JSPM

  • ESM via JSPM
  • ES Module Entrypoint
  • Export Map
  • Keywords
  • License
  • Repository URL
  • TypeScript Types
  • README
  • Created
  • Published
  • Downloads 12783
  • Score
    100M100P100Q136878F
  • License MIT

untar files in the browser

Package Exports

  • js-untar

This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (js-untar) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.

Readme

js-untar

Library for extracting tar files in the browser. Useful when packing all your application images/sound/json/etc. data in a standard .tar file and serving to clients as one gzipped bundle.

Browser feature requirements

As of September 2015 this includes Chrome>=20, Firefox>=13, IE>=10, Opera>=12.10 and Safari>=8. Web Worker transferable objects are used when available, increasing speed greatly. This is supported in Chrome>=21, Firefox>=18, Opera>=15 and Safari.

Web Workers are not implemented in Node.js, so js-untar is not Node-compatible. Use a Node-compatible library such as tar-stream.

Installation

NPM

npm install js-untar

Bower

bower install js-untar

Documentation

Supports AMD, CommonJS or simply load with a script tag, which will provide a global untar function. The module is a function that returns a modified Promise with a progress callback. This callback is executed every time a file is extracted. The standard Promise.then method is also called when extraction is done, with all extracted files as argument. The extraction is done in a Web Worker to allow the main UI thread to continue.

Example:

// Load the source ArrayBuffer from a XMLHttpRequest (or any other way you may need).
var sourceBuffer = [...];

untar(sourceBuffer)
.progress(function(extractedFile) {
    ... // Do something with a single extracted file.
})
.then(function(extractedFiles) {
    ... // Do something with all extracted files.
});

// or

untar(sourceBuffer).then(
    function(extractedFiles) { // onSuccess
        ... // Do something with all extracted files.
    },
    function(err) { // onError
        ... // Handle the error.
    },
    function(extractedFile) { // onProgress
        ... // Do something with a single extracted file.
    }
);

File object

The returned file object(s) has the following properties. Most of these are explained in the Tar wikipedia entry.

  • name = The full filename (including path and ustar filename prefix).

  • mode

  • uid

  • gid

  • size

  • mtime

  • checksum

  • type

  • linkname

  • ustarFormat

  • buffer An ArrayBuffer with the contents of the file.

  • blob A Blob object with the contents of the file.

  • getBlobUrl() A unique ObjectUrl to the data can be retrieved with this method for easy usage of extracted data in <img> tags etc.

            document.getElementById("targetImageElement").src = file.getBlobUrl();
  • readAsString() Parse the file contents as a UTF-8 string.

  • readAsJSON() Parse the file contents as a JSON object.

If the .tar file was in the ustar format (which most are), the following properties are also defined:

  • version
  • uname
  • gname
  • devmajor
  • devminor
  • namePrefix

Additional vendor-specific PAX header fields might also be defined.