Tar & archive formats (was Re: [WinMac] Film Bureau and Platforms)
Leonard Rosenthol(leonardr[at]lazerware.com)
At 3:29 PM +0000 9/21/99, John Droggitis wrote: >Leonard Rosenthol wrote: > > > Tar, like ZIP, stores all files in a flat file structure. It > > relies on the fact that it stores (relative) PATHNAMES to maintain > > any true hierarchy that existed on the source device. > >Tar does produce a single archive that contains file entries Each >entry contains a header that includes its pathname, statistics (including >ownership, permissions, creation and modification dates) and >checksum for error checking.
Exactly what I said above. It's a FLAT FILE structure based
Also, as I noted in my message, those pathnames are SHORT
> Directory entries are similar to file entries, so those too include
See above comments about limited set of information...
>Tar is not limited to relative
GNU tar may support absolute pathnames, but it's not part of
Let's also not forget about other well known limitations of
> > Tar is an outdated archiving format.
Almost makes me want to comment about NT ;).
As the original author of StuffIt Expander, and most of the
Leonard
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