Extracting tar, gzip, bzip2, z

Sometimes there is a need to extract some files on Linux console. Below y'll find list most common method for that. See also Packaging files to archicves with linux

tar

Tar archives are the most common way of distributing bundles of files under Linux or UNIX. The .tar file represent a bundle of files packaged with GNU tar program. To extract such files use:

tar xf somearchive.tar  
tar xvf somearchive.tar  
  • Provide option f if you want to extract content of files. Tar (from tape archive) has long history and was intended to work with tape media, so when you omit f tar tries to work with tape device.
  • v- stands for verbose. List all the files by extract process.
  • x- Extract command.

Before extracting you may be interested in Looking inside of tar. Do it with option "t" :

tar tf archive.tar  

gzip

Often tar-files are also compressed. One of the most known compressed formats is GNU Zip (gzip). Tar bundeld and zipped file would normally have extension .tar.gz. To extract such files you can use tar with "z" option, which causes tar to automatically invoke gzip. Modify abow example and you get able to extract tar.gz files too.

tar -xzf somearchive.tar.gz  

In old tar version the "z" option is may be not available. In that case just use mighty UNIX pipes:

gzip -dc target.tar.gz | tar xf -  

Gzip options explained

  • d - Do decompress!
  • c - write to console (So that tar can take it from there )
  • t - Tests file integrity
  • l - lists archive file information

bzip2

Sometimes you can find files ending with .tar.bz2. That are files packaged with bzip (a block-sorting file compressor). Use it like gzip

tar xjvf filename.tar.bz2  

Options d,c,t have the same meaning.

zcat

Some files have .tar.Z endings. They can be extracted by

zcat somearchive.tar.Z | tar xf -