77
21
I have 100 files: cvd1.txt
, cvd2.txt
... cvd100.txt
How to gzip
100 files into one .gz
file, so that after I gunzip
it, I should have cvd1.txt
, cvd2.txt
... cvd100.txt
separately?
77
21
I have 100 files: cvd1.txt
, cvd2.txt
... cvd100.txt
How to gzip
100 files into one .gz
file, so that after I gunzip
it, I should have cvd1.txt
, cvd2.txt
... cvd100.txt
separately?
42
if you have zip,
zip myzip.zip cvd*.txt
Don't need to tar
them first.
85
You want to tar
your files together and gzip
the resulting tar file.
tar cvzf cvd.tar.gz cvd*.txt
To untar the gzip'd tar file you would do:
tar xvzf cvd.tar.gz -C /path/to/parent/dir
This would extract your files under the /path/to/parent/dir
directory
7if you name the file with the extension .tgz, (short for tar gz), then Windows programs will recognize it as something that winzip etc can process as is. Congrats to SiegeX for your 10K! – shellter – 2011-03-29T01:29:05.920
25
You'll want to use tar, like so:
tar -czvf file.tar.gz cvd*.txt
tar puts the files together, while gzip then performs the compression.
Quoth the gzip manpage:
If you wish to create a single archive file with multiple members so that members can later be extracted independently, use an archiver such as tar or zip. GNU tar supports the -z option to invoke gzip transparently. gzip is designed as a complement to tar, not as a replacement
13
gzip by itself does not know anything about file structure. To do what you want, you need to first put the files into some kind of container file (e.g. a tar structure, or similar) and then gzip that. tar has z and j (for bzip2) switches on GNU platforms to do this.
2The switch is actually 'z' ('x' is for extract). Nice you mentioned 'j'/bzip2 - much tighter compression. – None – 2011-03-29T02:09:43.367
6
You can do it using:
zip my_final_filename.zip my_first_file my_second_file ... my_last_file
unzip my_final_filename.gz
or
tar cvzf my_final_filename.tar.gz my_first_file my_second_file ... my_last_file
tar -czvf my_final_filename.tar.gz
Unfortunately gzip
is not capable of doing that. In case of more information please look at comments.
I don't think your first command works. At least generally. If it works for a particular shell you should indicate it. I'd downvote if I had enough rep. – DPM – 2019-02-17T16:41:57.963
@DPM is right, the gzip/gunzip
commands didn't work, it will return the error gzip: my_final_filename.gz: No such file or directory
– Bilal – 2019-06-20T09:41:16.187
DPM and Bilal are right. Gzip is not capable of compressing multiple files into one. Look at this thread under Melebius answer: https://askubuntu.com/questions/1103018/gzip-2-files-into-one-file I edit my answer now.
– Vahid F – 2019-12-07T07:58:45.6031
To compress multiple files with different patterns, we could this :
tar -czvf deploy.tar.gz **/Alice*.yml **/Bob*.json
this will add all .yml files that starts with Alice from any sub-directory and add all .json files that starts with Bob from any sub-directory.
You lose
zgrep
,zcmp
,zdiff
and all sorts of tools that can work on pipes by your choice of a non-streamable format called zip. Power users use pipes. – Tankman六四 – 2018-11-14T03:39:09.0031@Kurumi- Do Windows programmes such as Winzip or 7-zip recognise .zip files? – None – 2011-03-29T01:45:55.867
1@Tony. I believe they do. I tested the 7-zip linux version with zip and able to extract. If you want, there is also GNU zip for windows. – None – 2011-03-29T02:06:09.413