tar
Operations
The basic tar
operations, --create (-c), --list (-t) and
--extract (--get, -x), are currently presented and described in the tutorial
chapter of this manual. This section provides some complementary notes
for these operations.
tar
to destroy a magnetic tape with an empty archive(5). The two most
common errors are:
create
instead of extract
, when the
intent was to extract the full contents of an archive. This error
is likely: keys c and x are right next ot each other on
the QWERTY keyboard. Instead of being unpacked, the archive then
gets wholly destroyed. When users speak about exploding an
archive, they usually mean something else :-).
file
, when the intent was to create
an archive with a single file in it. This error is likely because a
tired user can easily add the f key to the cluster of option
letters, by the mere force of habit, without realizing the full
consequence of doing so. The usual consequence is that the single
file, which was meant to be saved, is rather destroyed.
tar
now takes some distance from elegance, and
cowardly refuses to create an archive when --create (-c) option is
given, there are no arguments besides options, and --files-from=file-of-names (-T file-of-names)
option is not used. To get around the cautiousness of GNU
tar
and nevertheless create an archive with nothing in it,
one may still use, as the value for the --files-from=file-of-names (-T file-of-names) option,
a file with no names in it, as shown in the following commands:
tar --create --file=empty-archive.tar --files-from=/dev/null tar cfT empty-archive.tar /dev/null
tar
archive, as a pipe.
tar
now shows dates as `1996-11-09', while it used to
show them as `Nov 11 1996'. (One can revert to the old behavior by
defining USE_OLD_CTIME
in `src/list.c' before reinstalling.)
But preferrably, people you should get used to ISO 8601 dates. Local
American dates should be made available again with full date localisation
support, once ready. In the meantime, programs not being localisable
for dates should prefer international dates, that's really the way to go.
Look up http://www.ft.uni-erlangen.de/~mskuhn/iso-time.html if you
are curious, it contains a detailed explanation of the ISO 8601 standard.
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