1Archive::Tar(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Archive::Tar(3)
2
3
4
6 Archive::Tar - module for manipulations of tar archives
7
9 use Archive::Tar;
10 my $tar = Archive::Tar->new;
11
12 $tar->read('origin.tgz');
13 $tar->extract();
14
15 $tar->add_files('file/foo.pl', 'docs/README');
16 $tar->add_data('file/baz.txt', 'This is the contents now');
17
18 $tar->rename('oldname', 'new/file/name');
19 $tar->chown('/', 'root');
20 $tar->chown('/', 'root:root');
21 $tar->chmod('/tmp', '1777');
22
23 $tar->write('files.tar'); # plain tar
24 $tar->write('files.tgz', COMPRESS_GZIP); # gzip compressed
25 $tar->write('files.tbz', COMPRESS_BZIP); # bzip2 compressed
26 $tar->write('files.txz', COMPRESS_XZ); # xz compressed
27
29 Archive::Tar provides an object oriented mechanism for handling tar
30 files. It provides class methods for quick and easy files handling
31 while also allowing for the creation of tar file objects for custom
32 manipulation. If you have the IO::Zlib module installed, Archive::Tar
33 will also support compressed or gzipped tar files.
34
35 An object of class Archive::Tar represents a .tar(.gz) archive full of
36 files and things.
37
39 Archive::Tar->new( [$file, $compressed] )
40 Returns a new Tar object. If given any arguments, "new()" calls the
41 "read()" method automatically, passing on the arguments provided to the
42 "read()" method.
43
44 If "new()" is invoked with arguments and the "read()" method fails for
45 any reason, "new()" returns undef.
46
47 $tar->read ( $filename|$handle, [$compressed, {opt => 'val'}] )
48 Read the given tar file into memory. The first argument can either be
49 the name of a file or a reference to an already open filehandle (or an
50 IO::Zlib object if it's compressed)
51
52 The "read" will replace any previous content in $tar!
53
54 The second argument may be considered optional, but remains for
55 backwards compatibility. Archive::Tar now looks at the file magic to
56 determine what class should be used to open the file and will
57 transparently Do The Right Thing.
58
59 Archive::Tar will warn if you try to pass a bzip2 / xz compressed file
60 and the IO::Uncompress::Bunzip2 / IO::Uncompress::UnXz are not
61 available and simply return.
62
63 Note that you can currently not pass a "gzip" compressed filehandle,
64 which is not opened with "IO::Zlib", a "bzip2" compressed filehandle,
65 which is not opened with "IO::Uncompress::Bunzip2", a "xz" compressed
66 filehandle, which is not opened with "IO::Uncompress::UnXz", nor a
67 string containing the full archive information (either compressed or
68 uncompressed). These are worth while features, but not currently
69 implemented. See the "TODO" section.
70
71 The third argument can be a hash reference with options. Note that all
72 options are case-sensitive.
73
74 limit
75 Do not read more than "limit" files. This is useful if you have
76 very big archives, and are only interested in the first few files.
77
78 filter
79 Can be set to a regular expression. Only files with names that
80 match the expression will be read.
81
82 md5 Set to 1 and the md5sum of files will be returned (instead of file
83 data)
84 my $iter = Archive::Tar->iter( $file, 1, {md5 => 1} );
85 while( my $f = $iter->() ) {
86 print $f->data . "\t" . $f->full_path . $/;
87 }
88
89 extract
90 If set to true, immediately extract entries when reading them. This
91 gives you the same memory break as the "extract_archive" function.
92 Note however that entries will not be read into memory, but written
93 straight to disk. This means no "Archive::Tar::File" objects are
94 created for you to inspect.
95
96 All files are stored internally as "Archive::Tar::File" objects.
97 Please consult the Archive::Tar::File documentation for details.
98
99 Returns the number of files read in scalar context, and a list of
100 "Archive::Tar::File" objects in list context.
101
102 $tar->contains_file( $filename )
103 Check if the archive contains a certain file. It will return true if
104 the file is in the archive, false otherwise.
105
106 Note however, that this function does an exact match using "eq" on the
107 full path. So it cannot compensate for case-insensitive file- systems
108 or compare 2 paths to see if they would point to the same underlying
109 file.
110
111 $tar->extract( [@filenames] )
112 Write files whose names are equivalent to any of the names in
113 @filenames to disk, creating subdirectories as necessary. This might
114 not work too well under VMS. Under MacPerl, the file's modification
115 time will be converted to the MacOS zero of time, and appropriate
116 conversions will be done to the path. However, the length of each
117 element of the path is not inspected to see whether it's longer than
118 MacOS currently allows (32 characters).
119
120 If "extract" is called without a list of file names, the entire
121 contents of the archive are extracted.
122
123 Returns a list of filenames extracted.
124
125 $tar->extract_file( $file, [$extract_path] )
126 Write an entry, whose name is equivalent to the file name provided to
127 disk. Optionally takes a second parameter, which is the full native
128 path (including filename) the entry will be written to.
129
130 For example:
131
132 $tar->extract_file( 'name/in/archive', 'name/i/want/to/give/it' );
133
134 $tar->extract_file( $at_file_object, 'name/i/want/to/give/it' );
135
136 Returns true on success, false on failure.
137
138 $tar->list_files( [\@properties] )
139 Returns a list of the names of all the files in the archive.
140
141 If "list_files()" is passed an array reference as its first argument it
142 returns a list of hash references containing the requested properties
143 of each file. The following list of properties is supported: name,
144 size, mtime (last modified date), mode, uid, gid, linkname, uname,
145 gname, devmajor, devminor, prefix.
146
147 Passing an array reference containing only one element, 'name', is
148 special cased to return a list of names rather than a list of hash
149 references, making it equivalent to calling "list_files" without
150 arguments.
151
152 $tar->get_files( [@filenames] )
153 Returns the "Archive::Tar::File" objects matching the filenames
154 provided. If no filename list was passed, all "Archive::Tar::File"
155 objects in the current Tar object are returned.
156
157 Please refer to the "Archive::Tar::File" documentation on how to handle
158 these objects.
159
160 $tar->get_content( $file )
161 Return the content of the named file.
162
163 $tar->replace_content( $file, $content )
164 Make the string $content be the content for the file named $file.
165
166 $tar->rename( $file, $new_name )
167 Rename the file of the in-memory archive to $new_name.
168
169 Note that you must specify a Unix path for $new_name, since per tar
170 standard, all files in the archive must be Unix paths.
171
172 Returns true on success and false on failure.
173
174 $tar->chmod( $file, $mode )
175 Change mode of $file to $mode.
176
177 Returns true on success and false on failure.
178
179 $tar->chown( $file, $uname [, $gname] )
180 Change owner $file to $uname and $gname.
181
182 Returns true on success and false on failure.
183
184 $tar->remove (@filenamelist)
185 Removes any entries with names matching any of the given filenames from
186 the in-memory archive. Returns a list of "Archive::Tar::File" objects
187 that remain.
188
189 $tar->clear
190 "clear" clears the current in-memory archive. This effectively gives
191 you a 'blank' object, ready to be filled again. Note that "clear" only
192 has effect on the object, not the underlying tarfile.
193
194 $tar->write ( [$file, $compressed, $prefix] )
195 Write the in-memory archive to disk. The first argument can either be
196 the name of a file or a reference to an already open filehandle (a GLOB
197 reference).
198
199 The second argument is used to indicate compression. You can compress
200 using "gzip", "bzip2" or "xz". If you pass a digit, it's assumed to be
201 the "gzip" compression level (between 1 and 9), but the use of
202 constants is preferred:
203
204 # write a gzip compressed file
205 $tar->write( 'out.tgz', COMPRESS_GZIP );
206
207 # write a bzip compressed file
208 $tar->write( 'out.tbz', COMPRESS_BZIP );
209
210 # write a xz compressed file
211 $tar->write( 'out.txz', COMPRESS_XZ );
212
213 Note that when you pass in a filehandle, the compression argument is
214 ignored, as all files are printed verbatim to your filehandle. If you
215 wish to enable compression with filehandles, use an "IO::Zlib",
216 "IO::Compress::Bzip2" or "IO::Compress::Xz" filehandle instead.
217
218 The third argument is an optional prefix. All files will be tucked away
219 in the directory you specify as prefix. So if you have files 'a' and
220 'b' in your archive, and you specify 'foo' as prefix, they will be
221 written to the archive as 'foo/a' and 'foo/b'.
222
223 If no arguments are given, "write" returns the entire formatted archive
224 as a string, which could be useful if you'd like to stuff the archive
225 into a socket or a pipe to gzip or something.
226
227 $tar->add_files( @filenamelist )
228 Takes a list of filenames and adds them to the in-memory archive.
229
230 The path to the file is automatically converted to a Unix like
231 equivalent for use in the archive, and, if on MacOS, the file's
232 modification time is converted from the MacOS epoch to the Unix epoch.
233 So tar archives created on MacOS with Archive::Tar can be read both
234 with tar on Unix and applications like suntar or Stuffit Expander on
235 MacOS.
236
237 Be aware that the file's type/creator and resource fork will be lost,
238 which is usually what you want in cross-platform archives.
239
240 Instead of a filename, you can also pass it an existing
241 "Archive::Tar::File" object from, for example, another archive. The
242 object will be clone, and effectively be a copy of the original, not an
243 alias.
244
245 Returns a list of "Archive::Tar::File" objects that were just added.
246
247 $tar->add_data ( $filename, $data, [$opthashref] )
248 Takes a filename, a scalar full of data and optionally a reference to a
249 hash with specific options.
250
251 Will add a file to the in-memory archive, with name $filename and
252 content $data. Specific properties can be set using $opthashref. The
253 following list of properties is supported: name, size, mtime (last
254 modified date), mode, uid, gid, linkname, uname, gname, devmajor,
255 devminor, prefix, type. (On MacOS, the file's path and modification
256 times are converted to Unix equivalents.)
257
258 Valid values for the file type are the following constants defined by
259 Archive::Tar::Constant:
260
261 FILE
262 Regular file.
263
264 HARDLINK
265 SYMLINK
266 Hard and symbolic ("soft") links; linkname should specify target.
267
268 CHARDEV
269 BLOCKDEV
270 Character and block devices. devmajor and devminor should specify
271 the major and minor device numbers.
272
273 DIR Directory.
274
275 FIFO
276 FIFO (named pipe).
277
278 SOCKET
279 Socket.
280
281 Returns the "Archive::Tar::File" object that was just added, or "undef"
282 on failure.
283
284 $tar->error( [$BOOL] )
285 Returns the current error string (usually, the last error reported).
286 If a true value was specified, it will give the "Carp::longmess"
287 equivalent of the error, in effect giving you a stacktrace.
288
289 For backwards compatibility, this error is also available as
290 $Archive::Tar::error although it is much recommended you use the method
291 call instead.
292
293 $tar->setcwd( $cwd );
294 "Archive::Tar" needs to know the current directory, and it will run
295 "Cwd::cwd()" every time it extracts a relative entry from the tarfile
296 and saves it in the file system. (As of version 1.30, however,
297 "Archive::Tar" will use the speed optimization described below
298 automatically, so it's only relevant if you're using "extract_file()").
299
300 Since "Archive::Tar" doesn't change the current directory internally
301 while it is extracting the items in a tarball, all calls to
302 "Cwd::cwd()" can be avoided if we can guarantee that the current
303 directory doesn't get changed externally.
304
305 To use this performance boost, set the current directory via
306
307 use Cwd;
308 $tar->setcwd( cwd() );
309
310 once before calling a function like "extract_file" and "Archive::Tar"
311 will use the current directory setting from then on and won't call
312 "Cwd::cwd()" internally.
313
314 To switch back to the default behaviour, use
315
316 $tar->setcwd( undef );
317
318 and "Archive::Tar" will call "Cwd::cwd()" internally again.
319
320 If you're using "Archive::Tar"'s "extract()" method, "setcwd()" will be
321 called for you.
322
324 Archive::Tar->create_archive($file, $compressed, @filelist)
325 Creates a tar file from the list of files provided. The first argument
326 can either be the name of the tar file to create or a reference to an
327 open file handle (e.g. a GLOB reference).
328
329 The second argument is used to indicate compression. You can compress
330 using "gzip", "bzip2" or "xz". If you pass a digit, it's assumed to be
331 the "gzip" compression level (between 1 and 9), but the use of
332 constants is preferred:
333
334 # write a gzip compressed file
335 Archive::Tar->create_archive( 'out.tgz', COMPRESS_GZIP, @filelist );
336
337 # write a bzip compressed file
338 Archive::Tar->create_archive( 'out.tbz', COMPRESS_BZIP, @filelist );
339
340 # write a xz compressed file
341 Archive::Tar->create_archive( 'out.txz', COMPRESS_XZ, @filelist );
342
343 Note that when you pass in a filehandle, the compression argument is
344 ignored, as all files are printed verbatim to your filehandle. If you
345 wish to enable compression with filehandles, use an "IO::Zlib",
346 "IO::Compress::Bzip2" or "IO::Compress::Xz" filehandle instead.
347
348 The remaining arguments list the files to be included in the tar file.
349 These files must all exist. Any files which don't exist or can't be
350 read are silently ignored.
351
352 If the archive creation fails for any reason, "create_archive" will
353 return false. Please use the "error" method to find the cause of the
354 failure.
355
356 Note that this method does not write "on the fly" as it were; it still
357 reads all the files into memory before writing out the archive.
358 Consult the FAQ below if this is a problem.
359
360 Archive::Tar->iter( $filename, [ $compressed, {opt => $val} ] )
361 Returns an iterator function that reads the tar file without loading it
362 all in memory. Each time the function is called it will return the
363 next file in the tarball. The files are returned as
364 "Archive::Tar::File" objects. The iterator function returns the empty
365 list once it has exhausted the files contained.
366
367 The second argument can be a hash reference with options, which are
368 identical to the arguments passed to "read()".
369
370 Example usage:
371
372 my $next = Archive::Tar->iter( "example.tar.gz", 1, {filter => qr/\.pm$/} );
373
374 while( my $f = $next->() ) {
375 print $f->name, "\n";
376
377 $f->extract or warn "Extraction failed";
378
379 # ....
380 }
381
382 Archive::Tar->list_archive($file, $compressed, [\@properties])
383 Returns a list of the names of all the files in the archive. The first
384 argument can either be the name of the tar file to list or a reference
385 to an open file handle (e.g. a GLOB reference).
386
387 If "list_archive()" is passed an array reference as its third argument
388 it returns a list of hash references containing the requested
389 properties of each file. The following list of properties is
390 supported: full_path, name, size, mtime (last modified date), mode,
391 uid, gid, linkname, uname, gname, devmajor, devminor, prefix, type.
392
393 See "Archive::Tar::File" for details about supported properties.
394
395 Passing an array reference containing only one element, 'name', is
396 special cased to return a list of names rather than a list of hash
397 references.
398
399 Archive::Tar->extract_archive($file, $compressed)
400 Extracts the contents of the tar file. The first argument can either
401 be the name of the tar file to create or a reference to an open file
402 handle (e.g. a GLOB reference). All relative paths in the tar file
403 will be created underneath the current working directory.
404
405 "extract_archive" will return a list of files it extracted. If the
406 archive extraction fails for any reason, "extract_archive" will return
407 false. Please use the "error" method to find the cause of the failure.
408
409 $bool = Archive::Tar->has_io_string
410 Returns true if we currently have "IO::String" support loaded.
411
412 Either "IO::String" or "perlio" support is needed to support writing
413 stringified archives. Currently, "perlio" is the preferred method, if
414 available.
415
416 See the "GLOBAL VARIABLES" section to see how to change this
417 preference.
418
419 $bool = Archive::Tar->has_perlio
420 Returns true if we currently have "perlio" support loaded.
421
422 This requires "perl-5.8" or higher, compiled with "perlio"
423
424 Either "IO::String" or "perlio" support is needed to support writing
425 stringified archives. Currently, "perlio" is the preferred method, if
426 available.
427
428 See the "GLOBAL VARIABLES" section to see how to change this
429 preference.
430
431 $bool = Archive::Tar->has_zlib_support
432 Returns true if "Archive::Tar" can extract "zlib" compressed archives
433
434 $bool = Archive::Tar->has_bzip2_support
435 Returns true if "Archive::Tar" can extract "bzip2" compressed archives
436
437 $bool = Archive::Tar->has_xz_support
438 Returns true if "Archive::Tar" can extract "xz" compressed archives
439
440 Archive::Tar->can_handle_compressed_files
441 A simple checking routine, which will return true if "Archive::Tar" is
442 able to uncompress compressed archives on the fly with "IO::Zlib",
443 "IO::Compress::Bzip2" and "IO::Compress::Xz" or false if not both are
444 installed.
445
446 You can use this as a shortcut to determine whether "Archive::Tar" will
447 do what you think before passing compressed archives to its "read"
448 method.
449
451 $Archive::Tar::FOLLOW_SYMLINK
452 Set this variable to 1 to make "Archive::Tar" effectively make a copy
453 of the file when extracting. Default is 0, which means the symlink
454 stays intact. Of course, you will have to pack the file linked to as
455 well.
456
457 This option is checked when you write out the tarfile using "write" or
458 "create_archive".
459
460 This works just like "/bin/tar"'s "-h" option.
461
462 $Archive::Tar::CHOWN
463 By default, "Archive::Tar" will try to "chown" your files if it is able
464 to. In some cases, this may not be desired. In that case, set this
465 variable to 0 to disable "chown"-ing, even if it were possible.
466
467 The default is 1.
468
469 $Archive::Tar::CHMOD
470 By default, "Archive::Tar" will try to "chmod" your files to whatever
471 mode was specified for the particular file in the archive. In some
472 cases, this may not be desired. In that case, set this variable to 0 to
473 disable "chmod"-ing.
474
475 The default is 1.
476
477 $Archive::Tar::SAME_PERMISSIONS
478 When, $Archive::Tar::CHMOD is enabled, this setting controls whether
479 the permissions on files from the archive are used without modification
480 of if they are filtered by removing any setid bits and applying the
481 current umask.
482
483 The default is 1 for the root user and 0 for normal users.
484
485 $Archive::Tar::DO_NOT_USE_PREFIX
486 By default, "Archive::Tar" will try to put paths that are over 100
487 characters in the "prefix" field of your tar header, as defined per
488 POSIX-standard. However, some (older) tar programs do not implement
489 this spec. To retain compatibility with these older or non-POSIX
490 compliant versions, you can set the $DO_NOT_USE_PREFIX variable to a
491 true value, and "Archive::Tar" will use an alternate way of dealing
492 with paths over 100 characters by using the "GNU Extended Header"
493 feature.
494
495 Note that clients who do not support the "GNU Extended Header" feature
496 will not be able to read these archives. Such clients include tars on
497 "Solaris", "Irix" and "AIX".
498
499 The default is 0.
500
501 $Archive::Tar::DEBUG
502 Set this variable to 1 to always get the "Carp::longmess" output of the
503 warnings, instead of the regular "carp". This is the same message you
504 would get by doing:
505
506 $tar->error(1);
507
508 Defaults to 0.
509
510 $Archive::Tar::WARN
511 Set this variable to 0 if you do not want any warnings printed.
512 Personally I recommend against doing this, but people asked for the
513 option. Also, be advised that this is of course not threadsafe.
514
515 Defaults to 1.
516
517 $Archive::Tar::error
518 Holds the last reported error. Kept for historical reasons, but its use
519 is very much discouraged. Use the "error()" method instead:
520
521 warn $tar->error unless $tar->extract;
522
523 Note that in older versions of this module, the "error()" method would
524 return an effectively global value even when called an instance method
525 as above. This has since been fixed, and multiple instances of
526 "Archive::Tar" now have separate error strings.
527
528 $Archive::Tar::INSECURE_EXTRACT_MODE
529 This variable indicates whether "Archive::Tar" should allow files to be
530 extracted outside their current working directory.
531
532 Allowing this could have security implications, as a malicious tar
533 archive could alter or replace any file the extracting user has
534 permissions to. Therefor, the default is to not allow insecure
535 extractions.
536
537 If you trust the archive, or have other reasons to allow the archive to
538 write files outside your current working directory, set this variable
539 to "true".
540
541 Note that this is a backwards incompatible change from version 1.36 and
542 before.
543
544 $Archive::Tar::HAS_PERLIO
545 This variable holds a boolean indicating if we currently have "perlio"
546 support loaded. This will be enabled for any perl greater than 5.8
547 compiled with "perlio".
548
549 If you feel strongly about disabling it, set this variable to "false".
550 Note that you will then need "IO::String" installed to support writing
551 stringified archives.
552
553 Don't change this variable unless you really know what you're doing.
554
555 $Archive::Tar::HAS_IO_STRING
556 This variable holds a boolean indicating if we currently have
557 "IO::String" support loaded. This will be enabled for any perl that has
558 a loadable "IO::String" module.
559
560 If you feel strongly about disabling it, set this variable to "false".
561 Note that you will then need "perlio" support from your perl to be able
562 to write stringified archives.
563
564 Don't change this variable unless you really know what you're doing.
565
566 $Archive::Tar::ZERO_PAD_NUMBERS
567 This variable holds a boolean indicating if we will create zero padded
568 numbers for "size", "mtime" and "checksum". The default is 0,
569 indicating that we will create space padded numbers. Added for
570 compatibility with "busybox" implementations.
571
572 Tuning the way RESOLVE_SYMLINK will works
573 You can tune the behaviour by setting the $Archive::Tar::RESOLVE_SYMLINK variable,
574 or $ENV{PERL5_AT_RESOLVE_SYMLINK} before loading the module Archive::Tar.
575
576 Values can be one of the following:
577
578 none
579 Disable this mechanism and failed as it was in previous version (<1.88)
580
581 speed (default)
582 If you prefer speed
583 this will read again the whole archive using read() so all entries
584 will be available
585
586 memory
587 If you prefer memory
588
589 Limitation
590
591 It won't work for terminal, pipe or sockets or every non seekable source.
592
594 What's the minimum perl version required to run Archive::Tar?
595 You will need perl version 5.005_03 or newer.
596
597 Isn't Archive::Tar slow?
598 Yes it is. It's pure perl, so it's a lot slower then your
599 "/bin/tar" However, it's very portable. If speed is an issue,
600 consider using "/bin/tar" instead.
601
602 Isn't Archive::Tar heavier on memory than /bin/tar?
603 Yes it is, see previous answer. Since "Compress::Zlib" and
604 therefore "IO::Zlib" doesn't support "seek" on their filehandles,
605 there is little choice but to read the archive into memory. This
606 is ok if you want to do in-memory manipulation of the archive.
607
608 If you just want to extract, use the "extract_archive" class method
609 instead. It will optimize and write to disk immediately.
610
611 Another option is to use the "iter" class method to iterate over
612 the files in the tarball without reading them all in memory at
613 once.
614
615 Can you lazy-load data instead?
616 In some cases, yes. You can use the "iter" class method to iterate
617 over the files in the tarball without reading them all in memory at
618 once.
619
620 How much memory will an X kb tar file need?
621 Probably more than X kb, since it will all be read into memory. If
622 this is a problem, and you don't need to do in memory manipulation
623 of the archive, consider using the "iter" class method, or
624 "/bin/tar" instead.
625
626 What do you do with unsupported filetypes in an archive?
627 "Unix" has a few filetypes that aren't supported on other
628 platforms, like "Win32". If we encounter a "hardlink" or "symlink"
629 we'll just try to make a copy of the original file, rather than
630 throwing an error.
631
632 This does require you to read the entire archive in to memory
633 first, since otherwise we wouldn't know what data to fill the copy
634 with. (This means that you cannot use the class methods, including
635 "iter" on archives that have incompatible filetypes and still
636 expect things to work).
637
638 For other filetypes, like "chardevs" and "blockdevs" we'll warn
639 that the extraction of this particular item didn't work.
640
641 I'm using WinZip, or some other non-POSIX client, and files are not
642 being extracted properly!
643 By default, "Archive::Tar" is in a completely POSIX-compatible
644 mode, which uses the POSIX-specification of "tar" to store files.
645 For paths greater than 100 characters, this is done using the
646 "POSIX header prefix". Non-POSIX-compatible clients may not support
647 this part of the specification, and may only support the "GNU
648 Extended Header" functionality. To facilitate those clients, you
649 can set the $Archive::Tar::DO_NOT_USE_PREFIX variable to "true".
650 See the "GLOBAL VARIABLES" section for details on this variable.
651
652 Note that GNU tar earlier than version 1.14 does not cope well with
653 the "POSIX header prefix". If you use such a version, consider
654 setting the $Archive::Tar::DO_NOT_USE_PREFIX variable to "true".
655
656 How do I extract only files that have property X from an archive?
657 Sometimes, you might not wish to extract a complete archive, just
658 the files that are relevant to you, based on some criteria.
659
660 You can do this by filtering a list of "Archive::Tar::File" objects
661 based on your criteria. For example, to extract only files that
662 have the string "foo" in their title, you would use:
663
664 $tar->extract(
665 grep { $_->full_path =~ /foo/ } $tar->get_files
666 );
667
668 This way, you can filter on any attribute of the files in the
669 archive. Consult the "Archive::Tar::File" documentation on how to
670 use these objects.
671
672 How do I access .tar.Z files?
673 The "Archive::Tar" module can optionally use "Compress::Zlib" (via
674 the "IO::Zlib" module) to access tar files that have been
675 compressed with "gzip". Unfortunately tar files compressed with the
676 Unix "compress" utility cannot be read by "Compress::Zlib" and so
677 cannot be directly accesses by "Archive::Tar".
678
679 If the "uncompress" or "gunzip" programs are available, you can use
680 one of these workarounds to read ".tar.Z" files from "Archive::Tar"
681
682 Firstly with "uncompress"
683
684 use Archive::Tar;
685
686 open F, "uncompress -c $filename |";
687 my $tar = Archive::Tar->new(*F);
688 ...
689
690 and this with "gunzip"
691
692 use Archive::Tar;
693
694 open F, "gunzip -c $filename |";
695 my $tar = Archive::Tar->new(*F);
696 ...
697
698 Similarly, if the "compress" program is available, you can use this
699 to write a ".tar.Z" file
700
701 use Archive::Tar;
702 use IO::File;
703
704 my $fh = new IO::File "| compress -c >$filename";
705 my $tar = Archive::Tar->new();
706 ...
707 $tar->write($fh);
708 $fh->close ;
709
710 How do I handle Unicode strings?
711 "Archive::Tar" uses byte semantics for any files it reads from or
712 writes to disk. This is not a problem if you only deal with files
713 and never look at their content or work solely with byte strings.
714 But if you use Unicode strings with character semantics, some
715 additional steps need to be taken.
716
717 For example, if you add a Unicode string like
718
719 # Problem
720 $tar->add_data('file.txt', "Euro: \x{20AC}");
721
722 then there will be a problem later when the tarfile gets written
723 out to disk via "$tar->write()":
724
725 Wide character in print at .../Archive/Tar.pm line 1014.
726
727 The data was added as a Unicode string and when writing it out to
728 disk, the ":utf8" line discipline wasn't set by "Archive::Tar", so
729 Perl tried to convert the string to ISO-8859 and failed. The
730 written file now contains garbage.
731
732 For this reason, Unicode strings need to be converted to
733 UTF-8-encoded bytestrings before they are handed off to
734 "add_data()":
735
736 use Encode;
737 my $data = "Accented character: \x{20AC}";
738 $data = encode('utf8', $data);
739
740 $tar->add_data('file.txt', $data);
741
742 A opposite problem occurs if you extract a UTF8-encoded file from a
743 tarball. Using "get_content()" on the "Archive::Tar::File" object
744 will return its content as a bytestring, not as a Unicode string.
745
746 If you want it to be a Unicode string (because you want character
747 semantics with operations like regular expression matching), you
748 need to decode the UTF8-encoded content and have Perl convert it
749 into a Unicode string:
750
751 use Encode;
752 my $data = $tar->get_content();
753
754 # Make it a Unicode string
755 $data = decode('utf8', $data);
756
757 There is no easy way to provide this functionality in
758 "Archive::Tar", because a tarball can contain many files, and each
759 of which could be encoded in a different way.
760
762 The AIX tar does not fill all unused space in the tar archive with
763 0x00. This sometimes leads to warning messages from "Archive::Tar".
764
765 Invalid header block at offset nnn
766
767 A fix for that problem is scheduled to be released in the following
768 levels of AIX, all of which should be coming out in the 4th quarter of
769 2009:
770
771 AIX 5.3 TL7 SP10
772 AIX 5.3 TL8 SP8
773 AIX 5.3 TL9 SP5
774 AIX 5.3 TL10 SP2
775
776 AIX 6.1 TL0 SP11
777 AIX 6.1 TL1 SP7
778 AIX 6.1 TL2 SP6
779 AIX 6.1 TL3 SP3
780
781 The IBM APAR number for this problem is IZ50240 (Reported component ID:
782 5765G0300 / AIX 5.3). It is possible to get an ifix for that problem.
783 If you need an ifix please contact your local IBM AIX support.
784
786 Check if passed in handles are open for read/write
787 Currently I don't know of any portable pure perl way to do this.
788 Suggestions welcome.
789
790 Allow archives to be passed in as string
791 Currently, we only allow opened filehandles or filenames, but not
792 strings. The internals would need some reworking to facilitate
793 stringified archives.
794
795 Facilitate processing an opened filehandle of a compressed archive
796 Currently, we only support this if the filehandle is an IO::Zlib
797 object. Environments, like apache, will present you with an opened
798 filehandle to an uploaded file, which might be a compressed
799 archive.
800
802 The GNU tar specification
803 "http://www.gnu.org/software/tar/manual/tar.html"
804
805 The PAX format specification
806 The specification which tar derives from; "
807 http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/007904975/utilities/pax.html"
808
809 A comparison of GNU and POSIX tar standards;
810 "http://www.delorie.com/gnu/docs/tar/tar_114.html"
811 GNU tar intends to switch to POSIX compatibility
812 GNU Tar authors have expressed their intention to become completely
813 POSIX-compatible;
814 "http://www.gnu.org/software/tar/manual/html_node/Formats.html"
815
816 A Comparison between various tar implementations
817 Lists known issues and incompatibilities;
818 "http://gd.tuwien.ac.at/utils/archivers/star/README.otherbugs"
819
821 This module by Jos Boumans <kane@cpan.org>.
822
823 Please reports bugs to <bug-archive-tar@rt.cpan.org>.
824
826 Thanks to Sean Burke, Chris Nandor, Chip Salzenberg, Tim Heaney, Gisle
827 Aas, Rainer Tammer and especially Andrew Savige for their help and
828 suggestions.
829
831 This module is copyright (c) 2002 - 2009 Jos Boumans <kane@cpan.org>.
832 All rights reserved.
833
834 This library is free software; you may redistribute and/or modify it
835 under the same terms as Perl itself.
836
837
838
839perl v5.30.1 2020-02-14 Archive::Tar(3)