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Learn Linux Quickly

You're reading from   Learn Linux Quickly A beginner-friendly guide to getting up and running with the world's most powerful operating system

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800566002
Length 338 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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Ahmed AlKabary Ahmed AlKabary
Author Profile Icon Ahmed AlKabary
Ahmed AlKabary
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Table of Contents (24) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Your First Keystrokes 2. Climbing the Tree FREE CHAPTER 3. Meet the Editors 4. Copying, Moving, and Deleting Files 5. Read Your Manuals! 6. Hard versus Soft Links 7. Who Is Root? 8. Controlling the Population 9. Piping and I/O Redirection 10. Analyzing and Manipulating Files 11. Let's Play Find and Seek 12. You Got a Package 13. Kill the Process 14. The Power of Sudo 15. What's Wrong with the Network? 16. Bash Scripting Is Fun 17. You Need a Cron Job 18. Archiving and Compressing Files 19. Create Your Own Commands 20. Everyone Needs Disk Space 21. echo "Goodbye My Friend" 22. Assessments 23. Other Books You May Enjoy

Compressing with bzip2

bzip2 is another popular compression method used on Linux. On average, bzip2 is slower than gzip; however, bzip2 does a better job of compressing files to smaller sizes.

You can compress an archive with bzip2 compression by using the -j option with the tar command as follows:

tar -cjf compressed_archive archive_name

Notice the only difference here is that we use the -j option for bzip2 compression instead of -z for gzip compression.

So to compress the scripts.tar archive into a bzip2-compressed archive named scripts.tar.bz2, you first need to change to the /root/backup directory and then run the following command:

root@ubuntu-linux:~/backup# tar -cjf scripts.tar.bz2 scripts.tar

Now if you list the contents of the backup directory, you will see the newly created bzip2-compressed archive scripts.tar.bz2:

root@ubuntu-linux:~/backup# ls
scripts.tar scripts.tar.bz2 scripts.tar.gz

Let's run the file command on the bzip2-compressed archive scripts.tar.bz2:

root@ubuntu...
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