Archive::Tar::Builder - Stream tarball data to a file handle
Archive::Tar::Builder is meant to quickly and easily generate tarball streams, and write them to a given file handle. Though its options are few, its flexible interface provides for a number of possible uses in many scenarios.
Archive::Tar::Builder supports path inclusions and exclusions, arbitrary file name length, and the ability to add items from the filesystem into the archive under an arbitrary name.
Archive::Tar::Builder->new()
Create a new Archive::Tar::Builder object.
$archive->add_as(%members)
Add any number of members to the current archive, where the keys specified in %members specify the paths where the files exist on the filesystem, and the values shall represent the eventual names of the members as they shall be written upon archive writing.
%members
$archive-
Add any number of members to the current archive.
File path matching facilities exist to control, based on filenames and patterns, which data should be included into and excluded from an archive made up of a broad selection of files.
Note that file pattern matching operations triggered by usage of inclusions and exclusions are performed against the names of the members of the archive as they are added to the archive, not as the names of the files as they live in the filesystem.
File inclusions can be used to specify patterns which name members that should be included into an archive, to the exclusion of other members. File inclusions take lower precedence to exclusions.
$archive->include($pattern)
Add a file match pattern, whose format is specified by fnmatch(3), for which matching member names should be included into the archive. Will die() upon error.
$archive->include_from_file($file)
Import a list of file inclusion patterns from a flat file consisting of newline- separated patterns. Will die() upon error, especially failure to open a file for reading inclusion patterns.
$archive->exclude($pattern)
Add a pattern which specifies that an exclusion of files and directories with matching names should be excluded from the archive. Note that exclusions take higher priority than inclusions. Will die() upon error.
$archive->exclude_from_file($file)
Add a number of patterns from a flat file consisting of exclusion patterns separated by newlines. Will die() upon error, especially when unable to open a file for reading.
$archive->is_excluded($path)
Based on the file exclusion and inclusion patterns (respectively), determine if the given path is to be excluded from the archive upon writing.
$archive->write($handle)
Write a tar stream of ustar format, with GNU tar extensions for supporting long filenames and other POSIX extensions for files >8GB. Files will be included or excluded based on any possible previous usage of the filename inclusion and exclusion calls. Members will be written with the names given to them when they were added to the archive, whether $archive->add() or $archive->add_as() was used.
$archive->add()
$archive->add_as()
Returns the total number of bytes written.
$archive->start($handle)
A synonym for $archive->write($handle).
Copyright (c) 2012, cPanel, Inc. All rights reserved. http://cpanel.net/
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See perlartistic for further details.
To install Archive::Tar::Builder, copy and paste the appropriate command in to your terminal.
cpanm
cpanm Archive::Tar::Builder
CPAN shell
perl -MCPAN -e shell install Archive::Tar::Builder
For more information on module installation, please visit the detailed CPAN module installation guide.