Have you ever wondered why that are so many file extensions ending in "
a r"? It's because the "ar" stands for archive, and it's such a reasonable way of naming file that the original
tar which stands for
tape archive was picked up by Sun and the Java community and transmuted into other file formats.
tar - tape archive
jar - java archive
war - web application archive
ear - enterprise archive
sar - service archive
The original
tar or tape archive files are / were used for software distribution and backups. The format they use is that the file is written as a series of units:
• file name
• file length
• file data
which means that the whole archive file has potentially to be scanned when an element is to be extracted. Furthermore, a tar file in its native form is NOT compressed in any way. This means that a tar file can be both big and inconvenient.
Jar or Java Archive files may also be used for software distribution and backups, and although the jat utility that's used to create and (usually) to unpack them is written in Java and most people use them to contain Java - related information, they can actually contain any file and directory structure. There IS a header (an index or MANIFEST) at the top of a jar file saying what's in the file and where it is, so things can be accessed quickly on a random access systems such as a disc drive, and the data is usually stored compressed (turn compression off with the
0 option when you create a jar). This means that a .jar file is an appropriate medium for extracting information on the fly within a live application, even one that's quite heavily used.
Other file types that I mentioned at the start, such as
war and
ear are also jar files, created with the jar utility. In fact, they're a subtype of jar files with the data they contain being in a specific file and directory stucture. In other words, the arrangment of files within a
war is such that the file and its contents are suitable for deployment as a webapp under a container such as Apache Tomcat, and the arrangement of files within a
ear is such that it's an Enterprise Archive such as you would use under JBoss, etc.
(written 2006-06-10 07:05:15)
Associated topics are indexed under
J708 - Java - PackagesJ951 - Java - Tomcat - Configuring Web ApplicationsA653 - Web Application Deployment - Tomcat - Configuring Web ApplicationsA502 - Web Application Deployment - Java - Basic ToolsA162 - Web Application Deployment - Backups and File System ManagementA802 - Web Application Deployment - The JBoss application server
Some other Articles
Very good for woodliceHorse and Python trainingSeeing the bricks for the treesUsing different URLs to navigate around a single scripttar, jar, war, ear, sar filesPython 3000 - the next generationOver zealous police activity?Want to be a technical trainer in the UK?Almost everyone losesCottage industry or production line data handling methods