NAME¶
xzdec, lzmadec - Small .xz and .lzma decompressors
SYNOPSIS¶
xzdec [
option]... [
file]...
lzmadec [
option]... [
file]...
DESCRIPTION¶
xzdec is a liblzma-based decompression-only tool for
.xz (and only
.xz) files.
xzdec is intended to work as a drop-in replacement
for
xz(1) in the most common situations where a script has been written
to use
xz --decompress --stdout (and possibly a few other commonly used
options) to decompress
.xz files.
lzmadec is identical to
xzdec except that
lzmadec supports
.lzma files instead of
.xz files.
To reduce the size of the executable,
xzdec doesn't support
multithreading or localization, and doesn't read options from
XZ_DEFAULTS and
XZ_OPT environment variables.
xzdec
doesn't support displaying intermediate progress information: sending
SIGINFO to
xzdec does nothing, but sending
SIGUSR1
terminates the process instead of displaying progress information.
OPTIONS¶
- -d, --decompress, --uncompress
- Ignored for xz(1) compatibility. xzdec supports only
decompression.
- -k, --keep
- Ignored for xz(1) compatibility. xzdec never creates or
removes any files.
- -c, --stdout, --to-stdout
- Ignored for xz(1) compatibility. xzdec always writes the
decompressed data to standard output.
- -q, --quiet
- Specifying this once does nothing since xzdec never displays any
warnings or notices. Specify this twice to suppress errors.
- -Q, --no-warn
- Ignored for xz(1) compatibility. xzdec never uses the exit
status 2.
- -h, --help
- Display a help message and exit successfully.
- -V, --version
- Display the version number of xzdec and liblzma.
EXIT STATUS¶
- 0
- All was good.
- 1
- An error occurred.
xzdec doesn't have any warning messages like
xz(1) has, thus the
exit status 2 is not used by
xzdec.
NOTES¶
Use
xz(1) instead of
xzdec or
lzmadec for normal everyday
use.
xzdec or
lzmadec are meant only for situations where it is
important to have a smaller decompressor than the full-featured
xz(1).
xzdec and
lzmadec are not really that small. The size can be
reduced further by dropping features from liblzma at compile time, but that
shouldn't usually be done for executables distributed in typical non-embedded
operating system distributions. If you need a truly small
.xz
decompressor, consider using XZ Embedded.
SEE ALSO¶
xz(1)
XZ Embedded: <
http://tukaani.org/xz/embedded.html>