06-30-2015
It's not immediately obvious from the script what the directory and file structure you are working with looks like. Based on the first line, it looks like you have a number of directories in /tarfiles, each directory can contain one of more tar files which you immediately delete.
Next, you are looking for tar gz files that are in the /tarfiles directory and are named after each subdirectory, and then moving them into that subdirectory, it looks like there could be more than one per directory.
Once all that's done, you are unzipping the tar gzs, and then untaring them.
If all that is true, then we can proceed.
Each of the files returned by your for loop will already have the right directory included in it, you are then prepending the directory name again. You'd end up with something like /tarfiles/abcd/abcd/abcd-foo.tar when you actually want /tarfiles/abcd/abcd-foo.tar - thus tar saying it can't find the file.
If that's indeed what's happening, just remove the $dir part of the input file being passed to tar.
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TAR(1) General Commands Manual TAR(1)
NAME
tar - archiver
SYNOPSIS
tar key [ file ... ]
DESCRIPTION
Tar saves and restores file trees. It is most often used to transport a tree of files from one system to another. The key is a string
that contains at most one function letter plus optional modifiers. Other arguments to the command are names of files or directories to be
dumped or restored. A directory name implies all the contained files and subdirectories (recursively).
The function is one of the following letters:
c Create a new archive with the given files as contents.
x Extract the named files from the archive. If a file is a directory, the directory is extracted recursively. Modes are restored if
possible. If no file argument is given, extract the entire archive. If the archive contains multiple entries for a file, the lat-
est one wins.
t List all occurrences of each file in the archive, or of all files if there are no file arguments.
r The named files are appended to the archive.
The modifiers are:
v (verbose) Print the name of each file treated preceded by the function letter. With t, give more details about the archive entries.
f Use the next argument as the name of the archive instead of the default standard input (for keys x and t) or standard output (for
keys c and r).
u Use the next (numeric) argument as the user id for files in the output archive. This is only useful when moving files to a non-Plan
9 system.
g Use the next (numeric) argument as the group id for files in the output archive.
EXAMPLES
Tar can be used to copy hierarchies thus:
{cd fromdir; tar c .} | {cd todir; tar x}
SOURCE
/sys/src/cmd/tar.c
SEE ALSO
ar(1), bundle(1), tapefs(1)
BUGS
There is no way to ask for any but the last occurrence of a file.
File path names are limited to 100 characters.
The tar format allows specification of links and symbolic links, concepts foreign to Plan 9: they are ignored.
TAR(1)