On Mon, Feb 6, 2012 at 12:48 PM, Dennis Clarke dclarke@blastwave.org wrote:
I doubt if they are as well maintained in linux distros as the GNU tool set, particularly in terms of having recent fixes backported into the versions carried in enterprise distros.
They are updated pretty much every month.
My experience is very old (probably w/CentOS 3.x), but when I found problems with star they were fixed in its own source but I gave up before the packaged version was updated. Maybe that has changed...
My basic requirement with what I'm doing is to use standard tools and formats so that archives I write today can be readable in 10 years.
I've never had any doubts that current GNU tar would extract archives made with it 10+ years ago - in fact I'm fairly sure I've done that. Or that I'd be able to obtain a copy of it in the future.
GNU tar .. has its own bugs. Is it really standards compliant?
Everything has had bugs. Have you reported the bugs, and were the reports ignored? As for standards, GNU tar is the default tar shipped on most or all linux distributions so it is almost guaranteed to be the most prevalent. The historical limits on sizes of files and paths by the posix standards and the fact that tar predates them have kind of made a mess of standards, and you probably don't want to be restricted by them. Better to plan on being able to get a copy of the version you write with onto any future platform. I compiled GNUtar on DOS eons ago and wouldn't expect anything more hostile in the future.