Linux-related decompression commands and linux decompression commands
ZIP
We can use the following command to compress a directory:
# Zip-r archive_name.zip directory_to_compress
Below is a zip file:
# Unzip archive_name.zip
TAR
Tar is a widely used document packaging format in Linux. Its advantage is that it only consumes a very small amount of CPU and time to package files. It is only a packaging tool and is not responsible for compression. The following shows how to package a directory:
# Tar-cvf archive_name.tar directory_to_compress
How to unpack:
# Tar-xvf archive_name.tar.gz
The preceding command unpacks the document in the current directory. Of course, you can also use this command to hold the path for unpacking:
# Tar-xvf archive_name.tar-C/tmp/extract_here/
TAR. GZ
This format is the most commonly used compression format. It does not occupy too much CPU during compression, and can obtain an ideal compression rate. Use the following format to compress a directory:
# Tar-zcvf archive_name.tar.gz directory_to_compress
Decompress:
# Tar-zxvf archive_name.tar.gz
The preceding command unpacks the document in the current directory. Of course, you can also use this command to hold the path for unpacking:
# Tar-zxvf archive_name.tar.gz-C/tmp/extract_here/
TAR. BZ2
This compression format is the best compression ratio among all the methods we mentioned. Of course, this means that it takes more CPU and time than the previous method. For example, you can use tar.bz2 for compression.
# Tar-jcvf archive_name.tar.bz2 directory_to_compress
The preceding command unpacks the document in the current directory. Of course, you can also use this command to hold the path for unpacking:
# Tar-jxvf archive_name.tar.bz2-C/tmp/extract_here/