Stephen Liu wrote: > I create a tarred file then compressed with bzip with following command > line; > > # tar -jcpf AAA.bz2 /home/path/to/dirA > > dirA is about 2G in size. > > After working several days on dirA I want to create a new compressed > tarred file. Instead of repeating the above command, is there a way > starting from the old file AAA.bz2 making use of the options -u, -N, > -G, etc. to reduce the compressing time? I looked around on man tar and > Internet and could not sort out their combination on the command line. You wouldn't be able to do this with command lines. bzip2 compresses 900K [1] blocks at a time: it might be possible, if a 900K block hasn't changed, to "carry it forward" from the earlier .tar.bz2 to the next, but you'd need to write a program that got pretty deep into the .tar and .bz2 format. [2] If you really want faster compression, possibly at the expense of file-size, then gzip might be a much better answer for you. It doesn't compress as well, but it can compress a lot faster. (Quite how much faster depends on your processor architecture). Hope this helps, James. [1] By default: see man bzip2 for details. [2] Someone's going to quibble if I don't quote the bzip2 man page saying bzip2 compresses files in blocks, usually 900kbytes long. Each block is handled independently. If a media or transmission error causes a multi-block .bz2 file to become damaged, it may be possible to recover data from the undamaged blocks in the file. -- E-mail address: james | Whenever [Richard I] returned to England he always @westexe.demon.co.uk | set out again immediately for the Mediterranean and | was therefore known as Richard Gare de Lyon. | -- '1066 and All That'