This entry was originally posted in slightly different form to Server Fault
If you’re coming from a Windows world, you’re used to using tools like zip or
rar, which compress collections of files. In the typical Unix tradition of
doing one thing and doing one thing well, you tend to have two different
utilities; a compression tool and a archive format. People then use these two
tools together to give the same functionality that zip or rar provide.
There are numerous different compression formats; the common ones used on Linux
these days are gzip (sometimes known as zlib) and the newer, higher performing
bzip2. Unfortunately bzip2 uses more CPU and memory to provide the higher rates
of compression. You can use these tools to compress any file and by convention
files compressed by either of these formats is .gz and .bz2. You can use gzip
and bzip2 to compress and gunzip and bunzip2 to decompress these formats.
There are also several different types of archive formats available, including
cpio, ar and tar, but people tend to only use tar. These allow you to take a
number of files and pack them into a single file. They can also include path
and permission information. You can create and unpack a tar file using the tar
command. You might hear these operations referred to as “tarring” and
“untarring”. (The name of the command comes from a shortening of Tape ARchive.
Tar was an improvement on the ar format in that you could use it to span
multiple physical tapes for backups).
# tar -cf archive.tar list of files to include
This will create (-c) and archive into a file -f called archive.tar. (.tar
is the convention extention for tar archives). You should now have a single
file that contains five files (“list”, “of”, “files”, “to” and “include”). If
you give tar a directory, it will recurse into that directory and store
everything inside it.
# tar -xf archive.tar # tar -xf archive.tar list of files
This will extract (-x) the previously created archive.tar. You can extract just
the files you want from the archive by listing them on the end of the command
line. In our example, the second line would extract “list”, “of”, “file”, but
not “to” and “include”. You can also use
# tar -tf archive.tar
to get a list of the contents before you extract them.
So now you can combine these two tools to replication the functionality of zip:
# tar -cf archive.tar directory # gzip archive.tar
You’ll now have an archive.tar.gz file. You can extract it using:
# gunzip archive.tar.gz # tar -xf archive.tar
We can use pipes to save us having an intermediate archive.tar:
# tar -cf - directory | gzip > archive.tar.gz # gunzip < archive.tar.gz | tar -xf -
You can use – with the -f option to specify stdin or stdout (tar knows which one based on context).
We can do slightly better, because, in a slight apparent breaking of the
“one job well” idea, tar has the ability to compress its output and decompress
its input by using the -z argument (I say apparent, because it still uses the
gzip and gunzip commandline behind the scenes)
# tar -czf archive.tar.gz directory # tar -xzf archive.tar.gz
To use bzip2 instead of gzip, use bzip2, bunzip2 and -j instead of gzip, gunzip
and -z respectively (tar -cjf archive.tar.bz2). Some versions of tar can detect
a bzip2 file archive with you use -z and do the right thing, but it is probably
worth getting in the habit of being explicit.
More info: