gmoney3138 wrote:
>All--
>
>I'm trying to get a clear answer on this one. I have a gzipped tar
file
>from a customer that was originated on Unix. Inside the tar.gz are a
series
>of files that look something like this:
>
>systemlog_071607_09:25.log
>systemlog_071607_10:07.log
>
>etc...
>
>Basical
gmoney3138 wrote:
> Thanks to all, that just might be what I'm looking for.
>
> Also, I made a typo in my original message. My mistake :). I meant
> to type "force-local" instead of "force-file". According to the tar
> help pages:
>
> --force-local archive file is local even if it ha
Thanks to all, that just might be what I'm looking for.
Also, I made a typo in my original message. My mistake :). I meant to type
"force-local" instead of "force-file". According to the tar help pages:
--force-local archive file is local even if it has a colon
I couldn't get this t
gmoney3138 wrote:
> When the cygwin tar recognizes this, due to Windows restrictions, the output
> file is not properly extracted. I Googled around and found options for
Use a managed mount or "--transform s,:,_,g".
I'm not sure what this --force-file you mention is but it's not a valid
tar opt
When the cygwin tar recognizes this, due to Windows restrictions, the output
file is not properly extracted. I Googled around and found options for
--force-file and http://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2001-01/msg01536.html this
link , but I still can't get this to work properly.
I am able to get the f
gmoney3138 wrote:
All--
I'm trying to get a clear answer on this one. I have a gzipped tar file
from a customer that was originated on Unix. Inside the tar.gz are a series
of files that look something like this:
systemlog_071607_09:25.log
systemlog_071607_10:07.log
etc...
Basically, as per
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