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|
This is zutils.info, produced by makeinfo version 4.13+ from zutils.texi.
INFO-DIR-SECTION Compression
START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
* Zutils: (zutils). Utilities dealing with compressed files
END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
File: zutils.info, Node: Top, Next: Introduction, Up: (dir)
Zutils Manual
*************
This manual is for Zutils (version 1.13, 23 January 2024).
* Menu:
* Introduction:: Purpose and features of zutils
* Common options:: Options common to all utilities
* Configuration:: The configuration file zutils.conf
* Zcat:: Concatenating compressed files
* Zcmp:: Comparing compressed files byte by byte
* Zdiff:: Comparing compressed files line by line
* Zgrep:: Searching inside compressed files
* Ztest:: Testing the integrity of compressed files
* Zupdate:: Recompressing files to lzip format
* Problems:: Reporting bugs
* Concept index:: Index of concepts
Copyright (C) 2009-2024 Antonio Diaz Diaz.
This manual is free documentation: you have unlimited permission to copy,
distribute, and modify it.
File: zutils.info, Node: Introduction, Next: Common options, Prev: Top, Up: Top
1 Introduction
**************
Zutils is a collection of utilities able to process any combination of
compressed and uncompressed files transparently. If any file given,
including standard input, is compressed, its decompressed content is used.
Compressed files are decompressed on the fly; no temporary files are
created. Data format is detected by its identifier string (magic bytes), not
by the file name extension. Empty files are considered uncompressed.
These utilities are not wrapper scripts but safer and more efficient C++
programs. In particular the option '--recursive' is very efficient in those
utilities supporting it.
The utilities provided are 'zcat', 'zcmp', 'zdiff', 'zgrep', 'ztest', and
'zupdate'.
The formats supported are bzip2, gzip, lzip, xz, and zstd.
Zutils uses external compressors. The compressor to be used for each format
is configurable at runtime.
'zcat', 'zcmp', 'zdiff', and 'zgrep' are improved replacements for the
shell scripts provided by GNU gzip. 'ztest' is unique to zutils. 'zupdate'
is similar to gzip's znew.
When 'zcat', 'zcmp', 'zdiff', or 'zgrep' need to try compressed file
names, the search order is: lzip, gzip, bzip2, zstd, xz.
(FILE.[lz|gz|bz2|zst|xz]).
NOTE: Bzip2 and lzip provide well-defined values of exit status, which
makes them safe to use with zutils. Gzip and xz may return ambiguous warning
values, making them less reliable back ends for zutils. Zstd currently does
not even document its exit status in its man page. *Note
compressor-requirements::.
FORMAT NOTE 1: The option '--format' allows the processing of a subset
of formats in recursive mode and when trying compressed file names. For
example, use the following command to search for the string 'foo' in gzip
and lzip files only: 'zgrep foo -r --format=gz,lz somedir somefile.tar'.
FORMAT NOTE 2: The standard POSIX compress format (.Z) is obsolete and is
only supported through gzip. For this to work, the gzip program used (for
example GNU gzip) must be able to decompress .Z files.
LANGUAGE NOTE: Uncompressed = not compressed = plain data; it may never
have been compressed. Decompressed is used to refer to data which have
undergone the process of decompression.
File: zutils.info, Node: Common options, Next: Configuration, Prev: Introduction, Up: Top
2 Common options
****************
The following options: are available in all the utilities. Rather than
writing identical descriptions for each of the programs, they are described
here. Remember to prepend './' to any file name beginning with a hyphen, or
use '--'. *Note Argument syntax: (arg_parser)Argument syntax.
'-h'
'--help'
Print an informative help message describing the options and exit.
'zgrep' only supports the '--help' form of this option.
'-V'
'--version'
Print the version number on the standard output and exit. This version
number should be included in all bug reports. In verbose mode, 'zdiff'
and 'zgrep' print also the version of the diff or grep program used
respectively. At verbosity level 1 (2 for 'zdiff' and 'zgrep') or
higher, print also the versions of the compressors used (perhaps
limited by option '--format'). (The compressors used must support the
option '-V' for this to work).
'-M FORMAT_LIST'
'--format=FORMAT_LIST'
Process only the formats listed in the comma-separated FORMAT_LIST.
Valid formats are 'bz2', 'gz', 'lz', 'xz', 'zst', and 'un' for
'uncompressed', meaning "any file name without a known extension".
This option excludes files based on extension, instead of format,
because it is more efficient. The exclusion only applies to names
generated automatically (for example when adding extensions to a file
name or when operating recursively on directories). Files given in the
command line are always processed.
Each format in FORMAT_LIST enables file names with the following
extensions:
bz2 enables .bz2 .tbz .tbz2
gz enables .gz .tgz .Z
lz enables .lz .tlz
xz enables .xz .txz
zst enables .zst .tzst
un enables any other file name
'-N'
'--no-rcfile'
Don't read the runtime configuration file 'zutils.conf'.
'--bz2=COMMAND'
'--gz=COMMAND'
'--lz=COMMAND'
'--xz=COMMAND'
'--zst=COMMAND'
Set program to be used as decompressor for the corresponding format.
COMMAND may include arguments. For example '--lz='plzip --threads=2''.
'zupdate' uses '--lz' for compression, not for decompression (*note
lz-compressor::). The name of the program can't begin with '-'. These
options override the values set in 'zutils.conf'. The compression
program used must meet three requirements:
1. When called with the option '-d' and without file names, it must
read compressed data from the standard input and produce
decompressed data on the standard output.
2. If the option '-q' is passed to zutils, the compression program
must also accept it.
3. It must return 0 if no errors occurred, and a non-zero value
otherwise.
Numbers given as arguments to options may be expressed in decimal,
hexadecimal, or octal (using the same syntax as integer constants in C++),
and may be followed by a multiplier and an optional 'B' for "byte".
Table of SI and binary prefixes (unit multipliers):
Prefix Value | Prefix Value
k kilobyte (10^3 = 1000) | Ki kibibyte (2^10 = 1024)
M megabyte (10^6) | Mi mebibyte (2^20)
G gigabyte (10^9) | Gi gibibyte (2^30)
T terabyte (10^12) | Ti tebibyte (2^40)
P petabyte (10^15) | Pi pebibyte (2^50)
E exabyte (10^18) | Ei exbibyte (2^60)
Z zettabyte (10^21) | Zi zebibyte (2^70)
Y yottabyte (10^24) | Yi yobibyte (2^80)
R ronnabyte (10^27) | Ri robibyte (2^90)
Q quettabyte (10^30) | Qi quebibyte (2^100)
File: zutils.info, Node: Configuration, Next: Zcat, Prev: Common options, Up: Top
3 The configuration file 'zutils.conf'
**************************************
'zutils.conf' is the runtime configuration file for zutils. In it you may
define the compressor name and options to be used for each format.
'zutils.conf' is optional; you don't need to install it in order to run
zutils.
The compressors specified in the command line override those specified
in 'zutils.conf'.
You may copy the system 'zutils.conf' file '${sysconfdir}/zutils.conf'
to '$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/zutils.conf' and customize these options as you like.
('XDG_CONFIG_HOME' defaults to '$HOME/.config'). The file syntax is fairly
obvious (and there are further instructions in it):
1. Any line beginning with '#' is a comment line.
2. Each non-comment line defines the command to be used for the
corresponding format, with the syntax:
<format> = <compressor> [options]
where <format> is one of 'bz2', 'gz', 'lz', 'xz', or 'zst'.
File: zutils.info, Node: Zcat, Next: Zcmp, Prev: Configuration, Up: Top
4 Zcat
******
'zcat' copies each FILE argument to standard output in sequence. If any
file given is compressed, its decompressed content is copied. If a file
given does not exist, and its name does not end with one of the known
extensions, 'zcat' tries the compressed file names corresponding to the
formats supported until one is found. *Note search-order::. If a file fails
to decompress, 'zcat' continues copying the rest of the files.
If a file is specified as '-', data are read from standard input,
decompressed if needed, and sent to standard output. Data read from
standard input must be of the same type; all uncompressed or all in the
same compressed format.
If no files are specified, recursive searches examine the current working
directory, and nonrecursive searches read standard input.
The format for running 'zcat' is:
zcat [OPTIONS] [FILES]
Exit status is 0 if no errors occurred, 1 otherwise.
'zcat' supports the following options:
'-A'
'--show-all'
Equivalent to '-vET'.
'-b'
'--number-nonblank'
Number all nonblank output lines, starting with 1. The line count is
unlimited.
'-e'
Equivalent to '-vE'.
'-E'
'--show-ends'
Print a '$' after the end of each line.
'-n'
'--number'
Number all output lines, starting with 1. The line count is unlimited.
'-O FORMAT'
'--force-format=FORMAT'
Force the compressed format given. Valid values for FORMAT are 'bz2',
'gz', 'lz', 'xz', 'zst', and 'un' for 'uncompressed'. If this option
is used, the files are passed to the corresponding decompressor (or
transmitted unmodified) without checking their format, and the exact
file name must be given. Other names are not tried.
'-q'
'--quiet'
Quiet operation. Suppress all messages.
'-r'
'--recursive'
For each directory operand, read and process all files in that
directory, recursively. Follow symbolic links given in the command
line, but skip symbolic links that are encountered recursively.
'-R'
'--dereference-recursive'
For each directory operand, read and process all files in that
directory, recursively, following all symbolic links.
'-s'
'--squeeze-blank'
Replace multiple adjacent blank lines with a single blank line.
'-t'
Equivalent to '-vT'.
'-T'
'--show-tabs'
Print TAB characters as '^I'.
'-v'
'--show-nonprinting'
Print control characters except for LF (newline) and TAB using '^'
notation and precede characters larger than 127 with 'M-' (which
stands for "meta").
'--verbose'
Verbose mode. Show error messages. Repeating it increases the verbosity
level. *Note version::.
File: zutils.info, Node: Zcmp, Next: Zdiff, Prev: Zcat, Up: Top
5 Zcmp
******
'zcmp' compares two files and, if they differ, writes to standard output
the first byte and line number where they differ. Bytes and lines are
numbered starting with 1. A hyphen '-' used as a FILE argument means
standard input. If any file given is compressed, its decompressed content
is used. Compressed files are decompressed on the fly; no temporary files
are created.
The format for running 'zcmp' is:
zcmp [OPTIONS] FILE1 [FILE2]
This compares FILE1 to FILE2. The standard input is used only if FILE1 or
FILE2 refers to standard input. If FILE2 is omitted 'zcmp' tries to compare
FILE1 with the corresponding uncompressed file (if FILE1 is compressed),
and then with the corresponding compressed files of the remaining formats
until one is found. *Note search-order::.
An exit status of 0 means no differences were found, 1 means some
differences were found, and 2 means trouble.
'zcmp' supports the following options:
'-b'
'--print-bytes'
Print the values of the differing bytes (in octal by default) followed
by the bytes themselves in printable form. Print control bytes as a '^'
followed by a letter, and precede bytes larger than 127 with 'M-'
(which stands for "meta").
'-H'
'--hexadecimal'
Print the values of the differing bytes in hexadecimal instead of
octal.
'-i SIZE'
'--ignore-initial=SIZE'
Ignore any differences in the first SIZE bytes of the input files.
Treat files with fewer than SIZE bytes as if they were empty. If SIZE
is in the form 'SIZE1:SIZE2', ignore the first SIZE1 bytes of the
first input file and the first SIZE2 bytes of the second input file.
'-l'
'--list'
Print the byte numbers (in decimal) and values (in octal by default)
of all differing bytes. Bytes are numbered starting with 1.
'-n COUNT'
'--bytes=COUNT'
Compare at most COUNT input bytes.
'-O [FORMAT1][,FORMAT2]'
'--force-format=[FORMAT1][,FORMAT2]'
Force the compressed formats given. If FORMAT1 or FORMAT2 is omitted,
the corresponding format is automatically detected. Valid values for
FORMAT are 'bz2', 'gz', 'lz', 'xz', 'zst', and 'un' for
'uncompressed'. If at least one format is specified with this option,
the file is passed to the corresponding decompressor (or transmitted
unmodified) without checking its format, and the exact file names of
both FILE1 and FILE2 must be given. Other names are not tried.
'-q'
'--quiet'
'--silent'
Suppress diagnostics written to standard error, even the
'EOF on <name_of_shorter_file>' diagnostic. Byte differences are still
written to standard output. ('-q' produces no output except byte
differences).
'-s'
'--script'
Write nothing to standard output or standard error when files differ,
not even the 'EOF on <name_of_shorter_file>' diagnostic; indicate
differing files through exit status only. Diagnostic messages are still
written to standard error when an error is encountered. ('-s' produces
no output except error messages).
'-v'
'--verbose'
Verbose mode. Undoes the effect of '--quiet'. Further -v's increase
the verbosity level. *Note version::.
File: zutils.info, Node: Zdiff, Next: Zgrep, Prev: Zcmp, Up: Top
6 Zdiff
*******
'zdiff' compares two files and, if they differ, writes to standard output
the differences line by line. A hyphen '-' used as a FILE argument means
standard input. If any file given is compressed, its decompressed content
is used. 'zdiff' is a front end to the program diff and has the limitation
that messages from diff refer to temporary file names instead of those
specified.
The format for running 'zdiff' is:
zdiff [OPTIONS] FILE1 [FILE2]
This compares FILE1 to FILE2. The standard input is used only if FILE1 or
FILE2 refers to standard input. If FILE2 is omitted 'zdiff' tries to
compare FILE1 with the corresponding uncompressed file (if FILE1 is
compressed), and then with the corresponding compressed files of the
remaining formats until one is found. *Note search-order::.
An exit status of 0 means no differences were found, 1 means some
differences were found, and 2 means trouble.
'zdiff' supports the following options (some options only work if the
diff program used supports them):
'-a'
'--text'
Treat all files as text.
'-b'
'--ignore-space-change'
Ignore changes in the amount of white space.
'-B'
'--ignore-blank-lines'
Ignore changes whose lines are all blank.
'-c'
Use the context output format.
'-C N'
'--context=N'
Same as -c but use N lines of context.
'-d'
'--minimal'
Try hard to find a smaller set of changes.
'-E'
'--ignore-tab-expansion'
Ignore changes due to tab expansion.
'-i'
'--ignore-case'
Ignore case differences. Consider uppercase and lowercase letters
equivalent.
'-O [FORMAT1][,FORMAT2]'
'--force-format=[FORMAT1][,FORMAT2]'
Force the compressed formats given. If FORMAT1 or FORMAT2 is omitted,
the corresponding format is automatically detected. Valid values for
FORMAT are 'bz2', 'gz', 'lz', 'xz', 'zst', and 'un' for
'uncompressed'. If at least one format is specified with this option,
the file is passed to the corresponding decompressor (or transmitted
unmodified) without checking its format, and the exact file names of
both FILE1 and FILE2 must be given. Other names are not tried.
'-p'
'--show-c-function'
Show which C function each change is in.
'-q'
'--brief'
Output only whether files differ.
'-s'
'--report-identical-files'
Report when two files are identical.
'-t'
'--expand-tabs'
Expand tabs to spaces in output.
'-T'
'--initial-tab'
Make tabs line up by prepending a tab.
'-u'
Use the unified output format.
'-U N'
'--unified=N'
Same as -u but use N lines of context.
'-v'
'--verbose'
When specified before '--version', print the version of the diff
program used. Further -v's increase the verbosity level. *Note
version::.
'-w'
'--ignore-all-space'
Ignore all white space.
'-W COLUMNS'
'--width=COLUMNS'
Output at most the specified number of print columns per line in side
by side format.
'-y'
'--side-by-side'
Use the side by side output format.
File: zutils.info, Node: Zgrep, Next: Ztest, Prev: Zdiff, Up: Top
7 Zgrep
*******
'zgrep' is a front end to the program grep that allows transparent search
on any combination of compressed and uncompressed files. If any file given
is compressed, its decompressed content is used. If a file given does not
exist, and its name does not end with one of the known extensions, 'zgrep'
tries the compressed file names corresponding to the formats supported
until one is found. *Note search-order::. If a file fails to decompress,
'zgrep' continues searching the rest of the files.
If a file is specified as '-', data are read from standard input,
decompressed if needed, and fed to grep. Data read from standard input must
be of the same type; all uncompressed or all in the same compressed format.
If no files are specified, recursive searches examine the current working
directory, and nonrecursive searches read standard input.
For efficiency reasons, 'zgrep' does not always read all its input. For
example, the shell command 'base64 -d foo | zgrep -q X' can cause 'zgrep'
to exit immediately after reading a line containing 'X', without bothering
to read the rest of its input data. This in turn can cause base64 to exit
with a nonzero status because base64 cannot write to its output pipe after
'zgrep' exits.
The format for running 'zgrep' is:
zgrep [OPTIONS] PATTERN [FILES]
An exit status of 0 means at least one match was found, 1 means no matches
were found, and 2 means trouble.
'zgrep' supports the following options (Some options only work if the
grep program used supports them. Options -h, -H, -r, -R, and -Z are managed
by 'zgrep' and not passed to grep):
'-a'
'--text'
Treat all files as text.
'-A N'
'--after-context=N'
Print N lines of trailing context.
'-b'
'--byte-offset'
Print the byte offset of each line.
'-B N'
'--before-context=N'
Print N lines of leading context.
'-c'
'--count'
Only print a count of matching lines per file.
'-C N'
'--context=N'
Print N lines of output context.
'--color[=WHEN]'
Show matched strings in color. WHEN is 'never', 'always', or 'auto'.
'-e PATTERN'
'--regexp=PATTERN'
Use PATTERN as the pattern to match.
'-E'
'--extended-regexp'
Interpret PATTERN as an extended regular expression (ERE).
'-f FILE'
'--file=FILE'
Obtain patterns from FILE, one per line.
When searching in several files at once, command substitution can be
used with '-e' to read FILE only once, for example if FILE is not a
regular file: 'zgrep -e "$(cat FILE)" file1.lz file2.gz'
'-F'
'--fixed-strings'
Interpret PATTERN as a set of newline-separated strings.
'-G'
'--basic-regexp'
Interpret PATTERN as a basic regular expression (BRE). This is the
default.
'-h'
'--no-filename'
Suppress the prefixing of file names on output when multiple files are
searched.
'-H'
'--with-filename'
Print the file name for each match.
'-i'
'--ignore-case'
Ignore case distinctions.
'-I'
Ignore binary files.
'-l'
'--files-with-matches'
Only print names of files containing at least one match. Stop reading
each file on the first match.
'-L'
'--files-without-match'
Only print names of files not containing any matches. Stop reading
each file on the first match.
Note: option -L fails (prints wrong results, returns wrong status, and
even hangs) when using GNU grep versions 3.2 to 3.4 inclusive because
of a wrong change in the exit status of grep, which was reverted in
GNU grep 3.5.
'--label=LABEL'
Display input actually coming from standard input as input coming from
file LABEL.
'--line-buffered'
Use line buffering on output. This may cause a performance penalty.
'-m N'
'--max-count=N'
Stop after N matches.
'-n'
'--line-number'
Prefix each matched line with its line number in the input file.
'-o'
'--only-matching'
Show only the part of matching lines that actually matches PATTERN.
'-O FORMAT'
'--force-format=FORMAT'
Force the compressed format given. Valid values for FORMAT are 'bz2',
'gz', 'lz', 'xz', 'zst', and 'un' for 'uncompressed'. If this option
is used, the files are passed to the corresponding decompressor (or
transmitted unmodified) without checking their format, and the exact
file name must be given. Other names are not tried.
'-P'
'--perl-regexp'
Interpret PATTERN as a Perl-compatible regular expression (PCRE).
'-q'
'--quiet'
'--silent'
Suppress all messages. Exit immediately with zero status if any match
is found, even if an error was detected.
'-r'
'--recursive'
For each directory operand, read and process all files in that
directory, recursively. Follow symbolic links given in the command
line, but skip symbolic links that are encountered recursively.
'-R'
'--dereference-recursive'
For each directory operand, read and process all files in that
directory, recursively, following all symbolic links.
'-s'
'--no-messages'
Suppress error messages about nonexistent or unreadable files.
'-T'
'--initial-tab'
Make sure that the first character of actual line content lies on a tab
stop, so that the alignment of tabs looks normal.
'-U'
'--binary'
Use binary I/O on platforms affected by the bug known as "text mode
I/O". (MS-DOS, MS-Windows, OS/2).
'-v'
'--invert-match'
Select non-matching lines.
'--verbose'
Verbose mode. Show error messages. When specified before '--version',
print the version of the grep program used. Repeating it increases the
verbosity level. *Note version::.
'-w'
'--word-regexp'
Match only whole words.
'-x'
'--line-regexp'
Match only whole lines.
'-Z'
'--null'
Output a zero byte (the ASCII NUL character) instead of the character
that normally follows a file name. For example, 'zgrep -lZ' outputs a
zero byte after each file name instead of the usual newline. This
option makes the output unambiguous, even in the presence of file
names containing unusual characters like newlines.
File: zutils.info, Node: Ztest, Next: Zupdate, Prev: Zgrep, Up: Top
8 Ztest
*******
'ztest' checks the integrity of the compressed files specified. It also
warns if an uncompressed file has a compressed file name extension, or if a
compressed file has a wrong compressed extension. Uncompressed files are
otherwise ignored. If a file is specified as '-', the integrity of
compressed data read from standard input is checked. Data read from
standard input must be all in the same compressed format. If a file fails to
decompress, does not exist, can't be opened, or is a terminal, 'ztest'
continues testing the rest of the files. A final diagnostic is shown at
verbosity level 1 or higher if any file fails the test when testing multiple
files.
If no files are specified, recursive searches examine the current working
directory, and nonrecursive searches read standard input.
Bzip2, gzip, and lzip are the primary formats. Xz and zstd are optional.
If the decompressor for the xz or zstd formats is not found, the
corresponding files are ignored.
Note that error detection in the xz format is broken. First, some xz
files lack integrity information. Second, not all xz decompressors can
check the integrity of all xz files. Third, section 2.1.1.2 'Stream Flags'
of the xz format specification allows xz decompressors to produce garbage
output without issuing any warning. Therefore, xz files can't always be
checked as reliably as files in the other formats can.
The format for running 'ztest' is:
ztest [OPTIONS] [FILES]
Exit status is 0 if all compressed files check OK, 1 if environmental
problems (file not found, invalid command-line options, I/O errors, etc), 2
if any compressed file is corrupt or invalid, or if any file has an
incorrect file name extension.
'ztest' supports the following options:
'-O FORMAT'
'--force-format=FORMAT'
Force the compressed format given. Valid values for FORMAT are 'bz2',
'gz', 'lz', 'xz', and 'zst'. If this option is used, the files are
passed to the corresponding decompressor without checking their
format, and any files in a format that the decompressor can't
understand fail the test.
'-q'
'--quiet'
Quiet operation. Suppress all messages.
'-r'
'--recursive'
For each directory operand, read and process all files in that
directory, recursively. Follow symbolic links given in the command
line, but skip symbolic links that are encountered recursively.
'-R'
'--dereference-recursive'
For each directory operand, read and process all files in that
directory, recursively, following all symbolic links.
'-v'
'--verbose'
Verbose mode. Show the check status for each file processed. Further
-v's increase the verbosity level. *Note version::.
File: zutils.info, Node: Zupdate, Next: Problems, Prev: Ztest, Up: Top
9 Zupdate
*********
'zupdate' recompresses files from bzip2, gzip, xz, and zstd formats to lzip
format. Each original is compared with the new file and then deleted. Only
regular files with standard file name extensions are recompressed, other
files are ignored. Compressed files are decompressed and then recompressed
on the fly; no temporary files are created. If an error happens while
recompressing a file, 'zupdate' exits immediately without recompressing the
rest of the files. The lzip format is chosen as destination because it is
the most appropriate for long-term archiving.
If no files are specified, recursive searches examine the current working
directory, and nonrecursive searches do nothing.
If the lzip-compressed version of a file already exists, the file is
skipped unless the option '--force' is given. In this case, if the
comparison with the existing lzip version fails, an error is returned and
the original file is not deleted. The operation of 'zupdate' is meant to be
safe and not cause any data loss. Therefore, existing lzip-compressed files
are never overwritten nor deleted.
Combining the options '--force' and '--keep', as in
'zupdate -f -k *.gz', checks that there are no differences between each
pair of files in a multiformat set of files.
The names of the original files must have one of the following
extensions:
'.bz2', '.gz', '.xz', '.zst', or '.Z', which are recompressed to '.lz';
'.tbz', '.tbz2', '.tgz', '.txz', or '.tzst', which are recompressed to
'.tlz'.
Keeping the combined extensions ('.tgz' --> '.tlz') may be useful when
recompressing Slackware packages, for example.
Bzip2, gzip, and lzip are the primary formats. Xz and zstd are optional.
If the decompressor for the xz or zstd formats is not found, the
corresponding files are ignored.
Recompressing a file is much like copying or moving it. Therefore
'zupdate' preserves the access and modification dates, permissions, and, if
you have appropriate privileges, ownership of the file just as 'cp -p'
does. (If the user ID or the group ID can't be duplicated, the file
permission bits S_ISUID and S_ISGID are cleared).
The format for running 'zupdate' is:
zupdate [OPTIONS] [FILES]
Exit status is 0 if all the compressed files were successfully recompressed
(if needed), compared, and deleted (if requested). 1 if a non-fatal error
occurred (file not found or not regular, or has invalid format, or can't be
deleted). 2 if a fatal error occurred (invalid command-line options,
compressor can't be run, or comparison fails).
'zupdate' supports the following options:
'-d DIR'
'--destdir=DIR'
Write recompressed files to another directory, using DIR as base
directory, instead of writing them in the same directory as the
original files. In recursive mode, this is done by replacing each
directory specified in the command line with DIR to produce the
recompressed file names. For example, 'zupdate -r -d DIR ../a'
recompresses a file named '../a/b/c.gz' to 'DIR/b/c.lz'. Regular files
specified in the command line are recompressed directly into DIR. For
example, 'zupdate -d DIR ../a/b/c.gz' writes the recompressed file to
'DIR/c.lz'.
This option allows recompressing files from a read-only file system to
another place without the need to copy or link them to the destination
directory first. (Remember to use option '--keep' when recompressing
read-only files to avoid warnings about files that can't be deleted).
'-e'
'--expand-extensions'
Expand combined file name extensions; recompress '.tbz', '.tbz2',
'.tgz', '.txz', and '.tzst' to 'tar.lz'.
'-f'
'--force'
Don't skip a file for which a lzip-compressed version already exists.
'--force' compares the content of the input file with the content of
the existing lzip file and deletes the input file if both contents are
identical.
'-i'
'--ignore-errors'
Ignore non-fatal errors. (See exit status above).
'-k'
'--keep'
Keep (don't delete) the input file after comparing it with the lzip
file. Use it when recompressing files from a read-only file system.
(See option '--destdir' above).
'-l'
'--lzip-verbose'
Pass one option '-v' to the lzip compressor so that it shows the
compression ratio for each file processed. Using lzip 1.15 or newer, a
second '-l' shows the progress of compression. Use it together with
'-v' to see the name of the file.
'-q'
'--quiet'
Quiet operation. Suppress all messages.
'-r'
'--recursive'
For each directory operand, read and process all files in that
directory, recursively. Follow symbolic links given in the command
line, but skip symbolic links that are encountered recursively.
'-R'
'--dereference-recursive'
For each directory operand, read and process all files in that
directory, recursively, following all symbolic links.
'-v'
'--verbose'
Verbose mode. Show the files being processed. A second '-v' also shows
the files being ignored and increases the verbosity level. *Note
version::.
'-0 .. -9'
Set the compression level of lzip. By default 'zupdate' passes '-9' to
lzip. Custom compression options can be passed to lzip with the option
'--lz'. For example '--lz='lzip -9 -s64MiB''.
'--lz=COMMAND'
Set compression command. COMMAND may include arguments. For example
'--lz='plzip --threads=2''. The name of the program can't begin with
'-'. This option overrides the value set in 'zutils.conf'. The
compression program used does not need to implement decompression
(*note compressor-requirements::), but it must implement at least the
compression level option '-9' and the option '-o FILE' to write the
compressed output to FILE. tarlz meets these requirements, and
therefore can be used to recompress POSIX tar archives by using a
command like 'zupdate --lz='tarlz -9 -z --no-solid' archive.tar.gz'.
*Note tarlz manual: (tarlz)Top.
File: zutils.info, Node: Problems, Next: Concept index, Prev: Zupdate, Up: Top
10 Reporting bugs
*****************
There are probably bugs in zutils. There are certainly errors and omissions
in this manual. If you report them, they will get fixed. If you don't, no
one will ever know about them and they will remain unfixed for all
eternity, if not longer.
If you find a bug in zutils, please send electronic mail to
<zutils-bug@nongnu.org>. Include the version number, which you can find by
running 'zupdate --version'.
File: zutils.info, Node: Concept index, Prev: Problems, Up: Top
Concept index
*************
[index ]
* Menu:
* bugs: Problems. (line 6)
* common options: Common options. (line 6)
* getting help: Problems. (line 6)
* introduction: Introduction. (line 6)
* zcat: Zcat. (line 6)
* zcmp: Zcmp. (line 6)
* zdiff: Zdiff. (line 6)
* zgrep: Zgrep. (line 6)
* ztest: Ztest. (line 6)
* zupdate: Zupdate. (line 6)
* zutils.conf: Configuration. (line 6)
Tag Table:
Node: Top217
Node: Introduction1152
Ref: search-order2304
Node: Common options3461
Ref: version4027
Ref: compressor-requirements5978
Node: Configuration7367
Node: Zcat8400
Node: Zcmp11139
Node: Zdiff14407
Node: Zgrep17490
Node: Ztest23637
Node: Zupdate26430
Ref: lz-compressor31838
Node: Problems32539
Node: Concept index33073
End Tag Table
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