On Wed, 2002-10-09 at 13:41, Seneca wrote: > On Wed, Oct 09, 2002 at 11:56:18AM +0200, Claudio Bley wrote: > > On Wed, 2002-10-09 at 11:27, Karl E. Jorgensen wrote: > > > What about zip archives that span disks? You won't get much compression > > > (if any) out of it, but... > > > > > > PS: never used XP, but zip has been able to do this for quite a while > > > (at least since 2.04g in the bad old DOS days) > > > > AFAIK, disc spanning only works when all files in the zip archive are > > smaller than the space on the medium you want to transfer it to. The > > files in the archive are just distributed over several floppies then, > > but without splitting them apart. > > Back when I had a FAT16 partition (hda1, ~100M) on my laptop and I > couldn't access the network with that system (borked NIC), I copied > pkzip onto that partition, and booted with an old DOS floppy. pkzip > could split over disks, mid-file, and properly reattach them at the > other end. I'm not sure if unzip could handle them properly, though.
Yes, you're right. It seems pkzip is able to produce splitted archives. I was using WinZip back in these days - and it wasn't possible to do that (or I simply overlooked something). At least it isn't possible using zipsplit. So, I doubt that unzip can handle those files properly then, but one may install pkzip for linux in that case. Anyway, thanks for correcting me. -- Claudio Bley ASCII ribbon campaign (") Debian GNU/Linux advocate - against HTML email X http://www.cs.uni-magdeburg.de/~bley/ & vCards / \ -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]