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Full Discussion: GNU TAR vs NATIVE AIX TAR
Operating Systems AIX GNU TAR vs NATIVE AIX TAR Post 302975681 by hicksd8 on Friday 17th of June 2016 06:27:03 AM
Old 06-17-2016
Using tar on different systems, or different point revisions of tar from the same vendor, or different versions completely (eg, Sun vs GNU) do not guarantee compatibility.

Generally, you can create a tar archive on one system which, when transferred to another system, might not unpack. The thing to do is that if you cannot extract an archive using a specific tar utility, try another one.

For example, read this:

@LongLink When Using Tar In Solaris | Little Handy Tips

You see that the actual pathname length is not compatible in this example (giving @longlink error) but a change to GNU gtar works fine.

Having such issues with different tar versions is no surprise.

Last edited by hicksd8; 06-17-2016 at 04:12 PM..
 

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SHAPE_TAR(1)						      General Commands Manual						      SHAPE_TAR(1)

NAME
shape_tar - shapeTools RMS bundle up subsystem in a tar or shar archive SYNOPSIS
shape tar[VERSIONS=<version_selection_rule>] [ARCHIVE=<filename>] shape shar[VERSIONS=<version_selection_rule>] [ARCHIVE=<filename>] DESCRIPTION
Shape tar and shape shar create a tar or a shar archive containing all source components of the current node in the system tree. All source components listed in the COMPONENTS macro in the Makefile and the release identification file (VERSIONFILE) are written to the archive. Components of subsystems are not included in the archive file. The VERSIONS macro may be set to specify a version selection rule to be active during archive file creation. Default is most_recent, selecting the most recent version of each component. See shape_stdrul(7) or the $(SHAPELIBPATH)/stdrules for other possible settings. You may also use self defined version selection rules as VERSIONS. ARCHIVE is the base name of the file where the output shall be written to. Default is $(SUBSYSTEMNAME). The output file gets the filename extension .tar (resp. .shar). When ARCHIVE=- is given, data will be written to standard output. SEE ALSO
shape_RMS(1), shape_stdrul(7) FILES
$(SUBSYSTEMNAME).tar $(SUBSYSTEMNAME).shar 20.7.119 SHAPE_TAR(1)
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