Package archiver makes it trivially easy to make and extract common archive formats such as .zip, and .tar.gz. Simply name the input and output file(s).
Files are put into the root of the archive; directories are recursively added, preserving structure.
The archiver
command runs the same cross-platform and has no external dependencies (not even libc); powered by the Go standard library, dsnet/compress, nwaples/rardecode, and ulikunitz/xz. Enjoy!
Supported formats/extensions:
- .zip
- .tar
- .tar.gz & .tgz
- .tar.bz2 & .tbz2
- .tar.xz & .txz
- .tar.lz4 & .tlz4
- .tar.sz & .tsz
- .rar (open only)
go get github.com/gyuho/archiver/cmd/archiver
Or download binaries from the releases page.
Make a new archive:
$ archiver make [archive name] [input files...]
(At least one input file is required.)
To extract an archive:
$ archiver open [archive name] [destination]
(The destination path is optional; default is current directory.)
The archive name must end with a supported file extension—this is how it knows what kind of archive to make. Run archiver -h
for more help.
import "github.com/gyuho/archiver"
Create a .zip file:
err := archiver.Zip.Make("output.zip", []string{"file.txt", "folder"})
Extract a .zip file:
err := archiver.Zip.Open("input.zip", "output_folder")
Working with other file formats is exactly the same, but with their own Archiver implementations.
No. This works just like your OS would make an archive in the file explorer: organize your input files to mirror the structure you want in the archive.
Nope. This is a simple tool; it just makes new archives or extracts existing ones.