14

I am trying to create a tar with follwing command:

tar -cvf myFile.tar -X exclude-files.txt myContentDirectory

and my exclude-file has follwing patterns to exclude:

**/*.bak
**/*.db
**/*.html

But i dont see these file types being excluded out in my tar. What am I doing wrong here?

I found that when i have just one pattern in my exclude-files.txt, lets say only

**/*.bak

it does work. But not with multiple file patterns (EACH ON NEW LINE)

2
  • What version of tar (and what operating system) are you using? I tested this using the OSX version (tar 2.8.3) and it works fine ...
    – Foo Bah
    Sep 21, 2011 at 21:05
  • Works fine on FreeBSD 12 also (bsdtar 3.5.2 - libarchive 3.5.2 zlib/1.2.11 liblzma/5.2.5 bz2lib/1.0.8) - I note that the use of ** in bash shell is governed by the globstar shell option (shopt globstar) - could some implementation of tar be checking for that? It is off in my shell and tar still handles ** anyway.
    – user9645
    Feb 13, 2023 at 12:15

3 Answers 3

9

I think this:

*.bak
*.db
*.html

is the correct format for the exclude file if you want to exclude a particular directory you could do:

some-dir/*.db

Also your command should look like this:

tar -cvf myFile.tar -X exclude-files.txt myContentDirectory 
2
  • i tried this as well but it worked, what do you get for output when you run the command?
    – Mike K.
    Sep 21, 2011 at 18:20
  • just edited my question above, please have a look. The command does run, but the exclude option works only if there's only one pattern mentioned in my file.
    – user620339
    Sep 21, 2011 at 18:42
5

Sorry if this answer is a little late.

tar -cO --exclude=*.bak myContentDirectory | tar -O --delete '*.db' | tar -O --delete '*.html' > myFile.tar

See, what you're doing here is creating the tar, but sending it to stdout instead of to a file then piping that into tar to delete the stuff you don't want, one or more times and finally writing the output to a file.

You can even test it first like this:

tar -cO --exclude=*.bak myContentDirectory | tar -O --delete '*.db' | tar -O --delete '*.html' | tar -tv

Which will spit out a list of all the files remaining in the archive.

2
  • 3
    --exclude patterns should always be in single quotes e.g. --exclude='*.bak'. see: gnu.org/software/tar/manual/html_node/…
    – thom_nic
    Jun 3, 2020 at 19:07
  • @thom_nic it is best practice, though technically it is not necessary in the above case: --exclude=*.bak. It would be necessary for this form: --exclude '*.bak'. The point is to avoid shell expansion.
    – aff
    Sep 29, 2020 at 6:54
1

Most likely the order of the command is incorrect.

tar -cvf myFile.tar -X exclude-files.txt myContentDirectory

should be something like

tar cv -X exclude-files.txt -f myFile.tar myContentDirectory

PS. I haven't looked into the filters itself. Most likely order of the parameters is the issue. If issues is in the filters/patterns - it's easier to test one by one with --exclude option.

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