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authorDaniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>2019-01-31 23:06:40 +0000
committerDaniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>2019-01-31 23:06:40 +0000
commit01348f04bc92f307f5f61dd9f9f4c8d7746336f5 (patch)
tree90ea2c52891816e8d5c095fd79f599e23659e092 /doc
parentAdding upstream version 0.9. (diff)
downloadtarlz-01348f04bc92f307f5f61dd9f9f4c8d7746336f5.tar.xz
tarlz-01348f04bc92f307f5f61dd9f9f4c8d7746336f5.zip
Adding upstream version 0.10.upstream/0.10
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r--doc/tarlz.18
-rw-r--r--doc/tarlz.info79
-rw-r--r--doc/tarlz.texi82
3 files changed, 116 insertions, 53 deletions
diff --git a/doc/tarlz.1 b/doc/tarlz.1
index b83a7e6..9450c57 100644
--- a/doc/tarlz.1
+++ b/doc/tarlz.1
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
.\" DO NOT MODIFY THIS FILE! It was generated by help2man 1.46.1.
-.TH TARLZ "1" "January 2019" "tarlz 0.9" "User Commands"
+.TH TARLZ "1" "January 2019" "tarlz 0.10" "User Commands"
.SH NAME
tarlz \- creates tar archives with multimember lzip compression
.SH SYNOPSIS
@@ -33,6 +33,9 @@ output version information and exit
\fB\-A\fR, \fB\-\-concatenate\fR
append tar.lz archives to the end of an archive
.TP
+\fB\-B\fR, \fB\-\-data\-size=\fR<bytes>
+set target size of input data blocks [2x8=16 MiB]
+.TP
\fB\-c\fR, \fB\-\-create\fR
create a new archive
.TP
@@ -66,6 +69,9 @@ set compression level [default 6]
\fB\-\-asolid\fR
create solidly compressed appendable archive
.TP
+\fB\-\-bsolid\fR
+create per\-data\-block compressed archive
+.TP
\fB\-\-dsolid\fR
create per\-directory compressed archive
.TP
diff --git a/doc/tarlz.info b/doc/tarlz.info
index 7f90766..bf1e1f5 100644
--- a/doc/tarlz.info
+++ b/doc/tarlz.info
@@ -11,7 +11,7 @@ File: tarlz.info, Node: Top, Next: Introduction, Up: (dir)
Tarlz Manual
************
-This manual is for Tarlz (version 0.9, 22 January 2019).
+This manual is for Tarlz (version 0.10, 31 January 2019).
* Menu:
@@ -120,6 +120,13 @@ archive 'foo'.
the archive if no FILES have been specified. Tarlz can't
concatenate uncompressed tar archives.
+'-B BYTES'
+'--data-size=BYTES'
+ Set target size of input data blocks for the '--bsolid' option.
+ Valid values range from 8 KiB to 1 GiB. Default value is two times
+ the dictionary size, except for option '-0' where it defaults to
+ 1 MiB.
+
'-c'
'--create'
Create a new archive from FILES.
@@ -190,6 +197,18 @@ archive 'foo'.
members it creates, reducing the amount of memory required for
decompression.
+ Level Dictionary size Match length limit
+ -0 64 KiB 16 bytes
+ -1 1 MiB 5 bytes
+ -2 1.5 MiB 6 bytes
+ -3 2 MiB 8 bytes
+ -4 3 MiB 12 bytes
+ -5 4 MiB 20 bytes
+ -6 8 MiB 36 bytes
+ -7 16 MiB 68 bytes
+ -8 24 MiB 132 bytes
+ -9 32 MiB 273 bytes
+
'--asolid'
When creating or appending to a compressed archive, use appendable
solid compression. All the files being added to the archive are
@@ -197,6 +216,15 @@ archive 'foo'.
are compressed into a separate lzip member. This creates a solidly
compressed appendable archive.
+'--bsolid'
+ When creating or appending to a compressed archive, compress tar
+ members together in a lzip member until they approximate a target
+ uncompressed size. The size can't be exact because each solidly
+ compressed data block must contain an integer number of tar
+ members. This option improves compression efficiency for archives
+ with lots of small files. *Note --data-size::, to set the target
+ block size.
+
'--dsolid'
When creating or appending to a compressed archive, use solid
compression for each directory especified in the command line. The
@@ -560,13 +588,13 @@ old tar programs from extracting the extended records as a file in the
wrong place. Tarlz also sets to zero those fields of the ustar header
overridden by extended records.
- If the extended header is needed because of a file size larger than
-8 GiB, the size field will be unable to contain the full size of the
-file. Therefore the file may be partially extracted, and the tool will
-issue a spurious warning about a corrupt header at the point where it
-thinks the file ends. Setting to zero the overridden size in the ustar
-header at least prevents the partial extraction and makes obvious that
-the file has been truncated.
+ If an extended header is required for any reason (for example a file
+size larger than 8 GiB or a link name longer than 100 bytes), tarlz
+moves the filename also to the extended header to prevent an ustar tool
+from trying to extract the file or link. This also makes easier during
+parallel extraction or listing the detection of a tar member split
+between two lzip members at the boundary between the extended header
+and the ustar header.
4.3 As simple as possible (but not simpler)
@@ -626,10 +654,10 @@ to single-threaded mode and continues decoding the archive. Currently
only the '--list' option is able to do multi-threaded decoding.
If the files in the archive are large, multi-threaded '--list' on a
-regular tar.lz archive can be hundreds of times faster than sequential
-'--list' because, in addition to using several processors, it only
-needs to decompress part of each lzip member. See the following example
-listing the Silesia corpus on a dual core machine:
+regular (seekable) tar.lz archive can be hundreds of times faster than
+sequential '--list' because, in addition to using several processors,
+it only needs to decompress part of each lzip member. See the following
+example listing the Silesia corpus on a dual core machine:
tarlz -9 -cf silesia.tar.lz silesia
time lzip -cd silesia.tar.lz | tar -tf - (5.032s)
@@ -690,9 +718,9 @@ Example 7: Extract files 'a' and 'c' from archive 'archive.tar.lz'.
Example 8: Copy the contents of directory 'sourcedir' to the directory
-'targetdir'.
+'destdir'.
- tarlz -C sourcedir -c . | tarlz -C targetdir -x
+ tarlz -C sourcedir -c . | tarlz -C destdir -x

File: tarlz.info, Node: Problems, Next: Concept index, Prev: Examples, Up: Top
@@ -734,17 +762,18 @@ Concept index

Tag Table:
Node: Top223
-Node: Introduction1012
-Node: Invoking tarlz3124
-Node: File format10384
-Ref: key_crc3215169
-Node: Amendments to pax format20586
-Ref: crc3221110
-Ref: flawed-compat22135
-Node: Multi-threaded tar24508
-Node: Examples27012
-Node: Problems28682
-Node: Concept index29208
+Node: Introduction1013
+Node: Invoking tarlz3125
+Ref: --data-size4717
+Node: File format11536
+Ref: key_crc3216321
+Node: Amendments to pax format21738
+Ref: crc3222262
+Ref: flawed-compat23287
+Node: Multi-threaded tar25649
+Node: Examples28164
+Node: Problems29830
+Node: Concept index30356

End Tag Table
diff --git a/doc/tarlz.texi b/doc/tarlz.texi
index d9bdc14..2ab37fb 100644
--- a/doc/tarlz.texi
+++ b/doc/tarlz.texi
@@ -6,8 +6,8 @@
@finalout
@c %**end of header
-@set UPDATED 22 January 2019
-@set VERSION 0.9
+@set UPDATED 31 January 2019
+@set VERSION 0.10
@dircategory Data Compression
@direntry
@@ -89,7 +89,7 @@ member) just like to an uncompressed tar archive.
It is a safe posix-style backup format. In case of corruption,
tarlz can extract all the undamaged members from the tar.lz
archive, skipping over the damaged members, just like the standard
-(uncompressed) tar. Moreover, the option @code{--keep-damaged} can be
+(uncompressed) tar. Moreover, the option @samp{--keep-damaged} can be
used to recover as much data as possible from each damaged member,
and lziprecover can be used to recover some of the damaged members.
@@ -154,6 +154,13 @@ end-of-file blocks are removed as each new archive is concatenated. Exit
with status 0 without modifying the archive if no @var{files} have been
specified. Tarlz can't concatenate uncompressed tar archives.
+@anchor{--data-size}
+@item -B @var{bytes}
+@itemx --data-size=@var{bytes}
+Set target size of input data blocks for the @samp{--bsolid} option. Valid
+values range from @w{8 KiB} to @w{1 GiB}. Default value is two times the
+dictionary size, except for option @samp{-0} where it defaults to @w{1 MiB}.
+
@item -c
@itemx --create
Create a new archive from @var{files}.
@@ -161,13 +168,13 @@ Create a new archive from @var{files}.
@item -C @var{dir}
@itemx --directory=@var{dir}
Change to directory @var{dir}. When creating or appending, the position
-of each @code{-C} option in the command line is significant; it will
+of each @samp{-C} option in the command line is significant; it will
change the current working directory for the following @var{files} until
-a new @code{-C} option appears in the command line. When extracting, all
-the @code{-C} options are executed in sequence before starting the
-extraction. Listing ignores any @code{-C} options specified. @var{dir}
+a new @samp{-C} option appears in the command line. When extracting, all
+the @samp{-C} options are executed in sequence before starting the
+extraction. Listing ignores any @samp{-C} options specified. @var{dir}
is relative to the then current working directory, perhaps changed by a
-previous @code{-C} option.
+previous @samp{-C} option.
@item -f @var{archive}
@itemx --file=@var{archive}
@@ -222,6 +229,20 @@ Set the compression level. The default compression level is @samp{-6}.
Like lzip, tarlz also minimizes the dictionary size of the lzip members
it creates, reducing the amount of memory required for decompression.
+@multitable {Level} {Dictionary size} {Match length limit}
+@item Level @tab Dictionary size @tab Match length limit
+@item -0 @tab 64 KiB @tab 16 bytes
+@item -1 @tab 1 MiB @tab 5 bytes
+@item -2 @tab 1.5 MiB @tab 6 bytes
+@item -3 @tab 2 MiB @tab 8 bytes
+@item -4 @tab 3 MiB @tab 12 bytes
+@item -5 @tab 4 MiB @tab 20 bytes
+@item -6 @tab 8 MiB @tab 36 bytes
+@item -7 @tab 16 MiB @tab 68 bytes
+@item -8 @tab 24 MiB @tab 132 bytes
+@item -9 @tab 32 MiB @tab 273 bytes
+@end multitable
+
@item --asolid
When creating or appending to a compressed archive, use appendable solid
compression. All the files being added to the archive are compressed
@@ -229,6 +250,14 @@ into a single lzip member, but the end-of-file blocks are compressed
into a separate lzip member. This creates a solidly compressed
appendable archive.
+@item --bsolid
+When creating or appending to a compressed archive, compress tar members
+together in a lzip member until they approximate a target uncompressed size.
+The size can't be exact because each solidly compressed data block must
+contain an integer number of tar members. This option improves compression
+efficiency for archives with lots of small files. @xref{--data-size}, to set
+the target block size.
+
@item --dsolid
When creating or appending to a compressed archive, use solid
compression for each directory especified in the command line. The
@@ -252,7 +281,7 @@ resulting archive is not appendable. No more files can be later appended
to the archive.
@item --anonymous
-Equivalent to @code{--owner=root --group=root}.
+Equivalent to @samp{--owner=root --group=root}.
@item --owner=@var{owner}
When creating or appending, use @var{owner} for files added to the
@@ -287,7 +316,7 @@ keyword appearing in the same block of extended records.
@end ignore
@item --uncompressed
-With @code{--create}, don't compress the created tar archive. Create an
+With @samp{--create}, don't compress the created tar archive. Create an
uncompressed tar archive instead.
@end table
@@ -350,7 +379,7 @@ Zero or more blocks that contain the contents of the file.
@end itemize
Each tar member must be contiguously stored in a lzip member for the
-parallel decoding operations like @code{--list} to work. If any tar member
+parallel decoding operations like @samp{--list} to work. If any tar member
is split over two or more lzip members, the archive must be decoded
sequentially. @xref{Multi-threaded tar}.
@@ -381,7 +410,7 @@ tar.lz
@end verbatim
@ignore
-When @code{--permissive} is used, the following violations of the
+When @samp{--permissive} is used, the following violations of the
archive format are allowed:@*
If several extended headers precede an ustar header, only the last
extended header takes effect. The other extended headers are ignored.
@@ -623,13 +652,12 @@ programs from extracting the extended records as a file in the wrong place.
Tarlz also sets to zero those fields of the ustar header overridden by
extended records.
-If the extended header is needed because of a file size larger than
-@w{8 GiB}, the size field will be unable to contain the full size of the
-file. Therefore the file may be partially extracted, and the tool will issue
-a spurious warning about a corrupt header at the point where it thinks the
-file ends. Setting to zero the overridden size in the ustar header at least
-prevents the partial extraction and makes obvious that the file has been
-truncated.
+If an extended header is required for any reason (for example a file size
+larger than @w{8 GiB} or a link name longer than 100 bytes), tarlz moves the
+filename also to the extended header to prevent an ustar tool from trying to
+extract the file or link. This also makes easier during parallel extraction
+or listing the detection of a tar member split between two lzip members at
+the boundary between the extended header and the ustar header.
@sp 1
@section As simple as possible (but not simpler)
@@ -679,14 +707,14 @@ decoding it safely in parallel.
Tarlz is able to automatically decode aligned and unaligned multimember
tar.lz archives, keeping backwards compatibility. If tarlz finds a member
misalignment during multi-threaded decoding, it switches to single-threaded
-mode and continues decoding the archive. Currently only the @code{--list}
+mode and continues decoding the archive. Currently only the @samp{--list}
option is able to do multi-threaded decoding.
-If the files in the archive are large, multi-threaded @code{--list} on a
-regular tar.lz archive can be hundreds of times faster than sequential
-@code{--list} because, in addition to using several processors, it only
-needs to decompress part of each lzip member. See the following example
-listing the Silesia corpus on a dual core machine:
+If the files in the archive are large, multi-threaded @samp{--list} on a
+regular (seekable) tar.lz archive can be hundreds of times faster than
+sequential @samp{--list} because, in addition to using several processors,
+it only needs to decompress part of each lzip member. See the following
+example listing the Silesia corpus on a dual core machine:
@example
tarlz -9 -cf silesia.tar.lz silesia
@@ -772,10 +800,10 @@ tarlz -xf archive.tar.lz a c
@sp 1
@noindent
Example 8: Copy the contents of directory @samp{sourcedir} to the
-directory @samp{targetdir}.
+directory @samp{destdir}.
@example
-tarlz -C sourcedir -c . | tarlz -C targetdir -x
+tarlz -C sourcedir -c . | tarlz -C destdir -x
@end example