.. data:: DEFAULT_FORMAT
- The default format for creating archives. This is currently :const:`GNU_FORMAT`.
+ The default format for creating archives. This is currently :const:`PAX_FORMAT`.
+
+ .. versionchanged:: 3.8
+ The default format for new archives was changed to
+ :const:`PAX_FORMAT` from :const:`GNU_FORMAT`.
.. seealso::
* The POSIX.1-2001 pax format (:const:`PAX_FORMAT`). It is the most flexible
format with virtually no limits. It supports long filenames and linknames, large
- files and stores pathnames in a portable way. However, not all tar
- implementations today are able to handle pax archives properly.
+ files and stores pathnames in a portable way. Modern tar implementations,
+ including GNU tar, bsdtar/libarchive and star, fully support extended *pax*
+ features; some older or unmaintained libraries may not, but should treat
+ *pax* archives as if they were in the universally-supported *ustar* format.
The *pax* format is an extension to the existing *ustar* format. It uses extra
headers for information that cannot be stored otherwise. There are two flavours
The default scheme is ``'surrogateescape'`` which Python also uses for its
file system calls, see :ref:`os-filenames`.
-In case of :const:`PAX_FORMAT` archives, *encoding* is generally not needed
+For :const:`PAX_FORMAT` archives (the default), *encoding* is generally not needed
because all the metadata is stored using *UTF-8*. *encoding* is only used in
the rare cases when binary pax headers are decoded or when strings with
surrogate characters are stored.
[7.672102882379219, 12.000027119750287, 4.647488369766392]
+tarfile
+-------
+
+The :mod:`tarfile` module now defaults to the modern pax (POSIX.1-2001)
+format for new archives, instead of the previous GNU-specific one.
+This improves cross-platform portability with a consistent encoding (UTF-8)
+in a standardized and extensible format, and offers several other benefits.
+(Contributed by C.A.M. Gerlach in :issue:`36268`.)
+
+
tokenize
--------
USTAR_FORMAT = 0 # POSIX.1-1988 (ustar) format
GNU_FORMAT = 1 # GNU tar format
PAX_FORMAT = 2 # POSIX.1-2001 (pax) format
-DEFAULT_FORMAT = GNU_FORMAT
+DEFAULT_FORMAT = PAX_FORMAT
#---------------------------------------------------------
# tarfile constants
def test_write_number_fields(self):
self.assertEqual(tarfile.itn(1), b"0000001\x00")
self.assertEqual(tarfile.itn(0o7777777), b"7777777\x00")
- self.assertEqual(tarfile.itn(0o10000000),
+ self.assertEqual(tarfile.itn(0o10000000, format=tarfile.GNU_FORMAT),
b"\x80\x00\x00\x00\x00\x20\x00\x00")
- self.assertEqual(tarfile.itn(0xffffffff),
+ self.assertEqual(tarfile.itn(0xffffffff, format=tarfile.GNU_FORMAT),
b"\x80\x00\x00\x00\xff\xff\xff\xff")
- self.assertEqual(tarfile.itn(-1),
+ self.assertEqual(tarfile.itn(-1, format=tarfile.GNU_FORMAT),
b"\xff\xff\xff\xff\xff\xff\xff\xff")
- self.assertEqual(tarfile.itn(-100),
+ self.assertEqual(tarfile.itn(-100, format=tarfile.GNU_FORMAT),
b"\xff\xff\xff\xff\xff\xff\xff\x9c")
- self.assertEqual(tarfile.itn(-0x100000000000000),
+ self.assertEqual(tarfile.itn(-0x100000000000000,
+ format=tarfile.GNU_FORMAT),
b"\xff\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00")
# Issue 32713: Test if itn() supports float values outside the
--- /dev/null
+Switch the default format used for writing tars with mod:`tarfile` to
+the modern POSIX.1-2001 pax standard, from the vendor-specific GNU.
+Contributed by C.A.M. Gerlach.