cpio

Cpio
Developer(s) GNU Project
Stable release 2.11  (March 10, 2010; 22 months ago (2010-03-10))[1] [±]
Written in C
Operating system Unix-like
Type File archiver
License GPL
Website www.gnu.org/software/cpio/

cpio is a general file archiver utility and its associated file format. It is primarily installed on Unix-like computer operating systems. The software utility was originally intended as a tape archiving program as part of the Programmer's Workbench (PWB/UNIX), and has been a component of virtually every Unix operating system released thereafter. Its name is derived from the phrase copy in and out, in close description of the program's use of standard input and standard output in its operation.

All variants of Unix also support other backup and archiving programs, such as tar that has become more widely recognized.[2] The use of cpio by the RPM Package Manager, in the initramfs program of Linux kernel 2.6, and in Apple Computer's Installer (pax) make cpio an important archiving tool.

Since its original design, cpio and its archive file format have undergone several, sometimes incompatible, revisions. Most notable is the change, now an operational option, from the use of a binary format of archive file meta information to an ASCII-based representation.

Contents

Operation and archive format

Cpio was originally designed to store backup file archives on a tape device in a sequential, contiguous manner. Cpio does not compress any content, but resulting archives are often compressed using gzip or other external compressors.

Archive creation

When creating archives during the copy-out operation, initiated with the -o command line flag, cpio reads file and directory path names from its standard input channel and writes the resulting archive byte stream to its standard output. Cpio is therefore typically used with other utilities that generate the list of files to be archived, such as the find program.

The resulting cpio archive is a sequence of files and directories concatenated into a single archive, separated by header sections with file meta information, such as filename, inode number, ownership, permissions, and timestamps. The file name of an archive is conventionally usually chosen with a .cpio file extension.

This example uses the find utility to generate a list of path names starting in the current directory to create an archive of the directory tree:

$ find . -depth -print | cpio -o >/path/archive.cpio

Extraction

During the copy-in operation, initiated by the -i command line flag, cpio reads an archive from its standard input and recreates the archived files in the operating system's file system.

$ cpio -ivd <archive.cpio

The -d flag tells cpio to construct directories as necessary. The -v flag lists file names as they are extracted.

Any remaining command line arguments other than the option flags are shell-like globbing-patterns; only files in the archive with matching names are copied from the archive. The following example extracts etc/fstab from the archive.

$ cpio -id etc/fstab <archive.cpio

List

The files contained in a cpio archive may be listed with this invocation:

$ cpio -it < archive.cpio

List may be useful since a cpio archive may contain absolute rather than relative paths (e.g., /bin/ls vs. bin/ls).

Copy

Cpio supports a third type of operation which copies files. It is initiated with the pass option (-p). This mode combines the copy-out and copy-in steps without actually creating any file archive. In this mode, cpio reads path names on standard input like the copy-out operation, but instead of creating an archive, it recreates the directories and files at a different location in the file system, as specified by the path given as a command line argument.

This example copies the directory tree starting at the current directory to another path new-path in the file system, preserving file modes (-m), creating directories as needed (-d), replacing any existing files unconditionally (-u), while producing a progress listing on standard output (-v):

$ find . -depth -print | cpio -pdumv new-path

POSIX standardization

The cpio utility was standardized in POSIX.1-1988. It was dropped from later revisions, starting with POSIX.1-2001 because of its 8 GB file size limit. The POSIX standardized pax utility can be used to read and write cpio archives instead.

Implementations

Most Linux distributions provide the GNU version of cpio.[3] FreeBSD and Mac OS X use the BSD-licensed cpio provided with libarchive[4]

See also

References

  1. ^ Poznyakoff, Sergey (2010-03-10). "cpio-2.11 released [stable]". info-gnu mailing list. http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/info-gnu/2010-03/msg00009.html. Retrieved 2010-03-21. 
  2. ^ Peek, J; O'Reilly, T; Loukides, M. (1997). Unix Power Tools. p. 38.13. O'Reilly & Associates, Inc. ISBN 1-56592-260-3.
  3. ^ "Cpio". GNU.org.
  4. ^ "libarchive". Google Code.

External links