unzip - list, test and extract compressed files in a ZIP archive
unzip [-Z]
[-cflptTuvz[abjnoqsCDKLMUVWX$/:^]]
file
[.zip
] [file(s)
. . .]
[-x xfile(s)
. . .] [-d
exdir
]
unzip
will list, test, or extract files from a ZIP archive,
commonly found on MS-DOS systems. The default behavior (with no options)
is to extract into the current directory (and subdirectories below it)
all files from the specified ZIP archive. A companion program,
zip
(1), creates ZIP archives; both programs are compatible with
archives created by PKWARE's PKZIP
and PKUNZIP
for
MS-DOS, but in many cases the program options or default behaviors
differ.
file
[.zip
]Path of the ZIP archive(s). If the file specification is a wildcard,
each matching file is processed in an order determined by the operating
system (or file system). Only the filename can be a wildcard; the path
itself cannot. Wildcard expressions are similar to those supported in
commonly used Unix shells (sh
, ksh
, csh
) and
may contain:
matches a sequence of 0 or more characters
matches exactly 1 character
matches any single character found inside the brackets; ranges are
specified by a beginning character, a hyphen, and an ending character.
If an exclamation point or a caret (`!' or `^') follows the left
bracket, then the range of characters within the brackets is
complemented (that is, anything except
the characters inside
the brackets is considered a match). To specify a verbatim left bracket,
the three-character sequence ``[[]'' has to be used.
(Be sure to quote any character that might otherwise be interpreted or modified by the operating system, particularly under Unix and VMS.) If no matches are found, the specification is assumed to be a literal filename; and if that also fails, the suffix .zip is appended. Note that self-extracting ZIP files are supported, as with any other ZIP archive; just specify the .exe suffix (if any) explicitly.
An optional list of archive members to be processed, separated by spaces. (VMS versions compiled with VMSCLI defined must delimit files with commas instead. See -v in OPTIONS below.) Regular expressions (wildcards) may be used to match multiple members; see above. Again, be sure to quote expressions that would otherwise be expanded or modified by the operating system.
An optional list of archive members to be excluded from processing. Since wildcard characters normally match (`/') directory separators (for exceptions see the option -W), this option may be used to exclude any files that are in subdirectories. For example, ``unzip foo *.[ch] -x */*'' would extract all C source files in the main directory, but none in any subdirectories. Without the -x option, all C source files in all directories within the zipfile would be extracted.
An optional directory to which to extract files. By default, all
files and subdirectories are recreated in the current directory; the
-d option allows extraction in an arbitrary directory
(always assuming one has permission to write to the directory). This
option need not appear at the end of the command line; it is also
accepted before the zipfile specification (with the normal options),
immediately after the zipfile specification, or between the
file(s)
and the -x option. The option and
directory may be concatenated without any white space between them, but
note that this may cause normal shell behavior to be suppressed. In
particular, ``-d ~'' (tilde) is expanded by Unix C shells into the name
of the user's home directory, but ``-d~'' is treated as a literal
subdirectory ``~'' of the current directory.
Note that, in order to support obsolescent hardware, unzip
's
usage screen is limited to 22 or 23 lines and should therefore be
considered only a reminder of the basic unzip
syntax rather
than an exhaustive list of all possible flags. The exhaustive list
follows:
zipinfo
(1) mode. If the first option on the command line is
-Z, the remaining options are taken to be
zipinfo
(1) options. See the appropriate manual page for a
description of these options.
[OS/2, Unix DLL] print extended help for the DLL's programming interface (API).
extract files to stdout/screen (``CRT''). This option is similar to
the -p option except that the name of each file is
printed as it is extracted, the -a option is allowed,
and ASCII-EBCDIC conversion is automatically performed if appropriate.
This option is not listed in the unzip
usage screen.
freshen existing files, i.e., extract only those files that already
exist on disk and that are newer than the disk copies. By default
unzip
queries before overwriting, but the -o
option may be used to suppress the queries. Note that under many
operating systems, the TZ (timezone) environment variable must be set
correctly in order for -f and -u to
work properly (under Unix the variable is usually set automatically).
The reasons for this are somewhat subtle but have to do with the
differences between DOS-format file times (always local time) and
Unix-format times (always in GMT/UTC) and the necessity to compare the
two. A typical TZ value is ``PST8PDT'' (US Pacific time with automatic
adjustment for Daylight Savings Time or ``summer time'').
list archive files (short format). The names, uncompressed file sizes and modification dates and times of the specified files are printed, along with totals for all files specified. If UnZip was compiled with OS2_EAS defined, the -l option also lists columns for the sizes of stored OS/2 extended attributes (EAs) and OS/2 access control lists (ACLs). In addition, the zipfile comment and individual file comments (if any) are displayed. If a file was archived from a single-case file system (for example, the old MS-DOS FAT file system) and the -L option was given, the filename is converted to lowercase and is prefixed with a caret (^).
extract files to pipe (stdout). Nothing but the file data is sent to stdout, and the files are always extracted in binary format, just as they are stored (no conversions).
test archive files. This option extracts each specified file in memory and compares the CRC (cyclic redundancy check, an enhanced checksum) of the expanded file with the original file's stored CRC value.
[most OSes] set the timestamp on the archive(s) to that of the newest
file in each one. This corresponds to zip
's
-go option except that it can be used on wildcard
zipfiles (e.g., ``unzip -T \*.zip'') and is much faster.
update existing files and create new ones if needed. This option performs the same function as the -f option, extracting (with query) files that are newer than those with the same name on disk, and in addition it extracts those files that do not already exist on disk. See -f above for information on setting the timezone properly.
list archive files (verbose format) or show diagnostic version info.
This option has evolved and now behaves as both an option and a
modifier. As an option it has two purposes: when a zipfile is specified
with no other options, -v lists archive files
verbosely, adding to the basic -l info the compression
method, compressed size, compression ratio and 32-bit CRC. In contrast
to most of the competing utilities, unzip
removes the 12
additional header bytes of encrypted entries from the compressed size
numbers. Therefore, compressed size and compression ratio figures are
independent of the entry's encryption status and show the correct
compression performance. (The complete size of the encrypted compressed
data stream for zipfile entries is reported by the more verbose
zipinfo
(1) reports, see the separate manual.) When no zipfile
is specified (that is, the complete command is simply ``unzip -v''), a
diagnostic screen is printed. In addition to the normal header with
release date and version, unzip
lists the home Info-ZIP ftp
site and where to find a list of other ftp and non-ftp sites; the target
operating system for which it was compiled, as well as (possibly) the
hardware on which it was compiled, the compiler and version used, and
the compilation date; any special compilation options that might affect
the program's operation (see also DECRYPTION below);
and any options stored in environment variables that might do the same
(see ENVIRONMENT OPTIONS below). As a modifier it works
in conjunction with other options (e.g., -t) to produce
more verbose or debugging output; this is not yet fully implemented but
will be in future releases.
display only the archive comment.
convert text files. Ordinarily all files are extracted exactly as
they are stored (as ``binary'' files). The -a option
causes files identified by zip
as text files (those with the
`t' label in zipinfo
listings, rather than `b') to be
automatically extracted as such, converting line endings, end-of-file
characters and the character set itself as necessary. (For example, Unix
files use line feeds (LFs) for end-of-line (EOL) and have no end-of-file
(EOF) marker; Macintoshes use carriage returns (CRs) for EOLs; and most
PC operating systems use CR+LF for EOLs and control-Z for EOF. In
addition, IBM mainframes and the Michigan Terminal System use EBCDIC
rather than the more common ASCII character set, and NT supports
Unicode.) Note that zip
's identification of text files is by no
means perfect; some ``text'' files may actually be binary and vice
versa. unzip
therefore prints ``[text]'' or ``[binary]'' as a
visual check for each file it extracts when using the
-a option. The -aa option forces all
files to be extracted as text, regardless of the supposed file type. On
VMS, see also -S.
[general] treat all files as binary (no text conversions). This is a shortcut for ---a.
[Tandem] force the creation files with filecode type 180 ('C') when extracting Zip entries marked as "text". (On Tandem, -a is enabled by default, see above).
[VMS] auto-convert binary files (see -a above) to fixed-length, 512-byte record format. Doubling the option (-bb) forces all files to be extracted in this format. When extracting to standard output (-c or -p option in effect), the default conversion of text record delimiters is disabled for binary (-b) resp. all (-bb) files.
[when compiled with UNIXBACKUP defined] save a backup copy of each
overwritten file. The backup file is gets the name of the target file
with a tilde and optionally a unique sequence number (up to 5 digits)
appended. The sequence number is applied whenever another file with the
original name plus tilde already exists. When used together with the
"overwrite all" option -o, numbered backup files are
never created. In this case, all backup files are named as the original
file with an appended tilde, existing backup files are deleted without
notice. This feature works similarly to the default behavior of
emacs
(1) in many locations.
Example: the old copy of ``foo'' is renamed to ``foo~''.
Warning: Users should be aware that the -B option
does not prevent loss of existing data under all circumstances. For
example, when unzip
is run in overwrite-all mode, an existing
``foo~'' file is deleted before unzip
attempts to rename
``foo'' to ``foo~''. When this rename attempt fails (because of a file
locks, insufficient privileges, or ...), the extraction of ``foo~'' gets
cancelled, but the old backup file is already lost. A similar scenario
takes place when the sequence number range for numbered backup files
gets exhausted (99999, or 65535 for 16-bit systems). In this case, the
backup file with the maximum sequence number is deleted and replaced by
the new backup version without notice.
use case-insensitive matching for the selection of archive entries
from the command-line list of extract selection patterns.
unzip
's philosophy is ``you get what you ask for'' (this is
also responsible for the -L/-U change;
see the relevant options below). Because some file systems are fully
case-sensitive (notably those under the Unix operating system) and
because both ZIP archives and unzip
itself are portable across
platforms, unzip
's default behavior is to match both wildcard
and literal filenames case-sensitively. That is, specifying ``makefile''
on the command line will only
match ``makefile'' in the
archive, not ``Makefile'' or ``MAKEFILE'' (and similarly for wildcard
specifications). Since this does not correspond to the behavior of many
other operating/file systems (for example, OS/2 HPFS, which preserves
mixed case but is not sensitive to it), the -C option
may be used to force all filename matches to be case-insensitive. In the
example above, all three files would then match ``makefile'' (or
``make*'', or similar). The -C option affects file
specs in both the normal file list and the excluded-file list
(xlist).
Please note that the -C option does neither affect
the search for the zipfile(s) nor the matching of archive entries to
existing files on the extraction path. On a case-sensitive file system,
unzip
will never try to overwrite a file ``FOO'' when
extracting an entry ``foo''!
skip restoration of timestamps for extracted items. Normally,
unzip
tries to restore all meta-information for extracted items
that are supplied in the Zip archive (and do not require privileges or
impose a security risk). By specifying -D,
unzip
is told to suppress restoration of timestamps for
directories explicitly created from Zip archive entries. This option
only applies to ports that support setting timestamps for directories
(currently ATheOS, BeOS, MacOS, OS/2, Unix, VMS, Win32, for other
unzip
ports, -D has no effect). The duplicated
option -DD forces suppression of timestamp restoration
for all extracted entries (files and directories). This option results
in setting the timestamps for all extracted entries to the current
time.
On VMS, the default setting for this option is -D for consistency with the behaviour of BACKUP: file timestamps are restored, timestamps of extracted directories are left at the current time. To enable restoration of directory timestamps, the negated option --D should be specified. On VMS, the option -D disables timestamp restoration for all extracted Zip archive items. (Here, a single -D on the command line combines with the default -D to do what an explicit -DD does on other systems.)
[MacOS only] display contents of MacOS extra field during restore operation.
[Acorn only] suppress removal of NFS filetype extension from stored filenames.
[non-Acorn systems supporting long filenames with embedded commas, and only if compiled with ACORN_FTYPE_NFS defined] translate filetype information from ACORN RISC OS extra field blocks into a NFS filetype extension and append it to the names of the extracted files. (When the stored filename appears to already have an appended NFS filetype extension, it is replaced by the info from the extra field.)
[MacOS only] ignore filenames stored in MacOS extra fields. Instead, the most compatible filename stored in the generic part of the entry's header is used.
[UNIX only] Specify a character encoding for UNIX and other archives.
junk paths. The archive's directory structure is not recreated; all files are deposited in the extraction directory (by default, the current one).
[BeOS only] junk file attributes. The file's BeOS file attributes are not restored, just the file's data.
[MacOS only] ignore MacOS extra fields. All Macintosh specific info is skipped. Data-fork and resource-fork are restored as separate files.
[AtheOS, BeOS, Unix only] retain SUID/SGID/Tacky file attributes. Without this flag, these attribute bits are cleared for security reasons.
convert to lowercase any filename originating on an uppercase-only
operating system or file system. (This was unzip
's default
behavior in releases prior to 5.11; the new default behavior is
identical to the old behavior with the -U option, which
is now obsolete and will be removed in a future release.) Depending on
the archiver, files archived under single-case file systems (VMS, old
MS-DOS FAT, etc.) may be stored as all-uppercase names; this can be ugly
or inconvenient when extracting to a case-preserving file system such as
OS/2 HPFS or a case-sensitive one such as under Unix. By default
unzip
lists and extracts such filenames exactly as they're
stored (excepting truncation, conversion of unsupported characters,
etc.); this option causes the names of all files from certain systems to
be converted to lowercase. The -LL option forces
conversion of every filename to lowercase, regardless of the originating
file system.
pipe all output through an internal pager similar to the Unix
more
(1) command. At the end of a screenful of output,
unzip
pauses with a ``--More--'' prompt; the next screenful may
be viewed by pressing the Enter (Return) key or the space bar.
unzip
can be terminated by pressing the ``q'' key and, on some
systems, the Enter/Return key. Unlike Unix more
(1), there is no
forward-searching or editing capability. Also, unzip
doesn't
notice if long lines wrap at the edge of the screen, effectively
resulting in the printing of two or more lines and the likelihood that
some text will scroll off the top of the screen before being viewed. On
some systems the number of available lines on the screen is not
detected, in which case unzip
assumes the height is 24
lines.
never overwrite existing files. If a file already exists, skip the
extraction of that file without prompting. By default unzip
queries before extracting any file that already exists; the user may
choose to overwrite only the current file, overwrite all files, skip
extraction of the current file, skip extraction of all existing files,
or rename the current file.
[Amiga] extract file comments as Amiga filenotes. File comments are
created with the -c option of zip
(1), or with the -N option of
the Amiga port of zip
(1), which stores filenotes as
comments.
overwrite existing files without prompting. This is a dangerous option, so use it with care. (It is often used with -f, however, and is the only way to overwrite directory EAs under OS/2.)
[UNIX only] Specify a character encoding for DOS, Windows and OS/2 archives.
use password
to decrypt encrypted zipfile entries (if any).
THIS IS INSECURE! Many multi-user operating systems
provide ways for any user to see the current command line of any other
user; even on stand-alone systems there is always the threat of
over-the-shoulder peeking. Storing the plaintext password as part of a
command line in an automated script is even worse. Whenever possible,
use the non-echoing, interactive prompt to enter passwords. (And where
security is truly important, use strong encryption such as Pretty Good
Privacy instead of the relatively weak encryption provided by standard
zipfile utilities.)
perform operations quietly (-qq = even quieter).
Ordinarily unzip
prints the names of the files it's extracting
or testing, the extraction methods, any file or zipfile comments that
may be stored in the archive, and possibly a summary when finished with
each archive. The -q[q] options
suppress the printing of some or all of these messages.
[OS/2, NT, MS-DOS] convert spaces in filenames to underscores. Since
all PC operating systems allow spaces in filenames, unzip
by
default extracts filenames with spaces intact (e.g., ``EA DATA. SF'').
This can be awkward, however, since MS-DOS in particular does not
gracefully support spaces in filenames. Conversion of spaces to
underscores can eliminate the awkwardness in some cases.
[VMS] convert text files (-a, -aa)
into Stream_LF record format, instead of the text-file default,
variable-length record format. (Stream_LF is the default record format
of VMS unzip
. It is applied unless conversion
(-a, -aa and/or -b,
-bb) is requested or a VMS-specific entry is
processed.)
[UNICODE_SUPPORT only] modify or disable UTF-8 handling. When
UNICODE_SUPPORT is available, the option -U forces
unzip
to escape all non-ASCII characters from UTF-8 coded
filenames as ``#Uxxxx'' (for UCS-2 characters, or ``#Lxxxxxx'' for
unicode codepoints needing 3 octets). This option is mainly provided for
debugging purpose when the fairly new UTF-8 support is suspected to
mangle up extracted filenames.
The option -UU allows to entirely disable the
recognition of UTF-8 encoded filenames. The handling of filename codings
within unzip
falls back to the behaviour of previous
versions.
[old, obsolete usage] leave filenames uppercase if created under MS-DOS, VMS, etc. See -L above.
retain (VMS) file version numbers. VMS files can be stored with a version number, in the format file.ext;##. By default the ``;##'' version numbers are stripped, but this option allows them to be retained. (On file systems that limit filenames to particularly short lengths, the version numbers may be truncated or stripped regardless of this option.)
[only when WILD_STOP_AT_DIR compile-time option enabled] modifies the pattern matching routine so that both `?' (single-char wildcard) and `*' (multi-char wildcard) do not match the directory separator character `/'. (The two-character sequence ``**'' acts as a multi-char wildcard that includes the directory separator in its matched characters.) Examples:
"*.c" matches "foo.c" but not "mydir/foo.c"
"**.c" matches both "foo.c" and "mydir/foo.c"
"*/*.c" matches "bar/foo.c" but not "baz/bar/foo.c"
"??*/*" matches "ab/foo" and "abc/foo"
but not "a/foo" or "a/b/foo"
This modified behaviour is equivalent to the pattern matching style used by the shells of some of UnZip's supported target OSs (one example is Acorn RISC OS). This option may not be available on systems where the Zip archive's internal directory separator character `/' is allowed as regular character in native operating system filenames. (Currently, UnZip uses the same pattern matching rules for both wildcard zipfile specifications and zip entry selection patterns in most ports. For systems allowing `/' as regular filename character, the -W option would not work as expected on a wildcard zipfile specification.)
[VMS, Unix, OS/2, NT, Tandem] restore owner/protection info (UICs and
ACL entries) under VMS, or user and group info (UID/GID) under Unix, or
access control lists (ACLs) under certain network-enabled versions of
OS/2 (Warp Server with IBM LAN Server/Requester 3.0 to 5.0; Warp Connect
with IBM Peer 1.0), or security ACLs under Windows NT. In most cases
this will require special system privileges, and doubling the option
(-XX) under NT instructs unzip
to use
privileges for extraction; but under Unix, for example, a user who
belongs to several groups can restore files owned by any of those
groups, as long as the user IDs match his or her own. Note that ordinary
file attributes are always restored--this option applies only to
optional, extra ownership info available on some operating systems.
[NT's access control lists do not appear to be especially compatible
with OS/2's, so no attempt is made at cross-platform portability of
access privileges. It is not clear under what conditions this would ever
be useful anyway.]
[VMS] treat archived file name endings of ``.nnn'' (where ``nnn'' is a decimal number) as if they were VMS version numbers (``;nnn''). (The default is to treat them as file types.) Example:
"a.b.3" -> "a.b;3".
[MS-DOS, OS/2, NT] restore the volume label if the extraction medium is removable (e.g., a diskette). Doubling the option (-$$) allows fixed media (hard disks) to be labelled as well. By default, volume labels are ignored.
[Acorn only] overrides the extension list supplied by Unzip$Ext environment variable. During extraction, filename extensions that match one of the items in this extension list are swapped in front of the base name of the extracted file.
[all but Acorn, VM/CMS, MVS, Tandem] allows to extract archive
members into locations outside of the current `` extraction root
folder''. For security reasons, unzip
normally removes ``parent
dir'' path components (``../'') from the names of extracted file. This
safety feature (new for version 5.50) prevents unzip
from
accidentally writing files to ``sensitive'' areas outside the active
extraction folder tree head. The -: option lets
unzip
switch back to its previous, more liberal behaviour, to
allow exact extraction of (older) archives that used ``../'' components
to create multiple directory trees at the level of the current
extraction folder. This option does not enable writing explicitly to the
root directory (``/''). To achieve this, it is necessary to set the
extraction target folder to root (e.g. -d / ). However,
when the -: option is specified, it is still possible
to implicitly write to the root directory by specifying enough ``../''
path components within the zip archive. Use this option with extreme
caution.
[Unix only] allow control characters in names of extracted ZIP
archive entries. On Unix, a file name may contain any (8-bit) character
code with the two exception '/' (directory delimiter) and NUL (0x00, the
C string termination indicator), unless the specific file system has
more restrictive conventions. Generally, this allows to embed ASCII
control characters (or even sophisticated control sequences) in file
names, at least on 'native' Unix file systems. However, it may be highly
suspicious to make use of this Unix "feature". Embedded control
characters in file names might have nasty side effects when displayed on
screen by some listing code without sufficient filtering. And, for
ordinary users, it may be difficult to handle such file names (e.g. when
trying to specify it for open, copy, move, or delete operations).
Therefore, unzip
applies a filter by default that removes
potentially dangerous control characters from the extracted file names.
The -^ option allows to override this filter in the
rare case that embedded filename control characters are to be
intentionally restored.
[VMS] force unconditionally conversion of file names to ODS2-compatible names. The default is to exploit the destination file system, preserving case and extended file name characters on an ODS5 destination file system; and applying the ODS2-compatibility file name filtering on an ODS2 destination file system.
unzip
's default behavior may be modified via options placed
in an environment variable. This can be done with any option, but it is
probably most useful with the -a, -L,
-C, -q, -o, or
-n modifiers: make unzip
auto-convert text
files by default, make it convert filenames from uppercase systems to
lowercase, make it match names case-insensitively, make it quieter, or
make it always overwrite or never overwrite files as it extracts them.
For example, to make unzip
act as quietly as possible, only
reporting errors, one would use one of the following commands:
UNZIP=-qq; export UNZIP
setenv UNZIP -qq
set UNZIP=-qq
lowercase
):define UNZIP_OPTS "-qq"
Environment options are, in effect, considered to be just like any other command-line options, except that they are effectively the first options on the command line. To override an environment option, one may use the ``minus operator'' to remove it. For instance, to override one of the quiet-flags in the example above, use the command
unzip --q[other options] zipfile
The first hyphen is the normal switch character, and the second is a minus sign, acting on the q option. Thus the effect here is to cancel one quantum of quietness. To cancel both quiet flags, two (or more) minuses may be used:
unzip -t--q zipfile
unzip ---qt zipfile
(the two are equivalent). This may seem awkward or confusing, but it
is reasonably intuitive: just ignore the first hyphen and go from there.
It is also consistent with the behavior of Unix nice
(1).
As suggested by the examples above, the default variable names are
UNZIP_OPTS for VMS (where the symbol used to install unzip
as a
foreign command would otherwise be confused with the environment
variable), and UNZIP for all other operating systems. For compatibility
with zip
(1), UNZIPOPT is also accepted (don't ask). If both
UNZIP and UNZIPOPT are defined, however, UNZIP takes precedence.
unzip
's diagnostic option (-v with no zipfile
name) can be used to check the values of all four possible
unzip
and zipinfo
environment variables.
The timezone variable (TZ) should be set according to the local
timezone in order for the -f and -u to
operate correctly. See the description of -f above for
details. This variable may also be necessary to get timestamps of
extracted files to be set correctly. The WIN32 (Win9x/ME/NT4/2K/XP/2K3)
port of unzip
gets the timezone configuration from the
registry, assuming it is correctly set in the Control Panel. The TZ
variable is ignored for this port.
Encrypted archives are fully supported by Info-ZIP software, but due to United States export restrictions, de-/encryption support might be disabled in your compiled binary. However, since spring 2000, US export restrictions have been liberated, and our source archives do now include full crypt code. In case you need binary distributions with crypt support enabled, see the file ``WHERE'' in any Info-ZIP source or binary distribution for locations both inside and outside the US.
Some compiled versions of unzip
may not support decryption.
To check a version for crypt support, either attempt to test or extract
an encrypted archive, or else check unzip
's diagnostic screen
(see the -v option above) for ``[decryption]'' as one
of the special compilation options.
As noted above, the -P option may be used to supply
a password on the command line, but at a cost in security. The preferred
decryption method is simply to extract normally; if a zipfile member is
encrypted, unzip
will prompt for the password without echoing
what is typed. unzip
continues to use the same password as long
as it appears to be valid, by testing a 12-byte header on each file. The
correct password will always check out against the header, but there is
a 1-in-256 chance that an incorrect password will as well. (This is a
security feature of the PKWARE zipfile format; it helps prevent
brute-force attacks that might otherwise gain a large speed advantage by
testing only the header.) In the case that an incorrect password is
given but it passes the header test anyway, either an incorrect CRC will
be generated for the extracted data or else unzip
will fail
during the extraction because the ``decrypted'' bytes do not constitute
a valid compressed data stream.
If the first password fails the header check on some file,
unzip
will prompt for another password, and so on until all
files are extracted. If a password is not known, entering a null
password (that is, just a carriage return or ``Enter'') is taken as a
signal to skip all further prompting. Only unencrypted files in the
archive(s) will thereafter be extracted. (In fact, that's not quite
true; older versions of zip
(1) and zipcloak
(1) allowed
null passwords, so unzip
checks each encrypted file to see if
the null password works. This may result in ``false positives'' and
extraction errors, as noted above.)
Archives encrypted with 8-bit passwords (for example, passwords with
accented European characters) may not be portable across systems and/or
other archivers. This problem stems from the use of multiple encoding
methods for such characters, including Latin-1 (ISO 8859-1) and OEM code
page 850. DOS PKZIP
2.04g uses the OEM code page; Windows
PKZIP
2.50 uses Latin-1 (and is therefore incompatible with DOS
PKZIP
); Info-ZIP uses the OEM code page on DOS, OS/2 and Win3.x
ports but ISO coding (Latin-1 etc.) everywhere else; and Nico Mak's
WinZip
6.x does not allow 8-bit passwords at all.
UnZip
5.3 (or newer) attempts to use the default character set
first (e.g., Latin-1), followed by the alternate one (e.g., OEM code
page) to test passwords. On EBCDIC systems, if both of these fail,
EBCDIC encoding will be tested as a last resort. (EBCDIC is not tested
on non-EBCDIC systems, because there are no known archivers that encrypt
using EBCDIC encoding.) ISO character encodings other than Latin-1 are
not supported. The new addition of (partially) Unicode (resp. UTF-8)
support in UnZip
6.0 has not yet been adapted to the encryption
password handling in unzip
. On systems that use UTF-8 as native
character encoding, unzip
simply tries decryption with the
native UTF-8 encoded password; the built-in attempts to check the
password in translated encoding have not yet been adapted for UTF-8
support and will consequently fail.
To use unzip
to extract all members of the archive
letters.zip
into the current directory and subdirectories below
it, creating any subdirectories as necessary:
unzip letters
To extract all members of letters.zip
into the current
directory only:
unzip -j letters
To test letters.zip
, printing only a summary message
indicating whether the archive is OK or not:
unzip -tq letters
To test all
zipfiles in the current directory, printing only
the summaries:
unzip -tq \*.zip
(The backslash before the asterisk is only required if the shell
expands wildcards, as in Unix; double quotes could have been used
instead, as in the source examples below.) To extract to standard output
all members of letters.zip
whose names end in .tex
,
auto-converting to the local end-of-line convention and piping the
output into more
(1):
unzip -ca letters \*.tex | more
To extract the binary file paper1.dvi
to standard output and
pipe it to a printing program:
unzip -p articles paper1.dvi | dvips
To extract all FORTRAN and C source files--*.f, *.c, *.h, and Makefile--into the /tmp directory:
unzip source.zip "*.[fch]" Makefile -d /tmp
(the double quotes are necessary only in Unix and only if globbing is turned on). To extract all FORTRAN and C source files, regardless of case (e.g., both *.c and *.C, and any makefile, Makefile, MAKEFILE or similar):
unzip -C source.zip "*.[fch]" makefile -d /tmp
To extract any such files but convert any uppercase MS-DOS or VMS names to lowercase and convert the line-endings of all of the files to the local standard (without respect to any files that might be marked ``binary''):
unzip -aaCL source.zip "*.[fch]" makefile -d /tmp
To extract only newer versions of the files already in the current directory, without querying (NOTE: be careful of unzipping in one timezone a zipfile created in another--ZIP archives other than those created by Zip 2.1 or later contain no timezone information, and a ``newer'' file from an eastern timezone may, in fact, be older):
unzip -fo sources
To extract newer versions of the files already in the current directory and to create any files not already there (same caveat as previous example):
unzip -uo sources
To display a diagnostic screen showing which unzip
and
zipinfo
options are stored in environment variables, whether
decryption support was compiled in, the compiler with which
unzip
was compiled, etc.:
unzip -v
In the last five examples, assume that UNZIP or UNZIP_OPTS is set to -q. To do a singly quiet listing:
unzip -l file.zip
To do a doubly quiet listing:
unzip -ql file.zip
(Note that the ``.zip'' is generally not necessary.) To do a standard listing:
unzip --ql file.zip
or
unzip -l-q file.zip
or
unzip -l--q file.zip
(Extra minuses in options don't hurt.)
The current maintainer, being a lazy sort, finds it very useful to
define a pair of aliases: tt for ``unzip -tq'' and ii for ``unzip -Z''
(or ``zipinfo''). One may then simply type ``tt zipfile'' to test an
archive, something that is worth making a habit of doing. With luck
unzip
will report ``No errors detected in compressed data of
zipfile.zip,'' after which one may breathe a sigh of relief.
The maintainer also finds it useful to set the UNZIP environment variable to ``-aL'' and is tempted to add ``-C'' as well. His ZIPINFO variable is set to ``-z''.
The exit status (or error level) approximates the exit codes defined by PKWARE and takes on the following values, except under VMS:
normal; no errors or warnings detected.
one or more warning errors were encountered, but processing completed successfully anyway. This includes zipfiles where one or more files was skipped due to unsupported compression method or encryption with an unknown password.
a generic error in the zipfile format was detected. Processing may have completed successfully anyway; some broken zipfiles created by other archivers have simple work-arounds.
a severe error in the zipfile format was detected. Processing probably failed immediately.
unzip
was unable to allocate memory for one or more buffers during program initialization.
unzip
was unable to allocate memory or unable to obtain a tty to read the decryption password(s).
unzip
was unable to allocate memory during decompression to disk.
unzip
was unable to allocate memory during in-memory decompression.[currently not used]
the specified zipfiles were not found.
invalid options were specified on the command line.
no matching files were found.
the disk is (or was) full during extraction.
the end of the ZIP archive was encountered prematurely.
the user aborted
unzip
prematurely with control-C (or similar)testing or extraction of one or more files failed due to unsupported compression methods or unsupported decryption.
no files were found due to bad decryption password(s). (If even one file is successfully processed, however, the exit status is 1.)
VMS interprets standard Unix (or PC) return values as other,
scarier-looking things, so unzip
instead maps them into
VMS-style status codes. The current mapping is as follows: 1 (success)
for normal exit, 0x7fff0001 for warning errors, and (0x7fff000? +
16*normal_unzip_exit_status) for all other errors, where the `?' is 2
(error) for unzip
values 2, 9-11 and 80-82, and 4 (fatal error)
for the remaining ones (3-8, 50, 51). In addition, there is a
compilation option to expand upon this behavior: defining RETURN_CODES
results in a human-readable explanation of what the error status
means.
Multi-part archives are not yet supported, except in conjunction with
zip
. (All parts must be concatenated together in order, and
then ``zip -F'' (for zip 2.x
) or ``zip -FF'' (for zip
3.x) must be performed on the concatenated archive in order to
``fix'' it. Also, zip 3.0
and later can combine multi-part
(split) archives into a combined single-file archive using ``zip -s-
inarchive -O outarchive''. See the zip 3
manual page for more
information.) This will definitely be corrected in the next major
release.
Archives read from standard input are not yet supported, except with
funzip
(and then only the first member of the archive can be
extracted).
Archives encrypted with 8-bit passwords (e.g., passwords with accented European characters) may not be portable across systems and/or other archivers. See the discussion in DECRYPTION above.
unzip
's -M (``more'') option tries to take
into account automatic wrapping of long lines. However, the code may
fail to detect the correct wrapping locations. First, TAB characters
(and similar control sequences) are not taken into account, they are
handled as ordinary printable characters. Second, depending on the
actual system / OS port, unzip
may not detect the true screen
geometry but rather rely on "commonly used" default dimensions. The
correct handling of tabs would require the implementation of a query for
the actual tabulator setup on the output console.
Dates, times and permissions of stored directories are not restored except under Unix. (On Windows NT and successors, timestamps are now restored.)
[MS-DOS] When extracting or testing files from an archive on a
defective floppy diskette, if the ``Fail'' option is chosen from DOS's
``Abort, Retry, Fail?'' message, older versions of unzip
may
hang the system, requiring a reboot. This problem appears to be fixed,
but control-C (or control-Break) can still be used to terminate
unzip
.
Under DEC Ultrix, unzip
would sometimes fail on long
zipfiles (bad CRC, not always reproducible). This was apparently due
either to a hardware bug (cache memory) or an operating system bug
(improper handling of page faults?). Since Ultrix has been abandoned in
favor of Digital Unix (OSF/1), this may not be an issue anymore.
[Unix] Unix special files such as FIFO buffers (named pipes), block
devices and character devices are not restored even if they are somehow
represented in the zipfile, nor are hard-linked files relinked.
Basically the only file types restored by unzip
are regular
files, directories and symbolic (soft) links.
[OS/2] Extended attributes for existing directories are only updated
if the -o (``overwrite all'') option is given. This is
a limitation of the operating system; because directories only have a
creation time associated with them, unzip
has no way to
determine whether the stored attributes are newer or older than those on
disk. In practice this may mean a two-pass approach is required: first
unpack the archive normally (with or without freshening/updating
existing files), then overwrite just the directory entries (e.g.,
``unzip -o foo */'').
[VMS] When extracting to another directory, only the [.foo]
syntax is accepted for the -d option; the simple Unix
foo
syntax is silently ignored (as is the less common VMS
foo.dir
syntax).
[VMS] When the file being extracted already exists, unzip
's
query only allows skipping, overwriting or renaming; there should
additionally be a choice for creating a new version of the file. In
fact, the ``overwrite'' choice does create a new version; the old
version is not overwritten or deleted.
funzip
(1), zip
(1), zipcloak
(1),
zipgrep
(1), zipinfo
(1), zipnote
(1),
zipsplit
(1)
The Info-ZIP home page is currently at
http://www.info-zip.org/pub/infozip/
or
ftp://ftp.info-zip.org/pub/infozip/ .
The primary Info-ZIP authors (current semi-active members of the Zip-Bugs workgroup) are: Ed Gordon (Zip, general maintenance, shared code, Zip64, Win32, Unix, Unicode); Christian Spieler (UnZip maintenance coordination, VMS, MS-DOS, Win32, shared code, general Zip and UnZip integration and optimization); Onno van der Linden (Zip); Mike White (Win32, Windows GUI, Windows DLLs); Kai Uwe Rommel (OS/2, Win32); Steven M. Schweda (VMS, Unix, support of new features); Paul Kienitz (Amiga, Win32, Unicode); Chris Herborth (BeOS, QNX, Atari); Jonathan Hudson (SMS/QDOS); Sergio Monesi (Acorn RISC OS); Harald Denker (Atari, MVS); John Bush (Solaris, Amiga); Hunter Goatley (VMS, Info-ZIP Site maintenance); Steve Salisbury (Win32); Steve Miller (Windows CE GUI), Johnny Lee (MS-DOS, Win32, Zip64); and Dave Smith (Tandem NSK).
The following people were former members of the Info-ZIP development group and provided major contributions to key parts of the current code: Greg ``Cave Newt'' Roelofs (UnZip, unshrink decompression); Jean-loup Gailly (deflate compression); Mark Adler (inflate decompression, fUnZip).
The author of the original unzip code upon which Info-ZIP's was based is Samuel H. Smith; Carl Mascott did the first Unix port; and David P. Kirschbaum organized and led Info-ZIP in its early days with Keith Petersen hosting the original mailing list at WSMR-SimTel20. The full list of contributors to UnZip has grown quite large; please refer to the CONTRIBS file in the UnZip source distribution for a relatively complete version.
Samuel H. Smith
Samuel H. Smith
many Usenet contributors
Info-ZIP (DPK, consolidator)
Info-ZIP (DPK, consolidator)
Info-ZIP (GRR, maintainer)
Info-ZIP
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, GRR)
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, GRR)
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, GRR)
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, GRR)
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, GRR)
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, GRR)
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, GRR)
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, GRR)
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, GRR)
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, GRR)
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, SPC)
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, SPC)
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, SPC)
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, SPC)
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, SPC)
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, SPC)
Info-ZIP (Zip-Bugs subgroup, SPC)