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tar.texi 335 KB

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  1. \input texinfo
  2. @c %**start of header
  3. @setfilename tar.info
  4. @settitle GNU tar
  5. @finalout
  6. @smallbook
  7. @setchapternewpage odd
  8. @c %**end of header
  9. @c ======================================================================
  10. @c This document has three levels of rendition: PUBLISH, DISTRIB or PROOF,
  11. @c as decided by @set symbols. The PUBLISH rendition does not show
  12. @c notes or marks asking for revision. Most users will prefer having more
  13. @c information, even if this information is not fully revised for adequacy,
  14. @c so DISTRIB is the default for tar distributions. The PROOF rendition
  15. @c show all marks to the point of ugliness, but is nevertheless useful to
  16. @c those working on the manual itself.
  17. @c ======================================================================
  18. @ifclear PUBLISH
  19. @ifclear DISTRIB
  20. @ifclear PROOF
  21. @set DISTRIB
  22. @end ifclear
  23. @end ifclear
  24. @end ifclear
  25. @ifset PUBLISH
  26. @set RENDITION The book, version
  27. @end ifset
  28. @ifset DISTRIB
  29. @set RENDITION FTP release, version
  30. @end ifset
  31. @ifset PROOF
  32. @set RENDITION Proof reading version
  33. @end ifset
  34. @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
  35. @c The @FIXME's, @UNREVISED and @c comments are part Fran@,{c}ois's work
  36. @c plan. These annotations are somewhat precious to him; he asks that I
  37. @c do not alter them inconsiderately. Much work is needed for GNU tar
  38. @c internals (the sources, the programs themselves). Revising the
  39. @c adequacy of the manual while revising the sources, and cleaning them
  40. @c both at the same time, seems to him like a good way to proceed.
  41. @c ---------------------------------------------------------------------
  42. @c Output marks for nodes needing revision, but not in PUBLISH rendition.
  43. @macro UNREVISED
  44. @ifclear PUBLISH
  45. @quotation
  46. @emph{(This message will disappear, once this node revised.)}
  47. @end quotation
  48. @end ifclear
  49. @end macro
  50. @c Output various FIXME information only in PROOF rendition.
  51. @macro FIXME{string}
  52. @allow-recursion
  53. @quote-arg
  54. @ifset PROOF
  55. @strong{<FIXME>} \string\ @strong{</>}
  56. @end ifset
  57. @end macro
  58. @macro FIXME-ref{string}
  59. @quote-arg
  60. @ifset PROOF
  61. @strong{<REF>} \string\ @strong{</>}
  62. @end ifset
  63. @end macro
  64. @macro FIXME-pxref{string}
  65. @quote-arg
  66. @ifset PROOF
  67. @strong{<PXREF>} \string\ @strong{</>}
  68. @end ifset
  69. @end macro
  70. @macro FIXME-xref{string}
  71. @quote-arg
  72. @ifset PROOF
  73. @strong{<XREF>} \string\ @strong{</>}
  74. @end ifset
  75. @end macro
  76. @c @macro option{entry}
  77. @c @quote-arg
  78. @c @opindex{--\entry\}
  79. @c @value{\entry\}
  80. @c @end macro
  81. @set op-absolute-names @kbd{--absolute-names} (@kbd{-P})
  82. @set ref-absolute-names @ref{absolute}
  83. @set xref-absolute-names @xref{absolute}
  84. @set pxref-absolute-names @pxref{absolute}
  85. @set op-after-date @kbd{--after-date=@var{date}} (@kbd{--newer=@var{date}}, @kbd{-N @var{date}})
  86. @set ref-after-date @ref{after}
  87. @set xref-after-date @xref{after}
  88. @set pxref-after-date @pxref{after}
  89. @set op-append @kbd{--append} (@kbd{-r})
  90. @set ref-append @ref{add}
  91. @set xref-append @xref{add}
  92. @set pxref-append @pxref{add}
  93. @set op-atime-preserve @kbd{--atime-preserve}
  94. @set ref-atime-preserve @ref{Attributes}
  95. @set xref-atime-preserve @xref{Attributes}
  96. @set pxref-atime-preserve @pxref{Attributes}
  97. @set op-backup @kbd{--backup}
  98. @set ref-backup @ref{Backup options}
  99. @set xref-backup @xref{Backup options}
  100. @set pxref-backup @pxref{Backup options}
  101. @set op-block-number @kbd{--block-number} (@kbd{-R})
  102. @set ref-block-number @ref{verbose}
  103. @set xref-block-number @xref{verbose}
  104. @set pxref-block-number @pxref{verbose}
  105. @set op-blocking-factor @kbd{--blocking-factor=@var{512-size}} (@kbd{-b @var{512-size}})
  106. @set ref-blocking-factor @ref{Blocking Factor}
  107. @set xref-blocking-factor @xref{Blocking Factor}
  108. @set pxref-blocking-factor @pxref{Blocking Factor}
  109. @set op-bzip2 @kbd{--bzip2} (@kbd{-j})
  110. @set ref-bzip2 @ref{gzip}
  111. @set xref-bzip2 @xref{gzip}
  112. @set pxref-bzip2 @pxref{gzip}
  113. @set op-checkpoint @kbd{--checkpoint}
  114. @set ref-checkpoint @ref{verbose}
  115. @set xref-checkpoint @xref{verbose}
  116. @set pxref-checkpoint @pxref{verbose}
  117. @set op-compare @kbd{--compare} (@kbd{--diff}, @kbd{-d})
  118. @set ref-compare @ref{compare}
  119. @set xref-compare @xref{compare}
  120. @set pxref-compare @pxref{compare}
  121. @set op-compress @kbd{--compress} (@kbd{--uncompress}, @kbd{-Z})
  122. @set ref-compress @ref{gzip}
  123. @set xref-compress @xref{gzip}
  124. @set pxref-compress @pxref{gzip}
  125. @set op-concatenate @kbd{--concatenate} (@kbd{--catenate}, @kbd{-A})
  126. @set ref-concatenate @ref{concatenate}
  127. @set xref-concatenate @xref{concatenate}
  128. @set pxref-concatenate @pxref{concatenate}
  129. @set op-create @kbd{--create} (@kbd{-c})
  130. @set ref-create @ref{create}
  131. @set xref-create @xref{create}
  132. @set pxref-create @pxref{create}
  133. @set op-delete @kbd{--delete}
  134. @set ref-delete @ref{delete}
  135. @set xref-delete @xref{delete}
  136. @set pxref-delete @pxref{delete}
  137. @set op-dereference @kbd{--dereference} (@kbd{-h})
  138. @set ref-dereference @ref{dereference}
  139. @set xref-dereference @xref{dereference}
  140. @set pxref-dereference @pxref{dereference}
  141. @set op-directory @kbd{--directory=@var{directory}} (@kbd{-C @var{directory}})
  142. @set ref-directory @ref{directory}
  143. @set xref-directory @xref{directory}
  144. @set pxref-directory @pxref{directory}
  145. @set op-exclude @kbd{--exclude=@var{pattern}}
  146. @set ref-exclude @ref{exclude}
  147. @set xref-exclude @xref{exclude}
  148. @set pxref-exclude @pxref{exclude}
  149. @set op-exclude-from @kbd{--exclude-from=@var{file-of-patterns}} (@kbd{-X @var{file-of-patterns}})
  150. @set ref-exclude-from @ref{exclude}
  151. @set xref-exclude-from @xref{exclude}
  152. @set pxref-exclude-from @pxref{exclude}
  153. @set op-extract @kbd{--extract} (@kbd{--get}, @kbd{-x})
  154. @set ref-extract @ref{extract}
  155. @set xref-extract @xref{extract}
  156. @set pxref-extract @pxref{extract}
  157. @set op-file @kbd{--file=@var{archive-name}} (@kbd{-f @var{archive-name}})
  158. @set ref-file @ref{file}
  159. @set xref-file @xref{file}
  160. @set pxref-file @pxref{file}
  161. @set op-files-from @kbd{--files-from=@var{file-of-names}} (@kbd{-T @var{file-of-names}})
  162. @set ref-files-from @ref{files}
  163. @set xref-files-from @xref{files}
  164. @set pxref-files-from @pxref{files}
  165. @set op-force-local @kbd{--force-local}
  166. @set ref-force-local @ref{file}
  167. @set xref-force-local @xref{file}
  168. @set pxref-force-local @pxref{file}
  169. @set op-group @kbd{--group=@var{group}}
  170. @set ref-group @ref{Option Summary}
  171. @set xref-group @xref{Option Summary}
  172. @set pxref-group @pxref{Option Summary}
  173. @set op-gzip @kbd{--gzip} (@kbd{--gunzip}, @kbd{--ungzip}, @kbd{-z})
  174. @set ref-gzip @ref{gzip}
  175. @set xref-gzip @xref{gzip}
  176. @set pxref-gzip @pxref{gzip}
  177. @set op-help @kbd{--help}
  178. @set ref-help @ref{help}
  179. @set xref-help @xref{help}
  180. @set pxref-help @pxref{help}
  181. @set op-ignore-failed-read @kbd{--ignore-failed-read}
  182. @set ref-ignore-failed-read @ref{create options}
  183. @set xref-ignore-failed-read @xref{create options}
  184. @set pxref-ignore-failed-read @pxref{create options}
  185. @set op-ignore-zeros @kbd{--ignore-zeros} (@kbd{-i})
  186. @set ref-ignore-zeros @ref{Reading}
  187. @set xref-ignore-zeros @xref{Reading}
  188. @set pxref-ignore-zeros @pxref{Reading}
  189. @set op-incremental @kbd{--incremental} (@kbd{-G})
  190. @set ref-incremental @ref{Inc Dumps}
  191. @set xref-incremental @xref{Inc Dumps}
  192. @set pxref-incremental @pxref{Inc Dumps}
  193. @set op-info-script @kbd{--info-script=@var{script-name}} (@kbd{--new-volume-script=@var{script-name}}, @kbd{-F @var{script-name}})
  194. @set ref-info-script @ref{Multi-Volume Archives}
  195. @set xref-info-script @xref{Multi-Volume Archives}
  196. @set pxref-info-script @pxref{Multi-Volume Archives}
  197. @set op-interactive @kbd{--interactive} (@kbd{-w})
  198. @set ref-interactive @ref{interactive}
  199. @set xref-interactive @xref{interactive}
  200. @set pxref-interactive @pxref{interactive}
  201. @set op-keep-old-files @kbd{--keep-old-files} (@kbd{-k})
  202. @set ref-keep-old-files @ref{Writing}
  203. @set xref-keep-old-files @xref{Writing}
  204. @set pxref-keep-old-files @pxref{Writing}
  205. @set op-label @kbd{--label=@var{archive-label}} (@kbd{-V @var{archive-label}})
  206. @set ref-label @ref{label}
  207. @set xref-label @xref{label}
  208. @set pxref-label @pxref{label}
  209. @set op-list @kbd{--list} (@kbd{-t})
  210. @set ref-list @ref{list}
  211. @set xref-list @xref{list}
  212. @set pxref-list @pxref{list}
  213. @set op-listed-incremental @kbd{--listed-incremental=@var{snapshot-file}} (@kbd{-g @var{snapshot-file}})
  214. @set ref-listed-incremental @ref{Inc Dumps}
  215. @set xref-listed-incremental @xref{Inc Dumps}
  216. @set pxref-listed-incremental @pxref{Inc Dumps}
  217. @set op-mode @kbd{--mode=@var{permissions}}
  218. @set ref-mode @ref{Option Summary}
  219. @set xref-mode @xref{Option Summary}
  220. @set pxref-mode @pxref{Option Summary}
  221. @set op-multi-volume @kbd{--multi-volume} (@kbd{-M})
  222. @set ref-multi-volume @ref{Multi-Volume Archives}
  223. @set xref-multi-volume @xref{Multi-Volume Archives}
  224. @set pxref-multi-volume @pxref{Multi-Volume Archives}
  225. @set op-newer-mtime @kbd{--newer-mtime=@var{date}}
  226. @set ref-newer-mtime @ref{after}
  227. @set xref-newer-mtime @xref{after}
  228. @set pxref-newer-mtime @pxref{after}
  229. @set op-no-recursion @kbd{--no-recursion}
  230. @set ref-no-recursion @ref{recurse}
  231. @set xref-no-recursion @xref{recurse}
  232. @set pxref-no-recursion @pxref{recurse}
  233. @set op-no-same-owner @kbd{--no-same-owner}
  234. @set ref-no-same-owner @ref{Attributes}
  235. @set xref-no-same-owner @xref{Attributes}
  236. @set pxref-no-same-owner @pxref{Attributes}
  237. @set op-no-same-permissions @kbd{--no-same-permissions}
  238. @set ref-no-same-permissions @ref{Attributes}
  239. @set xref-no-same-permissions @xref{Attributes}
  240. @set pxref-no-same-permissions @pxref{Attributes}
  241. @set op-null @kbd{--null}
  242. @set ref-null @ref{files}
  243. @set xref-null @xref{files}
  244. @set pxref-null @pxref{files}
  245. @set op-numeric-owner @kbd{--numeric-owner}
  246. @set ref-numeric-owner @ref{Attributes}
  247. @set xref-numeric-owner @xref{Attributes}
  248. @set pxref-numeric-owner @pxref{Attributes}
  249. @set op-old-archive @kbd{--old-archive} (@kbd{-o})
  250. @set ref-old-archive @ref{old}
  251. @set xref-old-archive @xref{old}
  252. @set pxref-old-archive @pxref{old}
  253. @set op-one-file-system @kbd{--one-file-system} (@kbd{-l})
  254. @set ref-one-file-system @ref{one}
  255. @set xref-one-file-system @xref{one}
  256. @set pxref-one-file-system @pxref{one}
  257. @set op-overwrite @kbd{--overwrite}
  258. @set ref-overwrite @ref{Overwrite Old Files}
  259. @set xref-overwrite @xref{Overwrite Old Files}
  260. @set pxref-overwrite @pxref{Overwrite Old Files}
  261. @set op-owner @kbd{--owner=@var{user}}
  262. @set ref-owner @ref{Option Summary}
  263. @set xref-owner @xref{Option Summary}
  264. @set pxref-owner @pxref{Option Summary}
  265. @set op-posix @kbd{--posix}
  266. @set ref-posix @ref{posix}
  267. @set xref-posix @xref{posix}
  268. @set pxref-posix @pxref{posix}
  269. @set op-preserve @kbd{--preserve}
  270. @set ref-preserve @ref{Attributes}
  271. @set xref-preserve @xref{Attributes}
  272. @set pxref-preserve @pxref{Attributes}
  273. @set op-record-size @kbd{--record-size=@var{size}}
  274. @set ref-record-size @ref{Blocking}
  275. @set xref-record-size @xref{Blocking}
  276. @set pxref-record-size @pxref{Blocking}
  277. @set op-recursive-unlink @kbd{--recursive-unlink}
  278. @set ref-recursive-unlink @ref{Writing}
  279. @set xref-recursive-unlink @xref{Writing}
  280. @set pxref-recursive-unlink @pxref{Writing}
  281. @set op-read-full-records @kbd{--read-full-records} (@kbd{-B})
  282. @set ref-read-full-records @ref{Blocking}
  283. @set xref-read-full-records @xref{Blocking}
  284. @set pxref-read-full-records @pxref{Blocking}
  285. @c FIXME: or should it be Reading, or Blocking Factor
  286. @set op-remove-files @kbd{--remove-files}
  287. @set ref-remove-files @ref{Writing}
  288. @set xref-remove-files @xref{Writing}
  289. @set pxref-remove-files @pxref{Writing}
  290. @set op-rsh-command @kbd{rsh-command=@var{command}}
  291. @set op-same-order @kbd{--same-order} (@kbd{--preserve-order}, @kbd{-s})
  292. @set ref-same-order @ref{Scarce}
  293. @set xref-same-order @xref{Scarce}
  294. @set pxref-same-order @pxref{Scarce}
  295. @c FIXME: or should it be Reading, or Attributes?
  296. @set op-same-owner @kbd{--same-owner}
  297. @set ref-same-owner @ref{Attributes}
  298. @set xref-same-owner @xref{Attributes}
  299. @set pxref-same-owner @pxref{Attributes}
  300. @set op-same-permissions @kbd{--same-permissions} (@kbd{--preserve-permissions}, @kbd{-p})
  301. @set ref-same-permissions @ref{Attributes}
  302. @set xref-same-permissions @xref{Attributes}
  303. @set pxref-same-permissions @pxref{Attributes}
  304. @c FIXME: or should it be Writing?
  305. @set op-show-omitted-dirs @kbd{--show-omitted-dirs}
  306. @set ref-show-omitted-dirs @ref{verbose}
  307. @set xref-show-omitted-dirs @xref{verbose}
  308. @set pxref-show-omitted-dirs @pxref{verbose}
  309. @set op-sparse @kbd{--sparse} (@kbd{-S})
  310. @set ref-sparse @ref{sparse}
  311. @set xref-sparse @xref{sparse}
  312. @set pxref-sparse @pxref{sparse}
  313. @set op-starting-file @kbd{--starting-file=@var{name}} (@kbd{-K @var{name}})
  314. @set ref-starting-file @ref{Scarce}
  315. @set xref-starting-file @xref{Scarce}
  316. @set pxref-starting-file @pxref{Scarce}
  317. @set op-suffix @kbd{--suffix=@var{suffix}}
  318. @set ref-suffix @ref{Backup options}
  319. @set xref-suffix @xref{Backup options}
  320. @set pxref-suffix @pxref{Backup options}
  321. @set op-tape-length @kbd{--tape-length=@var{1024-size}} (@kbd{-L @var{1024-size}})
  322. @set ref-tape-length @ref{Using Multiple Tapes}
  323. @set xref-tape-length @xref{Using Multiple Tapes}
  324. @set pxref-tape-length @pxref{Using Multiple Tapes}
  325. @set op-to-stdout @kbd{--to-stdout} (@kbd{-O})
  326. @set ref-to-stdout @ref{Writing}
  327. @set xref-to-stdout @xref{Writing}
  328. @set pxref-to-stdout @pxref{Writing}
  329. @set op-totals @kbd{--totals}
  330. @set ref-totals @ref{verbose}
  331. @set xref-totals @xref{verbose}
  332. @set pxref-totals @pxref{verbose}
  333. @set op-touch @kbd{--touch} (@kbd{-m})
  334. @set ref-touch @ref{Writing}
  335. @set xref-touch @xref{Writing}
  336. @set pxref-touch @pxref{Writing}
  337. @set op-unlink-first @kbd{--unlink-first} (@kbd{-U})
  338. @set ref-unlink-first @ref{Writing}
  339. @set xref-unlink-first @xref{Writing}
  340. @set pxref-unlink-first @pxref{Writing}
  341. @set op-update @kbd{--update} (@kbd{-u})
  342. @set ref-update @ref{update}
  343. @set xref-update @xref{update}
  344. @set pxref-update @pxref{update}
  345. @set op-use-compress-prog @kbd{--use-compress-prog=@var{program}}
  346. @set ref-use-compress-prog @ref{gzip}
  347. @set xref-use-compress-prog @xref{gzip}
  348. @set pxref-use-compress-prog @pxref{gzip}
  349. @set op-verbose @kbd{--verbose} (@kbd{-v})
  350. @set ref-verbose @ref{verbose}
  351. @set xref-verbose @xref{verbose}
  352. @set pxref-verbose @pxref{verbose}
  353. @set op-verify @kbd{--verify} (@kbd{-W})
  354. @set ref-verify @ref{verify}
  355. @set xref-verify @xref{verify}
  356. @set pxref-verify @pxref{verify}
  357. @set op-version @kbd{--version}
  358. @set ref-version @ref{help}
  359. @set xref-version @xref{help}
  360. @set pxref-version @pxref{help}
  361. @set op-volno-file @kbd{--volno-file=@var{file-of-number}}
  362. @set ref-volno-file @ref{Using Multiple Tapes}
  363. @set xref-volno-file @xref{Using Multiple Tapes}
  364. @set pxref-volno-file @pxref{Using Multiple Tapes}
  365. @include version.texi
  366. @c Put everything in one index (arbitrarily chosen to be the concept index).
  367. @syncodeindex fn cp
  368. @syncodeindex ky cp
  369. @syncodeindex pg cp
  370. @syncodeindex vr cp
  371. @defindex op
  372. @syncodeindex op cp
  373. @dircategory GNU Packages
  374. @direntry
  375. * Tar: (tar). Making tape (or disk) archives.
  376. @end direntry
  377. @dircategory Individual utilities
  378. @direntry
  379. * tar: (tar)tar invocation. Invoking @sc{gnu} @command{tar}
  380. @end direntry
  381. @ifinfo
  382. This file documents @sc{gnu} @command{tar}, which creates and extracts
  383. files from archives.
  384. Copyright 1992, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2001 Free Software
  385. Foundation, Inc.
  386. Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
  387. under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1
  388. or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation;
  389. with no Invariant Sections, with no
  390. Front-Cover Texts, and with no Back-Cover Texts.
  391. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled ``GNU
  392. Free Documentation License''.
  393. @end ifinfo
  394. @shorttitlepage @sc{gnu} @command{tar}
  395. @titlepage
  396. @title @sc{gnu} tar: an archiver tool
  397. @subtitle @value{RENDITION} @value{VERSION}, @value{UPDATED}
  398. @author Melissa Weisshaus, Jay Fenlason,
  399. @author Thomas Bushnell, n/BSG, Amy Gorin
  400. @c he said to remove it: Fran@,{c}ois Pinard
  401. @c i'm thinking about how the author page *should* look. -mew 2may96
  402. @page
  403. @vskip 0pt plus 1filll
  404. Copyright @copyright{} 1992, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1999, 2000, 2001
  405. Free Software Foundation, Inc.
  406. Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
  407. under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1
  408. or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation;
  409. with no Invariant Sections, with no
  410. Front-Cover Texts, and with no Back-Cover Texts.
  411. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled ``GNU
  412. Free Documentation License''.
  413. @end titlepage
  414. @ifnottex
  415. @node Top
  416. @top @sc{gnu} tar: an archiver tool
  417. @cindex file archival
  418. @cindex archiving files
  419. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} creates and extracts files from archives.
  420. This manual documents version @value{VERSION} of @sc{gnu} @command{tar}.
  421. The first part of this master menu lists the major nodes in this Info
  422. document. The rest of the menu lists all the lower level nodes.
  423. @end ifnottex
  424. @c The master menu, created with texinfo-master-menu, goes here.
  425. @c (However, getdate.texi's menu is interpolated by hand.)
  426. @menu
  427. * Introduction::
  428. * Tutorial::
  429. * tar invocation::
  430. * operations::
  431. * Backups::
  432. * Choosing::
  433. * Date input formats::
  434. * Formats::
  435. * Media::
  436. * Free Software Needs Free Documentation::
  437. * Copying This Manual::
  438. * Index::
  439. @detailmenu
  440. --- The Detailed Node Listing ---
  441. Introduction
  442. * Book Contents:: What this Book Contains
  443. * Definitions:: Some Definitions
  444. * What tar Does:: What @command{tar} Does
  445. * Naming tar Archives:: How @command{tar} Archives are Named
  446. * posix compliance::
  447. * Authors:: @sc{gnu} @command{tar} Authors
  448. * Reports:: Reporting bugs or suggestions
  449. Tutorial Introduction to @command{tar}
  450. * assumptions::
  451. * stylistic conventions::
  452. * basic tar options:: Basic @command{tar} Operations and Options
  453. * frequent operations::
  454. * Two Frequent Options::
  455. * create:: How to Create Archives
  456. * list:: How to List Archives
  457. * extract:: How to Extract Members from an Archive
  458. * going further::
  459. Two Frequently Used Options
  460. * file tutorial::
  461. * verbose tutorial::
  462. * help tutorial::
  463. How to Create Archives
  464. * prepare for examples::
  465. * Creating the archive::
  466. * create verbose::
  467. * short create::
  468. * create dir::
  469. How to List Archives
  470. * list dir::
  471. How to Extract Members from an Archive
  472. * extracting archives::
  473. * extracting files::
  474. * extract dir::
  475. * failing commands::
  476. Invoking @sc{gnu} @command{tar}
  477. * Synopsis::
  478. * using tar options::
  479. * Styles::
  480. * All Options::
  481. * help::
  482. * verbose::
  483. * interactive::
  484. The Three Option Styles
  485. * Mnemonic Options:: Mnemonic Option Style
  486. * Short Options:: Short Option Style
  487. * Old Options:: Old Option Style
  488. * Mixing:: Mixing Option Styles
  489. All @command{tar} Options
  490. * Operation Summary::
  491. * Option Summary::
  492. * Short Option Summary::
  493. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} Operations
  494. * Basic tar::
  495. * Advanced tar::
  496. * create options::
  497. * extract options::
  498. * backup::
  499. * Applications::
  500. * looking ahead::
  501. Advanced @sc{gnu} @command{tar} Operations
  502. * Operations::
  503. * current state::
  504. * append::
  505. * update::
  506. * concatenate::
  507. * delete::
  508. * compare::
  509. How to Add Files to Existing Archives: @code{--append}
  510. * appending files:: Appending Files to an Archive
  511. * multiple::
  512. Updating an Archive
  513. * how to update::
  514. Options Used by @code{--create}
  515. * Ignore Failed Read::
  516. Options Used by @code{--extract}
  517. * Reading:: Options to Help Read Archives
  518. * Writing:: Changing How @command{tar} Writes Files
  519. * Scarce:: Coping with Scarce Resources
  520. Options to Help Read Archives
  521. * read full records::
  522. * Ignore Zeros::
  523. Changing How @command{tar} Writes Files
  524. * Dealing with Old Files::
  525. * Overwrite Old Files::
  526. * Keep Old Files::
  527. * Unlink First::
  528. * Recursive Unlink::
  529. * Modification Times::
  530. * Setting Access Permissions::
  531. * Writing to Standard Output::
  532. * remove files::
  533. Coping with Scarce Resources
  534. * Starting File::
  535. * Same Order::
  536. Performing Backups and Restoring Files
  537. * Full Dumps:: Using @command{tar} to Perform Full Dumps
  538. * Inc Dumps:: Using @command{tar} to Perform Incremental Dumps
  539. * incremental and listed-incremental:: The Incremental Options
  540. * Backup Levels:: Levels of Backups
  541. * Backup Parameters:: Setting Parameters for Backups and Restoration
  542. * Scripted Backups:: Using the Backup Scripts
  543. * Scripted Restoration:: Using the Restore Script
  544. Setting Parameters for Backups and Restoration
  545. * backup-specs example:: An Example Text of @file{Backup-specs}
  546. * Script Syntax:: Syntax for @file{Backup-specs}
  547. Choosing Files and Names for @command{tar}
  548. * file:: Choosing the Archive's Name
  549. * Selecting Archive Members::
  550. * files:: Reading Names from a File
  551. * exclude:: Excluding Some Files
  552. * Wildcards::
  553. * after:: Operating Only on New Files
  554. * recurse:: Descending into Directories
  555. * one:: Crossing Filesystem Boundaries
  556. Reading Names from a File
  557. * nul::
  558. Excluding Some Files
  559. * controlling pattern-patching with exclude::
  560. * problems with exclude::
  561. Crossing Filesystem Boundaries
  562. * directory:: Changing Directory
  563. * absolute:: Absolute File Names
  564. Date input formats
  565. * General date syntax:: Common rules.
  566. * Calendar date items:: 19 Dec 1994.
  567. * Time of day items:: 9:20pm.
  568. * Time zone items:: @sc{est}, @sc{pdt}, @sc{gmt}, ...
  569. * Day of week items:: Monday and others.
  570. * Relative items in date strings:: next tuesday, 2 years ago.
  571. * Pure numbers in date strings:: 19931219, 1440.
  572. * Authors of getdate:: Bellovin, Eggert, Salz, Berets, et al.
  573. Controlling the Archive Format
  574. * Portability:: Making @command{tar} Archives More Portable
  575. * Compression:: Using Less Space through Compression
  576. * Attributes:: Handling File Attributes
  577. * Standard:: The Standard Format
  578. * Extensions:: @sc{gnu} Extensions to the Archive Format
  579. * cpio:: Comparison of @command{tar} and @command{cpio}
  580. Making @command{tar} Archives More Portable
  581. * Portable Names:: Portable Names
  582. * dereference:: Symbolic Links
  583. * old:: Old V7 Archives
  584. * posix:: @sc{posix} archives
  585. * Checksumming:: Checksumming Problems
  586. * Large or Negative Values:: Large files, negative time stamps, etc.
  587. Using Less Space through Compression
  588. * gzip:: Creating and Reading Compressed Archives
  589. * sparse:: Archiving Sparse Files
  590. Tapes and Other Archive Media
  591. * Device:: Device selection and switching
  592. * Remote Tape Server::
  593. * Common Problems and Solutions::
  594. * Blocking:: Blocking
  595. * Many:: Many archives on one tape
  596. * Using Multiple Tapes:: Using Multiple Tapes
  597. * label:: Including a Label in the Archive
  598. * verify::
  599. * Write Protection::
  600. Blocking
  601. * Format Variations:: Format Variations
  602. * Blocking Factor:: The Blocking Factor of an Archive
  603. Many Archives on One Tape
  604. * Tape Positioning:: Tape Positions and Tape Marks
  605. * mt:: The @command{mt} Utility
  606. Using Multiple Tapes
  607. * Multi-Volume Archives:: Archives Longer than One Tape or Disk
  608. * Tape Files:: Tape Files
  609. Copying This Manual
  610. * GNU Free Documentation License:: License for copying this manual
  611. @end detailmenu
  612. @end menu
  613. @node Introduction
  614. @chapter Introduction
  615. Welcome to the @sc{gnu} @command{tar} manual. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} creates
  616. and manipulates (@dfn{archives}) which are actually collections of
  617. many other files; the program provides users with an organized and
  618. systematic method for controlling a large amount of data.
  619. @menu
  620. * Book Contents:: What this Book Contains
  621. * Definitions:: Some Definitions
  622. * What tar Does:: What @command{tar} Does
  623. * Naming tar Archives:: How @command{tar} Archives are Named
  624. * posix compliance::
  625. * Authors:: @sc{gnu} @command{tar} Authors
  626. * Reports:: Reporting bugs or suggestions
  627. @end menu
  628. @node Book Contents
  629. @section What this Book Contains
  630. The first part of this chapter introduces you to various terms that will
  631. recur throughout the book. It also tells you who has worked on @sc{gnu}
  632. @command{tar} and its documentation, and where you should send bug reports
  633. or comments.
  634. The second chapter is a tutorial (@pxref{Tutorial}) which provides a
  635. gentle introduction for people who are new to using @command{tar}. It is
  636. meant to be self contained, not requiring any reading from subsequent
  637. chapters to make sense. It moves from topic to topic in a logical,
  638. progressive order, building on information already explained.
  639. Although the tutorial is paced and structured to allow beginners to
  640. learn how to use @command{tar}, it is not intended solely for beginners.
  641. The tutorial explains how to use the three most frequently used
  642. operations (@samp{create}, @samp{list}, and @samp{extract}) as well as
  643. two frequently used options (@samp{file} and @samp{verbose}). The other
  644. chapters do not refer to the tutorial frequently; however, if a section
  645. discusses something which is a complex variant of a basic concept, there
  646. may be a cross reference to that basic concept. (The entire book,
  647. including the tutorial, assumes that the reader understands some basic
  648. concepts of using a Unix-type operating system; @pxref{Tutorial}.)
  649. The third chapter presents the remaining five operations, and
  650. information about using @command{tar} options and option syntax.
  651. @FIXME{this sounds more like a @sc{gnu} Project Manuals Concept [tm] more
  652. than the reality. should think about whether this makes sense to say
  653. here, or not.} The other chapters are meant to be used as a
  654. reference. Each chapter presents everything that needs to be said
  655. about a specific topic.
  656. One of the chapters (@pxref{Date input formats}) exists in its entirety
  657. in other @sc{gnu} manuals, and is mostly self-contained. In addition, one
  658. section of this manual (@pxref{Standard}) contains a big quote which is
  659. taken directly from @command{tar} sources.
  660. In general, we give both the long and short (abbreviated) option names
  661. at least once in each section where the relevant option is covered, so
  662. that novice readers will become familiar with both styles. (A few
  663. options have no short versions, and the relevant sections will
  664. indicate this.)
  665. @node Definitions
  666. @section Some Definitions
  667. @cindex archive
  668. @cindex tar archive
  669. The @command{tar} program is used to create and manipulate @command{tar}
  670. archives. An @dfn{archive} is a single file which contains the contents
  671. of many files, while still identifying the names of the files, their
  672. owner(s), and so forth. (In addition, archives record access
  673. permissions, user and group, size in bytes, and last modification time.
  674. Some archives also record the file names in each archived directory, as
  675. well as other file and directory information.) You can use @command{tar}
  676. to @dfn{create} a new archive in a specified directory.
  677. @cindex member
  678. @cindex archive member
  679. @cindex file name
  680. @cindex member name
  681. The files inside an archive are called @dfn{members}. Within this
  682. manual, we use the term @dfn{file} to refer only to files accessible in
  683. the normal ways (by @command{ls}, @command{cat}, and so forth), and the term
  684. @dfn{member} to refer only to the members of an archive. Similarly, a
  685. @dfn{file name} is the name of a file, as it resides in the filesystem,
  686. and a @dfn{member name} is the name of an archive member within the
  687. archive.
  688. @cindex extraction
  689. @cindex unpacking
  690. The term @dfn{extraction} refers to the process of copying an archive
  691. member (or multiple members) into a file in the filesystem. Extracting
  692. all the members of an archive is often called @dfn{extracting the
  693. archive}. The term @dfn{unpack} can also be used to refer to the
  694. extraction of many or all the members of an archive. Extracting an
  695. archive does not destroy the archive's structure, just as creating an
  696. archive does not destroy the copies of the files that exist outside of
  697. the archive. You may also @dfn{list} the members in a given archive
  698. (this is often thought of as ``printing'' them to the standard output,
  699. or the command line), or @dfn{append} members to a pre-existing archive.
  700. All of these operations can be performed using @command{tar}.
  701. @node What tar Does
  702. @section What @command{tar} Does
  703. @cindex tar
  704. The @command{tar} program provides the ability to create @command{tar}
  705. archives, as well as various other kinds of manipulation. For example,
  706. you can use @command{tar} on previously created archives to extract files,
  707. to store additional files, or to update or list files which were already
  708. stored.
  709. Initially, @command{tar} archives were used to store files conveniently on
  710. magnetic tape. The name @command{tar} comes from this use; it stands for
  711. @code{t}ape @code{ar}chiver. Despite the utility's name, @command{tar} can
  712. direct its output to available devices, files, or other programs (using
  713. pipes). @command{tar} may even access remote devices or files (as archives).
  714. @FIXME{the following table entries need a bit of work..}
  715. You can use @command{tar} archives in many ways. We want to stress a few
  716. of them: storage, backup, and transportation.
  717. @table @asis
  718. @item Storage
  719. Often, @command{tar} archives are used to store related files for
  720. convenient file transfer over a network. For example, the @sc{gnu} Project
  721. distributes its software bundled into @command{tar} archives, so that
  722. all the files relating to a particular program (or set of related
  723. programs) can be transferred as a single unit.
  724. A magnetic tape can store several files in sequence. However, the tape
  725. has no names for these files; it only knows their relative position on
  726. the tape. One way to store several files on one tape and retain their
  727. names is by creating a @command{tar} archive. Even when the basic transfer
  728. mechanism can keep track of names, as FTP can, the nuisance of handling
  729. multiple files, directories, and multiple links makes @command{tar}
  730. archives useful.
  731. Archive files are also used for long-term storage. You can think of
  732. this as transportation from the present into the future. (It is a
  733. science-fiction idiom that you can move through time as well as in
  734. space; the idea here is that @command{tar} can be used to move archives in
  735. all dimensions, even time!)
  736. @item Backup
  737. Because the archive created by @command{tar} is capable of preserving file
  738. information and directory structure, @command{tar} is commonly used for
  739. performing full and incremental backups of disks. A backup puts a
  740. collection of files (possibly pertaining to many users and
  741. projects) together on a disk or a tape. This guards against accidental
  742. destruction of the information in those files. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} has
  743. special features that allow it to be used to make incremental and full
  744. dumps of all the files in a filesystem.
  745. @item Transportation
  746. You can create an archive on one system, transfer it to another system,
  747. and extract the contents there. This allows you to transport a group of
  748. files from one system to another.
  749. @end table
  750. @node Naming tar Archives
  751. @section How @command{tar} Archives are Named
  752. Conventionally, @command{tar} archives are given names ending with
  753. @samp{.tar}. This is not necessary for @command{tar} to operate properly,
  754. but this manual follows that convention in order to accustom readers to
  755. it and to make examples more clear.
  756. @cindex tar file
  757. @cindex entry
  758. @cindex tar entry
  759. Often, people refer to @command{tar} archives as ``@command{tar} files,'' and
  760. archive members as ``files'' or ``entries''. For people familiar with
  761. the operation of @command{tar}, this causes no difficulty. However, in
  762. this manual, we consistently refer to ``archives'' and ``archive
  763. members'' to make learning to use @command{tar} easier for novice users.
  764. @node posix compliance
  765. @section @sc{posix} Compliance
  766. @noindent
  767. @FIXME{must ask franc,ois about this. dan hagerty thinks this might
  768. be an issue, but we're not really sure at this time. dan just tried a
  769. test case of mixing up options' orders while the variable was set, and
  770. there was no problem...}
  771. We make some of our recommendations throughout this book for one
  772. reason in addition to what we think of as ``good sense''. The main
  773. additional reason for a recommendation is to be compliant with the
  774. @sc{posix} standards. If you set the shell environment variable
  775. @env{POSIXLY_CORRECT}, @sc{gnu} @command{tar} will force you to adhere to
  776. these standards. Therefore, if this variable is set and you violate
  777. one of the @sc{posix} standards in the way you phrase a command, for
  778. example, @sc{gnu} @command{tar} will not allow the command and will signal an
  779. error message. You would then have to reorder the options or rephrase
  780. the command to comply with the @sc{posix} standards.
  781. There is a chance in the future that, if you set this environment
  782. variable, your archives will be forced to comply with @sc{posix} standards,
  783. also. No @sc{gnu} @command{tar} extensions will be allowed.
  784. @node Authors
  785. @section @sc{gnu} @command{tar} Authors
  786. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} was originally written by John Gilmore, and modified by
  787. many people. The @sc{gnu} enhancements were written by Jay Fenlason, then
  788. Joy Kendall, and the whole package has been further maintained by
  789. Thomas Bushnell, n/BSG, and finally Fran@,{c}ois Pinard, with
  790. the help of numerous and kind users.
  791. We wish to stress that @command{tar} is a collective work, and owes much to
  792. all those people who reported problems, offered solutions and other
  793. insights, or shared their thoughts and suggestions. An impressive, yet
  794. partial list of those contributors can be found in the @file{THANKS}
  795. file from the @sc{gnu} @command{tar} distribution.
  796. @FIXME{i want all of these names mentioned, Absolutely. BUT, i'm not
  797. sure i want to spell out the history in this detail, at least not for
  798. the printed book. i'm just not sure it needs to be said this way.
  799. i'll think about it.}
  800. @FIXME{History is more important, and surely more interesting, than
  801. actual names. Quoting names without history would be meaningless. FP}
  802. Jay Fenlason put together a draft of a @sc{gnu} @command{tar} manual,
  803. borrowing notes from the original man page from John Gilmore. This
  804. was withdrawn in version
  805. 1.11. Thomas Bushnell, n/BSG and Amy Gorin worked on a tutorial and
  806. manual for @sc{gnu} @command{tar}. Fran@,{c}ois Pinard put version 1.11.8
  807. of the manual together by taking information from all these sources
  808. and merging them. Melissa Weisshaus finally edited and redesigned the
  809. book to create version 1.12. @FIXME{update version number as
  810. necessary; i'm being optimistic!} @FIXME{Someone [maybe karl berry?
  811. maybe bob chassell? maybe melissa? maybe julie sussman?] needs to
  812. properly index the thing.}
  813. For version 1.12, Daniel Hagerty contributed a great deal of technical
  814. consulting. In particular, he is the primary author of @ref{Backups}.
  815. @node Reports
  816. @section Reporting bugs or suggestions
  817. @cindex bug reports
  818. @cindex reporting bugs
  819. If you find problems or have suggestions about this program or manual,
  820. please report them to @file{bug-tar@@gnu.org}.
  821. @node Tutorial
  822. @chapter Tutorial Introduction to @command{tar}
  823. This chapter guides you through some basic examples of three @command{tar}
  824. operations: @samp{--create}, @samp{--list}, and @samp{--extract}. If
  825. you already know how to use some other version of @command{tar}, then you
  826. may not need to read this chapter. This chapter omits most complicated
  827. details about how @command{tar} works.
  828. @menu
  829. * assumptions::
  830. * stylistic conventions::
  831. * basic tar options:: Basic @command{tar} Operations and Options
  832. * frequent operations::
  833. * Two Frequent Options::
  834. * create:: How to Create Archives
  835. * list:: How to List Archives
  836. * extract:: How to Extract Members from an Archive
  837. * going further::
  838. @end menu
  839. @node assumptions
  840. @section Assumptions this Tutorial Makes
  841. This chapter is paced to allow beginners to learn about @command{tar}
  842. slowly. At the same time, we will try to cover all the basic aspects of
  843. these three operations. In order to accomplish both of these tasks, we
  844. have made certain assumptions about your knowledge before reading this
  845. manual, and the hardware you will be using:
  846. @itemize @bullet
  847. @item
  848. Before you start to work through this tutorial, you should understand
  849. what the terms ``archive'' and ``archive member'' mean
  850. (@pxref{Definitions}). In addition, you should understand something
  851. about how Unix-type operating systems work, and you should know how to
  852. use some basic utilities. For example, you should know how to create,
  853. list, copy, rename, edit, and delete files and directories; how to
  854. change between directories; and how to figure out where you are in the
  855. filesystem. You should have some basic understanding of directory
  856. structure and how files are named according to which directory they are
  857. in. You should understand concepts such as standard output and standard
  858. input, what various definitions of the term ``argument'' mean, and the
  859. differences between relative and absolute path names. @FIXME{and what
  860. else?}
  861. @item
  862. This manual assumes that you are working from your own home directory
  863. (unless we state otherwise). In this tutorial, you will create a
  864. directory to practice @command{tar} commands in. When we show path names,
  865. we will assume that those paths are relative to your home directory.
  866. For example, my home directory path is @file{/home/fsf/melissa}. All of
  867. my examples are in a subdirectory of the directory named by that path
  868. name; the subdirectory is called @file{practice}.
  869. @item
  870. In general, we show examples of archives which exist on (or can be
  871. written to, or worked with from) a directory on a hard disk. In most
  872. cases, you could write those archives to, or work with them on any other
  873. device, such as a tape drive. However, some of the later examples in
  874. the tutorial and next chapter will not work on tape drives.
  875. Additionally, working with tapes is much more complicated than working
  876. with hard disks. For these reasons, the tutorial does not cover working
  877. with tape drives. @xref{Media}, for complete information on using
  878. @command{tar} archives with tape drives.
  879. @FIXME{this is a cop out. need to add some simple tape drive info.}
  880. @end itemize
  881. @node stylistic conventions
  882. @section Stylistic Conventions
  883. In the examples, @samp{$} represents a typical shell prompt. It
  884. precedes lines you should type; to make this more clear, those lines are
  885. shown in @kbd{this font}, as opposed to lines which represent the
  886. computer's response; those lines are shown in @code{this font}, or
  887. sometimes @samp{like this}. When we have lines which are too long to be
  888. displayed in any other way, we will show them like this:
  889. @smallexample
  890. This is an example of a line which would otherwise not fit in this space.
  891. @end smallexample
  892. @FIXME{how often do we use smallexample?}
  893. @node basic tar options
  894. @section Basic @command{tar} Operations and Options
  895. @command{tar} can take a wide variety of arguments which specify and define
  896. the actions it will have on the particular set of files or the archive.
  897. The main types of arguments to @command{tar} fall into one of two classes:
  898. operations, and options.
  899. Some arguments fall into a class called @dfn{operations}; exactly one of
  900. these is both allowed and required for any instance of using @command{tar};
  901. you may @emph{not} specify more than one. People sometimes speak of
  902. @dfn{operating modes}. You are in a particular operating mode when you
  903. have specified the operation which specifies it; there are eight
  904. operations in total, and thus there are eight operating modes.
  905. The other arguments fall into the class known as @dfn{options}. You are
  906. not required to specify any options, and you are allowed to specify more
  907. than one at a time (depending on the way you are using @command{tar} at
  908. that time). Some options are used so frequently, and are so useful for
  909. helping you type commands more carefully that they are effectively
  910. ``required''. We will discuss them in this chapter.
  911. You can write most of the @command{tar} operations and options in any of
  912. three forms: long (mnemonic) form, short form, and old style. Some of
  913. the operations and options have no short or ``old'' forms; however, the
  914. operations and options which we will cover in this tutorial have
  915. corresponding abbreviations. @FIXME{make sure this is still the case,
  916. at the end}We will indicate those abbreviations appropriately to get
  917. you used to seeing them. (Note that the ``old style'' option forms
  918. exist in @sc{gnu} @command{tar} for compatibility with Unix @command{tar}. We
  919. present a full discussion of this way of writing options and operations
  920. appears in @ref{Old Options}, and we discuss the other two styles of
  921. writing options in @ref{Mnemonic Options} and @ref{Short Options}.)
  922. In the examples and in the text of this tutorial, we usually use the
  923. long forms of operations and options; but the ``short'' forms produce
  924. the same result and can make typing long @command{tar} commands easier.
  925. For example, instead of typing
  926. @example
  927. @kbd{tar --create --verbose --file=afiles.tar apple angst aspic}
  928. @end example
  929. @noindent
  930. you can type
  931. @example
  932. @kbd{tar -c -v -f afiles.tar apple angst aspic}
  933. @end example
  934. @noindent
  935. or even
  936. @example
  937. @kbd{tar -cvf afiles.tar apple angst aspic}
  938. @end example
  939. @noindent
  940. For more information on option syntax, see @ref{Advanced tar}. In
  941. discussions in the text, when we name an option by its long form, we
  942. also give the corresponding short option in parentheses.
  943. The term, ``option'', can be confusing at times, since ``operations''
  944. are often lumped in with the actual, @emph{optional} ``options'' in certain
  945. general class statements. For example, we just talked about ``short and
  946. long forms of options and operations''. However, experienced @command{tar}
  947. users often refer to these by shorthand terms such as, ``short and long
  948. options''. This term assumes that the ``operations'' are included, also.
  949. Context will help you determine which definition of ``options'' to use.
  950. Similarly, the term ``command'' can be confusing, as it is often used in
  951. two different ways. People sometimes refer to @command{tar} ``commands''.
  952. A @command{tar} @dfn{command} is the entire command line of user input
  953. which tells @command{tar} what to do --- including the operation, options,
  954. and any arguments (file names, pipes, other commands, etc). However,
  955. you will also sometimes hear the term ``the @command{tar} command''. When
  956. the word ``command'' is used specifically like this, a person is usually
  957. referring to the @command{tar} @emph{operation}, not the whole line.
  958. Again, use context to figure out which of the meanings the speaker
  959. intends.
  960. @node frequent operations
  961. @section The Three Most Frequently Used Operations
  962. Here are the three most frequently used operations (both short and long
  963. forms), as well as a brief description of their meanings. The rest of
  964. this chapter will cover how to use these operations in detail. We will
  965. present the rest of the operations in the next chapter.
  966. @table @kbd
  967. @item --create
  968. @itemx -c
  969. Create a new @command{tar} archive.
  970. @item --list
  971. @itemx -t
  972. List the contents of an archive.
  973. @item --extract
  974. @itemx -x
  975. Extract one or more members from an archive.
  976. @end table
  977. @node Two Frequent Options
  978. @section Two Frequently Used Options
  979. To understand how to run @command{tar} in the three operating modes listed
  980. previously, you also need to understand how to use two of the options to
  981. @command{tar}: @samp{--file} (which takes an archive file as an argument)
  982. and @samp{--verbose}. (You are usually not @emph{required} to specify
  983. either of these options when you run @command{tar}, but they can be very
  984. useful in making things more clear and helping you avoid errors.)
  985. @menu
  986. * file tutorial::
  987. * verbose tutorial::
  988. * help tutorial::
  989. @end menu
  990. @node file tutorial
  991. @unnumberedsubsec The @samp{--file} Option
  992. @table @kbd
  993. @item --file=@var{archive-name}
  994. @itemx -f @var{archive-name}
  995. Specify the name of an archive file.
  996. @end table
  997. You can specify an argument for the @value{op-file} option whenever you
  998. use @command{tar}; this option determines the name of the archive file
  999. that @command{tar} will work on.
  1000. If you don't specify this argument, then @command{tar} will use a
  1001. default, usually some physical tape drive attached to your machine.
  1002. If there is no tape drive attached, or the default is not meaningful,
  1003. then @command{tar} will print an error message. The error message might
  1004. look roughly like one of the following:
  1005. @example
  1006. tar: can't open /dev/rmt8 : No such device or address
  1007. tar: can't open /dev/rsmt0 : I/O error
  1008. @end example
  1009. @noindent
  1010. To avoid confusion, we recommend that you always specify an archive file
  1011. name by using @value{op-file} when writing your @command{tar} commands.
  1012. For more information on using the @value{op-file} option, see
  1013. @ref{file}.
  1014. @node verbose tutorial
  1015. @unnumberedsubsec The @samp{--verbose} Option
  1016. @table @kbd
  1017. @item --verbose
  1018. @itemx -v
  1019. Show the files being worked on as @command{tar} is running.
  1020. @end table
  1021. @value{op-verbose} shows details about the results of running
  1022. @command{tar}. This can be especially useful when the results might not be
  1023. obvious. For example, if you want to see the progress of @command{tar} as
  1024. it writes files into the archive, you can use the @samp{--verbose}
  1025. option. In the beginning, you may find it useful to use
  1026. @samp{--verbose} at all times; when you are more accustomed to
  1027. @command{tar}, you will likely want to use it at certain times but not at
  1028. others. We will use @samp{--verbose} at times to help make something
  1029. clear, and we will give many examples both using and not using
  1030. @samp{--verbose} to show the differences.
  1031. Sometimes, a single instance of @samp{--verbose} on the command line
  1032. will show a full, @samp{ls} style listing of an archive or files,
  1033. giving sizes, owners, and similar information. Other times,
  1034. @samp{--verbose} will only show files or members that the particular
  1035. operation is operating on at the time. In the latter case, you can
  1036. use @samp{--verbose} twice in a command to get a listing such as that
  1037. in the former case. For example, instead of saying
  1038. @example
  1039. @kbd{tar -cvf afiles.tar apple angst aspic}
  1040. @end example
  1041. @noindent
  1042. above, you might say
  1043. @example
  1044. @kbd{tar -cvvf afiles.tar apple angst aspic}
  1045. @end example
  1046. @noindent
  1047. This works equally well using short or long forms of options. Using
  1048. long forms, you would simply write out the mnemonic form of the option
  1049. twice, like this:
  1050. @example
  1051. $ @kbd{tar --create --verbose --verbose @dots{}}
  1052. @end example
  1053. @noindent
  1054. Note that you must double the hyphens properly each time.
  1055. Later in the tutorial, we will give examples using @w{@samp{--verbose
  1056. --verbose}}.
  1057. @node help tutorial
  1058. @unnumberedsubsec Getting Help: Using the @code{--help} Option
  1059. @table @kbd
  1060. @item --help
  1061. The @samp{--help} option to @command{tar} prints out a very brief list of
  1062. all operations and option available for the current version of
  1063. @command{tar} available on your system.
  1064. @end table
  1065. @node create
  1066. @section How to Create Archives
  1067. @UNREVISED
  1068. One of the basic operations of @command{tar} is @value{op-create}, which
  1069. you use to create a @command{tar} archive. We will explain
  1070. @samp{--create} first because, in order to learn about the other
  1071. operations, you will find it useful to have an archive available to
  1072. practice on.
  1073. To make this easier, in this section you will first create a directory
  1074. containing three files. Then, we will show you how to create an
  1075. @emph{archive} (inside the new directory). Both the directory, and
  1076. the archive are specifically for you to practice on. The rest of this
  1077. chapter and the next chapter will show many examples using this
  1078. directory and the files you will create: some of those files may be
  1079. other directories and other archives.
  1080. The three files you will archive in this example are called
  1081. @file{blues}, @file{folk}, and @file{jazz}. The archive is called
  1082. @file{collection.tar}.
  1083. This section will proceed slowly, detailing how to use @samp{--create}
  1084. in @code{verbose} mode, and showing examples using both short and long
  1085. forms. In the rest of the tutorial, and in the examples in the next
  1086. chapter, we will proceed at a slightly quicker pace. This section
  1087. moves more slowly to allow beginning users to understand how
  1088. @command{tar} works.
  1089. @menu
  1090. * prepare for examples::
  1091. * Creating the archive::
  1092. * create verbose::
  1093. * short create::
  1094. * create dir::
  1095. @end menu
  1096. @node prepare for examples
  1097. @subsection Preparing a Practice Directory for Examples
  1098. To follow along with this and future examples, create a new directory
  1099. called @file{practice} containing files called @file{blues}, @file{folk}
  1100. and @file{jazz}. The files can contain any information you like:
  1101. ideally, they should contain information which relates to their names,
  1102. and be of different lengths. Our examples assume that @file{practice}
  1103. is a subdirectory of your home directory.
  1104. Now @command{cd} to the directory named @file{practice}; @file{practice}
  1105. is now your @dfn{working directory}. (@emph{Please note}: Although
  1106. the full path name of this directory is
  1107. @file{/@var{homedir}/practice}, in our examples we will refer to
  1108. this directory as @file{practice}; the @var{homedir} is presumed.
  1109. In general, you should check that the files to be archived exist where
  1110. you think they do (in the working directory) by running @command{ls}.
  1111. Because you just created the directory and the files and have changed to
  1112. that directory, you probably don't need to do that this time.
  1113. It is very important to make sure there isn't already a file in the
  1114. working directory with the archive name you intend to use (in this case,
  1115. @samp{collection.tar}), or that you don't care about its contents.
  1116. Whenever you use @samp{create}, @command{tar} will erase the current
  1117. contents of the file named by @value{op-file} if it exists. @command{tar}
  1118. will not tell you if you are about to overwrite an archive unless you
  1119. specify an option which does this. @FIXME{xref to the node for
  1120. --backup!}To add files to an existing archive, you need to use a
  1121. different option, such as @value{op-append}; see @ref{append} for
  1122. information on how to do this.
  1123. @node Creating the archive
  1124. @subsection Creating the Archive
  1125. To place the files @file{blues}, @file{folk}, and @file{jazz} into an
  1126. archive named @file{collection.tar}, use the following command:
  1127. @example
  1128. $ @kbd{tar --create --file=collection.tar blues folk jazz}
  1129. @end example
  1130. The order of the arguments is not very important, @emph{when using long
  1131. option forms}. You could also say:
  1132. @example
  1133. $ @kbd{tar blues --create folk --file=collection.tar jazz}
  1134. @end example
  1135. @noindent
  1136. However, you can see that this order is harder to understand; this is
  1137. why we will list the arguments in the order that makes the commands
  1138. easiest to understand (and we encourage you to do the same when you use
  1139. @command{tar}, to avoid errors).
  1140. Note that the part of the command which says,
  1141. @w{@kbd{--file=collection.tar}} is considered to be @emph{one} argument.
  1142. If you substituted any other string of characters for
  1143. @kbd{collection.tar}, then that string would become the name of the
  1144. archive file you create.
  1145. The order of the options becomes more important when you begin to use
  1146. short forms. With short forms, if you type commands in the wrong order
  1147. (even if you type them correctly in all other ways), you may end up with
  1148. results you don't expect. For this reason, it is a good idea to get
  1149. into the habit of typing options in the order that makes inherent sense.
  1150. @xref{short create}, for more information on this.
  1151. In this example, you type the command as shown above: @samp{--create}
  1152. is the operation which creates the new archive
  1153. (@file{collection.tar}), and @samp{--file} is the option which lets
  1154. you give it the name you chose. The files, @file{blues}, @file{folk},
  1155. and @file{jazz}, are now members of the archive, @file{collection.tar}
  1156. (they are @dfn{file name arguments} to the @samp{--create} operation).
  1157. @FIXME{xref here to the discussion of file name args?}Now that they are
  1158. in the archive, they are called @emph{archive members}, not files.
  1159. @FIXME{xref to definitions?}
  1160. When you create an archive, you @emph{must} specify which files you want
  1161. placed in the archive. If you do not specify any archive members, @sc{gnu}
  1162. @command{tar} will complain.
  1163. If you now list the contents of the working directory (@kbd{ls}), you will
  1164. find the archive file listed as well as the files you saw previously:
  1165. @example
  1166. blues folk jazz collection.tar
  1167. @end example
  1168. @noindent
  1169. Creating the archive @samp{collection.tar} did not destroy the copies of
  1170. the files in the directory.
  1171. Keep in mind that if you don't indicate an operation, @command{tar} will not
  1172. run and will prompt you for one. If you don't name any files, @command{tar}
  1173. will complain. You must have write access to the working directory,
  1174. or else you will not be able to create an archive in that directory.
  1175. @emph{Caution}: Do not attempt to use @value{op-create} to add files to
  1176. an existing archive; it will delete the archive and write a new one.
  1177. Use @value{op-append} instead. @xref{append}.
  1178. @node create verbose
  1179. @subsection Running @samp{--create} with @samp{--verbose}
  1180. If you include the @value{op-verbose} option on the command line,
  1181. @command{tar} will list the files it is acting on as it is working. In
  1182. verbose mode, the @code{create} example above would appear as:
  1183. @example
  1184. $ @kbd{tar --create --verbose --file=collection.tar blues folk jazz}
  1185. blues
  1186. folk
  1187. jazz
  1188. @end example
  1189. This example is just like the example we showed which did not use
  1190. @samp{--verbose}, except that @command{tar} generated the remaining lines
  1191. @iftex
  1192. (note the different font styles).
  1193. @end iftex
  1194. @ifinfo
  1195. .
  1196. @end ifinfo
  1197. In the rest of the examples in this chapter, we will frequently use
  1198. @code{verbose} mode so we can show actions or @command{tar} responses that
  1199. you would otherwise not see, and which are important for you to
  1200. understand.
  1201. @node short create
  1202. @subsection Short Forms with @samp{create}
  1203. As we said before, the @value{op-create} operation is one of the most
  1204. basic uses of @command{tar}, and you will use it countless times.
  1205. Eventually, you will probably want to use abbreviated (or ``short'')
  1206. forms of options. A full discussion of the three different forms that
  1207. options can take appears in @ref{Styles}; for now, here is what the
  1208. previous example (including the @value{op-verbose} option) looks like
  1209. using short option forms:
  1210. @example
  1211. $ @kbd{tar -cvf collection.tar blues folk jazz}
  1212. blues
  1213. folk
  1214. jazz
  1215. @end example
  1216. @noindent
  1217. As you can see, the system responds the same no matter whether you use
  1218. long or short option forms.
  1219. @FIXME{i don't like how this is worded:} One difference between using
  1220. short and long option forms is that, although the exact placement of
  1221. arguments following options is no more specific when using short forms,
  1222. it is easier to become confused and make a mistake when using short
  1223. forms. For example, suppose you attempted the above example in the
  1224. following way:
  1225. @example
  1226. $ @kbd{tar -cfv collection.tar blues folk jazz}
  1227. @end example
  1228. @noindent
  1229. In this case, @command{tar} will make an archive file called @file{v},
  1230. containing the files @file{blues}, @file{folk}, and @file{jazz}, because
  1231. the @samp{v} is the closest ``file name'' to the @samp{-f} option, and
  1232. is thus taken to be the chosen archive file name. @command{tar} will try
  1233. to add a file called @file{collection.tar} to the @file{v} archive file;
  1234. if the file @file{collection.tar} did not already exist, @command{tar} will
  1235. report an error indicating that this file does not exist. If the file
  1236. @file{collection.tar} does already exist (e.g., from a previous command
  1237. you may have run), then @command{tar} will add this file to the archive.
  1238. Because the @samp{-v} option did not get registered, @command{tar} will not
  1239. run under @samp{verbose} mode, and will not report its progress.
  1240. The end result is that you may be quite confused about what happened,
  1241. and possibly overwrite a file. To illustrate this further, we will show
  1242. you how an example we showed previously would look using short forms.
  1243. This example,
  1244. @example
  1245. $ @kbd{tar blues --create folk --file=collection.tar jazz}
  1246. @end example
  1247. @noindent
  1248. is confusing as it is. When shown using short forms, however, it
  1249. becomes much more so:
  1250. @example
  1251. $ @kbd{tar blues -c folk -f collection.tar jazz}
  1252. @end example
  1253. @noindent
  1254. It would be very easy to put the wrong string of characters
  1255. immediately following the @samp{-f}, but doing that could sacrifice
  1256. valuable data.
  1257. For this reason, we recommend that you pay very careful attention to
  1258. the order of options and placement of file and archive names,
  1259. especially when using short option forms. Not having the option name
  1260. written out mnemonically can affect how well you remember which option
  1261. does what, and therefore where different names have to be placed.
  1262. (Placing options in an unusual order can also cause @command{tar} to
  1263. report an error if you have set the shell environment variable
  1264. @env{POSIXLY_CORRECT}; @pxref{posix compliance} for more information
  1265. on this.)
  1266. @node create dir
  1267. @subsection Archiving Directories
  1268. @cindex Archiving Directories
  1269. @cindex Directories, Archiving
  1270. You can archive a directory by specifying its directory name as a
  1271. file name argument to @command{tar}. The files in the directory will be
  1272. archived relative to the working directory, and the directory will be
  1273. re-created along with its contents when the archive is extracted.
  1274. To archive a directory, first move to its superior directory. If you
  1275. have followed the previous instructions in this tutorial, you should
  1276. type:
  1277. @example
  1278. $ @kbd{cd ..}
  1279. $
  1280. @end example
  1281. @noindent
  1282. This will put you into the directory which contains @file{practice},
  1283. i.e. your home directory. Once in the superior directory, you can
  1284. specify the subdirectory, @file{practice}, as a file name argument. To
  1285. store @file{practice} in the new archive file @file{music.tar}, type:
  1286. @example
  1287. $ @kbd{tar --create --verbose --file=music.tar practice}
  1288. @end example
  1289. @noindent
  1290. @command{tar} should output:
  1291. @example
  1292. practice/
  1293. practice/blues
  1294. practice/folk
  1295. practice/jazz
  1296. practice/collection.tar
  1297. @end example
  1298. Note that the archive thus created is not in the subdirectory
  1299. @file{practice}, but rather in the current working directory---the
  1300. directory from which @command{tar} was invoked. Before trying to archive a
  1301. directory from its superior directory, you should make sure you have
  1302. write access to the superior directory itself, not only the directory
  1303. you are trying archive with @command{tar}. For example, you will probably
  1304. not be able to store your home directory in an archive by invoking
  1305. @command{tar} from the root directory; @value{xref-absolute-names}. (Note
  1306. also that @file{collection.tar}, the original archive file, has itself
  1307. been archived. @command{tar} will accept any file as a file to be
  1308. archived, regardless of its content. When @file{music.tar} is
  1309. extracted, the archive file @file{collection.tar} will be re-written
  1310. into the file system).
  1311. If you give @command{tar} a command such as
  1312. @example
  1313. $ @kbd{tar --create --file=foo.tar .}
  1314. @end example
  1315. @noindent
  1316. @command{tar} will report @samp{tar: ./foo.tar is the archive; not dumped}.
  1317. This happens because @command{tar} creates the archive @file{foo.tar} in
  1318. the current directory before putting any files into it. Then, when
  1319. @command{tar} attempts to add all the files in the directory @file{.} to
  1320. the archive, it notices that the file @file{./foo.tar} is the same as the
  1321. archive @file{foo.tar}, and skips it. (It makes no sense to put an archive
  1322. into itself.) @sc{gnu} @command{tar} will continue in this case, and create the
  1323. archive normally, except for the exclusion of that one file.
  1324. (@emph{Please note:} Other versions of @command{tar} are not so clever;
  1325. they will enter an infinite loop when this happens, so you should not
  1326. depend on this behavior unless you are certain you are running @sc{gnu}
  1327. @command{tar}.) @FIXME{bob doesn't like this sentence, since he does it
  1328. all the time, and we've been doing it in the editing passes for this
  1329. manual: In general, make sure that the archive is not inside a
  1330. directory being dumped.}
  1331. @node list
  1332. @section How to List Archives
  1333. Frequently, you will find yourself wanting to determine exactly what a
  1334. particular archive contains. You can use the @value{op-list} operation
  1335. to get the member names as they currently appear in the archive, as well
  1336. as various attributes of the files at the time they were archived. For
  1337. example, you can examine the archive @file{collection.tar} that you
  1338. created in the last section with the command,
  1339. @example
  1340. $ @kbd{tar --list --file=collection.tar}
  1341. @end example
  1342. @noindent
  1343. The output of @command{tar} would then be:
  1344. @example
  1345. blues
  1346. folk
  1347. jazz
  1348. @end example
  1349. @FIXME{we hope this will change. if it doesn't, need to show the
  1350. creation of bfiles somewhere above!!! : }
  1351. @noindent
  1352. The archive @file{bfiles.tar} would list as follows:
  1353. @example
  1354. ./birds
  1355. baboon
  1356. ./box
  1357. @end example
  1358. @noindent
  1359. Be sure to use a @value{op-file} option just as with @value{op-create}
  1360. to specify the name of the archive.
  1361. If you use the @value{op-verbose} option with @samp{--list}, then
  1362. @command{tar} will print out a listing reminiscent of @w{@samp{ls -l}},
  1363. showing owner, file size, and so forth.
  1364. If you had used @value{op-verbose} mode, the example above would look
  1365. like:
  1366. @example
  1367. $ @kbd{tar --list --verbose --file=collection.tar folk}
  1368. -rw-rw-rw- myself user 62 1990-05-23 10:55 folk
  1369. @end example
  1370. @cindex File name arguments, using @code{--list} with
  1371. @cindex @code{--list} with file name arguments
  1372. You can specify one or more individual member names as arguments when
  1373. using @samp{list}. In this case, @command{tar} will only list the
  1374. names of members you identify. For example, @w{@kbd{tar --list
  1375. --file=afiles.tar apple}} would only print @file{apple}.
  1376. @FIXME{we hope the relevant aspects of this will change:}Because
  1377. @command{tar} preserves paths, file names must be specified as they appear
  1378. in the archive (ie., relative to the directory from which the archive
  1379. was created). Therefore, it is essential when specifying member names
  1380. to @command{tar} that you give the exact member names. For example,
  1381. @w{@kbd{tar --list --file=bfiles birds}} would produce an error message
  1382. something like @samp{tar: birds: Not found in archive}, because there is
  1383. no member named @file{birds}, only one named @file{./birds}. While the
  1384. names @file{birds} and @file{./birds} name the same file, @emph{member}
  1385. names are compared using a simplistic name comparison, in which an exact
  1386. match is necessary. @xref{absolute}.
  1387. However, @w{@kbd{tar --list --file=collection.tar folk}} would respond
  1388. with @file{folk}, because @file{folk} is in the archive file
  1389. @file{collection.tar}. If you are not sure of the exact file name, try
  1390. listing all the files in the archive and searching for the one you
  1391. expect to find; remember that if you use @samp{--list} with no file
  1392. names as arguments, @command{tar} will print the names of all the members
  1393. stored in the specified archive.
  1394. @menu
  1395. * list dir::
  1396. @end menu
  1397. @node list dir
  1398. @unnumberedsubsec Listing the Contents of a Stored Directory
  1399. @UNREVISED
  1400. @FIXME{i changed the order of these nodes around and haven't had a
  1401. chance to play around with this node's example, yet. i have to play
  1402. with it and see what it actually does for my own satisfaction, even if
  1403. what it says *is* correct..}
  1404. To get information about the contents of an archived directory,
  1405. use the directory name as a file name argument in conjunction with
  1406. @value{op-list}. To find out file attributes, include the
  1407. @value{op-verbose} option.
  1408. For example, to find out about files in the directory @file{practice}, in
  1409. the archive file @file{music.tar}, type:
  1410. @example
  1411. $ @kbd{tar --list --verbose --file=music.tar practice}
  1412. @end example
  1413. @command{tar} responds:
  1414. @example
  1415. drwxrwxrwx myself user 0 1990-05-31 21:49 practice/
  1416. -rw-rw-rw- myself user 42 1990-05-21 13:29 practice/blues
  1417. -rw-rw-rw- myself user 62 1990-05-23 10:55 practice/folk
  1418. -rw-rw-rw- myself user 40 1990-05-21 13:30 practice/jazz
  1419. -rw-rw-rw- myself user 10240 1990-05-31 21:49 practice/collection.tar
  1420. @end example
  1421. When you use a directory name as a file name argument, @command{tar} acts on
  1422. all the files (including sub-directories) in that directory.
  1423. @node extract
  1424. @section How to Extract Members from an Archive
  1425. @UNREVISED
  1426. @cindex Extraction
  1427. @cindex Retrieving files from an archive
  1428. @cindex Resurrecting files from an archive
  1429. Creating an archive is only half the job---there is no point in storing
  1430. files in an archive if you can't retrieve them. The act of retrieving
  1431. members from an archive so they can be used and manipulated as
  1432. unarchived files again is called @dfn{extraction}. To extract files
  1433. from an archive, use the @value{op-extract} operation. As with
  1434. @value{op-create}, specify the name of the archive with @value{op-file}.
  1435. Extracting an archive does not modify the archive in any way; you can
  1436. extract it multiple times if you want or need to.
  1437. Using @samp{--extract}, you can extract an entire archive, or specific
  1438. files. The files can be directories containing other files, or not. As
  1439. with @value{op-create} and @value{op-list}, you may use the short or the
  1440. long form of the operation without affecting the performance.
  1441. @menu
  1442. * extracting archives::
  1443. * extracting files::
  1444. * extract dir::
  1445. * failing commands::
  1446. @end menu
  1447. @node extracting archives
  1448. @subsection Extracting an Entire Archive
  1449. To extract an entire archive, specify the archive file name only, with
  1450. no individual file names as arguments. For example,
  1451. @example
  1452. $ @kbd{tar -xvf collection.tar}
  1453. @end example
  1454. @noindent
  1455. produces this:
  1456. @example
  1457. -rw-rw-rw- me user 28 1996-10-18 16:31 jazz
  1458. -rw-rw-rw- me user 21 1996-09-23 16:44 blues
  1459. -rw-rw-rw- me user 20 1996-09-23 16:44 folk
  1460. @end example
  1461. @node extracting files
  1462. @subsection Extracting Specific Files
  1463. To extract specific archive members, give their exact member names as
  1464. arguments, as printed by @value{op-list}. If you had mistakenly deleted
  1465. one of the files you had placed in the archive @file{collection.tar}
  1466. earlier (say, @file{blues}), you can extract it from the archive without
  1467. changing the archive's structure. It will be identical to the original
  1468. file @file{blues} that you deleted. @FIXME{check this; will the times,
  1469. permissions, owner, etc be the same, also?}
  1470. First, make sure you are in the @file{practice} directory, and list the
  1471. files in the directory. Now, delete the file, @samp{blues}, and list
  1472. the files in the directory again.
  1473. You can now extract the member @file{blues} from the archive file
  1474. @file{collection.tar} like this:
  1475. @example
  1476. $ @kbd{tar --extract --file=collection.tar blues}
  1477. @end example
  1478. @noindent
  1479. If you list the files in the directory again, you will see that the file
  1480. @file{blues} has been restored, with its original permissions, creation
  1481. times, and owner.@FIXME{This is only accidentally true, but not in
  1482. general. In most cases, one has to be root for restoring the owner, and
  1483. use a special option for restoring permissions. Here, it just happens
  1484. that the restoring user is also the owner of the archived members, and
  1485. that the current @code{umask} is compatible with original permissions.}
  1486. (These parameters will be identical to those which
  1487. the file had when you originally placed it in the archive; any changes
  1488. you may have made before deleting the file from the file system,
  1489. however, will @emph{not} have been made to the archive member.) The
  1490. archive file, @samp{collection.tar}, is the same as it was before you
  1491. extracted @samp{blues}. You can confirm this by running @command{tar} with
  1492. @value{op-list}.
  1493. @FIXME{we hope this will change:}Remember that as with other operations,
  1494. specifying the exact member name is important. @w{@kbd{tar --extract
  1495. --file=bfiles.tar birds}} will fail, because there is no member named
  1496. @file{birds}. To extract the member named @file{./birds}, you must
  1497. specify @w{@kbd{tar --extract --file=bfiles.tar ./birds}}. To find the
  1498. exact member names of the members of an archive, use @value{op-list}
  1499. (@pxref{list}).
  1500. You can extract a file to standard output by combining the above options
  1501. with the @option{--to-stdout} option (@pxref{Writing to Standard
  1502. Output}).
  1503. If you give the @value{op-verbose} option, then @value{op-extract} will
  1504. print the names of the archive members as it extracts them.
  1505. @node extract dir
  1506. @subsection Extracting Files that are Directories
  1507. Extracting directories which are members of an archive is similar to
  1508. extracting other files. The main difference to be aware of is that if
  1509. the extracted directory has the same name as any directory already in
  1510. the working directory, then files in the extracted directory will be
  1511. placed into the directory of the same name. Likewise, if there are
  1512. files in the pre-existing directory with the same names as the members
  1513. which you extract, the files from the extracted archive will replace
  1514. the files already in the working directory (and possible
  1515. subdirectories). This will happen regardless of whether or not the
  1516. files in the working directory were more recent than those extracted.
  1517. However, if a file was stored with a directory name as part of its file
  1518. name, and that directory does not exist under the working directory when
  1519. the file is extracted, @command{tar} will create the directory.
  1520. We can demonstrate how to use @samp{--extract} to extract a directory
  1521. file with an example. Change to the @file{practice} directory if you
  1522. weren't there, and remove the files @file{folk} and @file{jazz}. Then,
  1523. go back to the parent directory and extract the archive
  1524. @file{music.tar}. You may either extract the entire archive, or you may
  1525. extract only the files you just deleted. To extract the entire archive,
  1526. don't give any file names as arguments after the archive name
  1527. @file{music.tar}. To extract only the files you deleted, use the
  1528. following command:
  1529. @example
  1530. $ @kbd{tar -xvf music.tar practice/folk practice/jazz}
  1531. @end example
  1532. @FIXME{need to show tar's response; used verbose above. also, here's a
  1533. good place to demonstrate the -v -v thing. have to write that up
  1534. (should be trivial, but i'm too tired!).}
  1535. @noindent
  1536. Because you created the directory with @file{practice} as part of the
  1537. file names of each of the files by archiving the @file{practice}
  1538. directory as @file{practice}, you must give @file{practice} as part
  1539. of the file names when you extract those files from the archive.
  1540. @FIXME{IMPORTANT! show the final structure, here. figure out what it
  1541. will be.}
  1542. @node failing commands
  1543. @subsection Commands That Will Fail
  1544. Here are some sample commands you might try which will not work, and why
  1545. they won't work.
  1546. If you try to use this command,
  1547. @example
  1548. $ @kbd{tar -xvf music.tar folk jazz}
  1549. @end example
  1550. @noindent
  1551. you will get the following response:
  1552. @example
  1553. tar: folk: Not found in archive
  1554. tar: jazz: Not found in archive
  1555. $
  1556. @end example
  1557. @noindent
  1558. This is because these files were not originally @emph{in} the parent
  1559. directory @file{..}, where the archive is located; they were in the
  1560. @file{practice} directory, and their file names reflect this:
  1561. @example
  1562. $ @kbd{tar -tvf music.tar}
  1563. practice/folk
  1564. practice/jazz
  1565. practice/rock
  1566. @end example
  1567. @FIXME{make sure the above works when going through the examples in
  1568. order...}
  1569. @noindent
  1570. Likewise, if you try to use this command,
  1571. @example
  1572. $ @kbd{tar -tvf music.tar folk jazz}
  1573. @end example
  1574. @noindent
  1575. you would get a similar response. Members with those names are not in the
  1576. archive. You must use the correct member names in order to extract the
  1577. files from the archive.
  1578. If you have forgotten the correct names of the files in the archive,
  1579. use @w{@kbd{tar --list --verbose}} to list them correctly.
  1580. @FIXME{more examples, here? hag thinks it's a good idea.}
  1581. @node going further
  1582. @section Going Further Ahead in this Manual
  1583. @FIXME{need to write up a node here about the things that are going to
  1584. be in the rest of the manual.}
  1585. @node tar invocation
  1586. @chapter Invoking @sc{gnu} @command{tar}
  1587. @UNREVISED
  1588. This chapter is about how one invokes the @sc{gnu} @command{tar} command, from
  1589. the command synopsis (@pxref{Synopsis}). There are numerous options,
  1590. and many styles for writing them. One mandatory option specifies
  1591. the operation @command{tar} should perform (@pxref{Operation Summary}),
  1592. other options are meant to detail how this operation should be performed
  1593. (@pxref{Option Summary}). Non-option arguments are not always interpreted
  1594. the same way, depending on what the operation is.
  1595. You will find in this chapter everything about option styles and rules for
  1596. writing them (@pxref{Styles}). On the other hand, operations and options
  1597. are fully described elsewhere, in other chapters. Here, you will find
  1598. only synthetic descriptions for operations and options, together with
  1599. pointers to other parts of the @command{tar} manual.
  1600. Some options are so special they are fully described right in this
  1601. chapter. They have the effect of inhibiting the normal operation of
  1602. @command{tar} or else, they globally alter the amount of feedback the user
  1603. receives about what is going on. These are the @value{op-help} and
  1604. @value{op-version} (@pxref{help}), @value{op-verbose} (@pxref{verbose})
  1605. and @value{op-interactive} options (@pxref{interactive}).
  1606. @menu
  1607. * Synopsis::
  1608. * using tar options::
  1609. * Styles::
  1610. * All Options::
  1611. * help::
  1612. * verbose::
  1613. * interactive::
  1614. @end menu
  1615. @node Synopsis
  1616. @section General Synopsis of @command{tar}
  1617. The @sc{gnu} @command{tar} program is invoked as either one of:
  1618. @example
  1619. @kbd{tar @var{option}@dots{} [@var{name}]@dots{}}
  1620. @kbd{tar @var{letter}@dots{} [@var{argument}]@dots{} [@var{option}]@dots{} [@var{name}]@dots{}}
  1621. @end example
  1622. The second form is for when old options are being used.
  1623. You can use @command{tar} to store files in an archive, to extract them from
  1624. an archive, and to do other types of archive manipulation. The primary
  1625. argument to @command{tar}, which is called the @dfn{operation}, specifies
  1626. which action to take. The other arguments to @command{tar} are either
  1627. @dfn{options}, which change the way @command{tar} performs an operation,
  1628. or file names or archive members, which specify the files or members
  1629. @command{tar} is to act on.
  1630. You can actually type in arguments in any order, even if in this manual
  1631. the options always precede the other arguments, to make examples easier
  1632. to understand. Further, the option stating the main operation mode
  1633. (the @command{tar} main command) is usually given first.
  1634. Each @var{name} in the synopsis above is interpreted as an archive member
  1635. name when the main command is one of @value{op-compare}, @value{op-delete},
  1636. @value{op-extract}, @value{op-list} or @value{op-update}. When naming
  1637. archive members, you must give the exact name of the member in the
  1638. archive, as it is printed by @value{op-list}. For @value{op-append}
  1639. and @value{op-create}, these @var{name} arguments specify the names
  1640. of either files or directory hierarchies to place in the archive.
  1641. These files or hierarchies should already exist in the file system,
  1642. prior to the execution of the @command{tar} command.
  1643. @command{tar} interprets relative file names as being relative to the
  1644. working directory. @command{tar} will make all file names relative
  1645. (by removing leading slashes when archiving or restoring files),
  1646. unless you specify otherwise (using the @value{op-absolute-names}
  1647. option). @value{xref-absolute-names}, for more information about
  1648. @value{op-absolute-names}.
  1649. If you give the name of a directory as either a file name or a member
  1650. name, then @command{tar} acts recursively on all the files and directories
  1651. beneath that directory. For example, the name @file{/} identifies all
  1652. the files in the filesystem to @command{tar}.
  1653. The distinction between file names and archive member names is especially
  1654. important when shell globbing is used, and sometimes a source of confusion
  1655. for newcomers. @xref{Wildcards}, for more information about globbing.
  1656. The problem is that shells may only glob using existing files in the
  1657. file system. Only @command{tar} itself may glob on archive members, so when
  1658. needed, you must ensure that wildcard characters reach @command{tar} without
  1659. being interpreted by the shell first. Using a backslash before @samp{*}
  1660. or @samp{?}, or putting the whole argument between quotes, is usually
  1661. sufficient for this.
  1662. Even if @var{name}s are often specified on the command line, they
  1663. can also be read from a text file in the file system, using the
  1664. @value{op-files-from} option.
  1665. If you don't use any file name arguments, @value{op-append},
  1666. @value{op-delete} and @value{op-concatenate} will do nothing, while
  1667. @value{op-create} will usually yield a diagnostic and inhibit @command{tar}
  1668. execution. The other operations of @command{tar} (@value{op-list},
  1669. @value{op-extract}, @value{op-compare}, and @value{op-update}) will act
  1670. on the entire contents of the archive.
  1671. @cindex exit status
  1672. @cindex return status
  1673. Besides successful exits, @sc{gnu} @command{tar} may fail for many reasons.
  1674. Some reasons correspond to bad usage, that is, when the @command{tar}
  1675. command is improperly written.
  1676. Errors may be encountered later, while encountering an error
  1677. processing the archive or the files. Some errors are recoverable,
  1678. in which case the failure is delayed until @command{tar} has completed
  1679. all its work. Some errors are such that it would not meaningful,
  1680. or at least risky, to continue processing: @command{tar} then aborts
  1681. processing immediately. All abnormal exits, whether immediate or
  1682. delayed, should always be clearly diagnosed on @code{stderr}, after
  1683. a line stating the nature of the error.
  1684. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} returns only a few exit statuses. I'm really
  1685. aiming simplicity in that area, for now. If you are not using the
  1686. @value{op-compare} option, zero means that everything went well, besides
  1687. maybe innocuous warnings. Nonzero means that something went wrong.
  1688. Right now, as of today, ``nonzero'' is almost always 2, except for
  1689. remote operations, where it may be 128.
  1690. @node using tar options
  1691. @section Using @command{tar} Options
  1692. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} has a total of eight operating modes which allow you to
  1693. perform a variety of tasks. You are required to choose one operating
  1694. mode each time you employ the @command{tar} program by specifying one, and
  1695. only one operation as an argument to the @command{tar} command (two lists
  1696. of four operations each may be found at @ref{frequent operations} and
  1697. @ref{Operations}). Depending on circumstances, you may also wish to
  1698. customize how the chosen operating mode behaves. For example, you may
  1699. wish to change the way the output looks, or the format of the files that
  1700. you wish to archive may require you to do something special in order to
  1701. make the archive look right.
  1702. You can customize and control @command{tar}'s performance by running
  1703. @command{tar} with one or more options (such as @value{op-verbose}, which
  1704. we used in the tutorial). As we said in the tutorial, @dfn{options} are
  1705. arguments to @command{tar} which are (as their name suggests) optional.
  1706. Depending on the operating mode, you may specify one or more options.
  1707. Different options will have different effects, but in general they all
  1708. change details of the operation, such as archive format, archive name,
  1709. or level of user interaction. Some options make sense with all
  1710. operating modes, while others are meaningful only with particular modes.
  1711. You will likely use some options frequently, while you will only use
  1712. others infrequently, or not at all. (A full list of options is
  1713. available in @pxref{All Options}.)
  1714. The @env{TAR_OPTIONS} environment variable specifies default options to
  1715. be placed in front of any explicit options. For example, if
  1716. @code{TAR_OPTIONS} is @samp{-v --unlink-first}, @command{tar} behaves as
  1717. if the two options @option{-v} and @option{--unlink-first} had been
  1718. specified before any explicit options. Option specifications are
  1719. separated by whitespace. A backslash escapes the next character, so it
  1720. can be used to specify an option containing whitespace or a backslash.
  1721. Note that @command{tar} options are case sensitive. For example, the
  1722. options @samp{-T} and @samp{-t} are different; the first requires an
  1723. argument for stating the name of a file providing a list of @var{name}s,
  1724. while the second does not require an argument and is another way to
  1725. write @value{op-list}.
  1726. In addition to the eight operations, there are many options to
  1727. @command{tar}, and three different styles for writing both: long (mnemonic)
  1728. form, short form, and old style. These styles are discussed below.
  1729. Both the options and the operations can be written in any of these three
  1730. styles.
  1731. @FIXME{menu at end of this node. need to think of an actual outline
  1732. for this chapter; probably do that after stuff from chap. 4 is
  1733. incorporated.}
  1734. @node Styles
  1735. @section The Three Option Styles
  1736. There are three styles for writing operations and options to the command
  1737. line invoking @command{tar}. The different styles were developed at
  1738. different times during the history of @command{tar}. These styles will be
  1739. presented below, from the most recent to the oldest.
  1740. Some options must take an argument. (For example, @value{op-file} takes
  1741. the name of an archive file as an argument. If you do not supply an
  1742. archive file name, @command{tar} will use a default, but this can be
  1743. confusing; thus, we recommend that you always supply a specific archive
  1744. file name.) Where you @emph{place} the arguments generally depends on
  1745. which style of options you choose. We will detail specific information
  1746. relevant to each option style in the sections on the different option
  1747. styles, below. The differences are subtle, yet can often be very
  1748. important; incorrect option placement can cause you to overwrite a
  1749. number of important files. We urge you to note these differences, and
  1750. only use the option style(s) which makes the most sense to you until you
  1751. feel comfortable with the others.
  1752. @FIXME{hag to write a brief paragraph on the option(s) which can
  1753. optionally take an argument}
  1754. @menu
  1755. * Mnemonic Options:: Mnemonic Option Style
  1756. * Short Options:: Short Option Style
  1757. * Old Options:: Old Option Style
  1758. * Mixing:: Mixing Option Styles
  1759. @end menu
  1760. @node Mnemonic Options
  1761. @subsection Mnemonic Option Style
  1762. @FIXME{have to decide whether or ot to replace other occurrences of
  1763. "mnemonic" with "long", or *ugh* vice versa.}
  1764. Each option has at least one long (or mnemonic) name starting with two
  1765. dashes in a row, e.g.@: @samp{--list}. The long names are more clear than
  1766. their corresponding short or old names. It sometimes happens that a
  1767. single mnemonic option has many different different names which are
  1768. synonymous, such as @samp{--compare} and @samp{--diff}. In addition,
  1769. long option names can be given unique abbreviations. For example,
  1770. @samp{--cre} can be used in place of @samp{--create} because there is no
  1771. other mnemonic option which begins with @samp{cre}. (One way to find
  1772. this out is by trying it and seeing what happens; if a particular
  1773. abbreviation could represent more than one option, @command{tar} will tell
  1774. you that that abbreviation is ambiguous and you'll know that that
  1775. abbreviation won't work. You may also choose to run @samp{tar --help}
  1776. to see a list of options. Be aware that if you run @command{tar} with a
  1777. unique abbreviation for the long name of an option you didn't want to
  1778. use, you are stuck; @command{tar} will perform the command as ordered.)
  1779. Mnemonic options are meant to be obvious and easy to remember, and their
  1780. meanings are generally easier to discern than those of their
  1781. corresponding short options (see below). For example:
  1782. @example
  1783. $ @kbd{tar --create --verbose --blocking-factor=20 --file=/dev/rmt0}
  1784. @end example
  1785. @noindent
  1786. gives a fairly good set of hints about what the command does, even
  1787. for those not fully acquainted with @command{tar}.
  1788. Mnemonic options which require arguments take those arguments
  1789. immediately following the option name; they are introduced by an equal
  1790. sign. For example, the @samp{--file} option (which tells the name
  1791. of the @command{tar} archive) is given a file such as @file{archive.tar}
  1792. as argument by using the notation @samp{--file=archive.tar} for the
  1793. mnemonic option.
  1794. @node Short Options
  1795. @subsection Short Option Style
  1796. Most options also have a short option name. Short options start with
  1797. a single dash, and are followed by a single character, e.g.@: @samp{-t}
  1798. (which is equivalent to @samp{--list}). The forms are absolutely
  1799. identical in function; they are interchangeable.
  1800. The short option names are faster to type than long option names.
  1801. Short options which require arguments take their arguments immediately
  1802. following the option, usually separated by white space. It is also
  1803. possible to stick the argument right after the short option name, using
  1804. no intervening space. For example, you might write @w{@samp{-f
  1805. archive.tar}} or @samp{-farchive.tar} instead of using
  1806. @samp{--file=archive.tar}. Both @samp{--file=@var{archive-name}} and
  1807. @w{@samp{-f @var{archive-name}}} denote the option which indicates a
  1808. specific archive, here named @file{archive.tar}.
  1809. Short options' letters may be clumped together, but you are not
  1810. required to do this (as compared to old options; see below). When short
  1811. options are clumped as a set, use one (single) dash for them all, e.g.@:
  1812. @w{@samp{@command{tar} -cvf}}. Only the last option in such a set is allowed
  1813. to have an argument@footnote{Clustering many options, the last of which
  1814. has an argument, is a rather opaque way to write options. Some wonder if
  1815. @sc{gnu} @code{getopt} should not even be made helpful enough for considering
  1816. such usages as invalid.}.
  1817. When the options are separated, the argument for each option which requires
  1818. an argument directly follows that option, as is usual for Unix programs.
  1819. For example:
  1820. @example
  1821. $ @kbd{tar -c -v -b 20 -f /dev/rmt0}
  1822. @end example
  1823. If you reorder short options' locations, be sure to move any arguments
  1824. that belong to them. If you do not move the arguments properly, you may
  1825. end up overwriting files.
  1826. @node Old Options
  1827. @subsection Old Option Style
  1828. @UNREVISED
  1829. Like short options, old options are single letters. However, old options
  1830. must be written together as a single clumped set, without spaces separating
  1831. them or dashes preceding them@footnote{Beware that if you precede options
  1832. with a dash, you are announcing the short option style instead of the
  1833. old option style; short options are decoded differently.}. This set
  1834. of letters must be the first to appear on the command line, after the
  1835. @command{tar} program name and some white space; old options cannot appear
  1836. anywhere else. The letter of an old option is exactly the same letter as
  1837. the corresponding short option. For example, the old option @samp{t} is
  1838. the same as the short option @samp{-t}, and consequently, the same as the
  1839. mnemonic option @samp{--list}. So for example, the command @w{@samp{tar
  1840. cv}} specifies the option @samp{-v} in addition to the operation @samp{-c}.
  1841. @FIXME{bob suggests having an uglier example. :-) }
  1842. When options that need arguments are given together with the command,
  1843. all the associated arguments follow, in the same order as the options.
  1844. Thus, the example given previously could also be written in the old
  1845. style as follows:
  1846. @example
  1847. $ @kbd{tar cvbf 20 /dev/rmt0}
  1848. @end example
  1849. @noindent
  1850. Here, @samp{20} is the argument of @samp{-b} and @samp{/dev/rmt0} is
  1851. the argument of @samp{-f}.
  1852. On the other hand, this old style syntax makes it difficult to match
  1853. option letters with their corresponding arguments, and is often
  1854. confusing. In the command @w{@samp{tar cvbf 20 /dev/rmt0}}, for example,
  1855. @samp{20} is the argument for @samp{-b}, @samp{/dev/rmt0} is the
  1856. argument for @samp{-f}, and @samp{-v} does not have a corresponding
  1857. argument. Even using short options like in @w{@samp{tar -c -v -b 20 -f
  1858. /dev/rmt0}} is clearer, putting all arguments next to the option they
  1859. pertain to.
  1860. If you want to reorder the letters in the old option argument, be
  1861. sure to reorder any corresponding argument appropriately.
  1862. This old way of writing @command{tar} options can surprise even experienced
  1863. users. For example, the two commands:
  1864. @example
  1865. @kbd{tar cfz archive.tar.gz file}
  1866. @kbd{tar -cfz archive.tar.gz file}
  1867. @end example
  1868. @noindent
  1869. are quite different. The first example uses @file{archive.tar.gz} as
  1870. the value for option @samp{f} and recognizes the option @samp{z}. The
  1871. second example, however, uses @file{z} as the value for option
  1872. @samp{f}---probably not what was intended.
  1873. Old options are kept for compatibility with old versions of @command{tar}.
  1874. This second example could be corrected in many ways, among which the
  1875. following are equivalent:
  1876. @example
  1877. @kbd{tar -czf archive.tar.gz file}
  1878. @kbd{tar -cf archive.tar.gz -z file}
  1879. @kbd{tar cf archive.tar.gz -z file}
  1880. @end example
  1881. @FIXME{still could explain this better; it's redundant:}
  1882. @cindex option syntax, traditional
  1883. As far as we know, all @command{tar} programs, @sc{gnu} and non-@sc{gnu}, support
  1884. old options. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} supports them not only for historical
  1885. reasons, but also because many people are used to them. For
  1886. compatibility with Unix @command{tar}, the first argument is always
  1887. treated as containing command and option letters even if it doesn't
  1888. start with @samp{-}. Thus, @samp{tar c} is equivalent to @w{@samp{tar
  1889. -c}:} both of them specify the @value{op-create} command to create an
  1890. archive.
  1891. @node Mixing
  1892. @subsection Mixing Option Styles
  1893. All three styles may be intermixed in a single @command{tar} command, so
  1894. long as the rules for each style are fully respected@footnote{Before @sc{gnu}
  1895. @command{tar} version 1.11.6, a bug prevented intermixing old style options
  1896. with mnemonic options in some cases.}. Old style options and either of the
  1897. modern styles of options may be mixed within a single @command{tar} command.
  1898. However, old style options must be introduced as the first arguments only,
  1899. following the rule for old options (old options must appear directly
  1900. after the @command{tar} command and some white space). Modern options may
  1901. be given only after all arguments to the old options have been collected.
  1902. If this rule is not respected, a modern option might be falsely interpreted
  1903. as the value of the argument to one of the old style options.
  1904. For example, all the following commands are wholly equivalent, and
  1905. illustrate the many combinations and orderings of option styles.
  1906. @example
  1907. @kbd{tar --create --file=archive.tar}
  1908. @kbd{tar --create -f archive.tar}
  1909. @kbd{tar --create -farchive.tar}
  1910. @kbd{tar --file=archive.tar --create}
  1911. @kbd{tar --file=archive.tar -c}
  1912. @kbd{tar -c --file=archive.tar}
  1913. @kbd{tar -c -f archive.tar}
  1914. @kbd{tar -c -farchive.tar}
  1915. @kbd{tar -cf archive.tar}
  1916. @kbd{tar -cfarchive.tar}
  1917. @kbd{tar -f archive.tar --create}
  1918. @kbd{tar -f archive.tar -c}
  1919. @kbd{tar -farchive.tar --create}
  1920. @kbd{tar -farchive.tar -c}
  1921. @kbd{tar c --file=archive.tar}
  1922. @kbd{tar c -f archive.tar}
  1923. @kbd{tar c -farchive.tar}
  1924. @kbd{tar cf archive.tar}
  1925. @kbd{tar f archive.tar --create}
  1926. @kbd{tar f archive.tar -c}
  1927. @kbd{tar fc archive.tar}
  1928. @end example
  1929. On the other hand, the following commands are @emph{not} equivalent to
  1930. the previous set:
  1931. @example
  1932. @kbd{tar -f -c archive.tar}
  1933. @kbd{tar -fc archive.tar}
  1934. @kbd{tar -fcarchive.tar}
  1935. @kbd{tar -farchive.tarc}
  1936. @kbd{tar cfarchive.tar}
  1937. @end example
  1938. @noindent
  1939. These last examples mean something completely different from what the
  1940. user intended (judging based on the example in the previous set which
  1941. uses long options, whose intent is therefore very clear). The first
  1942. four specify that the @command{tar} archive would be a file named
  1943. @samp{-c}, @samp{c}, @samp{carchive.tar} or @samp{archive.tarc},
  1944. respectively. The first two examples also specify a single non-option,
  1945. @var{name} argument having the value @samp{archive.tar}. The last
  1946. example contains only old style option letters (repeating option
  1947. @samp{c} twice), not all of which are meaningful (eg., @samp{.},
  1948. @samp{h}, or @samp{i}), with no argument value. @FIXME{not sure i liked
  1949. the first sentence of this paragraph..}
  1950. @node All Options
  1951. @section All @command{tar} Options
  1952. The coming manual sections contain an alphabetical listing of all
  1953. @command{tar} operations and options, with brief descriptions and cross
  1954. references to more in-depth explanations in the body of the manual.
  1955. They also contain an alphabetically arranged table of the short option
  1956. forms with their corresponding long option. You can use this table as
  1957. a reference for deciphering @command{tar} commands in scripts.
  1958. @menu
  1959. * Operation Summary::
  1960. * Option Summary::
  1961. * Short Option Summary::
  1962. @end menu
  1963. @node Operation Summary
  1964. @subsection Operations
  1965. @table @kbd
  1966. @item --append
  1967. @itemx -r
  1968. Appends files to the end of the archive. @xref{append}.
  1969. @item --catenate
  1970. @itemx -A
  1971. Same as @samp{--concatenate}. @xref{concatenate}.
  1972. @item --compare
  1973. @itemx -d
  1974. Compares archive members with their counterparts in the file
  1975. system, and reports differences in file size, mode, owner,
  1976. modification date and contents. @xref{compare}.
  1977. @item --concatenate
  1978. @itemx -A
  1979. Appends other @command{tar} archives to the end of the archive.
  1980. @xref{concatenate}.
  1981. @item --create
  1982. @itemx -c
  1983. Creates a new @command{tar} archive. @xref{create}.
  1984. @item --delete
  1985. Deletes members from the archive. Don't try this on a archive on a
  1986. tape! @xref{delete}.
  1987. @item --diff
  1988. @itemx -d
  1989. Same @samp{--compare}. @xref{compare}.
  1990. @item --extract
  1991. @itemx -x
  1992. Extracts members from the archive into the file system. @xref{extract}.
  1993. @item --get
  1994. @itemx -x
  1995. Same as @samp{--extract}. @xref{extract}.
  1996. @item --list
  1997. @itemx -t
  1998. Lists the members in an archive. @xref{list}.
  1999. @item --update
  2000. @itemx -u
  2001. @FIXME{It was: A combination of the @samp{--compare} and @samp{--append} operations.
  2002. This is not true and rather misleading, as @value{op-compare}
  2003. does a lot more than @value{op-update} for ensuring files are identical.}
  2004. Adds files to the end of the archive, but only if they are newer than
  2005. their counterparts already in the archive, or if they do not already
  2006. exist in the archive.
  2007. @xref{update}.
  2008. @end table
  2009. @node Option Summary
  2010. @subsection @command{tar} Options
  2011. @table @kbd
  2012. @item --absolute-names
  2013. @itemx -P
  2014. Normally when creating an archive, @command{tar} strips an initial @samp{/} from
  2015. member names. This option disables that behavior. @FIXME-xref{}
  2016. @item --after-date
  2017. (See @samp{--newer}.) @FIXME-pxref{}
  2018. @item --anchored
  2019. An exclude pattern must match an initial subsequence of the name's components.
  2020. @FIXME-xref{}
  2021. @item --atime-preserve
  2022. Tells @command{tar} to preserve the access time field in a file's inode when
  2023. reading it. Due to limitations in the @code{utimes} system call, the
  2024. modification time field is also preserved, which may cause problems if
  2025. the file is simultaneously being modified by another program.
  2026. This option is incompatible with incremental backups, because
  2027. preserving the access time involves updating the last-changed time.
  2028. Also, this option does not work on files that you do not own,
  2029. unless you're root.
  2030. @FIXME-xref{}
  2031. @item --backup=@var{backup-type}
  2032. Rather than deleting files from the file system, @command{tar} will back them up
  2033. using simple or numbered backups, depending upon @var{backup-type}.
  2034. @FIXME-xref{}
  2035. @item --block-number
  2036. @itemx -R
  2037. With this option present, @command{tar} prints error messages for read errors
  2038. with the block number in the archive file. @FIXME-xref{}
  2039. @item --blocking-factor=@var{blocking}
  2040. @itemx -b @var{blocking}
  2041. Sets the blocking factor @command{tar} uses to @var{blocking} x 512 bytes per
  2042. record. @FIXME-xref{}
  2043. @item --bzip2
  2044. @itemx -j
  2045. This option tells @command{tar} to read or write archives through @code{bzip2}.
  2046. @FIXME-xref{}
  2047. @item --checkpoint
  2048. This option directs @command{tar} to print periodic checkpoint messages as it
  2049. reads through the archive. Its intended for when you want a visual
  2050. indication that @command{tar} is still running, but don't want to see
  2051. @samp{--verbose} output. @FIXME-xref{}
  2052. @item --compress
  2053. @itemx --uncompress
  2054. @itemx -Z
  2055. @command{tar} will use the @command{compress} program when reading or writing the
  2056. archive. This allows you to directly act on archives while saving
  2057. space. @FIXME-xref{}
  2058. @item --confirmation
  2059. (See @samp{--interactive}.) @FIXME-pxref{}
  2060. @item --dereference
  2061. @itemx -h
  2062. When creating a @command{tar} archive, @command{tar} will archive the file that a symbolic
  2063. link points to, rather than archiving the symlink. @FIXME-xref{}
  2064. @item --directory=@var{dir}
  2065. @itemx -C @var{dir}
  2066. When this option is specified, @command{tar} will change its current directory
  2067. to @var{dir} before performing any operations. When this option is used
  2068. during archive creation, it is order sensitive. @FIXME-xref{}
  2069. @item --exclude=@var{pattern}
  2070. When performing operations, @command{tar} will skip files that match
  2071. @var{pattern}. @FIXME-xref{}
  2072. @item --exclude-from=@var{file}
  2073. @itemx -X @var{file}
  2074. Similar to @samp{--exclude}, except @command{tar} will use the list of patterns
  2075. in the file @var{file}. @FIXME-xref{}
  2076. @item --file=@var{archive}
  2077. @itemx -f @var{archive}
  2078. @command{tar} will use the file @var{archive} as the @command{tar} archive it
  2079. performs operations on, rather than @command{tar}'s compilation dependent
  2080. default. @FIXME-xref{}
  2081. @item --files-from=@var{file}
  2082. @itemx -T @var{file}
  2083. @command{tar} will use the contents of @var{file} as a list of archive members
  2084. or files to operate on, in addition to those specified on the
  2085. command-line. @FIXME-xref{}
  2086. @item --force-local
  2087. Forces @command{tar} to interpret the filename given to @samp{--file} as a local
  2088. file, even if it looks like a remote tape drive name. @FIXME-xref{}
  2089. @item --group=@var{group}
  2090. Files added to the @command{tar} archive will have a group id of @var{group},
  2091. rather than the group from the source file. @var{group} is first decoded
  2092. as a group symbolic name, but if this interpretation fails, it has to be
  2093. a decimal numeric group ID. @FIXME-xref{}
  2094. Also see the comments for the @value{op-owner} option.
  2095. @item --gunzip
  2096. (See @samp{--gzip}.) @FIXME-pxref{}
  2097. @item --gzip
  2098. @itemx --gunzip
  2099. @itemx --ungzip
  2100. @itemx -z
  2101. This option tells @command{tar} to read or write archives through @command{gzip},
  2102. allowing @command{tar} to directly operate on several kinds of compressed
  2103. archives transparently. @FIXME-xref{}
  2104. @item --help
  2105. @command{tar} will print out a short message summarizing the operations and
  2106. options to @command{tar} and exit. @FIXME-xref{}
  2107. @item --ignore-case
  2108. Ignore case when excluding files.
  2109. @FIXME-xref{}
  2110. @item --ignore-failed-read
  2111. Do not exit unsuccessfully merely because an unreadable file was encountered.
  2112. @xref{Reading}.
  2113. @item --ignore-zeros
  2114. @itemx -i
  2115. With this option, @command{tar} will ignore zeroed blocks in the archive, which
  2116. normally signals EOF. @xref{Reading}.
  2117. @item --incremental
  2118. @itemx -G
  2119. Used to inform @command{tar} that it is working with an old @sc{gnu}-format
  2120. incremental backup archive. It is intended primarily for backwards
  2121. compatibility only. @FIXME-xref{}
  2122. @item --info-script=@var{script-file}
  2123. @itemx --new-volume-script=@var{script-file}
  2124. @itemx -F @var{script-file}
  2125. When @command{tar} is performing multi-tape backups, @var{script-file} is run
  2126. at the end of each tape. If @var{script-file} exits with nonzero status,
  2127. @command{tar} fails immediately. @FIXME-xref{}
  2128. @item --interactive
  2129. @itemx --confirmation
  2130. @itemx -w
  2131. Specifies that @command{tar} should ask the user for confirmation before
  2132. performing potentially destructive options, such as overwriting files.
  2133. @FIXME-xref{}
  2134. @item --keep-old-files
  2135. @itemx -k
  2136. Do not overwrite existing files when extracting files from an archive.
  2137. @xref{Writing}.
  2138. @item --label=@var{name}
  2139. @itemx -V @var{name}
  2140. When creating an archive, instructs @command{tar} to write @var{name} as a name
  2141. record in the archive. When extracting or listing archives, @command{tar} will
  2142. only operate on archives that have a label matching the pattern
  2143. specified in @var{name}. @FIXME-xref{}
  2144. @item --listed-incremental=@var{snapshot-file}
  2145. @itemx -g @var{snapshot-file}
  2146. During a @samp{--create} operation, specifies that the archive that
  2147. @command{tar} creates is a new @sc{gnu}-format incremental backup, using
  2148. @var{snapshot-file} to determine which files to backup.
  2149. With other operations, informs @command{tar} that the archive is in incremental
  2150. format. @FIXME-xref{}
  2151. @item --mode=@var{permissions}
  2152. When adding files to an archive, @command{tar} will use @var{permissions}
  2153. for the archive members, rather than the permissions from the files.
  2154. The program @command{chmod} and this @command{tar} option share the same syntax
  2155. for what @var{permissions} might be. @xref{File permissions, Permissions,
  2156. File permissions, fileutils, @sc{gnu} file utilities}. This reference also
  2157. has useful information for those not being overly familiar with the Unix
  2158. permission system.
  2159. Of course, @var{permissions} might be plainly specified as an octal number.
  2160. However, by using generic symbolic modifications to mode bits, this allows
  2161. more flexibility. For example, the value @samp{a+rw} adds read and write
  2162. permissions for everybody, while retaining executable bits on directories
  2163. or on any other file already marked as executable.
  2164. @item --multi-volume
  2165. @itemx -M
  2166. Informs @command{tar} that it should create or otherwise operate on a
  2167. multi-volume @command{tar} archive. @FIXME-xref{}
  2168. @item --new-volume-script
  2169. (see --info-script)
  2170. @item --newer=@var{date}
  2171. @itemx --after-date=@var{date}
  2172. @itemx -N
  2173. When creating an archive, @command{tar} will only add files that have changed
  2174. since @var{date}. If @var{date} begins with @samp{/} or @samp{.}, it
  2175. is taken to be the name of a file whose last-modified time specifies
  2176. the date. @FIXME-xref{}
  2177. @item --newer-mtime=@var{date}
  2178. Like @samp{--newer}, but add only files whose
  2179. contents have changed (as opposed to just @samp{--newer}, which will
  2180. also back up files for which any status information has changed).
  2181. @item --no-anchored
  2182. An exclude pattern can match any subsequence of the name's components.
  2183. @FIXME-xref{}
  2184. @item --no-ignore-case
  2185. Use case-sensitive matching when excluding files.
  2186. @FIXME-xref{}
  2187. @item --no-recursion
  2188. With this option, @command{tar} will not recurse into directories.
  2189. @FIXME-xref{}
  2190. @item --no-same-owner
  2191. When extracting an archive, do not attempt to preserve the owner
  2192. specified in the @command{tar} archive. This the default behavior
  2193. for ordinary users; this option has an effect only for the superuser.
  2194. @item --no-same-permissions
  2195. When extracting an archive, subtract the user's umask from files from
  2196. the permissions specified in the archive. This is the default behavior
  2197. for ordinary users; this option has an effect only for the superuser.
  2198. @item --no-wildcards
  2199. Do not use wildcards when excluding files.
  2200. @FIXME-xref{}
  2201. @item --no-wildcards-match-slash
  2202. Wildcards do not match @samp{/} when excluding files.
  2203. @FIXME-xref{}
  2204. @item --null
  2205. When @command{tar} is using the @samp{--files-from} option, this option
  2206. instructs @command{tar} to expect filenames terminated with @kbd{NUL}, so
  2207. @command{tar} can correctly work with file names that contain newlines.
  2208. @FIXME-xref{}
  2209. @item --numeric-owner
  2210. This option will notify @command{tar} that it should use numeric user and group
  2211. IDs when creating a @command{tar} file, rather than names. @FIXME-xref{}
  2212. @item --old-archive
  2213. (See @samp{--portability}.) @FIXME-pxref{}
  2214. @item --one-file-system
  2215. @itemx -l
  2216. Used when creating an archive. Prevents @command{tar} from recursing into
  2217. directories that are on different file systems from the current
  2218. directory. @FIXME-xref{}
  2219. @item --overwrite
  2220. Overwrite existing files and directory metadata when extracting files
  2221. from an archive. @xref{Overwrite Old Files}.
  2222. @item --overwrite-dir
  2223. Overwrite the metadata of existing directories when extracting files
  2224. from an archive. @xref{Overwrite Old Files}.
  2225. @item --owner=@var{user}
  2226. Specifies that @command{tar} should use @var{user} as the owner of members
  2227. when creating archives, instead of the user associated with the source
  2228. file. @var{user} is first decoded as a user symbolic name, but if
  2229. this interpretation fails, it has to be a decimal numeric user ID.
  2230. @FIXME-xref{}
  2231. There is no value indicating a missing number, and @samp{0} usually means
  2232. @code{root}. Some people like to force @samp{0} as the value to offer in
  2233. their distributions for the owner of files, because the @code{root} user is
  2234. anonymous anyway, so that might as well be the owner of anonymous archives.
  2235. This option does not affect extraction from archives.
  2236. @item --portability
  2237. @itemx --old-archive
  2238. @itemx -o
  2239. Tells @command{tar} to create an archive that is compatible with Unix V7
  2240. @command{tar}. @FIXME-xref{}
  2241. @item --posix
  2242. Instructs @command{tar} to create a @sc{posix} compliant @command{tar} archive. @FIXME-xref{}
  2243. @item --preserve
  2244. Synonymous with specifying both @samp{--preserve-permissions} and
  2245. @samp{--same-order}. @FIXME-xref{}
  2246. @item --preserve-order
  2247. (See @samp{--same-order}; @pxref{Reading}.)
  2248. @item --preserve-permissions
  2249. @itemx --same-permissions
  2250. @itemx -p
  2251. When @command{tar} is extracting an archive, it normally subtracts the users'
  2252. umask from the permissions specified in the archive and uses that
  2253. number as the permissions to create the destination file. Specifying
  2254. this option instructs @command{tar} that it should use the permissions directly
  2255. from the archive. @xref{Writing}.
  2256. @item --read-full-records
  2257. @itemx -B
  2258. Specifies that @command{tar} should reblock its input, for reading from pipes on
  2259. systems with buggy implementations. @xref{Reading}.
  2260. @item --record-size=@var{size}
  2261. Instructs @command{tar} to use @var{size} bytes per record when accessing the
  2262. archive. @FIXME-xref{}
  2263. @item --recursion
  2264. With this option, @command{tar} recurses into directories.
  2265. @FIXME-xref{}
  2266. @item --recursive-unlink
  2267. Remove existing
  2268. directory hierarchies before extracting directories of the same name
  2269. from the archive. @xref{Writing}.
  2270. @item --remove-files
  2271. Directs @command{tar} to remove the source file from the file system after
  2272. appending it to an archive. @FIXME-xref{}
  2273. @item --rsh-command=@var{cmd}
  2274. Notifies @command{tar} that is should use @var{cmd} to communicate with remote
  2275. devices. @FIXME-xref{}
  2276. @item --same-order
  2277. @itemx --preserve-order
  2278. @itemx -s
  2279. This option is an optimization for @command{tar} when running on machines with
  2280. small amounts of memory. It informs @command{tar} that the list of file
  2281. arguments has already been sorted to match the order of files in the
  2282. archive. @xref{Reading}.
  2283. @item --same-owner
  2284. When extracting an archive, @command{tar} will attempt to preserve the owner
  2285. specified in the @command{tar} archive with this option present.
  2286. This is the default behavior for the superuser; this option has an
  2287. effect only for ordinary users. @FIXME-xref{}
  2288. @item --same-permissions
  2289. (See @samp{--preserve-permissions}; @pxref{Writing}.)
  2290. @item --show-omitted-dirs
  2291. Instructs @command{tar} to mention directories its skipping over when operating
  2292. on a @command{tar} archive. @FIXME-xref{}
  2293. @item --sparse
  2294. @itemx -S
  2295. Invokes a @sc{gnu} extension when adding files to an archive that handles
  2296. sparse files efficiently. @FIXME-xref{}
  2297. @item --starting-file=@var{name}
  2298. @itemx -K @var{name}
  2299. This option affects extraction only; @command{tar} will skip extracting
  2300. files in the archive until it finds one that matches @var{name}.
  2301. @xref{Scarce}.
  2302. @item --suffix=@var{suffix}
  2303. Alters the suffix @command{tar} uses when backing up files from the default
  2304. @samp{~}. @FIXME-xref{}
  2305. @item --tape-length=@var{num}
  2306. @itemx -L @var{num}
  2307. Specifies the length of tapes that @command{tar} is writing as being
  2308. @w{@var{num} x 1024} bytes long. @FIXME-xref{}
  2309. @item --to-stdout
  2310. @itemx -O
  2311. During extraction, @command{tar} will extract files to stdout rather than to the
  2312. file system. @xref{Writing}.
  2313. @item --totals
  2314. Displays the total number of bytes written after creating an archive.
  2315. @FIXME-xref{}
  2316. @item --touch
  2317. @itemx -m
  2318. Sets the modification time of extracted files to the extraction time,
  2319. rather than the modification time stored in the archive.
  2320. @xref{Writing}.
  2321. @item --uncompress
  2322. (See @samp{--compress}.) @FIXME-pxref{}
  2323. @item --ungzip
  2324. (See @samp{--gzip}.) @FIXME-pxref{}
  2325. @item --unlink-first
  2326. @itemx -U
  2327. Directs @command{tar} to remove the corresponding file from the file
  2328. system before extracting it from the archive. @xref{Writing}.
  2329. @item --use-compress-program=@var{prog}
  2330. Instructs @command{tar} to access the archive through @var{prog}, which is
  2331. presumed to be a compression program of some sort. @FIXME-xref{}
  2332. @item --verbose
  2333. @itemx -v
  2334. Specifies that @command{tar} should be more verbose about the operations its
  2335. performing. This option can be specified multiple times for some
  2336. operations to increase the amount of information displayed. @FIXME-xref{}
  2337. @item --verify
  2338. @itemx -W
  2339. Verifies that the archive was correctly written when creating an
  2340. archive. @FIXME-xref{}
  2341. @item --version
  2342. @command{tar} will print an informational message about what version it is and a
  2343. copyright message, some credits, and then exit. @FIXME-xref{}
  2344. @item --volno-file=@var{file}
  2345. Used in conjunction with @samp{--multi-volume}. @command{tar} will keep track
  2346. of which volume of a multi-volume archive its working in @var{file}.
  2347. @FIXME-xref{}
  2348. @item --wildcards
  2349. Use wildcards when excluding files.
  2350. @FIXME-xref{}
  2351. @item --wildcards-match-slash
  2352. Wildcards match @samp{/} when excluding files.
  2353. @FIXME-xref{}
  2354. @end table
  2355. @node Short Option Summary
  2356. @subsection Short Options Cross Reference
  2357. Here is an alphabetized list of all of the short option forms, matching
  2358. them with the equivalent long option.
  2359. @table @kbd
  2360. @item -A
  2361. @samp{--concatenate}
  2362. @item -B
  2363. @samp{--read-full-records}
  2364. @item -C
  2365. @samp{--directory}
  2366. @item -F
  2367. @samp{--info-script}
  2368. @item -G
  2369. @samp{--incremental}
  2370. @item -K
  2371. @samp{--starting-file}
  2372. @item -L
  2373. @samp{--tape-length}
  2374. @item -M
  2375. @samp{--multi-volume}
  2376. @item -N
  2377. @samp{--newer}
  2378. @item -O
  2379. @samp{--to-stdout}
  2380. @item -P
  2381. @samp{--absolute-names}
  2382. @item -R
  2383. @samp{--block-number}
  2384. @item -S
  2385. @samp{--sparse}
  2386. @item -T
  2387. @samp{--files-from}
  2388. @item -U
  2389. @samp{--unlink-first}
  2390. @item -V
  2391. @samp{--label}
  2392. @item -W
  2393. @samp{--verify}
  2394. @item -X
  2395. @samp{--exclude-from}
  2396. @item -Z
  2397. @samp{--compress}
  2398. @item -b
  2399. @samp{--blocking-factor}
  2400. @item -c
  2401. @samp{--create}
  2402. @item -d
  2403. @samp{--compare}
  2404. @item -f
  2405. @samp{--file}
  2406. @item -g
  2407. @samp{--listed-incremental}
  2408. @item -h
  2409. @samp{--dereference}
  2410. @item -i
  2411. @samp{--ignore-zeros}
  2412. @item -k
  2413. @samp{--keep-old-files}
  2414. @item -l
  2415. @samp{--one-file-system}
  2416. @item -m
  2417. @samp{--touch}
  2418. @item -o
  2419. @samp{--portability}
  2420. @item -p
  2421. @samp{--preserve-permissions}
  2422. @item -r
  2423. @samp{--append}
  2424. @item -s
  2425. @samp{--same-order}
  2426. @item -t
  2427. @samp{--list}
  2428. @item -u
  2429. @samp{--update}
  2430. @item -v
  2431. @samp{--verbose}
  2432. @item -w
  2433. @samp{--interactive}
  2434. @item -x
  2435. @samp{--extract}
  2436. @item -z
  2437. @samp{--gzip}
  2438. @end table
  2439. @node help
  2440. @section @sc{gnu} @command{tar} documentation
  2441. Being careful, the first thing is really checking that you are using @sc{gnu}
  2442. @command{tar}, indeed. The @value{op-version} option will generate a message
  2443. giving confirmation that you are using @sc{gnu} @command{tar}, with the precise
  2444. version of @sc{gnu} @command{tar} you are using. @command{tar} identifies itself
  2445. and prints the version number to the standard output, then immediately
  2446. exits successfully, without doing anything else, ignoring all other
  2447. options. For example, @w{@samp{tar --version}} might return:
  2448. @example
  2449. tar (@sc{gnu} tar) @value{VERSION}
  2450. @end example
  2451. @noindent
  2452. The first occurrence of @samp{tar} in the result above is the program
  2453. name in the package (for example, @command{rmt} is another program), while
  2454. the second occurrence of @samp{tar} is the name of the package itself,
  2455. containing possibly many programs. The package is currently named
  2456. @samp{tar}, after the name of the main program it contains@footnote{There
  2457. are plans to merge the @command{cpio} and @command{tar} packages into a single one
  2458. which would be called @code{paxutils}. So, who knows if, one of this days,
  2459. the @value{op-version} would not yield @w{@samp{tar (@sc{gnu} paxutils) 3.2}}}.
  2460. Another thing you might want to do is checking the spelling or meaning
  2461. of some particular @command{tar} option, without resorting to this manual,
  2462. for once you have carefully read it. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} has a short help
  2463. feature, triggerable through the @value{op-help} option. By using this
  2464. option, @command{tar} will print a usage message listing all available
  2465. options on standard output, then exit successfully, without doing
  2466. anything else and ignoring all other options. Even if this is only a
  2467. brief summary, it may be several screens long. So, if you are not
  2468. using some kind of scrollable window, you might prefer to use something
  2469. like:
  2470. @example
  2471. $ @kbd{tar --help | less}
  2472. @end example
  2473. @noindent
  2474. presuming, here, that you like using @command{less} for a pager. Other
  2475. popular pagers are @command{more} and @command{pg}. If you know about some
  2476. @var{keyword} which interests you and do not want to read all the
  2477. @value{op-help} output, another common idiom is doing:
  2478. @example
  2479. tar --help | grep @var{keyword}
  2480. @end example
  2481. @noindent
  2482. for getting only the pertinent lines.
  2483. The perceptive reader would have noticed some contradiction in the
  2484. previous paragraphs. It is written that both @value{op-version} and
  2485. @value{op-help} print something, and have all other options ignored. In
  2486. fact, they cannot ignore each other, and one of them has to win. We do
  2487. not specify which is stronger, here; experiment if you really wonder!
  2488. The short help output is quite succinct, and you might have to get back
  2489. to the full documentation for precise points. If you are reading this
  2490. paragraph, you already have the @command{tar} manual in some form. This
  2491. manual is available in printed form, as a kind of small book. It may
  2492. printed out of the @sc{gnu} @command{tar} distribution, provided you have @TeX{}
  2493. already installed somewhere, and a laser printer around. Just configure
  2494. the distribution, execute the command @w{@samp{make dvi}}, then print
  2495. @file{doc/tar.dvi} the usual way (contact your local guru to know how).
  2496. If @sc{gnu} @command{tar} has been conveniently installed at your place, this
  2497. manual is also available in interactive, hypertextual form as an Info
  2498. file. Just call @w{@samp{info tar}} or, if you do not have the
  2499. @command{info} program handy, use the Info reader provided within @sc{gnu}
  2500. Emacs, calling @samp{tar} from the main Info menu.
  2501. There is currently no @code{man} page for @sc{gnu} @command{tar}. If you observe
  2502. such a @code{man} page on the system you are running, either it does not
  2503. long to @sc{gnu} @command{tar}, or it has not been produced by @sc{gnu}. Currently,
  2504. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} documentation is provided in Texinfo format only, if we
  2505. except, of course, the short result of @kbd{tar --help}.
  2506. @node verbose
  2507. @section Checking @command{tar} progress
  2508. @cindex Progress information
  2509. @cindex Status information
  2510. @cindex Information on progress and status of operations
  2511. @cindex Verbose operation
  2512. @cindex Block number where error occurred
  2513. @cindex Error message, block number of
  2514. @cindex Version of the @command{tar} program
  2515. @cindex Getting more information during the operation
  2516. @cindex Information during operation
  2517. @cindex Feedback from @command{tar}
  2518. Typically, @command{tar} performs most operations without reporting any
  2519. information to the user except error messages. When using @command{tar}
  2520. with many options, particularly ones with complicated or
  2521. difficult-to-predict behavior, it is possible to make serious mistakes.
  2522. @command{tar} provides several options that make observing @command{tar}
  2523. easier. These options cause @command{tar} to print information as it
  2524. progresses in its job, and you might want to use them just for being
  2525. more careful about what is going on, or merely for entertaining
  2526. yourself. If you have encountered a problem when operating on an
  2527. archive, however, you may need more information than just an error
  2528. message in order to solve the problem. The following options can be
  2529. helpful diagnostic tools.
  2530. Normally, the @value{op-list} command to list an archive prints just
  2531. the file names (one per line) and the other commands are silent.
  2532. When used with most operations, the @value{op-verbose} option causes
  2533. @command{tar} to print the name of each file or archive member as it
  2534. is processed. This and the other options which make @command{tar} print
  2535. status information can be useful in monitoring @command{tar}.
  2536. With @value{op-create} or @value{op-extract}, @value{op-verbose} used once
  2537. just prints the names of the files or members as they are processed.
  2538. Using it twice causes @command{tar} to print a longer listing (reminiscent
  2539. of @samp{ls -l}) for each member. Since @value{op-list} already prints
  2540. the names of the members, @value{op-verbose} used once with @value{op-list}
  2541. causes @command{tar} to print an @samp{ls -l} type listing of the files
  2542. in the archive. The following examples both extract members with
  2543. long list output:
  2544. @example
  2545. $ @kbd{tar --extract --file=archive.tar --verbose --verbose}
  2546. $ @kbd{tar xvv archive.tar}
  2547. @end example
  2548. Verbose output appears on the standard output except when an archive is
  2549. being written to the standard output, as with @samp{tar --create
  2550. --file=- --verbose} (@samp{tar cfv -}, or even @samp{tar cv}---if the
  2551. installer let standard output be the default archive). In that case
  2552. @command{tar} writes verbose output to the standard error stream.
  2553. The @value{op-totals} option---which is only meaningful when used with
  2554. @value{op-create}---causes @command{tar} to print the total
  2555. amount written to the archive, after it has been fully created.
  2556. The @value{op-checkpoint} option prints an occasional message
  2557. as @command{tar} reads or writes the archive. In fact, it print
  2558. directory names while reading the archive. It is designed for
  2559. those who don't need the more detailed (and voluminous) output of
  2560. @value{op-block-number}, but do want visual confirmation that @command{tar}
  2561. is actually making forward progress.
  2562. @FIXME{There is some confusion here. It seems that -R once wrote a
  2563. message at @samp{every} record read or written.}
  2564. The @value{op-show-omitted-dirs} option, when reading an archive---with
  2565. @value{op-list} or @value{op-extract}, for example---causes a message
  2566. to be printed for each directory in the archive which is skipped.
  2567. This happens regardless of the reason for skipping: the directory might
  2568. not have been named on the command line (implicitly or explicitly),
  2569. it might be excluded by the use of the @value{op-exclude} option, or
  2570. some other reason.
  2571. If @value{op-block-number} is used, @command{tar} prints, along with every
  2572. message it would normally produce, the block number within the archive
  2573. where the message was triggered. Also, supplementary messages are
  2574. triggered when reading blocks full of NULs, or when hitting end of file on
  2575. the archive. As of now, if the archive if properly terminated with a NUL
  2576. block, the reading of the file may stop before end of file is met, so the
  2577. position of end of file will not usually show when @value{op-block-number}
  2578. is used. Note that @sc{gnu} @command{tar} drains the archive before exiting when
  2579. reading the archive from a pipe.
  2580. This option is especially useful when reading damaged archives, since
  2581. it helps pinpoint the damaged sections. It can also be used with
  2582. @value{op-list} when listing a file-system backup tape, allowing you to
  2583. choose among several backup tapes when retrieving a file later, in
  2584. favor of the tape where the file appears earliest (closest to the
  2585. front of the tape). @FIXME-xref{when the node name is set and the
  2586. backup section written.}
  2587. @node interactive
  2588. @section Asking for Confirmation During Operations
  2589. @cindex Interactive operation
  2590. Typically, @command{tar} carries out a command without stopping for
  2591. further instructions. In some situations however, you may want to
  2592. exclude some files and archive members from the operation (for instance
  2593. if disk or storage space is tight). You can do this by excluding
  2594. certain files automatically (@pxref{Choosing}), or by performing
  2595. an operation interactively, using the @value{op-interactive} option.
  2596. @command{tar} also accepts @samp{--confirmation} for this option.
  2597. When the @value{op-interactive} option is specified, before
  2598. reading, writing, or deleting files, @command{tar} first prints a message
  2599. for each such file, telling what operation it intends to take, then asks
  2600. for confirmation on the terminal. The actions which require
  2601. confirmation include adding a file to the archive, extracting a file
  2602. from the archive, deleting a file from the archive, and deleting a file
  2603. from disk. To confirm the action, you must type a line of input
  2604. beginning with @samp{y}. If your input line begins with anything other
  2605. than @samp{y}, @command{tar} skips that file.
  2606. If @command{tar} is reading the archive from the standard input,
  2607. @command{tar} opens the file @file{/dev/tty} to support the interactive
  2608. communications.
  2609. Verbose output is normally sent to standard output, separate from
  2610. other error messages. However, if the archive is produced directly
  2611. on standard output, then verbose output is mixed with errors on
  2612. @code{stderr}. Producing the archive on standard output may be used
  2613. as a way to avoid using disk space, when the archive is soon to be
  2614. consumed by another process reading it, say. Some people felt the need
  2615. of producing an archive on stdout, still willing to segregate between
  2616. verbose output and error output. A possible approach would be using a
  2617. named pipe to receive the archive, and having the consumer process to
  2618. read from that named pipe. This has the advantage of letting standard
  2619. output free to receive verbose output, all separate from errors.
  2620. @node operations
  2621. @chapter @sc{gnu} @command{tar} Operations
  2622. @menu
  2623. * Basic tar::
  2624. * Advanced tar::
  2625. * create options::
  2626. * extract options::
  2627. * backup::
  2628. * Applications::
  2629. * looking ahead::
  2630. @end menu
  2631. @node Basic tar
  2632. @section Basic @sc{gnu} @command{tar} Operations
  2633. The basic @command{tar} operations, @value{op-create}, @value{op-list} and
  2634. @value{op-extract}, are currently presented and described in the tutorial
  2635. chapter of this manual. This section provides some complementary notes
  2636. for these operations.
  2637. @table @asis
  2638. @item @value{op-create}
  2639. Creating an empty archive would have some kind of elegance. One can
  2640. initialize an empty archive and later use @value{op-append} for adding
  2641. all members. Some applications would not welcome making an exception
  2642. in the way of adding the first archive member. On the other hand,
  2643. many people reported that it is dangerously too easy for @command{tar}
  2644. to destroy a magnetic tape with an empty archive@footnote{This is well
  2645. described in @cite{Unix-haters Handbook}, by Simson Garfinkel, Daniel
  2646. Weise & Steven Strassmann, IDG Books, ISBN 1-56884-203-1.}. The two most
  2647. common errors are:
  2648. @enumerate
  2649. @item
  2650. Mistakingly using @code{create} instead of @code{extract}, when the
  2651. intent was to extract the full contents of an archive. This error
  2652. is likely: keys @kbd{c} and @kbd{x} are right next ot each other on
  2653. the QWERTY keyboard. Instead of being unpacked, the archive then
  2654. gets wholly destroyed. When users speak about @dfn{exploding} an
  2655. archive, they usually mean something else :-).
  2656. @item
  2657. Forgetting the argument to @code{file}, when the intent was to create
  2658. an archive with a single file in it. This error is likely because a
  2659. tired user can easily add the @kbd{f} key to the cluster of option
  2660. letters, by the mere force of habit, without realizing the full
  2661. consequence of doing so. The usual consequence is that the single
  2662. file, which was meant to be saved, is rather destroyed.
  2663. @end enumerate
  2664. So, recognizing the likelihood and the catastrophical nature of these
  2665. errors, @sc{gnu} @command{tar} now takes some distance from elegance, and
  2666. cowardly refuses to create an archive when @value{op-create} option is
  2667. given, there are no arguments besides options, and @value{op-files-from}
  2668. option is @emph{not} used. To get around the cautiousness of @sc{gnu}
  2669. @command{tar} and nevertheless create an archive with nothing in it,
  2670. one may still use, as the value for the @value{op-files-from} option,
  2671. a file with no names in it, as shown in the following commands:
  2672. @example
  2673. @kbd{tar --create --file=empty-archive.tar --files-from=/dev/null}
  2674. @kbd{tar cfT empty-archive.tar /dev/null}
  2675. @end example
  2676. @item @value{op-extract}
  2677. A socket is stored, within a @sc{gnu} @command{tar} archive, as a pipe.
  2678. @item @value{op-list}
  2679. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} now shows dates as @samp{1996-08-30}, while it used to
  2680. show them as @samp{Aug 30 1996}. (One can revert to the old behavior by
  2681. defining @code{USE_OLD_CTIME} in @file{src/list.c} before reinstalling.)
  2682. But preferably, people should get used to ISO 8601 dates. Local
  2683. American dates should be made available again with full date localization
  2684. support, once ready. In the meantime, programs not being localizable
  2685. for dates should prefer international dates, that's really the way to go.
  2686. Look up @url{http://www.ft.uni-erlangen.de/~mskuhn/iso-time.html} if you
  2687. are curious, it contains a detailed explanation of the ISO 8601 standard.
  2688. @end table
  2689. @node Advanced tar
  2690. @section Advanced @sc{gnu} @command{tar} Operations
  2691. Now that you have learned the basics of using @sc{gnu} @command{tar}, you may
  2692. want to learn about further ways in which @command{tar} can help you.
  2693. This chapter presents five, more advanced operations which you probably
  2694. won't use on a daily basis, but which serve more specialized functions.
  2695. We also explain the different styles of options and why you might want
  2696. to use one or another, or a combination of them in your @command{tar}
  2697. commands. Additionally, this chapter includes options which allow you to
  2698. define the output from @command{tar} more carefully, and provide help and
  2699. error correction in special circumstances.
  2700. @FIXME{check this after the chapter is actually revised to make sure
  2701. it still introduces the info in the chapter correctly : ).}
  2702. @menu
  2703. * Operations::
  2704. * current state::
  2705. * append::
  2706. * update::
  2707. * concatenate::
  2708. * delete::
  2709. * compare::
  2710. @end menu
  2711. @node Operations
  2712. @subsection The Five Advanced @command{tar} Operations
  2713. @UNREVISED
  2714. In the last chapter, you learned about the first three operations to
  2715. @command{tar}. This chapter presents the remaining five operations to
  2716. @command{tar}: @samp{--append}, @samp{--update}, @samp{--concatenate},
  2717. @samp{--delete}, and @samp{--compare}.
  2718. You are not likely to use these operations as frequently as those
  2719. covered in the last chapter; however, since they perform specialized
  2720. functions, they are quite useful when you do need to use them. We
  2721. will give examples using the same directory and files that you created
  2722. in the last chapter. As you may recall, the directory is called
  2723. @file{practice}, the files are @samp{jazz}, @samp{blues}, @samp{folk},
  2724. @samp{rock}, and the two archive files you created are
  2725. @samp{collection.tar} and @samp{music.tar}.
  2726. We will also use the archive files @samp{afiles.tar} and
  2727. @samp{bfiles.tar}. @samp{afiles.tar} contains the members @samp{apple},
  2728. @samp{angst}, and @samp{aspic}. @samp{bfiles.tar} contains the members
  2729. @samp{./birds}, @samp{baboon}, and @samp{./box}.
  2730. Unless we state otherwise, all practicing you do and examples you follow
  2731. in this chapter will take place in the @file{practice} directory that
  2732. you created in the previous chapter; see @ref{prepare for examples}.
  2733. (Below in this section, we will remind you of the state of the examples
  2734. where the last chapter left them.)
  2735. The five operations that we will cover in this chapter are:
  2736. @table @kbd
  2737. @item --append
  2738. @itemx -r
  2739. Add new entries to an archive that already exists.
  2740. @item --update
  2741. @itemx -r
  2742. Add more recent copies of archive members to the end of an archive, if
  2743. they exist.
  2744. @item --concatenate
  2745. @itemx --catenate
  2746. @itemx -A
  2747. Add one or more pre-existing archives to the end of another archive.
  2748. @item --delete
  2749. Delete items from an archive (does not work on tapes).
  2750. @item --compare
  2751. @itemx --diff
  2752. @itemx -d
  2753. Compare archive members to their counterparts in the file system.
  2754. @end table
  2755. @node current state
  2756. @subsection The Current State of the Practice Files
  2757. Currently, the listing of the directory using @command{ls} is as follows:
  2758. @example
  2759. @end example
  2760. @noindent
  2761. The archive file @samp{collection.tar} looks like this:
  2762. @example
  2763. $ @kbd{tar -tvf collection.tar}
  2764. @end example
  2765. @noindent
  2766. The archive file @samp{music.tar} looks like this:
  2767. @example
  2768. $ @kbd{tar -tvf music.tar}
  2769. @end example
  2770. @FIXME{need to fill in the above!!!}
  2771. @node append
  2772. @subsection How to Add Files to Existing Archives: @code{--append}
  2773. @UNREVISED
  2774. If you want to add files to an existing archive, you don't need to
  2775. create a new archive; you can use @value{op-append}. The archive must
  2776. already exist in order to use @samp{--append}. (A related operation
  2777. is the @samp{--update} operation; you can use this to add newer
  2778. versions of archive members to an existing archive. To learn how to
  2779. do this with @samp{--update}, @pxref{update}.)
  2780. @FIXME{Explain in second paragraph whether you can get to the previous
  2781. version -- explain whole situation somewhat more clearly.}
  2782. If you use @value{op-append} to add a file that has the same name as an
  2783. archive member to an archive containing that archive member, then the
  2784. old member is not deleted. What does happen, however, is somewhat
  2785. complex. @command{tar} @emph{allows} you to have infinite numbers of files
  2786. with the same name. Some operations treat these same-named members no
  2787. differently than any other set of archive members: for example, if you
  2788. view an archive with @value{op-list}, you will see all of those members
  2789. listed, with their modification times, owners, etc.
  2790. Other operations don't deal with these members as perfectly as you might
  2791. prefer; if you were to use @value{op-extract} to extract the archive,
  2792. only the most recently added copy of a member with the same name as four
  2793. other members would end up in the working directory. This is because
  2794. @samp{--extract} extracts an archive in the order the members appeared
  2795. in the archive; the most recently archived members will be extracted
  2796. last. Additionally, an extracted member will @emph{replace} a file of
  2797. the same name which existed in the directory already, and @command{tar}
  2798. will not prompt you about this. Thus, only the most recently archived
  2799. member will end up being extracted, as it will replace the one
  2800. extracted before it, and so on.
  2801. @FIXME{ hag -- you might want to incorporate some of the above into the
  2802. MMwtSN node; not sure. i didn't know how to make it simpler...}
  2803. There are a few ways to get around this. @FIXME-xref{Multiple Members
  2804. with the Same Name.}
  2805. @cindex Members, replacing with other members
  2806. @cindex Replacing members with other members
  2807. If you want to replace an archive member, use @value{op-delete} to
  2808. delete the member you want to remove from the archive, , and then use
  2809. @samp{--append} to add the member you want to be in the archive. Note
  2810. that you can not change the order of the archive; the most recently
  2811. added member will still appear last. In this sense, you cannot truly
  2812. ``replace'' one member with another. (Replacing one member with another
  2813. will not work on certain types of media, such as tapes; see @ref{delete}
  2814. and @ref{Media}, for more information.)
  2815. @menu
  2816. * appending files:: Appending Files to an Archive
  2817. * multiple::
  2818. @end menu
  2819. @node appending files
  2820. @subsubsection Appending Files to an Archive
  2821. @UNREVISED
  2822. @cindex Adding files to an Archive
  2823. @cindex Appending files to an Archive
  2824. @cindex Archives, Appending files to
  2825. The simplest way to add a file to an already existing archive is the
  2826. @value{op-append} operation, which writes specified files into the
  2827. archive whether or not they are already among the archived files.
  2828. When you use @samp{--append}, you @emph{must} specify file name
  2829. arguments, as there is no default. If you specify a file that already
  2830. exists in the archive, another copy of the file will be added to the
  2831. end of the archive. As with other operations, the member names of the
  2832. newly added files will be exactly the same as their names given on the
  2833. command line. The @value{op-verbose} option will print out the names
  2834. of the files as they are written into the archive.
  2835. @samp{--append} cannot be performed on some tape drives, unfortunately,
  2836. due to deficiencies in the formats those tape drives use. The archive
  2837. must be a valid @command{tar} archive, or else the results of using this
  2838. operation will be unpredictable. @xref{Media}.
  2839. To demonstrate using @samp{--append} to add a file to an archive,
  2840. create a file called @file{rock} in the @file{practice} directory.
  2841. Make sure you are in the @file{practice} directory. Then, run the
  2842. following @command{tar} command to add @file{rock} to
  2843. @file{collection.tar}:
  2844. @example
  2845. $ @kbd{tar --append --file=collection.tar rock}
  2846. @end example
  2847. @noindent
  2848. If you now use the @value{op-list} operation, you will see that
  2849. @file{rock} has been added to the archive:
  2850. @example
  2851. $ @kbd{tar --list --file=collection.tar}
  2852. -rw-rw-rw- me user 28 1996-10-18 16:31 jazz
  2853. -rw-rw-rw- me user 21 1996-09-23 16:44 blues
  2854. -rw-rw-rw- me user 20 1996-09-23 16:44 folk
  2855. -rw-rw-rw- me user 20 1996-09-23 16:44 rock
  2856. @end example
  2857. @FIXME{in theory, dan will (soon) try to turn this node into what it's
  2858. title claims it will become...}
  2859. @node multiple
  2860. @subsubsection Multiple Files with the Same Name
  2861. You can use @value{op-append} to add copies of files which have been
  2862. updated since the archive was created. (However, we do not recommend
  2863. doing this since there is another @command{tar} option called
  2864. @samp{--update}; @pxref{update} for more information. We describe this
  2865. use of @samp{--append} here for the sake of completeness.) @FIXME{is
  2866. this really a good idea, to give this whole description for something
  2867. which i believe is basically a Stupid way of doing something? certain
  2868. aspects of it show ways in which tar is more broken than i'd personally
  2869. like to admit to, specifically the last sentence. On the other hand, i
  2870. don't think it's a good idea to be saying that re explicitly don't
  2871. recommend using something, but i can't see any better way to deal with
  2872. the situation.}When you extract the archive, the older version will be
  2873. effectively lost. This works because files are extracted from an
  2874. archive in the order in which they were archived. Thus, when the
  2875. archive is extracted, a file archived later in time will replace a
  2876. file of the same name which was archived earlier, even though the older
  2877. version of the file will remain in the archive unless you delete all
  2878. versions of the file.
  2879. Supposing you change the file @file{blues} and then append the changed
  2880. version to @file{collection.tar}. As you saw above, the original
  2881. @file{blues} is in the archive @file{collection.tar}. If you change the
  2882. file and append the new version of the file to the archive, there will
  2883. be two copies in the archive. When you extract the archive, the older
  2884. version of the file will be extracted first, and then replaced by the
  2885. newer version when it is extracted.
  2886. You can append the new, changed copy of the file @file{blues} to the
  2887. archive in this way:
  2888. @example
  2889. $ @kbd{tar --append --verbose --file=collection.tar blues}
  2890. blues
  2891. @end example
  2892. @noindent
  2893. Because you specified the @samp{--verbose} option, @command{tar} has
  2894. printed the name of the file being appended as it was acted on. Now
  2895. list the contents of the archive:
  2896. @example
  2897. $ @kbd{tar --list --verbose --file=collection.tar}
  2898. -rw-rw-rw- me user 28 1996-10-18 16:31 jazz
  2899. -rw-rw-rw- me user 21 1996-09-23 16:44 blues
  2900. -rw-rw-rw- me user 20 1996-09-23 16:44 folk
  2901. -rw-rw-rw- me user 20 1996-09-23 16:44 rock
  2902. -rw-rw-rw- me user 58 1996-10-24 18:30 blues
  2903. @end example
  2904. @noindent
  2905. The newest version of @file{blues} is now at the end of the archive
  2906. (note the different creation dates and file sizes). If you extract
  2907. the archive, the older version of the file @file{blues} will be
  2908. replaced by the newer version. You can confirm this by extracting
  2909. the archive and running @samp{ls} on the directory. @xref{Writing},
  2910. for more information. (@emph{Please note:} This is the case unless
  2911. you employ the @value{op-backup} option. @FIXME-ref{Multiple Members
  2912. with the Same Name}.)
  2913. @node update
  2914. @subsection Updating an Archive
  2915. @UNREVISED
  2916. @cindex Updating an archive
  2917. In the previous section, you learned how to use @value{op-append} to add
  2918. a file to an existing archive. A related operation is
  2919. @value{op-update}. The @samp{--update} operation updates a @command{tar}
  2920. archive by comparing the date of the specified archive members against
  2921. the date of the file with the same name. If the file has been modified
  2922. more recently than the archive member, then the newer version of the
  2923. file is added to the archive (as with @value{op-append}).
  2924. Unfortunately, you cannot use @samp{--update} with magnetic tape drives.
  2925. The operation will fail.
  2926. @FIXME{other examples of media on which --update will fail? need to ask
  2927. charles and/or mib/thomas/dave shevett..}
  2928. Both @samp{--update} and @samp{--append} work by adding to the end
  2929. of the archive. When you extract a file from the archive, only the
  2930. version stored last will wind up in the file system, unless you use
  2931. the @value{op-backup} option. @FIXME-ref{Multiple Members with the
  2932. Same Name}
  2933. @menu
  2934. * how to update::
  2935. @end menu
  2936. @node how to update
  2937. @subsubsection How to Update an Archive Using @code{--update}
  2938. You must use file name arguments with the @value{op-update} operation.
  2939. If you don't specify any files, @command{tar} won't act on any files and
  2940. won't tell you that it didn't do anything (which may end up confusing
  2941. you).
  2942. @FIXME{note: the above parenthetical added because in fact, this
  2943. behavior just confused the author. :-) }
  2944. To see the @samp{--update} option at work, create a new file,
  2945. @file{classical}, in your practice directory, and some extra text to the
  2946. file @file{blues}, using any text editor. Then invoke @command{tar} with
  2947. the @samp{update} operation and the @value{op-verbose} option specified,
  2948. using the names of all the files in the practice directory as file name
  2949. arguments:
  2950. @example
  2951. $ @kbd{tar --update -v -f collection.tar blues folk rock classical}
  2952. blues
  2953. classical
  2954. $
  2955. @end example
  2956. @noindent
  2957. Because we have specified verbose mode, @command{tar} prints out the names
  2958. of the files it is working on, which in this case are the names of the
  2959. files that needed to be updated. If you run @samp{tar --list} and look
  2960. at the archive, you will see @file{blues} and @file{classical} at its
  2961. end. There will be a total of two versions of the member @samp{blues};
  2962. the one at the end will be newer and larger, since you added text before
  2963. updating it.
  2964. (The reason @command{tar} does not overwrite the older file when updating
  2965. it is because writing to the middle of a section of tape is a difficult
  2966. process. Tapes are not designed to go backward. @xref{Media}, for more
  2967. information about tapes.
  2968. @value{op-update} is not suitable for performing backups for two
  2969. reasons: it does not change directory content entries, and it lengthens
  2970. the archive every time it is used. The @sc{gnu} @command{tar} options intended
  2971. specifically for backups are more efficient. If you need to run
  2972. backups, please consult @ref{Backups}.
  2973. @node concatenate
  2974. @subsection Combining Archives with @code{--concatenate}
  2975. @cindex Adding archives to an archive
  2976. @cindex Concatenating Archives
  2977. Sometimes it may be convenient to add a second archive onto the end of
  2978. an archive rather than adding individual files to the archive. To add
  2979. one or more archives to the end of another archive, you should use the
  2980. @value{op-concatenate} operation.
  2981. To use @samp{--concatenate}, name the archives to be concatenated on the
  2982. command line. (Nothing happens if you don't list any.) The members,
  2983. and their member names, will be copied verbatim from those archives. If
  2984. this causes multiple members to have the same name, it does not delete
  2985. any members; all the members with the same name coexist. @FIXME-ref{For
  2986. information on how this affects reading the archive, Multiple
  2987. Members with the Same Name.}
  2988. To demonstrate how @samp{--concatenate} works, create two small archives
  2989. called @file{bluesrock.tar} and @file{folkjazz.tar}, using the relevant
  2990. files from @file{practice}:
  2991. @example
  2992. $ @kbd{tar -cvf bluesrock.tar blues rock}
  2993. blues
  2994. classical
  2995. $ @kbd{tar -cvf folkjazz.tar folk jazz}
  2996. folk
  2997. jazz
  2998. @end example
  2999. @noindent
  3000. If you like, You can run @samp{tar --list} to make sure the archives
  3001. contain what they are supposed to:
  3002. @example
  3003. $ @kbd{tar -tvf bluesrock.tar}
  3004. -rw-rw-rw- melissa user 105 1997-01-21 19:42 blues
  3005. -rw-rw-rw- melissa user 33 1997-01-20 15:34 rock
  3006. $ @kbd{tar -tvf folkjazz.tar}
  3007. -rw-rw-rw- melissa user 20 1996-09-23 16:44 folk
  3008. -rw-rw-rw- melissa user 65 1997-01-30 14:15 jazz
  3009. @end example
  3010. We can concatenate these two archives with @command{tar}:
  3011. @example
  3012. $ @kbd{cd ..}
  3013. $ @kbd{tar --concatenate --file=bluesrock.tar jazzfolk.tar}
  3014. @end example
  3015. If you now list the contents of the @file{bluesclass.tar}, you will see
  3016. that now it also contains the archive members of @file{jazzfolk.tar}:
  3017. @example
  3018. $ @kbd{tar --list --file=bluesrock.tar}
  3019. blues
  3020. rock
  3021. jazz
  3022. folk
  3023. @end example
  3024. When you use @samp{--concatenate}, the source and target archives must
  3025. already exist and must have been created using compatible format
  3026. parameters. @FIXME-pxref{Matching Format Parameters}The new,
  3027. concatenated archive will be called by the same name as the first
  3028. archive listed on the command line. @FIXME{is there a way to specify a
  3029. new name?}
  3030. Like @value{op-append}, this operation cannot be performed on some
  3031. tape drives, due to deficiencies in the formats those tape drives use.
  3032. @cindex @code{concatenate} vs @command{cat}
  3033. @cindex @command{cat} vs @code{concatenate}
  3034. It may seem more intuitive to you to want or try to use @command{cat} to
  3035. concatenate two archives instead of using the @samp{--concatenate}
  3036. operation; after all, @command{cat} is the utility for combining files.
  3037. However, @command{tar} archives incorporate an end-of-file marker which
  3038. must be removed if the concatenated archives are to be read properly as
  3039. one archive. @samp{--concatenate} removes the end-of-archive marker
  3040. from the target archive before each new archive is appended. If you use
  3041. @command{cat} to combine the archives, the result will not be a valid
  3042. @command{tar} format archive. If you need to retrieve files from an
  3043. archive that was added to using the @command{cat} utility, use the
  3044. @value{op-ignore-zeros} option. @xref{Ignore Zeros}, for further
  3045. information on dealing with archives improperly combined using the
  3046. @command{cat} shell utility.
  3047. @FIXME{this shouldn't go here. where should it go?} You must specify
  3048. the source archives using @value{op-file} (@value{pxref-file}). If you
  3049. do not specify the target archive, @command{tar} uses the value of the
  3050. environment variable @env{TAPE}, or, if this has not been set, the
  3051. default archive name.
  3052. @node delete
  3053. @subsection Removing Archive Members Using @samp{--delete}
  3054. @UNREVISED
  3055. @cindex Deleting files from an archive
  3056. @cindex Removing files from an archive
  3057. You can remove members from an archive by using the @value{op-delete}
  3058. option. Specify the name of the archive with @value{op-file} and then
  3059. specify the names of the members to be deleted; if you list no member
  3060. names, nothing will be deleted. The @value{op-verbose} option will
  3061. cause @command{tar} to print the names of the members as they are deleted.
  3062. As with @value{op-extract}, you must give the exact member names when
  3063. using @samp{tar --delete}. @samp{--delete} will remove all versions of
  3064. the named file from the archive. The @samp{--delete} operation can run
  3065. very slowly.
  3066. Unlike other operations, @samp{--delete} has no short form.
  3067. @cindex Tapes, using @code{--delete} and
  3068. @cindex Deleting from tape archives
  3069. This operation will rewrite the archive. You can only use
  3070. @samp{--delete} on an archive if the archive device allows you to
  3071. write to any point on the media, such as a disk; because of this, it
  3072. does not work on magnetic tapes. Do not try to delete an archive member
  3073. from a magnetic tape; the action will not succeed, and you will be
  3074. likely to scramble the archive and damage your tape. There is no safe
  3075. way (except by completely re-writing the archive) to delete files from
  3076. most kinds of magnetic tape. @xref{Media}.
  3077. To delete all versions of the file @file{blues} from the archive
  3078. @file{collection.tar} in the @file{practice} directory, make sure you
  3079. are in that directory, and then,
  3080. @example
  3081. $ @kbd{tar --list --file=collection.tar}
  3082. blues
  3083. folk
  3084. jazz
  3085. rock
  3086. practice/blues
  3087. practice/folk
  3088. practice/jazz
  3089. practice/rock
  3090. practice/blues
  3091. $ @kbd{tar --delete --file=collection.tar blues}
  3092. $ @kbd{tar --list --file=collection.tar}
  3093. folk
  3094. jazz
  3095. rock
  3096. $
  3097. @end example
  3098. @FIXME{I changed the order of these nodes around and haven't had a chance
  3099. to fix the above example's results, yet. I have to play with this and
  3100. follow it and see what it actually does!}
  3101. The @value{op-delete} option has been reported to work properly when
  3102. @command{tar} acts as a filter from @code{stdin} to @code{stdout}.
  3103. @node compare
  3104. @subsection Comparing Archive Members with the File System
  3105. @cindex Verifying the currency of an archive
  3106. @UNREVISED
  3107. The @samp{--compare} (@samp{-d}), or @samp{--diff} operation compares
  3108. specified archive members against files with the same names, and then
  3109. reports differences in file size, mode, owner, modification date and
  3110. contents. You should @emph{only} specify archive member names, not file
  3111. names. If you do not name any members, then @command{tar} will compare the
  3112. entire archive. If a file is represented in the archive but does not
  3113. exist in the file system, @command{tar} reports a difference.
  3114. You have to specify the record size of the archive when modifying an
  3115. archive with a non-default record size.
  3116. @command{tar} ignores files in the file system that do not have
  3117. corresponding members in the archive.
  3118. The following example compares the archive members @file{rock},
  3119. @file{blues} and @file{funk} in the archive @file{bluesrock.tar} with
  3120. files of the same name in the file system. (Note that there is no file,
  3121. @file{funk}; @command{tar} will report an error message.)
  3122. @example
  3123. $ @kbd{tar --compare --file=bluesrock.tar rock blues funk}
  3124. rock
  3125. blues
  3126. tar: funk not found in archive
  3127. @end example
  3128. @noindent
  3129. @FIXME{what does this actually depend on? i'm making a guess,
  3130. here.}Depending on the system where you are running @command{tar} and the
  3131. version you are running, @command{tar} may have a different error message,
  3132. such as:
  3133. @example
  3134. funk: does not exist
  3135. @end example
  3136. @FIXME-xref{somewhere, for more information about format parameters.
  3137. Melissa says: such as "format variations"? But why? Clearly I don't
  3138. get it yet; I'll deal when I get to that section.}
  3139. The spirit behind the @value{op-compare} option is to check whether the
  3140. archive represents the current state of files on disk, more than validating
  3141. the integrity of the archive media. For this later goal, @xref{verify}.
  3142. @node create options
  3143. @section Options Used by @code{--create}
  3144. The previous chapter described the basics of how to use
  3145. @value{op-create} to create an archive from a set of files.
  3146. @xref{create}. This section described advanced options to be used with
  3147. @samp{--create}.
  3148. @menu
  3149. * Ignore Failed Read::
  3150. @end menu
  3151. @node Ignore Failed Read
  3152. @subsection Ignore Fail Read
  3153. @table @kbd
  3154. @item --ignore-failed-read
  3155. Do not exit with nonzero on unreadable files or directories.
  3156. @end table
  3157. @node extract options
  3158. @section Options Used by @code{--extract}
  3159. @UNREVISED
  3160. @FIXME{i need to get dan to go over these options with me and see if
  3161. there's a better way of organizing them.}
  3162. The previous chapter showed how to use @value{op-extract} to extract
  3163. an archive into the filesystem. Various options cause @command{tar} to
  3164. extract more information than just file contents, such as the owner,
  3165. the permissions, the modification date, and so forth. This section
  3166. presents options to be used with @samp{--extract} when certain special
  3167. considerations arise. You may review the information presented in
  3168. @ref{extract} for more basic information about the
  3169. @samp{--extract} operation.
  3170. @menu
  3171. * Reading:: Options to Help Read Archives
  3172. * Writing:: Changing How @command{tar} Writes Files
  3173. * Scarce:: Coping with Scarce Resources
  3174. @end menu
  3175. @node Reading
  3176. @subsection Options to Help Read Archives
  3177. @cindex Options when reading archives
  3178. @cindex Reading incomplete records
  3179. @cindex Records, incomplete
  3180. @cindex End-of-archive entries, ignoring
  3181. @cindex Ignoring end-of-archive entries
  3182. @cindex Large lists of file names on small machines
  3183. @cindex Small memory
  3184. @cindex Running out of space
  3185. @UNREVISED
  3186. Normally, @command{tar} will request data in full record increments from
  3187. an archive storage device. If the device cannot return a full record,
  3188. @command{tar} will report an error. However, some devices do not always
  3189. return full records, or do not require the last record of an archive to
  3190. be padded out to the next record boundary. To keep reading until you
  3191. obtain a full record, or to accept an incomplete record if it contains
  3192. an end-of-archive marker, specify the @value{op-read-full-records} option
  3193. in conjunction with the @value{op-extract} or @value{op-list} operations.
  3194. @value{xref-read-full-records}.
  3195. The @value{op-read-full-records} option is turned on by default when
  3196. @command{tar} reads an archive from standard input, or from a remote
  3197. machine. This is because on BSD Unix systems, attempting to read a
  3198. pipe returns however much happens to be in the pipe, even if it is
  3199. less than was requested. If this option were not enabled, @command{tar}
  3200. would fail as soon as it read an incomplete record from the pipe.
  3201. If you're not sure of the blocking factor of an archive, you can
  3202. read the archive by specifying @value{op-read-full-records} and
  3203. @value{op-blocking-factor}, using a blocking factor larger than what the
  3204. archive uses. This lets you avoid having to determine the blocking factor
  3205. of an archive. @value{xref-blocking-factor}.
  3206. @menu
  3207. * read full records::
  3208. * Ignore Zeros::
  3209. @end menu
  3210. @node read full records
  3211. @unnumberedsubsubsec Reading Full Records
  3212. @FIXME{need sentence or so of intro here}
  3213. @table @kbd
  3214. @item --read-full-records
  3215. @item -B
  3216. Use in conjunction with @value{op-extract} to read an archive which
  3217. contains incomplete records, or one which has a blocking factor less
  3218. than the one specified.
  3219. @end table
  3220. @node Ignore Zeros
  3221. @unnumberedsubsubsec Ignoring Blocks of Zeros
  3222. Normally, @command{tar} stops reading when it encounters a block of zeros
  3223. between file entries (which usually indicates the end of the archive).
  3224. @value{op-ignore-zeros} allows @command{tar} to completely read an archive
  3225. which contains a block of zeros before the end (i.e.@: a damaged
  3226. archive, or one which was created by concatenating several archives
  3227. together).
  3228. The @value{op-ignore-zeros} option is turned off by default because many
  3229. versions of @command{tar} write garbage after the end-of-archive entry,
  3230. since that part of the media is never supposed to be read. @sc{gnu}
  3231. @command{tar} does not write after the end of an archive, but seeks to
  3232. maintain compatiblity among archiving utilities.
  3233. @table @kbd
  3234. @item --ignore-zeros
  3235. @itemx -i
  3236. To ignore blocks of zeros (ie.@: end-of-archive entries) which may be
  3237. encountered while reading an archive. Use in conjunction with
  3238. @value{op-extract} or @value{op-list}.
  3239. @end table
  3240. @node Writing
  3241. @subsection Changing How @command{tar} Writes Files
  3242. @cindex Overwriting old files, prevention
  3243. @cindex Protecting old files
  3244. @cindex Modification times of extracted files
  3245. @cindex Permissions of extracted files
  3246. @cindex Modes of extracted files
  3247. @cindex Writing extracted files to standard output
  3248. @cindex Standard output, writing extracted files to
  3249. @UNREVISED
  3250. @FIXME{need to mention the brand new option, --backup}
  3251. @menu
  3252. * Dealing with Old Files::
  3253. * Overwrite Old Files::
  3254. * Keep Old Files::
  3255. * Unlink First::
  3256. * Recursive Unlink::
  3257. * Modification Times::
  3258. * Setting Access Permissions::
  3259. * Writing to Standard Output::
  3260. * remove files::
  3261. @end menu
  3262. @node Dealing with Old Files
  3263. @unnumberedsubsubsec Options Controlling the Overwriting of Existing Files
  3264. When extracting files, if @command{tar} discovers that the extracted
  3265. file already exists, it normally replaces the file by removing it before
  3266. extracting it, to prevent confusion in the presence of hard or symbolic
  3267. links. (If the existing file is a symbolic link, it is removed, not
  3268. followed.) However, if a directory cannot be removed because it is
  3269. nonempty, @command{tar} neither removes it nor modifies its ownership,
  3270. permissions, or time stamps.
  3271. To be more cautious and prevent existing files from being replaced, use
  3272. the @value{op-keep-old-files} option. It causes @command{tar} to refuse
  3273. to replace or update a file that already exists, i.e., a file with the
  3274. same name as an archive member prevents extraction of that archive
  3275. member. Instead, it reports an error.
  3276. To be more aggressive about altering existing files, use the
  3277. @value{op-overwrite} option. It causes @command{tar} to overwrite
  3278. existing files and to follow existing symbolic links when extracting.
  3279. The @option{--overwrite-dir} option is somewhat more conservative than
  3280. @value{op-overwrite}: it overwrites metadata (ownership, permission,
  3281. etc.) for directories, but removes other files before extracting them.
  3282. Some people argue that @sc{gnu} @command{tar} should not hesitate to overwrite
  3283. files with other files when extracting. When extracting a @command{tar}
  3284. archive, they expect to see a faithful copy of the state of the filesystem
  3285. when the archive was created. It is debatable that this would always
  3286. be a proper behavior. For example, suppose one has an archive in
  3287. which @file{usr/local} is a link to @file{usr/local2}. Since then,
  3288. maybe the site removed the link and renamed the whole hierarchy from
  3289. @file{/usr/local2} to @file{/usr/local}. Such things happen all the time.
  3290. I guess it would not be welcome at all that @sc{gnu} @command{tar} removes the
  3291. whole hierarchy just to make room for the link to be reinstated (unless it
  3292. @emph{also} simultaneously restores the full @file{/usr/local2}, of course!
  3293. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} is indeed able to remove a whole hierarchy to reestablish a
  3294. symbolic link, for example, but @emph{only if} @value{op-recursive-unlink}
  3295. is specified to allow this behavior. In any case, single files are
  3296. silently removed.
  3297. Finally, the @value{op-unlink-first} option can improve performance in
  3298. some cases by causing @command{tar} to remove files unconditionally
  3299. before extracting them.
  3300. @node Overwrite Old Files
  3301. @unnumberedsubsubsec Overwrite Old Files
  3302. @table @kbd
  3303. @item --overwrite
  3304. Overwrite existing files and directory metadata when extracting files
  3305. from an archive.
  3306. This
  3307. causes @command{tar} to write extracted files into the file system without
  3308. regard to the files already on the system; i.e., files with the same
  3309. names as archive members are overwritten when the archive is extracted.
  3310. It also causes @command{tar} to extract the ownership, permissions,
  3311. and time stamps onto any preexisting files or directories.
  3312. If the name of a corresponding file name is a symbolic link, the file
  3313. pointed to by the symbolic link will be overwritten instead of the
  3314. symbolic link itself (if this is possible). Moreover, special devices,
  3315. empty directories and even symbolic links are automatically removed if
  3316. they are in the way of extraction.
  3317. Be careful when using the @value{op-overwrite} option, particularly when
  3318. combined with the @value{op-absolute-names} option, as this combination
  3319. can change the contents, ownership or permissions of any file on your
  3320. system. Also, many systems do not take kindly to overwriting files that
  3321. are currently being executed.
  3322. @item --overwrite-dir
  3323. Overwrite the metadata of directories when extracting files from an
  3324. archive, but remove other files before extracting.
  3325. @end table
  3326. @node Keep Old Files
  3327. @unnumberedsubsubsec Keep Old Files
  3328. @table @kbd
  3329. @item --keep-old-files
  3330. @itemx -k
  3331. Do not replace existing files from archive. The
  3332. @value{op-keep-old-files} option prevents @command{tar} from replacing
  3333. existing files with files with the same name from the archive.
  3334. The @value{op-keep-old-files} option is meaningless with @value{op-list}.
  3335. Prevents @command{tar} from replacing files in the file system during
  3336. extraction.
  3337. @end table
  3338. @node Unlink First
  3339. @unnumberedsubsubsec Unlink First
  3340. @table @kbd
  3341. @item --unlink-first
  3342. @itemx -U
  3343. Remove files before extracting over them.
  3344. This can make @command{tar} run a bit faster if you know in advance
  3345. that the extracted files all need to be removed. Normally this option
  3346. slows @command{tar} down slightly, so it is disabled by default.
  3347. @end table
  3348. @node Recursive Unlink
  3349. @unnumberedsubsubsec Recursive Unlink
  3350. @table @kbd
  3351. @item --recursive-unlink
  3352. When this option is specified, try removing files and directory hierarchies
  3353. before extracting over them. @emph{This is a dangerous option!}
  3354. @end table
  3355. If you specify the @value{op-recursive-unlink} option,
  3356. @command{tar} removes @emph{anything} that keeps you from extracting a file
  3357. as far as current permissions will allow it. This could include removal
  3358. of the contents of a full directory hierarchy.
  3359. @node Modification Times
  3360. @unnumberedsubsubsec Setting Modification Times
  3361. Normally, @command{tar} sets the modification times of extracted files to
  3362. the modification times recorded for the files in the archive, but
  3363. limits the permissions of extracted files by the current @code{umask}
  3364. setting.
  3365. To set the modification times of extracted files to the time when
  3366. the files were extracted, use the @value{op-touch} option in
  3367. conjunction with @value{op-extract}.
  3368. @table @kbd
  3369. @item --touch
  3370. @itemx -m
  3371. Sets the modification time of extracted archive members to the time
  3372. they were extracted, not the time recorded for them in the archive.
  3373. Use in conjunction with @value{op-extract}.
  3374. @end table
  3375. @node Setting Access Permissions
  3376. @unnumberedsubsubsec Setting Access Permissions
  3377. To set the modes (access permissions) of extracted files to those
  3378. recorded for those files in the archive, use @samp{--same-permissions}
  3379. in conjunction with the @value{op-extract} operation. @FIXME{Should be
  3380. aliased to ignore-umask.}
  3381. @table @kbd
  3382. @item --preserve-permission
  3383. @itemx --same-permission
  3384. @itemx --ignore-umask
  3385. @itemx -p
  3386. Set modes of extracted archive members to those recorded in the
  3387. archive, instead of current umask settings. Use in conjunction with
  3388. @value{op-extract}.
  3389. @end table
  3390. @FIXME{Following paragraph needs to be rewritten: why doesn't this cat
  3391. files together, why is this useful. is it really useful with
  3392. more than one file?}
  3393. @node Writing to Standard Output
  3394. @unnumberedsubsubsec Writing to Standard Output
  3395. To write the extracted files to the standard output, instead of
  3396. creating the files on the file system, use @value{op-to-stdout} in
  3397. conjunction with @value{op-extract}. This option is useful if you are
  3398. extracting files to send them through a pipe, and do not need to
  3399. preserve them in the file system. If you extract multiple members,
  3400. they appear on standard output concatenated, in the order they are
  3401. found in the archive.
  3402. @table @kbd
  3403. @item --to-stdout
  3404. @itemx -O
  3405. Writes files to the standard output. Used in conjunction with
  3406. @value{op-extract}. Extract files to standard output. When this option
  3407. is used, instead of creating the files specified, @command{tar} writes
  3408. the contents of the files extracted to its standard output. This may
  3409. be useful if you are only extracting the files in order to send them
  3410. through a pipe. This option is meaningless with @value{op-list}.
  3411. @end table
  3412. @FIXME{Why would you want to do such a thing, how are files separated on
  3413. the standard output? is this useful with more that one file? Are
  3414. pipes the real reason?}
  3415. @node remove files
  3416. @unnumberedsubsubsec Removing Files
  3417. @FIXME{the various macros in the front of the manual think that this
  3418. option goes in this section. i have no idea; i only know it's nowhere
  3419. else in the book...}
  3420. @table @kbd
  3421. @item --remove-files
  3422. Remove files after adding them to the archive.
  3423. @end table
  3424. @node Scarce
  3425. @subsection Coping with Scarce Resources
  3426. @cindex Middle of the archive, starting in the
  3427. @cindex Running out of space during extraction
  3428. @cindex Disk space, running out of
  3429. @cindex Space on the disk, recovering from lack of
  3430. @UNREVISED
  3431. @menu
  3432. * Starting File::
  3433. * Same Order::
  3434. @end menu
  3435. @node Starting File
  3436. @unnumberedsubsubsec Starting File
  3437. @table @kbd
  3438. @item --starting-file=@var{name}
  3439. @itemx -K @var{name}
  3440. Starts an operation in the middle of an archive. Use in conjunction
  3441. with @value{op-extract} or @value{op-list}.
  3442. @end table
  3443. If a previous attempt to extract files failed due to lack of disk
  3444. space, you can use @value{op-starting-file} to start extracting only
  3445. after member @var{name} of the archive. This assumes, of course, that
  3446. there is now free space, or that you are now extracting into a
  3447. different file system. (You could also choose to suspend @command{tar},
  3448. remove unnecessary files from the file system, and then restart the
  3449. same @command{tar} operation. In this case, @value{op-starting-file} is
  3450. not necessary. @value{xref-incremental}, @value{xref-interactive},
  3451. and @value{ref-exclude}.)
  3452. @node Same Order
  3453. @unnumberedsubsubsec Same Order
  3454. @table @kbd
  3455. @item --same-order
  3456. @itemx --preserve-order
  3457. @itemx -s
  3458. To process large lists of file names on machines with small amounts of
  3459. memory. Use in conjunction with @value{op-compare},
  3460. @value{op-list}
  3461. or @value{op-extract}.
  3462. @end table
  3463. @FIXME{we don't need/want --preserve to exist any more (from melissa:
  3464. ie, don't want that *version* of the option to exist, or don't want
  3465. the option to exist in either version?}
  3466. @FIXME{i think this explanation is lacking.}
  3467. The @value{op-same-order} option tells @command{tar} that the list of file
  3468. names to be listed or extracted is sorted in the same order as the
  3469. files in the archive. This allows a large list of names to be used,
  3470. even on a small machine that would not otherwise be able to hold all
  3471. the names in memory at the same time. Such a sorted list can easily be
  3472. created by running @samp{tar -t} on the archive and editing its output.
  3473. This option is probably never needed on modern computer systems.
  3474. @node backup
  3475. @section Backup options
  3476. @cindex backup options
  3477. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} offers options for making backups of files before writing
  3478. new versions. These options control the details of these backups.
  3479. They may apply to the archive itself before it is created or rewritten,
  3480. as well as individual extracted members. Other @sc{gnu} programs (@command{cp},
  3481. @command{install}, @command{ln}, and @command{mv}, for example) offer similar
  3482. options.
  3483. Backup options may prove unexpectedly useful when extracting archives
  3484. containing many members having identical name, or when extracting archives
  3485. on systems having file name limitations, making different members appear
  3486. has having similar names through the side-effect of name truncation.
  3487. (This is true only if we have a good scheme for truncated backup names,
  3488. which I'm not sure at all: I suspect work is needed in this area.)
  3489. When any existing file is backed up before being overwritten by extraction,
  3490. then clashing files are automatically be renamed to be unique, and the
  3491. true name is kept for only the last file of a series of clashing files.
  3492. By using verbose mode, users may track exactly what happens.
  3493. At the detail level, some decisions are still experimental, and may
  3494. change in the future, we are waiting comments from our users. So, please
  3495. do not learn to depend blindly on the details of the backup features.
  3496. For example, currently, directories themselves are never renamed through
  3497. using these options, so, extracting a file over a directory still has
  3498. good chances to fail. Also, backup options apply to created archives,
  3499. not only to extracted members. For created archives, backups will not
  3500. be attempted when the archive is a block or character device, or when it
  3501. refers to a remote file.
  3502. For the sake of simplicity and efficiency, backups are made by renaming old
  3503. files prior to creation or extraction, and not by copying. The original
  3504. name is restored if the file creation fails. If a failure occurs after a
  3505. partial extraction of a file, both the backup and the partially extracted
  3506. file are kept.
  3507. @table @samp
  3508. @item --backup[=@var{method}]
  3509. @opindex --backup
  3510. @vindex VERSION_CONTROL
  3511. @cindex backups
  3512. Back up files that are about to be overwritten or removed.
  3513. Without this option, the original versions are destroyed.
  3514. Use @var{method} to determine the type of backups made.
  3515. If @var{method} is not specified, use the value of the @env{VERSION_CONTROL}
  3516. environment variable. And if @env{VERSION_CONTROL} is not set,
  3517. use the @samp{existing} method.
  3518. @vindex version-control @r{Emacs variable}
  3519. This option corresponds to the Emacs variable @samp{version-control};
  3520. the same values for @var{method} are accepted as in Emacs. This option
  3521. also allows more descriptive names. The valid @var{method}s are:
  3522. @table @samp
  3523. @item t
  3524. @itemx numbered
  3525. @opindex numbered @r{backup method}
  3526. Always make numbered backups.
  3527. @item nil
  3528. @itemx existing
  3529. @opindex existing @r{backup method}
  3530. Make numbered backups of files that already have them, simple backups
  3531. of the others.
  3532. @item never
  3533. @itemx simple
  3534. @opindex simple @r{backup method}
  3535. Always make simple backups.
  3536. @end table
  3537. @item --suffix=@var{suffix}
  3538. @opindex --suffix
  3539. @cindex backup suffix
  3540. @vindex SIMPLE_BACKUP_SUFFIX
  3541. Append @var{suffix} to each backup file made with @samp{--backup}. If this
  3542. option is not specified, the value of the @env{SIMPLE_BACKUP_SUFFIX}
  3543. environment variable is used. And if @env{SIMPLE_BACKUP_SUFFIX} is not
  3544. set, the default is @samp{~}, just as in Emacs.
  3545. @end table
  3546. Some people express the desire to @emph{always} use the @value{op-backup}
  3547. option, by defining some kind of alias or script. This is not as easy
  3548. as one may think, due to the fact that old style options should appear first
  3549. and consume arguments a bit unpredictably for an alias or script. But,
  3550. if you are ready to give up using old style options, you may resort to
  3551. using something like (a Bourne shell function here):
  3552. @example
  3553. tar () @{ /usr/local/bin/tar --backup $*; @}
  3554. @end example
  3555. @node Applications
  3556. @section Notable @command{tar} Usages
  3557. @UNREVISED
  3558. @FIXME{Using Unix file linking capability to recreate directory
  3559. structures---linking files into one subdirectory and then
  3560. @command{tar}ring that directory.}
  3561. @FIXME{Nice hairy example using absolute-names, newer, etc.}
  3562. @findex uuencode
  3563. You can easily use archive files to transport a group of files from
  3564. one system to another: put all relevant files into an archive on one
  3565. computer system, transfer the archive to another system, and extract
  3566. the contents there. The basic transfer medium might be magnetic tape,
  3567. Internet FTP, or even electronic mail (though you must encode the
  3568. archive with @command{uuencode} in order to transport it properly by
  3569. mail). Both machines do not have to use the same operating system, as
  3570. long as they both support the @command{tar} program.
  3571. For example, here is how you might copy a directory's contents from
  3572. one disk to another, while preserving the dates, modes, owners and
  3573. link-structure of all the files therein. In this case, the transfer
  3574. medium is a @dfn{pipe}, which is one a Unix redirection mechanism:
  3575. @smallexample
  3576. $ @kbd{cd sourcedir; tar -cf - . | (cd targetdir; tar -xf -)}
  3577. @end smallexample
  3578. @noindent
  3579. The command also works using short option forms:
  3580. @FIXME{The following using standard input/output correct??}
  3581. @smallexample
  3582. $ @w{@kbd{cd sourcedir; tar --create --file=- . | (cd targetdir; tar --extract --file=-)}}
  3583. @end smallexample
  3584. @noindent
  3585. This is one of the easiest methods to transfer a @command{tar} archive.
  3586. @node looking ahead
  3587. @section Looking Ahead: The Rest of this Manual
  3588. You have now seen how to use all eight of the operations available to
  3589. @command{tar}, and a number of the possible options. The next chapter
  3590. explains how to choose and change file and archive names, how to use
  3591. files to store names of other files which you can then call as
  3592. arguments to @command{tar} (this can help you save time if you expect to
  3593. archive the same list of files a number of times), and so forth.
  3594. @FIXME{in case it's not obvious, i'm making this up in some sense
  3595. based on my imited memory of what the next chapter *really* does. i
  3596. just wanted to flesh out this final section a little bit so i'd
  3597. remember to sitck it in here. :-)}
  3598. If there are too many files to conveniently list on the command line,
  3599. you can list the names in a file, and @command{tar} will read that file.
  3600. @value{xref-files-from}.
  3601. There are various ways of causing @command{tar} to skip over some files,
  3602. and not archive them. @xref{Choosing}.
  3603. @node Backups
  3604. @chapter Performing Backups and Restoring Files
  3605. @UNREVISED
  3606. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} is distributed along with the scripts which the Free
  3607. Software Foundation uses for performing backups. There is no corresponding
  3608. scripts available yet for doing restoration of files. Even if there is
  3609. a good chance those scripts may be satisfying to you, they are not the
  3610. only scripts or methods available for doing backups and restore. You may
  3611. well create your own, or use more sophisticated packages dedicated to
  3612. that purpose.
  3613. Some users are enthusiastic about @code{Amanda} (The Advanced Maryland
  3614. Automatic Network Disk Archiver), a backup system developed by James
  3615. da Silva @file{jds@@cs.umd.edu} and available on many Unix systems.
  3616. This is free software, and it is available at these places:
  3617. @example
  3618. http://www.cs.umd.edu/projects/amanda/amanda.html
  3619. ftp://ftp.cs.umd.edu/pub/amanda
  3620. @end example
  3621. @ifclear PUBLISH
  3622. Here is a possible plan for a future documentation about the backuping
  3623. scripts which are provided within the @sc{gnu} @command{tar} distribution.
  3624. @example
  3625. .* dumps
  3626. . + what are dumps
  3627. . + different levels of dumps
  3628. . - full dump = dump everything
  3629. . - level 1, level 2 dumps etc, -
  3630. A level n dump dumps everything changed since the last level
  3631. n-1 dump (?)
  3632. . + how to use scripts for dumps (ie, the concept)
  3633. . - scripts to run after editing backup specs (details)
  3634. . + Backup Specs, what is it.
  3635. . - how to customize
  3636. . - actual text of script [/sp/dump/backup-specs]
  3637. . + Problems
  3638. . - rsh doesn't work
  3639. . - rtape isn't installed
  3640. . - (others?)
  3641. . + the --incremental option of tar
  3642. . + tapes
  3643. . - write protection
  3644. . - types of media
  3645. . : different sizes and types, useful for different things
  3646. . - files and tape marks
  3647. one tape mark between files, two at end.
  3648. . - positioning the tape
  3649. MT writes two at end of write,
  3650. backspaces over one when writing again.
  3651. @end example
  3652. @end ifclear
  3653. This chapter documents both the provided FSF scripts and @command{tar}
  3654. options which are more specific to usage as a backup tool.
  3655. To @dfn{back up} a file system means to create archives that contain
  3656. all the files in that file system. Those archives can then be used to
  3657. restore any or all of those files (for instance if a disk crashes or a
  3658. file is accidentally deleted). File system @dfn{backups} are also
  3659. called @dfn{dumps}.
  3660. @menu
  3661. * Full Dumps:: Using @command{tar} to Perform Full Dumps
  3662. * Inc Dumps:: Using @command{tar} to Perform Incremental Dumps
  3663. * incremental and listed-incremental:: The Incremental Options
  3664. * Backup Levels:: Levels of Backups
  3665. * Backup Parameters:: Setting Parameters for Backups and Restoration
  3666. * Scripted Backups:: Using the Backup Scripts
  3667. * Scripted Restoration:: Using the Restore Script
  3668. @end menu
  3669. @node Full Dumps
  3670. @section Using @command{tar} to Perform Full Dumps
  3671. @UNREVISED
  3672. @cindex full dumps
  3673. @cindex dumps, full
  3674. @cindex corrupted archives
  3675. Full dumps should only be made when no other people or programs
  3676. are modifying files in the filesystem. If files are modified while
  3677. @command{tar} is making the backup, they may not be stored properly in
  3678. the archive, in which case you won't be able to restore them if you
  3679. have to. (Files not being modified are written with no trouble, and do
  3680. not corrupt the entire archive.)
  3681. You will want to use the @value{op-label} option to give the archive a
  3682. volume label, so you can tell what this archive is even if the label
  3683. falls off the tape, or anything like that.
  3684. Unless the filesystem you are dumping is guaranteed to fit on
  3685. one volume, you will need to use the @value{op-multi-volume} option.
  3686. Make sure you have enough tapes on hand to complete the backup.
  3687. If you want to dump each filesystem separately you will need to use
  3688. the @value{op-one-file-system} option to prevent @command{tar} from crossing
  3689. filesystem boundaries when storing (sub)directories.
  3690. The @value{op-incremental} option is not needed, since this is a complete
  3691. copy of everything in the filesystem, and a full restore from this
  3692. backup would only be done onto a completely empty disk.
  3693. Unless you are in a hurry, and trust the @command{tar} program (and your
  3694. tapes), it is a good idea to use the @value{op-verify} option, to make
  3695. sure your files really made it onto the dump properly. This will
  3696. also detect cases where the file was modified while (or just after)
  3697. it was being archived. Not all media (notably cartridge tapes) are
  3698. capable of being verified, unfortunately.
  3699. @value{op-listed-incremental} take a file name argument always. If the
  3700. file doesn't exist, run a level zero dump, creating the file. If the
  3701. file exists, uses that file to see what has changed.
  3702. @value{op-incremental} @FIXME{look it up}
  3703. @value{op-incremental} handle old @sc{gnu}-format incremental backup.
  3704. This option should only be used when creating an incremental backup of
  3705. a filesystem. When the @value{op-incremental} option is used, @command{tar}
  3706. writes, at the beginning of the archive, an entry for each of the
  3707. directories that will be operated on. The entry for a directory
  3708. includes a list of all the files in the directory at the time the
  3709. dump was done, and a flag for each file indicating whether the file
  3710. is going to be put in the archive. This information is used when
  3711. doing a complete incremental restore.
  3712. Note that this option causes @command{tar} to create a non-standard
  3713. archive that may not be readable by non-@sc{gnu} versions of the @command{tar}
  3714. program.
  3715. The @value{op-incremental} option means the archive is an incremental
  3716. backup. Its meaning depends on the command that it modifies.
  3717. If the @value{op-incremental} option is used with @value{op-list}, @command{tar}
  3718. will list, for each directory in the archive, the list of files in
  3719. that directory at the time the archive was created. This information
  3720. is put out in a format that is not easy for humans to read, but which
  3721. is unambiguous for a program: each file name is preceded by either a
  3722. @samp{Y} if the file is present in the archive, an @samp{N} if the
  3723. file is not included in the archive, or a @samp{D} if the file is
  3724. a directory (and is included in the archive). Each file name is
  3725. terminated by a null character. The last file is followed by an
  3726. additional null and a newline to indicate the end of the data.
  3727. If the @value{op-incremental} option is used with @value{op-extract}, then
  3728. when the entry for a directory is found, all files that currently
  3729. exist in that directory but are not listed in the archive @emph{are
  3730. deleted from the directory}.
  3731. This behavior is convenient when you are restoring a damaged file
  3732. system from a succession of incremental backups: it restores the
  3733. entire state of the file system to that which obtained when the backup
  3734. was made. If you don't use @value{op-incremental}, the file system will
  3735. probably fill up with files that shouldn't exist any more.
  3736. @value{op-listed-incremental} handle new @sc{gnu}-format incremental backup.
  3737. This option handles new @sc{gnu}-format incremental backup. It has much the
  3738. same effect as @value{op-incremental}, but also the time when the dump
  3739. is done and the list of directories dumped is written to the given
  3740. @var{file}. When restoring, only files newer than the saved time are
  3741. restored, and the directory list is used to speed up operations.
  3742. @value{op-listed-incremental} acts like @value{op-incremental}, but when
  3743. used in conjunction with @value{op-create} will also cause @command{tar} to
  3744. use the file @var{file}, which contains information about the state
  3745. of the filesystem at the time of the last backup, to decide which
  3746. files to include in the archive being created. That file will then
  3747. be updated by @command{tar}. If the file @var{file} does not exist when
  3748. this option is specified, @command{tar} will create it, and include all
  3749. appropriate files in the archive.
  3750. The file, which is archive independent, contains the date it was last
  3751. modified and a list of devices, inode numbers and directory names.
  3752. @command{tar} will archive files with newer mod dates or inode change
  3753. times, and directories with an unchanged inode number and device but
  3754. a changed directory name. The file is updated after the files to
  3755. be archived are determined, but before the new archive is actually
  3756. created.
  3757. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} actually writes the file twice: once before the data
  3758. and written, and once after.
  3759. @node Inc Dumps
  3760. @section Using @command{tar} to Perform Incremental Dumps
  3761. @UNREVISED
  3762. @cindex incremental dumps
  3763. @cindex dumps, incremental
  3764. Performing incremental dumps is similar to performing full dumps,
  3765. although a few more options will usually be needed.
  3766. A standard scheme is to do a @emph{monthly} (full) dump once a month,
  3767. a @emph{weekly} dump once a week of everything since the last monthly
  3768. and a @emph{daily} every day of everything since the last (weekly or
  3769. monthly) dump.
  3770. Here is a sample script to dump the directory hierarchies @samp{/usr}
  3771. and @samp{/var}.
  3772. @example
  3773. #! /bin/sh
  3774. tar --create \
  3775. --blocking-factor=126 \
  3776. --file=/dev/rmt/0 \
  3777. --label="`hostname` /usr /var `date +%Y-%m-%d`" \
  3778. --listed-incremental=/var/log/usr-var.snar \
  3779. --verbose \
  3780. /usr /var
  3781. @end example
  3782. This script uses the file @file{/var/log/usr-var.snar} as a snapshot to
  3783. store information about the previous tar dump.
  3784. The blocking factor 126 is an attempt to make the tape drive stream.
  3785. Some tape devices cannot handle 64 kB blocks or larger, and require the
  3786. block size to be a multiple of 1 kB; for these devices, 126 is the
  3787. largest blocking factor that can be used.
  3788. @node incremental and listed-incremental
  3789. @section The Incremental Options
  3790. @UNREVISED
  3791. @value{op-incremental} is used in conjunction with @value{op-create},
  3792. @value{op-extract} or @value{op-list} when backing up and restoring file
  3793. systems. An archive cannot be extracted or listed with the
  3794. @value{op-incremental} option specified unless it was created with the
  3795. option specified. This option should only be used by a script, not by
  3796. the user, and is usually disregarded in favor of
  3797. @value{op-listed-incremental}, which is described below.
  3798. @value{op-incremental} in conjunction with @value{op-create} causes
  3799. @command{tar} to write, at the beginning of the archive, an entry for
  3800. each of the directories that will be archived. The entry for a
  3801. directory includes a list of all the files in the directory at the
  3802. time the archive was created and a flag for each file indicating
  3803. whether or not the file is going to be put in the archive.
  3804. Note that this option causes @command{tar} to create a non-standard
  3805. archive that may not be readable by non-@sc{gnu} versions of the @command{tar}
  3806. program.
  3807. @value{op-incremental} in conjunction with @value{op-extract} causes
  3808. @command{tar} to read the lists of directory contents previously stored
  3809. in the archive, @emph{delete} files in the file system that did not
  3810. exist in their directories when the archive was created, and then
  3811. extract the files in the archive.
  3812. This behavior is convenient when restoring a damaged file system from
  3813. a succession of incremental backups: it restores the entire state of
  3814. the file system to that which obtained when the backup was made. If
  3815. @value{op-incremental} isn't specified, the file system will probably
  3816. fill up with files that shouldn't exist any more.
  3817. @value{op-incremental} in conjunction with @value{op-list} causes
  3818. @command{tar} to print, for each directory in the archive, the list of
  3819. files in that directory at the time the archive was created. This
  3820. information is put out in a format that is not easy for humans to
  3821. read, but which is unambiguous for a program: each file name is
  3822. preceded by either a @samp{Y} if the file is present in the archive,
  3823. an @samp{N} if the file is not included in the archive, or a @samp{D}
  3824. if the file is a directory (and is included in the archive). Each
  3825. file name is terminated by a null character. The last file is followed
  3826. by an additional null and a newline to indicate the end of the data.
  3827. @value{op-listed-incremental} acts like @value{op-incremental}, but when
  3828. used in conjunction with @value{op-create} will also cause @command{tar}
  3829. to use the file @var{snapshot-file}, which contains information about
  3830. the state of the file system at the time of the last backup, to decide
  3831. which files to include in the archive being created. That file will
  3832. then be updated by @command{tar}. If the file @var{file} does not exist
  3833. when this option is specified, @command{tar} will create it, and include
  3834. all appropriate files in the archive.
  3835. The file @var{file}, which is archive independent, contains the date
  3836. it was last modified and a list of devices, inode numbers and
  3837. directory names. @command{tar} will archive files with newer mod dates
  3838. or inode change times, and directories with an unchanged inode number
  3839. and device but a changed directory name. The file is updated after
  3840. the files to be archived are determined, but before the new archive is
  3841. actually created.
  3842. Incremental dumps depend crucially on time stamps, so the results are
  3843. unreliable if you modify a file's time stamps during dumping (e.g.@:
  3844. with the @samp{--atime-preserve} option), or if you set the clock
  3845. backwards.
  3846. Despite it should be obvious that a device has a non-volatile value, NFS
  3847. devices have non-dependable values when an automounter gets in the picture.
  3848. This led to a great deal of spurious redumping in incremental dumps,
  3849. so it is somewhat useless to compare two NFS devices numbers over time.
  3850. So @command{tar} now considers all NFS devices as being equal when it comes
  3851. to comparing directories; this is fairly gross, but there does not seem
  3852. to be a better way to go.
  3853. @FIXME{this section needs to be written}
  3854. @node Backup Levels
  3855. @section Levels of Backups
  3856. @UNREVISED
  3857. An archive containing all the files in the file system is called a
  3858. @dfn{full backup} or @dfn{full dump}. You could insure your data by
  3859. creating a full dump every day. This strategy, however, would waste a
  3860. substantial amount of archive media and user time, as unchanged files
  3861. are daily re-archived.
  3862. It is more efficient to do a full dump only occasionally. To back up
  3863. files between full dumps, you can a incremental dump. A @dfn{level
  3864. one} dump archives all the files that have changed since the last full
  3865. dump.
  3866. A typical dump strategy would be to perform a full dump once a week,
  3867. and a level one dump once a day. This means some versions of files
  3868. will in fact be archived more than once, but this dump strategy makes
  3869. it possible to restore a file system to within one day of accuracy by
  3870. only extracting two archives---the last weekly (full) dump and the
  3871. last daily (level one) dump. The only information lost would be in
  3872. files changed or created since the last daily backup. (Doing dumps
  3873. more than once a day is usually not worth the trouble).
  3874. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} comes with scripts you can use to do full and level-one
  3875. dumps. Using scripts (shell programs) to perform backups and
  3876. restoration is a convenient and reliable alternative to typing out
  3877. file name lists and @command{tar} commands by hand.
  3878. Before you use these scripts, you need to edit the file
  3879. @file{backup-specs}, which specifies parameters used by the backup
  3880. scripts and by the restore script. @FIXME{There is no such restore
  3881. script!}@FIXME-xref{Script Syntax}Once the backup parameters
  3882. are set, you can perform backups or restoration by running the
  3883. appropriate script.
  3884. The name of the restore script is @code{restore}. @FIXME{There is
  3885. no such restore script!}The names of the level one and full backup
  3886. scripts are, respectively, @code{level-1} and @code{level-0}.
  3887. The @code{level-0} script also exists under the name @code{weekly}, and
  3888. the @code{level-1} under the name @code{daily}---these additional names
  3889. can be changed according to your backup schedule. @FIXME-xref{Scripted
  3890. Restoration, for more information on running the restoration script.}
  3891. @FIXME-xref{Scripted Backups, for more information on running the
  3892. backup scripts.}
  3893. @emph{Please Note:} The backup scripts and the restoration scripts are
  3894. designed to be used together. While it is possible to restore files by
  3895. hand from an archive which was created using a backup script, and to create
  3896. an archive by hand which could then be extracted using the restore script,
  3897. it is easier to use the scripts.@FIXME{There is no such restore script!}
  3898. @value{xref-incremental}, and @value{xref-listed-incremental},
  3899. before making such an attempt.
  3900. @FIXME{shorten node names}
  3901. @node Backup Parameters
  3902. @section Setting Parameters for Backups and Restoration
  3903. @UNREVISED
  3904. The file @file{backup-specs} specifies backup parameters for the
  3905. backup and restoration scripts provided with @command{tar}. You must
  3906. edit @file{backup-specs} to fit your system configuration and schedule
  3907. before using these scripts.
  3908. @FIXME{This about backup scripts needs to be written: BS is a shell
  3909. script .... thus ... @file{backup-specs} is in shell script syntax.}
  3910. @FIXME-xref{Script Syntax, for an explanation of this syntax.}
  3911. @FIXME{Whats a parameter .... looked at by the backup scripts
  3912. ... which will be expecting to find ... now syntax ... value is linked
  3913. to lame ... @file{backup-specs} specifies the following parameters:}
  3914. @table @samp
  3915. @item ADMINISTRATOR
  3916. The user name of the backup administrator.
  3917. @item BACKUP_HOUR
  3918. The hour at which the backups are done. This can be a number from 0
  3919. to 23, or the string @samp{now}.
  3920. @item TAPE_FILE
  3921. The device @command{tar} writes the archive to. This device should be
  3922. attached to the host on which the dump scripts are run.
  3923. @FIXME{examples for all ...}
  3924. @item TAPE_STATUS
  3925. The command to use to obtain the status of the archive device,
  3926. including error count. On some tape drives there may not be such a
  3927. command; in that case, simply use @samp{TAPE_STATUS=false}.
  3928. @item BLOCKING
  3929. The blocking factor @command{tar} will use when writing the dump archive.
  3930. @value{xref-blocking-factor}.
  3931. @item BACKUP_DIRS
  3932. A list of file systems to be dumped. You can include any directory
  3933. name in the list---subdirectories on that file system will be
  3934. included, regardless of how they may look to other networked machines.
  3935. Subdirectories on other file systems will be ignored.
  3936. The host name specifies which host to run @command{tar} on, and should
  3937. normally be the host that actually contains the file system. However,
  3938. the host machine must have @sc{gnu} @command{tar} installed, and must be able
  3939. to access the directory containing the backup scripts and their
  3940. support files using the same file name that is used on the machine
  3941. where the scripts are run (ie. what @command{pwd} will print when in that
  3942. directory on that machine). If the host that contains the file system
  3943. does not have this capability, you can specify another host as long as
  3944. it can access the file system through NFS.
  3945. @item BACKUP_FILES
  3946. A list of individual files to be dumped. These should be accessible
  3947. from the machine on which the backup script is run.
  3948. @FIXME{Same file name, be specific. Through NFS ...}
  3949. @end table
  3950. @menu
  3951. * backup-specs example:: An Example Text of @file{Backup-specs}
  3952. * Script Syntax:: Syntax for @file{Backup-specs}
  3953. @end menu
  3954. @node backup-specs example
  3955. @subsection An Example Text of @file{Backup-specs}
  3956. @UNREVISED
  3957. The following is the text of @file{backup-specs} as it appears at FSF:
  3958. @example
  3959. # site-specific parameters for file system backup.
  3960. ADMINISTRATOR=friedman
  3961. BACKUP_HOUR=1
  3962. TAPE_FILE=/dev/nrsmt0
  3963. TAPE_STATUS="mts -t $TAPE_FILE"
  3964. BLOCKING=124
  3965. BACKUP_DIRS="
  3966. albert:/fs/fsf
  3967. apple-gunkies:/gd
  3968. albert:/fs/gd2
  3969. albert:/fs/gp
  3970. geech:/usr/jla
  3971. churchy:/usr/roland
  3972. albert:/
  3973. albert:/usr
  3974. apple-gunkies:/
  3975. apple-gunkies:/usr
  3976. gnu:/hack
  3977. gnu:/u
  3978. apple-gunkies:/com/mailer/gnu
  3979. apple-gunkies:/com/archive/gnu"
  3980. BACKUP_FILES="/com/mailer/aliases /com/mailer/league*[a-z]"
  3981. @end example
  3982. @node Script Syntax
  3983. @subsection Syntax for @file{Backup-specs}
  3984. @UNREVISED
  3985. @file{backup-specs} is in shell script syntax. The following
  3986. conventions should be considered when editing the script:
  3987. @FIXME{"conventions?"}
  3988. A quoted string is considered to be contiguous, even if it is on more
  3989. than one line. Therefore, you cannot include commented-out lines
  3990. within a multi-line quoted string. BACKUP_FILES and BACKUP_DIRS are
  3991. the two most likely parameters to be multi-line.
  3992. A quoted string typically cannot contain wildcards. In
  3993. @file{backup-specs}, however, the parameters BACKUP_DIRS and
  3994. BACKUP_FILES can contain wildcards.
  3995. @node Scripted Backups
  3996. @section Using the Backup Scripts
  3997. @UNREVISED
  3998. The syntax for running a backup script is:
  3999. @example
  4000. @file{script-name} [@var{time-to-be-run}]
  4001. @end example
  4002. where @var{time-to-be-run} can be a specific system time, or can be
  4003. @kbd{now}. If you do not specify a time, the script runs at the time
  4004. specified in @file{backup-specs}. @FIXME-pxref{Script Syntax}
  4005. You should start a script with a tape or disk mounted. Once you
  4006. start a script, it prompts you for new tapes or disks as it
  4007. needs them. Media volumes don't have to correspond to archive
  4008. files---a multi-volume archive can be started in the middle of a
  4009. tape that already contains the end of another multi-volume archive.
  4010. The @code{restore} script prompts for media by its archive volume,
  4011. so to avoid an error message you should keep track of which tape
  4012. (or disk) contains which volume of the archive. @FIXME{There is
  4013. no such restore script!} @FIXME-xref{Scripted Restoration}
  4014. @FIXME{Have file names changed?}
  4015. The backup scripts write two files on the file system. The first is a
  4016. record file in @file{/etc/tar-backup/}, which is used by the scripts
  4017. to store and retrieve information about which files were dumped. This
  4018. file is not meant to be read by humans, and should not be deleted by
  4019. them. @FIXME-xref{incremental and listed-incremental, for a more
  4020. detailed explanation of this file.}
  4021. The second file is a log file containing the names of the file systems
  4022. and files dumped, what time the backup was made, and any error
  4023. messages that were generated, as well as how much space was left in
  4024. the media volume after the last volume of the archive was written.
  4025. You should check this log file after every backup. The file name is
  4026. @file{log-@var{mmm-ddd-yyyy}-level-1} or
  4027. @file{log-@var{mmm-ddd-yyyy}-full}.
  4028. The script also prints the name of each system being dumped to the
  4029. standard output.
  4030. @node Scripted Restoration
  4031. @section Using the Restore Script
  4032. @UNREVISED
  4033. @ifset PUBLISH
  4034. The @command{tar} distribution does not provide restoring scripts.
  4035. @end ifset
  4036. @ifclear PUBLISH
  4037. @quotation
  4038. @strong{Warning:} The @sc{gnu} @command{tar} distribution does @emph{not}
  4039. provide any such @code{restore} script yet. This section is only
  4040. listed here for documentation maintenance purposes. In any case,
  4041. all contents is subject to change as things develop.
  4042. @end quotation
  4043. @FIXME{A section on non-scripted restore may be a good idea.}
  4044. To restore files that were archived using a scripted backup, use the
  4045. @code{restore} script. The syntax for the script is:
  4046. where ***** are the file systems to restore from, and
  4047. ***** is a regular expression which specifies which files to
  4048. restore. If you specify --all, the script restores all the files
  4049. in the file system.
  4050. You should start the restore script with the media containing the
  4051. first volume of the archive mounted. The script will prompt for other
  4052. volumes as they are needed. If the archive is on tape, you don't need
  4053. to rewind the tape to to its beginning---if the tape head is
  4054. positioned past the beginning of the archive, the script will rewind
  4055. the tape as needed. @FIXME-xref{Media, for a discussion of tape
  4056. positioning.}
  4057. If you specify @samp{--all} as the @var{files} argument, the
  4058. @code{restore} script extracts all the files in the archived file
  4059. system into the active file system.
  4060. @quotation
  4061. @strong{Warning:} The script will delete files from the active file
  4062. system if they were not in the file system when the archive was made.
  4063. @end quotation
  4064. @value{xref-incremental}, and @value{ref-listed-incremental},
  4065. for an explanation of how the script makes that determination.
  4066. @FIXME{this may be an option, not a given}
  4067. @end ifclear
  4068. @node Choosing
  4069. @chapter Choosing Files and Names for @command{tar}
  4070. @UNREVISED
  4071. @FIXME{Melissa (still) Doesn't Really Like This ``Intro'' Paragraph!!!}
  4072. Certain options to @command{tar} enable you to specify a name for your
  4073. archive. Other options let you decide which files to include or exclude
  4074. from the archive, based on when or whether files were modified, whether
  4075. the file names do or don't match specified patterns, or whether files
  4076. are in specified directories.
  4077. @menu
  4078. * file:: Choosing the Archive's Name
  4079. * Selecting Archive Members::
  4080. * files:: Reading Names from a File
  4081. * exclude:: Excluding Some Files
  4082. * Wildcards::
  4083. * after:: Operating Only on New Files
  4084. * recurse:: Descending into Directories
  4085. * one:: Crossing Filesystem Boundaries
  4086. @end menu
  4087. @node file
  4088. @section Choosing and Naming Archive Files
  4089. @cindex Naming an archive
  4090. @cindex Archive Name
  4091. @cindex Directing output
  4092. @cindex Choosing an archive file
  4093. @cindex Where is the archive?
  4094. @UNREVISED
  4095. @FIXME{should the title of this section actually be, "naming an
  4096. archive"?}
  4097. By default, @command{tar} uses an archive file name that was compiled when
  4098. it was built on the system; usually this name refers to some physical
  4099. tape drive on the machine. However, the person who installed @command{tar}
  4100. on the system may not set the default to a meaningful value as far as
  4101. most users are concerned. As a result, you will usually want to tell
  4102. @command{tar} where to find (or create) the archive. The @value{op-file}
  4103. option allows you to either specify or name a file to use as the archive
  4104. instead of the default archive file location.
  4105. @table @kbd
  4106. @item --file=@var{archive-name}
  4107. @itemx -f @var{archive-name}
  4108. Name the archive to create or operate on. Use in conjunction with
  4109. any operation.
  4110. @end table
  4111. For example, in this @command{tar} command,
  4112. @example
  4113. $ @kbd{tar -cvf collection.tar blues folk jazz}
  4114. @end example
  4115. @noindent
  4116. @file{collection.tar} is the name of the archive. It must directly
  4117. follow the @samp{-f} option, since whatever directly follows @samp{-f}
  4118. @emph{will} end up naming the archive. If you neglect to specify an
  4119. archive name, you may end up overwriting a file in the working directory
  4120. with the archive you create since @command{tar} will use this file's name
  4121. for the archive name.
  4122. An archive can be saved as a file in the file system, sent through a
  4123. pipe or over a network, or written to an I/O device such as a tape,
  4124. floppy disk, or CD write drive.
  4125. @cindex Writing new archives
  4126. @cindex Archive creation
  4127. If you do not name the archive, @command{tar} uses the value of the
  4128. environment variable @env{TAPE} as the file name for the archive. If
  4129. that is not available, @command{tar} uses a default, compiled-in archive
  4130. name, usually that for tape unit zero (ie. @file{/dev/tu00}).
  4131. @command{tar} always needs an archive name.
  4132. If you use @file{-} as an @var{archive-name}, @command{tar} reads the
  4133. archive from standard input (when listing or extracting files), or
  4134. writes it to standard output (when creating an archive). If you use
  4135. @file{-} as an @var{archive-name} when modifying an archive,
  4136. @command{tar} reads the original archive from its standard input and
  4137. writes the entire new archive to its standard output.
  4138. @FIXME{might want a different example here; this is already used in
  4139. "notable tar usages".}
  4140. @example
  4141. $ @kbd{cd sourcedir; tar -cf - . | (cd targetdir; tar -xf -)}
  4142. @end example
  4143. @FIXME{help!}
  4144. @cindex Standard input and output
  4145. @cindex tar to standard input and output
  4146. To specify an archive file on a device attached to a remote machine,
  4147. use the following:
  4148. @example
  4149. @kbd{--file=@var{hostname}:/@var{dev}/@var{file name}}
  4150. @end example
  4151. @noindent
  4152. @command{tar} will complete the remote connection, if possible, and
  4153. prompt you for a username and password. If you use
  4154. @samp{--file=@@@var{hostname}:/@var{dev}/@var{file name}}, @command{tar}
  4155. will complete the remote connection, if possible, using your username
  4156. as the username on the remote machine.
  4157. If the archive file name includes a colon (@samp{:}), then it is assumed
  4158. to be a file on another machine. If the archive file is
  4159. @samp{@var{user}@@@var{host}:@var{file}}, then @var{file} is used on the
  4160. host @var{host}. The remote host is accessed using the @command{rsh}
  4161. program, with a username of @var{user}. If the username is omitted
  4162. (along with the @samp{@@} sign), then your user name will be used.
  4163. (This is the normal @command{rsh} behavior.) It is necessary for the
  4164. remote machine, in addition to permitting your @command{rsh} access, to
  4165. have the @file{/usr/ucb/rmt} program installed. If you need to use a
  4166. file whose name includes a colon, then the remote tape drive behavior
  4167. can be inhibited by using the @value{op-force-local} option.
  4168. @FIXME{i know we went over this yesterday, but bob (and now i do again,
  4169. too) thinks it's out of the middle of nowhere. it doesn't seem to tie
  4170. into what came before it well enough <<i moved it now, is it better
  4171. here?>>. bob also comments that if Amanda isn't free software, we
  4172. shouldn't mention it..}
  4173. When the archive is being created to @file{/dev/null}, @sc{gnu} @command{tar}
  4174. tries to minimize input and output operations. The Amanda backup
  4175. system, when used with @sc{gnu} @command{tar}, has an initial sizing pass which
  4176. uses this feature.
  4177. @node Selecting Archive Members
  4178. @section Selecting Archive Members
  4179. @cindex Specifying files to act on
  4180. @cindex Specifying archive members
  4181. @dfn{File Name arguments} specify which files in the file system
  4182. @command{tar} operates on, when creating or adding to an archive, or which
  4183. archive members @command{tar} operates on, when reading or deleting from
  4184. an archive. @xref{Operations}.
  4185. To specify file names, you can include them as the last arguments on
  4186. the command line, as follows:
  4187. @smallexample
  4188. @kbd{tar} @var{operation} [@var{option1} @var{option2} @dots{}] [@var{file name-1} @var{file name-2} @dots{}]
  4189. @end smallexample
  4190. If you specify a directory name as a file name argument, all the files
  4191. in that directory are operated on by @command{tar}.
  4192. If you do not specify files when @command{tar} is invoked with
  4193. @value{op-create}, @command{tar} operates on all the non-directory files in
  4194. the working directory. If you specify either @value{op-list} or
  4195. @value{op-extract}, @command{tar} operates on all the archive members in the
  4196. archive. If you specify any operation other than one of these three,
  4197. @command{tar} does nothing.
  4198. By default, @command{tar} takes file names from the command line. However,
  4199. there are other ways to specify file or member names, or to modify the
  4200. manner in which @command{tar} selects the files or members upon which to
  4201. operate. @FIXME{add xref here}In general, these methods work both for
  4202. specifying the names of files and archive members.
  4203. @node files
  4204. @section Reading Names from a File
  4205. @UNREVISED
  4206. @cindex Reading file names from a file
  4207. @cindex Lists of file names
  4208. @cindex File Name arguments, alternatives
  4209. Instead of giving the names of files or archive members on the command
  4210. line, you can put the names into a file, and then use the
  4211. @value{op-files-from} option to @command{tar}. Give the name of the file
  4212. which contains the list of files to include as the argument to
  4213. @samp{--files-from}. In the list, the file names should be separated by
  4214. newlines. You will frequently use this option when you have generated
  4215. the list of files to archive with the @command{find} utility.
  4216. @table @kbd
  4217. @item --files-from=@var{file name}
  4218. @itemx -T @var{file name}
  4219. Get names to extract or create from file @var{file name}.
  4220. @end table
  4221. If you give a single dash as a file name for @samp{--files-from}, (i.e.,
  4222. you specify either @samp{--files-from=-} or @samp{-T -}), then the file
  4223. names are read from standard input.
  4224. Unless you are running @command{tar} with @samp{--create}, you can not use
  4225. both @samp{--files-from=-} and @samp{--file=-} (@samp{-f -}) in the same
  4226. command.
  4227. @FIXME{add bob's example, from his message on 2-10-97}
  4228. The following example shows how to use @command{find} to generate a list of
  4229. files smaller than 400K in length and put that list into a file
  4230. called @file{small-files}. You can then use the @samp{-T} option to
  4231. @command{tar} to specify the files from that file, @file{small-files}, to
  4232. create the archive @file{little.tgz}. (The @samp{-z} option to
  4233. @command{tar} compresses the archive with @command{gzip}; @pxref{gzip} for
  4234. more information.)
  4235. @example
  4236. $ @kbd{find . -size -400 -print > small-files}
  4237. $ @kbd{tar -c -v -z -T small-files -f little.tgz}
  4238. @end example
  4239. @noindent
  4240. @FIXME{say more here to conclude the example/section?}
  4241. @menu
  4242. * nul::
  4243. @end menu
  4244. @node nul
  4245. @subsection @kbd{NUL} Terminated File Names
  4246. @cindex File names, terminated by @kbd{NUL}
  4247. @cindex @kbd{NUL} terminated file names
  4248. The @value{op-null} option causes @value{op-files-from} to read file
  4249. names terminated by a @code{NUL} instead of a newline, so files whose
  4250. names contain newlines can be archived using @samp{--files-from}.
  4251. @table @kbd
  4252. @item --null
  4253. Only consider @kbd{NUL} terminated file names, instead of files that
  4254. terminate in a newline.
  4255. @end table
  4256. The @samp{--null} option is just like the one in @sc{gnu} @command{xargs} and
  4257. @command{cpio}, and is useful with the @samp{-print0} predicate of @sc{gnu}
  4258. @command{find}. In @command{tar}, @samp{--null} also causes
  4259. @value{op-directory} options to be treated as file names to archive, in
  4260. case there are any files out there called @file{-C}.
  4261. This example shows how to use @command{find} to generate a list of files
  4262. larger than 800K in length and put that list into a file called
  4263. @file{long-files}. The @samp{-print0} option to @command{find} just just
  4264. like @samp{-print}, except that it separates files with a @kbd{NUL}
  4265. rather than with a newline. You can then run @command{tar} with both the
  4266. @samp{--null} and @samp{-T} options to specify that @command{tar} get the
  4267. files from that file, @file{long-files}, to create the archive
  4268. @file{big.tgz}. The @samp{--null} option to @command{tar} will cause
  4269. @command{tar} to recognize the @kbd{NUL} separator between files.
  4270. @example
  4271. $ @kbd{find . -size +800 -print0 > long-files}
  4272. $ @kbd{tar -c -v --null --files-from=long-files --file=big.tar}
  4273. @end example
  4274. @FIXME{say anything else here to conclude the section?}
  4275. @node exclude
  4276. @section Excluding Some Files
  4277. @cindex File names, excluding files by
  4278. @cindex Excluding files by name and pattern
  4279. @cindex Excluding files by file system
  4280. @UNREVISED
  4281. To avoid operating on files whose names match a particular pattern,
  4282. use the @value{op-exclude} or @value{op-exclude-from} options.
  4283. @table @kbd
  4284. @item --exclude=@var{pattern}
  4285. Causes @command{tar} to ignore files that match the @var{pattern}.
  4286. @end table
  4287. @findex exclude
  4288. The @value{op-exclude} option prevents any file or member whose name
  4289. matches the shell wildcard (@var{pattern}) from being operated on.
  4290. For example, to create an archive with all the contents of the directory
  4291. @file{src} except for files whose names end in @file{.o}, use the
  4292. command @samp{tar -cf src.tar --exclude='*.o' src}.
  4293. You may give multiple @samp{--exclude} options.
  4294. @table @kbd
  4295. @item --exclude-from=@var{file}
  4296. @itemx -X @var{file}
  4297. Causes @command{tar} to ignore files that match the patterns listed in
  4298. @var{file}.
  4299. @end table
  4300. @findex exclude-from
  4301. Use the @samp{--exclude-from=@var{file-of-patterns}} option to read a
  4302. list of patterns, one per line, from @var{file}; @command{tar} will
  4303. ignore files matching those patterns. Thus if @command{tar} is
  4304. called as @w{@samp{tar -c -X foo .}} and the file @file{foo} contains a
  4305. single line @file{*.o}, no files whose names end in @file{.o} will be
  4306. added to the archive.
  4307. @FIXME{do the exclude options files need to have stuff separated by
  4308. newlines the same as the files-from option does?}
  4309. @menu
  4310. * controlling pattern-patching with exclude::
  4311. * problems with exclude::
  4312. @end menu
  4313. @node controlling pattern-patching with exclude
  4314. @unnumberedsubsec Controlling Pattern-Matching with the @code{exclude} Options
  4315. Normally, a pattern matches a name if an initial subsequence of the
  4316. name's components matches the pattern, where @samp{*}, @samp{?}, and
  4317. @samp{[...]} are the usual shell wildcards, @samp{\} escapes wildcards,
  4318. and wildcards can match @samp{/}.
  4319. Other than optionally stripping leading @samp{/} from names
  4320. (@pxref{absolute}), patterns and names are used as-is. For
  4321. example, trailing @samp{/} is not trimmed from a user-specified name
  4322. before deciding whether to exclude it.
  4323. However, this matching procedure can be altered by the options listed
  4324. below. These options accumulate. For example:
  4325. @example
  4326. --ignore-case --exclude='makefile' --no-ignore-case ---exclude='readme'
  4327. @end example
  4328. ignores case when excluding @samp{makefile}, but not when excluding
  4329. @samp{readme}.
  4330. @table @option
  4331. @item --anchored
  4332. @itemx --no-anchored
  4333. If anchored (the default), a pattern must match an initial subsequence
  4334. of the name's components. Otherwise, the pattern can match any subsequence.
  4335. @item --ignore-case
  4336. @itemx --no-ignore-case
  4337. When ignoring case, upper-case patterns match lower-case names and vice versa.
  4338. When not ignoring case (the default), matching is case-sensitive.
  4339. @item --wildcards
  4340. @itemx --no-wildcards
  4341. When using wildcards (the default), @samp{*}, @samp{?}, and @samp{[...]}
  4342. are the usual shell wildcards, and @samp{\} escapes wildcards.
  4343. Otherwise, none of these characters are special, and patterns must match
  4344. names literally.
  4345. @item --wildcards-match-slash
  4346. @itemx --no-wildcards-match-slash
  4347. When wildcards match slash (the default), a wildcard like @samp{*} in
  4348. the pattern can match a @samp{/} in the name. Otherwise, @samp{/} is
  4349. matched only by @samp{/}.
  4350. @end table
  4351. The @option{--recursion} and @option{--no-recursion} options
  4352. (@pxref{recurse}) also affect how exclude patterns are interpreted. If
  4353. recursion is in effect, a pattern excludes a name if it matches any of
  4354. the name's parent directories.
  4355. @node problems with exclude
  4356. @unnumberedsubsec Problems with Using the @code{exclude} Options
  4357. Some users find @samp{exclude} options confusing. Here are some common
  4358. pitfalls:
  4359. @itemize @bullet
  4360. @item
  4361. The main operating mode of @command{tar} does not act on a path name
  4362. explicitly listed on the command line if one of its file name
  4363. components is excluded. In the example above, if
  4364. you create an archive and exclude files that end with @samp{*.o}, but
  4365. explicitly name the file @samp{dir.o/foo} after all the options have been
  4366. listed, @samp{dir.o/foo} will be excluded from the archive.
  4367. @item
  4368. You can sometimes confuse the meanings of @value{op-exclude} and
  4369. @value{op-exclude-from}. Be careful: use @value{op-exclude} when files
  4370. to be excluded are given as a pattern on the command line. Use
  4371. @samp{--exclude-from=@var{file-of-patterns}} to introduce the name of a
  4372. file which contains a list of patterns, one per line; each of these
  4373. patterns can exclude zero, one, or many files.
  4374. @item
  4375. When you use @value{op-exclude}, be sure to quote the @var{pattern}
  4376. parameter, so @sc{gnu} @command{tar} sees wildcard characters like @samp{*}.
  4377. If you do not do this, the shell might expand the @samp{*} itself
  4378. using files at hand, so @command{tar} might receive a list of files
  4379. instead of one pattern, or none at all, making the command somewhat
  4380. illegal. This might not correspond to what you want.
  4381. For example, write:
  4382. @example
  4383. $ @kbd{tar -c -f @var{archive.tar} --exclude '*.o' @var{directory}}
  4384. @end example
  4385. @noindent
  4386. rather than:
  4387. @example
  4388. $ @kbd{tar -c -f @var{archive.tar} --exclude *.o @var{directory}}
  4389. @end example
  4390. @item
  4391. You must use use shell syntax, or globbing, rather than @code{regexp}
  4392. syntax, when using exclude options in @command{tar}. If you try to use
  4393. @code{regexp} syntax to describe files to be excluded, your command
  4394. might fail.
  4395. @item
  4396. In earlier versions of @command{tar}, what is now the
  4397. @samp{--exclude-from=@var{file-of-patterns}} option was called
  4398. @samp{--exclude=@var{pattern}} instead. Now,
  4399. @samp{--exclude=@var{pattern}} applies to patterns listed on the command
  4400. line and @samp{--exclude-from=@var{file-of-patterns}} applies to
  4401. patterns listed in a file.
  4402. @end itemize
  4403. @node Wildcards
  4404. @section Wildcards Patterns and Matching
  4405. @dfn{Globbing} is the operation by which @dfn{wildcard} characters,
  4406. @samp{*} or @samp{?} for example, are replaced and expanded into all
  4407. existing files matching the given pattern. However, @command{tar} often
  4408. uses wildcard patterns for matching (or globbing) archive members instead
  4409. of actual files in the filesystem. Wildcard patterns are also used for
  4410. verifying volume labels of @command{tar} archives. This section has the
  4411. purpose of explaining wildcard syntax for @command{tar}.
  4412. @FIXME{the next few paragraphs need work.}
  4413. A @var{pattern} should be written according to shell syntax, using wildcard
  4414. characters to effect globbing. Most characters in the pattern stand
  4415. for themselves in the matched string, and case is significant: @samp{a}
  4416. will match only @samp{a}, and not @samp{A}. The character @samp{?} in the
  4417. pattern matches any single character in the matched string. The character
  4418. @samp{*} in the pattern matches zero, one, or more single characters in
  4419. the matched string. The character @samp{\} says to take the following
  4420. character of the pattern @emph{literally}; it is useful when one needs to
  4421. match the @samp{?}, @samp{*}, @samp{[} or @samp{\} characters, themselves.
  4422. The character @samp{[}, up to the matching @samp{]}, introduces a character
  4423. class. A @dfn{character class} is a list of acceptable characters
  4424. for the next single character of the matched string. For example,
  4425. @samp{[abcde]} would match any of the first five letters of the alphabet.
  4426. Note that within a character class, all of the ``special characters''
  4427. listed above other than @samp{\} lose their special meaning; for example,
  4428. @samp{[-\\[*?]]} would match any of the characters, @samp{-}, @samp{\},
  4429. @samp{[}, @samp{*}, @samp{?}, or @samp{]}. (Due to parsing constraints,
  4430. the characters @samp{-} and @samp{]} must either come @emph{first} or
  4431. @emph{last} in a character class.)
  4432. @cindex Excluding characters from a character class
  4433. @cindex Character class, excluding characters from
  4434. If the first character of the class after the opening @samp{[}
  4435. is @samp{!} or @samp{^}, then the meaning of the class is reversed.
  4436. Rather than listing character to match, it lists those characters which
  4437. are @emph{forbidden} as the next single character of the matched string.
  4438. Other characters of the class stand for themselves. The special
  4439. construction @samp{[@var{a}-@var{e}]}, using an hyphen between two
  4440. letters, is meant to represent all characters between @var{a} and
  4441. @var{e}, inclusive.
  4442. @FIXME{need to add a sentence or so here to make this clear for those
  4443. who don't have dan around.}
  4444. Periods (@samp{.}) or forward slashes (@samp{/}) are not considered
  4445. special for wildcard matches. However, if a pattern completely matches
  4446. a directory prefix of a matched string, then it matches the full matched
  4447. string: excluding a directory also excludes all the files beneath it.
  4448. There are some discussions floating in the air and asking for modifications
  4449. in the way @sc{gnu} @command{tar} accomplishes wildcard matches. We perceive
  4450. any change of semantics in this area as a delicate thing to impose on
  4451. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} users. On the other hand, the @sc{gnu} project should be
  4452. progressive enough to correct any ill design: compatibility at all price
  4453. is not always a good attitude. In conclusion, it is @emph{possible}
  4454. that slight amendments be later brought to the previous description.
  4455. Your opinions on the matter are welcome.
  4456. @node after
  4457. @section Operating Only on New Files
  4458. @cindex Excluding file by age
  4459. @cindex Modification time, excluding files by
  4460. @cindex Age, excluding files by
  4461. @UNREVISED
  4462. The @value{op-after-date} option causes @command{tar} to only work on files
  4463. whose modification or inode-changed times are newer than the @var{date}
  4464. given. If @var{date} starts with @samp{/} or @samp{.}, it is taken to
  4465. be a file name; the last-modified time of that file is used as the date.
  4466. If you use this option when creating or appending to an archive,
  4467. the archive will only include new files. If you use @samp{--after-date}
  4468. when extracting an archive, @command{tar} will only extract files newer
  4469. than the @var{date} you specify.
  4470. If you only want @command{tar} to make the date comparison based on
  4471. modification of the actual contents of the file (rather than inode
  4472. changes), then use the @value{op-newer-mtime} option.
  4473. You may use these options with any operation. Note that these options
  4474. differ from the @value{op-update} operation in that they allow you to
  4475. specify a particular date against which @command{tar} can compare when
  4476. deciding whether or not to archive the files.
  4477. @table @kbd
  4478. @item --after-date=@var{date}
  4479. @itemx --newer=@var{date}
  4480. @itemx -N @var{date}
  4481. Only store files newer than @var{date}.
  4482. Acts on files only if their modification or inode-changed times are
  4483. later than @var{date}. Use in conjunction with any operation.
  4484. If @var{date} starts with @samp{/} or @samp{.}, it is taken to be a file
  4485. name; the last-modified time of that file is used as the date.
  4486. @item --newer-mtime=@var{date}
  4487. Acts like @value{op-after-date}, but only looks at modification times.
  4488. @end table
  4489. These options limit @command{tar} to only operating on files which have
  4490. been modified after the date specified. A file is considered to have
  4491. changed if the contents have been modified, or if the owner,
  4492. permissions, and so forth, have been changed. (For more information on
  4493. how to specify a date, see @ref{Date input formats}; remember that the
  4494. entire date argument must be quoted if it contains any spaces.)
  4495. Gurus would say that @value{op-after-date} tests both the @code{mtime}
  4496. (time the contents of the file were last modified) and @code{ctime}
  4497. (time the file's status was last changed: owner, permissions, etc)
  4498. fields, while @value{op-newer-mtime} tests only @code{mtime} field.
  4499. To be precise, @value{op-after-date} checks @emph{both} @code{mtime} and
  4500. @code{ctime} and processes the file if either one is more recent than
  4501. @var{date}, while @value{op-newer-mtime} only checks @code{mtime} and
  4502. disregards @code{ctime}. Neither uses @code{atime} (the last time the
  4503. contents of the file were looked at).
  4504. Date specifiers can have embedded spaces. Because of this, you may need
  4505. to quote date arguments to keep the shell from parsing them as separate
  4506. arguments.
  4507. @FIXME{Need example of --newer-mtime with quoted argument.}
  4508. @quotation
  4509. @strong{Please Note:} @value{op-after-date} and @value{op-newer-mtime}
  4510. should not be used for incremental backups. Some files (such as those
  4511. in renamed directories) are not selected properly by these options.
  4512. @xref{incremental and listed-incremental}.
  4513. @end quotation
  4514. @noindent
  4515. @FIXME{which tells -- need to fill this in!}
  4516. @node recurse
  4517. @section Descending into Directories
  4518. @cindex Avoiding recursion in directories
  4519. @cindex Descending directories, avoiding
  4520. @cindex Directories, avoiding recursion
  4521. @cindex Recursion in directories, avoiding
  4522. @UNREVISED
  4523. @FIXME{arrggh! this is still somewhat confusing to me. :-< }
  4524. @FIXME{show dan bob's comments, from 2-10-97}
  4525. Usually, @command{tar} will recursively explore all directories (either
  4526. those given on the command line or through the @value{op-files-from}
  4527. option) for the various files they contain. However, you may not always
  4528. want @command{tar} to act this way.
  4529. The @value{op-no-recursion} option inhibits @command{tar}'s recursive descent
  4530. into specified directories. If you specify @samp{--no-recursion}, you can
  4531. use the @command{find} utility for hunting through levels of directories to
  4532. construct a list of file names which you could then pass to @command{tar}.
  4533. @command{find} allows you to be more selective when choosing which files to
  4534. archive; see @ref{files} for more information on using @command{find} with
  4535. @command{tar}, or look.
  4536. @table @kbd
  4537. @item --no-recursion
  4538. Prevents @command{tar} from recursively descending directories.
  4539. @item --recursion
  4540. Requires @command{tar} to recursively descend directories.
  4541. This is the default.
  4542. @end table
  4543. When you use @samp{--no-recursion}, @sc{gnu} @command{tar} grabs directory entries
  4544. themselves, but does not descend on them recursively. Many people use
  4545. @command{find} for locating files they want to back up, and since
  4546. @command{tar} @emph{usually} recursively descends on directories, they have
  4547. to use the @samp{@w{! -d}} option to @command{find} @FIXME{needs more
  4548. explanation or a cite to another info file}as they usually do not want
  4549. all the files in a directory. They then use the @value{op-files-from}
  4550. option to archive the files located via @command{find}.
  4551. The problem when restoring files archived in this manner is that the
  4552. directories themselves are not in the archive; so the
  4553. @value{op-same-permissions} option does not affect them---while users
  4554. might really like it to. Specifying @value{op-no-recursion} is a way to
  4555. tell @command{tar} to grab only the directory entries given to it, adding
  4556. no new files on its own.
  4557. The @value{op-no-recursion} option also applies when extracting: it
  4558. causes @command{tar} to extract only the matched directory entries, not
  4559. the files under those directories.
  4560. The @value{op-no-recursion} option also affects how exclude patterns
  4561. are interpreted (@pxref{controlling pattern-patching with exclude}).
  4562. @FIXME{example here}
  4563. @node one
  4564. @section Crossing Filesystem Boundaries
  4565. @cindex File system boundaries, not crossing
  4566. @UNREVISED
  4567. @command{tar} will normally automatically cross file system boundaries in
  4568. order to archive files which are part of a directory tree. You can
  4569. change this behavior by running @command{tar} and specifying
  4570. @value{op-one-file-system}. This option only affects files that are
  4571. archived because they are in a directory that is being archived;
  4572. @command{tar} will still archive files explicitly named on the command line
  4573. or through @value{op-files-from}, regardless of where they reside.
  4574. @table @kbd
  4575. @item --one-file-system
  4576. @itemx -l
  4577. Prevents @command{tar} from crossing file system boundaries when
  4578. archiving. Use in conjunction with any write operation.
  4579. @end table
  4580. The @samp{--one-file-system} option causes @command{tar} to modify its
  4581. normal behavior in archiving the contents of directories. If a file in
  4582. a directory is not on the same filesystem as the directory itself, then
  4583. @command{tar} will not archive that file. If the file is a directory
  4584. itself, @command{tar} will not archive anything beneath it; in other words,
  4585. @command{tar} will not cross mount points.
  4586. It is reported that using this option, the mount point is is archived,
  4587. but nothing under it.
  4588. This option is useful for making full or incremental archival backups of
  4589. a file system. If this option is used in conjunction with
  4590. @value{op-verbose}, files that are excluded are mentioned by name on the
  4591. standard error.
  4592. @menu
  4593. * directory:: Changing Directory
  4594. * absolute:: Absolute File Names
  4595. @end menu
  4596. @node directory
  4597. @subsection Changing the Working Directory
  4598. @FIXME{need to read over this node now for continuity; i've switched
  4599. things around some.}
  4600. @cindex Changing directory mid-stream
  4601. @cindex Directory, changing mid-stream
  4602. @cindex Working directory, specifying
  4603. @UNREVISED
  4604. To change the working directory in the middle of a list of file names,
  4605. either on the command line or in a file specified using
  4606. @value{op-files-from}, use @value{op-directory}. This will change the
  4607. working directory to the directory @var{directory} after that point in
  4608. the list.
  4609. @table @kbd
  4610. @item --directory=@var{directory}
  4611. @itemx -C @var{directory}
  4612. Changes the working directory in the middle of a command line.
  4613. @end table
  4614. For example,
  4615. @example
  4616. $ @kbd{tar -c -f jams.tar grape prune -C food cherry}
  4617. @end example
  4618. @noindent
  4619. will place the files @file{grape} and @file{prune} from the current
  4620. directory into the archive @file{jams.tar}, followed by the file
  4621. @file{cherry} from the directory @file{food}. This option is especially
  4622. useful when you have several widely separated files that you want to
  4623. store in the same archive.
  4624. Note that the file @file{cherry} is recorded in the archive under the
  4625. precise name @file{cherry}, @emph{not} @file{food/cherry}. Thus, the
  4626. archive will contain three files that all appear to have come from the
  4627. same directory; if the archive is extracted with plain @samp{tar
  4628. --extract}, all three files will be written in the current directory.
  4629. Contrast this with the command,
  4630. @example
  4631. $ @kbd{tar -c -f jams.tar grape prune -C food red/cherry}
  4632. @end example
  4633. @noindent
  4634. which records the third file in the archive under the name
  4635. @file{red/cherry} so that, if the archive is extracted using
  4636. @samp{tar --extract}, the third file will be written in a subdirectory
  4637. named @file{orange-colored}.
  4638. You can use the @samp{--directory} option to make the archive
  4639. independent of the original name of the directory holding the files.
  4640. The following command places the files @file{/etc/passwd},
  4641. @file{/etc/hosts}, and @file{/lib/libc.a} into the archive
  4642. @file{foo.tar}:
  4643. @example
  4644. $ @kbd{tar -c -f foo.tar -C /etc passwd hosts -C /lib libc.a}
  4645. @end example
  4646. @noindent
  4647. However, the names of the archive members will be exactly what they were
  4648. on the command line: @file{passwd}, @file{hosts}, and @file{libc.a}.
  4649. They will not appear to be related by file name to the original
  4650. directories where those files were located.
  4651. Note that @samp{--directory} options are interpreted consecutively. If
  4652. @samp{--directory} specifies a relative file name, it is interpreted
  4653. relative to the then current directory, which might not be the same as
  4654. the original current working directory of @command{tar}, due to a previous
  4655. @samp{--directory} option.
  4656. @FIXME{dan: does this mean that you *can* use the short option form, but
  4657. you can *not* use the long option form with --files-from? or is this
  4658. totally screwed?}
  4659. When using @samp{--files-from} (@pxref{files}), you can put @samp{-C}
  4660. options in the file list. Unfortunately, you cannot put
  4661. @samp{--directory} options in the file list. (This interpretation can
  4662. be disabled by using the @value{op-null} option.)
  4663. @node absolute
  4664. @subsection Absolute File Names
  4665. @UNREVISED
  4666. @table @kbd
  4667. @item -P
  4668. @itemx --absolute-names
  4669. Do not strip leading slashes from file names, and permit file names
  4670. containing a @file{..} file name component.
  4671. @end table
  4672. By default, @sc{gnu} @command{tar} drops a leading @samp{/} on input or output,
  4673. and complains about file names containing a @file{..} component.
  4674. This option turns off this behavior.
  4675. When @command{tar} extracts archive members from an archive, it strips any
  4676. leading slashes (@samp{/}) from the member name. This causes absolute
  4677. member names in the archive to be treated as relative file names. This
  4678. allows you to have such members extracted wherever you want, instead of
  4679. being restricted to extracting the member in the exact directory named
  4680. in the archive. For example, if the archive member has the name
  4681. @file{/etc/passwd}, @command{tar} will extract it as if the name were
  4682. really @file{etc/passwd}.
  4683. File names containing @file{..} can cause problems when extracting, so
  4684. @command{tar} normally warns you about such files when creating an
  4685. archive, and rejects attempts to extracts such files.
  4686. Other @command{tar} programs do not do this. As a result, if you create an
  4687. archive whose member names start with a slash, they will be difficult
  4688. for other people with a non-@sc{gnu} @command{tar} program to use. Therefore,
  4689. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} also strips leading slashes from member names when
  4690. putting members into the archive. For example, if you ask @command{tar} to
  4691. add the file @file{/bin/ls} to an archive, it will do so, but the member
  4692. name will be @file{bin/ls}.
  4693. If you use the @value{op-absolute-names} option, @command{tar} will do
  4694. none of these transformations.
  4695. To archive or extract files relative to the root directory, specify
  4696. the @value{op-absolute-names} option.
  4697. Normally, @command{tar} acts on files relative to the working
  4698. directory---ignoring superior directory names when archiving, and
  4699. ignoring leading slashes when extracting.
  4700. When you specify @value{op-absolute-names}, @command{tar} stores file names
  4701. including all superior directory names, and preserves leading slashes.
  4702. If you only invoked @command{tar} from the root directory you would never
  4703. need the @value{op-absolute-names} option, but using this option may be
  4704. more convenient than switching to root.
  4705. @FIXME{Should be an example in the tutorial/wizardry section using this
  4706. to transfer files between systems.}
  4707. @FIXME{Is write access an issue?}
  4708. @table @kbd
  4709. @item --absolute-names
  4710. Preserves full file names (including superior directory names) when
  4711. archiving files. Preserves leading slash when extracting files.
  4712. @end table
  4713. @FIXME{this is still horrible; need to talk with dan on monday.}
  4714. @command{tar} prints out a message about removing the @samp{/} from file
  4715. names. This message appears once per @sc{gnu} @command{tar} invocation. It
  4716. represents something which ought to be told; ignoring what it means can
  4717. cause very serious surprises, later.
  4718. Some people, nevertheless, do not want to see this message. Wanting to
  4719. play really dangerously, one may of course redirect @command{tar} standard
  4720. error to the sink. For example, under @command{sh}:
  4721. @example
  4722. $ @kbd{tar -c -f archive.tar /home 2> /dev/null}
  4723. @end example
  4724. @noindent
  4725. Another solution, both nicer and simpler, would be to change to
  4726. the @file{/} directory first, and then avoid absolute notation.
  4727. For example:
  4728. @example
  4729. $ @kbd{(cd / && tar -c -f archive.tar home)}
  4730. $ @kbd{tar -c -f archive.tar -C / home}
  4731. @end example
  4732. @include getdate.texi
  4733. @node Formats
  4734. @chapter Controlling the Archive Format
  4735. @FIXME{need an intro here}
  4736. @menu
  4737. * Portability:: Making @command{tar} Archives More Portable
  4738. * Compression:: Using Less Space through Compression
  4739. * Attributes:: Handling File Attributes
  4740. * Standard:: The Standard Format
  4741. * Extensions:: @sc{gnu} Extensions to the Archive Format
  4742. * cpio:: Comparison of @command{tar} and @command{cpio}
  4743. @end menu
  4744. @node Portability
  4745. @section Making @command{tar} Archives More Portable
  4746. Creating a @command{tar} archive on a particular system that is meant to be
  4747. useful later on many other machines and with other versions of @command{tar}
  4748. is more challenging than you might think. @command{tar} archive formats
  4749. have been evolving since the first versions of Unix. Many such formats
  4750. are around, and are not always compatible with each other. This section
  4751. discusses a few problems, and gives some advice about making @command{tar}
  4752. archives more portable.
  4753. One golden rule is simplicity. For example, limit your @command{tar}
  4754. archives to contain only regular files and directories, avoiding
  4755. other kind of special files. Do not attempt to save sparse files or
  4756. contiguous files as such. Let's discuss a few more problems, in turn.
  4757. @menu
  4758. * Portable Names:: Portable Names
  4759. * dereference:: Symbolic Links
  4760. * old:: Old V7 Archives
  4761. * posix:: @sc{posix} archives
  4762. * Checksumming:: Checksumming Problems
  4763. * Large or Negative Values:: Large files, negative time stamps, etc.
  4764. @end menu
  4765. @node Portable Names
  4766. @subsection Portable Names
  4767. Use portable file and member names. A name is portable if it contains
  4768. only ASCII letters and digits, @samp{/}, @samp{.}, @samp{_}, and
  4769. @samp{-}; it cannot be empty, start with @samp{-} or @samp{//}, or
  4770. contain @samp{/-}. Avoid deep directory nesting. For portability to
  4771. old Unix hosts, limit your file name components to 14 characters or
  4772. less.
  4773. If you intend to have your @command{tar} archives to be read under MSDOS,
  4774. you should not rely on case distinction for file names, and you might
  4775. use the @sc{gnu} @command{doschk} program for helping you further diagnosing
  4776. illegal MSDOS names, which are even more limited than System V's.
  4777. @node dereference
  4778. @subsection Symbolic Links
  4779. @cindex File names, using symbolic links
  4780. @cindex Symbolic link as file name
  4781. Normally, when @command{tar} archives a symbolic link, it writes a
  4782. block to the archive naming the target of the link. In that way, the
  4783. @command{tar} archive is a faithful record of the filesystem contents.
  4784. @value{op-dereference} is used with @value{op-create}, and causes @command{tar}
  4785. to archive the files symbolic links point to, instead of the links
  4786. themselves. When this option is used, when @command{tar} encounters a
  4787. symbolic link, it will archive the linked-to file, instead of simply
  4788. recording the presence of a symbolic link.
  4789. The name under which the file is stored in the file system is not
  4790. recorded in the archive. To record both the symbolic link name and
  4791. the file name in the system, archive the file under both names. If
  4792. all links were recorded automatically by @command{tar}, an extracted file
  4793. might be linked to a file name that no longer exists in the file
  4794. system.
  4795. If a linked-to file is encountered again by @command{tar} while creating
  4796. the same archive, an entire second copy of it will be stored. (This
  4797. @emph{might} be considered a bug.)
  4798. So, for portable archives, do not archive symbolic links as such,
  4799. and use @value{op-dereference}: many systems do not support
  4800. symbolic links, and moreover, your distribution might be unusable if
  4801. it contains unresolved symbolic links.
  4802. @node old
  4803. @subsection Old V7 Archives
  4804. @cindex Format, old style
  4805. @cindex Old style format
  4806. @cindex Old style archives
  4807. Certain old versions of @command{tar} cannot handle additional
  4808. information recorded by newer @command{tar} programs. To create an
  4809. archive in V7 format (not ANSI), which can be read by these old
  4810. versions, specify the @value{op-old-archive} option in
  4811. conjunction with the @value{op-create}. @command{tar} also
  4812. accepts @samp{--portability} for this option. When you specify it,
  4813. @command{tar} leaves out information about directories, pipes, fifos,
  4814. contiguous files, and device files, and specifies file ownership by
  4815. group and user IDs instead of group and user names.
  4816. When updating an archive, do not use @value{op-old-archive}
  4817. unless the archive was created with using this option.
  4818. In most cases, a @emph{new} format archive can be read by an @emph{old}
  4819. @command{tar} program without serious trouble, so this option should
  4820. seldom be needed. On the other hand, most modern @command{tar}s are
  4821. able to read old format archives, so it might be safer for you to
  4822. always use @value{op-old-archive} for your distributions.
  4823. @node posix
  4824. @subsection @sc{gnu} @command{tar} and @sc{posix} @command{tar}
  4825. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} was based on an early draft of the @sc{posix} 1003.1
  4826. @code{ustar} standard. @sc{gnu} extensions to @command{tar}, such as the
  4827. support for file names longer than 100 characters, use portions of the
  4828. @command{tar} header record which were specified in that @sc{posix} draft as
  4829. unused. Subsequent changes in @sc{posix} have allocated the same parts of
  4830. the header record for other purposes. As a result, @sc{gnu} @command{tar} is
  4831. incompatible with the current @sc{posix} spec, and with @command{tar} programs
  4832. that follow it.
  4833. We plan to reimplement these @sc{gnu} extensions in a new way which is
  4834. upward compatible with the latest @sc{posix} @command{tar} format, but we
  4835. don't know when this will be done.
  4836. In the mean time, there is simply no telling what might happen if you
  4837. read a @sc{gnu} @command{tar} archive, which uses the @sc{gnu} extensions, using
  4838. some other @command{tar} program. So if you want to read the archive
  4839. with another @command{tar} program, be sure to write it using the
  4840. @samp{--old-archive} option (@samp{-o}).
  4841. @FIXME{is there a way to tell which flavor of tar was used to write a
  4842. particular archive before you try to read it?}
  4843. Traditionally, old @command{tar}s have a limit of 100 characters. @sc{gnu}
  4844. @command{tar} attempted two different approaches to overcome this limit,
  4845. using and extending a format specified by a draft of some P1003.1.
  4846. The first way was not that successful, and involved @file{@@MaNgLeD@@}
  4847. file names, or such; while a second approach used @file{././@@LongLink}
  4848. and other tricks, yielding better success. In theory, @sc{gnu} @command{tar}
  4849. should be able to handle file names of practically unlimited length.
  4850. So, if @sc{gnu} @command{tar} fails to dump and retrieve files having more
  4851. than 100 characters, then there is a bug in @sc{gnu} @command{tar}, indeed.
  4852. But, being strictly @sc{posix}, the limit was still 100 characters.
  4853. For various other purposes, @sc{gnu} @command{tar} used areas left unassigned
  4854. in the @sc{posix} draft. @sc{posix} later revised P1003.1 @code{ustar} format by
  4855. assigning previously unused header fields, in such a way that the upper
  4856. limit for file name length was raised to 256 characters. However, the
  4857. actual @sc{posix} limit oscillates between 100 and 256, depending on the
  4858. precise location of slashes in full file name (this is rather ugly).
  4859. Since @sc{gnu} @command{tar} use the same fields for quite other purposes,
  4860. it became incompatible with the latest @sc{posix} standards.
  4861. For longer or non-fitting file names, we plan to use yet another set
  4862. of @sc{gnu} extensions, but this time, complying with the provisions @sc{posix}
  4863. offers for extending the format, rather than conflicting with it.
  4864. Whenever an archive uses old @sc{gnu} @command{tar} extension format or @sc{posix}
  4865. extensions, would it be for very long file names or other specialities,
  4866. this archive becomes non-portable to other @command{tar} implementations.
  4867. In fact, anything can happen. The most forgiving @command{tar}s will
  4868. merely unpack the file using a wrong name, and maybe create another
  4869. file named something like @file{@@LongName}, with the true file name
  4870. in it. @command{tar}s not protecting themselves may segment violate!
  4871. Compatibility concerns make all this thing more difficult, as we
  4872. will have to support @emph{all} these things together, for a while.
  4873. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} should be able to produce and read true @sc{posix} format
  4874. files, while being able to detect old @sc{gnu} @command{tar} formats, besides
  4875. old V7 format, and process them conveniently. It would take years
  4876. before this whole area stabilizes@dots{}
  4877. There are plans to raise this 100 limit to 256, and yet produce @sc{posix}
  4878. conforming archives. Past 256, I do not know yet if @sc{gnu} @command{tar}
  4879. will go non-@sc{posix} again, or merely refuse to archive the file.
  4880. There are plans so @sc{gnu} @command{tar} support more fully the latest @sc{posix}
  4881. format, while being able to read old V7 format, @sc{gnu} (semi-@sc{posix} plus
  4882. extension), as well as full @sc{posix}. One may ask if there is part of
  4883. the @sc{posix} format that we still cannot support. This simple question
  4884. has a complex answer. Maybe that, on intimate look, some strong
  4885. limitations will pop up, but until now, nothing sounds too difficult
  4886. (but see below). I only have these few pages of @sc{posix} telling about
  4887. ``Extended tar Format'' (P1003.1-1990 -- section 10.1.1), and there are
  4888. references to other parts of the standard I do not have, which should
  4889. normally enforce limitations on stored file names (I suspect things
  4890. like fixing what @kbd{/} and @kbd{@key{NUL}} means). There are also
  4891. some points which the standard does not make clear, Existing practice
  4892. will then drive what I should do.
  4893. @sc{posix} mandates that, when a file name cannot fit within 100 to
  4894. 256 characters (the variance comes from the fact a @kbd{/} is
  4895. ideally needed as the 156'th character), or a link name cannot
  4896. fit within 100 characters, a warning should be issued and the file
  4897. @emph{not} be stored. Unless some @value{op-posix} option is given
  4898. (or @env{POSIXLY_CORRECT} is set), I suspect that @sc{gnu} @command{tar}
  4899. should disobey this specification, and automatically switch to using
  4900. @sc{gnu} extensions to overcome file name or link name length limitations.
  4901. There is a problem, however, which I did not intimately studied yet.
  4902. Given a truly @sc{posix} archive with names having more than 100 characters,
  4903. I guess that @sc{gnu} @command{tar} up to 1.11.8 will process it as if it were an
  4904. old V7 archive, and be fooled by some fields which are coded differently.
  4905. So, the question is to decide if the next generation of @sc{gnu} @command{tar}
  4906. should produce @sc{posix} format by default, whenever possible, producing
  4907. archives older versions of @sc{gnu} @command{tar} might not be able to read
  4908. correctly. I fear that we will have to suffer such a choice one of these
  4909. days, if we want @sc{gnu} @command{tar} to go closer to @sc{posix}. We can rush it.
  4910. Another possibility is to produce the current @sc{gnu} @command{tar} format
  4911. by default for a few years, but have @sc{gnu} @command{tar} versions from some
  4912. 1.@var{POSIX} and up able to recognize all three formats, and let older
  4913. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} fade out slowly. Then, we could switch to producing @sc{posix}
  4914. format by default, with not much harm to those still having (very old at
  4915. that time) @sc{gnu} @command{tar} versions prior to 1.@var{POSIX}.
  4916. @sc{posix} format cannot represent very long names, volume headers,
  4917. splitting of files in multi-volumes, sparse files, and incremental
  4918. dumps; these would be all disallowed if @value{op-posix} or
  4919. @env{POSIXLY_CORRECT}. Otherwise, if @command{tar} is given long
  4920. names, or @samp{-[VMSgG]}, then it should automatically go non-@sc{posix}.
  4921. I think this is easily granted without much discussion.
  4922. Another point is that only @code{mtime} is stored in @sc{posix}
  4923. archives, while @sc{gnu} @command{tar} currently also store @code{atime}
  4924. and @code{ctime}. If we want @sc{gnu} @command{tar} to go closer to @sc{posix},
  4925. my choice would be to drop @code{atime} and @code{ctime} support on
  4926. average. On the other hand, I perceive that full dumps or incremental
  4927. dumps need @code{atime} and @code{ctime} support, so for those special
  4928. applications, @sc{posix} has to be avoided altogether.
  4929. A few users requested that @value{op-sparse} be always active by
  4930. default, I think that before replying to them, we have to decide
  4931. if we want @sc{gnu} @command{tar} to go closer to @sc{posix} on average, while
  4932. producing files. My choice would be to go closer to @sc{posix} in the
  4933. long run. Besides possible double reading, I do not see any point
  4934. of not trying to save files as sparse when creating archives which
  4935. are neither @sc{posix} nor old-V7, so the actual @value{op-sparse} would
  4936. become selected by default when producing such archives, whatever
  4937. the reason is. So, @value{op-sparse} alone might be redefined to force
  4938. @sc{gnu}-format archives, and recover its previous meaning from this fact.
  4939. @sc{gnu}-format as it exists now can easily fool other @sc{posix} @command{tar},
  4940. as it uses fields which @sc{posix} considers to be part of the file name
  4941. prefix. I wonder if it would not be a good idea, in the long run,
  4942. to try changing @sc{gnu}-format so any added field (like @code{ctime},
  4943. @code{atime}, file offset in subsequent volumes, or sparse file
  4944. descriptions) be wholly and always pushed into an extension block,
  4945. instead of using space in the @sc{posix} header block. I could manage
  4946. to do that portably between future @sc{gnu} @command{tar}s. So other @sc{posix}
  4947. @command{tar}s might be at least able to provide kind of correct listings
  4948. for the archives produced by @sc{gnu} @command{tar}, if not able to process
  4949. them otherwise.
  4950. Using these projected extensions might induce older @command{tar}s to fail.
  4951. We would use the same approach as for @sc{posix}. I'll put out a @command{tar}
  4952. capable of reading @sc{posix}ier, yet extended archives, but will not produce
  4953. this format by default, in @sc{gnu} mode. In a few years, when newer @sc{gnu}
  4954. @command{tar}s will have flooded out @command{tar} 1.11.X and previous, we
  4955. could switch to producing @sc{posix}ier extended archives, with no real harm
  4956. to users, as almost all existing @sc{gnu} @command{tar}s will be ready to read
  4957. @sc{posix}ier format. In fact, I'll do both changes at the same time, in a
  4958. few years, and just prepare @command{tar} for both changes, without effecting
  4959. them, from 1.@var{POSIX}. (Both changes: 1---using @sc{posix} convention for
  4960. getting over 100 characters; 2---avoiding mangling @sc{posix} headers for @sc{gnu}
  4961. extensions, using only @sc{posix} mandated extension techniques).
  4962. So, a future @command{tar} will have a @value{op-posix}
  4963. flag forcing the usage of truly @sc{posix} headers, and so, producing
  4964. archives previous @sc{gnu} @command{tar} will not be able to read.
  4965. So, @emph{once} pretest will announce that feature, it would be
  4966. particularly useful that users test how exchangeable will be archives
  4967. between @sc{gnu} @command{tar} with @value{op-posix} and other @sc{posix} @command{tar}.
  4968. In a few years, when @sc{gnu} @command{tar} will produce @sc{posix} headers by
  4969. default, @value{op-posix} will have a strong meaning and will disallow
  4970. @sc{gnu} extensions. But in the meantime, for a long while, @value{op-posix}
  4971. in @sc{gnu} tar will not disallow @sc{gnu} extensions like @value{op-label},
  4972. @value{op-multi-volume}, @value{op-sparse}, or very long file or link names.
  4973. However, @value{op-posix} with @sc{gnu} extensions will use @sc{posix}
  4974. headers with reserved-for-users extensions to headers, and I will be
  4975. curious to know how well or bad @sc{posix} @command{tar}s will react to these.
  4976. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} prior to 1.@var{POSIX}, and after 1.@var{POSIX} without
  4977. @value{op-posix}, generates and checks @samp{ustar@w{ }@w{ }}, with two
  4978. suffixed spaces. This is sufficient for older @sc{gnu} @command{tar} not to
  4979. recognize @sc{posix} archives, and consequently, wrongly decide those archives
  4980. are in old V7 format. It is a useful bug for me, because @sc{gnu} @command{tar}
  4981. has other @sc{posix} incompatibilities, and I need to segregate @sc{gnu} @command{tar}
  4982. semi-@sc{posix} archives from truly @sc{posix} archives, for @sc{gnu} @command{tar} should
  4983. be somewhat compatible with itself, while migrating closer to latest
  4984. @sc{posix} standards. So, I'll be very careful about how and when I will do
  4985. the correction.
  4986. @node Checksumming
  4987. @subsection Checksumming Problems
  4988. SunOS and HP-UX @command{tar} fail to accept archives created using @sc{gnu}
  4989. @command{tar} and containing non-ASCII file names, that is, file names
  4990. having characters with the eight bit set, because they use signed
  4991. checksums, while @sc{gnu} @command{tar} uses unsigned checksums while creating
  4992. archives, as per @sc{posix} standards. On reading, @sc{gnu} @command{tar} computes
  4993. both checksums and accept any. It is somewhat worrying that a lot of
  4994. people may go around doing backup of their files using faulty (or at
  4995. least non-standard) software, not learning about it until it's time
  4996. to restore their missing files with an incompatible file extractor,
  4997. or vice versa.
  4998. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} compute checksums both ways, and accept any on read,
  4999. so @sc{gnu} tar can read Sun tapes even with their wrong checksums.
  5000. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} produces the standard checksum, however, raising
  5001. incompatibilities with Sun. That is to say, @sc{gnu} @command{tar} has not
  5002. been modified to @emph{produce} incorrect archives to be read by buggy
  5003. @command{tar}'s. I've been told that more recent Sun @command{tar} now
  5004. read standard archives, so maybe Sun did a similar patch, after all?
  5005. The story seems to be that when Sun first imported @command{tar}
  5006. sources on their system, they recompiled it without realizing that
  5007. the checksums were computed differently, because of a change in
  5008. the default signing of @code{char}'s in their compiler. So they
  5009. started computing checksums wrongly. When they later realized their
  5010. mistake, they merely decided to stay compatible with it, and with
  5011. themselves afterwards. Presumably, but I do not really know, HP-UX
  5012. has chosen that their @command{tar} archives to be compatible with Sun's.
  5013. The current standards do not favor Sun @command{tar} format. In any
  5014. case, it now falls on the shoulders of SunOS and HP-UX users to get
  5015. a @command{tar} able to read the good archives they receive.
  5016. @node Large or Negative Values
  5017. @subsection Large or Negative Values
  5018. @cindex large values
  5019. @cindex future time stamps
  5020. @cindex negative time stamps
  5021. @sc{posix} @command{tar} format uses fixed-sized unsigned octal strings
  5022. to represent numeric values. User and group IDs and device major and
  5023. minor numbers have unsigned 21-bit representations, and file sizes and
  5024. times have unsigned 33-bit representations. @sc{gnu} @command{tar}
  5025. generates @sc{posix} representations when possible, but for values
  5026. outside the @sc{posix} range it generates two's-complement base-256
  5027. strings: uids, gids, and device numbers have signed 57-bit
  5028. representations, and file sizes and times have signed 89-bit
  5029. representations. These representations are an extension to @sc{posix}
  5030. @command{tar} format, so they are not universally portable.
  5031. The most common portability problems with out-of-range numeric values
  5032. are large files and future or negative time stamps.
  5033. Portable archives should avoid members of 8 GB or larger, as @sc{posix}
  5034. @command{tar} format cannot represent them.
  5035. Portable archives should avoid time stamps from the future. @sc{posix}
  5036. @command{tar} format can represent time stamps in the range 1970-01-01
  5037. 00:00:00 through 2242-03-16 12:56:31 @sc{utc}. However, many current
  5038. hosts use a signed 32-bit @code{time_t}, or internal time stamp format,
  5039. and cannot represent time stamps after 2038-01-19 03:14:07 @sc{utc}; so
  5040. portable archives must avoid these time stamps for many years to come.
  5041. Portable archives should also avoid time stamps before 1970. These time
  5042. stamps are a common @sc{posix} extension but their @code{time_t}
  5043. representations are negative. Many traditional @command{tar}
  5044. implementations generate a two's complement representation for negative
  5045. time stamps that assumes a signed 32-bit @code{time_t}; hence they
  5046. generate archives that are not portable to hosts with differing
  5047. @code{time_t} representations. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} recognizes this
  5048. situation when it is run on host with a signed 32-bit @code{time_t}, but
  5049. it issues a warning, as these time stamps are nonstandard and unportable.
  5050. @node Compression
  5051. @section Using Less Space through Compression
  5052. @menu
  5053. * gzip:: Creating and Reading Compressed Archives
  5054. * sparse:: Archiving Sparse Files
  5055. @end menu
  5056. @node gzip
  5057. @subsection Creating and Reading Compressed Archives
  5058. @cindex Compressed archives
  5059. @cindex Storing archives in compressed format
  5060. @UNREVISED
  5061. @table @kbd
  5062. @item -z
  5063. @itemx --gzip
  5064. @itemx --ungzip
  5065. Filter the archive through @command{gzip}.
  5066. @end table
  5067. @FIXME{ach; these two bits orig from "compare" (?). where to put?} Some
  5068. format parameters must be taken into consideration when modifying an
  5069. archive.@FIXME{???} Compressed archives cannot be modified.
  5070. You can use @samp{--gzip} and @samp{--gunzip} on physical devices
  5071. (tape drives, etc.) and remote files as well as on normal files; data
  5072. to or from such devices or remote files is reblocked by another copy
  5073. of the @command{tar} program to enforce the specified (or default) record
  5074. size. The default compression parameters are used; if you need to
  5075. override them, avoid the @value{op-gzip} option and run @command{gzip}
  5076. explicitly. (Or set the @env{GZIP} environment variable.)
  5077. The @value{op-gzip} option does not work with the @value{op-multi-volume}
  5078. option, or with the @value{op-update}, @value{op-append},
  5079. @value{op-concatenate}, or @value{op-delete} operations.
  5080. It is not exact to say that @sc{gnu} @command{tar} is to work in concert
  5081. with @command{gzip} in a way similar to @command{zip}, say. Surely, it is
  5082. possible that @command{tar} and @command{gzip} be done with a single call,
  5083. like in:
  5084. @example
  5085. $ @kbd{tar cfz archive.tar.gz subdir}
  5086. @end example
  5087. @noindent
  5088. to save all of @samp{subdir} into a @code{gzip}'ed archive. Later you
  5089. can do:
  5090. @example
  5091. $ @kbd{tar xfz archive.tar.gz}
  5092. @end example
  5093. @noindent
  5094. to explode and unpack.
  5095. The difference is that the whole archive is compressed. With
  5096. @command{zip}, archive members are archived individually. @command{tar}'s
  5097. method yields better compression. On the other hand, one can view the
  5098. contents of a @command{zip} archive without having to decompress it. As
  5099. for the @command{tar} and @command{gzip} tandem, you need to decompress the
  5100. archive to see its contents. However, this may be done without needing
  5101. disk space, by using pipes internally:
  5102. @example
  5103. $ @kbd{tar tfz archive.tar.gz}
  5104. @end example
  5105. @cindex corrupted archives
  5106. About corrupted compressed archives: @command{gzip}'ed files have no
  5107. redundancy, for maximum compression. The adaptive nature of the
  5108. compression scheme means that the compression tables are implicitly
  5109. spread all over the archive. If you lose a few blocks, the dynamic
  5110. construction of the compression tables becomes unsynchronized, and there
  5111. is little chance that you could recover later in the archive.
  5112. There are pending suggestions for having a per-volume or per-file
  5113. compression in @sc{gnu} @command{tar}. This would allow for viewing the
  5114. contents without decompression, and for resynchronizing decompression at
  5115. every volume or file, in case of corrupted archives. Doing so, we might
  5116. lose some compressibility. But this would have make recovering easier.
  5117. So, there are pros and cons. We'll see!
  5118. @table @kbd
  5119. @item -j
  5120. @itemx --bzip2
  5121. Filter the archive through @code{bzip2}. Otherwise like @value{op-gzip}.
  5122. @item -Z
  5123. @itemx --compress
  5124. @itemx --uncompress
  5125. Filter the archive through @command{compress}. Otherwise like @value{op-gzip}.
  5126. @item --use-compress-program=@var{prog}
  5127. Filter through @var{prog} (must accept @samp{-d}).
  5128. @end table
  5129. @value{op-compress} stores an archive in compressed format. This
  5130. option is useful in saving time over networks and space in pipes, and
  5131. when storage space is at a premium. @value{op-compress} causes
  5132. @command{tar} to compress when writing the archive, or to uncompress when
  5133. reading the archive.
  5134. To perform compression and uncompression on the archive, @command{tar}
  5135. runs the @command{compress} utility. @command{tar} uses the default
  5136. compression parameters; if you need to override them, avoid the
  5137. @value{op-compress} option and run the @command{compress} utility
  5138. explicitly. It is useful to be able to call the @command{compress}
  5139. utility from within @command{tar} because the @command{compress} utility by
  5140. itself cannot access remote tape drives.
  5141. The @value{op-compress} option will not work in conjunction with the
  5142. @value{op-multi-volume} option or the @value{op-append}, @value{op-update}
  5143. and @value{op-delete} operations. @xref{Operations}, for
  5144. more information on these operations.
  5145. If there is no compress utility available, @command{tar} will report an error.
  5146. @strong{Please note} that the @command{compress} program may be covered by
  5147. a patent, and therefore we recommend you stop using it.
  5148. @value{op-bzip2} acts like @value{op-compress}, except that it uses
  5149. the @code{bzip2} utility.
  5150. @table @kbd
  5151. @item --compress
  5152. @itemx --uncompress
  5153. @itemx -z
  5154. @itemx -Z
  5155. When this option is specified, @command{tar} will compress (when writing
  5156. an archive), or uncompress (when reading an archive). Used in
  5157. conjunction with the @value{op-create}, @value{op-extract}, @value{op-list} and
  5158. @value{op-compare} operations.
  5159. @end table
  5160. You can have archives be compressed by using the @value{op-gzip} option.
  5161. This will arrange for @command{tar} to use the @command{gzip} program to be
  5162. used to compress or uncompress the archive wren writing or reading it.
  5163. To use the older, obsolete, @command{compress} program, use the
  5164. @value{op-compress} option. The @sc{gnu} Project recommends you not use
  5165. @command{compress}, because there is a patent covering the algorithm it
  5166. uses. You could be sued for patent infringement merely by running
  5167. @command{compress}.
  5168. I have one question, or maybe it's a suggestion if there isn't a way
  5169. to do it now. I would like to use @value{op-gzip}, but I'd also like the
  5170. output to be fed through a program like @sc{gnu} @command{ecc} (actually, right
  5171. now that's @samp{exactly} what I'd like to use :-)), basically adding
  5172. ECC protection on top of compression. It seems as if this should be
  5173. quite easy to do, but I can't work out exactly how to go about it.
  5174. Of course, I can pipe the standard output of @command{tar} through
  5175. @command{ecc}, but then I lose (though I haven't started using it yet,
  5176. I confess) the ability to have @command{tar} use @command{rmt} for it's I/O
  5177. (I think).
  5178. I think the most straightforward thing would be to let me specify a
  5179. general set of filters outboard of compression (preferably ordered,
  5180. so the order can be automatically reversed on input operations, and
  5181. with the options they require specifiable), but beggars shouldn't be
  5182. choosers and anything you decide on would be fine with me.
  5183. By the way, I like @command{ecc} but if (as the comments say) it can't
  5184. deal with loss of block sync, I'm tempted to throw some time at adding
  5185. that capability. Supposing I were to actually do such a thing and
  5186. get it (apparently) working, do you accept contributed changes to
  5187. utilities like that? (Leigh Clayton @file{loc@@soliton.com}, May 1995).
  5188. Isn't that exactly the role of the @value{op-use-compress-prog} option?
  5189. I never tried it myself, but I suspect you may want to write a
  5190. @var{prog} script or program able to filter stdin to stdout to
  5191. way you want. It should recognize the @samp{-d} option, for when
  5192. extraction is needed rather than creation.
  5193. It has been reported that if one writes compressed data (through the
  5194. @value{op-gzip} or @value{op-compress} options) to a DLT and tries to use
  5195. the DLT compression mode, the data will actually get bigger and one will
  5196. end up with less space on the tape.
  5197. @node sparse
  5198. @subsection Archiving Sparse Files
  5199. @cindex Sparse Files
  5200. @UNREVISED
  5201. @table @kbd
  5202. @item -S
  5203. @itemx --sparse
  5204. Handle sparse files efficiently.
  5205. @end table
  5206. This option causes all files to be put in the archive to be tested for
  5207. sparseness, and handled specially if they are. The @value{op-sparse}
  5208. option is useful when many @code{dbm} files, for example, are being
  5209. backed up. Using this option dramatically decreases the amount of
  5210. space needed to store such a file.
  5211. In later versions, this option may be removed, and the testing and
  5212. treatment of sparse files may be done automatically with any special
  5213. @sc{gnu} options. For now, it is an option needing to be specified on
  5214. the command line with the creation or updating of an archive.
  5215. Files in the filesystem occasionally have ``holes.'' A hole in a file
  5216. is a section of the file's contents which was never written. The
  5217. contents of a hole read as all zeros. On many operating systems,
  5218. actual disk storage is not allocated for holes, but they are counted
  5219. in the length of the file. If you archive such a file, @command{tar}
  5220. could create an archive longer than the original. To have @command{tar}
  5221. attempt to recognize the holes in a file, use @value{op-sparse}. When
  5222. you use the @value{op-sparse} option, then, for any file using less
  5223. disk space than would be expected from its length, @command{tar} searches
  5224. the file for consecutive stretches of zeros. It then records in the
  5225. archive for the file where the consecutive stretches of zeros are, and
  5226. only archives the ``real contents'' of the file. On extraction (using
  5227. @value{op-sparse} is not needed on extraction) any such files have
  5228. hols created wherever the continuous stretches of zeros were found.
  5229. Thus, if you use @value{op-sparse}, @command{tar} archives won't take
  5230. more space than the original.
  5231. A file is sparse if it contains blocks of zeros whose existence is
  5232. recorded, but that have no space allocated on disk. When you specify
  5233. the @value{op-sparse} option in conjunction with the @value{op-create}
  5234. operation, @command{tar} tests all files for sparseness while archiving.
  5235. If @command{tar} finds a file to be sparse, it uses a sparse representation of
  5236. the file in the archive. @value{xref-create}, for more information
  5237. about creating archives.
  5238. @value{op-sparse} is useful when archiving files, such as dbm files,
  5239. likely to contain many nulls. This option dramatically
  5240. decreases the amount of space needed to store such an archive.
  5241. @quotation
  5242. @strong{Please Note:} Always use @value{op-sparse} when performing file
  5243. system backups, to avoid archiving the expanded forms of files stored
  5244. sparsely in the system.
  5245. Even if your system has no sparse files currently, some may be
  5246. created in the future. If you use @value{op-sparse} while making file
  5247. system backups as a matter of course, you can be assured the archive
  5248. will never take more space on the media than the files take on disk
  5249. (otherwise, archiving a disk filled with sparse files might take
  5250. hundreds of tapes). @FIXME-xref{incremental when node name is set.}
  5251. @end quotation
  5252. @command{tar} ignores the @value{op-sparse} option when reading an archive.
  5253. @table @kbd
  5254. @item --sparse
  5255. @itemx -S
  5256. Files stored sparsely in the file system are represented sparsely in
  5257. the archive. Use in conjunction with write operations.
  5258. @end table
  5259. However, users should be well aware that at archive creation time, @sc{gnu}
  5260. @command{tar} still has to read whole disk file to locate the @dfn{holes}, and
  5261. so, even if sparse files use little space on disk and in the archive, they
  5262. may sometimes require inordinate amount of time for reading and examining
  5263. all-zero blocks of a file. Although it works, it's painfully slow for a
  5264. large (sparse) file, even though the resulting tar archive may be small.
  5265. (One user reports that dumping a @file{core} file of over 400 megabytes,
  5266. but with only about 3 megabytes of actual data, took about 9 minutes on
  5267. a Sun Sparcstation ELC, with full CPU utilization.)
  5268. This reading is required in all cases and is not related to the fact
  5269. the @value{op-sparse} option is used or not, so by merely @emph{not}
  5270. using the option, you are not saving time@footnote{Well! We should say
  5271. the whole truth, here. When @value{op-sparse} is selected while creating
  5272. an archive, the current @command{tar} algorithm requires sparse files to be
  5273. read twice, not once. We hope to develop a new archive format for saving
  5274. sparse files in which one pass will be sufficient.}.
  5275. Programs like @command{dump} do not have to read the entire file; by examining
  5276. the file system directly, they can determine in advance exactly where the
  5277. holes are and thus avoid reading through them. The only data it need read
  5278. are the actual allocated data blocks. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} uses a more portable
  5279. and straightforward archiving approach, it would be fairly difficult that
  5280. it does otherwise. Elizabeth Zwicky writes to @file{comp.unix.internals},
  5281. on 1990-12-10:
  5282. @quotation
  5283. What I did say is that you cannot tell the difference between a hole and an
  5284. equivalent number of nulls without reading raw blocks. @code{st_blocks} at
  5285. best tells you how many holes there are; it doesn't tell you @emph{where}.
  5286. Just as programs may, conceivably, care what @code{st_blocks} is (care
  5287. to name one that does?), they may also care where the holes are (I have
  5288. no examples of this one either, but it's equally imaginable).
  5289. I conclude from this that good archivers are not portable. One can
  5290. arguably conclude that if you want a portable program, you can in good
  5291. conscience restore files with as many holes as possible, since you can't
  5292. get it right.
  5293. @end quotation
  5294. @node Attributes
  5295. @section Handling File Attributes
  5296. @UNREVISED
  5297. When @command{tar} reads files, this causes them to have the access
  5298. times updated. To have @command{tar} attempt to set the access times
  5299. back to what they were before they were read, use the
  5300. @value{op-atime-preserve} option.
  5301. Handling of file attributes
  5302. @table @kbd
  5303. @item --atime-preserve
  5304. Preserve access times on files that are read.
  5305. This doesn't work for files that
  5306. you don't own, unless you're root, and it doesn't interact with
  5307. incremental dumps nicely (@pxref{Backups}), and it can set access or
  5308. modification times incorrectly if other programs access the file while
  5309. @command{tar} is running; but it is good enough for some purposes.
  5310. @item -m
  5311. @itemx --touch
  5312. Do not extract file modified time.
  5313. When this option is used, @command{tar} leaves the modification times
  5314. of the files it extracts as the time when the files were extracted,
  5315. instead of setting it to the time recorded in the archive.
  5316. This option is meaningless with @value{op-list}.
  5317. @item --same-owner
  5318. Create extracted files with the same ownership they have in the
  5319. archive.
  5320. This is the default behavior for the superuser,
  5321. so this option is meaningful only for non-root users, when @command{tar}
  5322. is executed on those systems able to give files away. This is
  5323. considered as a security flaw by many people, at least because it
  5324. makes quite difficult to correctly account users for the disk space
  5325. they occupy. Also, the @code{suid} or @code{sgid} attributes of
  5326. files are easily and silently lost when files are given away.
  5327. When writing an archive, @command{tar} writes the user id and user name
  5328. separately. If it can't find a user name (because the user id is not
  5329. in @file{/etc/passwd}), then it does not write one. When restoring,
  5330. and doing a @code{chmod} like when you use @value{op-same-permissions},
  5331. @FIXME{same-owner?}it tries to look the name (if one was written)
  5332. up in @file{/etc/passwd}. If it fails, then it uses the user id
  5333. stored in the archive instead.
  5334. @item --no-same-owner
  5335. Do not attempt to restore ownership when extracting. This is the
  5336. default behavior for ordinary users, so this option has an effect
  5337. only for the superuser.
  5338. @item --numeric-owner
  5339. The @value{op-numeric-owner} option allows (ANSI) archives to be written
  5340. without user/group name information or such information to be ignored
  5341. when extracting. It effectively disables the generation and/or use
  5342. of user/group name information. This option forces extraction using
  5343. the numeric ids from the archive, ignoring the names.
  5344. This is useful in certain circumstances, when restoring a backup from
  5345. an emergency floppy with different passwd/group files for example.
  5346. It is otherwise impossible to extract files with the right ownerships
  5347. if the password file in use during the extraction does not match the
  5348. one belonging to the filesystem(s) being extracted. This occurs,
  5349. for example, if you are restoring your files after a major crash and
  5350. had booted from an emergency floppy with no password file or put your
  5351. disk into another machine to do the restore.
  5352. The numeric ids are @emph{always} saved into @command{tar} archives.
  5353. The identifying names are added at create time when provided by the
  5354. system, unless @value{op-old-archive} is used. Numeric ids could be
  5355. used when moving archives between a collection of machines using
  5356. a centralized management for attribution of numeric ids to users
  5357. and groups. This is often made through using the NIS capabilities.
  5358. When making a @command{tar} file for distribution to other sites, it
  5359. is sometimes cleaner to use a single owner for all files in the
  5360. distribution, and nicer to specify the write permission bits of the
  5361. files as stored in the archive independently of their actual value on
  5362. the file system. The way to prepare a clean distribution is usually
  5363. to have some Makefile rule creating a directory, copying all needed
  5364. files in that directory, then setting ownership and permissions as
  5365. wanted (there are a lot of possible schemes), and only then making a
  5366. @command{tar} archive out of this directory, before cleaning everything
  5367. out. Of course, we could add a lot of options to @sc{gnu} @command{tar} for
  5368. fine tuning permissions and ownership. This is not the good way,
  5369. I think. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} is already crowded with options and moreover,
  5370. the approach just explained gives you a great deal of control already.
  5371. @item -p
  5372. @itemx --same-permissions
  5373. @itemx --preserve-permissions
  5374. Extract all protection information.
  5375. This option causes @command{tar} to set the modes (access permissions) of
  5376. extracted files exactly as recorded in the archive. If this option
  5377. is not used, the current @code{umask} setting limits the permissions
  5378. on extracted files.
  5379. This option is meaningless with @value{op-list}.
  5380. @item --preserve
  5381. Same as both @value{op-same-permissions} and @value{op-same-order}.
  5382. The @value{op-preserve} option has no equivalent short option name.
  5383. It is equivalent to @value{op-same-permissions} plus @value{op-same-order}.
  5384. @FIXME{I do not see the purpose of such an option. (Neither I. FP.)}
  5385. @end table
  5386. @node Standard
  5387. @section The Standard Format
  5388. @UNREVISED
  5389. While an archive may contain many files, the archive itself is a
  5390. single ordinary file. Like any other file, an archive file can be
  5391. written to a storage device such as a tape or disk, sent through a
  5392. pipe or over a network, saved on the active file system, or even
  5393. stored in another archive. An archive file is not easy to read or
  5394. manipulate without using the @command{tar} utility or Tar mode in @sc{gnu}
  5395. Emacs.
  5396. Physically, an archive consists of a series of file entries terminated
  5397. by an end-of-archive entry, which consists of 512 zero bytes. A file
  5398. entry usually describes one of the files in the archive (an
  5399. @dfn{archive member}), and consists of a file header and the contents
  5400. of the file. File headers contain file names and statistics, checksum
  5401. information which @command{tar} uses to detect file corruption, and
  5402. information about file types.
  5403. Archives are permitted to have more than one member with the same
  5404. member name. One way this situation can occur is if more than one
  5405. version of a file has been stored in the archive. For information
  5406. about adding new versions of a file to an archive, see @ref{update}.
  5407. @FIXME-xref{To learn more about having more than one archive member with the
  5408. same name, see -backup node, when it's written.}
  5409. In addition to entries describing archive members, an archive may
  5410. contain entries which @command{tar} itself uses to store information.
  5411. @value{xref-label}, for an example of such an archive entry.
  5412. A @command{tar} archive file contains a series of blocks. Each block
  5413. contains @code{BLOCKSIZE} bytes. Although this format may be thought
  5414. of as being on magnetic tape, other media are often used.
  5415. Each file archived is represented by a header block which describes
  5416. the file, followed by zero or more blocks which give the contents
  5417. of the file. At the end of the archive file there may be a block
  5418. filled with binary zeros as an end-of-file marker. A reasonable system
  5419. should write a block of zeros at the end, but must not assume that
  5420. such a block exists when reading an archive.
  5421. The blocks may be @dfn{blocked} for physical I/O operations.
  5422. Each record of @var{n} blocks (where @var{n} is set by the
  5423. @value{op-blocking-factor} option to @command{tar}) is written with a single
  5424. @w{@samp{write ()}} operation. On magnetic tapes, the result of
  5425. such a write is a single record. When writing an archive,
  5426. the last record of blocks should be written at the full size, with
  5427. blocks after the zero block containing all zeros. When reading
  5428. an archive, a reasonable system should properly handle an archive
  5429. whose last record is shorter than the rest, or which contains garbage
  5430. records after a zero block.
  5431. The header block is defined in C as follows. In the @sc{gnu} @command{tar}
  5432. distribution, this is part of file @file{src/tar.h}:
  5433. @example
  5434. @include header.texi
  5435. @end example
  5436. All characters in header blocks are represented by using 8-bit
  5437. characters in the local variant of ASCII. Each field within the
  5438. structure is contiguous; that is, there is no padding used within
  5439. the structure. Each character on the archive medium is stored
  5440. contiguously.
  5441. Bytes representing the contents of files (after the header block
  5442. of each file) are not translated in any way and are not constrained
  5443. to represent characters in any character set. The @command{tar} format
  5444. does not distinguish text files from binary files, and no translation
  5445. of file contents is performed.
  5446. The @code{name}, @code{linkname}, @code{magic}, @code{uname}, and
  5447. @code{gname} are null-terminated character strings. All other fields
  5448. are zero-filled octal numbers in ASCII. Each numeric field of width
  5449. @var{w} contains @var{w} minus 2 digits, a space, and a null, except
  5450. @code{size}, and @code{mtime}, which do not contain the trailing null.
  5451. The @code{name} field is the file name of the file, with directory names
  5452. (if any) preceding the file name, separated by slashes.
  5453. @FIXME{how big a name before field overflows?}
  5454. The @code{mode} field provides nine bits specifying file permissions
  5455. and three bits to specify the Set UID, Set GID, and Save Text
  5456. (@dfn{sticky}) modes. Values for these bits are defined above.
  5457. When special permissions are required to create a file with a given
  5458. mode, and the user restoring files from the archive does not hold such
  5459. permissions, the mode bit(s) specifying those special permissions
  5460. are ignored. Modes which are not supported by the operating system
  5461. restoring files from the archive will be ignored. Unsupported modes
  5462. should be faked up when creating or updating an archive; e.g.@: the
  5463. group permission could be copied from the @emph{other} permission.
  5464. The @code{uid} and @code{gid} fields are the numeric user and group
  5465. ID of the file owners, respectively. If the operating system does
  5466. not support numeric user or group IDs, these fields should be ignored.
  5467. The @code{size} field is the size of the file in bytes; linked files
  5468. are archived with this field specified as zero. @FIXME-xref{Modifiers, in
  5469. particular the @value{op-incremental} option.}
  5470. The @code{mtime} field is the modification time of the file at the time
  5471. it was archived. It is the ASCII representation of the octal value of
  5472. the last time the file was modified, represented as an integer number of
  5473. seconds since January 1, 1970, 00:00 Coordinated Universal Time.
  5474. The @code{chksum} field is the ASCII representation of the octal value
  5475. of the simple sum of all bytes in the header block. Each 8-bit
  5476. byte in the header is added to an unsigned integer, initialized to
  5477. zero, the precision of which shall be no less than seventeen bits.
  5478. When calculating the checksum, the @code{chksum} field is treated as
  5479. if it were all blanks.
  5480. The @code{typeflag} field specifies the type of file archived. If a
  5481. particular implementation does not recognize or permit the specified
  5482. type, the file will be extracted as if it were a regular file. As this
  5483. action occurs, @command{tar} issues a warning to the standard error.
  5484. The @code{atime} and @code{ctime} fields are used in making incremental
  5485. backups; they store, respectively, the particular file's access time
  5486. and last inode-change time.
  5487. The @code{offset} is used by the @value{op-multi-volume} option, when
  5488. making a multi-volume archive. The offset is number of bytes into
  5489. the file that we need to restart at to continue the file on the next
  5490. tape, i.e., where we store the location that a continued file is
  5491. continued at.
  5492. The following fields were added to deal with sparse files. A file
  5493. is @dfn{sparse} if it takes in unallocated blocks which end up being
  5494. represented as zeros, i.e., no useful data. A test to see if a file
  5495. is sparse is to look at the number blocks allocated for it versus the
  5496. number of characters in the file; if there are fewer blocks allocated
  5497. for the file than would normally be allocated for a file of that
  5498. size, then the file is sparse. This is the method @command{tar} uses to
  5499. detect a sparse file, and once such a file is detected, it is treated
  5500. differently from non-sparse files.
  5501. Sparse files are often @code{dbm} files, or other database-type files
  5502. which have data at some points and emptiness in the greater part of
  5503. the file. Such files can appear to be very large when an @samp{ls
  5504. -l} is done on them, when in truth, there may be a very small amount
  5505. of important data contained in the file. It is thus undesirable
  5506. to have @command{tar} think that it must back up this entire file, as
  5507. great quantities of room are wasted on empty blocks, which can lead
  5508. to running out of room on a tape far earlier than is necessary.
  5509. Thus, sparse files are dealt with so that these empty blocks are
  5510. not written to the tape. Instead, what is written to the tape is a
  5511. description, of sorts, of the sparse file: where the holes are, how
  5512. big the holes are, and how much data is found at the end of the hole.
  5513. This way, the file takes up potentially far less room on the tape,
  5514. and when the file is extracted later on, it will look exactly the way
  5515. it looked beforehand. The following is a description of the fields
  5516. used to handle a sparse file:
  5517. The @code{sp} is an array of @code{struct sparse}. Each @code{struct
  5518. sparse} contains two 12-character strings which represent an offset
  5519. into the file and a number of bytes to be written at that offset.
  5520. The offset is absolute, and not relative to the offset in preceding
  5521. array element.
  5522. The header can hold four of these @code{struct sparse} at the moment;
  5523. if more are needed, they are not stored in the header.
  5524. The @code{isextended} flag is set when an @code{extended_header}
  5525. is needed to deal with a file. Note that this means that this flag
  5526. can only be set when dealing with a sparse file, and it is only set
  5527. in the event that the description of the file will not fit in the
  5528. allotted room for sparse structures in the header. In other words,
  5529. an extended_header is needed.
  5530. The @code{extended_header} structure is used for sparse files which
  5531. need more sparse structures than can fit in the header. The header can
  5532. fit 4 such structures; if more are needed, the flag @code{isextended}
  5533. gets set and the next block is an @code{extended_header}.
  5534. Each @code{extended_header} structure contains an array of 21
  5535. sparse structures, along with a similar @code{isextended} flag
  5536. that the header had. There can be an indeterminate number of such
  5537. @code{extended_header}s to describe a sparse file.
  5538. @table @asis
  5539. @item @code{REGTYPE}
  5540. @itemx @code{AREGTYPE}
  5541. These flags represent a regular file. In order to be compatible
  5542. with older versions of @command{tar}, a @code{typeflag} value of
  5543. @code{AREGTYPE} should be silently recognized as a regular file.
  5544. New archives should be created using @code{REGTYPE}. Also, for
  5545. backward compatibility, @command{tar} treats a regular file whose name
  5546. ends with a slash as a directory.
  5547. @item @code{LNKTYPE}
  5548. This flag represents a file linked to another file, of any type,
  5549. previously archived. Such files are identified in Unix by each
  5550. file having the same device and inode number. The linked-to name is
  5551. specified in the @code{linkname} field with a trailing null.
  5552. @item @code{SYMTYPE}
  5553. This represents a symbolic link to another file. The linked-to name
  5554. is specified in the @code{linkname} field with a trailing null.
  5555. @item @code{CHRTYPE}
  5556. @itemx @code{BLKTYPE}
  5557. These represent character special files and block special files
  5558. respectively. In this case the @code{devmajor} and @code{devminor}
  5559. fields will contain the major and minor device numbers respectively.
  5560. Operating systems may map the device specifications to their own
  5561. local specification, or may ignore the entry.
  5562. @item @code{DIRTYPE}
  5563. This flag specifies a directory or sub-directory. The directory
  5564. name in the @code{name} field should end with a slash. On systems where
  5565. disk allocation is performed on a directory basis, the @code{size} field
  5566. will contain the maximum number of bytes (which may be rounded to
  5567. the nearest disk block allocation unit) which the directory may
  5568. hold. A @code{size} field of zero indicates no such limiting. Systems
  5569. which do not support limiting in this manner should ignore the
  5570. @code{size} field.
  5571. @item @code{FIFOTYPE}
  5572. This specifies a FIFO special file. Note that the archiving of a
  5573. FIFO file archives the existence of this file and not its contents.
  5574. @item @code{CONTTYPE}
  5575. This specifies a contiguous file, which is the same as a normal
  5576. file except that, in operating systems which support it, all its
  5577. space is allocated contiguously on the disk. Operating systems
  5578. which do not allow contiguous allocation should silently treat this
  5579. type as a normal file.
  5580. @item @code{A} @dots{} @code{Z}
  5581. These are reserved for custom implementations. Some of these are
  5582. used in the @sc{gnu} modified format, as described below.
  5583. @end table
  5584. Other values are reserved for specification in future revisions of
  5585. the P1003 standard, and should not be used by any @command{tar} program.
  5586. The @code{magic} field indicates that this archive was output in
  5587. the P1003 archive format. If this field contains @code{TMAGIC},
  5588. the @code{uname} and @code{gname} fields will contain the ASCII
  5589. representation of the owner and group of the file respectively.
  5590. If found, the user and group IDs are used rather than the values in
  5591. the @code{uid} and @code{gid} fields.
  5592. For references, see ISO/IEC 9945-1:1990 or IEEE Std 1003.1-1990, pages
  5593. 169-173 (section 10.1) for @cite{Archive/Interchange File Format}; and
  5594. IEEE Std 1003.2-1992, pages 380-388 (section 4.48) and pages 936-940
  5595. (section E.4.48) for @cite{pax - Portable archive interchange}.
  5596. @node Extensions
  5597. @section @sc{gnu} Extensions to the Archive Format
  5598. @UNREVISED
  5599. The @sc{gnu} format uses additional file types to describe new types of
  5600. files in an archive. These are listed below.
  5601. @table @code
  5602. @item GNUTYPE_DUMPDIR
  5603. @itemx 'D'
  5604. This represents a directory and a list of files created by the
  5605. @value{op-incremental} option. The @code{size} field gives the total
  5606. size of the associated list of files. Each file name is preceded by
  5607. either a @samp{Y} (the file should be in this archive) or an @samp{N}.
  5608. (The file is a directory, or is not stored in the archive.) Each file
  5609. name is terminated by a null. There is an additional null after the
  5610. last file name.
  5611. @item GNUTYPE_MULTIVOL
  5612. @itemx 'M'
  5613. This represents a file continued from another volume of a multi-volume
  5614. archive created with the @value{op-multi-volume} option. The original
  5615. type of the file is not given here. The @code{size} field gives the
  5616. maximum size of this piece of the file (assuming the volume does
  5617. not end before the file is written out). The @code{offset} field
  5618. gives the offset from the beginning of the file where this part of
  5619. the file begins. Thus @code{size} plus @code{offset} should equal
  5620. the original size of the file.
  5621. @item GNUTYPE_SPARSE
  5622. @itemx 'S'
  5623. This flag indicates that we are dealing with a sparse file. Note
  5624. that archiving a sparse file requires special operations to find
  5625. holes in the file, which mark the positions of these holes, along
  5626. with the number of bytes of data to be found after the hole.
  5627. @item GNUTYPE_VOLHDR
  5628. @itemx 'V'
  5629. This file type is used to mark the volume header that was given with
  5630. the @value{op-label} option when the archive was created. The @code{name}
  5631. field contains the @code{name} given after the @value{op-label} option.
  5632. The @code{size} field is zero. Only the first file in each volume
  5633. of an archive should have this type.
  5634. @end table
  5635. You may have trouble reading a @sc{gnu} format archive on a non-@sc{gnu}
  5636. system if the options @value{op-incremental}, @value{op-multi-volume},
  5637. @value{op-sparse}, or @value{op-label} were used when writing the archive.
  5638. In general, if @command{tar} does not use the @sc{gnu}-added fields of the
  5639. header, other versions of @command{tar} should be able to read the
  5640. archive. Otherwise, the @command{tar} program will give an error, the
  5641. most likely one being a checksum error.
  5642. @node cpio
  5643. @section Comparison of @command{tar} and @command{cpio}
  5644. @UNREVISED
  5645. @FIXME{Reorganize the following material}
  5646. The @command{cpio} archive formats, like @command{tar}, do have maximum
  5647. pathname lengths. The binary and old ASCII formats have a max path
  5648. length of 256, and the new ASCII and CRC ASCII formats have a max
  5649. path length of 1024. @sc{gnu} @command{cpio} can read and write archives
  5650. with arbitrary pathname lengths, but other @command{cpio} implementations
  5651. may crash unexplainedly trying to read them.
  5652. @command{tar} handles symbolic links in the form in which it comes in BSD;
  5653. @command{cpio} doesn't handle symbolic links in the form in which it comes
  5654. in System V prior to SVR4, and some vendors may have added symlinks
  5655. to their system without enhancing @command{cpio} to know about them.
  5656. Others may have enhanced it in a way other than the way I did it
  5657. at Sun, and which was adopted by AT&T (and which is, I think, also
  5658. present in the @command{cpio} that Berkeley picked up from AT&T and put
  5659. into a later BSD release---I think I gave them my changes).
  5660. (SVR4 does some funny stuff with @command{tar}; basically, its @command{cpio}
  5661. can handle @command{tar} format input, and write it on output, and it
  5662. probably handles symbolic links. They may not have bothered doing
  5663. anything to enhance @command{tar} as a result.)
  5664. @command{cpio} handles special files; traditional @command{tar} doesn't.
  5665. @command{tar} comes with V7, System III, System V, and BSD source;
  5666. @command{cpio} comes only with System III, System V, and later BSD
  5667. (4.3-tahoe and later).
  5668. @command{tar}'s way of handling multiple hard links to a file can handle
  5669. file systems that support 32-bit inumbers (e.g., the BSD file system);
  5670. @command{cpio}s way requires you to play some games (in its "binary"
  5671. format, i-numbers are only 16 bits, and in its "portable ASCII" format,
  5672. they're 18 bits---it would have to play games with the "file system ID"
  5673. field of the header to make sure that the file system ID/i-number pairs
  5674. of different files were always different), and I don't know which
  5675. @command{cpio}s, if any, play those games. Those that don't might get
  5676. confused and think two files are the same file when they're not, and
  5677. make hard links between them.
  5678. @command{tar}s way of handling multiple hard links to a file places only
  5679. one copy of the link on the tape, but the name attached to that copy
  5680. is the @emph{only} one you can use to retrieve the file; @command{cpio}s
  5681. way puts one copy for every link, but you can retrieve it using any
  5682. of the names.
  5683. @quotation
  5684. What type of check sum (if any) is used, and how is this calculated.
  5685. @end quotation
  5686. See the attached manual pages for @command{tar} and @command{cpio} format.
  5687. @command{tar} uses a checksum which is the sum of all the bytes in the
  5688. @command{tar} header for a file; @command{cpio} uses no checksum.
  5689. @quotation
  5690. If anyone knows why @command{cpio} was made when @command{tar} was present
  5691. at the unix scene,
  5692. @end quotation
  5693. It wasn't. @command{cpio} first showed up in PWB/UNIX 1.0; no
  5694. generally-available version of UNIX had @command{tar} at the time. I don't
  5695. know whether any version that was generally available @emph{within AT&T}
  5696. had @command{tar}, or, if so, whether the people within AT&T who did
  5697. @command{cpio} knew about it.
  5698. On restore, if there is a corruption on a tape @command{tar} will stop at
  5699. that point, while @command{cpio} will skip over it and try to restore the
  5700. rest of the files.
  5701. The main difference is just in the command syntax and header format.
  5702. @command{tar} is a little more tape-oriented in that everything is blocked
  5703. to start on a record boundary.
  5704. @quotation
  5705. Is there any differences between the ability to recover crashed
  5706. archives between the two of them. (Is there any chance of recovering
  5707. crashed archives at all.)
  5708. @end quotation
  5709. Theoretically it should be easier under @command{tar} since the blocking
  5710. lets you find a header with some variation of @samp{dd skip=@var{nn}}.
  5711. However, modern @command{cpio}'s and variations have an option to just
  5712. search for the next file header after an error with a reasonable chance
  5713. of resyncing. However, lots of tape driver software won't allow you to
  5714. continue past a media error which should be the only reason for getting
  5715. out of sync unless a file changed sizes while you were writing the
  5716. archive.
  5717. @quotation
  5718. If anyone knows why @command{cpio} was made when @command{tar} was present
  5719. at the unix scene, please tell me about this too.
  5720. @end quotation
  5721. Probably because it is more media efficient (by not blocking everything
  5722. and using only the space needed for the headers where @command{tar}
  5723. always uses 512 bytes per file header) and it knows how to archive
  5724. special files.
  5725. You might want to look at the freely available alternatives. The major
  5726. ones are @command{afio}, @sc{gnu} @command{tar}, and @command{pax}, each of which
  5727. have their own extensions with some backwards compatibility.
  5728. Sparse files were @command{tar}red as sparse files (which you can easily
  5729. test, because the resulting archive gets smaller, and @sc{gnu} @command{cpio}
  5730. can no longer read it).
  5731. @node Media
  5732. @chapter Tapes and Other Archive Media
  5733. @UNREVISED
  5734. A few special cases about tape handling warrant more detailed
  5735. description. These special cases are discussed below.
  5736. Many complexities surround the use of @command{tar} on tape drives. Since
  5737. the creation and manipulation of archives located on magnetic tape was
  5738. the original purpose of @command{tar}, it contains many features making
  5739. such manipulation easier.
  5740. Archives are usually written on dismountable media---tape cartridges,
  5741. mag tapes, or floppy disks.
  5742. The amount of data a tape or disk holds depends not only on its size,
  5743. but also on how it is formatted. A 2400 foot long reel of mag tape
  5744. holds 40 megabytes of data when formatted at 1600 bits per inch. The
  5745. physically smaller EXABYTE tape cartridge holds 2.3 gigabytes.
  5746. Magnetic media are re-usable---once the archive on a tape is no longer
  5747. needed, the archive can be erased and the tape or disk used over.
  5748. Media quality does deteriorate with use, however. Most tapes or disks
  5749. should be discarded when they begin to produce data errors. EXABYTE
  5750. tape cartridges should be discarded when they generate an @dfn{error
  5751. count} (number of non-usable bits) of more than 10k.
  5752. Magnetic media are written and erased using magnetic fields, and
  5753. should be protected from such fields to avoid damage to stored data.
  5754. Sticking a floppy disk to a filing cabinet using a magnet is probably
  5755. not a good idea.
  5756. @menu
  5757. * Device:: Device selection and switching
  5758. * Remote Tape Server::
  5759. * Common Problems and Solutions::
  5760. * Blocking:: Blocking
  5761. * Many:: Many archives on one tape
  5762. * Using Multiple Tapes:: Using Multiple Tapes
  5763. * label:: Including a Label in the Archive
  5764. * verify::
  5765. * Write Protection::
  5766. @end menu
  5767. @node Device
  5768. @section Device Selection and Switching
  5769. @UNREVISED
  5770. @table @kbd
  5771. @item -f [@var{hostname}:]@var{file}
  5772. @itemx --file=[@var{hostname}:]@var{file}
  5773. Use archive file or device @var{file} on @var{hostname}.
  5774. @end table
  5775. This option is used to specify the file name of the archive @command{tar}
  5776. works on.
  5777. If the file name is @samp{-}, @command{tar} reads the archive from standard
  5778. input (when listing or extracting), or writes it to standard output
  5779. (when creating). If the @samp{-} file name is given when updating an
  5780. archive, @command{tar} will read the original archive from its standard
  5781. input, and will write the entire new archive to its standard output.
  5782. If the file name contains a @samp{:}, it is interpreted as
  5783. @samp{hostname:file name}. If the @var{hostname} contains an @dfn{at}
  5784. sign (@kbd{@@}), it is treated as @samp{user@@hostname:file name}. In
  5785. either case, @command{tar} will invoke the command @command{rsh} (or
  5786. @command{remsh}) to start up an @file{/etc/rmt} on the remote machine. If
  5787. you give an alternate login name, it will be given to the @command{rsh}.
  5788. Naturally, the remote machine must have an executable @file{/etc/rmt}.
  5789. This program is free software from the University of California, and a
  5790. copy of the source code can be found with the sources for @command{tar};
  5791. it's compiled and installed by default.
  5792. If this option is not given, but the environment variable @env{TAPE} is
  5793. set, its value is used; otherwise, old versions of @command{tar} used a default
  5794. archive name (which was picked when @command{tar} was compiled). The
  5795. default is normally set up to be the @dfn{first} tape drive or other
  5796. transportable I/O medium on the system.
  5797. Starting with version 1.11.5, @sc{gnu} @command{tar} uses standard input and
  5798. standard output as the default device, and I will not try anymore
  5799. supporting automatic device detection at installation time. This was
  5800. failing really in too many cases, it was hopeless. This is now
  5801. completely left to the installer to override standard input and standard
  5802. output for default device, if this seems preferable.
  5803. Further, I think @emph{most} actual usages of @command{tar} are done with
  5804. pipes or disks, not really tapes, cartridges or diskettes.
  5805. Some users think that using standard input and output is running
  5806. after trouble. This could lead to a nasty surprise on your screen if
  5807. you forget to specify an output file name---especially if you are going
  5808. through a network or terminal server capable of buffering large amounts
  5809. of output. We had so many bug reports in that area of configuring
  5810. default tapes automatically, and so many contradicting requests, that
  5811. we finally consider the problem to be portably intractable. We could
  5812. of course use something like @samp{/dev/tape} as a default, but this
  5813. is @emph{also} running after various kind of trouble, going from hung
  5814. processes to accidental destruction of real tapes. After having seen
  5815. all this mess, using standard input and output as a default really
  5816. sounds like the only clean choice left, and a very useful one too.
  5817. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} reads and writes archive in records, I suspect this is the
  5818. main reason why block devices are preferred over character devices.
  5819. Most probably, block devices are more efficient too. The installer
  5820. could also check for @samp{DEFTAPE} in @file{<sys/mtio.h>}.
  5821. @table @kbd
  5822. @item --force-local
  5823. Archive file is local even if it contains a colon.
  5824. @item --rsh-command=@var{command}
  5825. Use remote @var{command} instead of @command{rsh}. This option exists
  5826. so that people who use something other than the standard @command{rsh}
  5827. (e.g., a Kerberized @command{rsh}) can access a remote device.
  5828. When this command is not used, the shell command found when
  5829. the @command{tar} program was installed is used instead. This is
  5830. the first found of @file{/usr/ucb/rsh}, @file{/usr/bin/remsh},
  5831. @file{/usr/bin/rsh}, @file{/usr/bsd/rsh} or @file{/usr/bin/nsh}.
  5832. The installer may have overridden this by defining the environment
  5833. variable @env{RSH} @emph{at installation time}.
  5834. @item -[0-7][lmh]
  5835. Specify drive and density.
  5836. @item -M
  5837. @itemx --multi-volume
  5838. Create/list/extract multi-volume archive.
  5839. This option causes @command{tar} to write a @dfn{multi-volume} archive---one
  5840. that may be larger than will fit on the medium used to hold it.
  5841. @xref{Multi-Volume Archives}.
  5842. @item -L @var{num}
  5843. @itemx --tape-length=@var{num}
  5844. Change tape after writing @var{num} x 1024 bytes.
  5845. This option might be useful when your tape drivers do not properly
  5846. detect end of physical tapes. By being slightly conservative on the
  5847. maximum tape length, you might avoid the problem entirely.
  5848. @item -F @var{file}
  5849. @itemx --info-script=@var{file}
  5850. @itemx --new-volume-script=@var{file}
  5851. Execute @file{file} at end of each tape. If @file{file} exits with
  5852. nonzero status, exit. This implies @value{op-multi-volume}.
  5853. @end table
  5854. @node Remote Tape Server
  5855. @section The Remote Tape Server
  5856. @cindex remote tape drive
  5857. @pindex rmt
  5858. In order to access the tape drive on a remote machine, @command{tar}
  5859. uses the remote tape server written at the University of California at
  5860. Berkeley. The remote tape server must be installed as @file{/etc/rmt}
  5861. on any machine whose tape drive you want to use. @command{tar} calls
  5862. @file{/etc/rmt} by running an @command{rsh} or @command{remsh} to the remote
  5863. machine, optionally using a different login name if one is supplied.
  5864. A copy of the source for the remote tape server is provided. It is
  5865. Copyright @copyright{} 1983 by the Regents of the University of
  5866. California, but can be freely distributed. Instructions for compiling
  5867. and installing it are included in the @file{Makefile}.
  5868. @cindex absolute file names
  5869. Unless you use the @value{op-absolute-names} option, @sc{gnu} @command{tar} will
  5870. not allow you to create an archive that contains absolute file names
  5871. (a file name beginning with @samp{/}.) If you try, @command{tar} will
  5872. automatically remove the leading @samp{/} from the file names it
  5873. stores in the archive. It will also type a warning message telling
  5874. you what it is doing.
  5875. When reading an archive that was created with a different @command{tar}
  5876. program, @sc{gnu} @command{tar} automatically extracts entries in the archive
  5877. which have absolute file names as if the file names were not absolute.
  5878. This is an important feature. A visitor here once gave a
  5879. @command{tar} tape to an operator to restore; the operator used Sun @command{tar}
  5880. instead of @sc{gnu} @command{tar}, and the result was that it replaced large
  5881. portions of our @file{/bin} and friends with versions from the tape;
  5882. needless to say, we were unhappy about having to recover the file system
  5883. from backup tapes.
  5884. For example, if the archive contained a file @file{/usr/bin/computoy},
  5885. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} would extract the file to @file{usr/bin/computoy},
  5886. relative to the current directory. If you want to extract the files in
  5887. an archive to the same absolute names that they had when the archive
  5888. was created, you should do a @samp{cd /} before extracting the files
  5889. from the archive, or you should either use the @value{op-absolute-names}
  5890. option, or use the command @samp{tar -C / @dots{}}.
  5891. @cindex Ultrix 3.1 and write failure
  5892. Some versions of Unix (Ultrix 3.1 is known to have this problem),
  5893. can claim that a short write near the end of a tape succeeded,
  5894. when it actually failed. This will result in the -M option not
  5895. working correctly. The best workaround at the moment is to use a
  5896. significantly larger blocking factor than the default 20.
  5897. In order to update an archive, @command{tar} must be able to backspace the
  5898. archive in order to reread or rewrite a record that was just read (or
  5899. written). This is currently possible only on two kinds of files: normal
  5900. disk files (or any other file that can be backspaced with @samp{lseek}),
  5901. and industry-standard 9-track magnetic tape (or any other kind of tape
  5902. that can be backspaced with the @code{MTIOCTOP} @code{ioctl}.
  5903. This means that the @value{op-append}, @value{op-update},
  5904. @value{op-concatenate}, and @value{op-delete} commands will not work on any
  5905. other kind of file. Some media simply cannot be backspaced, which
  5906. means these commands and options will never be able to work on them.
  5907. These non-backspacing media include pipes and cartridge tape drives.
  5908. Some other media can be backspaced, and @command{tar} will work on them
  5909. once @command{tar} is modified to do so.
  5910. Archives created with the @value{op-multi-volume}, @value{op-label}, and
  5911. @value{op-incremental} options may not be readable by other version
  5912. of @command{tar}. In particular, restoring a file that was split over
  5913. a volume boundary will require some careful work with @command{dd}, if
  5914. it can be done at all. Other versions of @command{tar} may also create
  5915. an empty file whose name is that of the volume header. Some versions
  5916. of @command{tar} may create normal files instead of directories archived
  5917. with the @value{op-incremental} option.
  5918. @node Common Problems and Solutions
  5919. @section Some Common Problems and their Solutions
  5920. @ifclear PUBLISH
  5921. @format
  5922. errors from system:
  5923. permission denied
  5924. no such file or directory
  5925. not owner
  5926. errors from @command{tar}:
  5927. directory checksum error
  5928. header format error
  5929. errors from media/system:
  5930. i/o error
  5931. device busy
  5932. @end format
  5933. @end ifclear
  5934. @node Blocking
  5935. @section Blocking
  5936. @UNREVISED
  5937. @dfn{Block} and @dfn{record} terminology is rather confused, and it
  5938. is also confusing to the expert reader. On the other hand, readers
  5939. who are new to the field have a fresh mind, and they may safely skip
  5940. the next two paragraphs, as the remainder of this manual uses those
  5941. two terms in a quite consistent way.
  5942. John Gilmore, the writer of the public domain @command{tar} from which
  5943. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} was originally derived, wrote (June 1995):
  5944. @quotation
  5945. The nomenclature of tape drives comes from IBM, where I believe
  5946. they were invented for the IBM 650 or so. On IBM mainframes, what
  5947. is recorded on tape are tape blocks. The logical organization of
  5948. data is into records. There are various ways of putting records into
  5949. blocks, including @code{F} (fixed sized records), @code{V} (variable
  5950. sized records), @code{FB} (fixed blocked: fixed size records, @var{n}
  5951. to a block), @code{VB} (variable size records, @var{n} to a block),
  5952. @code{VSB} (variable spanned blocked: variable sized records that can
  5953. occupy more than one block), etc. The @code{JCL} @samp{DD RECFORM=}
  5954. parameter specified this to the operating system.
  5955. The Unix man page on @command{tar} was totally confused about this.
  5956. When I wrote @code{PD TAR}, I used the historically correct terminology
  5957. (@command{tar} writes data records, which are grouped into blocks).
  5958. It appears that the bogus terminology made it into @sc{posix} (no surprise
  5959. here), and now Fran@,{c}ois has migrated that terminology back
  5960. into the source code too.
  5961. @end quotation
  5962. The term @dfn{physical block} means the basic transfer chunk from or
  5963. to a device, after which reading or writing may stop without anything
  5964. being lost. In this manual, the term @dfn{block} usually refers to
  5965. a disk physical block, @emph{assuming} that each disk block is 512
  5966. bytes in length. It is true that some disk devices have different
  5967. physical blocks, but @command{tar} ignore these differences in its own
  5968. format, which is meant to be portable, so a @command{tar} block is always
  5969. 512 bytes in length, and @dfn{block} always mean a @command{tar} block.
  5970. The term @dfn{logical block} often represents the basic chunk of
  5971. allocation of many disk blocks as a single entity, which the operating
  5972. system treats somewhat atomically; this concept is only barely used
  5973. in @sc{gnu} @command{tar}.
  5974. The term @dfn{physical record} is another way to speak of a physical
  5975. block, those two terms are somewhat interchangeable. In this manual,
  5976. the term @dfn{record} usually refers to a tape physical block,
  5977. @emph{assuming} that the @command{tar} archive is kept on magnetic tape.
  5978. It is true that archives may be put on disk or used with pipes,
  5979. but nevertheless, @command{tar} tries to read and write the archive one
  5980. @dfn{record} at a time, whatever the medium in use. One record is made
  5981. up of an integral number of blocks, and this operation of putting many
  5982. disk blocks into a single tape block is called @dfn{reblocking}, or
  5983. more simply, @dfn{blocking}. The term @dfn{logical record} refers to
  5984. the logical organization of many characters into something meaningful
  5985. to the application. The term @dfn{unit record} describes a small set
  5986. of characters which are transmitted whole to or by the application,
  5987. and often refers to a line of text. Those two last terms are unrelated
  5988. to what we call a @dfn{record} in @sc{gnu} @command{tar}.
  5989. When writing to tapes, @command{tar} writes the contents of the archive
  5990. in chunks known as @dfn{records}. To change the default blocking
  5991. factor, use the @value{op-blocking-factor} option. Each record will
  5992. then be composed of @var{512-size} blocks. (Each @command{tar} block is
  5993. 512 bytes. @xref{Standard}.) Each file written to the archive uses
  5994. at least one full record. As a result, using a larger record size
  5995. can result in more wasted space for small files. On the other hand, a
  5996. larger record size can often be read and written much more efficiently.
  5997. Further complicating the problem is that some tape drives ignore the
  5998. blocking entirely. For these, a larger record size can still improve
  5999. performance (because the software layers above the tape drive still
  6000. honor the blocking), but not as dramatically as on tape drives that
  6001. honor blocking.
  6002. When reading an archive, @command{tar} can usually figure out the record
  6003. size on itself. When this is the case, and a non-standard record size
  6004. was used when the archive was created, @command{tar} will print a message
  6005. about a non-standard blocking factor, and then operate normally. On
  6006. some tape devices, however, @command{tar} cannot figure out the record size
  6007. itself. On most of those, you can specify a blocking factor (with
  6008. @value{op-blocking-factor}) larger than the actual blocking factor, and then use
  6009. the @value{op-read-full-records} option. (If you specify a blocking factor
  6010. with @value{op-blocking-factor} and don't use the @value{op-read-full-records}
  6011. option, then @command{tar} will not attempt to figure out the recording size
  6012. itself.) On some devices, you must always specify the record size
  6013. exactly with @value{op-blocking-factor} when reading, because @command{tar} cannot
  6014. figure it out. In any case, use @value{op-list} before doing any
  6015. extractions to see whether @command{tar} is reading the archive correctly.
  6016. @command{tar} blocks are all fixed size (512 bytes), and its scheme for
  6017. putting them into records is to put a whole number of them (one or
  6018. more) into each record. @command{tar} records are all the same size;
  6019. at the end of the file there's a block containing all zeros, which
  6020. is how you tell that the remainder of the last record(s) are garbage.
  6021. In a standard @command{tar} file (no options), the block size is 512
  6022. and the record size is 10240, for a blocking factor of 20. What the
  6023. @value{op-blocking-factor} option does is sets the blocking factor,
  6024. changing the record size while leaving the block size at 512 bytes.
  6025. 20 was fine for ancient 800 or 1600 bpi reel-to-reel tape drives;
  6026. most tape drives these days prefer much bigger records in order to
  6027. stream and not waste tape. When writing tapes for myself, some tend
  6028. to use a factor of the order of 2048, say, giving a record size of
  6029. around one megabyte.
  6030. If you use a blocking factor larger than 20, older @command{tar} programs
  6031. might not be able to read the archive, so we recommend this as a limit
  6032. to use in practice. @sc{gnu} @command{tar}, however, will support arbitrarily
  6033. large record sizes, limited only by the amount of virtual memory or the
  6034. physical characteristics of the tape device.
  6035. @menu
  6036. * Format Variations:: Format Variations
  6037. * Blocking Factor:: The Blocking Factor of an Archive
  6038. @end menu
  6039. @node Format Variations
  6040. @subsection Format Variations
  6041. @cindex Format Parameters
  6042. @cindex Format Options
  6043. @cindex Options, archive format specifying
  6044. @cindex Options, format specifying
  6045. @UNREVISED
  6046. Format parameters specify how an archive is written on the archive
  6047. media. The best choice of format parameters will vary depending on
  6048. the type and number of files being archived, and on the media used to
  6049. store the archive.
  6050. To specify format parameters when accessing or creating an archive,
  6051. you can use the options described in the following sections.
  6052. If you do not specify any format parameters, @command{tar} uses
  6053. default parameters. You cannot modify a compressed archive.
  6054. If you create an archive with the @value{op-blocking-factor} option
  6055. specified (@value{pxref-blocking-factor}), you must specify that
  6056. blocking-factor when operating on the archive. @xref{Formats}, for other
  6057. examples of format parameter considerations.
  6058. @node Blocking Factor
  6059. @subsection The Blocking Factor of an Archive
  6060. @cindex Blocking Factor
  6061. @cindex Record Size
  6062. @cindex Number of blocks per record
  6063. @cindex Number of bytes per record
  6064. @cindex Bytes per record
  6065. @cindex Blocks per record
  6066. @UNREVISED
  6067. The data in an archive is grouped into blocks, which are 512 bytes.
  6068. Blocks are read and written in whole number multiples called
  6069. @dfn{records}. The number of blocks in a record (ie. the size of a
  6070. record in units of 512 bytes) is called the @dfn{blocking factor}.
  6071. The @value{op-blocking-factor} option specifies the blocking factor of
  6072. an archive. The default blocking factor is typically 20 (ie.@:
  6073. 10240 bytes), but can be specified at installation. To find out
  6074. the blocking factor of an existing archive, use @samp{tar --list
  6075. --file=@var{archive-name}}. This may not work on some devices.
  6076. Records are separated by gaps, which waste space on the archive media.
  6077. If you are archiving on magnetic tape, using a larger blocking factor
  6078. (and therefore larger records) provides faster throughput and allows you
  6079. to fit more data on a tape (because there are fewer gaps). If you are
  6080. archiving on cartridge, a very large blocking factor (say 126 or more)
  6081. greatly increases performance. A smaller blocking factor, on the other
  6082. hand, may be useful when archiving small files, to avoid archiving lots
  6083. of nulls as @command{tar} fills out the archive to the end of the record.
  6084. In general, the ideal record size depends on the size of the
  6085. inter-record gaps on the tape you are using, and the average size of the
  6086. files you are archiving. @xref{create}, for information on
  6087. writing archives.
  6088. @FIXME{Need example of using a cartridge with blocking factor=126 or more.}
  6089. Archives with blocking factors larger than 20 cannot be read
  6090. by very old versions of @command{tar}, or by some newer versions
  6091. of @command{tar} running on old machines with small address spaces.
  6092. With @sc{gnu} @command{tar}, the blocking factor of an archive is limited
  6093. only by the maximum record size of the device containing the archive,
  6094. or by the amount of available virtual memory.
  6095. Also, on some systems, not using adequate blocking factors, as sometimes
  6096. imposed by the device drivers, may yield unexpected diagnostics. For
  6097. example, this has been reported:
  6098. @example
  6099. Cannot write to /dev/dlt: Invalid argument
  6100. @end example
  6101. @noindent
  6102. In such cases, it sometimes happen that the @command{tar} bundled by the
  6103. system is aware of block size idiosyncrasies, while @sc{gnu} @command{tar} requires
  6104. an explicit specification for the block size, which it cannot guess.
  6105. This yields some people to consider @sc{gnu} @command{tar} is misbehaving, because
  6106. by comparison, @cite{the bundle @command{tar} works OK}. Adding @w{@kbd{-b
  6107. 256}}, for example, might resolve the problem.
  6108. If you use a non-default blocking factor when you create an archive, you
  6109. must specify the same blocking factor when you modify that archive. Some
  6110. archive devices will also require you to specify the blocking factor when
  6111. reading that archive, however this is not typically the case. Usually, you
  6112. can use @value{op-list} without specifying a blocking factor---@command{tar}
  6113. reports a non-default record size and then lists the archive members as
  6114. it would normally. To extract files from an archive with a non-standard
  6115. blocking factor (particularly if you're not sure what the blocking factor
  6116. is), you can usually use the @value{op-read-full-records} option while
  6117. specifying a blocking factor larger then the blocking factor of the archive
  6118. (ie. @samp{tar --extract --read-full-records --blocking-factor=300}.
  6119. @xref{list}, for more information on the @value{op-list}
  6120. operation. @xref{Reading}, for a more detailed explanation of that option.
  6121. @table @kbd
  6122. @item --blocking-factor=@var{number}
  6123. @itemx -b @var{number}
  6124. Specifies the blocking factor of an archive. Can be used with any
  6125. operation, but is usually not necessary with @value{op-list}.
  6126. @end table
  6127. Device blocking
  6128. @table @kbd
  6129. @item -b @var{blocks}
  6130. @itemx --blocking-factor=@var{blocks}
  6131. Set record size to @math{@var{blocks} * 512} bytes.
  6132. This option is used to specify a @dfn{blocking factor} for the archive.
  6133. When reading or writing the archive, @command{tar}, will do reads and writes
  6134. of the archive in records of @math{@var{block}*512} bytes. This is true
  6135. even when the archive is compressed. Some devices requires that all
  6136. write operations be a multiple of a certain size, and so, @command{tar}
  6137. pads the archive out to the next record boundary.
  6138. The default blocking factor is set when @command{tar} is compiled, and is
  6139. typically 20. Blocking factors larger than 20 cannot be read by very
  6140. old versions of @command{tar}, or by some newer versions of @command{tar}
  6141. running on old machines with small address spaces.
  6142. With a magnetic tape, larger records give faster throughput and fit
  6143. more data on a tape (because there are fewer inter-record gaps).
  6144. If the archive is in a disk file or a pipe, you may want to specify
  6145. a smaller blocking factor, since a large one will result in a large
  6146. number of null bytes at the end of the archive.
  6147. When writing cartridge or other streaming tapes, a much larger
  6148. blocking factor (say 126 or more) will greatly increase performance.
  6149. However, you must specify the same blocking factor when reading or
  6150. updating the archive.
  6151. Apparently, Exabyte drives have a physical block size of 8K bytes.
  6152. If we choose our blocksize as a multiple of 8k bytes, then the problem
  6153. seems to dissapper. Id est, we are using block size of 112 right
  6154. now, and we haven't had the problem since we switched@dots{}
  6155. With @sc{gnu} @command{tar} the blocking factor is limited only by the maximum
  6156. record size of the device containing the archive, or by the amount of
  6157. available virtual memory.
  6158. However, deblocking or reblocking is virtually avoided in a special
  6159. case which often occurs in practice, but which requires all the
  6160. following conditions to be simultaneously true:
  6161. @itemize @bullet
  6162. @item
  6163. the archive is subject to a compression option,
  6164. @item
  6165. the archive is not handled through standard input or output, nor
  6166. redirected nor piped,
  6167. @item
  6168. the archive is directly handled to a local disk, instead of any special
  6169. device,
  6170. @item
  6171. @value{op-blocking-factor} is not explicitly specified on the @command{tar}
  6172. invocation.
  6173. @end itemize
  6174. In previous versions of @sc{gnu} @command{tar}, the @samp{--compress-block}
  6175. option (or even older: @samp{--block-compress}) was necessary to
  6176. reblock compressed archives. It is now a dummy option just asking
  6177. not to be used, and otherwise ignored. If the output goes directly
  6178. to a local disk, and not through stdout, then the last write is
  6179. not extended to a full record size. Otherwise, reblocking occurs.
  6180. Here are a few other remarks on this topic:
  6181. @itemize @bullet
  6182. @item
  6183. @command{gzip} will complain about trailing garbage if asked to
  6184. uncompress a compressed archive on tape, there is an option to turn
  6185. the message off, but it breaks the regularity of simply having to use
  6186. @samp{@var{prog} -d} for decompression. It would be nice if gzip was
  6187. silently ignoring any number of trailing zeros. I'll ask Jean-loup
  6188. Gailly, by sending a copy of this message to him.
  6189. @item
  6190. @command{compress} does not show this problem, but as Jean-loup pointed
  6191. out to Michael, @samp{compress -d} silently adds garbage after
  6192. the result of decompression, which tar ignores because it already
  6193. recognized its end-of-file indicator. So this bug may be safely
  6194. ignored.
  6195. @item
  6196. @samp{gzip -d -q} will be silent about the trailing zeros indeed,
  6197. but will still return an exit status of 2 which tar reports in turn.
  6198. @command{tar} might ignore the exit status returned, but I hate doing
  6199. that, as it weakens the protection @command{tar} offers users against
  6200. other possible problems at decompression time. If @command{gzip} was
  6201. silently skipping trailing zeros @emph{and} also avoiding setting the
  6202. exit status in this innocuous case, that would solve this situation.
  6203. @item
  6204. @command{tar} should become more solid at not stopping to read a pipe at
  6205. the first null block encountered. This inelegantly breaks the pipe.
  6206. @command{tar} should rather drain the pipe out before exiting itself.
  6207. @end itemize
  6208. @item -i
  6209. @itemx --ignore-zeros
  6210. Ignore blocks of zeros in archive (means EOF).
  6211. The @value{op-ignore-zeros} option causes @command{tar} to ignore blocks
  6212. of zeros in the archive. Normally a block of zeros indicates the
  6213. end of the archive, but when reading a damaged archive, or one which
  6214. was created by concatenating several archives together, this option
  6215. allows @command{tar} to read the entire archive. This option is not on
  6216. by default because many versions of @command{tar} write garbage after
  6217. the zeroed blocks.
  6218. Note that this option causes @command{tar} to read to the end of the
  6219. archive file, which may sometimes avoid problems when multiple files
  6220. are stored on a single physical tape.
  6221. @item -B
  6222. @itemx --read-full-records
  6223. Reblock as we read (for reading 4.2BSD pipes).
  6224. If @value{op-read-full-records} is used, @command{tar} will not panic if an
  6225. attempt to read a record from the archive does not return a full record.
  6226. Instead, @command{tar} will keep reading until it has obtained a full
  6227. record.
  6228. This option is turned on by default when @command{tar} is reading
  6229. an archive from standard input, or from a remote machine. This is
  6230. because on BSD Unix systems, a read of a pipe will return however
  6231. much happens to be in the pipe, even if it is less than @command{tar}
  6232. requested. If this option was not used, @command{tar} would fail as
  6233. soon as it read an incomplete record from the pipe.
  6234. This option is also useful with the commands for updating an archive.
  6235. @end table
  6236. Tape blocking
  6237. @FIXME{Appropriate options should be moved here from elsewhere.}
  6238. @cindex blocking factor
  6239. @cindex tape blocking
  6240. When handling various tapes or cartridges, you have to take care of
  6241. selecting a proper blocking, that is, the number of disk blocks you
  6242. put together as a single tape block on the tape, without intervening
  6243. tape gaps. A @dfn{tape gap} is a small landing area on the tape
  6244. with no information on it, used for decelerating the tape to a
  6245. full stop, and for later regaining the reading or writing speed.
  6246. When the tape driver starts reading a record, the record has to
  6247. be read whole without stopping, as a tape gap is needed to stop the
  6248. tape motion without loosing information.
  6249. @cindex Exabyte blocking
  6250. @cindex DAT blocking
  6251. Using higher blocking (putting more disk blocks per tape block) will use
  6252. the tape more efficiently as there will be less tape gaps. But reading
  6253. such tapes may be more difficult for the system, as more memory will be
  6254. required to receive at once the whole record. Further, if there is a
  6255. reading error on a huge record, this is less likely that the system will
  6256. succeed in recovering the information. So, blocking should not be too
  6257. low, nor it should be too high. @command{tar} uses by default a blocking of
  6258. 20 for historical reasons, and it does not really matter when reading or
  6259. writing to disk. Current tape technology would easily accommodate higher
  6260. blockings. Sun recommends a blocking of 126 for Exabytes and 96 for DATs.
  6261. We were told that for some DLT drives, the blocking should be a multiple
  6262. of 4Kb, preferably 64Kb (@w{@kbd{-b 128}}) or 256 for decent performance.
  6263. Other manufacturers may use different recommendations for the same tapes.
  6264. This might also depends of the buffering techniques used inside modern
  6265. tape controllers. Some imposes a minimum blocking, or a maximum blocking.
  6266. Others request blocking to be some exponent of two.
  6267. So, there is no fixed rule for blocking. But blocking at read time
  6268. should ideally be the same as blocking used at write time. At one place
  6269. I know, with a wide variety of equipment, they found it best to use a
  6270. blocking of 32 to guarantee that their tapes are fully interchangeable.
  6271. I was also told that, for recycled tapes, prior erasure (by the same
  6272. drive unit that will be used to create the archives) sometimes lowers
  6273. the error rates observed at rewriting time.
  6274. I might also use @samp{--number-blocks} instead of
  6275. @samp{--block-number}, so @samp{--block} will then expand to
  6276. @samp{--blocking-factor} unambiguously.
  6277. @node Many
  6278. @section Many Archives on One Tape
  6279. @FIXME{Appropriate options should be moved here from elsewhere.}
  6280. @findex ntape @r{device}
  6281. Most tape devices have two entries in the @file{/dev} directory, or
  6282. entries that come in pairs, which differ only in the minor number for
  6283. this device. Let's take for example @file{/dev/tape}, which often
  6284. points to the only or usual tape device of a given system. There might
  6285. be a corresponding @file{/dev/nrtape} or @file{/dev/ntape}. The simpler
  6286. name is the @emph{rewinding} version of the device, while the name
  6287. having @samp{nr} in it is the @emph{no rewinding} version of the same
  6288. device.
  6289. A rewinding tape device will bring back the tape to its beginning point
  6290. automatically when this device is opened or closed. Since @command{tar}
  6291. opens the archive file before using it and closes it afterwards, this
  6292. means that a simple:
  6293. @example
  6294. $ @kbd{tar cf /dev/tape @var{directory}}
  6295. @end example
  6296. @noindent
  6297. will reposition the tape to its beginning both prior and after saving
  6298. @var{directory} contents to it, thus erasing prior tape contents and
  6299. making it so that any subsequent write operation will destroy what has
  6300. just been saved.
  6301. @cindex tape positioning
  6302. So, a rewinding device is normally meant to hold one and only one file.
  6303. If you want to put more than one @command{tar} archive on a given tape, you
  6304. will need to avoid using the rewinding version of the tape device. You
  6305. will also have to pay special attention to tape positioning. Errors in
  6306. positioning may overwrite the valuable data already on your tape. Many
  6307. people, burnt by past experiences, will only use rewinding devices and
  6308. limit themselves to one file per tape, precisely to avoid the risk of
  6309. such errors. Be fully aware that writing at the wrong position on a
  6310. tape loses all information past this point and most probably until the
  6311. end of the tape, and this destroyed information @emph{cannot} be
  6312. recovered.
  6313. To save @var{directory-1} as a first archive at the beginning of a
  6314. tape, and leave that tape ready for a second archive, you should use:
  6315. @example
  6316. $ @kbd{mt -f /dev/nrtape rewind}
  6317. $ @kbd{tar cf /dev/nrtape @var{directory-1}}
  6318. @end example
  6319. @cindex tape marks
  6320. @dfn{Tape marks} are special magnetic patterns written on the tape
  6321. media, which are later recognizable by the reading hardware. These
  6322. marks are used after each file, when there are many on a single tape.
  6323. An empty file (that is to say, two tape marks in a row) signal the
  6324. logical end of the tape, after which no file exist. Usually,
  6325. non-rewinding tape device drivers will react to the close request issued
  6326. by @command{tar} by first writing two tape marks after your archive, and by
  6327. backspacing over one of these. So, if you remove the tape at that time
  6328. from the tape drive, it is properly terminated. But if you write
  6329. another file at the current position, the second tape mark will be
  6330. erased by the new information, leaving only one tape mark between files.
  6331. So, you may now save @var{directory-2} as a second archive after the
  6332. first on the same tape by issuing the command:
  6333. @example
  6334. $ @kbd{tar cf /dev/nrtape @var{directory-2}}
  6335. @end example
  6336. @noindent
  6337. and so on for all the archives you want to put on the same tape.
  6338. Another usual case is that you do not write all the archives the same
  6339. day, and you need to remove and store the tape between two archive
  6340. sessions. In general, you must remember how many files are already
  6341. saved on your tape. Suppose your tape already has 16 files on it, and
  6342. that you are ready to write the 17th. You have to take care of skipping
  6343. the first 16 tape marks before saving @var{directory-17}, say, by using
  6344. these commands:
  6345. @example
  6346. $ @kbd{mt -f /dev/nrtape rewind}
  6347. $ @kbd{mt -f /dev/nrtape fsf 16}
  6348. $ @kbd{tar cf /dev/nrtape @var{directory-17}}
  6349. @end example
  6350. In all the previous examples, we put aside blocking considerations, but
  6351. you should do the proper things for that as well. @xref{Blocking}.
  6352. @menu
  6353. * Tape Positioning:: Tape Positions and Tape Marks
  6354. * mt:: The @command{mt} Utility
  6355. @end menu
  6356. @node Tape Positioning
  6357. @subsection Tape Positions and Tape Marks
  6358. @UNREVISED
  6359. Just as archives can store more than one file from the file system,
  6360. tapes can store more than one archive file. To keep track of where
  6361. archive files (or any other type of file stored on tape) begin and
  6362. end, tape archive devices write magnetic @dfn{tape marks} on the
  6363. archive media. Tape drives write one tape mark between files,
  6364. two at the end of all the file entries.
  6365. If you think of data as a series of records "rrrr"'s, and tape marks as
  6366. "*"'s, a tape might look like the following:
  6367. @example
  6368. rrrr*rrrrrr*rrrrr*rr*rrrrr**-------------------------
  6369. @end example
  6370. Tape devices read and write tapes using a read/write @dfn{tape
  6371. head}---a physical part of the device which can only access one
  6372. point on the tape at a time. When you use @command{tar} to read or
  6373. write archive data from a tape device, the device will begin reading
  6374. or writing from wherever on the tape the tape head happens to be,
  6375. regardless of which archive or what part of the archive the tape
  6376. head is on. Before writing an archive, you should make sure that no
  6377. data on the tape will be overwritten (unless it is no longer needed).
  6378. Before reading an archive, you should make sure the tape head is at
  6379. the beginning of the archive you want to read. (The @code{restore}
  6380. script will find the archive automatically. @FIXME{There is no such
  6381. restore script!}@FIXME-xref{Scripted Restoration}@xref{mt}, for
  6382. an explanation of the tape moving utility.
  6383. If you want to add new archive file entries to a tape, you should
  6384. advance the tape to the end of the existing file entries, backspace
  6385. over the last tape mark, and write the new archive file. If you were
  6386. to add two archives to the example above, the tape might look like the
  6387. following:
  6388. @example
  6389. rrrr*rrrrrr*rrrrr*rr*rrrrr*rrr*rrrr**----------------
  6390. @end example
  6391. @node mt
  6392. @subsection The @command{mt} Utility
  6393. @UNREVISED
  6394. @FIXME{Is it true that this only works on non-block devices?
  6395. should explain the difference, (fixed or variable).}
  6396. @value{xref-blocking-factor}.
  6397. You can use the @command{mt} utility to advance or rewind a tape past a
  6398. specified number of archive files on the tape. This will allow you
  6399. to move to the beginning of an archive before extracting or reading
  6400. it, or to the end of all the archives before writing a new one.
  6401. @FIXME{Why isn't there an "advance 'til you find two tape marks
  6402. together"?}
  6403. The syntax of the @command{mt} command is:
  6404. @example
  6405. @kbd{mt [-f @var{tapename}] @var{operation} [@var{number}]}
  6406. @end example
  6407. where @var{tapename} is the name of the tape device, @var{number} is
  6408. the number of times an operation is performed (with a default of one),
  6409. and @var{operation} is one of the following:
  6410. @FIXME{is there any use for record operations?}
  6411. @table @kbd
  6412. @item eof
  6413. @itemx weof
  6414. Writes @var{number} tape marks at the current position on the tape.
  6415. @item fsf
  6416. Moves tape position forward @var{number} files.
  6417. @item bsf
  6418. Moves tape position back @var{number} files.
  6419. @item rewind
  6420. Rewinds the tape. (Ignores @var{number}).
  6421. @item offline
  6422. @itemx rewoff1
  6423. Rewinds the tape and takes the tape device off-line. (Ignores @var{number}).
  6424. @item status
  6425. Prints status information about the tape unit.
  6426. @end table
  6427. @FIXME{Is there a better way to frob the spacing on the list?}
  6428. If you don't specify a @var{tapename}, @command{mt} uses the environment
  6429. variable @env{TAPE}; if @env{TAPE} is not set, @command{mt} uses the device
  6430. @file{/dev/rmt12}.
  6431. @command{mt} returns a 0 exit status when the operation(s) were
  6432. successful, 1 if the command was unrecognized, and 2 if an operation
  6433. failed.
  6434. @FIXME{New node on how to find an archive?}
  6435. If you use @value{op-extract} with the @value{op-label} option specified,
  6436. @command{tar} will read an archive label (the tape head has to be positioned
  6437. on it) and print an error if the archive label doesn't match the
  6438. @var{archive-name} specified. @var{archive-name} can be any regular
  6439. expression. If the labels match, @command{tar} extracts the archive.
  6440. @value{xref-label}.
  6441. @FIXME-xref{Matching Format Parameters}@FIXME{fix cross
  6442. references}@samp{tar --list --label} will cause @command{tar} to print the
  6443. label.
  6444. @FIXME{Program to list all the labels on a tape?}
  6445. @node Using Multiple Tapes
  6446. @section Using Multiple Tapes
  6447. @UNREVISED
  6448. Often you might want to write a large archive, one larger than will fit
  6449. on the actual tape you are using. In such a case, you can run multiple
  6450. @command{tar} commands, but this can be inconvenient, particularly if you
  6451. are using options like @value{op-exclude} or dumping entire filesystems.
  6452. Therefore, @command{tar} supports multiple tapes automatically.
  6453. Use @value{op-multi-volume} on the command line, and then @command{tar} will,
  6454. when it reaches the end of the tape, prompt for another tape, and
  6455. continue the archive. Each tape will have an independent archive, and
  6456. can be read without needing the other. (As an exception to this, the
  6457. file that @command{tar} was archiving when it ran out of tape will usually
  6458. be split between the two archives; in this case you need to extract from
  6459. the first archive, using @value{op-multi-volume}, and then put in the
  6460. second tape when prompted, so @command{tar} can restore both halves of the
  6461. file.)
  6462. @sc{gnu} @command{tar} multi-volume archives do not use a truly portable format.
  6463. You need @sc{gnu} @command{tar} at both end to process them properly.
  6464. When prompting for a new tape, @command{tar} accepts any of the following
  6465. responses:
  6466. @table @kbd
  6467. @item ?
  6468. Request @command{tar} to explain possible responses
  6469. @item q
  6470. Request @command{tar} to exit immediately.
  6471. @item n @var{file name}
  6472. Request @command{tar} to write the next volume on the file @var{file name}.
  6473. @item !
  6474. Request @command{tar} to run a subshell.
  6475. @item y
  6476. Request @command{tar} to begin writing the next volume.
  6477. @end table
  6478. (You should only type @samp{y} after you have changed the tape;
  6479. otherwise @command{tar} will write over the volume it just finished.)
  6480. If you want more elaborate behavior than this, give @command{tar} the
  6481. @value{op-info-script} option. The file @var{script-name} is expected
  6482. to be a program (or shell script) to be run instead of the normal
  6483. prompting procedure. If the program fails, @command{tar} exits;
  6484. otherwise, @command{tar} begins writing the next volume. The behavior
  6485. of the
  6486. @samp{n} response to the normal tape-change prompt is not available
  6487. if you use @value{op-info-script}.
  6488. The method @command{tar} uses to detect end of tape is not perfect, and
  6489. fails on some operating systems or on some devices. You can use the
  6490. @value{op-tape-length} option if @command{tar} can't detect the end of the
  6491. tape itself. This option selects @value{op-multi-volume} automatically.
  6492. The @var{size} argument should then be the usable size of the tape.
  6493. But for many devices, and floppy disks in particular, this option is
  6494. never required for real, as far as we know.
  6495. The volume number used by @command{tar} in its tape-change prompt
  6496. can be changed; if you give the @value{op-volno-file} option, then
  6497. @var{file-of-number} should be an unexisting file to be created, or else,
  6498. a file already containing a decimal number. That number will be used
  6499. as the volume number of the first volume written. When @command{tar} is
  6500. finished, it will rewrite the file with the now-current volume number.
  6501. (This does not change the volume number written on a tape label, as
  6502. per @value{ref-label}, it @emph{only} affects the number used in
  6503. the prompt.)
  6504. If you want @command{tar} to cycle through a series of tape drives, then
  6505. you can use the @samp{n} response to the tape-change prompt. This is
  6506. error prone, however, and doesn't work at all with @value{op-info-script}.
  6507. Therefore, if you give @command{tar} multiple @value{op-file} options, then
  6508. the specified files will be used, in sequence, as the successive volumes
  6509. of the archive. Only when the first one in the sequence needs to be
  6510. used again will @command{tar} prompt for a tape change (or run the info
  6511. script).
  6512. Multi-volume archives
  6513. With @value{op-multi-volume}, @command{tar} will not abort when it cannot
  6514. read or write any more data. Instead, it will ask you to prepare a new
  6515. volume. If the archive is on a magnetic tape, you should change tapes
  6516. now; if the archive is on a floppy disk, you should change disks, etc.
  6517. Each volume of a multi-volume archive is an independent @command{tar}
  6518. archive, complete in itself. For example, you can list or extract any
  6519. volume alone; just don't specify @value{op-multi-volume}. However, if one
  6520. file in the archive is split across volumes, the only way to extract
  6521. it successfully is with a multi-volume extract command @samp{--extract
  6522. --multi-volume} (@samp{-xM}) starting on or before the volume where
  6523. the file begins.
  6524. For example, let's presume someone has two tape drives on a system
  6525. named @file{/dev/tape0} and @file{/dev/tape1}. For having @sc{gnu}
  6526. @command{tar} to switch to the second drive when it needs to write the
  6527. second tape, and then back to the first tape, etc., just do either of:
  6528. @smallexample
  6529. $ @kbd{tar --create --multi-volume --file=/dev/tape0 --file=/dev/tape1 @var{files}}
  6530. $ @kbd{tar cMff /dev/tape0 /dev/tape1 @var{files}}
  6531. @end smallexample
  6532. @menu
  6533. * Multi-Volume Archives:: Archives Longer than One Tape or Disk
  6534. * Tape Files:: Tape Files
  6535. @end menu
  6536. @node Multi-Volume Archives
  6537. @subsection Archives Longer than One Tape or Disk
  6538. @cindex Multi-volume archives
  6539. @UNREVISED
  6540. To create an archive that is larger than will fit on a single unit of
  6541. the media, use the @value{op-multi-volume} option in conjunction with
  6542. the @value{op-create} option (@pxref{create}). A
  6543. @dfn{multi-volume} archive can be manipulated like any other archive
  6544. (provided the @value{op-multi-volume} option is specified), but is
  6545. stored on more than one tape or disk.
  6546. When you specify @value{op-multi-volume}, @command{tar} does not report an
  6547. error when it comes to the end of an archive volume (when reading), or
  6548. the end of the media (when writing). Instead, it prompts you to load
  6549. a new storage volume. If the archive is on a magnetic tape, you
  6550. should change tapes when you see the prompt; if the archive is on a
  6551. floppy disk, you should change disks; etc.
  6552. You can read each individual volume of a multi-volume archive as if it
  6553. were an archive by itself. For example, to list the contents of one
  6554. volume, use @value{op-list}, without @value{op-multi-volume} specified.
  6555. To extract an archive member from one volume (assuming it is described
  6556. that volume), use @value{op-extract}, again without
  6557. @value{op-multi-volume}.
  6558. If an archive member is split across volumes (ie. its entry begins on
  6559. one volume of the media and ends on another), you need to specify
  6560. @value{op-multi-volume} to extract it successfully. In this case, you
  6561. should load the volume where the archive member starts, and use
  6562. @samp{tar --extract --multi-volume}---@command{tar} will prompt for later
  6563. volumes as it needs them. @xref{extracting archives}, for more
  6564. information about extracting archives.
  6565. @value{op-info-script} is like @value{op-multi-volume}, except that
  6566. @command{tar} does not prompt you directly to change media volumes when
  6567. a volume is full---instead, @command{tar} runs commands you have stored
  6568. in @var{script-name}. For example, this option can be used to eject
  6569. cassettes, or to broadcast messages such as @samp{Someone please come
  6570. change my tape} when performing unattended backups. When @var{script-name}
  6571. is done, @command{tar} will assume that the media has been changed.
  6572. Multi-volume archives can be modified like any other archive. To add
  6573. files to a multi-volume archive, you need to only mount the last
  6574. volume of the archive media (and new volumes, if needed). For all
  6575. other operations, you need to use the entire archive.
  6576. If a multi-volume archive was labeled using @value{op-label}
  6577. (@value{pxref-label}) when it was created, @command{tar} will not
  6578. automatically label volumes which are added later. To label subsequent
  6579. volumes, specify @value{op-label} again in conjunction with the
  6580. @value{op-append}, @value{op-update} or @value{op-concatenate} operation.
  6581. @cindex Labeling multi-volume archives
  6582. @FIXME{example}
  6583. @FIXME{There should be a sample program here, including an exit
  6584. before end. Is the exit status even checked in tar? :-(}
  6585. @table @kbd
  6586. @item --multi-volume
  6587. @itemx -M
  6588. Creates a multi-volume archive, when used in conjunction with
  6589. @value{op-create}. To perform any other operation on a multi-volume
  6590. archive, specify @value{op-multi-volume} in conjunction with that
  6591. operation.
  6592. @item --info-script=@var{program-file}
  6593. @itemx -F @var{program-file}
  6594. Creates a multi-volume archive via a script. Used in conjunction with
  6595. @value{op-create}.
  6596. @end table
  6597. Beware that there is @emph{no} real standard about the proper way, for a
  6598. @command{tar} archive, to span volume boundaries. If you have a multi-volume
  6599. created by some vendor's @command{tar}, there is almost no chance you could
  6600. read all the volumes with @sc{gnu} @command{tar}. The converse is also true:
  6601. you may not expect multi-volume archives created by @sc{gnu} @command{tar} to
  6602. be fully recovered by vendor's @command{tar}. Since there is little chance
  6603. that, in mixed system configurations, some vendor's @command{tar} will work on
  6604. another vendor's machine, and there is a great chance that @sc{gnu} @command{tar}
  6605. will work on most of them, your best bet is to install @sc{gnu} @command{tar}
  6606. on all machines between which you know exchange of files is possible.
  6607. @node Tape Files
  6608. @subsection Tape Files
  6609. @UNREVISED
  6610. To give the archive a name which will be recorded in it, use the
  6611. @value{op-label} option. This will write a special block identifying
  6612. @var{volume-label} as the name of the archive to the front of the archive
  6613. which will be displayed when the archive is listed with @value{op-list}.
  6614. If you are creating a multi-volume archive with
  6615. @value{op-multi-volume}@FIXME-pxref{Using Multiple Tapes}, then the
  6616. volume label will have
  6617. @samp{Volume @var{nnn}} appended to the name you give, where @var{nnn} is
  6618. the number of the volume of the archive. (If you use the @value{op-label}
  6619. option when reading an archive, it checks to make sure the label on the
  6620. tape matches the one you give. @value{xref-label}.
  6621. When @command{tar} writes an archive to tape, it creates a single
  6622. tape file. If multiple archives are written to the same tape, one
  6623. after the other, they each get written as separate tape files. When
  6624. extracting, it is necessary to position the tape at the right place
  6625. before running @command{tar}. To do this, use the @command{mt} command.
  6626. For more information on the @command{mt} command and on the organization
  6627. of tapes into a sequence of tape files, see @ref{mt}.
  6628. People seem to often do:
  6629. @example
  6630. @kbd{--label="@var{some-prefix} `date +@var{some-format}`"}
  6631. @end example
  6632. or such, for pushing a common date in all volumes or an archive set.
  6633. @node label
  6634. @section Including a Label in the Archive
  6635. @cindex Labeling an archive
  6636. @cindex Labels on the archive media
  6637. @UNREVISED
  6638. @table @kbd
  6639. @item -V @var{name}
  6640. @itemx --label=@var{name}
  6641. Create archive with volume name @var{name}.
  6642. @end table
  6643. This option causes @command{tar} to write out a @dfn{volume header} at
  6644. the beginning of the archive. If @value{op-multi-volume} is used, each
  6645. volume of the archive will have a volume header of @samp{@var{name}
  6646. Volume @var{n}}, where @var{n} is 1 for the first volume, 2 for the
  6647. next, and so on.
  6648. @FIXME{Should the arg to --label be a quoted string?? No.}
  6649. To avoid problems caused by misplaced paper labels on the archive
  6650. media, you can include a @dfn{label} entry---an archive member which
  6651. contains the name of the archive---in the archive itself. Use the
  6652. @value{op-label} option in conjunction with the @value{op-create} operation
  6653. to include a label entry in the archive as it is being created.
  6654. If you create an archive using both @value{op-label} and
  6655. @value{op-multi-volume}, each volume of the archive will have an
  6656. archive label of the form @samp{@var{archive-label} Volume @var{n}},
  6657. where @var{n} is 1 for the first volume, 2 for the next, and so on.
  6658. @FIXME-xref{Multi-Volume Archives, for information on creating multiple
  6659. volume archives.}
  6660. If you list or extract an archive using @value{op-label}, @command{tar} will
  6661. print an error if the archive label doesn't match the @var{archive-label}
  6662. specified, and will then not list nor extract the archive. In those cases,
  6663. @var{archive-label} argument is interpreted as a globbing-style pattern
  6664. which must match the actual magnetic volume label. @xref{exclude}, for
  6665. a precise description of how match is attempted@footnote{Previous versions
  6666. of @command{tar} used full regular expression matching, or before that, only
  6667. exact string matching, instead of wildcard matchers. We decided for the
  6668. sake of simplicity to use a uniform matching device through @command{tar}.}.
  6669. If the switch @value{op-multi-volume} is being used, the volume label
  6670. matcher will also suffix @var{archive-label} by @w{@samp{ Volume [1-9]*}}
  6671. if the initial match fails, before giving up. Since the volume numbering
  6672. is automatically added in labels at creation time, it sounded logical to
  6673. equally help the user taking care of it when the archive is being read.
  6674. The @value{op-label} was once called @samp{--volume}, but is not available
  6675. under that name anymore.
  6676. To find out an archive's label entry (or to find out if an archive has
  6677. a label at all), use @samp{tar --list --verbose}. @command{tar} will print the
  6678. label first, and then print archive member information, as in the
  6679. example below:
  6680. @example
  6681. $ @kbd{tar --verbose --list --file=iamanarchive}
  6682. V--------- 0 0 0 1992-03-07 12:01 iamalabel--Volume Header--
  6683. -rw-rw-rw- ringo user 40 1990-05-21 13:30 iamafilename
  6684. @end example
  6685. @table @kbd
  6686. @item --label=@var{archive-label}
  6687. @itemx -V @var{archive-label}
  6688. Includes an @dfn{archive-label} at the beginning of the archive when
  6689. the archive is being created, when used in conjunction with the
  6690. @value{op-create} option. Checks to make sure the archive label
  6691. matches the one specified (when used in conjunction with the
  6692. @value{op-extract} option.
  6693. @end table
  6694. To get a common information on all tapes of a series, use the
  6695. @value{op-label} option. For having this information different in each
  6696. series created through a single script used on a regular basis, just
  6697. manage to get some date string as part of the label. For example:
  6698. @example
  6699. $ @kbd{tar cfMV /dev/tape "Daily backup for `date +%Y-%m-%d`"}
  6700. $ @kbd{tar --create --file=/dev/tape --multi-volume \
  6701. --volume="Daily backup for `date +%Y-%m-%d`"}
  6702. @end example
  6703. Also note that each label has its own date and time, which corresponds
  6704. to when @sc{gnu} @command{tar} initially attempted to write it, often soon
  6705. after the operator launches @command{tar} or types the carriage return
  6706. telling that the next tape is ready. Comparing date labels does give
  6707. an idea of tape throughput only if the delays for rewinding tapes
  6708. and the operator switching them were negligible, which is usually
  6709. not the case.
  6710. @FIXME{was --volume}
  6711. @node verify
  6712. @section Verifying Data as It is Stored
  6713. @cindex Verifying a write operation
  6714. @cindex Double-checking a write operation
  6715. @table @kbd
  6716. @item -W
  6717. @itemx --verify
  6718. Attempt to verify the archive after writing.
  6719. @end table
  6720. This option causes @command{tar} to verify the archive after writing it.
  6721. Each volume is checked after it is written, and any discrepancies
  6722. are recorded on the standard error output.
  6723. Verification requires that the archive be on a back-space-able medium.
  6724. This means pipes, some cartridge tape drives, and some other devices
  6725. cannot be verified.
  6726. You can insure the accuracy of an archive by comparing files in the
  6727. system with archive members. @command{tar} can compare an archive to the
  6728. file system as the archive is being written, to verify a write
  6729. operation, or can compare a previously written archive, to insure that
  6730. it is up to date.
  6731. To check for discrepancies in an archive immediately after it is
  6732. written, use the @value{op-verify} option in conjunction with
  6733. the @value{op-create} operation. When this option is
  6734. specified, @command{tar} checks archive members against their counterparts
  6735. in the file system, and reports discrepancies on the standard error.
  6736. To verify an archive, you must be able to read it from before the end
  6737. of the last written entry. This option is useful for detecting data
  6738. errors on some tapes. Archives written to pipes, some cartridge tape
  6739. drives, and some other devices cannot be verified.
  6740. One can explicitly compare an already made archive with the file system
  6741. by using the @value{op-compare} option, instead of using the more automatic
  6742. @value{op-verify} option. @value{xref-compare}.
  6743. Note that these two options have a slightly different intent. The
  6744. @value{op-compare} option how identical are the logical contents of some
  6745. archive with what is on your disks, while the @value{op-verify} option is
  6746. really for checking if the physical contents agree and if the recording
  6747. media itself is of dependable quality. So, for the @value{op-verify}
  6748. operation, @command{tar} tries to defeat all in-memory cache pertaining to
  6749. the archive, while it lets the speed optimization undisturbed for the
  6750. @value{op-compare} option. If you nevertheless use @value{op-compare} for
  6751. media verification, you may have to defeat the in-memory cache yourself,
  6752. maybe by opening and reclosing the door latch of your recording unit,
  6753. forcing some doubt in your operating system about the fact this is really
  6754. the same volume as the one just written or read.
  6755. The @value{op-verify} option would not be necessary if drivers were indeed
  6756. able to detect dependably all write failures. This sometimes require many
  6757. magnetic heads, some able to read after the writes occurred. One would
  6758. not say that drivers unable to detect all cases are necessarily flawed,
  6759. as long as programming is concerned.
  6760. The @value{op-verify} option will not work in conjunction with the
  6761. @value{op-multi-volume} option or the @value{op-append},
  6762. @value{op-update} and @value{op-delete} operations. @xref{Operations},
  6763. for more information on these operations.
  6764. Also, since @command{tar} normally strips leading @samp{/} from file
  6765. names (@pxref{absolute}), a command like @samp{tar --verify -cf
  6766. /tmp/foo.tar /etc} will work as desired only if the working directory is
  6767. @file{/}, as @command{tar} uses the archive's relative member names
  6768. (e.g., @file{etc/motd}) when verifying the archive.
  6769. @node Write Protection
  6770. @section Write Protection
  6771. Almost all tapes and diskettes, and in a few rare cases, even disks can
  6772. be @dfn{write protected}, to protect data on them from being changed.
  6773. Once an archive is written, you should write protect the media to prevent
  6774. the archive from being accidentally overwritten or deleted. (This will
  6775. protect the archive from being changed with a tape or floppy drive---it
  6776. will not protect it from magnet fields or other physical hazards).
  6777. The write protection device itself is usually an integral part of the
  6778. physical media, and can be a two position (write enabled/write
  6779. disabled) switch, a notch which can be popped out or covered, a ring
  6780. which can be removed from the center of a tape reel, or some other
  6781. changeable feature.
  6782. @node Free Software Needs Free Documentation
  6783. @appendix Free Software Needs Free Documentation
  6784. @include freemanuals.texi
  6785. @node Copying This Manual
  6786. @appendix Copying This Manual
  6787. @menu
  6788. * GNU Free Documentation License:: License for copying this manual
  6789. @end menu
  6790. @include fdl.texi
  6791. @node Index
  6792. @appendix Index
  6793. @printindex cp
  6794. @summarycontents
  6795. @contents
  6796. @bye
  6797. @c Local variables:
  6798. @c texinfo-column-for-description: 32
  6799. @c End: