Hello Robert and all,

Because CD's are cheap I burned the michael.tar file to a CD.

I did as you, Robert, suggested to create a text file of the contents of
the michael.tar file to michael-tar.txt and successfully got the
contents listed in a text file about 36000 lines long.

So, because CD's are cheap, I burned michael-tar.txt to another CD. I
know such a short file is a waste of a burned CD, but hey, CD's are
cheaper than floppies.

Thanks Nick for all your help too.

I have now successfully burned a michael.tar CD and a michael-tar.txt CD.

And when I put the michael.tar CD in my CD drive and looked at the
contents, I saw that .kde and .mozilla and their subdirectories are on
my CD. So presumably my back up CD's are complete enough to restore my
data files, c programs, and thunderbird address book and filter
configurations if I reinstall libranet 3.0. If I presumed wrong, please
let me know. I will not reinstall libranet 3.0 until I know my backup
CD's are complete and accurate.

I did not have time to read all the 36000 lines in michael-tar.txt, but
what I scanned through seemed OK to me.

Thanks and regards to all those who helped me, including Robert Campbell
and Rick Wiltshire,

Michael Walters

___________________________________________________________________
Robert Campbell wrote:

>creating an uncompressed tar file of your entire home directory,
>including dot files and directories should be as easy
>as
>    tar cvf /tmp/michael.tar ~
>
>notice we are tarring the entire home directory, not just some of the
>files in it.
>viewing the contents of the .tar file and putting the results into a
>text file should be
>
>    tar tvf /tmp/michael.tar > /tmp/michael-tar.txt
>
>using gzip compression should be as easy as
>
>     tar zcvf /tmp/michael.tar.gz ~
>
>and getting the contents of this file are similar to the above
>instruction except for the "z" flag and the gz extension
>
>     tar ztvf /tmp/michael.tar.gz > /tmp/michael-tar-gz.txt
>
>Hope this helps
>
>On Tue, 2005-11-15 at 07:58 -0700, Michael Walters wrote:
>
>  
>
>>Hello Nick,
>>
>>I successfully tarred my home directory without compression in
>>michael.tar with a size of 207943680 bytes which should easily be burned
>>to a 700 Meg CD.
>>
>>Thank you for your detailed instructions which worked beautifully.
>>
>>My friend at the CCNA told me a command I could use to get a text file
>>containing a list of contents in michael.tar.
>>
>>I want to get that list put in a text file (with the txt extension) so
>>that I can check to see whether everything is there.
>>
>>I also want to  see whether the configuration .kde directories and tiles
>>and the .mozilla directories and files are saved to the michael.tar file.
>>
>>The reason I want the .kde directories and files and .mozilla
>>directories and files is that I want to be able to restore my mozilla
>>thunderbird address book and filters and need the configuration files to
>>be backed up.
>>
>>I likewise was told by my friend at the CCNA I need the .kde
>>configuration files.
>>
>>If everything checks out I will burn the michael.tar file to the CD.
>>
>>If I have to burn the .kde files and directories and .mozilla files and
>>directories separately to another CD that is all right because CD's are
>>cheap. But I do want to back up my .mozilla configuration files so that
>>I do not lose my thunderbird address book. I do not remember why I
>>should save my .kde configuration files too, but it would not hurt to do so.
>>
>>
>>Thanks again for all your help. Once I do the last couple of steps
>>listed above I will burn the michael.tar file to a CD.
>>
>>Regards,
>>
>>Michael Walters
>>
>>_________________________________________________________________________________
>>
>>
>>Nick Wiltshire wrote:
>>
>>    
>>
>>>The command to tar & gzip is:
>>>
>>>tar -zcf /tmp/michael.tgz /home/michael
>>>(then burn the file /tmp/michael.tgz to CD)
>>>
>>>without compression, remove the z option:
>>>
>>>tar -cf /tmp/michael.tar /home/michael
>>>
>>>add the v option to either command for verbose output, but note the f option 
>>>must come LAST:
>>>
>>>tar -zvcf /tmp/michael.tgz /home/michael
>>>
>>>to scroll help:
>>>
>>>tar --help | less
>>>
>>>or 
>>>
>>>man tar
>>>
>>>to decompress later:
>>>
>>>tar -zxvf michael.tgz /wherever/you/want
>>>
>>>or if you didn't use compression above:
>>>
>>>tar -xvf michael.tar /wherever/you/want
>>>
>>>Happy tar-ing :)
>>>
>>>
>>>On Monday 14 November 2005 11:43 pm, Michael Walters wrote:
>>> 
>>>
>>>      
>>>
>>>>Michael Walters wrote:
>>>>   
>>>>
>>>>        
>>>>
>>>>>Thanks Nick and everyone else,
>>>>>
>>>>>I did a du -h /home/michael and found I am using 181M in /home/michael
>>>>>
>>>>>I did a du -h /tmp and got 17K used in /tmp.
>>>>>
>>>>>Since my usage in /home/michael was only 181M I should be able to put
>>>>>all of my home directory on a 700M CD as 181M is far less than 700M.
>>>>>
>>>>>I was told that I could tar the current directory by doing tar . by a
>>>>>fellow I met at the Calgary Community Network Association. I am going to
>>>>>try that out now and will tell you how it goes.
>>>>>     
>>>>>
>>>>>          
>>>>>
>>>>I tried tar . and got an error message of tar . invalid operation try
>>>>tar --help. I tried tar --help and a number of lines went by, only the
>>>>last of which I could read. I have forgotten how to scroll through a
>>>>help file.
>>>>
>>>>Regards,
>>>>
>>>>Michael again
>>>>
>>>>   
>>>>
>>>>        
>>>>
>>>>>Regards,
>>>>>
>>>>>Michael Walters
>>>>>
>>>>>__________________________________________
>>>>>
>>>>>          
>>>>>

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