How to extract a tar in a tar












1














I have a tar file with tar files in it. They are rather large so I was wondering if it is possible to extract a specific tar in the tar file directly.



Is that possible? How?










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    1














    I have a tar file with tar files in it. They are rather large so I was wondering if it is possible to extract a specific tar in the tar file directly.



    Is that possible? How?










    share|improve this question

























      1












      1








      1







      I have a tar file with tar files in it. They are rather large so I was wondering if it is possible to extract a specific tar in the tar file directly.



      Is that possible? How?










      share|improve this question













      I have a tar file with tar files in it. They are rather large so I was wondering if it is possible to extract a specific tar in the tar file directly.



      Is that possible? How?







      tar






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked Dec 12 '18 at 16:23









      onknowsonknows

      210236




      210236






















          2 Answers
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          If I understood it correctly that you want the contents of the "inner" tar file to be extracted, 1) use the O option to extract a given file to stdout, 2) use f - to read an archive from stdin:



          tar -xOf outer_archive.tar inner_archive_1.tar | tar -tf -

          tar -xOf outer_archive.tar inner_archive_1.tar | tar -xvf -





          share|improve this answer





























            1














            If you have 7-Zip installed, either on Linux (or from from GNOME Software, for Debian distros) or on Windows in a dual-boot setup (7-Zip runs well under wine), you can explore a tar or other archive using a GUI, and decide what needs to be extracted.






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              2 Answers
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              2 Answers
              2






              active

              oldest

              votes









              active

              oldest

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              active

              oldest

              votes









              1














              If I understood it correctly that you want the contents of the "inner" tar file to be extracted, 1) use the O option to extract a given file to stdout, 2) use f - to read an archive from stdin:



              tar -xOf outer_archive.tar inner_archive_1.tar | tar -tf -

              tar -xOf outer_archive.tar inner_archive_1.tar | tar -xvf -





              share|improve this answer


























                1














                If I understood it correctly that you want the contents of the "inner" tar file to be extracted, 1) use the O option to extract a given file to stdout, 2) use f - to read an archive from stdin:



                tar -xOf outer_archive.tar inner_archive_1.tar | tar -tf -

                tar -xOf outer_archive.tar inner_archive_1.tar | tar -xvf -





                share|improve this answer
























                  1












                  1








                  1






                  If I understood it correctly that you want the contents of the "inner" tar file to be extracted, 1) use the O option to extract a given file to stdout, 2) use f - to read an archive from stdin:



                  tar -xOf outer_archive.tar inner_archive_1.tar | tar -tf -

                  tar -xOf outer_archive.tar inner_archive_1.tar | tar -xvf -





                  share|improve this answer












                  If I understood it correctly that you want the contents of the "inner" tar file to be extracted, 1) use the O option to extract a given file to stdout, 2) use f - to read an archive from stdin:



                  tar -xOf outer_archive.tar inner_archive_1.tar | tar -tf -

                  tar -xOf outer_archive.tar inner_archive_1.tar | tar -xvf -






                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Dec 12 '18 at 16:29









                  grawitygrawity

                  233k36494548




                  233k36494548

























                      1














                      If you have 7-Zip installed, either on Linux (or from from GNOME Software, for Debian distros) or on Windows in a dual-boot setup (7-Zip runs well under wine), you can explore a tar or other archive using a GUI, and decide what needs to be extracted.






                      share|improve this answer


























                        1














                        If you have 7-Zip installed, either on Linux (or from from GNOME Software, for Debian distros) or on Windows in a dual-boot setup (7-Zip runs well under wine), you can explore a tar or other archive using a GUI, and decide what needs to be extracted.






                        share|improve this answer
























                          1












                          1








                          1






                          If you have 7-Zip installed, either on Linux (or from from GNOME Software, for Debian distros) or on Windows in a dual-boot setup (7-Zip runs well under wine), you can explore a tar or other archive using a GUI, and decide what needs to be extracted.






                          share|improve this answer












                          If you have 7-Zip installed, either on Linux (or from from GNOME Software, for Debian distros) or on Windows in a dual-boot setup (7-Zip runs well under wine), you can explore a tar or other archive using a GUI, and decide what needs to be extracted.







                          share|improve this answer












                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer










                          answered Dec 13 '18 at 16:30









                          DrMoishe PippikDrMoishe Pippik

                          9,80721330




                          9,80721330






























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