Dokumentation
While an archive may contain many files, the archive itself is a single ordinary file. Like any other file, an archive file can be written to a storage device such as a tape or disk, sent through a pipe or over a network, saved on the active file system, or even stored in another archive. An archive file is not easy to read or manipulate without using the tar
utility or Tar mode in GNU Emacs.
Physically, an archive consists of a series of file entries terminated by an end-of-archive entry, which consists of two 512 blocks of zero bytes. A file entry usually describes one of the files in the archive (an archive member), and consists of a file header and the contents of the file. File headers contain file names and statistics, checksum information which tar
uses to detect file corruption, and information about file types.
Archives are permitted to have more than one member with the same member name. One way this situation can occur is if more than one version of a file has been stored in the archive. For information about adding new versions of a file to an archive, see Updating an Archive.
In addition to entries describing archive members, an archive may contain entries which tar
itself uses to store information. See section Including a Label in the Archive, for an example of such an archive entry.
A tar
archive file contains a series of blocks. Each block contains BLOCKSIZE
bytes. Although this format may be thought of as being on magnetic tape, other media are often used.
Each file archived is represented by a header block which describes the file, followed by zero or more blocks which give the contents of the file. At the end of the archive file there are two 512-byte blocks filled with binary zeros as an end-of-file marker. A reasonable system should write such end-of-file marker at the end of an archive, but must not assume that such a block exists when reading an archive. In particular GNU tar
always issues a warning if it does not encounter it.
The blocks may be blocked for physical I/O operations. Each record of n blocks (where n is set by the `–blocking-factor=512-size' (`-b 512-size') option to tar
) is written with a single `write ()' operation. On magnetic tapes, the result of such a write is a single record. When writing an archive, the last record of blocks should be written at the full size, with blocks after the zero block containing all zeros. When reading an archive, a reasonable system should properly handle an archive whose last record is shorter than the rest, or which contains garbage records after a zero block.
The header block is defined in C as follows. In the GNU tar
distribution, this is part of file src/tar.h
:
All characters in header blocks are represented by using 8-bit characters in the local variant of ASCII. Each field within the structure is contiguous; that is, there is no padding used within the structure. Each character on the archive medium is stored contiguously.
Bytes representing the contents of files (after the header block of each file) are not translated in any way and are not constrained to represent characters in any character set. The tar
format does not distinguish text files from binary files, and no translation of file contents is performed.
The name
, linkname
, magic
, uname
, and gname
are null-terminated character strings. All other fields are zero-filled octal numbers in ASCII. Each numeric field of width w contains w minus 1 digits, and a null. (In the extended GNU format, the numeric fields can take other forms.)
The name
field is the file name of the file, with directory names (if any) preceding the file name, separated by slashes.
See how big a name before field overflows?
The mode
field provides nine bits specifying file permissions and three bits to specify the Set UID, Set GID, and Save Text (sticky) modes. Values for these bits are defined above. When special permissions are required to create a file with a given mode, and the user restoring files from the archive does not hold such permissions, the mode bit(s) specifying those special permissions are ignored. Modes which are not supported by the operating system restoring files from the archive will be ignored. Unsupported modes should be faked up when creating or updating an archive; e.g., the group permission could be copied from the other permission.
The uid
and gid
fields are the numeric user and group ID of the file owners, respectively. If the operating system does not support numeric user or group IDs, these fields should be ignored.
The size
field is the size of the file in bytes; linked files are archived with this field specified as zero.
The mtime
field represents the data modification time of the file at the time it was archived. It represents the integer number of seconds since January 1, 1970, 00:00 Coordinated Universal Time.
The chksum
field represents the simple sum of all bytes in the header block. Each 8-bit byte in the header is added to an unsigned integer, initialized to zero, the precision of which shall be no less than seventeen bits. When calculating the checksum, the chksum
field is treated as if it were all blanks.
The typeflag
field specifies the type of file archived. If a particular implementation does not recognize or permit the specified type, the file will be extracted as if it were a regular file. As this action occurs, tar
issues a warning to the standard error.
The atime
and ctime
fields are used in making incremental backups; they store, respectively, the particular file's access and status change times.
The offset
is used by the `–multi-volume' (`-M') option, when making a multi-volume archive. The offset is number of bytes into the file that we need to restart at to continue the file on the next tape, i.e., where we store the location that a continued file is continued at.
The following fields were added to deal with sparse files. A file is sparse if it takes in unallocated blocks which end up being represented as zeros, i.e., no useful data. A test to see if a file is sparse is to look at the number blocks allocated for it versus the number of characters in the file; if there are fewer blocks allocated for the file than would normally be allocated for a file of that size, then the file is sparse. This is the method tar
uses to detect a sparse file, and once such a file is detected, it is treated differently from non-sparse files.
Sparse files are often dbm
files, or other database-type files which have data at some points and emptiness in the greater part of the file. Such files can appear to be very large when an `ls -l' is done on them, when in truth, there may be a very small amount of important data contained in the file. It is thus undesirable to have tar
think that it must back up this entire file, as great quantities of room are wasted on empty blocks, which can lead to running out of room on a tape far earlier than is necessary. Thus, sparse files are dealt with so that these empty blocks are not written to the tape. Instead, what is written to the tape is a description, of sorts, of the sparse file: where the holes are, how big the holes are, and how much data is found at the end of the hole. This way, the file takes up potentially far less room on the tape, and when the file is extracted later on, it will look exactly the way it looked beforehand. The following is a description of the fields used to handle a sparse file:
The sp
is an array of struct sparse
. Each struct sparse
contains two 12-character strings which represent an offset into the file and a number of bytes to be written at that offset. The offset is absolute, and not relative to the offset in preceding array element.
The header can hold four of these struct sparse
at the moment; if more are needed, they are not stored in the header.
The isextended
flag is set when an extended_header
is needed to deal with a file. Note that this means that this flag can only be set when dealing with a sparse file, and it is only set in the event that the description of the file will not fit in the allotted room for sparse structures in the header. In other words, an extended_header is needed.
The extended_header
structure is used for sparse files which need more sparse structures than can fit in the header. The header can fit 4 such structures; if more are needed, the flag isextended
gets set and the next block is an extended_header
.
Each extended_header
structure contains an array of 21 sparse structures, along with a similar isextended
flag that the header had. There can be an indeterminate number of such extended_header
s to describe a sparse file.
REGTYPE
AREGTYPE
These flags represent a regular file. In order to be compatible with older versions of tar
, a typeflag
value of AREGTYPE
should be silently recognized as a regular file. New archives should be created using REGTYPE
. Also, for backward compatibility, tar
treats a regular file whose name ends with a slash as a directory.
LNKTYPE
This flag represents a file linked to another file, of any type, previously archived. Such files are identified in Unix by each file having the same device and inode number. The linked-to name is specified in the linkname
field with a trailing null.
SYMTYPE
This represents a symbolic link to another file. The linked-to name is specified in the linkname
field with a trailing null.
CHRTYPE
BLKTYPE
These represent character special files and block special files respectively. In this case the devmajor
and devminor
fields will contain the major and minor device numbers respectively. Operating systems may map the device specifications to their own local specification, or may ignore the entry.
DIRTYPE
This flag specifies a directory or sub-directory. The directory name in the name
field should end with a slash. On systems where disk allocation is performed on a directory basis, the size
field will contain the maximum number of bytes (which may be rounded to the nearest disk block allocation unit) which the directory may hold. A size
field of zero indicates no such limiting. Systems which do not support limiting in this manner should ignore the size
field.
FIFOTYPE
This specifies a FIFO special file. Note that the archiving of a FIFO file archives the existence of this file and not its contents.
CONTTYPE
This specifies a contiguous file, which is the same as a normal file except that, in operating systems which support it, all its space is allocated contiguously on the disk. Operating systems which do not allow contiguous allocation should silently treat this type as a normal file.
A
... Z
These are reserved for custom implementations. Some of these are used in the GNU modified format, as described below.
Other values are reserved for specification in future revisions of the P1003 standard, and should not be used by any tar
program.
The magic
field indicates that this archive was output in the P1003 archive format. If this field contains TMAGIC
, the uname
and gname
fields will contain the ASCII representation of the owner and group of the file respectively. If found, the user and group IDs are used rather than the values in the uid
and gid
fields.
For references, see ISO/IEC 9945-1:1990 or IEEE Std 1003.1-1990, pages 169-173 (section 10.1) for Archive/Interchange File Format; and IEEE Std 1003.2-1992, pages 380-388 (section 4.48) and pages 936-940 (section E.4.48) for pax - Portable archive interchange.