druhy clanok

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test

To archive a folder recursively in Linux, you typically use -cvf (for a standard tarball) or -czvf (for a compressed gzip archive). By default, the tar command in Linux includes all subdirectories and their contents recursively unless told otherwise. Your suggested flags, -xzfv, are almost correct but have a significant error: the -x flag is for extracting an archive, not creating one. To create an archive, you must use the -c flag.

To archive a folder recursively in Linux, you typically use -cvf (for a standard tarball) or -czvf (for a compressed gzip archive). By default, the tar command in Linux includes all subdirectories and their contents recursively unless told otherwise. Your suggested flags, -xzfv, are almost correct but have a significant error: the -x flag is for extracting an archive, not creating one. To create an archive, you must use the -c flag.

To archive a folder recursively in Linux, you typically use -cvf (for a standard tarball) or -czvf (for a compressed gzip archive). By default, the tar command in Linux includes all subdirectories and their contents recursively unless told otherwise. Your suggested flags, -xzfv, are almost correct but have a significant error: the -x flag is for extracting an archive, not creating one. To create an archive, you must use the -c flag.