Linux archives
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TAR, GZ, BZIP
Working with archives in linux where tar = tape archive and the most common used options are:
- c - create a new tar file
- x - extract file
- t - list the contents of an archive
- z - compress use gzip compress, extention .tar.gz
- j - compress use bzip2 compress, extention .tar.bz2
- v - verbose displays files to compress or uncompress
- f - file specify the new archive name or an archive to extract from
Compress
Create a compressed .tar.gz archive
#archive a directory and everything under (recursively), the dir tree will be preserved eg. /dir/to/be/compressed/ when you extract tar -czvf archive.tar.gz /dir/to/be/compressed/ tar -czvf archive.tar.gz /path/to/*.conf #archive only files matching *.conf
Create a compressed archive controlling directory tree structure
tar -czvf archive.tar.gz -C directory/level1/ . # -C change current working directory # . archive all files from current working directory, this way when you extract it will extract to to the current working dir
Extract
tar -xzvf archive.tar.gz
A single file from compressed .tar.gz
tar -xzvf archive.tar.gz myscript.txt
A single directory (here conf directory) from compressed .tar.gz
tar -xzvf archive.tar.gz conf
Preview files inside archive
tar -tzvf {.tar.gz} tar -tjvf {.tbz2}
Zip
Install zip and unzip then use interactive method:
- Extract using default options, retaining directory structure
unzip file.zip
- Compress file or directory
zip name.zip directory/* zip name.zip file1 file2 file3
'Compress each directory in current directory into separate zip
$ for i in */; do echo zip -r "${i%/}.zip" "$i"; done # Test $ for i in */; do zip -r "${i%/}.zip" "$i"; done # Run