Create a tar.xz in one command

If you like the pipe mode, this is the most clean solution:

tar c some-dir | xz > some-dir.tar.xz

It's not necessary to put the f option in order to deal with files and then to use - to specify that the file is the standard input. It's also not necessary to specify the -z option for xz, because it's default.

It works with gzip and bzip2 too:

tar c some-dir | gzip > some-dir.tar.gz

or

tar c some-dir | bzip2 > some-dir.tar.bz2

Decompressing is also quite straightforward:

xzcat tarball.tar.xz | tar x
bzcat tarball.tar.bz2 | tar x
zcat tarball.tar.gz | tar x

If you have only tar archive, you can use cat:

cat archive.tar | tar x

If you need to list the files only, use tar t.


Switch -J only works on newer systems. The universal command is:

To make .tar.xz archive

tar cf - directory/ | xz -z - > directory.tar.xz

Explanation

  1. tar cf - directory reads directory/ and starts putting it to TAR format. The output of this operation is generated on the standard output.

  2. | pipes standard output to the input of another program...

  3. ... which happens to be xz -z -. XZ is configured to compress (-z) the archive from standard input (-).

  4. You redirect the output from xz to the tar.xz file.


Use the -J compression option for xz. And remember to man tar :)

tar cfJ <archive.tar.xz> <files>

Edit 2015-08-10:

If you're passing the arguments to tar with dashes (ex: tar -cf as opposed to tar cf), then the -f option must come last, since it specifies the filename (thanks to @A-B-B for pointing that out!). In that case, the command looks like:

tar -cJf <archive.tar.xz> <files>