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- archive - How do I tar a directory of files and folders without . . .
I typically do: tar -czvf my_directory tar gz my_directory What if I just want to include everything (including any hidden system files) in my_directory, but not the directory itself? I don't want:
- Shell command to tar directory excluding certain files folders
Is there a simple shell command script that supports excluding certain files folders from being archived? I have a directory that need to be archived with a sub directory that has a number of very
- bash - Listing the content of a tar file or a directory only down to . . .
I wonder how to list the content of a tar file only down to some level? I understand tar tvf mytar tar will list all files, but sometimes I would like to only see directories down to some level
- linux - How to extract filename. tar. gz file - Stack Overflow
0 A tar gz is a tar file inside a gzip file, so 1st you must unzip the gzip file with gunzip -d filename tar gz , and then use tar to untar it However, since gunzip says it isn't in gzip format, you can see what format it is in with file filename tar gz, and use the appropriate program to open it
- linux - tar: Error is not recoverable: exiting now - Stack Overflow
The tar program can use external compression programs gzip, bzip2, xz by opening a pipe to those programs, sending a tar archive via the pipe to the compression utility, which compresses the data which it reads from tar and writes the result to the filename which the tar program specifies
- linux - How do I tar a directory without retaining the directory . . .
tar -czf destination tar gz -C source directory $(ls source directory) This solution: Includes all files and folders in the directory Does not include any of the directory structure (or ) in the final product Does not require you to change directories However, it requires the directory to be given twice, so it may be most useful in another
- linux - tar: add all files and directories in current directory . . .
I try to tar gz a directory and use tar -czf workspace tar gz * The resulting tar includes svn directories in subdirs but NOT in the current directory (as * gets expanded to only 'visible' files
- what does -zxvf mean in tar -zxvf lt;filename gt;? [closed]
I have seen on many websites commands like this what does the "-zxvf" or the similar commands stand for? tar -zxvf lt;filename gt; tar xvf lt;filename gt;
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