Difference between revisions of "How to unpack a tar file in Windows"
(Added an introduction, description of the tar command and a description of the 7-Zip GUI) |
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Instead of using 7-Zip on the command line, you can use the file manager and click on a <tt>.tar</tt>, <tt>.tar.gz</tt>, or<tt>.tar.bz2</tt> file; 7-Zip will automatically start. | Instead of using 7-Zip on the command line, you can use the file manager and click on a <tt>.tar</tt>, <tt>.tar.gz</tt>, or<tt>.tar.bz2</tt> file; 7-Zip will automatically start. | ||
+ | |||
+ | = TarTool = | ||
+ | |||
+ | A simple windows command line tool | ||
+ | |||
+ | #to decompress and untar .tar.gz (.tgz) files or | ||
+ | #just untar .tar files | ||
+ | |||
+ | >TarTool.exe | ||
+ | |||
+ | Usage : | ||
+ | |||
+ | >TarTool sourceFile destinationDirectory | ||
+ | |||
+ | >TarTool D:\sample.tar.gz ./ | ||
+ | |||
+ | >TarTool sample.tgz temp | ||
+ | |||
+ | >TarTool -x sample.tar temp | ||
+ | |||
+ | More details are on this post -- http://blog.rajasekharan.com/2009/01/16/tartool-windows-tar-gzip-tgz-extraction-tool/ |
Revision as of 10:19, 30 March 2010
Contents
Introduction
Source code is often packed for download as a TAR (Tape ARchive) file, that is a standard format in the Unix/Linux world. These files have a .tar extension; they can also be compressed, the extension is .tar.gz or .tar.bz2 in these cases. There are several ways to unpack these files.
tar
If you have MinGW/MSYS or Cygwin installed, you can use the tar command to unpack such files:
tar xvf <.tar file> tar xzvf <.tar.gz file> tar xjvf <.tar.bz2 file>
See the tar man page for more information.
7-Zip
Another option is to install 7-Zip, which has a nice graphical user interface. 7-Zip can also be used to unpack many other formats and to create tar files (amongst others).
- Download and install 7-Zip from 7-zip.org. If you do not want to use 7-Zip as a command line tool, skip the next steps.
- Add the directory you installed 7-Zip into to your path (Start -> Control Panel -> System -> Advanced -> Environment Variables).
- Move the tar file to the directory you wish to unpack into (usually the tar file will put everything into a directory inside this directory).
- Open a command prompt, and cd to the directory.
- If the tar file is compressed, type 7z x filename.tar.gz at the command prompt (where filename.tar.gz is the name of the compressed tar file). This results in a tar file called filename.tar
- Type 7z x filename.tar at the command prompt (where filename.tar is the name of the tar file).
Instead of using 7-Zip on the command line, you can use the file manager and click on a .tar, .tar.gz, or.tar.bz2 file; 7-Zip will automatically start.
TarTool
A simple windows command line tool
- to decompress and untar .tar.gz (.tgz) files or
- just untar .tar files
>TarTool.exe
Usage :
>TarTool sourceFile destinationDirectory
>TarTool D:\sample.tar.gz ./
>TarTool sample.tgz temp
>TarTool -x sample.tar temp
More details are on this post -- http://blog.rajasekharan.com/2009/01/16/tartool-windows-tar-gzip-tgz-extraction-tool/