tttar(1) ToolTalk Commands tttar(1)NAMEtttar - process files and ToolTalk objects in an archive
SYNOPSIStttar c ⎪ t ⎪ x [EfhpSv] [tarfile ] pathname ...
tttar c ⎪ t ⎪ xfL [EhpRSv] tttarfile [[−rename oldname newname] ...]
pathname ...
tttar −h ⎪ −help
tttar −v
DESCRIPTION
The tttar utility has two fundamentally different modes.
· Without the L function modifier, tttar acts as a ToolTalk-aware
wrapper for tar(1), archiving (or extracting) multiple files and
their ToolTalk objects onto (or from) a single archive, called a
tarfile.
· With the L function modifier, tttar does not invoke tar to ar‐
chive actual files, but instead archives (or extracts) only
ToolTalk objects onto (or from) a single archive, called a
tttarfile. Since without the L function modifier tttar acts like
an ToolTalk-aware tar(1), the description below is phrased as if
the L function modifier is in effect. That is, the text refers
to tttarfiles instead of tarfiles, and it describes archiving and
de-archiving only ``the ToolTalk objects of the named files''
rather than archiving and de-archiving both ``the named files and
their ToolTalk objects.''
The actions of tttar are controlled by the first argument, the key, a
string of characters containing exactly one function letter from the
set ctx, and one or more of the optional function modifiers listed
under OPERANDS. Other arguments to tttar are file or directory names
that specify which files to archive or extract ToolTalk objects for.
By default, the appearance of a directory name refers recursively to
the files and subdirectories of that directory.
A file does not have to exist for a ToolTalk object to be associated
with its pathname. When tttar descends into a directory, it does not
attempt to archive the objects associated with any files that do not
exist in the directory.
When extracting from a tar archive that is given to tttar either on
magnetic tape or on the standard input, the current working directory
must be writable, so that the tttarfile can be placed there temporar‐
ily.
OPTIONS
The following options are available:
−h
−help Write a help message for invoking tttar and then exit.
−rename oldname newname
Interpret the next two arguments as an oldname and a newname,
respectively, and rename any entry archived as oldname to new‐
name. If oldname is a directory, then tttar recursively
renames the entries as well. If more than one −rename option
applies to an entry (because of one or more parent directories
being renamed), the most specific −rename option applies.
−v Write the version number of tttar and then exit.
OPERANDS
The following operands are supported:
key The key operand consists of a function letter followed immedi‐
ately by zero or more modifying letters.
The function letter is one of the following:
c Create a new archive and write the ToolTalk objects
of the named files onto it.
t Write to standard output the names of all the files
in the archive.
x Extract the ToolTalk objects of the named files from
the archive. If a named file matches a directory
with contents in the archive, this directory is
(recursively) extracted. The owner and modification
time of the ToolTalk objects are restored (if possi‐
ble). If no filename arguments are given, the
ToolTalk objects of all files named in the archive
are extracted.
The following characters can be appended to the function let‐
ter. Appending the same character more than once produces
undefined results.
f Use the next argument as the name of the tttarfile.
If tttarfile is given as `−', tttar writes to the
standard output or reads from the standard input,
whichever is appropriate.
h Follow symbolic links as if they were normal files or
directories. Normally, tttar does not follow sym‐
bolic links.
p Preserve. Restore the named files to their original
modes, ignoring the present umask value (see
umask(2)). The tttar utility also extracts setUID
and sticky information for the super-user. This
option is only useful with the x function letter, and
has no meaning if the L function letter is given.
L Do not invoke tar(1). This modifier must be used
with the f function modifier, since reading and writ‐
ing an tttar archive directly to or from magnetic
tape is unimplemented.
R Do not recurse into directories. This modifier is
valid only with the L function modifier.
v Verbose. Write to standard error the name of each
file processed, preceded by a string indicating the
operation being performed, as follows:
┌────────────────────┐
│Key Letter String │
├────────────────────┤
│ c "a " │
│ x "x " │
└────────────────────┘
The file name may be followed by additional informa‐
tion, such as the size of the file in the archive or
file system, in an unspecified format. When used
with the t function letter, v writes to standard out‐
put more information about the archive entries than
just the name.
The following functions and modifiers are not supported:
· The r and u function letters of tar(1), for incremen‐
tally updating an archive.
· The X and F function modifiers and the −I option of
tar(1), for including or excluding files from being
archived based on SCCS status or being listed in a spe‐
cial file.
· The w function modifier and the −C option of tar(1), for
pausing or changing directories between the files listed
on the command line.
· Writing and reading tttarfiles (that is, archives pro‐
duced with the L function modifier) directly to and from
magnetic tape.
pathname
A pathname of a regular file or directory to be archived (when
the c function letter is used), extracted (x) or listed (t).
When pathname is the pathname of a directory, the action
applies to all of the files and (recursively) subdirectories
of that directory. When the f letter is used in the key oper‐
and, the initial pathname operand is interpreted as an archive
name, as described previously.
tarfile
A pathname of a regular file to be read or written as an ar‐
chive of files.
ttarfile
A pathname of a regular file to be read or written as an ar‐
chive of ToolTalk objects.
STDIN
When the f modifier is used with the t or x function letter and the
pathname is −, the standard input is an archive file formatted as
described in EXTENDED DESCRIPTION. Otherwise, the standard input is
not used.
INPUT FILES
The files identified by the pathname operands are regular files or
directories. The file identified by the tarfile operand is a regular
file formatted as described in tar(1). The file identified by the
tttarfile operand is a regular file formatted as described in EXTENDED
DESCRIPTION.
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
The following environment variables affect the execution of tttar:
LANG Provide a default value for the internationalization
variables that are unset or null. If LANG is unset
or null, the corresponding value from the implementa‐
tion-specific default locale will be used. If any of
the internationalization variables contains an
invalid setting, the utility behaves as if none of
the variables had been defined.
LC_ALL If set to a non-empty string value, override the val‐
ues of all the other internationalization variables.
LC_MESSAGES Determine the locale that is used to affect the for‐
mat and contents of diagnostic messages written to
standard error and informative messages written to
standard output.
NLSPATH Determine the location of message catalogues for the
processing of LC_MESSAGES.
TZ Determine the timezone used with date and time
strings.
RESOURCES
None.
ASYNCHRONOUS EVENTS
The tttar utility takes the standard action for all signals.
STDOUT
When the −h option is used, tttar writes to standard output a help mes‐
sage in an unspecified format.
When the −v option is used, tttar writes to standard output a version
number in an unspecified format.
When the f modifier is used with the c function letter and the pathname
is −, the standard output is an archive file formatted as described in
EXTENDED DESCRIPTION.
Otherwise, the standard output is not used.
STDERR
The standard error is used for diagnostic messages and the file name
output described under the v modifier (when the t function letter is
not used).
OUTPUT FILES
Output files are created, as specified by the archive, when the x func‐
tion letter is used.
EXTENDED DESCRIPTION
The archive file produced and read by tttar is formatted as described
in tar(1), with the addition of one extra file named tttarfile. (If
one of the user files being archived is also named tttarfile, the
results are unspecified.) The tttarfile contains all the ToolTalk spec
information for the ToolTalk objects in the other files in the archive.
The contents of tttarfile are written according to the referenced XDR
specification (RFC 1014). The only XDR data types used are:
int A four-octet signed integer, most significant octet first
string A four-octet unsigned integer length, most significant
octet first, followed by the characters of the string,
followed by sufficient (0 to 3) residual zero octets to
make the total number of octets a multiple of four.
The tttarfile starts with two integers. The first is always 1, to mark
this as the header record. The second is always 1, indicating this is
version 1 of the tttarfile format. Any future revisions of the
tttarfile format should increment the version number so older programs
processing the tttarfile can diagnose the incompatiblity.
The end of the tttarfile is a integer 3, marking the end-of-file
record.
In between, there is one logical record for each spec. Each logical
record starts with an integer 2, marking it as a spec record. Other
integer values are reserved for assignment to future data types.
After the record identifier, the spec record contains, in sequence:
1. A string giving the Tooltalk object identifier (objid) of the
object represented by the spec
2. A string giving the name of the file (as found in the archive ta‐
ble of contents) that contains the contents of the ToolTalk
object represented by the spec
3. A string giving the ToolTalk object type identifier (otid) of the
ToolTalk object represented by the spec
4. An integer giving the number of properties for this object
The properties of the object immediately follow the number of proper‐
ties. Each property consists of:
1. A string giving the name of the property
2. An integer, which is always zero (for historical compatibility)
3. An integer giving the number of values for this property
4. A string for each value
After the values, the next property is found, until all properties for
the object have been accounted for; then the next spec is found, until
all specs for objects associated with files in the archive are
accounted for.
EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned:
0 All files and ToolTalk objects were moved successfully.
>0 An error occurred or the invoked tar(1) command exited with a
non-zero value.
CONSEQUENCES OF ERRORS
Default.
FILES
/mountpoint/TT_DB The directory used as a database for the ToolTalk
objects of files in the file system mounted at
/mountpoint.
APPLICATION USAGE
None.
EXAMPLES
None.
SEE ALSOtar(1), ttcp(1), ttsession(1).
ToolTalk 1.3 1 March 1996 tttar(1)