Archive::Tar::Minitar is a pure-Ruby library and command-line utility that provides the ability to deal with POSIX tar(1) archive files. The implementation is based heavily on Mauricio Ferna'ndez's implementation in rpa-base, but has been reorganised to promote reuse in other projects. Antoine Toulme forked the original project on rubyforge to place it on github, under http://www.github.com/atoulme/minitar
This release is version 0.5.2, offering a Ruby 1.9 compatibility bugfix over version 0.5.1. The library can only handle files and directories at this point. A future version will be expanded to handle symbolic links and hard links in a portable manner. The command line utility, minitar, can only create archives, extract from archives, and list archive contents.
Using this library is easy. The simplest case is:
require 'zlib' require 'archive/tar/minitar' include Archive::Tar
# Packs everything that matches Find.find('tests')
File.open('test.tar', 'wb') { |tar| Minitar.pack('tests', tar) } # Unpacks 'test.tar' to 'x', creating 'x' if necessary. Minitar.unpack('test.tar', 'x')
A gzipped tar can be written with:
tgz = Zlib::GzipWriter.new(File.open('test.tgz', 'wb'))
# Warning: tgz will be closed!
Minitar.pack('tests', tgz)
tgz = Zlib::GzipReader.new(File.open('test.tgz', 'rb'))
# Warning: tgz will be closed!
Minitar.unpack(tgz, 'x')
As the case above shows, one need not write to a file. However, it will sometimes require that one dive a little deeper into the API, as in the case of StringIO objects. Note that I'm not providing a block with Minitar::Output, as Minitar::Output#close automatically closes both the Output object and the wrapped data stream object.
begin sgz = Zlib::GzipWriter.new(StringIO.new("")) tar = Output.new(sgz) Find.find('tests') do |entry| Minitar.pack_file(entry, tar) end ensure # Closes both tar and sgz. tar.close end