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  2. pax (command) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pax_(command)

    pax is an archiving utility available for various operating systems and defined since 1995. [1] Rather than sort out the incompatible options that have crept up between tar and cpio, along with their implementations across various versions of Unix, the IEEE designed a new archive utility pax that could support various archive formats with useful options from both archivers.

  3. gzip - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gzip

    The tar utility included in most Linux distributions can extract .tar.gz files by passing the z option, e.g., tar -zxf file.tar.gz, where -z instructs decompression, -x means extraction, and -f specifies the name of the compressed archive file to extract from.

  4. tar (computing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tar_(computing)

    Most tar implementations can also read and create cpio and pax (the latter actually is a tar-format with POSIX-2001-extensions). Key implementations in order of origin: Solaris tar, based on the original Unix V7 tar and comes as the default on the Solaris operating system; GNU tar is the default on most Linux distributions. It is based on the ...

  5. List of archive formats - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_archive_formats

    tar with gzip, compress, bzip2, lzip, xz, or zstd Multiple Multiple Yes The "tarball" format combines tar archives with a file-based compression scheme (usually gzip). Commonly used for source and binary distribution on Unix-like platforms, widely available elsewhere. Xarchiver supports the .tar.zst Archive/Compression format on Unix-like ...

  6. Dar (disk archiver) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dar_(disk_archiver)

    dar.linux.free.fr dar ( d isk ar chive) is a computer program , a command-line archiving tool [ 4 ] intended as a replacement for tar in Unix-like operating systems . [ citation needed ]

  7. Self-extracting archive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-extracting_archive

    There are also programs that create self-extracting archives on Unix as shell scripts, which utilize programs like tar and gzip (which must be present in the destination system). [citation needed] Others (like 7-Zip or RAR) can create self-extracting archives as regular executables in ELF format.

  8. lzip - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lzip

    In popular Linux distributions, lzip can usually be installed from official package repositories. [5] [6] [7] Cygwin offers lzip as a maintained optional package (Archive category of its setup installer), and its GNU tar utility program has support for .lz archives (with --lzip option for creation).

  9. cpio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cpio

    cpio is a general file archiver utility and its associated file format.It is primarily installed on Unix-like computer operating systems. The software utility was originally intended as a tape archiving program as part of the Programmer's Workbench (), and has been a component of virtually every Unix operating system released thereafter.