1.\" Copyright (c) 2007 Tim Kientzle 2.\" All rights reserved. 3.\" 4.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 5.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 6.\" are met: 7.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 8.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 9.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 10.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the 11.\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 12.\" 13.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND 14.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE 15.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE 16.\" ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE 17.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL 18.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS 19.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) 20.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT 21.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY 22.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 23.\" SUCH DAMAGE. 24.\" 25.\" $FreeBSD$ 26.\" 27.Dd December 23, 2011 28.Dt CPIO 5 29.Os 30.Sh NAME 31.Nm cpio 32.Nd format of cpio archive files 33.Sh DESCRIPTION 34The 35.Nm 36archive format collects any number of files, directories, and other 37file system objects (symbolic links, device nodes, etc.) into a single 38stream of bytes. 39.Ss General Format 40Each file system object in a 41.Nm 42archive comprises a header record with basic numeric metadata 43followed by the full pathname of the entry and the file data. 44The header record stores a series of integer values that generally 45follow the fields in 46.Va struct stat . 47(See 48.Xr stat 2 49for details.) 50The variants differ primarily in how they store those integers 51(binary, octal, or hexadecimal). 52The header is followed by the pathname of the 53entry (the length of the pathname is stored in the header) 54and any file data. 55The end of the archive is indicated by a special record with 56the pathname 57.Dq TRAILER!!! . 58.Ss PWB format 59XXX Any documentation of the original PWB/UNIX 1.0 format? XXX 60.Ss Old Binary Format 61The old binary 62.Nm 63format stores numbers as 2-byte and 4-byte binary values. 64Each entry begins with a header in the following format: 65.Bd -literal -offset indent 66struct header_old_cpio { 67 unsigned short c_magic; 68 unsigned short c_dev; 69 unsigned short c_ino; 70 unsigned short c_mode; 71 unsigned short c_uid; 72 unsigned short c_gid; 73 unsigned short c_nlink; 74 unsigned short c_rdev; 75 unsigned short c_mtime[2]; 76 unsigned short c_namesize; 77 unsigned short c_filesize[2]; 78}; 79.Ed 80.Pp 81The 82.Va unsigned short 83fields here are 16-bit integer values; the 84.Va unsigned int 85fields are 32-bit integer values. 86The fields are as follows 87.Bl -tag -width indent 88.It Va magic 89The integer value octal 070707. 90This value can be used to determine whether this archive is 91written with little-endian or big-endian integers. 92.It Va dev , Va ino 93The device and inode numbers from the disk. 94These are used by programs that read 95.Nm 96archives to determine when two entries refer to the same file. 97Programs that synthesize 98.Nm 99archives should be careful to set these to distinct values for each entry. 100.It Va mode 101The mode specifies both the regular permissions and the file type. 102It consists of several bit fields as follows: 103.Bl -tag -width "MMMMMMM" -compact 104.It 0170000 105This masks the file type bits. 106.It 0140000 107File type value for sockets. 108.It 0120000 109File type value for symbolic links. 110For symbolic links, the link body is stored as file data. 111.It 0100000 112File type value for regular files. 113.It 0060000 114File type value for block special devices. 115.It 0040000 116File type value for directories. 117.It 0020000 118File type value for character special devices. 119.It 0010000 120File type value for named pipes or FIFOs. 121.It 0004000 122SUID bit. 123.It 0002000 124SGID bit. 125.It 0001000 126Sticky bit. 127On some systems, this modifies the behavior of executables and/or directories. 128.It 0000777 129The lower 9 bits specify read/write/execute permissions 130for world, group, and user following standard POSIX conventions. 131.El 132.It Va uid , Va gid 133The numeric user id and group id of the owner. 134.It Va nlink 135The number of links to this file. 136Directories always have a value of at least two here. 137Note that hardlinked files include file data with every copy in the archive. 138.It Va rdev 139For block special and character special entries, 140this field contains the associated device number. 141For all other entry types, it should be set to zero by writers 142and ignored by readers. 143.It Va mtime 144Modification time of the file, indicated as the number 145of seconds since the start of the epoch, 14600:00:00 UTC January 1, 1970. 147The four-byte integer is stored with the most-significant 16 bits first 148followed by the least-significant 16 bits. 149Each of the two 16 bit values are stored in machine-native byte order. 150.It Va namesize 151The number of bytes in the pathname that follows the header. 152This count includes the trailing NUL byte. 153.It Va filesize 154The size of the file. 155Note that this archive format is limited to 156four gigabyte file sizes. 157See 158.Va mtime 159above for a description of the storage of four-byte integers. 160.El 161.Pp 162The pathname immediately follows the fixed header. 163If the 164.Cm namesize 165is odd, an additional NUL byte is added after the pathname. 166The file data is then appended, padded with NUL 167bytes to an even length. 168.Pp 169Hardlinked files are not given special treatment; 170the full file contents are included with each copy of the 171file. 172.Ss Portable ASCII Format 173.St -susv2 174standardized an ASCII variant that is portable across all 175platforms. 176It is commonly known as the 177.Dq old character 178format or as the 179.Dq odc 180format. 181It stores the same numeric fields as the old binary format, but 182represents them as 6-character or 11-character octal values. 183.Bd -literal -offset indent 184struct cpio_odc_header { 185 char c_magic[6]; 186 char c_dev[6]; 187 char c_ino[6]; 188 char c_mode[6]; 189 char c_uid[6]; 190 char c_gid[6]; 191 char c_nlink[6]; 192 char c_rdev[6]; 193 char c_mtime[11]; 194 char c_namesize[6]; 195 char c_filesize[11]; 196}; 197.Ed 198.Pp 199The fields are identical to those in the old binary format. 200The name and file body follow the fixed header. 201Unlike the old binary format, there is no additional padding 202after the pathname or file contents. 203If the files being archived are themselves entirely ASCII, then 204the resulting archive will be entirely ASCII, except for the 205NUL byte that terminates the name field. 206.Ss New ASCII Format 207The "new" ASCII format uses 8-byte hexadecimal fields for 208all numbers and separates device numbers into separate fields 209for major and minor numbers. 210.Bd -literal -offset indent 211struct cpio_newc_header { 212 char c_magic[6]; 213 char c_ino[8]; 214 char c_mode[8]; 215 char c_uid[8]; 216 char c_gid[8]; 217 char c_nlink[8]; 218 char c_mtime[8]; 219 char c_filesize[8]; 220 char c_devmajor[8]; 221 char c_devminor[8]; 222 char c_rdevmajor[8]; 223 char c_rdevminor[8]; 224 char c_namesize[8]; 225 char c_check[8]; 226}; 227.Ed 228.Pp 229Except as specified below, the fields here match those specified 230for the old binary format above. 231.Bl -tag -width indent 232.It Va magic 233The string 234.Dq 070701 . 235.It Va check 236This field is always set to zero by writers and ignored by readers. 237See the next section for more details. 238.El 239.Pp 240The pathname is followed by NUL bytes so that the total size 241of the fixed header plus pathname is a multiple of four. 242Likewise, the file data is padded to a multiple of four bytes. 243Note that this format supports only 4 gigabyte files (unlike the 244older ASCII format, which supports 8 gigabyte files). 245.Pp 246In this format, hardlinked files are handled by setting the 247filesize to zero for each entry except the first one that 248appears in the archive. 249.Ss New CRC Format 250The CRC format is identical to the new ASCII format described 251in the previous section except that the magic field is set 252to 253.Dq 070702 254and the 255.Va check 256field is set to the sum of all bytes in the file data. 257This sum is computed treating all bytes as unsigned values 258and using unsigned arithmetic. 259Only the least-significant 32 bits of the sum are stored. 260.Ss HP variants 261The 262.Nm cpio 263implementation distributed with HPUX used XXXX but stored 264device numbers differently XXX. 265.Ss Other Extensions and Variants 266Sun Solaris uses additional file types to store extended file 267data, including ACLs and extended attributes, as special 268entries in cpio archives. 269.Pp 270XXX Others? XXX 271.Sh SEE ALSO 272.Xr cpio 1 , 273.Xr tar 5 274.Sh STANDARDS 275The 276.Nm cpio 277utility is no longer a part of POSIX or the Single Unix Standard. 278It last appeared in 279.St -susv2 . 280It has been supplanted in subsequent standards by 281.Xr pax 1 . 282The portable ASCII format is currently part of the specification for the 283.Xr pax 1 284utility. 285.Sh HISTORY 286The original cpio utility was written by Dick Haight 287while working in AT&T's Unix Support Group. 288It appeared in 1977 as part of PWB/UNIX 1.0, the 289.Dq Programmer's Work Bench 290derived from 291.At v6 292that was used internally at AT&T. 293Both the old binary and old character formats were in use 294by 1980, according to the System III source released 295by SCO under their 296.Dq Ancient Unix 297license. 298The character format was adopted as part of 299.St -p1003.1-88 . 300XXX when did "newc" appear? Who invented it? When did HP come out with their variant? When did Sun introduce ACLs and extended attributes? XXX 301.Sh BUGS 302The 303.Dq CRC 304format is mis-named, as it uses a simple checksum and 305not a cyclic redundancy check. 306.Pp 307The old binary format is limited to 16 bits for user id, 308group id, device, and inode numbers. 309It is limited to 4 gigabyte file sizes. 310.Pp 311The old ASCII format is limited to 18 bits for 312the user id, group id, device, and inode numbers. 313It is limited to 8 gigabyte file sizes. 314.Pp 315The new ASCII format is limited to 4 gigabyte file sizes. 316.Pp 317None of the cpio formats store user or group names, 318which are essential when moving files between systems with 319dissimilar user or group numbering. 320.Pp 321Especially when writing older cpio variants, it may be necessary 322to map actual device/inode values to synthesized values that 323fit the available fields. 324With very large filesystems, this may be necessary even for 325the newer formats. 326