Use archives within Linux CLI: Difference between revisions
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* <code class="noTypo">-o</code> - output directory. | * <code class="noTypo">-o</code> - output directory. | ||
== Unzip == | == Zip and Unzip == | ||
Create an recursive archive for a directory.<syntaxhighlight lang="shell" line="1"> | |||
zip -r "archive-name.zip" "./directory-to-be-archived/" | |||
</syntaxhighlight>Extract archive.<syntaxhighlight lang="shell" line="1"> | |||
unzip "archive-name.zip" | |||
</syntaxhighlight> | |||
== Rar and Unrar == | |||
Some times the Linux archive managers can't handle properly RAR archives - for example look at this topic [https://askubuntu.com/q/912692/566421 Extract files within an .exe file]. Here is how to extract such files.<syntaxhighlight lang="shell" line="1"> | |||
sudo apt install unrar | |||
</syntaxhighlight> | |||
<syntaxhighlight lang="shell" line="1"> | <syntaxhighlight lang="shell" line="1"> | ||
unrar x "PracticalMalwareAnalysis-Labs.exe" | |||
unrar x "archive-name.rar" | |||
</syntaxhighlight> | </syntaxhighlight> | ||
== Reference == | == Reference == |
Revision as of 10:49, 9 September 2022
Tar
- Note
.tgz === .tar.gz
Create a gzip-compressed archive
tar czvf archived-file.tar.gz /my/directory/or/file_1 /my/directory/or/file_2
-c
,--create
– create a new archive,-z
,--gzip
– filter the archive through gzip,-v
,--verbose
– verbosely list files processed,-f
– use archive file or device ARCHIVE – it must be the last option, otherwise you can use--file=ARCHIVE
.
Extract a gzip-compressed archive
tar xzvf my-file.tar.gz
-x
,--extract
,--get
– extract files from an archive,- The rest options are the same as the above,
- the compression type (
-z
in this case) could be omitted, because tar will detect it automatically.
Extract bzip2-compressed archives
tar -xjf nextcloud-[version].tar.bz2
7zip
7zip is not installed by default with most Linux distributions, so on Debian based distribution you can install it by the following command.
sudo apt update && sudo apt install p7zip-full
IMO, 7zip is the best or at least the most easiest way to create password protected compressed archive within the command line.
Create a 7z-compressed archive
7z a archive.7z /directory/or/file # create 7z compressed archive
7z a archive.7z * -p # create password protected archive, enter the password in prompt
7z a archive.7z * -p'SECRET @#!' # create password protected archive, append the password to the command
a
– create archive,-p
– password protected [followed by the pass phrase].
Extract a 7z-compressed archive
7z x archive.7z # extract an archive in the current directory
7z x archive.7z -p # extract a password protected archive in the current directory
7z x archive.7z -p'SECRET @#!' # append the password to the command
7z x archive.7z -p'SECRET' -o'/otput/dir/' # set an output directory
x
– extract,-o
– output directory.
Zip and Unzip
Create an recursive archive for a directory.
zip -r "archive-name.zip" "./directory-to-be-archived/"
Extract archive.
unzip "archive-name.zip"
Rar and Unrar
Some times the Linux archive managers can't handle properly RAR archives – for example look at this topic Extract files within an .exe file. Here is how to extract such files.
sudo apt install unrar
unrar x "PracticalMalwareAnalysis-Labs.exe"
unrar x "archive-name.rar"
Reference
- Ubuntu man pages:
tar
- Stack Overflow: 7‑Zip command to create and extract a password-protected ZIP file on Windows?
- How to Create an Encrypted (Password Protected) Tar or Zip Archive in Linux
- How to password protect gzip files on the command line?
- How do I password protect a .tgz file with tar in Unix?
7zip
destination folder-o
7z -o
(set Output directory) switch