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.
*.json
at all?)