vrypan |--o--|
@vrypan.eth
The .tar extension (or .tar.gz, ie. .tgz) in your files, comes from the "tar" command line that stands for "tape archive". tar was designed to read and write files to a serial device (magnetic tapes) without a filesystem. Being able to append files to an existing "tarball" was extremely handy (remember: slow, serial devices). Being able to extract only some files, too. tar still works much the same, but most probably you use a filesystem file or stdio instead of a raw serial device.
4 replies
0 recast
14 reactions
Koolkheart
@koolkheart.eth
Itβs honestly incredible how well tar still performs for large data movement. Many years later and itβs still relevant
0 reply
0 recast
1 reaction
J. Valeska π¦π©π«
@jvaleska.eth
worst linux command to be honest.. impossible to remember π
1 reply
0 recast
1 reaction
Justin Hunter
@polluterofminds
Dang, I didnβt know that. I kinda want to get an old magnetic tape storage system just for the fun of it.
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction
Matthew Fox π
@matthewfox
fuck always thought it was for "Tarzan" devasted not sure i'll recover from this
1 reply
0 recast
1 reaction