Linux common commands (six)

A commonly used compression format

1, common compression formats: .zip, .rar, .gz, .bz2

2, common compression formats: .tar.gz, .tar.bz2

 

 

Two, .zip format compression and decompression

1, file compression: zip compressed file compressed file name

2, catalog compression: zip -r archive directory name compression

3, decompress: unzip compressed files

 

Three, .gz format compression and decompression

1, compression formats: gzip source files (.gz file into a compressed format, source files will disappear)

2, the compression format: gzip -c source file> compressed file (.gz file into a compressed format, the source file retention)

3, compression formats: gzip -r directory (compressed files in all sub-directories, but can not be compressed directory)

4, decompression format: gzip -d compressed file

5, decompression format: gunzip compressed file

 

 

Four, .bz2 format compression and decompression

1, compression formats: bzip source files (source files will disappear)

2, the compression format: bzip -k source files (source files remain)

3, the decompression format: bzip -d compressed file (-k, source files remain compressed)

4, the decompression formats: bunzip compressed file (-k, source files remain compressed)

 

 

hint:

1, ">" is to write the contents of a another content, such as ls> abc, will result ls displayed inside into abc, abc can view the contents of the documents by cat abc

 

Guess you like

Origin www.cnblogs.com/BASE64/p/11442789.html