|  | @@ -824,7 +824,8 @@ used with @samp{--list} causes @code{tar} to print a longer listing
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  To see the progress of @code{tar} through the archive, the
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  @samp{--record-number} option prints a message for each record read or
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | -writted.  (@xref{Archive Structure}.)  
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +writted.  (@xref{Archive Structure}.)  This option can be very helpful
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +when trying to figure out where in the archive an error occurs.
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  The @samp{--totals} option (which is only meaningful when used with
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  @samp{--create}) causes @code{tar} to print the total amount written to
 | 
	
	
		
			
				|  | @@ -836,6 +837,9 @@ don't need the more detailed (and voluminous) output of
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  @samp{--record-number}, but do want visual confirmation that @code{tar}
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  is actually making forward progress.
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +The @samp{--version} option will generate a message with the version of
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +GNU @code{tar} you are using.
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  @chapter Input and Output
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  @section Changing the Archive Name
 | 
	
	
		
			
				|  | @@ -874,6 +878,23 @@ cause @code{tar} to write extracted archive members to standard output.
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  If you extract multiple members, they appear on standard output
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  concatenated, in the order they are found in the archive.
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +@section Dealing with Compressed Archives
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +You can have archives be compressed by using the @samp{--gzip} (or
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +@samp{-z}) option.  This will arrange for @code{tar} to use the
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +@code{gzip} program to be used to compress or uncompress the archive
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +wren writing or reading it.
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +To use the older, obsolete, @code{compress} program, use the
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +@samp{--compress} (or @samp{-Z}) option.  The GNU Project recommends you
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +not use @code{compress}, because there is a patent covering the
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +algorithm it uses.  Merely by running @code{compress} you could be sued
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +for patent infringment.
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +When using either @samp{--gzip} or @samp{--compress}, @code{tar} does
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +not do blocking (@pxref{Blocking}) correctly.  Use @samp{--gzip-block}
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +or @samp{--compress-block} instead when using real tape drives.
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  @chapter Being More Careful
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  When using @code{tar} with many options, particularly ones with
 | 
	
	
		
			
				|  | @@ -881,9 +902,10 @@ complicated or difficult-to-predict behavior, it is possible to make
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  serious mistakes.  As a result, @code{tar} provides several options that
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  make observing @code{tar} easier.
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | -The @samp{--verbose} option (@pxref{Making @code{tar} More Verbose})
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | -causes @code{tar} to print the name of each file or archive member as it
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | -is processed.
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +The @samp{--verbose} option causes @code{tar} to print the name of each
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +file or archive member as it is processed.  This and the other options
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +which make tar print status information can be useful in monitoring
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +@code{tar}.  @xref{Making @code{tar} More Verbose}. 
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  If you use @samp{--interactive} (or {@samp--confirm}), then @code{tar}
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  will ask you for confirmation before each operation.  For example, when
 | 
	
	
		
			
				|  | @@ -949,6 +971,14 @@ to use in practice.  GNU @code{tar}, however, will support arbitrarily
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  large block sizes, limited only by the amount of virtual memory or the
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  physical characteristics of the tape device.
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +If you are writing a compressed archive to tape with @samp{--compress}
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +or @samp{--gzip} (@pxref{Input and Output}), @code{tar} will not block
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +the archive correctly.  This doesn't matter if you are writing the
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +archive to a normal file or through a pipe, but if you are writing it to
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +a tape drive, then this causes problems.  Use @samp{--compress-block} or
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +@samp{--gzip-block} instead, to cause @code{tar} to arrange to have
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +blocking work correctly.
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  @section Using Multiple Tapes
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  Often you might want to write a large archive, one larger than will fit
 | 
	
	
		
			
				|  | @@ -1005,8 +1035,9 @@ changed; if you give the @samp{--volno-file=@var{file-name}} option,
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  then @var{file-name} should contain a decimal number.  That number will
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  be used as the volume number of the first volume written.  When
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  @code{tar} is finished, it will rewrite the file with the now--current
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | -volume number.   (This does not change the volume number written on a
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | -tape label; it @emph{only} affects the number used in the prompt.)
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +volume number.  (This does not change the volume number written on a
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +tape label (@pxref{Special Options for Archiving}; it @emph{only}
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +affects the number used in the prompt.)
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  If you want @code{tar} to cycle through a series of tape drives, then
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  you can use the @samp{n} response to the tape-change prompt.  This is
 | 
	
	
		
			
				|  | @@ -1015,7 +1046,59 @@ Therefore, if you give @code{tar} multiple @samp{--file} options, then
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  the specified files will be used, in sequence, as the successive volumes
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  of the archive.  Only when the first one in the sequence needs to be
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  used again will @code{tar} prompt for a tape change (or run the info
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | -script).
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +script).  
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +@section Tape Files
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +When @code{tar} writes an archive to tape, it creates a single tape
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +file.  If multiple archives are written to the same tape, one after the
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +other, they each get written as separate tape files.  When extracting,
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +it is necessary to position the tape at the right place before running
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +@code{tar}.  To do this, use the @code{mt} command.  For more
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +information on the @code{mt} command and on the organization of tapes
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +into a sequence of tape files, see XXX.
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +@chapter Special Options for Archiving
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +To give the archive a name which will be recorded in it, use the
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +@samp{--label=@var{volume-label}} (or @samp{-V}) option.  This will
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +write a special record identifying @var{volume-label} as the name of the
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +archive to the front of the archive which will be displayed when the
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +archive is listed with @samp{--list}.  If you are creating a
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +multi-volume archive with @samp{--multi-volume} (@pxref{Using Multiple
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +Tapes}), then the volume label will have @same{ Volume @var{nnn}}
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +appended to the name you give, where @var{nnn} is the number of the
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +volume of the archive.  (If you use the @samp{--label} option when
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +reading an archive, it checks to make sure the label on the tape matches
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +the one you give.  @xref{Special Options for Archiving}.)
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +Files in the filesystem occasionally have ``holes.''  A hole in a file
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +is a section of the file's contents which was never written.  The
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +contents of a hole read as all zeros.  On many operating systems, actual@c 
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +disk storage is not allocated for holes, but they are counted in the
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +length of the file.  If you archive such a file, @code{tar} could create
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +an archive longer than the original.  To have @code{tar} attempt to
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +recognize the holes in a file, use @samp{--sparse}.  When you use the 
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +@samp{--sparse} option, then, for any file using less disk space than
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +would be expected from its length, @code{tar} searches the file for
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +consecutive stretches of zeros.  It then records in the archive for the
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +file where the consecutive stretches of zeros are, and only archives the
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +``real contents'' of the file.  On extraction (using @samp{--sparse} is
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +not needed on extraction) any such files have hols created wherever the
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +continuous stretches of zeros were found.  Thus, if you use
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +@samp{--sparse}, @code{tar} archives won't take more space than the
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +original.
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +When @code{tar} reads files, this causes them to have the access times
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +updated.  To have @code{tar} attempt to set the access times back to
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +what they were before they were read, use the @samp{--atime-preserve}
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +option.  This doesn't work for files that you don't own, unless you're
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +root, and it doesn't interact with incremental dumps nicely
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +(@pxref{Making Backups}), but it is good enough for some purposes.
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +@chapter Special Options for Reading Archives
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  | +
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  
 | 
	
		
			
				|  |  |  
 |