Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers using Tar -cvf file.tar "Need Help" Post 74990 by blowtorch on Tuesday 14th of June 2005 04:46:55 PM
Old 06-14-2005
Try this:

cd ~kw4691; tar -cvf output/test.tar input

This should work.
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

using TAR -cvf test.tar "HELP"

Ok, I use the command tar -cvf /home/output/test.tar /home/input on one UNIX server, lets call it sneezy. I FTP the tared file over to another server, lets call it bashful. Use the tar -xvf test.tar command and get a error indicating that it is looking for the same directory as where the... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: wev
3 Replies

2. AIX

"tar" Check sum error

I have a tar file that contains some 50 files in it. while trying to untar i get a checksum error. iam unable to retreive the fiiles from that. Can anyone please help me...? (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: balaa
3 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

shortcut for tar cvf - [filename] | gzip > [filename].tar.gz

i'd like to have an alias (or something similar) where i can type a command like "archive" and a filename and have it tar and gzip the file, so... $ archive filename results in filename.tar.gz...do i have to write a script to do this? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: bcamp1973
4 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

tar -cvf test.tar `find . -mtime -1 -type f` only tar 1 file

Hi all, 4 files are returned when i issue 'find . -mtime -1 -type f -ls'. ./ora_475244.aud ./ora_671958.aud ./ora_934052.aud ./ora_934050.aud However, when I issued the below command: tar -cvf test.tar `find . -mtime -1 -type f`, the tar file only contains the 1st file -... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ahSher
2 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

tar "--totals" writes to stderr not stdout?

I want to use the "--totals" option in GNU tar for some reporting, however I have discovered that it writes the output to stderr not stdout and I would like to know why. This is running from BASH. mkdir /tmp/test touch /tmp/test/foo.file cd /tmp/ tar --totals -clpzf test.tar.gz test 2>... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: jelloir
2 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Bus error while using command tar -cvf

Hi, I am working on a mac OSX machine. I am getting bus error :confused: when i use the command tar -cvf file1.tar file1 What could be the reason for this?? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: shweeths
1 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

identify files with "Normal termination" and compress them into a .tar.gz file

Hi, I have hundreds of files "*.out" located in one folder, and I want to: 1. Identify the good files containing "Normal termination" (grep "Normal termination" *.out ) 2. Compress the good files into a tar.gz file (tar cvfz good.tar.gz *.goog.out ) Is there a way I can automate this... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: rockytodd
4 Replies

8. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

"Walk" apache installs and do a tar on them...

Hello unix.com Community: I need help with writing a "common" script that can get the httpd installs by name and install directory|ies and tar.gz them up by name and point that tar operation to the matching install directory. I have 2 Distros that I am concerned with for this task: CentOS and... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Habitual
3 Replies

9. Ubuntu

What is solution for this error "tar: Exiting with failure status due to previous errors"?

Does anyone know what is solution for this error ?tar: Exiting with failure status due to previous errors from last 3 days I am trying to take backup of home/user directory getting again and again same error please anyone give me solution (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: Akshay Hegde
8 Replies
Archive::Tar::Wrapper(3pm)				User Contributed Perl Documentation				Archive::Tar::Wrapper(3pm)

NAME
Archive::Tar::Wrapper - API wrapper around the 'tar' utility SYNOPSIS
use Archive::Tar::Wrapper; my $arch = Archive::Tar::Wrapper->new(); # Open a tarball, expand it into a temporary directory $arch->read("archive.tgz"); # Iterate over all entries in the archive $arch->list_reset(); # Reset Iterator # Iterate through archive while(my $entry = $arch->list_next()) { my($tar_path, $phys_path) = @$entry; print "$tar_path "; } # Get a huge list with all entries for my $entry (@{$arch->list_all()}) { my($tar_path, $real_path) = @$entry; print "Tarpath: $tar_path Tempfile: $real_path "; } # Add a new entry $arch->add($logic_path, $file_or_stringref); # Remove an entry $arch->remove($logic_path); # Find the physical location of a temporary file my($tmp_path) = $arch->locate($tar_path); # Create a tarball $arch->write($tarfile, $compress); DESCRIPTION
Archive::Tar::Wrapper is an API wrapper around the 'tar' command line utility. It never stores anything in memory, but works on temporary directory structures on disk instead. It provides a mapping between the logical paths in the tarball and the 'real' files in the temporary directory on disk. It differs from Archive::Tar in two ways: o Archive::Tar::Wrapper doesn't hold anything in memory. Everything is stored on disk. o Archive::Tar::Wrapper is 100% compliant with the platform's "tar" utility, because it uses it internally. METHODS
my $arch = Archive::Tar::Wrapper->new() Constructor for the tar wrapper class. Finds the "tar" executable by searching "PATH" and returning the first hit. In case you want to use a different tar executable, you can specify it as a parameter: my $arch = Archive::Tar::Wrapper->new(tar => '/path/to/tar'); Since "Archive::Tar::Wrapper" creates temporary directories to store tar data, the location of the temporary directory can be specified: my $arch = Archive::Tar::Wrapper->new(tmpdir => '/path/to/tmpdir'); Tremendous performance increases can be achieved if the temporary directory is located on a ram disk. Check the "Using RAM Disks" section below for details. Additional options can be passed to the "tar" command by using the "tar_read_options" and "tar_write_options" parameters. Example: my $arch = Archive::Tar::Wrapper->new( tar_read_options => "p" ); will use "tar xfp archive.tgz" to extract the tarball instead of just "tar xf archive.tgz". Gnu tar supports even more options, these can be passed in via my $arch = Archive::Tar::Wrapper->new( tar_gnu_read_options => ["--numeric-owner"], ); By default, the "list_*()" functions will return only file entries. Directories will be suppressed. To have "list_*()" return directories as well, use my $arch = Archive::Tar::Wrapper->new( dirs => 1 ); If more files are added to a tarball than the command line can handle, "Archive::Tar::Wrapper" will switch from using the command tar cfv tarfile file1 file2 file3 ... to tar cfv tarfile -T filelist where "filelist" is a file containing all file to be added. The default for this switch is 512, but it can be changed by setting the parameter "max_cmd_line_args": my $arch = Archive::Tar::Wrapper->new( max_cmd_line_args => 1024 ); $arch->read("archive.tgz") "read()" opens the given tarball, expands it into a temporary directory and returns 1 on success und "undef" on failure. The temporary directory holding the tar data gets cleaned up when $arch goes out of scope. "read" handles both compressed and uncompressed files. To find out if a file is compressed or uncompressed, it tries to guess by extension, then by checking the first couple of bytes in the tarfile. If only a limited number of files is needed from a tarball, they can be specified after the tarball name: $arch->read("archive.tgz", "path/file.dat", "path/sub/another.txt"); The file names are passed unmodified to the "tar" command, make sure that the file paths match exactly what's in the tarball, otherwise "read()" will fail. $arch->list_reset() Resets the list iterator. To be used before the first call to $arch-list_next()>. my($tar_path, $phys_path, $type) = $arch->list_next() Returns the next item in the tarfile. It returns a list of three scalars: the relative path of the item in the tarfile, the physical path to the unpacked file or directory on disk, and the type of the entry (f=file, d=directory, l=symlink). Note that by default, Archive::Tar::Wrapper won't display directories, unless the "dirs" parameter is set when running the constructor. my $items = $arch->list_all() Returns a reference to a (possibly huge) array of items in the tarfile. Each item is a reference to an array, containing two elements: the relative path of the item in the tarfile and the physical path to the unpacked file or directory on disk. To iterate over the list, the following construct can be used: # Get a huge list with all entries for my $entry (@{$arch->list_all()}) { my($tar_path, $real_path) = @$entry; print "Tarpath: $tar_path Tempfile: $real_path "; } If the list of items in the tarfile is big, use "list_reset()" and "list_next()" instead of "list_all". $arch->add($logic_path, $file_or_stringref, [$options]) Add a new file to the tarball. $logic_path is the virtual path of the file within the tarball. $file_or_stringref is either a scalar, in which case it holds the physical path of a file on disk to be transferred (i.e. copied) to the tarball. Or it is a reference to a scalar, in which case its content is interpreted to be the data of the file. If no additional parameters are given, permissions and user/group id settings of a file to be added are copied. If you want different settings, specify them in the options hash: $arch->add($logic_path, $stringref, { perm => 0755, uid => 123, gid => 10 }); If $file_or_stringref is a reference to a Unicode string, the "binmode" option has to be set to make sure the string gets written as proper UTF-8 into the tarfile: $arch->add($logic_path, $stringref, { binmode => ":utf8" }); $arch->remove($logic_path) Removes a file from the tarball. $logic_path is the virtual path of the file within the tarball. $arch->locate($logic_path) Finds the physical location of a file, specified by $logic_path, which is the virtual path of the file within the tarball. Returns a path to the temporary file "Archive::Tar::Wrapper" created to manipulate the tarball on disk. $arch->write($tarfile, $compress) Write out the tarball by tarring up all temporary files and directories and store it in $tarfile on disk. If $compress holds a true value, compression is used. $arch->tardir() Return the directory the tarball was unpacked in. This is sometimes useful to play dirty tricks on "Archive::Tar::Wrapper" by mass- manipulating unpacked files before wrapping them back up into the tarball. $arch->is_gnu() Checks if the tar executable is a GNU tar by running 'tar --version' and parsing the output for "GNU". Using RAM Disks On Linux, it's quite easy to create a RAM disk and achieve tremendous speedups while untarring or modifying a tarball. You can either create the RAM disk by hand by running # mkdir -p /mnt/myramdisk # mount -t tmpfs -o size=20m tmpfs /mnt/myramdisk and then feeding the ramdisk as a temporary directory to Archive::Tar::Wrapper, like my $tar = Archive::Tar::Wrapper->new( tmpdir => '/mnt/myramdisk' ); or using Archive::Tar::Wrapper's built-in option 'ramdisk': my $tar = Archive::Tar::Wrapper->new( ramdisk => { type => 'tmpfs', size => '20m', # 20 MB }, ); Only drawback with the latter option is that creating the RAM disk needs to be performed as root, which often isn't desirable for security reasons. For this reason, Archive::Tar::Wrapper offers a utility functions that mounts the ramdisk and returns the temporary directory it's located in: # Create new ramdisk (as root): my $tmpdir = Archive::Tar::Wrapper->ramdisk_mount( type => 'tmpfs', size => '20m', # 20 MB ); # Delete a ramdisk (as root): Archive::Tar::Wrapper->ramdisk_unmount(); Optionally, the "ramdisk_mount()" command accepts a "tmpdir" parameter pointing to a temporary directory for the ramdisk if you wish to set it yourself instead of letting Archive::Tar::Wrapper create it automatically. KNOWN LIMITATIONS
o Currently, only "tar" programs supporting the "z" option (for compressing/decompressing) are supported. Future version will use "gzip" alternatively. o Currently, you can't add empty directories to a tarball directly. You could add a temporary file within a directory, and then "remove()" the file. o If you delete a file, the empty directories it was located in stay in the tarball. You could try to "locate()" them and delete them. This will be fixed, though. o Filenames containing newlines are causing problems with the list iterators. To be fixed. BUGS
Archive::Tar::Wrapper doesn't currently handle filenames with embedded newlines. LEGALESE
Copyright 2005 by Mike Schilli, all rights reserved. This program is free software, you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. AUTHOR
2005, Mike Schilli <cpan@perlmeister.com> perl v5.14.2 2012-03-21 Archive::Tar::Wrapper(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:08 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy