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LIBARCHIVE(3) FreeBSD Library Functions Manual LIBARCHIVE(3)
NAME
libarchive - functions for reading and writing streaming archives
OVERVIEW
The libarchive library provides a flexible interface for reading and
writing archives in various formats such as tar and cpio. libarchive
also supports reading and writing archives compressed using various
compression filters such as gzip and bzip2. The library is inherently
stream-oriented; readers serially iterate through the archive, writers
serially add things to the archive. In particular, note that there is
currently no built-in support for random access nor for in-place
modification.
When reading an archive, the library automatically detects the format and
the compression. The library currently has read support for:
o old-style tar archives,
o most variants of the POSIX "ustar" format,
o the POSIX "pax interchange" format,
o GNU-format tar archives,
o most common cpio archive formats,
o 7-Zip archives,
o ar archives (including GNU/SysV and BSD extensions),
o Microsoft CAB archives,
o ISO9660 CD images (including RockRidge and Joliet extensions),
o LHA archives,
o mtree file tree descriptions,
o RAR and most RAR5 archives,
o WARC archives,
o XAR archives,
o Zip archives.
The library automatically detects archives compressed with compress(1),
bzip2(1), grzip(1), gzip(1), lrzip(1), lz4(1), lzip(1), lzop(1), xz(1),
or zstd(1) and decompresses them transparently. Decompression of some
formats requires external decompressor utilities. It can similarly
detect and decode archives processed with uuencode(1) or which have an
rpm(1) header.
When writing an archive, you can specify the compression to be used and
the format to use. The library can write
o POSIX-standard "ustar" archives,
o POSIX "pax interchange format" archives,
o cpio archives,
o 7-Zip archives,
o ar archives,
o two different variants of shar archives,
o ISO9660 CD images,
o mtree file tree descriptions,
o XAR archives,
o Zip archive.
Pax interchange format is an extension of the tar archive format that
eliminates essentially all of the limitations of historic tar formats in
a standard fashion that is supported by POSIX-compliant pax(1)
implementations on many systems as well as several newer implementations
of tar(1). Note that the default write format will suppress the pax
extended attributes for most entries; explicitly requesting pax format
will enable those attributes for all entries.
READING AN ARCHIVE
See archive_read(3).
WRITING AN ARCHIVE
See archive_write(3).
WRITING ENTRIES TO DISK
The archive_write_disk(3) API allows you to write archive_entry(3)
objects to disk using the same API used by archive_write(3). The
archive_write_disk(3) API is used internally by archive_read_extract();
using it directly can provide greater control over how entries get
written to disk. This API also makes it possible to share code between
archive-to-archive copy and archive-to-disk extraction operations.
READING ENTRIES FROM DISK
The archive_read_disk(3) supports for populating archive_entry(3) objects
from information in the filesystem. This includes the information
accessible from the stat(2) system call as well as ACLs, extended
attributes, and other metadata. The archive_read_disk(3) API also
supports iterating over directory trees, which allows directories of
files to be read using an API compatible with the archive_read(3) API.
DESCRIPTION
Detailed descriptions of each function are provided by the corresponding
manual pages.
All of the functions utilize an opaque struct archive datatype that
provides access to the archive contents.
The struct archive_entry structure contains a complete description of a
single archive entry. It uses an opaque interface that is fully
documented in archive_entry(3).
Users familiar with historic formats should be aware that the newer
variants have eliminated most restrictions on the length of textual
fields. Clients should not assume that filenames, link names, user
names, or group names are limited in length. In particular, pax
interchange format can easily accommodate pathnames in arbitrary
character sets that exceed PATH_MAX.
RETURN VALUES
Most functions return ARCHIVE_OK (zero) on success, non-zero on error.
The return value indicates the general severity of the error, ranging
from ARCHIVE_WARN, which indicates a minor problem that should probably
be reported to the user, to ARCHIVE_FATAL, which indicates a serious
problem that will prevent any further operations on this archive. On
error, the archive_errno() function can be used to retrieve a numeric
error code (see errno(2)). The archive_error_string() returns a textual
error message suitable for display.
archive_read_new() and archive_write_new() return pointers to an
allocated and initialized struct archive object.
archive_read_data() and archive_write_data() return a count of the number
of bytes actually read or written. A value of zero indicates the end of
the data for this entry. A negative value indicates an error, in which
case the archive_errno() and archive_error_string() functions can be used
to obtain more information.
archive_write(3), tar(5)
HISTORY
The libarchive library first appeared in FreeBSD 5.3.
AUTHORS
The libarchive library was originally written by Tim Kientzle
<kientzle@acm.org>.
BUGS
Some archive formats support information that is not supported by struct
archive_entry. Such information cannot be fully archived or restored
using this library. This includes, for example, comments, character
sets, or the arbitrary key/value pairs that can appear in pax interchange
format archives.
Conversely, of course, not all of the information that can be stored in
an struct archive_entry is supported by all formats. For example, cpio
formats do not support nanosecond timestamps; old tar formats do not
support large device numbers.
The ISO9660 reader cannot yet read all ISO9660 images; it should learn
how to seek.
The AR writer requires the client program to use two passes, unlike all
other libarchive writers.
FreeBSD 14.0-RELEASE-p11 March 18, 2012 FreeBSD 14.0-RELEASE-p11