forked from KolibriOS/kolibrios
e9b1c1bac6
git-svn-id: svn://kolibrios.org@6725 a494cfbc-eb01-0410-851d-a64ba20cac60
1041 lines
48 KiB
Groff
1041 lines
48 KiB
Groff
.\" Copyright (c) 1990-2009 Info-ZIP. All rights reserved.
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.\"
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.\" See the accompanying file LICENSE, version 2009-Jan-02 or later
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.\" (the contents of which are also included in unzip.h) for terms of use.
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.\" If, for some reason, all these files are missing, the Info-ZIP license
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.\" also may be found at: ftp://ftp.info-zip.org/pub/infozip/license.html
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.\"
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.\" unzip.1 by Greg Roelofs, Fulvio Marino, Jim van Zandt and others.
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.\"
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.\" =========================================================================
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.\" define .EX/.EE (for multiline user-command examples; normal Courier font)
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.de EX
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.in +4n
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.nf
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.ft CW
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..
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.de EE
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.ft R
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.fi
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.in -4n
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..
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.\" =========================================================================
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.TH UNZIP 1L "20 April 2009 (v6.0)" "Info-ZIP"
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.SH NAME
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unzip \- list, test and extract compressed files in a ZIP archive
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.PD
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.SH SYNOPSIS
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\fBunzip\fP [\fB\-Z\fP] [\fB\-cflptTuvz\fP[\fBabjnoqsCDKLMUVWX$/:^\fP]]
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\fIfile\fP[\fI.zip\fP] [\fIfile(s)\fP\ .\|.\|.]
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[\fB\-x\fP\ \fIxfile(s)\fP\ .\|.\|.] [\fB\-d\fP\ \fIexdir\fP]
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.PD
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.\" =========================================================================
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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\fIunzip\fP will list, test, or extract files from a ZIP archive, commonly
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found on MS-DOS systems. The default behavior (with no options) is to extract
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into the current directory (and subdirectories below it) all files from the
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specified ZIP archive. A companion program, \fIzip\fP(1L), creates ZIP
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archives; both programs are compatible with archives created by PKWARE's
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\fIPKZIP\fP and \fIPKUNZIP\fP for MS-DOS, but in many cases the program
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options or default behaviors differ.
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.PD
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.\" =========================================================================
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.SH ARGUMENTS
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.TP
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.IR file [ .zip ]
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Path of the ZIP archive(s). If the file specification is a wildcard,
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each matching file is processed in an order determined by the operating
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system (or file system). Only the filename can be a wildcard; the path
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itself cannot. Wildcard expressions are similar to those supported in
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commonly used Unix shells (\fIsh\fP, \fIksh\fP, \fIcsh\fP) and may contain:
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.RS
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.IP *
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matches a sequence of 0 or more characters
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.IP ?
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matches exactly 1 character
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.IP [.\|.\|.]
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matches any single character found inside the brackets; ranges are specified
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by a beginning character, a hyphen, and an ending character. If an exclamation
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point or a caret (`!' or `^') follows the left bracket, then the range of
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characters within the brackets is complemented (that is, anything \fIexcept\fP
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the characters inside the brackets is considered a match). To specify a
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verbatim left bracket, the three-character sequence ``[[]'' has to be used.
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.RE
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.IP
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(Be sure to quote any character that might otherwise be interpreted or
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modified by the operating system, particularly under Unix and VMS.) If no
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matches are found, the specification is assumed to be a literal filename;
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and if that also fails, the suffix \fC.zip\fR is appended. Note that
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self-extracting ZIP files are supported, as with any other ZIP archive;
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just specify the \fC.exe\fR suffix (if any) explicitly.
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.IP [\fIfile(s)\fP]
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An optional list of archive members to be processed, separated by spaces.
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(VMS versions compiled with VMSCLI defined must delimit files with commas
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instead. See \fB\-v\fP in \fBOPTIONS\fP below.)
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Regular expressions (wildcards) may be used to match multiple members; see
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above. Again, be sure to quote expressions that would otherwise be expanded
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or modified by the operating system.
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.IP [\fB\-x\fP\ \fIxfile(s)\fP]
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An optional list of archive members to be excluded from processing.
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Since wildcard characters normally match (`/') directory separators
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(for exceptions see the option \fB\-W\fP), this option may be used
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to exclude any files that are in subdirectories. For
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example, ``\fCunzip foo *.[ch] -x */*\fR'' would extract all C source files
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in the main directory, but none in any subdirectories. Without the \fB\-x\fP
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option, all C source files in all directories within the zipfile would be
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extracted.
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.IP [\fB\-d\fP\ \fIexdir\fP]
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An optional directory to which to extract files. By default, all files
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and subdirectories are recreated in the current directory; the \fB\-d\fP
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option allows extraction in an arbitrary directory (always assuming one
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has permission to write to the directory). This option need not appear
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at the end of the command line; it is also accepted before the zipfile
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specification (with the normal options), immediately after the zipfile
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specification, or between the \fIfile(s)\fP and the \fB\-x\fP option.
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The option and directory may be concatenated without any white space
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between them, but note that this may cause normal shell behavior to be
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suppressed. In particular, ``\fC\-d\ ~\fR'' (tilde) is expanded by Unix
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C shells into the name of the user's home directory, but ``\fC\-d~\fR''
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is treated as a literal subdirectory ``\fB~\fP'' of the current directory.
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.\" =========================================================================
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.SH OPTIONS
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Note that, in order to support obsolescent hardware, \fIunzip\fP's usage
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screen is limited to 22 or 23 lines and should therefore be considered
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only a reminder of the basic \fIunzip\fP syntax rather than an exhaustive
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list of all possible flags. The exhaustive list follows:
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.TP
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.B \-Z
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\fIzipinfo\fP(1L) mode. If the first option on the command line is \fB\-Z\fP,
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the remaining options are taken to be \fIzipinfo\fP(1L) options. See the
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appropriate manual page for a description of these options.
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.TP
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.B \-A
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[OS/2, Unix DLL] print extended help for the DLL's programming interface (API).
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.TP
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.B \-c
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extract files to stdout/screen (``CRT''). This option is similar to the
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\fB\-p\fP option except that the name of each file is printed as it is
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extracted, the \fB\-a\fP option is allowed, and ASCII-EBCDIC conversion
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is automatically performed if appropriate. This option is not listed in
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the \fIunzip\fP usage screen.
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.TP
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.B \-f
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freshen existing files, i.e., extract only those files that
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already exist on disk and that are newer than the disk copies. By
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default \fIunzip\fP queries before overwriting, but the \fB\-o\fP option
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may be used to suppress the queries. Note that under many operating systems,
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the TZ (timezone) environment variable must be set correctly in order for
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\fB\-f\fP and \fB\-u\fP to work properly (under Unix the variable is usually
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set automatically). The reasons for this are somewhat subtle but
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have to do with the differences between DOS-format file times (always local
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time) and Unix-format times (always in GMT/UTC) and the necessity to compare
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the two. A typical TZ value is ``PST8PDT'' (US Pacific time with automatic
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adjustment for Daylight Savings Time or ``summer time'').
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.TP
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.B \-l
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list archive files (short format). The names, uncompressed file sizes and
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modification dates and times of the specified files are printed, along
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with totals for all files specified. If UnZip was compiled with OS2_EAS
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defined, the \fB\-l\fP option also lists columns for the sizes of stored
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OS/2 extended attributes (EAs) and OS/2 access control lists (ACLs). In
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addition, the zipfile comment and individual file comments (if any) are
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displayed. If a file was archived from a single-case file system (for
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example, the old MS-DOS FAT file system) and the \fB\-L\fP option was given,
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the filename is converted to lowercase and is prefixed with a caret (^).
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.TP
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.B \-p
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extract files to pipe (stdout). Nothing but the file data is sent to
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stdout, and the files are always extracted in binary format, just as they
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are stored (no conversions).
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.TP
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.B \-t
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test archive files. This option extracts each specified file in memory
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and compares the CRC (cyclic redundancy check, an enhanced checksum) of
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the expanded file with the original file's stored CRC value.
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.TP
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.B \-T
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[most OSes] set the timestamp on the archive(s) to that of the newest file
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in each one. This corresponds to \fIzip\fP's \fB\-go\fP option except that
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it can be used on wildcard zipfiles (e.g., ``\fCunzip \-T \e*.zip\fR'') and
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is much faster.
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.TP
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.B \-u
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update existing files and create new ones if needed. This option performs
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the same function as the \fB\-f\fP option, extracting (with query) files
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that are newer than those with the same name on disk, and in addition it
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extracts those files that do not already exist on disk. See \fB\-f\fP
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above for information on setting the timezone properly.
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.TP
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.B \-v
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list archive files (verbose format) or show diagnostic version info.
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This option has evolved and now behaves as both an option and a modifier.
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As an option it has two purposes: when a zipfile is specified with no
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other options, \fB\-v\fP lists archive files verbosely, adding to the
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basic \fB\-l\fP info the compression method, compressed size,
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compression ratio and 32-bit CRC. In contrast to most of the competing
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utilities, \fIunzip\fP removes the 12 additional header bytes of
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encrypted entries from the compressed size numbers. Therefore,
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compressed size and compression ratio figures are independent of the entry's
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encryption status and show the correct compression performance. (The complete
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size of the encrypted compressed data stream for zipfile entries is reported
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by the more verbose \fIzipinfo\fP(1L) reports, see the separate manual.)
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When no zipfile is specified (that is, the complete command is simply
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``\fCunzip \-v\fR''), a diagnostic screen is printed. In addition to
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the normal header with release date and version, \fIunzip\fP lists the
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home Info-ZIP ftp site and where to find a list of other ftp and non-ftp
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sites; the target operating system for which it was compiled, as well
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as (possibly) the hardware on which it was compiled, the compiler and
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version used, and the compilation date; any special compilation options
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that might affect the program's operation (see also \fBDECRYPTION\fP below);
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and any options stored in environment variables that might do the same
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(see \fBENVIRONMENT OPTIONS\fP below). As a modifier it works in
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conjunction with other options (e.g., \fB\-t\fP) to produce more
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verbose or debugging output; this is not yet fully implemented
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but will be in future releases.
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.TP
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.B \-z
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display only the archive comment.
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.PD
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.\" =========================================================================
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.SH MODIFIERS
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.TP
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.B \-a
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convert text files. Ordinarily all files are extracted exactly as they
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are stored (as ``binary'' files). The \fB\-a\fP option causes files identified
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by \fIzip\fP as text files (those with the `t' label in \fIzipinfo\fP
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listings, rather than `b') to be automatically extracted as such, converting
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line endings, end-of-file characters and the character set itself as necessary.
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(For example, Unix files use line feeds (LFs) for end-of-line (EOL) and
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have no end-of-file (EOF) marker; Macintoshes use carriage returns (CRs)
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for EOLs; and most PC operating systems use CR+LF for EOLs and control-Z for
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EOF. In addition, IBM mainframes and the Michigan Terminal System use EBCDIC
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rather than the more common ASCII character set, and NT supports Unicode.)
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Note that \fIzip\fP's identification of text files is by no means perfect; some
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``text'' files may actually be binary and vice versa. \fIunzip\fP therefore
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prints ``\fC[text]\fR'' or ``\fC[binary]\fR'' as a visual check for each file
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it extracts when using the \fB\-a\fP option. The \fB\-aa\fP option forces
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all files to be extracted as text, regardless of the supposed file type.
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On VMS, see also \fB\-S\fP.
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.TP
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.B \-b
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[general] treat all files as binary (no text conversions). This is a shortcut
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for \fB\-\-\-a\fP.
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.TP
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.B \-b
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[Tandem] force the creation files with filecode type 180 ('C') when
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extracting Zip entries marked as "text". (On Tandem, \fB\-a\fP is enabled
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by default, see above).
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.TP
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.B \-b
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[VMS] auto-convert binary files (see \fB\-a\fP above) to fixed-length,
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512-byte record format. Doubling the option (\fB\-bb\fP) forces all files
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to be extracted in this format. When extracting to standard output
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(\fB\-c\fP or \fB\-p\fP option in effect), the default conversion of text
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record delimiters is disabled for binary (\fB\-b\fP) resp. all (\fB\-bb\fP)
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files.
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.TP
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.B \-B
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[when compiled with UNIXBACKUP defined] save a backup copy of each
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overwritten file. The backup file is gets the name of the target file with
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a tilde and optionally a unique sequence number (up to 5 digits) appended.
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The sequence number is applied whenever another file with the original name
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plus tilde already exists. When used together with the "overwrite all"
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option \fB\-o\fP, numbered backup files are never created. In this case,
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all backup files are named as the original file with an appended tilde,
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existing backup files are deleted without notice.
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This feature works similarly to the default behavior of \fIemacs\fP(1)
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in many locations.
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.IP
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Example: the old copy of ``\fCfoo\fR'' is renamed to ``\fCfoo~\fR''.
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.IP
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Warning: Users should be aware that the \fB-B\fP option does not prevent
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loss of existing data under all circumstances. For example, when
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\fIunzip\fP is run in overwrite-all mode, an existing ``\fCfoo~\fR'' file
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is deleted before \fIunzip\fP attempts to rename ``\fCfoo\fR'' to
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``\fCfoo~\fR''. When this rename attempt fails (because of a file locks,
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insufficient privileges, or ...), the extraction of ``\fCfoo~\fR'' gets
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cancelled, but the old backup file is already lost. A similar scenario
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takes place when the sequence number range for numbered backup files gets
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exhausted (99999, or 65535 for 16-bit systems). In this case, the backup
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file with the maximum sequence number is deleted and replaced by the new
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backup version without notice.
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.TP
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.B \-C
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use case-insensitive matching for the selection of archive entries
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from the command-line list of extract selection patterns.
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\fIunzip\fP's philosophy is ``you get what you ask for'' (this is
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also responsible for the \fB\-L\fP/\fB\-U\fP change; see the relevant
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options below). Because some file systems are fully case-sensitive
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(notably those under the Unix operating system) and because
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both ZIP archives and \fIunzip\fP itself are portable across platforms,
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\fIunzip\fP's default behavior is to match both wildcard and literal
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filenames case-sensitively. That is, specifying ``\fCmakefile\fR''
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on the command line will \fIonly\fP match ``makefile'' in the archive,
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not ``Makefile'' or ``MAKEFILE'' (and similarly for wildcard specifications).
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Since this does not correspond to the behavior of many other
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operating/file systems (for example, OS/2 HPFS, which preserves
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mixed case but is not sensitive to it), the \fB\-C\fP option may be
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used to force all filename matches to be case-insensitive. In the
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example above, all three files would then match ``\fCmakefile\fR''
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(or ``\fCmake*\fR'', or similar). The \fB\-C\fP option affects
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file specs in both the normal file list and the excluded-file list (xlist).
|
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.IP
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Please note that the \fB\-C\fP option does neither affect the search for
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the zipfile(s) nor the matching of archive entries to existing files on
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the extraction path. On a case-sensitive file system, \fIunzip\fP will
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never try to overwrite a file ``FOO'' when extracting an entry ``foo''!
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.TP
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.B \-D
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skip restoration of timestamps for extracted items. Normally, \fIunzip\fP
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tries to restore all meta-information for extracted items that are supplied
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in the Zip archive (and do not require privileges or impose a security risk).
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By specifying \fB\-D\fP, \fIunzip\fP is told to suppress restoration of
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timestamps for directories explicitly created from Zip archive entries.
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This option only applies to ports that support setting timestamps for
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directories (currently ATheOS, BeOS, MacOS, OS/2, Unix, VMS, Win32, for other
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\fIunzip\fP ports, \fB\-D\fP has no effect).
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The duplicated option \fB\-DD\fP forces suppression of timestamp restoration
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for all extracted entries (files and directories). This option results in
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setting the timestamps for all extracted entries to the current time.
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.IP
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On VMS, the default setting for this option is \fB\-D\fP for consistency
|
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with the behaviour of BACKUP: file timestamps are restored, timestamps of
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extracted directories are left at the current time. To enable restoration
|
|
of directory timestamps, the negated option \fB\--D\fP should be specified.
|
|
On VMS, the option \fB\-D\fP disables timestamp restoration for all extracted
|
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Zip archive items. (Here, a single \fB\-D\fP on the command line combines
|
|
with the default \fB\-D\fP to do what an explicit \fB\-DD\fP does on other
|
|
systems.)
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-E
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|
[MacOS only] display contents of MacOS extra field during restore operation.
|
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.TP
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|
.B \-F
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|
[Acorn only] suppress removal of NFS filetype extension from stored filenames.
|
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.TP
|
|
.B \-F
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[non-Acorn systems supporting long filenames with embedded commas,
|
|
and only if compiled with ACORN_FTYPE_NFS defined] translate
|
|
filetype information from ACORN RISC OS extra field blocks into a
|
|
NFS filetype extension and append it to the names of the extracted files.
|
|
(When the stored filename appears to already have an appended NFS filetype
|
|
extension, it is replaced by the info from the extra field.)
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-i
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|
[MacOS only] ignore filenames stored in MacOS extra fields. Instead, the
|
|
most compatible filename stored in the generic part of the entry's header
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|
is used.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-j
|
|
junk paths. The archive's directory structure is not recreated; all files
|
|
are deposited in the extraction directory (by default, the current one).
|
|
.TP
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|
.B \-J
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[BeOS only] junk file attributes. The file's BeOS file attributes are not
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|
restored, just the file's data.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-J
|
|
[MacOS only] ignore MacOS extra fields. All Macintosh specific info
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|
is skipped. Data-fork and resource-fork are restored as separate files.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-K
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|
[AtheOS, BeOS, Unix only] retain SUID/SGID/Tacky file attributes. Without
|
|
this flag, these attribute bits are cleared for security reasons.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-L
|
|
convert to lowercase any filename originating on an uppercase-only operating
|
|
system or file system. (This was \fIunzip\fP's default behavior in releases
|
|
prior to 5.11; the new default behavior is identical to the old behavior with
|
|
the \fB\-U\fP option, which is now obsolete and will be removed in a future
|
|
release.) Depending on the archiver, files archived under single-case
|
|
file systems (VMS, old MS-DOS FAT, etc.) may be stored as all-uppercase names;
|
|
this can be ugly or inconvenient when extracting to a case-preserving
|
|
file system such as OS/2 HPFS or a case-sensitive one such as under
|
|
Unix. By default \fIunzip\fP lists and extracts such filenames exactly as
|
|
they're stored (excepting truncation, conversion of unsupported characters,
|
|
etc.); this option causes the names of all files from certain systems to be
|
|
converted to lowercase. The \fB\-LL\fP option forces conversion of every
|
|
filename to lowercase, regardless of the originating file system.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-M
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|
pipe all output through an internal pager similar to the Unix \fImore\fP(1)
|
|
command. At the end of a screenful of output, \fIunzip\fP pauses with a
|
|
``\-\-More\-\-'' prompt; the next screenful may be viewed by pressing the
|
|
Enter (Return) key or the space bar. \fIunzip\fP can be terminated by
|
|
pressing the ``q'' key and, on some systems, the Enter/Return key. Unlike
|
|
Unix \fImore\fP(1), there is no forward-searching or editing capability.
|
|
Also, \fIunzip\fP doesn't notice if long lines wrap at the edge of the screen,
|
|
effectively resulting in the printing of two or more lines and the likelihood
|
|
that some text will scroll off the top of the screen before being viewed.
|
|
On some systems the number of available lines on the screen is not detected,
|
|
in which case \fIunzip\fP assumes the height is 24 lines.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-n
|
|
never overwrite existing files. If a file already exists, skip the extraction
|
|
of that file without prompting. By default \fIunzip\fP queries before
|
|
extracting any file that already exists; the user may choose to overwrite
|
|
only the current file, overwrite all files, skip extraction of the current
|
|
file, skip extraction of all existing files, or rename the current file.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-N
|
|
[Amiga] extract file comments as Amiga filenotes. File comments are created
|
|
with the \-c option of \fIzip\fP(1L), or with the \-N option of the Amiga port
|
|
of \fIzip\fP(1L), which stores filenotes as comments.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-o
|
|
overwrite existing files without prompting. This is a dangerous option, so
|
|
use it with care. (It is often used with \fB\-f\fP, however, and is the only
|
|
way to overwrite directory EAs under OS/2.)
|
|
.IP \fB\-P\fP\ \fIpassword\fP
|
|
use \fIpassword\fP to decrypt encrypted zipfile entries (if any). \fBTHIS IS
|
|
INSECURE!\fP Many multi-user operating systems provide ways for any user to
|
|
see the current command line of any other user; even on stand-alone systems
|
|
there is always the threat of over-the-shoulder peeking. Storing the plaintext
|
|
password as part of a command line in an automated script is even worse.
|
|
Whenever possible, use the non-echoing, interactive prompt to enter passwords.
|
|
(And where security is truly important, use strong encryption such as Pretty
|
|
Good Privacy instead of the relatively weak encryption provided by standard
|
|
zipfile utilities.)
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-q
|
|
perform operations quietly (\fB\-qq\fP = even quieter). Ordinarily \fIunzip\fP
|
|
prints the names of the files it's extracting or testing, the extraction
|
|
methods, any file or zipfile comments that may be stored in the archive,
|
|
and possibly a summary when finished with each archive. The \fB\-q\fP[\fBq\fP]
|
|
options suppress the printing of some or all of these messages.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-s
|
|
[OS/2, NT, MS-DOS] convert spaces in filenames to underscores. Since all PC
|
|
operating systems allow spaces in filenames, \fIunzip\fP by default extracts
|
|
filenames with spaces intact (e.g., ``\fCEA\ DATA.\ SF\fR''). This can be
|
|
awkward, however, since MS-DOS in particular does not gracefully support
|
|
spaces in filenames. Conversion of spaces to underscores can eliminate the
|
|
awkwardness in some cases.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-S
|
|
[VMS] convert text files (\fB\-a\fP, \fB\-aa\fP) into Stream_LF record format,
|
|
instead of the text-file default, variable-length record format.
|
|
(Stream_LF is the default record format of VMS \fIunzip\fP. It is applied
|
|
unless conversion (\fB\-a\fP, \fB\-aa\fP and/or \fB\-b\fP, \fB\-bb\fP) is
|
|
requested or a VMS-specific entry is processed.)
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-U
|
|
[UNICODE_SUPPORT only] modify or disable UTF-8 handling.
|
|
When UNICODE_SUPPORT is available, the option \fB\-U\fP forces \fIunzip\fP
|
|
to escape all non-ASCII characters from UTF-8 coded filenames as ``#Uxxxx''
|
|
(for UCS-2 characters, or ``#Lxxxxxx'' for unicode codepoints needing 3
|
|
octets). This option is mainly provided for debugging purpose when the
|
|
fairly new UTF-8 support is suspected to mangle up extracted filenames.
|
|
.IP
|
|
The option \fB\-UU\fP allows to entirely disable the recognition of UTF-8
|
|
encoded filenames. The handling of filename codings within \fIunzip\fP falls
|
|
back to the behaviour of previous versions.
|
|
.IP
|
|
[old, obsolete usage] leave filenames uppercase if
|
|
created under MS-DOS, VMS, etc. See \fB\-L\fP above.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-V
|
|
retain (VMS) file version numbers. VMS files can be stored with a version
|
|
number, in the format \fCfile.ext;##\fR. By default the ``\fC;##\fR'' version
|
|
numbers are stripped, but this option allows them to be retained. (On
|
|
file systems that limit filenames to particularly short lengths, the version
|
|
numbers may be truncated or stripped regardless of this option.)
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-W
|
|
[only when WILD_STOP_AT_DIR compile-time option enabled]
|
|
modifies the pattern matching routine so that both `?' (single-char wildcard)
|
|
and `*' (multi-char wildcard) do not match the directory separator character
|
|
`/'. (The two-character sequence ``**'' acts as a multi-char wildcard that
|
|
includes the directory separator in its matched characters.) Examples:
|
|
.PP
|
|
.EX
|
|
"*.c" matches "foo.c" but not "mydir/foo.c"
|
|
"**.c" matches both "foo.c" and "mydir/foo.c"
|
|
"*/*.c" matches "bar/foo.c" but not "baz/bar/foo.c"
|
|
"??*/*" matches "ab/foo" and "abc/foo"
|
|
but not "a/foo" or "a/b/foo"
|
|
.EE
|
|
.IP
|
|
This modified behaviour is equivalent to the pattern matching style
|
|
used by the shells of some of UnZip's supported target OSs (one
|
|
example is Acorn RISC OS). This option may not be available on systems
|
|
where the Zip archive's internal directory separator character `/' is
|
|
allowed as regular character in native operating system filenames.
|
|
(Currently, UnZip uses the same pattern matching rules for both wildcard
|
|
zipfile specifications and zip entry selection patterns in most ports.
|
|
For systems allowing `/' as regular filename character, the -W option
|
|
would not work as expected on a wildcard zipfile specification.)
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-X
|
|
[VMS, Unix, OS/2, NT, Tandem] restore owner/protection info (UICs and ACL
|
|
entries) under VMS, or user and group info (UID/GID) under Unix, or access
|
|
control lists (ACLs) under certain network-enabled versions of OS/2
|
|
(Warp Server with IBM LAN Server/Requester 3.0 to 5.0; Warp Connect with
|
|
IBM Peer 1.0), or security ACLs under Windows NT. In most cases this will
|
|
require special system privileges, and doubling the option (\fB\-XX\fP)
|
|
under NT instructs \fIunzip\fP to use privileges for extraction; but under
|
|
Unix, for example, a user who belongs to several groups can restore files
|
|
owned by any of those groups, as long as the user IDs match his or her own.
|
|
Note that ordinary file attributes are always restored--this option applies
|
|
only to optional, extra ownership info available on some operating systems.
|
|
[NT's access control lists do not appear to be especially compatible with
|
|
OS/2's, so no attempt is made at cross-platform portability of access
|
|
privileges. It is not clear under what conditions this would ever be
|
|
useful anyway.]
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-Y
|
|
[VMS] treat archived file name endings of ``.nnn'' (where ``nnn'' is a
|
|
decimal number) as if they were VMS version numbers (``;nnn'').
|
|
(The default is to treat them as file types.) Example:
|
|
.EX
|
|
"a.b.3" -> "a.b;3".
|
|
.EE
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-$
|
|
.\" Amiga support possible eventually, but not yet
|
|
[MS-DOS, OS/2, NT] restore the volume label if the extraction medium is
|
|
removable (e.g., a diskette). Doubling the option (\fB\-$$\fP) allows fixed
|
|
media (hard disks) to be labelled as well. By default, volume labels are
|
|
ignored.
|
|
.IP \fB\-/\fP\ \fIextensions\fP
|
|
[Acorn only] overrides the extension list supplied by Unzip$Ext environment
|
|
variable. During extraction, filename extensions that match one of the items
|
|
in this extension list are swapped in front of the base name of the extracted
|
|
file.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-:
|
|
[all but Acorn, VM/CMS, MVS, Tandem] allows to extract archive members into
|
|
locations outside of the current `` extraction root folder''. For security
|
|
reasons, \fIunzip\fP normally removes ``parent dir'' path components
|
|
(``../'') from the names of extracted file. This safety feature (new for
|
|
version 5.50) prevents \fIunzip\fP from accidentally writing files to
|
|
``sensitive'' areas outside the active extraction folder tree head. The
|
|
\fB\-:\fP option lets \fIunzip\fP switch back to its previous, more liberal
|
|
behaviour, to allow exact extraction of (older) archives that used ``../''
|
|
components to create multiple directory trees at the level of the current
|
|
extraction folder. This option does not enable writing explicitly to the
|
|
root directory (``/''). To achieve this, it is necessary to set the
|
|
extraction target folder to root (e.g. \fB\-d / \fP). However, when the
|
|
\fB\-:\fP option is specified, it is still possible to implicitly write to
|
|
the root directory by specifying enough ``../'' path components within the
|
|
zip archive.
|
|
Use this option with extreme caution.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-^
|
|
[Unix only] allow control characters in names of extracted ZIP archive
|
|
entries. On Unix, a file name may contain any (8-bit) character code with
|
|
the two exception '/' (directory delimiter) and NUL (0x00, the C string
|
|
termination indicator), unless the specific file system has more
|
|
restrictive conventions. Generally, this allows to embed ASCII control
|
|
characters (or even sophisticated control sequences) in file names, at least
|
|
on 'native' Unix file systems. However, it may be highly suspicious to
|
|
make use of this Unix "feature". Embedded control characters in file names
|
|
might have nasty side effects when displayed on screen by some listing code
|
|
without sufficient filtering. And, for ordinary users, it may be difficult
|
|
to handle such file names (e.g. when trying to specify it for open, copy,
|
|
move, or delete operations). Therefore, \fIunzip\fP applies a filter by
|
|
default that removes potentially dangerous control characters from the
|
|
extracted file names. The \fB-^\fP option allows to override this filter
|
|
in the rare case that embedded filename control characters are to be
|
|
intentionally restored.
|
|
.TP
|
|
.B \-2
|
|
[VMS] force unconditionally conversion of file names to ODS2-compatible
|
|
names. The default is to exploit the destination file system, preserving
|
|
case and extended file name characters on an ODS5 destination file system;
|
|
and applying the ODS2-compatibility file name filtering on an ODS2 destination
|
|
file system.
|
|
.PD
|
|
.\" =========================================================================
|
|
.SH "ENVIRONMENT OPTIONS"
|
|
\fIunzip\fP's default behavior may be modified via options placed in
|
|
an environment variable. This can be done with any option, but it
|
|
is probably most useful with the \fB\-a\fP, \fB\-L\fP, \fB\-C\fP, \fB\-q\fP,
|
|
\fB\-o\fP, or \fB\-n\fP modifiers: make \fIunzip\fP auto-convert text
|
|
files by default, make it convert filenames from uppercase systems to
|
|
lowercase, make it match names case-insensitively, make it quieter,
|
|
or make it always overwrite or never overwrite files as it extracts
|
|
them. For example, to make \fIunzip\fP act as quietly as possible, only
|
|
reporting errors, one would use one of the following commands:
|
|
.TP
|
|
Unix Bourne shell:
|
|
UNZIP=\-qq; export UNZIP
|
|
.TP
|
|
Unix C shell:
|
|
setenv UNZIP \-qq
|
|
.TP
|
|
OS/2 or MS-DOS:
|
|
set UNZIP=\-qq
|
|
.TP
|
|
VMS (quotes for \fIlowercase\fP):
|
|
define UNZIP_OPTS "\-qq"
|
|
.PP
|
|
Environment options are, in effect, considered to be just like any other
|
|
command-line options, except that they are effectively the first options
|
|
on the command line. To override an environment option, one may use the
|
|
``minus operator'' to remove it. For instance, to override one of the
|
|
quiet-flags in the example above, use the command
|
|
.PP
|
|
.EX
|
|
unzip \-\-q[\fIother options\fP] zipfile
|
|
.EE
|
|
.PP
|
|
The first hyphen is the normal
|
|
switch character, and the second is a minus sign, acting on the q option.
|
|
Thus the effect here is to cancel one quantum of quietness. To cancel
|
|
both quiet flags, two (or more) minuses may be used:
|
|
.PP
|
|
.EX
|
|
unzip \-t\-\-q zipfile
|
|
unzip \-\-\-qt zipfile
|
|
.EE
|
|
.PP
|
|
(the two are equivalent). This may seem awkward
|
|
or confusing, but it is reasonably intuitive: just ignore the first
|
|
hyphen and go from there. It is also consistent with the behavior of
|
|
Unix \fInice\fP(1).
|
|
.PP
|
|
As suggested by the examples above, the default variable names are UNZIP_OPTS
|
|
for VMS (where the symbol used to install \fIunzip\fP as a foreign command
|
|
would otherwise be confused with the environment variable), and UNZIP
|
|
for all other operating systems. For compatibility with \fIzip\fP(1L),
|
|
UNZIPOPT is also accepted (don't ask). If both UNZIP and UNZIPOPT
|
|
are defined, however, UNZIP takes precedence. \fIunzip\fP's diagnostic
|
|
option (\fB\-v\fP with no zipfile name) can be used to check the values
|
|
of all four possible \fIunzip\fP and \fIzipinfo\fP environment variables.
|
|
.PP
|
|
The timezone variable (TZ) should be set according to the local timezone
|
|
in order for the \fB\-f\fP and \fB\-u\fP to operate correctly. See the
|
|
description of \fB\-f\fP above for details. This variable may also be
|
|
necessary to get timestamps of extracted files to be set correctly.
|
|
The WIN32 (Win9x/ME/NT4/2K/XP/2K3) port of \fIunzip\fP gets the timezone
|
|
configuration from the registry, assuming it is correctly set in the
|
|
Control Panel. The TZ variable is ignored for this port.
|
|
.PD
|
|
.\" =========================================================================
|
|
.SH DECRYPTION
|
|
Encrypted archives are fully supported by Info-ZIP software, but due to
|
|
United States export restrictions, de-/encryption support might be disabled
|
|
in your compiled binary. However, since spring 2000, US export restrictions
|
|
have been liberated, and our source archives do now include full crypt code.
|
|
In case you need binary distributions with crypt support enabled, see the
|
|
file ``WHERE'' in any Info-ZIP source or binary distribution for locations
|
|
both inside and outside the US.
|
|
.PP
|
|
Some compiled versions of \fIunzip\fP may not support decryption.
|
|
To check a version for crypt support, either attempt to test or extract
|
|
an encrypted archive, or else check \fIunzip\fP's diagnostic
|
|
screen (see the \fB\-v\fP option above) for ``\fC[decryption]\fR'' as one
|
|
of the special compilation options.
|
|
.PP
|
|
As noted above, the \fB\-P\fP option may be used to supply a password on
|
|
the command line, but at a cost in security. The preferred decryption
|
|
method is simply to extract normally; if a zipfile member is encrypted,
|
|
\fIunzip\fP will prompt for the password without echoing what is typed.
|
|
\fIunzip\fP continues to use the same password as long as it appears to be
|
|
valid, by testing a 12-byte header on each file. The correct password will
|
|
always check out against the header, but there is a 1-in-256 chance that an
|
|
incorrect password will as well. (This is a security feature of the PKWARE
|
|
zipfile format; it helps prevent brute-force attacks that might otherwise
|
|
gain a large speed advantage by testing only the header.) In the case that
|
|
an incorrect password is given but it passes the header test anyway, either
|
|
an incorrect CRC will be generated for the extracted data or else \fIunzip\fP
|
|
will fail during the extraction because the ``decrypted'' bytes do not
|
|
constitute a valid compressed data stream.
|
|
.PP
|
|
If the first password fails the header check on some file, \fIunzip\fP will
|
|
prompt for another password, and so on until all files are extracted. If
|
|
a password is not known, entering a null password (that is, just a carriage
|
|
return or ``Enter'') is taken as a signal to skip all further prompting.
|
|
Only unencrypted files in the archive(s) will thereafter be extracted. (In
|
|
fact, that's not quite true; older versions of \fIzip\fP(1L) and
|
|
\fIzipcloak\fP(1L) allowed null passwords, so \fIunzip\fP checks each encrypted
|
|
file to see if the null password works. This may result in ``false positives''
|
|
and extraction errors, as noted above.)
|
|
.PP
|
|
Archives encrypted with 8-bit passwords (for example, passwords with accented
|
|
European characters) may not be portable across systems and/or other
|
|
archivers. This problem stems from the use of multiple encoding methods for
|
|
such characters, including Latin-1 (ISO 8859-1) and OEM code page 850.
|
|
DOS \fIPKZIP\fP 2.04g uses the OEM code page; Windows \fIPKZIP\fP 2.50
|
|
uses Latin-1 (and is therefore incompatible with DOS \fIPKZIP\fP); Info-ZIP
|
|
uses the OEM code page on DOS, OS/2 and Win3.x ports but ISO coding
|
|
(Latin-1 etc.) everywhere else; and Nico Mak's \fIWinZip\fP 6.x does not
|
|
allow 8-bit passwords at all. \fIUnZip\fP 5.3 (or newer) attempts to use
|
|
the default character set first (e.g., Latin-1), followed by the alternate
|
|
one (e.g., OEM code page) to test passwords. On EBCDIC systems, if both
|
|
of these fail, EBCDIC encoding will be tested as a last resort. (EBCDIC is
|
|
not tested on non-EBCDIC systems, because there are no known archivers
|
|
that encrypt using EBCDIC encoding.) ISO character encodings other than
|
|
Latin-1 are not supported. The new addition of (partially) Unicode (resp.
|
|
UTF-8) support in \fIUnZip\fP 6.0 has not yet been adapted to the encryption
|
|
password handling in \fIunzip\fP. On systems that use UTF-8 as native
|
|
character encoding, \fIunzip\fP simply tries decryption with the native
|
|
UTF-8 encoded password; the built-in attempts to check the password in
|
|
translated encoding have not yet been adapted for UTF-8 support and
|
|
will consequently fail.
|
|
.PD
|
|
.\" =========================================================================
|
|
.SH EXAMPLES
|
|
To use \fIunzip\fP to extract all members of the archive \fIletters.zip\fP
|
|
into the current directory and subdirectories below it, creating any
|
|
subdirectories as necessary:
|
|
.PP
|
|
.EX
|
|
unzip letters
|
|
.EE
|
|
.PP
|
|
To extract all members of \fIletters.zip\fP into the current directory only:
|
|
.PP
|
|
.EX
|
|
unzip -j letters
|
|
.EE
|
|
.PP
|
|
To test \fIletters.zip\fP, printing only a summary message indicating
|
|
whether the archive is OK or not:
|
|
.PP
|
|
.EX
|
|
unzip -tq letters
|
|
.EE
|
|
.PP
|
|
To test \fIall\fP zipfiles in the current directory, printing only the
|
|
summaries:
|
|
.PP
|
|
.EX
|
|
unzip -tq \e*.zip
|
|
.EE
|
|
.PP
|
|
(The backslash before the asterisk is only required if the shell expands
|
|
wildcards, as in Unix; double quotes could have been used instead, as in
|
|
the source examples below.)\ \ To extract to standard output all members of
|
|
\fIletters.zip\fP whose names end in \fI.tex\fP, auto-converting to the
|
|
local end-of-line convention and piping the output into \fImore\fP(1):
|
|
.PP
|
|
.EX
|
|
unzip \-ca letters \e*.tex | more
|
|
.EE
|
|
.PP
|
|
To extract the binary file \fIpaper1.dvi\fP to standard output and pipe it
|
|
to a printing program:
|
|
.PP
|
|
.EX
|
|
unzip \-p articles paper1.dvi | dvips
|
|
.EE
|
|
.PP
|
|
To extract all FORTRAN and C source files--*.f, *.c, *.h, and Makefile--into
|
|
the /tmp directory:
|
|
.PP
|
|
.EX
|
|
unzip source.zip "*.[fch]" Makefile -d /tmp
|
|
.EE
|
|
.PP
|
|
(the double quotes are necessary only in Unix and only if globbing is turned
|
|
on). To extract all FORTRAN and C source files, regardless of case (e.g.,
|
|
both *.c and *.C, and any makefile, Makefile, MAKEFILE or similar):
|
|
.PP
|
|
.EX
|
|
unzip \-C source.zip "*.[fch]" makefile -d /tmp
|
|
.EE
|
|
.PP
|
|
To extract any such files but convert any uppercase MS-DOS or VMS names to
|
|
lowercase and convert the line-endings of all of the files to the local
|
|
standard (without respect to any files that might be marked ``binary''):
|
|
.PP
|
|
.EX
|
|
unzip \-aaCL source.zip "*.[fch]" makefile -d /tmp
|
|
.EE
|
|
.PP
|
|
To extract only newer versions of the files already in the current
|
|
directory, without querying (NOTE: be careful of unzipping in one timezone a
|
|
zipfile created in another--ZIP archives other than those created by Zip 2.1
|
|
or later contain no timezone information, and a ``newer'' file from an eastern
|
|
timezone may, in fact, be older):
|
|
.PP
|
|
.EX
|
|
unzip \-fo sources
|
|
.EE
|
|
.PP
|
|
To extract newer versions of the files already in the current directory and
|
|
to create any files not already there (same caveat as previous example):
|
|
.PP
|
|
.EX
|
|
unzip \-uo sources
|
|
.EE
|
|
.PP
|
|
To display a diagnostic screen showing which \fIunzip\fP and \fIzipinfo\fP
|
|
options are stored in environment variables, whether decryption support was
|
|
compiled in, the compiler with which \fIunzip\fP was compiled, etc.:
|
|
.PP
|
|
.EX
|
|
unzip \-v
|
|
.EE
|
|
.PP
|
|
In the last five examples, assume that UNZIP or UNZIP_OPTS is set to -q.
|
|
To do a singly quiet listing:
|
|
.PP
|
|
.EX
|
|
unzip \-l file.zip
|
|
.EE
|
|
.PP
|
|
To do a doubly quiet listing:
|
|
.PP
|
|
.EX
|
|
unzip \-ql file.zip
|
|
.EE
|
|
.PP
|
|
(Note that the ``\fC.zip\fR'' is generally not necessary.) To do a standard
|
|
listing:
|
|
.PP
|
|
.EX
|
|
unzip \-\-ql file.zip
|
|
.EE
|
|
or
|
|
.EX
|
|
unzip \-l\-q file.zip
|
|
.EE
|
|
or
|
|
.EX
|
|
unzip \-l\-\-q file.zip
|
|
.EE
|
|
\fR(Extra minuses in options don't hurt.)
|
|
.PD
|
|
.\" =========================================================================
|
|
.SH TIPS
|
|
The current maintainer, being a lazy sort, finds it very useful to define
|
|
a pair of aliases: \fCtt\fR for ``\fCunzip \-tq\fR'' and \fCii\fR for
|
|
``\fCunzip \-Z\fR'' (or ``\fCzipinfo\fR''). One may then simply type
|
|
``\fCtt zipfile\fR'' to test an archive, something that is worth making a
|
|
habit of doing. With luck \fIunzip\fP will report ``\fCNo errors detected
|
|
in compressed data of zipfile.zip\fR,'' after which one may breathe a sigh
|
|
of relief.
|
|
.PP
|
|
The maintainer also finds it useful to set the UNZIP environment variable
|
|
to ``\fC\-aL\fR'' and is tempted to add ``\fC\-C\fR'' as well. His ZIPINFO
|
|
variable is set to ``\fC\-z\fR''.
|
|
.PD
|
|
.\" =========================================================================
|
|
.SH DIAGNOSTICS
|
|
The exit status (or error level) approximates the exit codes defined by PKWARE
|
|
and takes on the following values, except under VMS:
|
|
.RS
|
|
.IP 0
|
|
normal; no errors or warnings detected.
|
|
.IP 1
|
|
one or more warning errors were encountered, but processing completed
|
|
successfully anyway. This includes zipfiles where one or more files
|
|
was skipped due to unsupported compression method or encryption with an
|
|
unknown password.
|
|
.IP 2
|
|
a generic error in the zipfile format was detected. Processing may have
|
|
completed successfully anyway; some broken zipfiles created by other
|
|
archivers have simple work-arounds.
|
|
.IP 3
|
|
a severe error in the zipfile format was detected. Processing probably
|
|
failed immediately.
|
|
.IP 4
|
|
\fIunzip\fP was unable to allocate memory for one or more buffers during
|
|
program initialization.
|
|
.IP 5
|
|
\fIunzip\fP was unable to allocate memory or unable to obtain a tty to read
|
|
the decryption password(s).
|
|
.IP 6
|
|
\fIunzip\fP was unable to allocate memory during decompression to disk.
|
|
.IP 7
|
|
\fIunzip\fP was unable to allocate memory during in-memory decompression.
|
|
.IP 8
|
|
[currently not used]
|
|
.IP 9
|
|
the specified zipfiles were not found.
|
|
.IP 10
|
|
invalid options were specified on the command line.
|
|
.IP 11
|
|
no matching files were found.
|
|
.IP 50
|
|
the disk is (or was) full during extraction.
|
|
.IP 51
|
|
the end of the ZIP archive was encountered prematurely.
|
|
.IP 80
|
|
the user aborted \fIunzip\fP prematurely with control-C (or similar)
|
|
.IP 81
|
|
testing or extraction of one or more files failed due to unsupported
|
|
compression methods or unsupported decryption.
|
|
.IP 82
|
|
no files were found due to bad decryption password(s). (If even one file is
|
|
successfully processed, however, the exit status is 1.)
|
|
.RE
|
|
.PP
|
|
VMS interprets standard Unix (or PC) return values as other, scarier-looking
|
|
things, so \fIunzip\fP instead maps them into VMS-style status codes. The
|
|
current mapping is as follows: 1 (success) for normal exit, 0x7fff0001
|
|
for warning errors, and (0x7fff000? + 16*normal_unzip_exit_status) for all
|
|
other errors, where the `?' is 2 (error) for \fIunzip\fP values 2, 9-11 and
|
|
80-82, and 4 (fatal error) for the remaining ones (3-8, 50, 51). In addition,
|
|
there is a compilation option to expand upon this behavior: defining
|
|
RETURN_CODES results in a human-readable explanation of what the error
|
|
status means.
|
|
.PD
|
|
.\" =========================================================================
|
|
.SH BUGS
|
|
Multi-part archives are not yet supported, except in conjunction with
|
|
\fIzip\fP. (All parts must be concatenated together in order, and then
|
|
``\fCzip \-F\fR'' (for \fIzip 2.x\fP) or ``\fCzip \-FF\fR'' (for
|
|
\fIzip 3.x\fP) must be performed on the concatenated archive in order to
|
|
``fix'' it. Also, \fIzip 3.0\fP and later can combine multi-part (split)
|
|
archives into a combined single-file archive using ``\fCzip \-s\- inarchive
|
|
-O outarchive\fR''. See the \fIzip 3\fP manual page for more information.)
|
|
This will definitely be corrected in the next major release.
|
|
.PP
|
|
Archives read from standard input are not yet supported, except with
|
|
\fIfunzip\fP (and then only the first member of the archive can be extracted).
|
|
.PP
|
|
Archives encrypted with 8-bit passwords (e.g., passwords with accented
|
|
European characters) may not be portable across systems and/or other
|
|
archivers. See the discussion in \fBDECRYPTION\fP above.
|
|
.PP
|
|
\fIunzip\fP's \fB\-M\fP (``more'') option tries to take into account automatic
|
|
wrapping of long lines. However, the code may fail to detect the correct
|
|
wrapping locations. First, TAB characters (and similar control sequences) are
|
|
not taken into account, they are handled as ordinary printable characters.
|
|
Second, depending on the actual system / OS port, \fIunzip\fP may not detect
|
|
the true screen geometry but rather rely on "commonly used" default dimensions.
|
|
The correct handling of tabs would require the implementation of a query for
|
|
the actual tabulator setup on the output console.
|
|
.PP
|
|
Dates, times and permissions of stored directories are not restored except
|
|
under Unix. (On Windows NT and successors, timestamps are now restored.)
|
|
.PP
|
|
[MS-DOS] When extracting or testing files from an archive on a defective
|
|
floppy diskette, if the ``Fail'' option is chosen from DOS's ``Abort, Retry,
|
|
Fail?'' message, older versions of \fIunzip\fP may hang the system, requiring
|
|
a reboot. This problem appears to be fixed, but control-C (or control-Break)
|
|
can still be used to terminate \fIunzip\fP.
|
|
.PP
|
|
Under DEC Ultrix, \fIunzip\fP would sometimes fail on long zipfiles (bad CRC,
|
|
not always reproducible). This was apparently due either to a hardware bug
|
|
(cache memory) or an operating system bug (improper handling of page faults?).
|
|
Since Ultrix has been abandoned in favor of Digital Unix (OSF/1), this may not
|
|
be an issue anymore.
|
|
.PP
|
|
[Unix] Unix special files such as FIFO buffers (named pipes), block devices
|
|
and character devices are not restored even if they are somehow represented
|
|
in the zipfile, nor are hard-linked files relinked. Basically the only file
|
|
types restored by \fIunzip\fP are regular files, directories and symbolic
|
|
(soft) links.
|
|
.PP
|
|
[OS/2] Extended attributes for existing directories are only updated if the
|
|
\fB\-o\fP (``overwrite all'') option is given. This is a limitation of the
|
|
operating system; because directories only have a creation time associated
|
|
with them, \fIunzip\fP has no way to determine whether the stored attributes
|
|
are newer or older than those on disk. In practice this may mean a two-pass
|
|
approach is required: first unpack the archive normally (with or without
|
|
freshening/updating existing files), then overwrite just the directory entries
|
|
(e.g., ``\fCunzip -o foo */\fR'').
|
|
.PP
|
|
[VMS] When extracting to another directory, only the \fI[.foo]\fP syntax is
|
|
accepted for the \fB\-d\fP option; the simple Unix \fIfoo\fP syntax is
|
|
silently ignored (as is the less common VMS \fIfoo.dir\fP syntax).
|
|
.PP
|
|
[VMS] When the file being extracted already exists, \fIunzip\fP's query only
|
|
allows skipping, overwriting or renaming; there should additionally be a
|
|
choice for creating a new version of the file. In fact, the ``overwrite''
|
|
choice does create a new version; the old version is not overwritten or
|
|
deleted.
|
|
.PD
|
|
.\" =========================================================================
|
|
.SH "SEE ALSO"
|
|
\fIfunzip\fP(1L), \fIzip\fP(1L), \fIzipcloak\fP(1L), \fIzipgrep\fP(1L),
|
|
\fIzipinfo\fP(1L), \fIzipnote\fP(1L), \fIzipsplit\fP(1L)
|
|
.PD
|
|
.\" =========================================================================
|
|
.SH URL
|
|
The Info-ZIP home page is currently at
|
|
.EX
|
|
\fChttp://www.info-zip.org/pub/infozip/\fR
|
|
.EE
|
|
or
|
|
.EX
|
|
\fCftp://ftp.info-zip.org/pub/infozip/\fR .
|
|
.EE
|
|
.PD
|
|
.\" =========================================================================
|
|
.SH AUTHORS
|
|
The primary Info-ZIP authors (current semi-active members of the Zip-Bugs
|
|
workgroup) are: Ed Gordon (Zip, general maintenance, shared code, Zip64,
|
|
Win32, Unix, Unicode); Christian Spieler (UnZip maintenance coordination,
|
|
VMS, MS-DOS, Win32, shared code, general Zip and UnZip integration and
|
|
optimization); Onno van der Linden (Zip); Mike White (Win32, Windows GUI,
|
|
Windows DLLs); Kai Uwe Rommel (OS/2, Win32); Steven M. Schweda (VMS, Unix,
|
|
support of new features); Paul Kienitz (Amiga, Win32, Unicode); Chris
|
|
Herborth (BeOS, QNX, Atari); Jonathan Hudson (SMS/QDOS); Sergio Monesi
|
|
(Acorn RISC OS); Harald Denker (Atari, MVS); John Bush (Solaris, Amiga);
|
|
Hunter Goatley (VMS, Info-ZIP Site maintenance); Steve Salisbury (Win32);
|
|
Steve Miller (Windows CE GUI), Johnny Lee (MS-DOS, Win32, Zip64); and Dave
|
|
Smith (Tandem NSK).
|
|
.PP
|
|
The following people were former members of the Info-ZIP development group
|
|
and provided major contributions to key parts of the current code:
|
|
Greg ``Cave Newt'' Roelofs (UnZip, unshrink decompression);
|
|
Jean-loup Gailly (deflate compression);
|
|
Mark Adler (inflate decompression, fUnZip).
|
|
.PP
|
|
The author of the original unzip code upon which Info-ZIP's was based
|
|
is Samuel H. Smith; Carl Mascott did the first Unix port; and David P.
|
|
Kirschbaum organized and led Info-ZIP in its early days with Keith Petersen
|
|
hosting the original mailing list at WSMR-SimTel20. The full list of
|
|
contributors to UnZip has grown quite large; please refer to the CONTRIBS
|
|
file in the UnZip source distribution for a relatively complete version.
|
|
.PD
|
|
.\" =========================================================================
|
|
.SH VERSIONS
|
|
.ta \w'vx.xxnn'u +\w'fall 1989'u+3n
|
|
.PD 0
|
|
.IP "v1.2\t15 Mar 89" \w'\t\t'u
|
|
Samuel H. Smith
|
|
.IP "v2.0\t\ 9 Sep 89"
|
|
Samuel H. Smith
|
|
.IP "v2.x\tfall 1989"
|
|
many Usenet contributors
|
|
.IP "v3.0\t\ 1 May 90"
|
|
Info-ZIP (DPK, consolidator)
|
|
.IP "v3.1\t15 Aug 90"
|
|
Info-ZIP (DPK, consolidator)
|
|
.IP "v4.0\t\ 1 Dec 90"
|
|
Info-ZIP (GRR, maintainer)
|
|
.IP "v4.1\t12 May 91"
|
|
Info-ZIP
|
|
.IP "v4.2\t20 Mar 92"
|
|
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, GRR)
|
|
.IP "v5.0\t21 Aug 92"
|
|
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, GRR)
|
|
.IP "v5.01\t15 Jan 93"
|
|
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, GRR)
|
|
.IP "v5.1\t\ 7 Feb 94"
|
|
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, GRR)
|
|
.IP "v5.11\t\ 2 Aug 94"
|
|
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, GRR)
|
|
.IP "v5.12\t28 Aug 94"
|
|
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, GRR)
|
|
.IP "v5.2\t30 Apr 96"
|
|
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, GRR)
|
|
.IP "v5.3\t22 Apr 97"
|
|
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, GRR)
|
|
.IP "v5.31\t31 May 97"
|
|
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, GRR)
|
|
.IP "v5.32\t\ 3 Nov 97"
|
|
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, GRR)
|
|
.IP "v5.4\t28 Nov 98"
|
|
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, SPC)
|
|
.IP "v5.41\t16 Apr 00"
|
|
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, SPC)
|
|
.IP "v5.42\t14 Jan 01"
|
|
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, SPC)
|
|
.IP "v5.5\t17 Feb 02"
|
|
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, SPC)
|
|
.IP "v5.51\t22 May 04"
|
|
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, SPC)
|
|
.IP "v5.52\t28 Feb 05"
|
|
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, SPC)
|
|
.IP "v6.0\t20 Apr 09"
|
|
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, SPC)
|
|
.PD
|