How to extract a single file from a cpio archive?

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I have a cpio archive with lots of files and I need to extract only one file, not all. With tar I could just use tar -xf archive.tar path/to/file, but that does not work with cpio:



cpio -i < archive.cpio path/to/file
bash: path/to/file: No such file or directory


Does anyone know how to extract just a single file from a cpio archive?










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    1















    I have a cpio archive with lots of files and I need to extract only one file, not all. With tar I could just use tar -xf archive.tar path/to/file, but that does not work with cpio:



    cpio -i < archive.cpio path/to/file
    bash: path/to/file: No such file or directory


    Does anyone know how to extract just a single file from a cpio archive?










    share|improve this question


























      1












      1








      1








      I have a cpio archive with lots of files and I need to extract only one file, not all. With tar I could just use tar -xf archive.tar path/to/file, but that does not work with cpio:



      cpio -i < archive.cpio path/to/file
      bash: path/to/file: No such file or directory


      Does anyone know how to extract just a single file from a cpio archive?










      share|improve this question
















      I have a cpio archive with lots of files and I need to extract only one file, not all. With tar I could just use tar -xf archive.tar path/to/file, but that does not work with cpio:



      cpio -i < archive.cpio path/to/file
      bash: path/to/file: No such file or directory


      Does anyone know how to extract just a single file from a cpio archive?







      backup archive cpio






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Mar 2 at 8:53







      chevallier

















      asked Mar 2 at 8:42









      chevallierchevallier

      9931525




      9931525




















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          You should use the -d option to let cpio create the leading directories (path/to) if they don't exist:



          cpio -id < archive.cpio path/to/file


          Also, bsdtar (the regular tar on FreeBSD) knows how to extract cpio archives, whether compressed or not.






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            You should use the -d option to let cpio create the leading directories (path/to) if they don't exist:



            cpio -id < archive.cpio path/to/file


            Also, bsdtar (the regular tar on FreeBSD) knows how to extract cpio archives, whether compressed or not.






            share|improve this answer





























              1














              You should use the -d option to let cpio create the leading directories (path/to) if they don't exist:



              cpio -id < archive.cpio path/to/file


              Also, bsdtar (the regular tar on FreeBSD) knows how to extract cpio archives, whether compressed or not.






              share|improve this answer



























                1












                1








                1







                You should use the -d option to let cpio create the leading directories (path/to) if they don't exist:



                cpio -id < archive.cpio path/to/file


                Also, bsdtar (the regular tar on FreeBSD) knows how to extract cpio archives, whether compressed or not.






                share|improve this answer















                You should use the -d option to let cpio create the leading directories (path/to) if they don't exist:



                cpio -id < archive.cpio path/to/file


                Also, bsdtar (the regular tar on FreeBSD) knows how to extract cpio archives, whether compressed or not.







                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited Mar 2 at 10:29

























                answered Mar 2 at 10:21









                Uncle BillyUncle Billy

                9168




                9168



























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