|
JAVA, JSP, SERVLETS, TOMCAT, SERVLETS MANAGER,
Private JVM (Java Virtual Machine),
Private Tomcat Server
Alden Hosting offers private JVM (Java Virtual Machine), Java Server Pages (JSP), Servlets, and Servlets Manager with our Web Hosting Plans
WEB 4 PLAN and
WEB 5 PLAN ,
WEB 6 PLAN .
At Alden Hosting we eat and breathe Java! We are the industry leader in providing
affordable, quality and efficient Java web hosting in the shared hosting marketplace.
All our sites run on our Java hosing platform configured for
optimum performance using Java 1.6, Tomcat 6.0.X, MySQL 5.0.x, Apache 2.2.xx and web
application frameworks such as Struts, Hibernate, Cocoon, Ant, etc.
We offer only one type of Java hosting - Private Tomcat. Hosting accounts on the Private
Tomcat environment get their very own Tomcat server. You can start and re-start
your entire Tomcat server yourself.
LINUX Web Hosting Commands and tools tar
SYNOPSIS
tar [ - ] A --catenate --concatenate | c --create | d
--diff --compare | r --append | t --list | u --update | x
-extract --get [ --atime-preserve ] [ -b, --block-size N ]
[ -B, --read-full-blocks ] [ -C, --directory DIR ] [
--checkpoint ] [ -f, --file [HOSTNAME:]F ] [ --force-
local ] [ -F, --info-script F --new-volume-script F ] [
-G, --incremental ] [ -g, --listed-incremental F ] [ -h,
--dereference ] [ -i, --ignore-zeros ] [ -j, -I, --bzip ]
[ --ignore-failed-read ] [ -k, --keep-old-files ] [ -K,
--starting-file F ] [ -l, --one-file-system ] [ -L,
--tape-length N ] [ -m, --modification-time ] [ -M,
--multi-volume ] [ -N, --after-date DATE, --newer DATE ] [
-o, --old-archive, --portability ] [ -O, --to-stdout ] [
-p, --same-permissions, --preserve-permissions ] [ -P,
--absolute-paths ] [ --preserve ] [ -R, --record-num-
ber ] [ --remove-files ] [ -s, --same-order, --preserve-
order ] [ --same-owner ] [ -S, --sparse ] [ -T, --files-
from=F ] [ --null ] [ --totals ] [ -v, --verbose ] [
-V, --label NAME ] [ --version ] [ -w, --interactive,
--confirmation ] [ -W, --verify ] [ --exclude FILE ] [
-X, --exclude-from FILE ] [ -Z, --compress, --uncompress ]
[ -z, --gzip, --ungzip ] [ --use-compress-program
PROG ] [ --block-compress ] [ -[0-7][lmh] ]
filename1 [ filename2, ... filenameN ]
directory1 [ directory2, ...directoryN ]
DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents the GNU version of tar , an
archiving program designed to store and extract files from
an archive file known as a tarfile. A tarfile may be made
on a tape drive, however, it is also common to write a
tarfile to a normal file. The first argument to tar must
be one of the options: Acdrtux, followed by any optional
functions. The final arguments to tar are the names of
the files or directories which should be archived. The use
of a directory name always implies that the subdirectories
below should be included in the archive.
FUNCTION LETTERS
One of the following options must be used:
-A, --catenate, --concatenate
append tar files to an archive
-c, --create
create a new archive
-d, --diff, --compare
find differences between archive and file system
-x, --extract, --get
extract files from an archive
OTHER OPTIONS
--atime-preserve
don't change access times on dumped files
-b, --block-size N
block size of Nx512 bytes (default N=20)
-B, --read-full-blocks
reblock as we read (for reading 4.2BSD pipes)
-C, --directory DIR
change to directory DIR
--checkpoint
print directory names while reading the archive
-f, --file [HOSTNAME:]F
use archive file or device F (default /dev/rmt0)
--force-local
archive file is local even if has a colon
-F, --info-script F --new-volume-script F
run script at end of each tape (implies -M)
-G, --incremental
create/list/extract old GNU-format incremental
backup
-g, --listed-incremental F
create/list/extract new GNU-format incremental
backup
-h, --dereference
don't dump symlinks; dump the files they point to
-i, --ignore-zeros
ignore blocks of zeros in archive (normally mean
EOF)
-j, -I, --bzip
filter the archive through bzip2. Note: -I is dep-
recated and may get a different meaning in the near
future.
--ignore-failed-read
don't exit with non-zero status on unreadable files
-k, --keep-old-files
-M, --multi-volume
create/list/extract multi-volume archive
-N, --after-date DATE, --newer DATE
only store files newer than DATE
-o, --old-archive, --portability
write a V7 format archive, rather than ANSI format
-O, --to-stdout
extract files to standard output
-p, --same-permissions, --preserve-permissions
extract all protection information
-P, --absolute-paths
don't strip leading `/'s from file names
--preserve
like -p -s
-R, --record-number
show record number within archive with each message
--remove-files
remove files after adding them to the archive
-s, --same-order, --preserve-order
list of names to extract is sorted to match archive
--same-owner
create extracted files with the same ownership
-S, --sparse
handle sparse files efficiently
-T, --files-from=F
get names to extract or create from file F
--null
-T reads null-terminated names, disable -C
--totals
print total bytes written with --create
-v, --verbose
verbosely list files processed
-V, --label NAME
create archive with volume name NAME
-Z, --compress, --uncompress
filter the archive through compress
-z, --gzip, --ungzip
filter the archive through gzip
--use-compress-program PROG
filter the archive through PROG (which must accept
-d)
30 October 2000 TAR(1)
JAVA, JSP, SERVLETS, TOMCAT, SERVLETS MANAGER,
Private JVM (Java Virtual Machine),
Private Tomcat Server
Alden Hosting offers private JVM (Java Virtual Machine), Java Server Pages (JSP), Servlets, and Servlets Manager with our Web Hosting Plans
WEB 4 PLAN and
WEB 5 PLAN ,
WEB 6 PLAN .
At Alden Hosting we eat and breathe Java! We are the industry leader in providing
affordable, quality and efficient Java web hosting in the shared hosting marketplace.
All our sites run on our Java hosing platform configured for
optimum performance using Java 1.6, Tomcat 6.0.X, MySQL 5.0.x, Apache 2.2.xx and web
application frameworks such as Struts, Hibernate, Cocoon, Ant, etc.
We offer only one type of Java hosting - Private Tomcat. Hosting accounts on the Private
Tomcat environment get their very own Tomcat server. You can start and re-start
your entire Tomcat server yourself.
|