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Tardy(1) |
FreeBSD General Commands Manual |
Tardy(1) |
tardy - a tar post-processor
tardy [ option... ][ infile [ outfile ]]
tardy -Help
tardy -VERSion
The tardy program is used to manipulate the file headers within archive
files. Supported archive formats include tar(1), cpio(1) and
ar(1).
This is useful when preparing sources for Internet archive sites,
and you don't want to included details of your development environment in
the tar(1) file.
One of the most useful features is the ability to add a prefix to
the names of the files within the tar(1) file. An example is adding
the prefix “.”, for when you have a tar(1) file with
absolute paths in it, and need to extract the file with relative paths.
The GNU tar format headers are understood, including extended
names.
If no input file is named, or the special name “-”
is used, input will be read from the standard input. Similarly, if no output
file is named, or the special name “-” is used, output will be
written to the standard output. Note that tardy will refuse to read
from or write to a terminal, as this indicates that the user has made a
mistake.
If the input is in gzip(1) format, it will be automatically
gunzip(1)ed before processing. Similarly, if the output file name
indicates that gzip(1) should be used, this will be done
automatically on output.
The following options are understood:
- -Block_Size number
- This option many be used to specify the block size, as a multiple of 512
bytes. The default is -bs=20 resulting in a 10kB
block size.
- -Clean_Meta
-
This option may be used to ensure that file names do not contain shell meta
characters. If any are found, they are replaced by a hyphen (-) character.
Warning: duplicate file names may result.
- -Clean_Print
-
This option may be used to ensure that file names only contain printable
ASCII characters. If any non-printable characters are found, they are
replaced by a hyphen (-) character. Warning: duplicate file names may
result.
- -Clean_Space
-
This option may be used to ensure that file names contain no white space
characters. If any are found, they are replaced by a hyphen (-) character.
Warning: duplicate file names may result.
- -Clean
-
This option is a terse way of specifying all of the above 3 options.
- -DownCase
-
This option may be used to force file names to be all lower case. Warning:
duplicate file names may result.
- -EXclude pattern
- This option may be used to completely remove files from the archive. All
files that have a filename patching the given shell filename pattern will
be removed. Be careful with wild cards, they match everything, including
slash (/) characters. The exclude pattern is applied before all file-name
manipulating patterns.
- -eXtract
- This option may be used to extract the contents of an archive.
- -Group arg
-
This option may be used to set both the group name and group number fields
in the header of every file in the archive file. The argument may be
either a string or a number. It is an error if a corresponding entry
cannot be found in the /etc/group file.
- -Group_NAme string
-
This option is used to set the group name field in the header of every file
in the archive file. The string may be any arbitrary string, it is not
restricted to a known group.
- -Group_NAme number
-
This option is used to set the group name field in the header of every file
in the archive file. The number is mapped to a group name through the
/etc/group file. It is an error if a corresponding group cannot be
found.
- -Group_NUmber string
-
This option is used to set the group number field in the header of every
file in the archive file. The string is mapped to a group number through
the /etc/group file. It is an error if a corresponding group cannot
be found.
- -Group_NUmber number
-
This option is used to set the group number field in the header of every
file in the archive file. The number may be any arbitrary number, it is
not restricted to a known group.
See the file man/man1/o_help.so.
- -Input_ForMaT name
By default, the input file is examined to automatically
detect the input archive file's format. This option may be used to specify the
input format to be used. The input format names are
- tar
- This format understands all of the various tar(1) formats. This is
the default.
- tar‐bsd
- This format expects BSD tar(1) archives.
- ustar
- This format expects ustar(1) format archives.
- list
- The input is a text file which contains one file name per line. The named
files are read as if they were the input. It is common for find(1)
to be used to form the list of file names.
- directory
- The input is a text file which contains one file name per line. The named
files are read as if they were an archive input. If any directories are
found, they will be descended recursively.
- cpio
- The file is expected to be in one of the cpio(5) formats, and will
be examined to figure out which.
- cpio‐bin
- This format expects cpio(5) “old binary” format
archives.
- cpio‐crc
- This format expects cpio(5) “crc” format
archives.
- cpio‐new‐ascii
- This format expects cpio(5) “new ascii” format
archives.
- cpio‐old‐ascii
- This format expects cpio(5) “old ascii” format
archives.
- ar
- The file is expected to be in one of the ar(1) formats, and will be
examined to figure out which.
- ar‐bsd
- This format expects ar(1) “BSD” format archives.
- ar‐pdp11
- This format expects ar(1) archives, in the ancient pre‐V7
format.
- ar‐v7
- This format expects ar(1) “Unix Version 7” format
archives.
Any other format name will produce an error.
- -List
-
Give a terse listing of the file headers on the standard error as they are
written to the output.
- -Mode_Clear bits
-
This option may be used to set the mode of each file in the archive file.
The bits specified are cleared in the mode. You should use an octal
number with a leading zero as the argument; if you omit the leading zero
it will be interpreted as decimal. The -Mode_Set option is applied
first, the -Mode_Clear option is applied second; if neither is
specified the mode of each file is unaltered.
- -Mode_Set bits
-
This option may be used to set the mode of each file in the archive file.
The bits specified are set in the mode. You should use an octal
number with a leading zero as the argument; if you omit the leading zero
it will be interpreted as decimal.
- -No_Directories
-
This option may be used to suppress directories from the output. This can be
useful when the archive has been created with directories in useless
modes.
- -Now
-
Set the last‐time‐modified field of the headers to the current
time, all files will be given the same time.
- -Old_Type
-
By default, tardy corrects the old normal file type into the modern normal
file type. This option requests that old normal file type indicators
remain unaltered.
- -Output_ForMaT name
By default, tardy tries to write the same format
on output as it sees on input. This option may be used to specify the output
format to be used. The output format names are
- ar
- The archive will be written using the ar(1) format, BSD variant.
Note that this format only supports simple files; it silently discards
directories, and even discards directory portions of file names.
- ar‐bsd
- The archive will be written using the ar(1) format, BSD variant.
Long file names are handled by a special file at the start of the archive
full of file names.
- ar‐bsd‐l2
- The archive will be written using the ar(1) format, BSD variant.
Long file names are handled by special file name mangling in the archive,
with the actual file name transparently injected into the start of the
file data.
- ar‐pdp11
- The archive will be written using the ar(1) format, in the most
ancient pre‐V7 variant. (There are also
ar‐pdp11‐le and ar‐pdp11‐le
names, if you need to select the byte order.)
- ar‐port5
- The archive will be written using the ar(1) format, in the PORT5
variant. (There are also ar‐port5‐le and
ar‐port5‐le names, if you need to select the byte
order.)
- ar‐v7
- The archive will be written using the ar(1) format, ancient Unix
Version 7 variant. (There are also ar‐v7‐le and
- posix
- The format that GNU tar uses.
- tar‐bsd
- The format that BSD tar(1) uses.
- cpio
- The new cpio(5) ASCII format.
- cpio‐bin
- The cpio(5) "old binary" format, using host byte
order.
- cpio‐bin‐le
- The cpio(5) "old binary" format, using
littl‐-endian byte order.
- cpio‐bin‐be
- The cpio(5) "old binary" format, using big‐endian
byte order.
- cpio‐crc
- The cpio(5) "crc ascii" format.
- cpio‐old‐ascii
- The old cpio(5) ASCII format.
- ustar
- This is the format that Joerg Schilling's ustar(1) uses.
- v7
- The ancient UNIX V7 tar(1) format.
Any other format name will produce an error.
- -Prefix string
-
This option is used to add a prefix directory name to the name of every file
in the archive file.
- -PROgress
- This option is used to obtain a progress indicator. Only works in
combination with the -ifmt=list option.
- -Remove_Prefix number
-
This option is used to remove a number of leading directories from the name
of every file in the archive file, if present. The prefixes will be
removed before any prefix specified by the -Prefix option is
prepended.
- -Remove_Prefix string
This option is used to remove a prefix directory name
from the name of every file in the archive file, if present. This option may
be given more than once, and as many of the prefixes as appear will be
removed. The prefixes will be removed before any prefix specified by the
-Prefix option is prepended.
This option is potentially ambiguous with the preceding option, if
you wish to remove a leading prefix which looks like a number. If this is
the case, add a slash ("/") to the end of the prefix to stop it
looking like a number.
- -UpCase
-
This option may be used to force file names to be all upper case. Warning:
duplicate file names may result.
- -User arg
-
This option may be used to set both the user name and user number fields in
the header of every file in the archive file. The argument may be either a
string or a number. It is an error if a corresponding entry cannot be
found in the /etc/passwd file.
- -User_NAme string
-
This option is used to set the user name field in the header of every file
in the archive file. The string may be any arbitrary string, it is not
restricted to a known user.
- -User_NAme number
-
This option is used to set the user name field in the header of every file
in the archive file. The number is mapped to a user name through the
/etc/passwd file. It is an error if a corresponding user cannot be
found.
- -User_NUmber string
-
This option is used to set the user number field in the header of every file
in the archive file. The string is mapped to a user number through the
/etc/passwd file. It is an error if a corresponding user cannot be
found.
- -User_NUmber number
-
This option is used to set the user number field in the header of every file
in the archive file. The number may be any arbitrary number, it is not
restricted to a known user.
- -VERSion
-
Print the version of the tardy program being executed.
See the file man/man1/o__rules.so.
See the file man/man1/z_exit.so.
- ar(1)
- Create, modify, and extract from archives
- ar(5)
- Format of ar(1) archive files (not all systems have this man
page).
- cpio(1)
- Copy files to and from archives
- cpio(5)
- Format of cpio(1) archive files
- find(1)
- Search for files in a directory hierarchy
- tar(1)
- Store and extract files from a tape or disk archive
- tar(5)
- Format of tar(1) archive files
See the file man/man1/z_cr.so.
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