PAXCPIO(1) | General Commands Manual | PAXCPIO(1) |
NAME
paxcpio
— copy
file archives in and out
SYNOPSIS
paxcpio |
-o [-0AaBcJjLVvZz ]
[-C bytes]
[-F archive]
[-H format]
[-M flag]
[-O archive] <
name-list
[> archive] |
paxcpio |
-i
[-06BbcdfJjmrSstuVvZz ]
[-C bytes]
[-E file]
[-F archive]
[-H format]
[-I archive]
[-M flag]
[pattern ...]
[< archive] |
paxcpio |
-p
[-0adLlmuVv ] destination-directory
< name-list |
DESCRIPTION
The paxcpio
command copies files to and
from a cpio
archive.
The options are as follows:
-0
- Use the NUL (‘
\0
’) character as a pathname terminator, instead of newline (‘\n
’). This applies only to the pathnames read from standard input in the write and copy modes, and to the pathnames written to standard output in list mode. This option is expected to be used in concert with the-print0
function in find(1), the-d
'' option to theread
built-in utility of mksh(1) or the-0
flag in xargs(1). -o
- Create an archive. Reads the list of files to store in the archive from
standard input, and writes the archive on standard output.
-A
- Append to the specified archive.
-a
- Reset the access times on files that have been copied to the archive.
-B
- Set block size of output to 5120 bytes.
-C
bytes- Set the block size of output to bytes.
-c
- Use ASCII format for
cpio
header for portability. -F
archive- Use the specified file as the input for the archive.
-H
format- Write the archive in the specified format. Recognised formats are:
- ar
- Unix Archiver.
- bcpio
- Old binary
cpio
format. Selected by-6
. - cpio
- Old octal character
cpio
format. Selected by-c
. - sv4cpio
- SVR4 hex
cpio
format. - sv4crc
- SVR4 hex
cpio
format with checksums. This is the default format for creating new archives. - tar
- Old tar format.
- ustar
- POSIX ustar format.
- bin
- These four formats...
- crc
- ...are supported...
- newc
- ...for backwards...
- odc
- ...compatibility only.
-J
- Use the xz utility to compress the archive.
-j
- Use the bzip2 utility to compress the archive.
-L
- Follow symbolic links.
-M
flag- Configure the archive normaliser. flag is either
a numeric value compatible to
strtonum(3) which is
directly stored in the flags word, or one of the following values,
optionally prefixed with “no-” to turn them off:
- inodes
- 0x0001: Serialise inodes, zero device info.
(cpio, sv4cpio, sv4crc) - links
- 0x0002: Store content of hard links only once.
(cpio, sv4cpio, sv4crc) - mtime
- 0x0004: Zero out the file modification time.
(ar, cpio, sv4cpio, sv4crc, ustar) - uidgid
- 0x0008: Set owner to 0:0
(
root
:wheel
).
(ar, cpio, sv4cpio, sv4crc, ustar) - verb
- 0x0010: Debug this option.
- debug
- 0x0020: Debug file header storage.
- lncp
- 0x0040: Extract hard links by copy if link fails.
- numid
- 0x0080: Use only numeric uid and gid values.
(ustar) - gslash
- 0x0100: Append a slash after directory names.
(ustar) - set
- 0x0003: Keep ownership and mtime intact.
- dist
- 0x008B: Clean everything except mtime.
- norm
- 0x008F: Clean everything.
- root
- 0x0089: Clean owner and device information.
When creating an archive and verbosely listing output, these normalisation operations are not reflected in the output, because they are made only after the output has been shown.
This option is only implemented for the ar, cpio, sv4cpio, sv4crc, and ustar file format writing routines.
-O
archive- Use the specified file name as the archive to write to.
-V
- Print a dot (‘.’) for each file written to the archive.
-v
- Be verbose about operations. List filenames as they are written to the archive.
-Z
- Use the compress(1) utility to compress the archive.
-z
- Use the gzip(1) utility to compress the archive.
-i
- Restore files from an archive. Reads the archive file from standard input
and extracts files matching the patterns that were
specified on the command line.
-6
- Process old-style
cpio
format archives. -B
- Set the block size of the archive being read to 5120 bytes.
-b
- Do byte and word swapping after reading in data from the archive, for restoring archives created on systems with a different byte order.
-C
bytes- Read archive written with a block size of bytes.
-c
- Expect the archive headers to be in ASCII format.
-d
- Create any intermediate directories as needed during restore.
-E
file- Read list of file name patterns to extract or list from file.
-F
archive,-I
archive- Use the specified file as the input for the archive.
-f
- Restore all files except those matching the patterns given on the command line.
-H
format- Read an archive of the specified format. Recognised formats are:
- ar
- Unix Archiver.
- bcpio
- Old binary
cpio
format. - cpio
- Old octal character
cpio
format. - sv4cpio
- SVR4 hex
cpio
format. - sv4crc
- SVR4 hex
cpio
format with checksums. - tar
- Old tar format.
- ustar
- POSIX ustar format.
- bin
- These four formats...
- crc
- ...are supported...
- newc
- ...for backwards...
- odc
- ...compatibility only.
-J
- Use the xz utility to decompress the archive.
-j
- Use the bzip2 utility to decompress the archive.
-m
- Restore modification times on files.
-r
- Rename restored files interactively.
-S
- Swap words after reading data from the archive.
-s
- Swap bytes after reading data from the archive.
-t
- Only list the contents of the archive, no files or directories will be created.
-u
- Overwrite files even when the file in the archive is older than the one that will be overwritten.
-V
- Print a dot (‘.’) for each file read from the archive.
-v
- Be verbose about operations. List filenames as they are copied in from the archive.
-Z
- Use the compress(1) utility to decompress the archive.
-z
- Use the gzip(1) utility to decompress the archive.
-p
- Copy files from one location to another in a single pass. The list of
files to copy are read from standard input and written out to a directory
relative to the specified directory argument.
-a
- Reset the access times on files that have been copied.
-d
- Create any intermediate directories as needed to write the files at the new location.
-L
- Follow symbolic links.
-l
- When possible, link files rather than creating an extra copy.
-m
- Restore modification times on files.
-u
- Overwrite files even when the original file being copied is older than the one that will be overwritten.
-V
- Print a dot (‘.’) for each file copied.
-v
- Be verbose about operations. List filenames as they are copied.
ENVIRONMENT
TMPDIR
- Path in which to store temporary files.
EXIT STATUS
The paxcpio
utility exits with one of the
following values:
- 0
- All files were processed successfully.
- 1
- An error occurred.
DIAGNOSTICS
Whenever paxcpio
cannot create a file or a
link when extracting an archive or cannot find a file while writing an
archive, or cannot preserve the user ID, group ID, file mode, or access and
modification times when the -p
option is specified,
a diagnostic message is written to standard error and a non-zero exit value
will be returned, but processing will continue. In the case where
paxcpio
cannot create a link to a file, unless
-M
lncp is given,
paxcpio
will not create a second copy of the
file.
If the extraction of a file from an archive is prematurely
terminated by a signal or error, paxcpio
may have
only partially extracted the file the user wanted. Additionally, the file
modes of extracted files and directories may have incorrect file bits, and
the modification and access times may be wrong.
If the creation of an archive is prematurely terminated by a
signal or error, paxcpio
may have only partially
created the archive, which may violate the specific archive format
specification.
SEE ALSO
AUTHORS
Keith Muller at the University of California, San Diego. MirBSD extensions by mirabilos ⟨m@mirbsd.org⟩.
CAVEATS
Different file formats have different maximum file sizes. It is recommended that a format such as cpio or ustar be used for larger files.
File format | Maximum file size |
ar | 10 Gigabytes - 1 Byte |
bcpio | 4 Gibibytes |
sv4cpio | 4 Gibibytes |
sv4crc | 4 Gibibytes |
cpio | 8 Gibibytes |
tar | 8 Gibibytes |
ustar | 8 Gibibytes |
The backwards-compatible format options are not available in the pax(1) front-end.
The -M
option is a MirBSD extension,
available starting with Archives written using these options are, however,
compatible to the standard and should be readable on any other system. The
only option whose behaviour is not explicitly allowed by the standard is
hard link unification (write file contens only once) selected by
-M
0x0002.
The -V
option is a GNU extension,
available starting with
The ar file format matches APT repositories and the BSD ar(1) specification, not GNU binutils (which can however read them) or SYSV systems.
BUGS
The -s
and -S
options are currently not implemented.
The pax file format is not yet supported.
September 4, 2020 | MirBSD |