239

I have a file that contain list of files I want to archive with tar. Let's call it mylist.txt

It contains:

file1.txt
file2.txt
...
file10.txt

Is there a way I can issue TAR command that takes mylist.txt as input? Something like

tar -cvf allfiles.tar -[someoption?] mylist.txt

So that it is similar as if I issue this command:

tar -cvf allfiles.tar file1.txt file2.txt file10.txt 
2
  • 4
    The tar man page is extremely unhelpful for this option (at least on RedHat 5.4 thru 6.3): "-T: get names to extract or create from file F". "Extract or create" sounds like it applies to taking files out of the tar archive, but not putting them in. The -X exclude option survives from the old Unix tar command, but apparently -I (include) did not! Dec 18, 2013 at 14:49
  • There are few man pages with an EXAMPLES section, despite it being a standard section. See <unix.stackexchange.com/questions/306189/…>. Apr 29, 2019 at 10:22

6 Answers 6

363

Yes:

tar -cvf allfiles.tar -T mylist.txt
5
  • 1
    I wish I could put comments in mylist.txt .. is there any workaround using some tar option from inside mylist.txt ?
    – Stphane
    Aug 10, 2018 at 10:50
  • 12
    @Stphane that's simple, using the --exclude flag allows this. Assuming your comment lines start with a '#', a command such as the following would ignore / exclude any attempted file operations on lines containing cmments, i.e. your command can look like this: tar -cvf allfiles.tar --exclude='^#' -T mylist.txt. Tar reports an error, but when you check your tar archive, there are no errors, and all files from the list are inside your archive.
    – Matt G
    Oct 31, 2018 at 6:05
  • Pointing out that this command is for linux variant and for those on sunOS or other variants, do check out the other answers below. E.g. For sunOS, two alternatives I have tested: tar -cvf file.tar -I list.txt and tar -cvf file.tar $(cat list.txt) Sep 2, 2019 at 8:37
  • 2
    -L mylist.txt on AIX
    – Roland
    Apr 24, 2020 at 11:32
  • You may also want to add a "--verbatim-files-from" option (before the -T), otherwise items in the list file which start with a dash (like -h or --dereference) will be treated as tar commands.
    – William
    Sep 27, 2021 at 18:52
95

Assuming GNU tar (as this is Linux), the -T or --files-from option is what you want.

1
  • 3
    This option also exists in "bsdtar 3.1.2" on FreeBSD 10.
    – drue
    Jun 23, 2014 at 14:56
63

You can also pipe in the file names which might be useful:

find /path/to/files -name \*.txt | tar -cvf allfiles.tar -T -
6
  • 2
    What if the .txt files list is really huge ? Should one use xarg command with tar -r.. instead of tar -c.. ?
    – Stphane
    Dec 15, 2015 at 22:42
  • 3
    @Stphane Hmm, I don't think the length of the list matters much for this method. In fact, I would imagine this method is better than xargs as xargs will rerun tar over and over to append data, but I haven't really tested the methods side by side.
    – woot
    Mar 1, 2016 at 20:28
  • 6
    When a pipe is employed, which is the case here, the operating system creates streams on both sides of the pipe and synchronizes production and consumption of data. The list of files could be infinite. You could tar/gz the entire internet using a Raspberry Pi Zero, given that you have enough storage on the end of the pipe. Dec 29, 2019 at 13:06
  • @Stpihane if you did eg find /path/to -name '*.txt' -exec tar -cvf all.tar {} \+ you'd be in trouble, yes, as find would execute the tar command multiple times with successive subsets of the files. Only the last subset would be in the archive, as it would be created anew for each tar execution.
    – drevicko
    Aug 30, 2020 at 13:33
  • 1
    Sorting the files by size via something like find /path/to -type f | parallel du | sort -n | cut -f2- | tar -cf - -T - can be handy for placing duplicate files next to one another for something like xz --lzma2=dict=100MiB if you want to deduplicate lots of ~10 MiB files.
    – baltakatei
    Jan 2 at 11:30
22

Some versions of tar, for example, the default versions on HP-UX (I tested 11.11 and 11.31), do not include a command line option to specify a file list, so a decent work-around is to do this:

tar cvf allfiles.tar $(cat mylist.txt)
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  • 7
    UUoC (unnecessary use of cat), simply $(<mylist.txt). Jul 25, 2016 at 6:21
  • 5
    note that this may exceed the maximum length of the command line if mylist.txt is large Dec 4, 2017 at 6:35
  • in that case tar -T <(<mylist.txt). redundant like this answer.
    – Mike D
    May 31, 2018 at 18:27
  • Just wonder if this would work 'cat mylist.txt | tr '\n' '\0' | xargs -0L1 tar rf allfiles.tar' to avoid exceeding command line length. With 'tar rf' files are appended to archive. -0L1 stands for taking only one line from the file. -0L2, -0L3, ... should also be possible
    – grenix
    Oct 27, 2021 at 17:12
10

On Solaris, you can use the option -I to read the filenames that you would normally state on the command line from a file. In contrast to the command line, this can create tar archives with hundreds of thousands of files (just did that).

So the example would read

tar -cvf allfiles.tar -I mylist.txt
7

For me on AIX, it worked as follows:

tar -L List.txt -cvf BKP.tar
2
  • How do you tar and not include full path? Oct 22, 2020 at 7:41
  • 3
    In debian based the option is -T, --files-from=FILE.
    – Maske
    Dec 6, 2021 at 17:04

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