Archivefs is a read-only FUSE filesystem for mounting compressed archives, inspired by archivemount.
- Read-only mount any archive file supported by libarchive to a directory
- Several orders of magnitude faster decompression compared to archivemount
Archivefs supports all the formats supported by libarchive, including, but not limited to:
- tar (compressed with gzip, bzip2, xz, zstd)
- cpio
- ISO9660 (including Joliet and Rockridge extensions)
- zip
- 7-Zip
Note that libarchive has known bugs when reading rar archives.
- Linux Kernel 3.15 or later (While FUSE works on other operating systems, the polyfuse crate used by archivefs only supports Linux at the moment)
- The
fusermountcommand (usually provided by thefuseorfuse2package) - libarchive
- Rust 1.31 or greater
- Development files for libarchive (usually provided by the
libarchive-devorlibarchive-develpackage)
- Python 3.5 or greater
- AsciiDoc
# This will install only the archivefs executable in $HOME/.cargo/bin, without any
# man page. Also, make sure that the $HOME/.cargo/bin directory is in your PATH
cargo install archivefs
# Alternatively, you can build from source using the command
cargo build --release
# and then copy the file target/release/archivefs somewhere in your PATH
# To build the man page:
a2x -f manpage doc/archivefs.1.adoc
# and then copy the file doc/archivefs.1 in a man path (like $HOME/.local/share/man/man1 )archivefs [OPTIONS] ARCHIVEPATH MOUNTPOINTConsider the gzipped tar archive files.tgz containing files file1 and
file2, and an empty directory mnt.
$ ls
files.tgz mnt/
# Mount the archive file
$ archivefs files.tgz mnt
$ ls mnt
file1 file2
# Perform desired read operations on the archive via mnt/
# For example, to extract a file simply copy it
$ cp mnt/file1 ~/
# Unmount the archive when done
$ umount mntContrary to archivemount, which sort-of supports writing to an archive by recreating it, archivefs only supports reading from archives.
Note that if an archive contains hard links, they will be treated as separate files by archivefs.