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     TAR(C)                   XENIX System V                    TAR(C)



     Name
          tar - Archives files.

     Syntax
          tar [ key ] [ files ]

     Description
          tar saves and restores files to and from an archive medium,
          which is typically a storage device such as floppy disk or
          tape, or a regular file.  Its actions are controlled by the
          key argument.  The key is a string of characters containing
          at most one function letter and possibly one or more
          function modifiers.  Valid function letters are c, t, x, and
          e.  Other arguments to the command are files (or directory
          names) specifying which files are to be backed up or
          restored.  In all cases, appearance of a directory name
          refers to the files and (recursively) subdirectories of that
          directory.  The r and u option cannot be used with tape
          devices.

          The function portion of the key is specified by one of the
          following letters:

          r       The named files are written to the end of the
                  archive.  The c function implies this function.

          x       The named files are extracted from the archive.  If
                  a named file matches a directory whose contents had
                  been written onto the archive, this directory is
                  (recursively) extracted.  The owner, modification
                  time, and mode are restored (if possible).  If no
                  files argument is given, the entire contents of the
                  archive are extracted.  Note that if several files
                  with the same name are on the archive, the last one
                  overwrites all earlier ones.

          t       The names of the specified files are listed each
                  time that they occur on the archive.  If no files
                  argument is given, all the names on the archive are
                  listed.

          u       The named files are added to the archive if they are
                  not already there, or if they have been modified
                  since last written on that archive.

          c       Creates a new archive; writing begins at the
                  beginning of the archive, instead of after the last
                  file.  This command implies the r function.







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     TAR(C)                   XENIX System V                    TAR(C)



          The following characters may be used in addition to the
          letter that selects the desired function:

          0,...,7 This modifier selects the drive on which the archive
                  is mounted.  The default is found in the file
                  /etc/default/tar.

          v       Normally, tar does its work silently.  The v
                  (verbose) option causes it to display the name of
                  each file it treats, preceded by the function
                  letter.  With the t function, v gives more
                  information about the archive entries than just the
                  name.

          w       Causes tar to display the action to be taken,
                  followed by the name of the file, and then wait for
                  the user's confirmation.  If a word beginning with y
                  is given, the action is performed.  Any other input
                  means ``no''.

          f       Causes tar to use the next argument as the name of
                  the archive instead of the default device listed in
                  /etc/default/tar.  If the name of the file is a dash
                  (-), tar writes to the standard output or reads from
                  the standard input, whichever is appropriate.  Thus,
                  tar can be used as the head or tail of a pipeline.
                  tar can also be used to move hierarchies with the
                  command:

                  cd fromdir; tar cf - . | (cd todir; tar xf -)

          b       Causes tar to use the next argument as the blocking
                  factor for archive records.  The default is 1, the
                  maximum is 20.  This option should only be used with
                  raw magnetic tape archives (see f above).  The block
                  size is determined automatically when reading tapes
                  (key letters x and t).

          F       Causes tar to use the next argument as the name of a
                  file from which succeeding arguments are taken.

          l       Tells tar to display an error message if it cannot
                  resolve all of the links to the files being backed
                  up.  If l is not specified, no error messages are
                  displayed.

          m       Tells tar to not restore the modification times.
                  The modification time of the file is the time of
                  extraction.

          k       Causes tar to use the next argument as the size of
                  an archive volume in kilobytes.  The minimum value



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     TAR(C)                   XENIX System V                    TAR(C)



                  allowed is 250.  This option is useful when the
                  archive is not intended for a magnetic tape device,
                  but for some fixed size device, such as floppy disk
                  (See f above). Very large files are split into
                  ``extents'' across volumes.  When restoring from a
                  multivolume archive, tar only prompts for a new
                  volume if a split file has been partially restored.
















































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     TAR(C)                   XENIX System V                    TAR(C)



                  To override the value of k in the default file,
                  specify k as 0 on the command line.

          e       Prevents files from being split across volumes
                  (tapes or floppy disks).  If there is not enough
                  room on the present volume for a given file, tar
                  prompts for a new volume.  This is only valid when
                  the k option is also specified on the command line.

          n       Indicates the archive device is not a magnetic tape.
                  The k option implies this. Listing and extracting
                  the contents of an archive are sped because tar can
                  seek over files it wishes to skip.  Sizes are
                  printed in kilobytes instead of tape blocks.

          p       Indicates that files are extracted using their
                  original permissions.  It is possible that a non-
                  super-user may be unable to extract files because of
                  the permissions associated with the files or
                  directories being extracted.

          A       Suppresses absolute filenames. Any leading
                  ``/''characters are removed from filenames.  During
                  extraction arguments given should match the relative
                  (rather than the absolute) pathnames.  With the c,
                  r, u options the A options can be used to inhibit
                  putting leading slashes in the archive headers.

          tar reads /etc/default/tar to obtain default values for the
          device, blocking factor, volume size, and the device type
          (tape or non-tape).  If no numeric key is specified on the
          command, tar looks for a line in the default file beginning
          with the string archive0=.  Following this pattern are 4
          blank separated strings indicating the values for the
          device, blocking factor, volume size and device type, in
          that order.  A volume size of `0' indicates infinite volume
          length, (the previous default value of volume) and is
          suitable for magnetic tape media.  An example
          /etc/default/tar line follows:

               archive0=/dev/fd0 1 400 n

          The n in the last field, means that this device is not a
          tape.  Use y for tape devices.  Any default value may be
          overridden on the command line.  The numeric keys (0-7)
          select the line from the default value beginning with
          archive#=, where # is the numeric key.  When the f key
          letter is specified on the command line, the entry
          "archivef=" is used.  In this case, the default file entry
          must still contain 4 strings, but the first entry
          (specifying the device) is not significant.  The default
          file /etc/default/tar need not exist if a device is



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     TAR(C)                   XENIX System V                    TAR(C)



          specified on the command line.

     Examples
          If the name of a floppy disk device is /dev/fd1, then a tar
          format file can be created on this device by entering:
               assign /dev/fd
               tar cvfk /dev/fd1 360 files

          where files are the names of files you want archived and 360
          is the capacity of the floppy disk in kilobytes.  Note that
          arguments to key letters are given in the same order as the
          key letters themselves, thus the fk key letters have
          corresponding arguments /dev/fd1 and 360.  Note that if a
          file is a directory, the contents of the directory are
          recursively archived.  To display a listing of the archive,
          enter:

               tar tvf /dev/fd1

          At some later time you will likely want to extract the files
          from the archive floppy.  You can do this by entering:

               tar xvf /dev/fd1

          The above command extracts all files from the archive, using
          the exact same pathnames as used when the archive was
          created. Because of this behavior, it is normally best to
          save archive files with relative pathnames rather than
          absolute ones, since directory permissions may not let you
          read the files into the absolute directories specified.
          (See the A flag under Options.)

          In the above examples, the v verbose option is used simply
          to confirm the reading or writing of archive files on the
          screen. Also, a normal file could be substituted for the
          floppy device /dev/fd1 shown in the examples.

     Files
          /etc/default/tar         Default devices, blocking and
                         volume sizes, device type
          /tmp/tar*

     Diagnostics
          Displays an error message about bad key characters and
          archive read/write errors.

          Displays an error message if not enough memory is available
          to hold the link tables.

     Notes
          There is no way to ask for the nth occurrence of a file.




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     TAR(C)                   XENIX System V                    TAR(C)



          The u option can be slow.

          The limit on filename length is 100 characters.

          When archiving a directory that contains subdirectories, tar
          will only access those subdirectories that are within 17
          levels of nesting.  Subdirectories at higher levels will be
          ignored after tar displays an error message.

          Systems with a 1K-byte file system cannot specify raw disk
          devices unless the b option is used to specify an even
          number of blocks. This means that one cannot update a raw-
          mode disk partition.

          Do not enter:

               tar xfF - -

          This would imply taking two things from the standard input
          at the same time.

          Use error-free floppy disks for best results with tar.

































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