This distribution also includes rmt, the remote tape server (which
must reside in /etc). The mt program is in the GNU cpio distribution.
-To compile tar (and rmt, if your system has the needed features) on
-Unix-like systems:
-
-1. Type `./configure'. This shell script attempts to guess correct
-values for various system-dependent variables used during compilation,
-and creates the file `Makefile'. This takes a couple of minutes.
-
-If you want to compile in a different directory from the one
-containing the source code, `cd' to that directory and run `configure'
-with the option `+srcdir=DIR', where DIR is the directory that
-contains the source code. The object files and executables will be
-put in the current directory. This option only works with versions of
-`make' that support the VPATH variable. `configure' ignores any other
-arguments you give it.
-
-If your system requires unusual options for compilation or linking
-that `configure' doesn't know about, you can give `configure' initial
-values for variables by setting them in the environment; in
-Bourne-compatible shells, you can do that on the command line like
-this:
-$ CC='gcc -traditional' LIBS=-lposix ./configure
-
-2. If you want to change the directories where the programs will be
-installed, or the optimization options, edit `Makefile' and change
-those values. If you have an unusual system that needs special
-compilation options that `configure' doesn't know about, and you
-didn't pass them in the environment when running `configure', you
-should add them to `Makefile' now. Alternately, teach `configure' how
-to figure out that it is being run on a system where they are needed,
-and mail the diffs to the address listed at the top of this file so we
-can include them in the next release.
-
-3. Type `make'.
-
-4. If your system needs to link with -lPW to get alloca, but has
-rename in the C library (so WANT_RENAME is not used), -lPW might give
-you an incorrect version of rename. On HP-UX this manifests itself as
-an undefined data symbol called "Error" when linking tar. If this
-happens, use `ar x' to extract alloca.o from libPW.a and `ar rc' to
-put it in a library liballoca.a, and put that in LIBS instead of -lPW.
-This problem does not occur when using gcc, which has alloca built in.
-
-5. If the programs compile successfully, type `make install' to
-install them.
-
-6. After you have installed the programs, you can remove the binaries
-from the source directory by typing `make clean'. Type `make
-distclean' if you also want to remove `Makefile', for instance if you
-are going to recompile tar next on another type of machine.
+See the file INSTALL for compilation and installation instructions for Unix.
makefile.pc is a makefile for Turbo C 2.0 on MS-DOS.
User-visible changes since 1.09:
Filename to -G is optional. -C works right.
-Names +newer and +newer-mtime work right.
+Names newer and --newer-mtime work right.
--g is now +incremental
--G is now +listed-incremental
+-g is now --incremental
+-G is now --listed-incremental
Sparse files now work correctly.
-+volume is now called +label.
+--volume is now called --label.
-+exclude now takes a filename argument, and +exclude-from does what
-+exclude used to do.
+--exclude now takes a filename argument, and --exclude-from does what
+--exclude used to do.
Exit status is now correct.
-+totals keeps track of total I/O and prints it when tar exits.
+--totals keeps track of total I/O and prints it when tar exits.
-When using +label with +extract, the label is now a regexp.
+When using --label with --extract, the label is now a regexp.
-New option +tape-length (-L) does multi-volume handling like BSD dump:
+New option --tape-length (-L) does multi-volume handling like BSD dump:
you tell tar how big the tape is and it will prompt at that point
instead of waiting for a write error.