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Unix file format From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In the Unix operating system, shar (from "shell archive") is an archive format created with the Unix shar
utility. A shar file is a type of self-extracting archive, because it is a valid shell script, and executing it will recreate the files. To extract the files, only the standard Unix Bourne shell sh is usually required.
Original author(s) | James Gosling |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Various open-source and commercial developers |
Operating system | Unix, Unix-like, VMS, Windows |
Type | Command |
Filename extension |
.shar |
---|---|
Type of format | Archive format, shell script |
Open format? | Yes[1] |
shar files are also sometimes called "sharchives" (from "/bin/sh archive").[2]
Note that the shar command is not specified by the Single Unix Specification, so it is not formally a component of Unix, but a legacy utility.
While the shar format has the advantage of being plain text, it poses a risk due to being executable;[3] for this reason the older and more general tar file format is usually preferred even for transferring text files. GNU provides its own version of shar in the GNU Sharutils collection.
unshar programs have been written for other operating systems but are not always reliable; shar files are shell scripts and can theoretically do anything that a shell script can do (including using incompatible features of enhanced or workalike shells), limiting their utility outside the Unix world.
The drawback of self-extracting shell scripts (any kind, not just shar) is that they may rely on a particular implementation of programs; shell archives created with older versions of makeself,[4] for example, the original Unreal Tournament for Linux installer, fails to run on bash 3.x due to a change in how missing arguments to trap
built-in command are handled.
James Gosling is credited with writing the first version of the shar utility in 1982,[1]: §1 and also wrote an early example (allegedly 1978-79) of the concept in the form of this simple shell script:[5][6][7]
# shar -- Shell archiver
AR=$1
shift
for i do
echo a - $i
echo "echo x - $i" >>$AR
echo "cat >$i <<'!Funky!Stuff!'" >>$AR
cat $i >>$AR
echo "!Funky!Stuff!" >>$AR
done
The following variants of shar are known:[8]
GNU shar
is available as a separate package for Microsoft Windows as part of the UnxUtils collection of native Win32 ports of common GNU Unix-like utilities.[9]
A version of the same concept, but for the VMS operating system, was written in 1987 by Michael Bednarek from The Melbourne Institute of Applied Economic and Social Research as a DCL script, VMS_SHAR.COM.[10] This was later maintained and extended by James A. Gray from Xerox,[11] and Andy Harper from King's College London.[12][13]
makeself (2001–) is a shell script that generates self-extracting tarballs (*.run
, application/x-makeself
) using the same shell script header technique. Using tar precludes makeself from being used in plain text directly, but the better compression and other functionalities has made it more popular in the 21st century among software vendors seeking to package Linux software.[14]
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