Virgin import of GNU cpio v2.4.2.

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\input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*-
@c %**start of header
@setfilename cpio.info
@settitle cpio
@setchapternewpage off
@set VERSION GNU cpio 2.4
@set RELEASEDATE November 1995
@c %**end of header
@ifinfo
@format
START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
* cpio: (cpio). Making tape (or disk) archives.
END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
@end format
@end ifinfo
@ifinfo
This file documents @value{VERSION}.
Copyright (C) 1995 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
are preserved on all copies.
@ignore
Permission is granted to process this file through TeX and print the
results, provided the printed document carries copying permission
notice identical to this one except for the removal of this paragraph
@end ignore
Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire
resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission
notice identical to this one.
Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual
into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions,
except that this permission notice may be stated in a translation approved
by the Foundation.
@end ifinfo
@titlepage
@title GNU CPIO
@subtitle @value{VERSION} @value{RELEASEDATE}
@author by Robert Carleton
@c copyright page
@page
@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
Copyright @copyright{} 1995 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
@sp 2
This is the first edition of the GNU cpio documentation,@*
and is consistent with @value{VERSION}.@*
@sp 2
Published by the Free Software Foundation @*
59 Temple Place - Suite 330, @*
Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA @*
Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
are preserved on all copies.
Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the entire
resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a permission
notice identical to this one.
Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual
into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions,
except that this permission notice may be stated in a translation
approved by the Free Software Foundation.
@end titlepage
@ifinfo
@node Top, Introduction, (dir), (dir)
@comment node-name, next, previous, up
@top
GNU cpio is a tool for creating and extracting archives, or copying
files from one place to another. It handles a number of cpio formats as
well as reading and writing tar files. This is the first edition of the
GNU cpio documentation and is consistant with @value{VERSION}.
@menu
* Introduction::
* Tutorial:: Getting started.
* Invoking `cpio':: How to invoke `cpio'.
* Media:: Using tapes and other archive media.
* Concept Index:: Concept index.
--- The Detailed Node Listing ---
Invoking cpio
* Copy-out mode::
* Copy-in mode::
* Copy-pass mode::
* Options::
@end menu
@end ifinfo
@node Introduction, Tutorial, Top, Top
@comment node-name, next, previous, up
@chapter Introduction
GNU cpio copies files into or out of a cpio or tar archive, The archive
can be another file on the disk, a magnetic tape, or a pipe.
GNU cpio supports the following archive formats: binary, old ASCII, new
ASCII, crc, HPUX binary, HPUX old ASCII, old tar, and POSIX.1 tar. The
tar format is provided for compatability with the tar program. By
default, cpio creates binary format archives, for compatibility with
older cpio programs. When extracting from archives, cpio automatically
recognizes which kind of archive it is reading and can read archives
created on machines with a different byte-order.
@node Tutorial, Invoking `cpio', Introduction, Top
@comment node-name, next, previous, up
@chapter Tutorial
@cindex creating a cpio archive
@cindex extracting a cpio archive
@cindex copying directory structures
@cindex passing directory structures
GNU cpio performs three primary functions. Copying files to an
archive, Extracting files from an archive, and passing files to another
directory tree. An archive can be a file on disk, one or more floppy
disks, or one or more tapes.
When creating an archive, cpio takes the list of files to be processed
from the standard input, and then sends the archive to the standard
output, or to the device defined by the @samp{-F} option.
@xref{Copy-out mode}. Usually find or ls is used to provide this list
to the standard input. In the following example you can see the
possibilities for archiving the contents of a single directory.
@example
@cartouche
% ls | cpio -ov > directory.cpio
@end cartouche
@end example
The @samp{-o} option creates the archive, and the @samp{-v} option
prints the names of the files archived as they are added. Notice that
the options can be put together after a single @samp{-} or can be placed
separately on the command line. The @samp{>} redirects the cpio output
to the file @samp{directory.cpio}.
If you wanted to archive an entire directory tree, the find command can
provide the file list to cpio:
@example
@cartouche
% find . -print -depth | cpio -ov > tree.cpio
@end cartouche
@end example
This will take all the files in the current directory, the directories
below and place them in the archive tree.cpio. Again the @samp{-o}
creates an archive, and the @samp{-v} option shows you the name of the
files as they are archived. @xref{Copy-out mode}. Using the `.' in the
find statement will give you more flexibility when doing restores, as it
will save file names with a relative path vice a hard wired, absolute
path. The @samp{-depth} option forces @samp{find} to print of the
entries in a directory before printing the directory itself. This
limits the effects of restrictive directory permissions by printing the
directory entries in a directory before the directory name itself.
Extracting an archive requires a bit more thought because cpio will not
create directories by default. Another characteristic, is it will not
overwrite existing files unless you tell it to.
@example
@cartouche
% cpio -iv < directory.cpio
@end cartouche
@end example
This will retrieve the files archived in the file directory.cpio and
place them in the present directory. The @samp{-i} option extracts the
archive and the @samp{-v} shows the file names as they are extracted.
If you are dealing with an archived directory tree, you need to use the
@samp{-d} option to create directories as necessary, something like:
@example
@cartouche
% cpio -idv < tree.cpio
@end cartouche
@end example
This will take the contents of the archive tree.cpio and extract it to
the current directory. If you try to extract the files on top of files
of the same name that already exist (and have the same or later
modification time) cpio will not extract the file unless told to do so
by the -u option. @xref{Copy-in mode}.
In copy-pass mode, cpio copies files from one directory tree to another,
combining the copy-out and copy-in steps without actually using an
archive. It reads the list of files to copy from the standard input;
the directory into which it will copy them is given as a non-option
argument. @xref{Copy-pass mode}.
@example
@cartouche
% find . -depth -print0 | cpio --null -pvd new-dir
@end cartouche
@end example
The example shows copying the files of the present directory, and
sub-directories to a new directory called new-dir. Some new options are
the @samp{-print0} available with GNU find, combined with the
@samp{--null} option of cpio. These two options act together to send
file names between find and cpio, even if special characters are
embedded in the file names. Another is @samp{-p}, which tells cpio to
pass the files it finds to the directory @samp{new-dir}.
@node Invoking `cpio', Media, Tutorial, Top
@comment node-name, next, previous, up
@chapter Invoking cpio
@cindex invoking cpio
@cindex command line options
@menu
* Copy-out mode::
* Copy-in mode::
* Copy-pass mode::
* Options::
@end menu
@node Copy-out mode, Copy-in mode, Invoking `cpio', Invoking `cpio'
@comment node-name, next, previous, up
@section Copy-out mode
In copy-out mode, cpio copies files into an archive. It reads a list
of filenames, one per line, on the standard input, and writes the
archive onto the standard output. A typical way to generate the list
of filenames is with the find command; you should give find the -depth
option to minimize problems with permissions on directories that are
unreadable.
@xref{Options}.
@example
cpio @{-o|--create@} [-0acvABLV] [-C bytes] [-H format]
[-M message] [-O [[user@@]host:]archive] [-F [[user@@]host:]archive]
[--file=[[user@@]host:]archive] [--format=format] [--sparse]
[--message=message][--null] [--reset-access-time] [--verbose]
[--dot] [--append] [--block-size=blocks] [--dereference]
[--io-size=bytes] [--help] [--version] < name-list [> archive]
@end example
@node Copy-in mode, Copy-pass mode, Copy-out mode, Invoking `cpio'
@comment node-name, next, previous, up
@section Copy-in mode
In copy-in mode, cpio copies files out of an archive or lists the
archive contents. It reads the archive from the standard input. Any
non-option command line arguments are shell globbing patterns; only
files in the archive whose names match one or more of those patterns are
copied from the archive. Unlike in the shell, an initial `.' in a
filename does match a wildcard at the start of a pattern, and a `/' in a
filename can match wildcards. If no patterns are given, all files are
extracted. @xref{Options}.
@example
cpio @{-i|--extract@} [-bcdfmnrtsuvBSV] [-C bytes] [-E file]
[-H format] [-M message] [-R [user][:.][group]]
[-I [[user@@]host:]archive] [-F [[user@@]host:]archive]
[--file=[[user@@]host:]archive] [--make-directories]
[--nonmatching] [--preserve-modification-time]
[--numeric-uid-gid] [--rename] [--list] [--swap-bytes] [--swap]
[--dot] [--unconditional] [--verbose] [--block-size=blocks]
[--swap-halfwords] [--io-size=bytes] [--pattern-file=file]
[--format=format] [--owner=[user][:.][group]]
[--no- preserve-owner] [--message=message] [--help] [--version]
[-no-abosolute-filenames] [-only-verify-crc] [-quiet]
[pattern...] [< archive]
@end example
@node Copy-pass mode, Options, Copy-in mode, Invoking `cpio'
@comment node-name, next, previous, up
@section Copy-pass mode
In copy-pass mode, cpio copies files from one directory tree to
another, combining the copy-out and copy-in steps without actually
using an archive. It reads the list of files to copy from the
standard input; the directory into which it will copy them is given as
a non-option argument.
@xref{Options}.
@example
cpio @{-p|--pass-through@} [-0adlmuvLV] [-R [user][:.][group]]
[--null] [--reset-access-time] [--make-directories] [--link]
[--preserve-modification-time] [--unconditional] [--verbose]
[--dot] [--dereference] [--owner=[user][:.][group]] [--sparse]
[--no-preserve-owner] [--help] [--version] destination-directory
< name-list
@end example
@node Options, , Copy-pass mode, Invoking `cpio'
@comment node-name, next, previous, up
@section Options
@table @code
@item -0, --null
Read a list of filenames terminated by a null character, instead of a
newline, so that files whose names contain newlines can be archived.
GNU find is one way to produce a list of null-terminated filenames.
This option may be used in copy-out and copy-pass modes.
@item -a, --reset-access-time
Reset the access times of files after reading them, so
that it does not look like they have just been read.
@item -A, --append
Append to an existing archive. Only works in copy-out
mode. The archive must be a disk file specified with
the -O or -F (--file) option.
@item -b, --swap
Swap both halfwords of words and bytes of halfwords in the data.
Equivalent to -sS. This option may be used in copy-in mode. Use this
option to convert 32-bit integers between big-endian and little-endian
machines.
@item -B
Set the I/O block size to 5120 bytes. Initially the
block size is 512 bytes.
@item --block-size=BLOCK-SIZE
Set the I/O block size to BLOCK-SIZE * 512 bytes.
@item -c
Use the old portable (ASCII) archive format.
@item -C IO-SIZE, --io-size=IO-SIZE
Set the I/O block size to IO-SIZE bytes.
@item -d, --make-directories
Create leading directories where needed.
@item -E FILE, --pattern-file=FILE
Read additional patterns specifying filenames to extract or list from
FILE. The lines of FILE are treated as if they had been non-option
arguments to cpio. This option is used in copy-in mode,
@item -f, --nonmatching
Only copy files that do not match any of the given
patterns.
@item -F, --file=archive
Archive filename to use instead of standard input or output. To use a
tape drive on another machine as the archive, use a filename that starts
with `HOSTNAME:'. The hostname can be preceded by a username and an
`@@' to access the remote tape drive as that user, if you have
permission to do so (typically an entry in that user's `~/.rhosts'
file).
@item --force-local
With -F, -I, or -O, take the archive file name to be a
local file even if it contains a colon, which would
ordinarily indicate a remote host name.
@item -H FORMAT, --format=FORMAT
Use archive format FORMAT. The valid formats are listed below; the same
names are also recognized in all-caps. The default in copy-in mode is
to automatically detect the archive format, and in copy-out mode is
@samp{bin}.
@table @samp
@item bin
The obsolete binary format.
@item odc
The old (POSIX.1) portable format.
@item newc
The new (SVR4) portable format, which supports file systems having more
than 65536 i-nodes.
@item crc
The new (SVR4) portable format with a checksum added.
@item tar
The old tar format.
@item ustar
The POSIX.1 tar format. Also recognizes GNU tar archives, which are
similar but not identical.
@item hpbin
The obsolete binary format used by HPUX's cpio (which stores device
files differently).
@item hpodc
The portable format used by HPUX's cpio (which stores device files
differently).
@end table
@item -i, --extract
Run in copy-in mode.
@xref{Copy-in mode}.
@item -I archive
Archive filename to use instead of standard input. To use a tape drive
on another machine as the archive, use a filename that starts with
`HOSTNAME:'. The hostname can be preceded by a username and an `@@' to
access the remote tape drive as that user, if you have permission to do
so (typically an entry in that user's `~/.rhosts' file).
@item -k
Ignored; for compatibility with other versions of cpio.
@item -l, --link
Link files instead of copying them, when possible.
@item -L, --dereference
Copy the file that a symbolic link points to, rather than the symbolic
link itself.
@item -m, --preserve-modification-time
Retain previous file modification times when creating files.
@item -M MESSAGE, --message=MESSAGE
Print MESSAGE when the end of a volume of the backup media (such as a
tape or a floppy disk) is reached, to prompt the user to insert a new
volume. If MESSAGE contains the string "%d", it is replaced by the
current volume number (starting at 1).
@item -n, --numeric-uid-gid
Show numeric UID and GID instead of translating them into names when using the
@samp{--verbose option}.
@item --no-absolute-filenames
Create all files relative to the current directory in copy-in mode, even
if they have an absolute file name in the archive.
@item --no-preserve-owner
Do not change the ownership of the files; leave them owned by the user
extracting them. This is the default for non-root users, so that users
on System V don't inadvertantly give away files. This option can be
used in copy-in mode and copy-pass mode
@item -o, --create
Run in copy-out mode.
@xref{Copy-out mode}.
@item -O archive
Archive filename to use instead of standard output. To use a tape drive
on another machine as the archive, use a filename that starts with
`HOSTNAME:'. The hostname can be preceded by a username and an `@@' to
access the remote tape drive as that user, if you have permission to do
so (typically an entry in that user's `~/.rhosts' file).
@item --only-verify-crc
Verify the CRC's of each file in the archive, when reading a CRC format
archive. Don't actually extract the files.
@item -p, --pass-through
Run in copy-pass mode.
@xref{Copy-pass mode}.
@item --quiet
Do not print the number of blocks copied.
@item -r, --rename
Interactively rename files.
@item -R [user][:.][group], --owner [user][:.][group]
Set the ownership of all files created to the specified user and/or
group in copy-out and copy-pass modes. Either the user, the group, or
both, must be present. If the group is omitted but the ":" or "."
separator is given, use the given user's login group. Only the
super-user can change files' ownership.
@item -s, --swap-bytes
Swap the bytes of each halfword (pair of bytes) in the files.This option
can be used in copy-in mode.
@item -S, --swap-halfwords
Swap the halfwords of each word (4 bytes) in the files. This option may
be used in copy-in mode.
@item --sparse
Write files with large blocks of zeros as sparse files. This option is
used in copy-out and copy-pass modes.
@item -t, --list
Print a table of contents of the input.
@item -u, --unconditional
Replace all files, without asking whether to replace
existing newer files with older files.
@item -v, --verbose
List the files processed, or with @samp{-t}, give an @samp{ls -l} style
table of contents listing. In a verbose table of contents of a ustar
archive, user and group names in the archive that do not exist on the
local system are replaced by the names that correspond locally to the
numeric UID and GID stored in the archive.
@item -V --dot
Print a @kbd{.} for each file processed.
@item --version
Print the cpio program version number and exit.
@end table
@node Media, Concept Index, Invoking `cpio', Top
@comment node-name, next, previous, up
@chapter Magnetic Media
@cindex magnetic media
Archives are usually written on removable media--tape cartridges, mag
tapes, or floppy disks.
The amount of data a tape or disk holds depends not only on its size,
but also on how it is formatted. A 2400 foot long reel of mag tape
holds 40 megabytes of data when formated at 1600 bits per inch. The
physically smaller EXABYTE tape cartridge holds 2.3 gigabytes.
Magnetic media are re-usable--once the archive on a tape is no longer
needed, the archive can be erased and the tape or disk used over. Media
quality does deteriorate with use, however. Most tapes or disks should
be disgarded when they begin to produce data errors.
Magnetic media are written and erased using magnetic fields, and should
be protected from such fields to avoid damage to stored data. Sticking
a floppy disk to a filing cabinet using a magnet is probably not a good
idea.
@node Concept Index, , Media, Top
@comment node-name, next, previous, up
@unnumbered Concept Index
@printindex cp
@contents
@bye