On Thu, 14 Oct 1999 11:08:24 -0400, Lars Appel <[log in to unmask]> wrote: >Did I say "can of worms"? For the grins... My C.60.00 machine knows >about -A in help tar, but looks more like yours regarding man tar... > Well, I'm always in for a good laugh but when I ran into this one it took at least an hour before I could laugh again. I (gratefully) had been using tar since MPE5.0 to distribute various archives to various sites, both my own (well, you know ...) as well as external, of various os's (MPE/iX, HP-UX, MS-Windows (well, not exactly an operating system ...), DEC, Sparc, and even MS-DOS (well, not exactly an ...). Suddenly I got reports from these sites that the tar files produced unexpected results or failed to untar. Luckily I'd had the foresight (and the disc space) to copy the 5.0 SYS account to an OLDSYS account prior to the update, bit of an overkill but y'never know... I therefore could temporarily create a link from HPBIN to point to the "old" TAR before I found out where the problem originated and got the -A solution from HPCRC. And then that pesky problem of not always correctly untarring certain files. I had hoped with the 5.5 version to completly get rid of MOVER and ARCXL and move to a more "standard" tool, but that's not the case (yet, I hope). For example, I'm using Allbase/SQL with preprocessed modules that need to get transferred to other systems. These modules are in files with 250W fixed binary records. It is not amusing to transfer these modules in a tar archive to the target system, untarring them, seemingly without a problem, and just finding out that they're corrupt when you try to install them into the DB. The "funny" part is that, while they look ok, (right number of records, right record length etc.) only by doing a cmp with the original module (which you don't have on that system and might have been purged on the originating system, they're safe in the archive aren't they?) you find out they are different. Sorry for the above, in no way is it directed at you. Just wanted to "share". All in all, I am still very pleased with POSIX on MPE. It makes most things more easy to do. Still some work to be done though in that area, but, what else is new... Danny A. van Delft [log in to unmask]