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I have a directory with plus 1,000,000 .json files and used the following command to build a j.tar.gz only from json files (without including the /Library/WebServer/a/a/e/j/ path):

cd /Library/WebServer/a/a/e/j && tar -zcvf j.tar.gz *.json

This error happened: ...Argument list too long. Would you suggest a better command to accomplish this task? Thanks.

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  • There are things other than JSON files in this directory? (If not, why specify *.json at all?) Jul 13, 2016 at 20:10

4 Answers 4

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An initial caveat: tar is not a standards-defined tool (the POSIX archiver is pax), so its behavior can vary between platforms without any minimal guaranteed baseline. Your mileage may vary.


Since this is flagged for bash, you can use <() -- a process substitution -- to generate a filename which, when read, will emit a subprocess's output without the need for a temporary file. (This will typically be implemented as either a /dev/fd name if your operating system supports them, or a named pipe otherwise).

If you only want the cd to apply to the tar command, you can do that as follows, putting it in a subshell and using exec to have the subshell replace itself with the tar command, avoiding the fork penalty that a subshell otherwise creates:

dir=/Library/WebServer/a/a/e/j
(cd "$dir" && exec tar --null -zcvf j.tar.gz -T <(printf '%s\0' *.json) )

Alternately, if your tar supports it, you can use --include to tell tar itself to filter the names:

tar -C "$dir" --include='*.json' -cvzf "$dir/j.tar.gz" .

Points of note:

  • printf '%s\n' *.json is immune from this because printf is a shell builtin; thus, the glob results aren't put in an execv-family syscall's arguments, so ARG_MAX doesn't apply.
  • Using --null on find and '%s\0' on printf (or -print0 if you were generating your list of names with find) prevents a maliciously-generated name with a literal newline from being able to inject arbitrary names into your stream. Think about what happens if someone runs mkdir -p $'hello/\n/etc/passwd\n.json' -- you don't want /etc/passwd going into your tarball.
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  • Thanks a lot for your answer,Cheers.
    – Sami
    Jul 16, 2016 at 4:26
  • there is a j directory inside the j.tar.gz file. How can I change the j directory permission inside the j.tar.gz to 755. Thanks again.
    – Sami
    Jul 24, 2016 at 18:44
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Try:

find . -type f -name "*.json" > ./include_file && tar -zcvf j.tar.gz --files-from ./include_file

NOTE: This was tested successfully on CentOS/RedHat 6.7.

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  • .json, not .sh Jul 13, 2016 at 20:11
  • @CharlesDuffy - I was editing that at about the same time you caught it. :-) (Didn't have enough .json files to test it.) But thanks for the input.
    – tale852150
    Jul 13, 2016 at 20:24
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There is a limit set by your system. You can check

$ getconf ARG_MAX

mine returns

131072

Alternatively, you can create a file list for tar and use -T, --files-from F option to get names instead of globbing which hits the max args limit.

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  • It's worth mentioning the nature of the limit (ie. that it's bytes, rather than number of arguments, and that environment variables as opposed to only command-line length counts against it). Jul 13, 2016 at 20:18
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How about something like:

> cd /Library/WebServer/a/a/e/j
> find . -name '*.json' -maxdepth 1 | xargs tar -czvf j.tar.gz --add-file

It does not require temporary file and does not need to do *.json in the shell which would fail.

Checked on Ubuntu haven't got Mac at hand.

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  • If you have more files than will fit in ARG_MAX, this will run tar more than once and overwrite the old j.tar.gz on every subsequent invocation. It is possible to tell tar to append to an existing archive, but that's not -c. Jul 16, 2016 at 14:48

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