From: Paul Eggert Date: Thu, 26 Jul 2012 15:49:39 +0000 (-0700) Subject: doc: improve discussion of compressed archives X-Git-Url: https://git.brokenzipper.com/gitweb?a=commitdiff_plain;h=07ef59cab8c3ed54b0dc3ea8860ef6f185260157;p=chaz%2Ftar doc: improve discussion of compressed archives * doc/tar.texi (gzip): Don't claim that -I 'gzip --best' works. Problem reported by Davide Brini in . Also, improve some of the surrounding text. This file is a placeholder. It will be replaced with the actual ChangeLog by make dist. Run make ChangeLog if you wish to create it earlier. --- diff --git a/doc/tar.texi b/doc/tar.texi index f140b70..afb77ab 100644 --- a/doc/tar.texi +++ b/doc/tar.texi @@ -8923,39 +8923,30 @@ etc.) and remote files as well as on normal files; data to or from such devices or remote files is reblocked by another copy of the @command{tar} program to enforce the specified (or default) record size. The default compression parameters are used. Most compression -programs allow to override these by setting a program-specific -environment variable. For example, when using @command{gzip} you can -use @env{GZIP} as in the example below: +programs let you override these by setting a program-specific +environment variable. For example, with @command{gzip} you can set +@env{GZIP}: @smallexample -$ @kbd{GZIP=--best tar czf archive.tar.gz subdir} +$ @kbd{GZIP='-9 -n' tar czf archive.tar.gz subdir} @end smallexample @noindent -Another way would be to use the @option{-I} option instead (see -below), e.g.: +The traditional way to do this is to use a pipe: @smallexample -$ @kbd{tar -cf archive.tar.gz -I 'gzip --best' subdir} -@end smallexample - -@noindent -Finally, the third, traditional, way to achieve the same result is to -use pipe: - -@smallexample -$ @kbd{tar cf - subdir | gzip --best -c - > archive.tar.gz} +$ @kbd{tar cf - subdir | gzip -9 -n > archive.tar.gz} @end smallexample @cindex corrupted archives -About corrupted compressed archives: compressed files have no -redundancy, for maximum compression. The adaptive nature of the +Compressed archives are easily corrupted, because compressed files +have little redundancy. The adaptive nature of the compression scheme means that the compression tables are implicitly spread all over the archive. If you lose a few blocks, the dynamic construction of the compression tables becomes unsynchronized, and there is little chance that you could recover later in the archive. -Another compression options provide a better control over creating +Other compression options provide better control over creating compressed archives. These are: @table @option @@ -8990,13 +8981,12 @@ suffix. The following suffixes are recognized: Use external compression program @var{prog}. Use this option if you are not happy with the compression program associated with the suffix at compile time or if you have a compression program that @GNUTAR{} -does not support. There are two requirements to which @var{prog} -should comply: +does not support. The program should follow two conventions: -First, when called without options, it should read data from standard +First, when invoked without options, it should read data from standard input, compress it and output it on standard output. -Secondly, if called with @option{-d} argument, it should do exactly +Secondly, if invoked with the @option{-d} option, it should do exactly the opposite, i.e., read the compressed data from the standard input and produce uncompressed data on the standard output. @end table