Tar

Description

Creates a tar archive.

The basedir attribute is the reference directory from where to tar.

This task is a directory based task and, as such, forms an implicit Fileset. This defines which files, relative to the basedir, will be included in the archive. The tar task supports all the attributes of Fileset to refine the set of files to be included in the implicit fileset.

In addition to the implicit fileset, the tar task supports nested resource collections and a special form of filesets. These filesets are extended to allow control over the access mode, username and groupname to be applied to the tar entries. This is useful, for example, when preparing archives for Unix systems where some files need to have execute permission. By default this task will use Unix permissions of 644 for files and 755 for directories.

Early versions of tar did not support path lengths greater than 100 characters. Over time several incompatible extensions have been developed until a new POSIX standard was created that added so called PAX extension headers (as the pax utility first introduced them) that among another things addressed file names longer than 100 characters. All modern implementations of tar support PAX extension headers.

Ant's tar support predates the standard with PAX extension headers, it supports different dialects that can be enabled using the longfile attribute. If the longfile attribute is set to fail, any long paths will cause the tar task to fail. If the longfile attribute is set to truncate, any long paths will be truncated to the 100 character maximum length prior to adding to the archive. If the value of the longfile attribute is set to omit then files containing long paths will be omitted from the archive. Either option ensures that the archive can be untarred by any compliant version of tar.

If the loss of path or file information is not acceptable, and it rarely is, longfile may be set to the value gnu or posix. With posix Ant will add PAX extension headers, with gnu it adds GNU tar specific extensions that newer versions of GNU tar call "oldgnu". GNU tar still creates these extensions by default but supports PAX extension headers as well. Either choice will produce a tar file which can have arbitrary length paths. Note however, that the resulting archive will only be able to be untarred with tar tools that support the chosen format.

The default for the longfile attribute is warn which behaves just like the gnu option except that it produces a warning for each file path encountered that does not match the limit. It uses gnu rather than posix for backwards compatibility reasons.

To achivieve best interoperability you should use either fail or posix for the longfile attribute.

This task can perform compression by setting the compression attribute to "gzip" or "bzip2".

Parameters

Attribute Description Required
destfile the tar-file to create. Yes
basedir the directory from which to tar the files. No
longfile Determines how long files (>100 chars) are to be handled. Allowable values are "truncate", "fail", "warn", "omit", "gnu" and "posix". Default is "warn". No
includes comma- or space-separated list of patterns of files that must be included. All files are included when omitted. No
includesfile the name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an include pattern No
excludes comma- or space-separated list of patterns of files that must be excluded. No files (except default excludes) are excluded when omitted. No
excludesfile the name of a file. Each line of this file is taken to be an exclude pattern No
defaultexcludes indicates whether default excludes should be used or not ("yes"/"no"). Default excludes are used when omitted. No
compression compression method. Allowable values are "none", "gzip" and "bzip2". Default is "none". No
encoding The character encoding to use for filenames inside the tar file. For a list of possible values see the Supported Encodings.
Defaults to the platform's default character encoding. Since Ant 1.9.5
No

Nested Elements

The tar task supports nested tarfileset elements. These are extended FileSets which, in addition to the standard elements, support one additional attributes
Attribute Description Required
preserveLeadingSlashes Indicates whether leading `/'s should be preserved in the file names. Default is false. No

any other resource collection

Resource Collections are used to select groups of files to archive.

Prior to Apache Ant 1.7 only <fileset> has been supported as a nested element.

Examples

<tar destfile="${dist}/manual.tar" basedir="htdocs/manual"/>
<gzip destfile="${dist}/manual.tar.gz" src="${dist}/manual.tar"/>

tars all files in the htdocs/manual directory into a file called manual.tar in the ${dist} directory, then applies the gzip task to compress it.

<tar destfile="${dist}/manual.tar"
     basedir="htdocs/manual"
     excludes="mydocs/**, **/todo.html"
/>

tars all files in the htdocs/manual directory into a file called manual.tar in the ${dist} directory. Files in the directory mydocs, or files with the name todo.html are excluded.

<tar destfile="${basedir}/docs.tar">
  <tarfileset dir="${dir.src}/docs"
              fullpath="/usr/doc/ant/README"
              preserveLeadingSlashes="true">
    <include name="readme.txt"/>
  </tarfileset>
  <tarfileset dir="${dir.src}/docs"
              prefix="/usr/doc/ant"
              preserveLeadingSlashes="true">
    <include name="*.html"/>
  </tarfileset>
</tar>

Writes the file docs/readme.txt as /usr/doc/ant/README into the archive. All *.html files in the docs directory are prefixed by /usr/doc/ant, so for example docs/index.html is written as /usr/doc/ant/index.html to the archive.

<tar longfile="gnu"
     destfile="${dist.base}/${dist.name}-src.tar">
  <tarfileset dir="${dist.name}/.." filemode="755" username="ant" group="ant">
    <include name="${dist.name}/bootstrap.sh"/>
    <include name="${dist.name}/build.sh"/>
  </tarfileset>
  <tarfileset dir="${dist.name}/.." username="ant" group="ant">
    <include name="${dist.name}/**"/>
    <exclude name="${dist.name}/bootstrap.sh"/>
    <exclude name="${dist.name}/build.sh"/>
  </tarfileset>
</tar>

This example shows building a tar which uses the GNU extensions for long paths and where some files need to be marked as executable (mode 755) and the rest are use the default mode (read-write by owner). The first fileset selects just the executable files. The second fileset must exclude the executable files and include all others.

Note: The tar task does not ensure that a file is only selected by one resource collection. If the same file is selected by more than one collection, it will be included in the tar file twice, with the same path.

Note: The patterns in the include and exclude elements are considered to be relative to the corresponding dir attribute as with all other filesets. In the example above, ${dist.name} is not an absolute path, but a simple name of a directory, so ${dist.name} is a valid path relative to ${dist.name}/...

<tar destfile="release.tar.gz" compression="gzip">
  <zipfileset src="release.zip"/>
</tar>

Re-packages a ZIP archive as a GZip compressed tar archive. If Unix file permissions have been stored as part of the ZIP file, they will be retained in the resulting tar archive.

Note: Please note the tar task creates a tar file, it does not append to an existing tar file. The existing tar file is replaced instead. As with most tasks in Ant, the task only takes action if the output file (the tar file in this case) is older than the input files, or if the output file does not exist.