3

I am doing a nightly backup of all files modified in the last day, using PowerShell.

The goal is to create an uncompressed zip (or any other format) that will group everything in the backup folder into one file, using PowerShell.

The following code works great for compression but it is far too slow:

function Add-Zip
{
    param([string]$zipfilename)

    if(-not (test-path($zipfilename)))
    {
        set-content $zipfilename ("PK" + [char]5 + [char]6 + ("$([char]0)" * 18)) 
        (dir $zipfilename).IsReadOnly = $false  
    }

    $shellApplication = new-object -com shell.application
    $zipPackage = $shellApplication.NameSpace($zipfilename)

    foreach($file in $input) 
    { 
        $zipPackage.CopyHere($file.FullName)
        Start-sleep -milliseconds 1000
        #500 milliseconds was too short.... 
    }
}

Any ideas?

Thanks!

2
  • You chose a hard way. Why don't you use any of available command line tools?
    – stej
    Mar 22, 2011 at 4:09
  • The powershell does more than what I showed above. It was used to only get the files modified in the last day.
    – nosirrahcd
    Mar 22, 2011 at 19:53

3 Answers 3

5

I would recomend using powershell in conjunction with 7-Zip Command line. 7-Zip has a command line option that allows for No Compression.

-mx0
1
  • 1
    For anyone who's as lazy as I am, here's the full command 7z a -tzip archive.zip *.jpg -mx0
    – Prinzhorn
    Jan 6, 2016 at 17:20
4

The PowerShell Community Extensions has a Write-Tar cmdlet that might be of use here.

0

Borrowing from Eld's answer to another question, I came up with:

function ZipFiles( $zipfilename, $sourcedir )
{
   [Reflection.Assembly]::LoadWithPartialName("System.IO.Compression.FileSystem")
   $compressionLevel = [System.IO.Compression.CompressionLevel]::NoCompression
   [System.IO.Compression.ZipFile]::CreateFromDirectory($sourcedir,
        $zipfilename, $compressionLevel, $false)
}

Eld also says of his solution, which applies here as well:

A pure Powershell alternative that works with Powershell 3 and .NET 4.5 (if you can use it):

The change from his answer was to specify NoCompression instead of Optimal for the level.

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