Deprecate the -P switch.
[p5sagit/p5-mst-13.2.git] / lib / Archive / Tar.pm
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39713df4 1### the gnu tar specification:
f38c1908 2### http://www.gnu.org/software/tar/manual/tar.html
39713df4 3###
4### and the pax format spec, which tar derives from:
5### http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/007904975/utilities/pax.html
6
7package Archive::Tar;
8require 5.005_03;
9
10use strict;
11use vars qw[$DEBUG $error $VERSION $WARN $FOLLOW_SYMLINK $CHOWN $CHMOD
12 $DO_NOT_USE_PREFIX $HAS_PERLIO $HAS_IO_STRING];
13
14$DEBUG = 0;
15$WARN = 1;
16$FOLLOW_SYMLINK = 0;
01d11a1c 17$VERSION = "1.34";
39713df4 18$CHOWN = 1;
19$CHMOD = 1;
20$DO_NOT_USE_PREFIX = 0;
21
22BEGIN {
23 use Config;
24 $HAS_PERLIO = $Config::Config{useperlio};
25
26 ### try and load IO::String anyway, so you can dynamically
27 ### switch between perlio and IO::String
28 eval {
29 require IO::String;
30 import IO::String;
31 };
32 $HAS_IO_STRING = $@ ? 0 : 1;
33
34}
35
36use Cwd;
37use IO::File;
38use Carp qw(carp croak);
39use File::Spec ();
40use File::Spec::Unix ();
41use File::Path ();
42
43use Archive::Tar::File;
44use Archive::Tar::Constant;
45
46=head1 NAME
47
48Archive::Tar - module for manipulations of tar archives
49
50=head1 SYNOPSIS
51
52 use Archive::Tar;
53 my $tar = Archive::Tar->new;
54
55 $tar->read('origin.tgz',1);
56 $tar->extract();
57
58 $tar->add_files('file/foo.pl', 'docs/README');
59 $tar->add_data('file/baz.txt', 'This is the contents now');
60
61 $tar->rename('oldname', 'new/file/name');
62
63 $tar->write('files.tar');
64
65=head1 DESCRIPTION
66
67Archive::Tar provides an object oriented mechanism for handling tar
68files. It provides class methods for quick and easy files handling
69while also allowing for the creation of tar file objects for custom
70manipulation. If you have the IO::Zlib module installed,
71Archive::Tar will also support compressed or gzipped tar files.
72
73An object of class Archive::Tar represents a .tar(.gz) archive full
74of files and things.
75
76=head1 Object Methods
77
78=head2 Archive::Tar->new( [$file, $compressed] )
79
80Returns a new Tar object. If given any arguments, C<new()> calls the
81C<read()> method automatically, passing on the arguments provided to
82the C<read()> method.
83
84If C<new()> is invoked with arguments and the C<read()> method fails
85for any reason, C<new()> returns undef.
86
87=cut
88
89my $tmpl = {
90 _data => [ ],
91 _file => 'Unknown',
92};
93
94### install get/set accessors for this object.
95for my $key ( keys %$tmpl ) {
96 no strict 'refs';
97 *{__PACKAGE__."::$key"} = sub {
98 my $self = shift;
99 $self->{$key} = $_[0] if @_;
100 return $self->{$key};
101 }
102}
103
104sub new {
105 my $class = shift;
106 $class = ref $class if ref $class;
107
108 ### copying $tmpl here since a shallow copy makes it use the
109 ### same aref, causing for files to remain in memory always.
110 my $obj = bless { _data => [ ], _file => 'Unknown' }, $class;
111
112 if (@_) {
81a5970e 113 unless ( $obj->read( @_ ) ) {
114 $obj->_error(qq[No data could be read from file]);
115 return;
116 }
39713df4 117 }
118
119 return $obj;
120}
121
122=head2 $tar->read ( $filename|$handle, $compressed, {opt => 'val'} )
123
124Read the given tar file into memory.
125The first argument can either be the name of a file or a reference to
126an already open filehandle (or an IO::Zlib object if it's compressed)
127The second argument indicates whether the file referenced by the first
128argument is compressed.
129
130The C<read> will I<replace> any previous content in C<$tar>!
131
132The second argument may be considered optional if IO::Zlib is
133installed, since it will transparently Do The Right Thing.
134Archive::Tar will warn if you try to pass a compressed file if
135IO::Zlib is not available and simply return.
136
b3200c5d 137Note that you can currently B<not> pass a C<gzip> compressed
138filehandle, which is not opened with C<IO::Zlib>, nor a string
139containing the full archive information (either compressed or
140uncompressed). These are worth while features, but not currently
141implemented. See the C<TODO> section.
142
39713df4 143The third argument can be a hash reference with options. Note that
144all options are case-sensitive.
145
146=over 4
147
148=item limit
149
150Do not read more than C<limit> files. This is useful if you have
151very big archives, and are only interested in the first few files.
152
153=item extract
154
155If set to true, immediately extract entries when reading them. This
156gives you the same memory break as the C<extract_archive> function.
157Note however that entries will not be read into memory, but written
158straight to disk.
159
160=back
161
162All files are stored internally as C<Archive::Tar::File> objects.
163Please consult the L<Archive::Tar::File> documentation for details.
164
165Returns the number of files read in scalar context, and a list of
166C<Archive::Tar::File> objects in list context.
167
168=cut
169
170sub read {
171 my $self = shift;
172 my $file = shift;
173 my $gzip = shift || 0;
174 my $opts = shift || {};
175
176 unless( defined $file ) {
177 $self->_error( qq[No file to read from!] );
178 return;
179 } else {
180 $self->_file( $file );
181 }
182
183 my $handle = $self->_get_handle($file, $gzip, READ_ONLY->( ZLIB ) )
184 or return;
185
186 my $data = $self->_read_tar( $handle, $opts ) or return;
187
188 $self->_data( $data );
189
190 return wantarray ? @$data : scalar @$data;
191}
192
193sub _get_handle {
194 my $self = shift;
195 my $file = shift; return unless defined $file;
196 return $file if ref $file;
197
198 my $gzip = shift || 0;
199 my $mode = shift || READ_ONLY->( ZLIB ); # default to read only
200
201 my $fh; my $bin;
202
203 ### only default to ZLIB if we're not trying to /write/ to a handle ###
204 if( ZLIB and $gzip || MODE_READ->( $mode ) ) {
205
206 ### IO::Zlib will Do The Right Thing, even when passed
207 ### a plain file ###
208 $fh = new IO::Zlib;
209
210 } else {
211 if( $gzip ) {
212 $self->_error(qq[Compression not available - Install IO::Zlib!]);
213 return;
214
215 } else {
216 $fh = new IO::File;
217 $bin++;
218 }
219 }
220
221 unless( $fh->open( $file, $mode ) ) {
222 $self->_error( qq[Could not create filehandle for '$file': $!!] );
223 return;
224 }
225
226 binmode $fh if $bin;
227
228 return $fh;
229}
230
231sub _read_tar {
232 my $self = shift;
233 my $handle = shift or return;
234 my $opts = shift || {};
235
236 my $count = $opts->{limit} || 0;
237 my $extract = $opts->{extract} || 0;
238
239 ### set a cap on the amount of files to extract ###
240 my $limit = 0;
241 $limit = 1 if $count > 0;
242
243 my $tarfile = [ ];
244 my $chunk;
245 my $read = 0;
246 my $real_name; # to set the name of a file when
247 # we're encountering @longlink
248 my $data;
249
250 LOOP:
251 while( $handle->read( $chunk, HEAD ) ) {
252 ### IO::Zlib doesn't support this yet
253 my $offset = eval { tell $handle } || 'unknown';
254
255 unless( $read++ ) {
256 my $gzip = GZIP_MAGIC_NUM;
257 if( $chunk =~ /$gzip/ ) {
258 $self->_error( qq[Cannot read compressed format in tar-mode] );
259 return;
260 }
261 }
262
263 ### if we can't read in all bytes... ###
264 last if length $chunk != HEAD;
265
266 ### Apparently this should really be two blocks of 512 zeroes,
267 ### but GNU tar sometimes gets it wrong. See comment in the
268 ### source code (tar.c) to GNU cpio.
269 next if $chunk eq TAR_END;
270
b30bcf62 271 ### according to the posix spec, the last 12 bytes of the header are
272 ### null bytes, to pad it to a 512 byte block. That means if these
273 ### bytes are NOT null bytes, it's a corrrupt header. See:
274 ### www.koders.com/c/fidCE473AD3D9F835D690259D60AD5654591D91D5BA.aspx
275 ### line 111
276 { my $nulls = join '', "\0" x 12;
277 unless( $nulls eq substr( $chunk, 500, 12 ) ) {
278 $self->_error( qq[Invalid header block at offset $offset] );
279 next LOOP;
280 }
281 }
282
81a5970e 283 ### pass the realname, so we can set it 'proper' right away
284 ### some of the heuristics are done on the name, so important
285 ### to set it ASAP
39713df4 286 my $entry;
81a5970e 287 { my %extra_args = ();
288 $extra_args{'name'} = $$real_name if defined $real_name;
289
290 unless( $entry = Archive::Tar::File->new( chunk => $chunk,
291 %extra_args )
292 ) {
293 $self->_error( qq[Couldn't read chunk at offset $offset] );
b30bcf62 294 next LOOP;
81a5970e 295 }
39713df4 296 }
297
298 ### ignore labels:
299 ### http://www.gnu.org/manual/tar/html_node/tar_139.html
300 next if $entry->is_label;
301
302 if( length $entry->type and ($entry->is_file || $entry->is_longlink) ) {
303
304 if ( $entry->is_file && !$entry->validate ) {
305 ### sometimes the chunk is rather fux0r3d and a whole 512
c3745331 306 ### bytes ends up in the ->name area.
39713df4 307 ### clean it up, if need be
308 my $name = $entry->name;
309 $name = substr($name, 0, 100) if length $name > 100;
310 $name =~ s/\n/ /g;
311
312 $self->_error( $name . qq[: checksum error] );
313 next LOOP;
314 }
315
316 my $block = BLOCK_SIZE->( $entry->size );
317
318 $data = $entry->get_content_by_ref;
319
320 ### just read everything into memory
321 ### can't do lazy loading since IO::Zlib doesn't support 'seek'
322 ### this is because Compress::Zlib doesn't support it =/
323 ### this reads in the whole data in one read() call.
324 if( $handle->read( $$data, $block ) < $block ) {
325 $self->_error( qq[Read error on tarfile (missing data) '].
326 $entry->full_path ."' at offset $offset" );
b30bcf62 327 next LOOP;
39713df4 328 }
329
330 ### throw away trailing garbage ###
376cc5ea 331 substr ($$data, $entry->size) = "" if defined $$data;
39713df4 332
333 ### part II of the @LongLink munging -- need to do /after/
334 ### the checksum check.
335 if( $entry->is_longlink ) {
336 ### weird thing in tarfiles -- if the file is actually a
337 ### @LongLink, the data part seems to have a trailing ^@
338 ### (unprintable) char. to display, pipe output through less.
339 ### but that doesn't *always* happen.. so check if the last
340 ### character is a control character, and if so remove it
341 ### at any rate, we better remove that character here, or tests
342 ### like 'eq' and hashlook ups based on names will SO not work
343 ### remove it by calculating the proper size, and then
344 ### tossing out everything that's longer than that size.
345
346 ### count number of nulls
347 my $nulls = $$data =~ tr/\0/\0/;
348
349 ### cut data + size by that many bytes
350 $entry->size( $entry->size - $nulls );
351 substr ($$data, $entry->size) = "";
352 }
353 }
354
355 ### clean up of the entries.. posix tar /apparently/ has some
356 ### weird 'feature' that allows for filenames > 255 characters
357 ### they'll put a header in with as name '././@LongLink' and the
358 ### contents will be the name of the /next/ file in the archive
359 ### pretty crappy and kludgy if you ask me
360
361 ### set the name for the next entry if this is a @LongLink;
362 ### this is one ugly hack =/ but needed for direct extraction
363 if( $entry->is_longlink ) {
364 $real_name = $data;
b30bcf62 365 next LOOP;
39713df4 366 } elsif ( defined $real_name ) {
367 $entry->name( $$real_name );
368 $entry->prefix('');
369 undef $real_name;
370 }
371
372 $self->_extract_file( $entry ) if $extract
373 && !$entry->is_longlink
374 && !$entry->is_unknown
375 && !$entry->is_label;
376
377 ### Guard against tarfiles with garbage at the end
378 last LOOP if $entry->name eq '';
379
380 ### push only the name on the rv if we're extracting
381 ### -- for extract_archive
382 push @$tarfile, ($extract ? $entry->name : $entry);
383
384 if( $limit ) {
385 $count-- unless $entry->is_longlink || $entry->is_dir;
386 last LOOP unless $count;
387 }
388 } continue {
389 undef $data;
390 }
391
392 return $tarfile;
393}
394
395=head2 $tar->contains_file( $filename )
396
397Check if the archive contains a certain file.
398It will return true if the file is in the archive, false otherwise.
399
400Note however, that this function does an exact match using C<eq>
401on the full path. So it cannot compensate for case-insensitive file-
402systems or compare 2 paths to see if they would point to the same
403underlying file.
404
405=cut
406
407sub contains_file {
408 my $self = shift;
01d11a1c 409 my $full = shift;
410
411 return unless defined $full;
39713df4 412
c3745331 413 ### don't warn if the entry isn't there.. that's what this function
414 ### is for after all.
415 local $WARN = 0;
39713df4 416 return 1 if $self->_find_entry($full);
417 return;
418}
419
420=head2 $tar->extract( [@filenames] )
421
422Write files whose names are equivalent to any of the names in
423C<@filenames> to disk, creating subdirectories as necessary. This
424might not work too well under VMS.
425Under MacPerl, the file's modification time will be converted to the
426MacOS zero of time, and appropriate conversions will be done to the
427path. However, the length of each element of the path is not
428inspected to see whether it's longer than MacOS currently allows (32
429characters).
430
431If C<extract> is called without a list of file names, the entire
432contents of the archive are extracted.
433
434Returns a list of filenames extracted.
435
436=cut
437
438sub extract {
439 my $self = shift;
b30bcf62 440 my @args = @_;
39713df4 441 my @files;
442
f38c1908 443 # use the speed optimization for all extracted files
444 local($self->{cwd}) = cwd() unless $self->{cwd};
445
39713df4 446 ### you requested the extraction of only certian files
b30bcf62 447 if( @args ) {
448 for my $file ( @args ) {
449
450 ### it's already an object?
451 if( UNIVERSAL::isa( $file, 'Archive::Tar::File' ) ) {
452 push @files, $file;
453 next;
39713df4 454
b30bcf62 455 ### go find it then
456 } else {
457
458 my $found;
459 for my $entry ( @{$self->_data} ) {
460 next unless $file eq $entry->full_path;
461
462 ### we found the file you're looking for
463 push @files, $entry;
464 $found++;
465 }
466
467 unless( $found ) {
468 return $self->_error(
469 qq[Could not find '$file' in archive] );
470 }
39713df4 471 }
472 }
473
474 ### just grab all the file items
475 } else {
476 @files = $self->get_files;
477 }
478
479 ### nothing found? that's an error
480 unless( scalar @files ) {
481 $self->_error( qq[No files found for ] . $self->_file );
482 return;
483 }
484
485 ### now extract them
486 for my $entry ( @files ) {
487 unless( $self->_extract_file( $entry ) ) {
488 $self->_error(q[Could not extract ']. $entry->full_path .q['] );
489 return;
490 }
491 }
492
493 return @files;
494}
495
496=head2 $tar->extract_file( $file, [$extract_path] )
497
498Write an entry, whose name is equivalent to the file name provided to
499disk. Optionally takes a second parameter, which is the full (unix)
500path (including filename) the entry will be written to.
501
502For example:
503
504 $tar->extract_file( 'name/in/archive', 'name/i/want/to/give/it' );
505
b30bcf62 506 $tar->extract_file( $at_file_object, 'name/i/want/to/give/it' );
507
39713df4 508Returns true on success, false on failure.
509
510=cut
511
512sub extract_file {
513 my $self = shift;
01d11a1c 514 my $file = shift; return unless defined $file;
39713df4 515 my $alt = shift;
516
517 my $entry = $self->_find_entry( $file )
518 or $self->_error( qq[Could not find an entry for '$file'] ), return;
519
520 return $self->_extract_file( $entry, $alt );
521}
522
523sub _extract_file {
524 my $self = shift;
525 my $entry = shift or return;
526 my $alt = shift;
39713df4 527
528 ### you wanted an alternate extraction location ###
529 my $name = defined $alt ? $alt : $entry->full_path;
530
531 ### splitpath takes a bool at the end to indicate
532 ### that it's splitting a dir
7f10f74b 533 my ($vol,$dirs,$file);
534 if ( defined $alt ) { # It's a local-OS path
535 ($vol,$dirs,$file) = File::Spec->splitpath( $alt,
536 $entry->is_dir );
537 } else {
538 ($vol,$dirs,$file) = File::Spec::Unix->splitpath( $name,
539 $entry->is_dir );
540 }
541
39713df4 542 my $dir;
543 ### is $name an absolute path? ###
544 if( File::Spec->file_name_is_absolute( $dirs ) ) {
545 $dir = $dirs;
546
547 ### it's a relative path ###
548 } else {
f38c1908 549 my $cwd = (defined $self->{cwd} ? $self->{cwd} : cwd());
39713df4 550 my @dirs = File::Spec::Unix->splitdir( $dirs );
551 my @cwd = File::Spec->splitdir( $cwd );
81a5970e 552 $dir = File::Spec->catdir( @cwd, @dirs );
553
554 # catdir() returns undef if the path is longer than 255 chars on VMS
555 unless ( defined $dir ) {
556 $^W && $self->_error( qq[Could not compose a path for '$dirs'\n] );
557 return;
558 }
559
39713df4 560 }
561
562 if( -e $dir && !-d _ ) {
563 $^W && $self->_error( qq['$dir' exists, but it's not a directory!\n] );
564 return;
565 }
566
567 unless ( -d _ ) {
568 eval { File::Path::mkpath( $dir, 0, 0777 ) };
569 if( $@ ) {
570 $self->_error( qq[Could not create directory '$dir': $@] );
571 return;
572 }
c3745331 573
574 ### XXX chown here? that might not be the same as in the archive
575 ### as we're only chown'ing to the owner of the file we're extracting
576 ### not to the owner of the directory itself, which may or may not
577 ### be another entry in the archive
578 ### Answer: no, gnu tar doesn't do it either, it'd be the wrong
579 ### way to go.
580 #if( $CHOWN && CAN_CHOWN ) {
581 # chown $entry->uid, $entry->gid, $dir or
582 # $self->_error( qq[Could not set uid/gid on '$dir'] );
583 #}
39713df4 584 }
585
586 ### we're done if we just needed to create a dir ###
587 return 1 if $entry->is_dir;
588
589 my $full = File::Spec->catfile( $dir, $file );
590
591 if( $entry->is_unknown ) {
592 $self->_error( qq[Unknown file type for file '$full'] );
593 return;
594 }
595
596 if( length $entry->type && $entry->is_file ) {
597 my $fh = IO::File->new;
598 $fh->open( '>' . $full ) or (
599 $self->_error( qq[Could not open file '$full': $!] ),
600 return
601 );
602
603 if( $entry->size ) {
604 binmode $fh;
605 syswrite $fh, $entry->data or (
606 $self->_error( qq[Could not write data to '$full'] ),
607 return
608 );
609 }
610
611 close $fh or (
612 $self->_error( qq[Could not close file '$full'] ),
613 return
614 );
615
616 } else {
617 $self->_make_special_file( $entry, $full ) or return;
618 }
619
620 utime time, $entry->mtime - TIME_OFFSET, $full or
621 $self->_error( qq[Could not update timestamp] );
622
623 if( $CHOWN && CAN_CHOWN ) {
624 chown $entry->uid, $entry->gid, $full or
625 $self->_error( qq[Could not set uid/gid on '$full'] );
626 }
627
628 ### only chmod if we're allowed to, but never chmod symlinks, since they'll
629 ### change the perms on the file they're linking too...
630 if( $CHMOD and not -l $full ) {
631 chmod $entry->mode, $full or
632 $self->_error( qq[Could not chown '$full' to ] . $entry->mode );
633 }
634
635 return 1;
636}
637
638sub _make_special_file {
639 my $self = shift;
640 my $entry = shift or return;
641 my $file = shift; return unless defined $file;
642
643 my $err;
644
645 if( $entry->is_symlink ) {
646 my $fail;
647 if( ON_UNIX ) {
648 symlink( $entry->linkname, $file ) or $fail++;
649
650 } else {
651 $self->_extract_special_file_as_plain_file( $entry, $file )
652 or $fail++;
653 }
654
655 $err = qq[Making symbolink link from '] . $entry->linkname .
656 qq[' to '$file' failed] if $fail;
657
658 } elsif ( $entry->is_hardlink ) {
659 my $fail;
660 if( ON_UNIX ) {
661 link( $entry->linkname, $file ) or $fail++;
662
663 } else {
664 $self->_extract_special_file_as_plain_file( $entry, $file )
665 or $fail++;
666 }
667
668 $err = qq[Making hard link from '] . $entry->linkname .
669 qq[' to '$file' failed] if $fail;
670
671 } elsif ( $entry->is_fifo ) {
672 ON_UNIX && !system('mknod', $file, 'p') or
673 $err = qq[Making fifo ']. $entry->name .qq[' failed];
674
675 } elsif ( $entry->is_blockdev or $entry->is_chardev ) {
676 my $mode = $entry->is_blockdev ? 'b' : 'c';
677
678 ON_UNIX && !system('mknod', $file, $mode,
679 $entry->devmajor, $entry->devminor) or
680 $err = qq[Making block device ']. $entry->name .qq[' (maj=] .
681 $entry->devmajor . qq[ min=] . $entry->devminor .
682 qq[) failed.];
683
684 } elsif ( $entry->is_socket ) {
685 ### the original doesn't do anything special for sockets.... ###
686 1;
687 }
688
689 return $err ? $self->_error( $err ) : 1;
690}
691
692### don't know how to make symlinks, let's just extract the file as
693### a plain file
694sub _extract_special_file_as_plain_file {
695 my $self = shift;
696 my $entry = shift or return;
697 my $file = shift; return unless defined $file;
698
699 my $err;
700 TRY: {
701 my $orig = $self->_find_entry( $entry->linkname );
702
703 unless( $orig ) {
704 $err = qq[Could not find file '] . $entry->linkname .
705 qq[' in memory.];
706 last TRY;
707 }
708
709 ### clone the entry, make it appear as a normal file ###
710 my $clone = $entry->clone;
711 $clone->_downgrade_to_plainfile;
712 $self->_extract_file( $clone, $file ) or last TRY;
713
714 return 1;
715 }
716
717 return $self->_error($err);
718}
719
720=head2 $tar->list_files( [\@properties] )
721
722Returns a list of the names of all the files in the archive.
723
724If C<list_files()> is passed an array reference as its first argument
725it returns a list of hash references containing the requested
726properties of each file. The following list of properties is
727supported: name, size, mtime (last modified date), mode, uid, gid,
728linkname, uname, gname, devmajor, devminor, prefix.
729
730Passing an array reference containing only one element, 'name', is
731special cased to return a list of names rather than a list of hash
732references, making it equivalent to calling C<list_files> without
733arguments.
734
735=cut
736
737sub list_files {
738 my $self = shift;
739 my $aref = shift || [ ];
740
741 unless( $self->_data ) {
742 $self->read() or return;
743 }
744
745 if( @$aref == 0 or ( @$aref == 1 and $aref->[0] eq 'name' ) ) {
746 return map { $_->full_path } @{$self->_data};
747 } else {
748
749 #my @rv;
750 #for my $obj ( @{$self->_data} ) {
751 # push @rv, { map { $_ => $obj->$_() } @$aref };
752 #}
753 #return @rv;
754
755 ### this does the same as the above.. just needs a +{ }
756 ### to make sure perl doesn't confuse it for a block
757 return map { my $o=$_;
758 +{ map { $_ => $o->$_() } @$aref }
759 } @{$self->_data};
760 }
761}
762
763sub _find_entry {
764 my $self = shift;
765 my $file = shift;
766
767 unless( defined $file ) {
768 $self->_error( qq[No file specified] );
769 return;
770 }
771
b30bcf62 772 ### it's an object already
773 return $file if UNIVERSAL::isa( $file, 'Archive::Tar::File' );
774
39713df4 775 for my $entry ( @{$self->_data} ) {
776 my $path = $entry->full_path;
777 return $entry if $path eq $file;
778 }
779
780 $self->_error( qq[No such file in archive: '$file'] );
781 return;
782}
783
784=head2 $tar->get_files( [@filenames] )
785
786Returns the C<Archive::Tar::File> objects matching the filenames
787provided. If no filename list was passed, all C<Archive::Tar::File>
788objects in the current Tar object are returned.
789
790Please refer to the C<Archive::Tar::File> documentation on how to
791handle these objects.
792
793=cut
794
795sub get_files {
796 my $self = shift;
797
798 return @{ $self->_data } unless @_;
799
800 my @list;
801 for my $file ( @_ ) {
802 push @list, grep { defined } $self->_find_entry( $file );
803 }
804
805 return @list;
806}
807
808=head2 $tar->get_content( $file )
809
810Return the content of the named file.
811
812=cut
813
814sub get_content {
815 my $self = shift;
816 my $entry = $self->_find_entry( shift ) or return;
817
818 return $entry->data;
819}
820
821=head2 $tar->replace_content( $file, $content )
822
823Make the string $content be the content for the file named $file.
824
825=cut
826
827sub replace_content {
828 my $self = shift;
829 my $entry = $self->_find_entry( shift ) or return;
830
831 return $entry->replace_content( shift );
832}
833
834=head2 $tar->rename( $file, $new_name )
835
836Rename the file of the in-memory archive to $new_name.
837
838Note that you must specify a Unix path for $new_name, since per tar
839standard, all files in the archive must be Unix paths.
840
841Returns true on success and false on failure.
842
843=cut
844
845sub rename {
846 my $self = shift;
847 my $file = shift; return unless defined $file;
848 my $new = shift; return unless defined $new;
849
850 my $entry = $self->_find_entry( $file ) or return;
851
852 return $entry->rename( $new );
853}
854
855=head2 $tar->remove (@filenamelist)
856
857Removes any entries with names matching any of the given filenames
858from the in-memory archive. Returns a list of C<Archive::Tar::File>
859objects that remain.
860
861=cut
862
863sub remove {
864 my $self = shift;
865 my @list = @_;
866
867 my %seen = map { $_->full_path => $_ } @{$self->_data};
868 delete $seen{ $_ } for @list;
869
870 $self->_data( [values %seen] );
871
872 return values %seen;
873}
874
875=head2 $tar->clear
876
877C<clear> clears the current in-memory archive. This effectively gives
878you a 'blank' object, ready to be filled again. Note that C<clear>
879only has effect on the object, not the underlying tarfile.
880
881=cut
882
883sub clear {
884 my $self = shift or return;
885
886 $self->_data( [] );
887 $self->_file( '' );
888
889 return 1;
890}
891
892
893=head2 $tar->write ( [$file, $compressed, $prefix] )
894
895Write the in-memory archive to disk. The first argument can either
896be the name of a file or a reference to an already open filehandle (a
897GLOB reference). If the second argument is true, the module will use
898IO::Zlib to write the file in a compressed format. If IO::Zlib is
899not available, the C<write> method will fail and return.
900
901Note that when you pass in a filehandle, the compression argument
902is ignored, as all files are printed verbatim to your filehandle.
903If you wish to enable compression with filehandles, use an
904C<IO::Zlib> filehandle instead.
905
906Specific levels of compression can be chosen by passing the values 2
907through 9 as the second parameter.
908
909The third argument is an optional prefix. All files will be tucked
910away in the directory you specify as prefix. So if you have files
911'a' and 'b' in your archive, and you specify 'foo' as prefix, they
912will be written to the archive as 'foo/a' and 'foo/b'.
913
914If no arguments are given, C<write> returns the entire formatted
915archive as a string, which could be useful if you'd like to stuff the
916archive into a socket or a pipe to gzip or something.
917
918=cut
919
920sub write {
921 my $self = shift;
922 my $file = shift; $file = '' unless defined $file;
923 my $gzip = shift || 0;
924 my $ext_prefix = shift; $ext_prefix = '' unless defined $ext_prefix;
925 my $dummy = '';
926
927 ### only need a handle if we have a file to print to ###
928 my $handle = length($file)
929 ? ( $self->_get_handle($file, $gzip, WRITE_ONLY->($gzip) )
930 or return )
931 : $HAS_PERLIO ? do { open my $h, '>', \$dummy; $h }
932 : $HAS_IO_STRING ? IO::String->new
933 : __PACKAGE__->no_string_support();
934
935
936
937 for my $entry ( @{$self->_data} ) {
938 ### entries to be written to the tarfile ###
939 my @write_me;
940
941 ### only now will we change the object to reflect the current state
942 ### of the name and prefix fields -- this needs to be limited to
943 ### write() only!
944 my $clone = $entry->clone;
945
946
947 ### so, if you don't want use to use the prefix, we'll stuff
948 ### everything in the name field instead
949 if( $DO_NOT_USE_PREFIX ) {
950
951 ### you might have an extended prefix, if so, set it in the clone
952 ### XXX is ::Unix right?
953 $clone->name( length $ext_prefix
954 ? File::Spec::Unix->catdir( $ext_prefix,
955 $clone->full_path)
956 : $clone->full_path );
957 $clone->prefix( '' );
958
959 ### otherwise, we'll have to set it properly -- prefix part in the
960 ### prefix and name part in the name field.
961 } else {
962
963 ### split them here, not before!
964 my ($prefix,$name) = $clone->_prefix_and_file( $clone->full_path );
965
966 ### you might have an extended prefix, if so, set it in the clone
967 ### XXX is ::Unix right?
968 $prefix = File::Spec::Unix->catdir( $ext_prefix, $prefix )
969 if length $ext_prefix;
970
971 $clone->prefix( $prefix );
972 $clone->name( $name );
973 }
974
975 ### names are too long, and will get truncated if we don't add a
976 ### '@LongLink' file...
977 my $make_longlink = ( length($clone->name) > NAME_LENGTH or
978 length($clone->prefix) > PREFIX_LENGTH
979 ) || 0;
980
981 ### perhaps we need to make a longlink file?
982 if( $make_longlink ) {
983 my $longlink = Archive::Tar::File->new(
984 data => LONGLINK_NAME,
985 $clone->full_path,
986 { type => LONGLINK }
987 );
988
989 unless( $longlink ) {
990 $self->_error( qq[Could not create 'LongLink' entry for ] .
991 qq[oversize file '] . $clone->full_path ."'" );
992 return;
993 };
994
995 push @write_me, $longlink;
996 }
997
998 push @write_me, $clone;
999
1000 ### write the one, optionally 2 a::t::file objects to the handle
1001 for my $clone (@write_me) {
1002
1003 ### if the file is a symlink, there are 2 options:
1004 ### either we leave the symlink intact, but then we don't write any
1005 ### data OR we follow the symlink, which means we actually make a
1006 ### copy. if we do the latter, we have to change the TYPE of the
1007 ### clone to 'FILE'
1008 my $link_ok = $clone->is_symlink && $Archive::Tar::FOLLOW_SYMLINK;
1009 my $data_ok = !$clone->is_symlink && $clone->has_content;
1010
1011 ### downgrade to a 'normal' file if it's a symlink we're going to
1012 ### treat as a regular file
1013 $clone->_downgrade_to_plainfile if $link_ok;
1014
1015 ### get the header for this block
1016 my $header = $self->_format_tar_entry( $clone );
1017 unless( $header ) {
1018 $self->_error(q[Could not format header for: ] .
1019 $clone->full_path );
1020 return;
1021 }
1022
1023 unless( print $handle $header ) {
1024 $self->_error(q[Could not write header for: ] .
1025 $clone->full_path);
1026 return;
1027 }
1028
1029 if( $link_ok or $data_ok ) {
1030 unless( print $handle $clone->data ) {
1031 $self->_error(q[Could not write data for: ] .
1032 $clone->full_path);
1033 return;
1034 }
1035
1036 ### pad the end of the clone if required ###
1037 print $handle TAR_PAD->( $clone->size ) if $clone->size % BLOCK
1038 }
1039
1040 } ### done writing these entries
1041 }
1042
1043 ### write the end markers ###
1044 print $handle TAR_END x 2 or
1045 return $self->_error( qq[Could not write tar end markers] );
b30bcf62 1046
39713df4 1047 ### did you want it written to a file, or returned as a string? ###
b30bcf62 1048 my $rv = length($file) ? 1
39713df4 1049 : $HAS_PERLIO ? $dummy
b30bcf62 1050 : do { seek $handle, 0, 0; local $/; <$handle> };
1051
1052 ### make sure to close the handle;
1053 close $handle;
1054
1055 return $rv;
39713df4 1056}
1057
1058sub _format_tar_entry {
1059 my $self = shift;
1060 my $entry = shift or return;
1061 my $ext_prefix = shift; $ext_prefix = '' unless defined $ext_prefix;
1062 my $no_prefix = shift || 0;
1063
1064 my $file = $entry->name;
1065 my $prefix = $entry->prefix; $prefix = '' unless defined $prefix;
1066
1067 ### remove the prefix from the file name
1068 ### not sure if this is still neeeded --kane
1069 ### no it's not -- Archive::Tar::File->_new_from_file will take care of
1070 ### this for us. Even worse, this would break if we tried to add a file
1071 ### like x/x.
1072 #if( length $prefix ) {
1073 # $file =~ s/^$match//;
1074 #}
1075
1076 $prefix = File::Spec::Unix->catdir($ext_prefix, $prefix)
1077 if length $ext_prefix;
1078
1079 ### not sure why this is... ###
1080 my $l = PREFIX_LENGTH; # is ambiguous otherwise...
1081 substr ($prefix, 0, -$l) = "" if length $prefix >= PREFIX_LENGTH;
1082
1083 my $f1 = "%06o"; my $f2 = "%11o";
1084
1085 ### this might be optimizable with a 'changed' flag in the file objects ###
1086 my $tar = pack (
1087 PACK,
1088 $file,
1089
1090 (map { sprintf( $f1, $entry->$_() ) } qw[mode uid gid]),
1091 (map { sprintf( $f2, $entry->$_() ) } qw[size mtime]),
1092
1093 "", # checksum field - space padded a bit down
1094
1095 (map { $entry->$_() } qw[type linkname magic]),
1096
1097 $entry->version || TAR_VERSION,
1098
1099 (map { $entry->$_() } qw[uname gname]),
1100 (map { sprintf( $f1, $entry->$_() ) } qw[devmajor devminor]),
1101
1102 ($no_prefix ? '' : $prefix)
1103 );
1104
1105 ### add the checksum ###
1106 substr($tar,148,7) = sprintf("%6o\0", unpack("%16C*",$tar));
1107
1108 return $tar;
1109}
1110
1111=head2 $tar->add_files( @filenamelist )
1112
1113Takes a list of filenames and adds them to the in-memory archive.
1114
1115The path to the file is automatically converted to a Unix like
1116equivalent for use in the archive, and, if on MacOS, the file's
1117modification time is converted from the MacOS epoch to the Unix epoch.
1118So tar archives created on MacOS with B<Archive::Tar> can be read
1119both with I<tar> on Unix and applications like I<suntar> or
1120I<Stuffit Expander> on MacOS.
1121
1122Be aware that the file's type/creator and resource fork will be lost,
1123which is usually what you want in cross-platform archives.
1124
1125Returns a list of C<Archive::Tar::File> objects that were just added.
1126
1127=cut
1128
1129sub add_files {
1130 my $self = shift;
1131 my @files = @_ or return;
1132
1133 my @rv;
1134 for my $file ( @files ) {
c3745331 1135 unless( -e $file || -l $file ) {
39713df4 1136 $self->_error( qq[No such file: '$file'] );
1137 next;
1138 }
1139
1140 my $obj = Archive::Tar::File->new( file => $file );
1141 unless( $obj ) {
1142 $self->_error( qq[Unable to add file: '$file'] );
1143 next;
1144 }
1145
1146 push @rv, $obj;
1147 }
1148
1149 push @{$self->{_data}}, @rv;
1150
1151 return @rv;
1152}
1153
1154=head2 $tar->add_data ( $filename, $data, [$opthashref] )
1155
1156Takes a filename, a scalar full of data and optionally a reference to
1157a hash with specific options.
1158
1159Will add a file to the in-memory archive, with name C<$filename> and
1160content C<$data>. Specific properties can be set using C<$opthashref>.
1161The following list of properties is supported: name, size, mtime
1162(last modified date), mode, uid, gid, linkname, uname, gname,
b3200c5d 1163devmajor, devminor, prefix, type. (On MacOS, the file's path and
39713df4 1164modification times are converted to Unix equivalents.)
1165
b3200c5d 1166Valid values for the file type are the following constants defined in
1167Archive::Tar::Constants:
1168
1169=over 4
1170
1171=item FILE
1172
1173Regular file.
1174
1175=item HARDLINK
1176
1177=item SYMLINK
1178
1179Hard and symbolic ("soft") links; linkname should specify target.
1180
1181=item CHARDEV
1182
1183=item BLOCKDEV
1184
1185Character and block devices. devmajor and devminor should specify the major
1186and minor device numbers.
1187
1188=item DIR
1189
1190Directory.
1191
1192=item FIFO
1193
1194FIFO (named pipe).
1195
1196=item SOCKET
1197
1198Socket.
1199
1200=back
1201
39713df4 1202Returns the C<Archive::Tar::File> object that was just added, or
1203C<undef> on failure.
1204
1205=cut
1206
1207sub add_data {
1208 my $self = shift;
1209 my ($file, $data, $opt) = @_;
1210
1211 my $obj = Archive::Tar::File->new( data => $file, $data, $opt );
1212 unless( $obj ) {
1213 $self->_error( qq[Unable to add file: '$file'] );
1214 return;
1215 }
1216
1217 push @{$self->{_data}}, $obj;
1218
1219 return $obj;
1220}
1221
1222=head2 $tar->error( [$BOOL] )
1223
1224Returns the current errorstring (usually, the last error reported).
1225If a true value was specified, it will give the C<Carp::longmess>
1226equivalent of the error, in effect giving you a stacktrace.
1227
1228For backwards compatibility, this error is also available as
1229C<$Archive::Tar::error> although it is much recommended you use the
1230method call instead.
1231
1232=cut
1233
1234{
1235 $error = '';
1236 my $longmess;
1237
1238 sub _error {
1239 my $self = shift;
1240 my $msg = $error = shift;
1241 $longmess = Carp::longmess($error);
1242
1243 ### set Archive::Tar::WARN to 0 to disable printing
1244 ### of errors
1245 if( $WARN ) {
1246 carp $DEBUG ? $longmess : $msg;
1247 }
1248
1249 return;
1250 }
1251
1252 sub error {
1253 my $self = shift;
1254 return shift() ? $longmess : $error;
1255 }
1256}
1257
f38c1908 1258=head2 $tar->setcwd( $cwd );
1259
1260C<Archive::Tar> needs to know the current directory, and it will run
1261C<Cwd::cwd()> I<every> time it extracts a I<relative> entry from the
1262tarfile and saves it in the file system. (As of version 1.30, however,
1263C<Archive::Tar> will use the speed optimization described below
1264automatically, so it's only relevant if you're using C<extract_file()>).
1265
1266Since C<Archive::Tar> doesn't change the current directory internally
1267while it is extracting the items in a tarball, all calls to C<Cwd::cwd()>
1268can be avoided if we can guarantee that the current directory doesn't
1269get changed externally.
1270
1271To use this performance boost, set the current directory via
1272
1273 use Cwd;
1274 $tar->setcwd( cwd() );
1275
1276once before calling a function like C<extract_file> and
1277C<Archive::Tar> will use the current directory setting from then on
1278and won't call C<Cwd::cwd()> internally.
1279
1280To switch back to the default behaviour, use
1281
1282 $tar->setcwd( undef );
1283
1284and C<Archive::Tar> will call C<Cwd::cwd()> internally again.
1285
1286If you're using C<Archive::Tar>'s C<exract()> method, C<setcwd()> will
1287be called for you.
1288
1289=cut
1290
1291sub setcwd {
1292 my $self = shift;
1293 my $cwd = shift;
1294
1295 $self->{cwd} = $cwd;
1296}
39713df4 1297
1298=head2 $bool = $tar->has_io_string
1299
1300Returns true if we currently have C<IO::String> support loaded.
1301
1302Either C<IO::String> or C<perlio> support is needed to support writing
3c4b39be 1303stringified archives. Currently, C<perlio> is the preferred method, if
39713df4 1304available.
1305
1306See the C<GLOBAL VARIABLES> section to see how to change this preference.
1307
1308=cut
1309
1310sub has_io_string { return $HAS_IO_STRING; }
1311
1312=head2 $bool = $tar->has_perlio
1313
1314Returns true if we currently have C<perlio> support loaded.
1315
1316This requires C<perl-5.8> or higher, compiled with C<perlio>
1317
1318Either C<IO::String> or C<perlio> support is needed to support writing
3c4b39be 1319stringified archives. Currently, C<perlio> is the preferred method, if
39713df4 1320available.
1321
1322See the C<GLOBAL VARIABLES> section to see how to change this preference.
1323
1324=cut
1325
1326sub has_perlio { return $HAS_PERLIO; }
1327
1328
1329=head1 Class Methods
1330
1331=head2 Archive::Tar->create_archive($file, $compression, @filelist)
1332
1333Creates a tar file from the list of files provided. The first
1334argument can either be the name of the tar file to create or a
1335reference to an open file handle (e.g. a GLOB reference).
1336
1337The second argument specifies the level of compression to be used, if
1338any. Compression of tar files requires the installation of the
1339IO::Zlib module. Specific levels of compression may be
1340requested by passing a value between 2 and 9 as the second argument.
1341Any other value evaluating as true will result in the default
1342compression level being used.
1343
1344Note that when you pass in a filehandle, the compression argument
1345is ignored, as all files are printed verbatim to your filehandle.
1346If you wish to enable compression with filehandles, use an
1347C<IO::Zlib> filehandle instead.
1348
1349The remaining arguments list the files to be included in the tar file.
1350These files must all exist. Any files which don't exist or can't be
1351read are silently ignored.
1352
1353If the archive creation fails for any reason, C<create_archive> will
1354return false. Please use the C<error> method to find the cause of the
1355failure.
1356
1357Note that this method does not write C<on the fly> as it were; it
1358still reads all the files into memory before writing out the archive.
1359Consult the FAQ below if this is a problem.
1360
1361=cut
1362
1363sub create_archive {
1364 my $class = shift;
1365
1366 my $file = shift; return unless defined $file;
1367 my $gzip = shift || 0;
1368 my @files = @_;
1369
1370 unless( @files ) {
1371 return $class->_error( qq[Cowardly refusing to create empty archive!] );
1372 }
1373
1374 my $tar = $class->new;
1375 $tar->add_files( @files );
1376 return $tar->write( $file, $gzip );
1377}
1378
1379=head2 Archive::Tar->list_archive ($file, $compressed, [\@properties])
1380
1381Returns a list of the names of all the files in the archive. The
1382first argument can either be the name of the tar file to list or a
1383reference to an open file handle (e.g. a GLOB reference).
1384
1385If C<list_archive()> is passed an array reference as its third
1386argument it returns a list of hash references containing the requested
1387properties of each file. The following list of properties is
b3200c5d 1388supported: full_path, name, size, mtime (last modified date), mode,
1389uid, gid, linkname, uname, gname, devmajor, devminor, prefix.
1390
1391See C<Archive::Tar::File> for details about supported properties.
39713df4 1392
1393Passing an array reference containing only one element, 'name', is
1394special cased to return a list of names rather than a list of hash
1395references.
1396
1397=cut
1398
1399sub list_archive {
1400 my $class = shift;
1401 my $file = shift; return unless defined $file;
1402 my $gzip = shift || 0;
1403
1404 my $tar = $class->new($file, $gzip);
1405 return unless $tar;
1406
1407 return $tar->list_files( @_ );
1408}
1409
1410=head2 Archive::Tar->extract_archive ($file, $gzip)
1411
1412Extracts the contents of the tar file. The first argument can either
1413be the name of the tar file to create or a reference to an open file
1414handle (e.g. a GLOB reference). All relative paths in the tar file will
1415be created underneath the current working directory.
1416
1417C<extract_archive> will return a list of files it extracted.
1418If the archive extraction fails for any reason, C<extract_archive>
1419will return false. Please use the C<error> method to find the cause
1420of the failure.
1421
1422=cut
1423
1424sub extract_archive {
1425 my $class = shift;
1426 my $file = shift; return unless defined $file;
1427 my $gzip = shift || 0;
1428
1429 my $tar = $class->new( ) or return;
1430
1431 return $tar->read( $file, $gzip, { extract => 1 } );
1432}
1433
1434=head2 Archive::Tar->can_handle_compressed_files
1435
1436A simple checking routine, which will return true if C<Archive::Tar>
1437is able to uncompress compressed archives on the fly with C<IO::Zlib>,
1438or false if C<IO::Zlib> is not installed.
1439
1440You can use this as a shortcut to determine whether C<Archive::Tar>
1441will do what you think before passing compressed archives to its
1442C<read> method.
1443
1444=cut
1445
1446sub can_handle_compressed_files { return ZLIB ? 1 : 0 }
1447
1448sub no_string_support {
1449 croak("You have to install IO::String to support writing archives to strings");
1450}
1451
14521;
1453
1454__END__
1455
1456=head1 GLOBAL VARIABLES
1457
1458=head2 $Archive::Tar::FOLLOW_SYMLINK
1459
1460Set this variable to C<1> to make C<Archive::Tar> effectively make a
1461copy of the file when extracting. Default is C<0>, which
1462means the symlink stays intact. Of course, you will have to pack the
1463file linked to as well.
1464
1465This option is checked when you write out the tarfile using C<write>
1466or C<create_archive>.
1467
1468This works just like C</bin/tar>'s C<-h> option.
1469
1470=head2 $Archive::Tar::CHOWN
1471
1472By default, C<Archive::Tar> will try to C<chown> your files if it is
1473able to. In some cases, this may not be desired. In that case, set
1474this variable to C<0> to disable C<chown>-ing, even if it were
1475possible.
1476
1477The default is C<1>.
1478
1479=head2 $Archive::Tar::CHMOD
1480
1481By default, C<Archive::Tar> will try to C<chmod> your files to
1482whatever mode was specified for the particular file in the archive.
1483In some cases, this may not be desired. In that case, set this
1484variable to C<0> to disable C<chmod>-ing.
1485
1486The default is C<1>.
1487
1488=head2 $Archive::Tar::DO_NOT_USE_PREFIX
1489
f38c1908 1490By default, C<Archive::Tar> will try to put paths that are over
1491100 characters in the C<prefix> field of your tar header, as
1492defined per POSIX-standard. However, some (older) tar programs
1493do not implement this spec. To retain compatibility with these older
1494or non-POSIX compliant versions, you can set the C<$DO_NOT_USE_PREFIX>
1495variable to a true value, and C<Archive::Tar> will use an alternate
1496way of dealing with paths over 100 characters by using the
1497C<GNU Extended Header> feature.
1498
1499Note that clients who do not support the C<GNU Extended Header>
1500feature will not be able to read these archives. Such clients include
1501tars on C<Solaris>, C<Irix> and C<AIX>.
39713df4 1502
1503The default is C<0>.
1504
1505=head2 $Archive::Tar::DEBUG
1506
1507Set this variable to C<1> to always get the C<Carp::longmess> output
1508of the warnings, instead of the regular C<carp>. This is the same
1509message you would get by doing:
1510
1511 $tar->error(1);
1512
1513Defaults to C<0>.
1514
1515=head2 $Archive::Tar::WARN
1516
1517Set this variable to C<0> if you do not want any warnings printed.
1518Personally I recommend against doing this, but people asked for the
1519option. Also, be advised that this is of course not threadsafe.
1520
1521Defaults to C<1>.
1522
1523=head2 $Archive::Tar::error
1524
1525Holds the last reported error. Kept for historical reasons, but its
1526use is very much discouraged. Use the C<error()> method instead:
1527
1528 warn $tar->error unless $tar->extract;
1529
1530=head2 $Archive::Tar::HAS_PERLIO
1531
1532This variable holds a boolean indicating if we currently have
1533C<perlio> support loaded. This will be enabled for any perl
1534greater than C<5.8> compiled with C<perlio>.
1535
1536If you feel strongly about disabling it, set this variable to
1537C<false>. Note that you will then need C<IO::String> installed
1538to support writing stringified archives.
1539
1540Don't change this variable unless you B<really> know what you're
1541doing.
1542
1543=head2 $Archive::Tar::HAS_IO_STRING
1544
1545This variable holds a boolean indicating if we currently have
1546C<IO::String> support loaded. This will be enabled for any perl
1547that has a loadable C<IO::String> module.
1548
1549If you feel strongly about disabling it, set this variable to
1550C<false>. Note that you will then need C<perlio> support from
1551your perl to be able to write stringified archives.
1552
1553Don't change this variable unless you B<really> know what you're
1554doing.
1555
1556=head1 FAQ
1557
1558=over 4
1559
1560=item What's the minimum perl version required to run Archive::Tar?
1561
1562You will need perl version 5.005_03 or newer.
1563
1564=item Isn't Archive::Tar slow?
1565
1566Yes it is. It's pure perl, so it's a lot slower then your C</bin/tar>
1567However, it's very portable. If speed is an issue, consider using
1568C</bin/tar> instead.
1569
1570=item Isn't Archive::Tar heavier on memory than /bin/tar?
1571
1572Yes it is, see previous answer. Since C<Compress::Zlib> and therefore
1573C<IO::Zlib> doesn't support C<seek> on their filehandles, there is little
1574choice but to read the archive into memory.
1575This is ok if you want to do in-memory manipulation of the archive.
1576If you just want to extract, use the C<extract_archive> class method
1577instead. It will optimize and write to disk immediately.
1578
1579=item Can't you lazy-load data instead?
1580
1581No, not easily. See previous question.
1582
1583=item How much memory will an X kb tar file need?
1584
1585Probably more than X kb, since it will all be read into memory. If
1586this is a problem, and you don't need to do in memory manipulation
1587of the archive, consider using C</bin/tar> instead.
1588
1589=item What do you do with unsupported filetypes in an archive?
1590
1591C<Unix> has a few filetypes that aren't supported on other platforms,
1592like C<Win32>. If we encounter a C<hardlink> or C<symlink> we'll just
1593try to make a copy of the original file, rather than throwing an error.
1594
1595This does require you to read the entire archive in to memory first,
1596since otherwise we wouldn't know what data to fill the copy with.
1597(This means that you cannot use the class methods on archives that
1598have incompatible filetypes and still expect things to work).
1599
1600For other filetypes, like C<chardevs> and C<blockdevs> we'll warn that
1601the extraction of this particular item didn't work.
1602
f38c1908 1603=item I'm using WinZip, or some other non-POSIX client, and files are not being extracted properly!
1604
1605By default, C<Archive::Tar> is in a completely POSIX-compatible
1606mode, which uses the POSIX-specification of C<tar> to store files.
1607For paths greather than 100 characters, this is done using the
1608C<POSIX header prefix>. Non-POSIX-compatible clients may not support
1609this part of the specification, and may only support the C<GNU Extended
1610Header> functionality. To facilitate those clients, you can set the
1611C<$Archive::Tar::DO_NOT_USE_PREFIX> variable to C<true>. See the
1612C<GLOBAL VARIABLES> section for details on this variable.
1613
c3745331 1614Note that GNU tar earlier than version 1.14 does not cope well with
1615the C<POSIX header prefix>. If you use such a version, consider setting
1616the C<$Archive::Tar::DO_NOT_USE_PREFIX> variable to C<true>.
1617
b30bcf62 1618=item How do I extract only files that have property X from an archive?
1619
1620Sometimes, you might not wish to extract a complete archive, just
1621the files that are relevant to you, based on some criteria.
1622
1623You can do this by filtering a list of C<Archive::Tar::File> objects
1624based on your criteria. For example, to extract only files that have
1625the string C<foo> in their title, you would use:
1626
1627 $tar->extract(
1628 grep { $_->full_path =~ /foo/ } $tar->get_files
1629 );
1630
1631This way, you can filter on any attribute of the files in the archive.
1632Consult the C<Archive::Tar::File> documentation on how to use these
1633objects.
1634
81a5970e 1635=item How do I access .tar.Z files?
1636
1637The C<Archive::Tar> module can optionally use C<Compress::Zlib> (via
1638the C<IO::Zlib> module) to access tar files that have been compressed
1639with C<gzip>. Unfortunately tar files compressed with the Unix C<compress>
1640utility cannot be read by C<Compress::Zlib> and so cannot be directly
1641accesses by C<Archive::Tar>.
1642
1643If the C<uncompress> or C<gunzip> programs are available, you can use
1644one of these workarounds to read C<.tar.Z> files from C<Archive::Tar>
1645
1646Firstly with C<uncompress>
1647
1648 use Archive::Tar;
1649
1650 open F, "uncompress -c $filename |";
1651 my $tar = Archive::Tar->new(*F);
1652 ...
1653
1654and this with C<gunzip>
1655
1656 use Archive::Tar;
1657
1658 open F, "gunzip -c $filename |";
1659 my $tar = Archive::Tar->new(*F);
1660 ...
1661
1662Similarly, if the C<compress> program is available, you can use this to
1663write a C<.tar.Z> file
1664
1665 use Archive::Tar;
1666 use IO::File;
1667
1668 my $fh = new IO::File "| compress -c >$filename";
1669 my $tar = Archive::Tar->new();
1670 ...
1671 $tar->write($fh);
1672 $fh->close ;
1673
01d11a1c 1674=item How do I handle Unicode strings?
1675
1676C<Archive::Tar> uses byte semantics for any files it reads from or writes
1677to disk. This is not a problem if you only deal with files and never
1678look at their content or work solely with byte strings. But if you use
1679Unicode strings with character semantics, some additional steps need
1680to be taken.
1681
1682For example, if you add a Unicode string like
1683
1684 # Problem
1685 $tar->add_data('file.txt', "Euro: \x{20AC}");
1686
1687then there will be a problem later when the tarfile gets written out
1688to disk via C<$tar->write()>:
1689
1690 Wide character in print at .../Archive/Tar.pm line 1014.
1691
1692The data was added as a Unicode string and when writing it out to disk,
1693the C<:utf8> line discipline wasn't set by C<Archive::Tar>, so Perl
1694tried to convert the string to ISO-8859 and failed. The written file
1695now contains garbage.
1696
1697For this reason, Unicode strings need to be converted to UTF-8-encoded
1698bytestrings before they are handed off to C<add_data()>:
1699
1700 use Encode;
1701 my $data = "Accented character: \x{20AC}";
1702 $data = encode('utf8', $data);
1703
1704 $tar->add_data('file.txt', $data);
1705
1706A opposite problem occurs if you extract a UTF8-encoded file from a
1707tarball. Using C<get_content()> on the C<Archive::Tar::File> object
1708will return its content as a bytestring, not as a Unicode string.
1709
1710If you want it to be a Unicode string (because you want character
1711semantics with operations like regular expression matching), you need
1712to decode the UTF8-encoded content and have Perl convert it into
1713a Unicode string:
1714
1715 use Encode;
1716 my $data = $tar->get_content();
1717
1718 # Make it a Unicode string
1719 $data = decode('utf8', $data);
1720
1721There is no easy way to provide this functionality in C<Archive::Tar>,
1722because a tarball can contain many files, and each of which could be
1723encoded in a different way.
81a5970e 1724
39713df4 1725=back
1726
1727=head1 TODO
1728
1729=over 4
1730
1731=item Check if passed in handles are open for read/write
1732
1733Currently I don't know of any portable pure perl way to do this.
1734Suggestions welcome.
1735
b3200c5d 1736=item Allow archives to be passed in as string
1737
1738Currently, we only allow opened filehandles or filenames, but
1739not strings. The internals would need some reworking to facilitate
1740stringified archives.
1741
1742=item Facilitate processing an opened filehandle of a compressed archive
1743
1744Currently, we only support this if the filehandle is an IO::Zlib object.
1745Environments, like apache, will present you with an opened filehandle
1746to an uploaded file, which might be a compressed archive.
1747
39713df4 1748=back
1749
f38c1908 1750=head1 SEE ALSO
1751
1752=over 4
1753
1754=item The GNU tar specification
1755
1756C<http://www.gnu.org/software/tar/manual/tar.html>
1757
1758=item The PAX format specication
1759
1760The specifcation which tar derives from; C< http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/007904975/utilities/pax.html>
1761
1762=item A comparison of GNU and POSIX tar standards; C<http://www.delorie.com/gnu/docs/tar/tar_114.html>
1763
1764=item GNU tar intends to switch to POSIX compatibility
1765
1766GNU Tar authors have expressed their intention to become completely
1767POSIX-compatible; C<http://www.gnu.org/software/tar/manual/html_node/Formats.html>
1768
1769=item A Comparison between various tar implementations
1770
1771Lists known issues and incompatibilities; C<http://gd.tuwien.ac.at/utils/archivers/star/README.otherbugs>
1772
1773=back
1774
39713df4 1775=head1 AUTHOR
1776
c3745331 1777This module by Jos Boumans E<lt>kane@cpan.orgE<gt>.
1778
1779Please reports bugs to E<lt>bug-archive-tar@rt.cpan.orgE<gt>.
39713df4 1780
1781=head1 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
1782
1783Thanks to Sean Burke, Chris Nandor, Chip Salzenberg, Tim Heaney and
1784especially Andrew Savige for their help and suggestions.
1785
1786=head1 COPYRIGHT
1787
c3745331 1788This module is copyright (c) 2002 - 2007 Jos Boumans
1789E<lt>kane@cpan.orgE<gt>. All rights reserved.
39713df4 1790
c3745331 1791This library is free software; you may redistribute and/or modify
1792it under the same terms as Perl itself.
39713df4 1793
1794=cut