I *thought* there was a way to do it directly - but even the Gnome Archive Manager decompresses an archive, adds the file, the recompresses it. I do similar in a way - I have a backup directory that I compress into a file periodically, overwriting the previous tar.gz. Cheers, Mike -- http://www.taroandti.com/ Exotic Plants and More... http://www.mjv.com/ Home... Erik Bixby wrote: > I can successfully create a tar file with something akin to > > tar -czvf /path/to/archive.tgz /path/to/file/to/backup > > Once the archive.tgz file is created, how does one add another file to > it? Everything I've read gives me the impression that > > tar -rzvf /path/to/archive.tgz /path/to/other/file/to/backup > > should work. However, that's blowing my archive.tgz file up. Any ideas? > > What I'm trying to do is write a script to create archive.tgz if it > doesn't exist (works), and add a file to it, if it does already exist > (currently blows up my archive). > -Erik --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss