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ARCHIVE_WRITE(3)	    Library Functions Manual	      ARCHIVE_WRITE(3)

NAME
       archive_write --	functions for creating archives

LIBRARY
       Streaming Archive Library (libarchive, -larchive)

SYNOPSIS
       #include	<archive.h>

DESCRIPTION
       These  functions	 provide a complete API	for creating streaming archive
       files.  The general process is to first create the struct  archive  ob-
       ject,  set any desired options, initialize the archive, append entries,
       then close the archive and release all resources.

   Create archive object
       See archive_write_new(3).

       To write	an archive,  you  must	first  obtain  an  initialized	struct
       archive object from archive_write_new().

   Enable filters and formats, configure block size and	padding
       See	archive_write_filter(3),      archive_write_format(3)	   and
       archive_write_blocksize(3).

       You can then modify this	object for the	desired	 operations  with  the
       various	archive_write_set_XXX()	 functions.   In  particular, you will
       need    to    invoke    appropriate     archive_write_add_XXX()	   and
       archive_write_set_XXX()	functions to enable the	corresponding compres-
       sion and	format support.

   Set options
       See archive_write_set_options(3).

   Open	archive
       See archive_write_open(3).

       Once  you  have	prepared  the  struct	archive	  object,   you	  call
       archive_write_open()  to	 actually  open	the archive and	prepare	it for
       writing.	 There are several variants of this function; the  most	 basic
       expects	you  to	provide	pointers to several functions that can provide
       blocks of bytes from the	archive.  There	are convenience	forms that al-
       low you to specify a filename, file descriptor, FILE  *	object,	 or  a
       block of	memory from which to write the archive data.

   Produce archive
       See archive_write_header(3) and archive_write_data(3).

       Individual  archive  entries  are  written in a three-step process: You
       first initialize	a  struct  archive_entry  structure  with  information
       about  the new entry.  At a minimum, you	should set the pathname	of the
       entry and provide a struct stat with a valid st_mode field, which spec-
       ifies the type of object	and st_size field, which specifies the size of
       the data	portion	of the object.

   Release resources
       See archive_write_free(3).

       After all entries have been written, use	the archive_write_free() func-
       tion to release all resources.

EXAMPLES
       The following sketch illustrates	basic usage of the library.   In  this
       example,	the callback functions are simply wrappers around the standard
       open(2),	write(2), and close(2) system calls.

	     #ifdef __linux__
	     #define _FILE_OFFSET_BITS 64
	     #endif
	     #include <sys/stat.h>
	     #include <archive.h>
	     #include <archive_entry.h>
	     #include <fcntl.h>
	     #include <stdlib.h>
	     #include <unistd.h>

	     struct mydata {
	       const char *name;
	       int fd;
	     };

	     int
	     myopen(struct archive *a, void *client_data)
	     {
	       struct mydata *mydata = client_data;

	       mydata->fd = open(mydata->name, O_WRONLY	| O_CREAT, 0644);
	       if (mydata->fd >= 0)
		 return	(ARCHIVE_OK);
	       else
		 return	(ARCHIVE_FATAL);
	     }

	     la_ssize_t
	     mywrite(struct archive *a,	void *client_data, const void *buff, size_t n)
	     {
	       struct mydata *mydata = client_data;

	       return (write(mydata->fd, buff, n));
	     }

	     int
	     myclose(struct archive *a,	void *client_data)
	     {
	       struct mydata *mydata = client_data;

	       if (mydata->fd >	0)
		 close(mydata->fd);
	       return (0);
	     }

	     void
	     write_archive(const char *outname,	const char **filename)
	     {
	       struct mydata *mydata = malloc(sizeof(struct mydata));
	       struct archive *a;
	       struct archive_entry *entry;
	       struct stat st;
	       char buff[8192];
	       int len;
	       int fd;

	       a = archive_write_new();
	       mydata->name = outname;
	       /* Set archive format and filter	according to output file extension.
		* If it	fails, set default format. Platform depended function.
		* See supported	formats	in archive_write_set_format_filter_by_ext.c */
	       if (archive_write_set_format_filter_by_ext(a, outname) != ARCHIVE_OK)  {
		 archive_write_add_filter_gzip(a);
		 archive_write_set_format_ustar(a);
	       }
	       archive_write_open(a, mydata, myopen, mywrite, myclose);
	       while (*filename) {
		 stat(*filename, &st);
		 entry = archive_entry_new();
		 archive_entry_copy_stat(entry,	&st);
		 archive_entry_set_pathname(entry, *filename);
		 archive_write_header(a, entry);
		 if ((fd = open(*filename, O_RDONLY)) != -1) {
		   len = read(fd, buff,	sizeof(buff));
		   while (len >	0) {
		     archive_write_data(a, buff, len);
		     len = read(fd, buff, sizeof(buff));
		   }
		   close(fd);
		 }
		 archive_entry_free(entry);
		 filename++;
	       }
	       archive_write_free(a);
	     }

	     int main(int argc,	const char **argv)
	     {
	       const char *outname;
	       argv++;
	       outname = *argv++;
	       write_archive(outname, argv);
	       return 0;
	     }

SEE ALSO
       tar(1), archive_write_set_options(3), libarchive(3), cpio(5), mtree(5),
       tar(5)

HISTORY
       The libarchive library first appeared in	FreeBSD	5.3.

AUTHORS
       The libarchive library was written by Tim Kientzle <kientzle@acm.org>.

BUGS
       There  are  many	peculiar bugs in historic tar implementations that may
       cause certain programs to reject	archives written by this library.  For
       example,	several	historic implementations calculated  header  checksums
       incorrectly and will thus reject	valid archives;	GNU tar	does not fully
       support	pax  interchange format; some old tar implementations required
       specific	field terminations.

       The default pax interchange format eliminates most of the historic  tar
       limitations  and	 provides  a  generic key/value	attribute facility for
       vendor-defined extensions.  One oversight in POSIX is  the  failure  to
       provide	a  standard  attribute for large device	numbers.  This library
       uses "SCHILY.devminor" and "SCHILY.devmajor" for	 device	 numbers  that
       exceed  the  range  supported by	the backwards-compatible ustar header.
       These keys are compatible with Joerg Schilling's	star archiver.	 Other
       implementations may not recognize these keys and	will thus be unable to
       correctly  restore device nodes with large device numbers from archives
       created by this library.

FreeBSD	Ports 14.quarterly     February	2, 2012		      ARCHIVE_WRITE(3)

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