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How do I rewrite file paths to be absolute in tar, other than rewriting the actual tar file? e.g.

$ tree tmp_fs
tmp_fs
├── bin
├── boot
│   └── kernel
├── include
├── lib
└── share
    └── misc
        └── logo

6 directories, 2 files

$ tar cC tmp_fs . | tar t
./
./share/
./share/misc/
./share/misc/logo
./lib/
./boot/
./boot/kernel
./include/
./bin

Ideally, I'd like to find an option to pass to tar that'd make the paths all be absolute (i.e. /boot/kernel instead of ./boot/kernel).

1 Answer 1

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If you mean when you're extracting the files, you just extract the tar file to /

For example:

tar -C / -xvf myfile.tar

If you're trying to force the tarfile to extract to a specific location, no matter what the person extracting it specifies, you can't do that. You'd need to include it in some kind of package, such as a .deb or .rpm file.

4
  • I know this is at least possible, because there are dozens of Google search results on people trying to do the opposite (eg. have ./whatever.txt instead of /home/me/Desktop/whatever.txt). The TAR format supports it, too (because I can do this with a hex editor), I'm just trying to do it without needing a hex editor or a post-processing step with Python/Perl/whatever language of choice. Oct 5, 2015 at 2:33
  • You can use the -P option to get the absolute path, however it doesn't extract the file absolutely. You can't get it to do that. Just try it with your hex edited file, it will still extract to whatever directory you specify.
    – seumasmac
    Oct 5, 2015 at 2:54
  • 1
    The -P option makes the paths /home/me/Desktop/whatever.txt; if I just want /whatever.txt, is there a way? Oct 5, 2015 at 3:25
  • Weirdly, there is. You can use something like: --transform='s_.*/_/_g' The --transform expression is a sed substitution expression. This one replaces /anything/like/this/thing/ with just /
    – seumasmac
    Oct 5, 2015 at 3:35

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