zip -h is confusing! I just want to know how to make a .zip from a directory. kthxbi
zip -r archive.zip dir_to_zip
from man zip
-r
--recurse-paths
Travel the directory structure recursively; for example:
zip -r foo.zip foo
or more concisely
zip -r foo foo
In this case, all the files and directories in foo are saved in a zip archive
named foo.zip,including files with names starting with ".", since the recursion
does not use the shell's file-name substitution mechanism...
Even if it functions well I would like to propose you 7z(http://www.7-zip.org/).
7za a directory.7z directory
It has a better compression and it is opensource, GNU LGPL license, freely available for windows,linux,BSD...
BTW it creates/opens 7z, XZ, BZIP2, GZIP, TAR, ZIP and WIM,
and open unpack only: ARJ, CAB, CHM, CPIO, CramFS, DEB, DMG, FAT, HFS, ISO, LZH, LZMA, MBR, MSI, NSIS, NTFS, RAR, RPM, SquashFS, UDF, VHD, WIM, XAR and Z.
[They should pay me for advertisement :-)]
On linux, although it can zip you really should instead be using :
to compress
tar -jcvf archive_name.tar /path/to/directory_to_compress
where archive_name.tar will be the the compressed version of the input dir /path/to/directory_to_compress
to decompress
tar -xvf archive_name.tar
tar is available on Windows 10 you can install it from https://www.libarchive.org/downloads/ which will give you bsdtar.exe which I just used to successfully decompress a xxx.tar file created on linux
tar on windows https://devblogs.microsoft.com/commandline/tar-and-curl-come-to-windows/
I think this is gonna help you
zip -r new_zip_file directory_name
Where "new_zip_file" is the name of the .zip file you want to create and "directory_name" is the folder you want compress in zip.
This should be quite easy and short
compressing
tar -zcvf filename.tar myflie.sql
Decompressing
tar -xvzf filename
For more interested in knowing usage options
z - filter achieving through gzip
j - filter achieve through bzip2
c - create achieve file
v - show the progress
x - extract achieve file
f - file name
cheers
Typically one uses tar to create an uncompressed archive and either gzip or bzip2 to compress that archive. The corresponding gunzip and bunzip2 commands can be used to uncompress said archive, or you can just use flags on the tar command to perform the uncompression.
If you are referring specifically to the Zip file format, you can simply use the zip and unzip commands.
To compress:
zip squash.zip file1 file2 file3
or to zip a directory
zip -r squash.zip dir1
To uncompress:
unzip squash.zip
this unzips it in your current working directory.
Source :: here
Python
is installed almost everywhere, so:
# create archive
python -m zipfile -c my.zip target_file_or_dir
# extract from archive
python -m zipfile -e my.zip target-dir/
Check docs
© 2022 - 2025 — McMap. All rights reserved.