xref: /netbsd/bin/pax/tar.1 (revision 8dcba567)
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26.\"	OpenBSD: tar.1,v 1.28 2000/11/09 23:58:56 aaron Exp
27.\"
28.Dd October 17, 2004
29.Dt TAR 1
30.Os
31.Sh NAME
32.Nm tar
33.Nd tape archiver
34.Sh SYNOPSIS
35.Nm tar
36.Sm off
37.Oo \&- Oc {crtux} Op Fl befhjklmopqvwzHOPSXZ014578
38.Sm on
39.Op Ar archive
40.Op Ar blocksize
41.\" XXX how to do this right?
42.Op Fl C Ar directory
43.Op Fl T Ar file
44.Op Fl s Ar replstr
45.Op Ar file ...
46.Sh DESCRIPTION
47The
48.Nm
49command creates, adds files to, or extracts files from an
50archive file in
51.Dq tar
52format.
53A tar archive is often stored on a magnetic tape, but can be
54stored equally well on a floppy, CD-ROM, or in a regular disk file.
55.Pp
56One of the following flags must be present:
57.Bl -tag -width Ar
58.It Fl c , -create
59Create new archive, or overwrite an existing archive,
60adding the specified files to it.
61.It Fl r , -append
62Append the named new files to existing archive.
63Note that this will only work on media on which an end-of-file mark
64can be overwritten.
65.It Fl t , -list
66List contents of archive.
67If any files are named on the
68command line, only those files will be listed.
69.It Fl u , -update
70Alias for
71.Fl r .
72.It Fl x , -extract , -get
73Extract files from archive.
74If any files are named on the
75command line, only those files will be extracted from the
76archive.
77If more than one copy of a file exists in the
78archive, later copies will overwrite earlier copies during
79extraction.
80The file mode and modification time are preserved
81if possible.
82The file mode is subject to modification by the
83.Xr umask 2 .
84.El
85.Pp
86In addition to the flags mentioned above, any of the following
87flags may be used:
88.Bl -tag -width Ar
89.It Fl b Ar "blocking factor" , Fl -block-size Ar "blocking factor"
90Set blocking factor to use for the archive.
91.Nm
92uses 512 byte blocks.
93The default is 20, the maximum is 126.
94Archives with a blocking factor larger 63 violate the
95.Tn POSIX
96standard and will not be portable to all systems.
97.It Fl e
98Stop after first error.
99.It Fl f Ar archive , Fl -file Ar archive
100Filename where the archive is stored.
101Defaults to
102.Pa /dev/rst0 .
103If the archive is of the form:
104.Ar [[user@]host:]file
105then the archive will be processed using
106.Xr rmt 8 .
107.It Fl h , -dereference
108Follow symbolic links as if they were normal files
109or directories.
110.It Fl j, -bzip2, -bunzip2
111Use
112.Xr bzip2 1
113for compression of the archive.
114This option is a GNU extension.
115.It Fl k , -keep-old-files
116Keep existing files; don't overwrite them from archive.
117.It Fl l , -one-file-system
118Do not cross filesystems.
119.It Fl m , -modification-time
120Do not preserve modification time.
121.It Fl O
122When creating and appending to an archive, write old-style (non-POSIX) archives.
123When extracting from an archive, extract to standard output.
124.It Fl o , -portability , -old-archive
125Don't write directory information that the older (V7) style
126.Nm
127is unable to decode.
128This implies the
129.Fl O
130flag.
131.It Fl p , -preserve-permissions , -preserve
132Preserve user and group ID as well as file mode regardless of
133the current
134.Xr umask 2 .
135The setuid and setgid bits are only preserved if the user is
136the superuser.
137Only meaningful in conjunction with the
138.Fl x
139flag.
140.It Fl q , -fast-read
141Select the first archive member that matches each
142.Ar pattern
143operand.
144No more than one archive member is matched for each
145.Ar pattern .
146When members of type directory are matched, the file hierarchy rooted at that
147directory is also matched.
148.It Fl S , -sparse
149This flag has no effect as
150.Nm
151always generates sparse files.
152.It Fl s Ar replstr
153Modify the file or archive member names specified by the
154.Ar pattern
155or
156.Ar file
157operands according to the substitution expression
158.Ar replstr ,
159using the syntax of the
160.Xr ed 1
161utility regular expressions.
162The format of these regular expressions are:
163.Dl /old/new/[gp]
164As in
165.Xr ed 1 ,
166.Cm old
167is a basic regular expression and
168.Cm new
169can contain an ampersand (\*[Am]), \\n (where n is a digit) back-references,
170or subexpression matching.
171The
172.Cm old
173string may also contain
174.Aq Dv newline
175characters.
176Any non-null character can be used as a delimiter (/ is shown here).
177Multiple
178.Fl s
179expressions can be specified.
180The expressions are applied in the order they are specified on the
181command line, terminating with the first successful substitution.
182The optional trailing
183.Cm g
184continues to apply the substitution expression to the pathname substring
185which starts with the first character following the end of the last successful
186substitution.
187The first unsuccessful substitution stops the operation of the
188.Cm g
189option.
190The optional trailing
191.Cm p
192will cause the final result of a successful substitution to be written to
193.Dv standard error
194in the following format:
195.Dl \*[Lt]original pathname\*[Gt] \*[Gt]\*[Gt] \*[Lt]new pathname\*[Gt]
196File or archive member names that substitute to the empty string
197are not selected and will be skipped.
198.It Fl v
199Verbose operation mode.
200.It Fl w , -interactive , -confirmation
201Interactively rename files.
202This option causes
203.Nm
204to prompt the user for the filename to use when storing or
205extracting files in an archive.
206.It Fl z , -gzip , -gunzip
207Compress archive using gzip.
208.It Fl B , -read-full-blocks
209Reassemble small reads into full blocks (For reading from 4.2BSD pipes).
210.It Fl C Ar directory , Fl -directory Ar directory
211This is a positional argument which sets the working directory for the
212following files.
213When extracting, files will be extracted into
214the specified directory; when creating, the specified files will be matched
215from the directory.
216This argument and its parameter may also appear in a file list specified by
217.Fl T .
218.It Fl H
219Follow symlinks given on command line only.
220.It Fl P , -absolute-paths
221Do not strip leading slashes
222.Pq Sq /
223from pathnames.
224The default is to strip leading slashes.
225.It Fl T Ar file , Fl -files-from Ar file
226Read the names of files to archive or extract from the given file, one
227per line.
228A line may also specify the positional argument
229.Dq Fl C Ar directory .
230.It Fl X Ar file , Fl -exclude-from Ar file
231Exclude files listed in the given file.
232.It Fl Z , -compress , -uncompress
233Compress archive using compress.
234.It Fl -strict
235Do not enable GNU tar extensions such as long filenames and long link names.
236.It Fl -atime-preserve
237Preserve file access times.
238.It Fl -chroot
239.Fn chroot
240to the current directory before extracting files.
241Use with
242.Fl x
243and
244.Fl h
245to make absolute symlinks relative to the current directory.
246.It Fl -unlink
247Ignored, only accepted for compatibility with other
248.Nm
249implementations.
250.Nm
251always unlinks files before creating them.
252.It Fl -use-compress-program Ar program
253Use the named program as the program to decompress the input.
254.It Fl -force-local
255Do not interpret filenames that contain a
256.Sq \&:
257as remote files.
258.It Fl -insecure
259Normally
260.Nm
261ignores filenames that contain
262.Sq ..
263as a path component.
264With this option, files that contain
265.Sq ..
266can be processed.
267.It Fl -no-recursion
268Cause files of type directory being copied or archived, or archive members of
269type directory being extracted, to match only the directory file or archive
270member and not the file hierarchy rooted at the directory.
271.El
272.Pp
273The options
274.Op Fl 014578
275can be used to select one of the compiled-in backup devices,
276.Pa /dev/rstN .
277.Sh FILES
278.Bl -tag -width "/dev/rst0"
279.It Pa /dev/rst0
280default archive name
281.El
282.Sh DIAGNOSTICS
283.Nm
284will exit with one of the following values:
285.Bl -tag -width 2n
286.It 0
287All files were processed successfully.
288.It 1
289An error occurred.
290.El
291.Pp
292Whenever
293.Nm
294cannot create a file or a link when extracting an archive or cannot
295find a file while writing an archive, or cannot preserve the user
296ID, group ID, file mode, or access and modification times when the
297.Fl p
298option is specified, a diagnostic message is written to standard
299error and a non-zero exit value will be returned, but processing
300will continue.
301In the case where
302.Nm
303cannot create a link to a file,
304.Nm
305will not create a second copy of the file.
306.Pp
307If the extraction of a file from an archive is prematurely terminated
308by a signal or error,
309.Nm
310may have only partially extracted the file the user wanted.
311Additionally, the file modes of extracted files and directories may
312have incorrect file bits, and the modification and access times may
313be wrong.
314.Pp
315If the creation of an archive is prematurely terminated by a signal
316or error,
317.Nm
318may have only partially created the archive which may violate the
319specific archive format specification.
320.Sh SEE ALSO
321.Xr cpio 1 ,
322.Xr pax 1
323.Sh HISTORY
324A
325.Nm
326command first appeared in
327.At v7 .
328.Sh AUTHORS
329Keith Muller at the University of California, San Diego.
330