| www.delorie.com/gnu/docs/tar/tar_75.html | search |
![]() Buy GNU books! | |
| [ < ] | [ > ] | [ << ] | [ Up ] | [ >> ] | [Top] | [Contents] | [Index] | [ ? ] |
tar Usages (This message will disappear, once this node revised.)
@quote-arg
{Using Unix file linking capability to recreate directory
structures--linking files into one subdirectory and then
tarring that directory.}
@quote-arg
You can easily use archive files to transport a group of files from
one system to another: put all relevant files into an archive on one
computer system, transfer the archive to another system, and extract
the contents there. The basic transfer medium might be magnetic tape,
Internet FTP, or even electronic mail (though you must encode the
archive with uuencode in order to transport it properly by
mail). Both machines do not have to use the same operating system, as
long as they both support the tar program.
For example, here is how you might copy a directory's contents from one disk to another, while preserving the dates, modes, owners and link-structure of all the files therein. In this case, the transfer medium is a pipe, which is one a Unix redirection mechanism:
$ cd sourcedir; tar -cf - . | (cd targetdir; tar -xf -) |
The command also works using short option forms:
@quote-arg
$ cd sourcedir; tar --create --file=- . | (cd targetdir; tar --extract --file=-) |
This is one of the easiest methods to transfer a tar archive.
| webmaster donations bookstore | delorie software privacy |
| Copyright © 2003 by The Free Software Foundation | Updated Jun 2003 |