- %{FMT}t - output current local time using FMT as strftime(3) format
- If {FMT} is omitted, use %c
- %{N}* - pad output with spaces to the Nth column, or to the
- current screen width, if {N} is not given.
- %c - a shortcut for "%{%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S}t: %ds, %{read,wrote}T%*\r"
+ %{FMT}t - Current local time using FMT as strftime(3) format.
+ If {FMT} is omitted, use %c.
+ %{N}* - Pad output with spaces to the Nth column, or to the
+ current screen width, if {N} is not given.
+ %c - A shortcut for "%{%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S}t: %ds, %{read,wrote}T%*\r"
+
+* New option --one-top-level
+
+The option --one-top-level tells tar to extract all files into a
+subdirectory named by the base name of the archive (minus standard
+compression suffixes recognizable by --auto-compress). When used with
+an argument, as in --one-top-level=DIR, the files are extracted into the
+supplied DIRectory. This ensures that no archive members are
+extracted outside of the specified directory, even if the archive is
+crafted so as to put them elsewhere.
+
+* New option --sort
+
+The --sort=ORDER option instructs tar to sort directory entries
+according to ORDER. It takes effect when creating archives.
+Available ORDERs are: none (the default), name and inode. The
+latter may be absent, if the underlying system does not provide
+the necessary information.
+
+Using --sort=name ensures the member ordering in the created archive
+is uniform and reproducible. Using --sort=inode reduces the number
+of disk seeks made when creating the archive and thus can considerably
+speed up archivation.
+
+* New exclusion options
+
+ --exclude-ignore=FILE Before dumping a directory check if it
+ contains FILE, and if so read exclude
+ patterns for this directory from FILE.
+ --exclude-ignore-recursive=FILE
+ Same as above, but the exclusion patterns
+ read from FILE remain in effect for any
+ subdirectory, recursively.
+ --exclude-vcs-ignores Read exclude tags from VCS ignore files,
+ where such files exist. Supported VCS's
+ are: CVS, Git, Bazaar, Mercurial.
+
+
+* Tar refuses to read input from and write output to a tty device.