On Sat, Apr 27, 2002 at 04:55:38PM -0500, Jackie LaVaque wrote: > A friend gave me a CD with some very cool astronomical charting/graphing > software on it, called "Xephem". I would like to install it on my Mac-based > Yellow Dog Linux system, but unfortunately, friend gave me a one-line > cryptic sentence as installation instructions ("untar in root) and I don't > know what to do next. I have no experience installing software in Linux and > friend is unavailable this weekend for installation instructions. tar is the standard *nix Tape ARchiver. It takes lots of small files and turns them into one big file. Modern tars also allow you to tell them to pipe the data through a compression program so you can archive and compress in a single step. The tarfile that your friend gave you is probably named something like either Xephem.tar, Xephem.tar.gz, or Xephem.tgz. If it ends in .tar, the command to dearchive it is tar xvf Xephem.tar If it ends in .tar.gz or .tgz, then it has also been compressed using gzip and the command to decompress and dearchive is tar xvzf Xephem.tgz In both cases, the 'v' is optional; it stands for 'Verbose' and causes tar to print the name of each file in the archive as it is extracted. I always use it, but nothing will break if you don't. Other compression formats are possible, such as .Z for the original unix 'compress' command's format or .bz2 (or .bzip2) for (surprise, surprise) bzip2. The relevant switches can be found by reading `man tar`. gzip is the most common, though, so that's the only one I've mentioned above. Finally, if you have the disk space, I would recommend first untarring the file in a scratch directory so you can take a look at what it's going to install and verify that it won't disrupt your system too badly. Depending on how adventurous you feel, you can then either untar it again in the root directory or manually move files from the scratch directory to permanent homes in more stable sections of the filesystem. -- When we reduce our own liberties to stop terrorism, the terrorists have already won. - reverius Innocence is no protection when governments go bad. - Tom Swiss