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Linux temps réel embarqué et outils de développements
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Technique |
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bsdtar
| bsdtar | tar(1) from FreeBSD, using libarchive | | Priority | |
| Section | utils |
| Installed size | 196 |
| Maintainer | John Goerzen <jgoerzen@complete.org> |
| Architecture | i386 |
| Version | 1.2.53-2etch1 |
| Depends | libbz2-1.0, libc6 (>= 2.3.6-6), zlib1g (>= 1 |
| Suggests | bochs-doc, debootstrap, grub-disk, gcc | c-compiler, libc-dev |
| File name | pool/updates/main/liba/libarchive/bsdtar_1.2.53-2etch1_i386.deb |
| Description | The bsdtar program has a number of advantages over previous tar implementations: . * Library. Since the core functionality is in a library, it can be used by other tools, such as pkg_add. . * Automatic format detection. Libarchive automatically detects the compression (none/gzip/bzip2) and format (old tar, ustar, gnutar, pax, cpio, iso9660, zip) when reading archives. It does this for any data source. . * Pax Interchange Format Support. This is a POSIX/SUSv3 extension to the old "ustar" tar format that adds arbitrary extended attributes to each entry. Does everything that GNU tar format does, only better. . * Handles file flags, ACLs, arbitrary pathnames, etc. Pax interchange format supports key/value attributes using an easily-extensible technique. Arbitrary pathnames, group names, user names, file sizes are part of the POSIX standard; libarchive extends this with support for file flags, ACLs, and arbitrary device numbers. . * GNU tar support. Libarchive reads most GNU tar archives. If there is demand, this can be improved further. |
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