PAXTAR(1) | General Commands Manual | PAXTAR(1) |
paxtar
— tape
archiver
paxtar |
{crtux }[014578AabefHhJjLmNOoPpqsvwXZz ]
[blocking-factor | archive | replstr]
[-C directory]
[-I file]
[file ...] |
paxtar |
{-crtux }
[-014578AaeHhJjLmNOoPpqvwXZz ]
[-b blocking-factor]
[-C directory]
[-f archive]
[-I file]
[-M flag]
[-s replstr]
[file ...] |
The paxtar
command creates, adds files to,
or extracts files from an archive file in “tar” format. A tar
archive is often stored on a magnetic tape, but can be stored equally well
on a floppy, CD-ROM, or in a regular disk file.
In the first (legacy) form, all option flags except for
-C
and -I
must be contained
within the first argument to paxtar
and must not be
prefixed by a hyphen (‘-’). Option arguments, if any, are
processed as subsequent arguments to paxtar
and are
processed in the order in which their corresponding option flags have been
presented on the command line.
In the second and preferred form, option flags may be given in any order and are immediately followed by their corresponding option argument values.
One of the following flags must be present:
-c
-r
-t
paxtar
will list all
archive members that match each pattern.-u
-r
.-x
paxtar
will extract all archive members that match
each pattern.
If more than one copy of a file exists in the archive, later copies will overwrite earlier copies during extraction. The file mode and modification time are preserved if possible. The file mode is subject to modification by the umask(2).
In addition to the flags mentioned above, any of the following flags may be used:
-A
-a
tar
; it is
strongly recommended to archive to stdout and pipe into an external
compression utility with appropriate arguments instead:
tar -cf - foo | xz -2e
>foo.txz
-b
blocking-factorpaxtar
uses 512-byte blocks. The default is 20, the maximum is 126. Archives with
a blocking factor larger than 63 violate the POSIX standard and will not
be portable to all systems.-C
directory-e
-f
archiveTAPE
environment variable.-H
-h
-I
file-J
-j
-L
-h
option.-M
flagroot
:wheel
).
When creating an archive and verbosely listing output, these normalisation operations are not reflected in the output, because they are made only after the output has been shown.
This option is only implemented for the ar, cpio, sv4cpio, sv4crc, and ustar file format writing routines.
-m
-N
-M
numid.-O
-o
tar
is
unable to decode.-P
paxtar
skips pathnames
containing dotdot (“..”) components and strips leading
slashes (‘/’) from pathnames by default; this option
disables that behaviour.-p
-x
flag.-q
-s
replstrThe format of these regular expressions is
/old/new/[gp]
As in ed(1), old is a
basic regular expression (see re_format(7)) and
new can contain an ampersand
(‘&
’),
‘\n
’ (where
n is a digit) back-references, or subexpression
matching. The old string may also contain newline
characters. Any non-null character can be used as a delimiter
(‘/
’ is shown here). Multiple
-s
expressions can be specified. The expressions
are applied in the order they are specified on the command line,
terminating with the first successful substitution.
The optional trailing g
continues to
apply the substitution expression to the pathname substring, which
starts with the first character following the end of the last successful
substitution. The first unsuccessful substitution stops the operation of
the g
option. The optional trailing
p
will cause the final result of a successful
substitution to be written to standard error in the following
format:
File or archive member names that substitute to the empty string are not selected and will be skipped.
-v
-v
is specified
multiple times or if the -t
option is also
specified, paxtar
will use a long format for
listing files, similar to ls(1)
-l
.-w
paxtar
to prompt the user for the filename to use
when storing or extracting files in an archive.-X
-Z
-z
The options [-014578
] can be used to
select one of the compiled-in backup devices,
/dev/rstN.
The paxtar
utility exits with one of the
following values:
Create an archive on the default tape drive, containing the files named bonvole and sekve:
$ paxtar c bonvole sekve
Output a gzip(1) compressed archive containing the files bonvole and sekve to a file called foriru.tar.gz:
$ paxtar zcf foriru.tar.gz bonvole
sekve
Verbosely create an archive, called backup.tar.gz, of all files matching the shell glob(7) function *.c:
$ paxtar zcvf backup.tar.gz
*.c
Verbosely list, but do not extract, all files ending in .jpeg from a compressed archive named backup.tar.gz. Note that the glob pattern has been quoted to avoid expansion by the shell:
$ paxtar tvzf backup.tar.gz
'*.jpeg'
For more detailed examples, see pax(1).
Whenever paxtar
cannot create a file or a
link when extracting an archive or cannot find a file while writing an
archive, or cannot preserve the user ID, group ID, file mode, or access and
modification times when the -p
option is specified,
a diagnostic message is written to standard error and a non-zero exit value
will be returned, but processing will continue. In the case where
paxtar
cannot create a link to a file, unless
-M
lncp is given,
paxtar
will not create a second copy of the
file.
If the extraction of a file from an archive is prematurely
terminated by a signal or error, paxtar
may have
only partially extracted the file the user wanted. Additionally, the file
modes of extracted files and directories may have incorrect file bits, and
the modification and access times may be wrong.
If the creation of an archive is prematurely terminated by a
signal or error, paxtar
may have only partially
created the archive, which may violate the specific archive format
specification.
A tar
command first appeared in
Version 7 AT&T UNIX.
Keith Muller at the University of California, San Diego. MirBSD extensions by mirabilos ⟨m@mirbsd.org⟩.
The flags -AaJjLMNo
are not portable to
other implementations of tar
where they may have a
different meaning or not exist at all. This implementation may have support
for other non-standard options that are undocumented because
removal-inducing deprecation was issued. There is no option to select a
different output format from ustar
or
tar
except -A
, which selects
ar
; use the paxcpio(1) or
pax(1) front-ends for that.
The pax file format is not yet supported.
February 24, 2019 | MirBSD |