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Also remove some unnecessary blank lines from archive_read.3.
92 lines
3.8 KiB
Plaintext
92 lines
3.8 KiB
Plaintext
$FreeBSD$
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libarchive: a library for reading and writing streaming archives
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This is all under a BSD license. Use, enjoy, but don't blame me if it breaks!
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Documentation:
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* libarchive.3 gives an overview of the library as a whole
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* archive_read.3 and archive_write.3 provide detailed calling
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sequences for the read and write APIs
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* archive_entry.3 details the "struct archive_entry" utility class
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* libarchive-formats.5 documents the file formats supported by the library
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* tar.5 provides some detailed information about a variety of different
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"tar" formats.
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You should also read the copious comments in "archive.h" and the source
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code for the sample "bsdtar" program for more details. Please let me know
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about any errors or omissions you find.
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Currently, the library automatically detects and reads the following:
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* gzip compression
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* bzip2 compression
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* compress/LZW compression
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* GNU tar format (including GNU long filenames, long link names, and
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sparse files)
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* Solaris 9 extended tar format (including ACLs)
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* Old V7 tar archives
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* POSIX ustar
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* POSIX pax interchange format
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* POSIX octet-oriented cpio
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* SVR4 ASCII cpio
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* Binary cpio (big-endian or little-endian)
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* ISO9660 CD-ROM images (with optional Rockridge extensions)
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* ZIP archives (with uncompressed or "deflate" compressed entries)
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The library can write:
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* gzip compression
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* bzip2 compression
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* POSIX ustar
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* POSIX pax interchange format
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* "restricted" pax format, which will create ustar archives except for
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entries that require pax extensions (for long filenames, ACLs, etc).
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* POSIX octet-oriented cpio
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* shar archives
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Notes:
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* This is a heavily stream-oriented system. There is no direct
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support for in-place modification or random access and no intention
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of ever adding such support. Adding such support would require
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sacrificing a lot of other features, so don't bother asking.
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* The library is designed to be extended with new compression and
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archive formats. The only requirement is that the format be
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readable or writable as a stream and that each archive entry be
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independent.
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* On read, compression and format are always detected automatically.
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* I've attempted to minimize static link pollution. If you don't
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explicitly invoke a particular feature (such as support for a
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particular compression or format), it won't get pulled in.
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In particular, if you don't explicitly enable a particular
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compression or decompression support, you won't need to link
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against the corresponding compression or decompression libraries.
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This also reduces the size of statically-linked binaries in
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environments where that matters.
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* On read, the library accepts whatever blocks you hand it.
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Your read callback is free to pass the library a byte at a time
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or mmap the entire archive and give it to the library at once.
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On write, the library always produces correctly-blocked
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output.
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* The object-style approach allows you to have multiple archive streams
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open at once. bsdtar uses this in its "@archive" extension.
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* The archive itself is read/written using callback functions.
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You can read an archive directly from an in-memory buffer or
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write it to a socket, if you wish. There are some utility
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functions to provide easy-to-use "open file," etc, capabilities.
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* The read/write APIs are designed to allow individual entries
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to be read or written to any data source: You can create
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a block of data in memory and add it to a tar archive without
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first writing a temporary file. You can also read an entry from
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an archive and write the data directly to a socket. If you want
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to read/write entries to disk, there are convenience functions to
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make this especially easy.
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* Note: "pax interchange format" is really an extended tar format,
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despite what the name says.
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