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- README for GNU tar
- Copyright 1990, 1991, 1992, 1994, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001
- Free Software Foundation, Inc.
- This file is part of GNU tar.
- GNU tar is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
- it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
- the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
- any later version.
- GNU tar is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
- but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
- MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
- GNU General Public License for more details.
- You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
- along with tar; see the file COPYING. If not, write to
- the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
- Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
- Please glance through *all* sections of this
- `README' file before starting configuration. Also make sure you read files
- `ABOUT-NLS' and `INSTALL' if you are not familiar with them already.
- If you got the `tar' distribution in `shar' format, time stamps ought to be
- properly restored; do not ignore such complaints at `unshar' time.
- GNU `tar' saves many files together into a single tape or disk
- archive, and can restore individual files from the archive. It includes
- multivolume support, the ability to archive sparse files, automatic archive
- compression/decompression, remote archives and special features that allow
- `tar' to be used for incremental and full backups. This distribution
- also includes `rmt', the remote tape server. The `mt' tape drive control
- program is in the GNU `cpio' distribution.
- GNU `tar' is derived from John Gilmore's public domain `tar'.
- See file `ABOUT-NLS' for how to customize this program to your language.
- See file `COPYING' for copying conditions.
- See file `INSTALL' for compilation and installation instructions.
- See file `PORTS' for various ports of GNU tar to non-Unix systems.
- See file `NEWS' for a list of major changes in the current release.
- See file `THANKS' for a list of contributors.
- Besides those configure options documented in files `INSTALL' and
- `ABOUT-NLS', an extra option may be accepted after `./configure':
- * `--disable-largefile' omits support for large files, even if the
- operating system supports large files. Typically, large files are
- those larger on 2 GB on a 32-bit host.
- The default archive device is now `stdin' on read and `stdout' on write.
- The installer can still override this by presetting `DEFAULT_ARCHIVE'
- in the environment before configuring (the behavior of `-[0-7]' or
- `-[0-7]lmh' options in `tar' are then derived automatically). Similarly,
- `DEFAULT_BLOCKING' can be preset to something else than 20.
- For comprehensive modifications to GNU tar, you might need tools beyond
- those used in simple installations. Fully install GNU m4 1.4 first,
- and only then, Autoconf 2.13 or later. Install Perl, then Automake
- 1.4 or later. You might need Bison 1.28 or later, and GNU tar itself.
- All are available on GNU archive sites, like in
- ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/.
- Send bug reports to `[email protected]'. (Beware, old-timers: it is
- `@gnu', not `@prep'; and not `bug-gnu-utils' anymore.) A bug report is
- an adequate description of the problem: your input, what you expected,
- what you got, and why this is wrong. Diffs are welcome, but they only
- describe a solution, from which the problem might be uneasy to infer.
- If needed, submit actual data files with your report. Small data files
- are preferred. Big files may sometimes be necessary, but do not send them
- to the report address; rather take special arrangement with the maintainer.
- Your feedback will help us to make a better and more portable package.
- Consider documentation errors as bugs, and report them as such. If you
- develop anything pertaining to `tar' or have suggestions, let us know
- and share your findings by writing to <[email protected]>.
- Installation hints
- ------------------
- Here are a few hints which might help installing `tar' on some systems.
- * gzip and bzip2.
- GNU tar uses the gzip and bzip2 programs to read and write compressed
- archives. If you don't have these programs already, you need to
- install them. Their sources can be found at:
- ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/gzip/
- http://sourceware.cygnus.com/bzip2/
- If you see the following symptoms:
- $ tar -xzf file.tar.gz
- gzip: stdin: decompression OK, trailing garbage ignored
- tar: Child returned status 2
- then you have encountered a gzip incompatibility that should be fixed
- in gzip test version 1.3, which as of this writing is available at
- <ftp://alpha.gnu.org/gnu/gzip/>. You can work around the
- incompatibility by using a shell command like
- `gzip -d <file.tar.gz | tar -xzf -'.
- * Solaris issues.
- GNU tar exercises many features that can cause problems with older GCC
- versions. In particular, GCC 2.8.1 (sparc, -O1 or -O2) is known to
- miscompile GNU tar. No compiler-related problems have been reported
- when using GCC 2.95.2 or later.
- Recent versions of Solaris tar sport a new -E option to generate
- extended headers in an undocumented format. GNU tar does not
- understand these headers.
- * Static linking.
- Some platform will, by default, prepare a smaller `tar' executable
- which depends on shared libraries. Since GNU `tar' may be used for
- system-level backups and disaster recovery, installers might prefer to
- force static linking, making a bigger `tar' executable maybe, but able to
- work standalone, in situations where shared libraries are not available.
- The way to achieve static linking varies between systems. Set LDFLAGS
- to a value from the table below, before configuration (see `INSTALL').
- Platform Compiler LDFLAGS
- (any) Gnu C -static
- AIX (vendor) -bnso -bI:/lib/syscalls.exp
- HPUX (vendor) -Wl,-a,archive
- IRIX (vendor) -non_shared
- OSF (vendor) -non_shared
- SCO 3.2v5 (vendor) -dn
- Solaris (vendor) -Bstatic
- SunOS (vendor) -Bstatic
- * Failed tests `ignfail.sh' or `incremen.sh'.
- In an NFS environment, lack of synchronization between machine clocks
- might create difficulties to any tool comparing dates and file time stamps,
- like `tar' in incremental dumps. This has been a recurrent problem with
- GNU Make for the last few years. We would like a general solution.
- * BSD compatibility matters.
- Set LIBS to `-lbsd' before configuration (see `INSTALL') if the linker
- complains about `bsd_ioctl' (Slackware). Also set CPPFLAGS to
- `-I/usr/include/bsd' if <sgtty.h> is not found (Slackware).
- * OPENStep 4.2 swap files
- Tar cannot read the file /private/vm/swapfile.front (even as root).
- This file is not a real file, but some kind of uncompressed view of
- the real compressed swap file; there is no reason to back it up, so
- the simplest workaround is to avoid tarring this file.
- Special topics
- --------------
- Here are a few special matters about GNU `tar', not related to build
- matters. See previous section for such.
- * File attributes.
- About *security*, it is probable that future releases of `tar' will have
- some behavior changed. There are many pending suggestions to choose from.
- Today, extracting an archive not being `root', `tar' will restore suid/sgid
- bits on files but owned by the extracting user. `root' automatically gets
- a lot of special privileges, `-p' might later become required to get them.
- GNU `tar' does not properly restore symlink attributes. Various systems
- implement flavors of symbolic links showing different behavior and
- properties. We did not successfully sorted all these out yet. Currently,
- the `lchown' call will be used if available, but that's all.
- * POSIX compliance.
- GNU `tar' implements an early draft of the POSIX 1003.1 `ustar' standard
- which is different from the final standard. This will be progressively
- corrected over the incoming few years. Don't be mislead by the mere
- existence of the --posix option. Later releases will become able to
- read truly POSIX archives, and also to produce them under option. (Also,
- if you look at the internals, don't take the GNU extensions you see for
- granted, as they are planned to change.) GNU tar 2.0 will produce POSIX
- archives by default, but there is a long way before we get there.
- * What's next?
- In the future we will try to release tar-1.14 as soon as possible and
- start merging with paxutils afterwards. We'll also try to rewrite
- some parts of the documentation after paxutils has been merged.
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