unzip(1) — USER COMMANDS
NAME
unzip - list/test/extract from a ZIP archive file
SYNOPSIS
unzip [ -xecptlvz[qadoUV] ] file[.zip] [filespec...]
ARGUMENTS
file[.zip] Path of the ZIP archive. The suffix “.zip” is applied if the file specified does not exist. Note that self-extracting ZIP files are supported; just specify the “.exe” suffix yourself.
[filespec] An optional list of archive members to be processed. Expressions may be used to match multiple members; be sure to quote expressions that contain characters interpreted by the UNIX shell. See DESCRIPTION (below) for more details.
OPTIONS
-x,-e extract files in archive (default--i.e., this flag is optional)
-c extract files to stdout (“CRT”)
-p extract files to stdout and no informational messages (for pipes)
-t test archive contents for validity
-l list archive contents (short format)
-v verbose listing of archive contents
-z display only the archive comment
MODIFIERS
-q perform operations quietly (up to two q’s allowed)
-a convert to MS-DOS textfile format (CR LF), Mac format (CR),
Unix/VMS format (LF), OR from ASCII to EBCDIC, depending on
your system
-d recreate directory structure contained in archive
-o OK to overwrite files without prompting
-U don’t map filenames to lowercase for selected (uppercase) OS’s
-V retain file version numbers
DESCRIPTION
unzip will list, test, or extract from a ZIP archive, commonly found on MSDOS systems. Archive member extraction is implied by the absence of the -c, -p, -t, -l, -v or -z options. All archive members are processed unless a filespec is provided to specify a subset of the archive members. The filespec is similar to an egrep expression, and may contain:
∗ matches a sequence of 0 or more characters
? matches exactly 1 character
\nnn matches the character having octal code nnn
[...] matches any single character found inside the brackets; ranges are specified by a beginning character, a hyphen, and an ending character. If a ’!’ follows the left bracket, then the range of characters matched is complemented with respect to the ASCII character set.
AUTHORS
v1.2 3/15/89 Samuel H. Smith
v2.x 1989 Many contributors.
v3.0 5/1/90 David Kirschbaum, consolidator, and the Info-ZIP
workgroup (Info-ZIP@WSMR-SIMTEL20.Army.Mil).
v3.1 8/15/90 Same luvable gang.
v4.0 12/1/90 Getting more luvable by the day.
v4.1 5/12/91 We got too luvable, so we toned it down a bit (for Mom).
Amiga Unix — Last change: UNIX UnZip version 4.1