7Z to CPIO Converter

Convert 7Z to CPIO archive format — free and online

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7Z to CPIO Fidelity

All contents of your 7Z archive — files, directories, and nested structures — are accurately reproduced in the CPIO output. Nothing is lost or rearranged.

Processed in the Cloud

Heavy lifting happens on our infrastructure, not your machine. Your laptop or phone stays responsive while the 7Z to CPIO conversion runs server-side.

Automatic Cleanup

Your uploaded archives are deleted immediately after processing. Converted CPIO files are wiped within 24 hours — no lingering copies on our servers.

How to convert 7Z to CPIO

1

Select files from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, URL or by dragging it on the page.

2

Choose cpio or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your cpio file right afterwards

About formats

7Z is the native archive format of 7-Zip, an open-source file archiver created by Igor Pavlov in 1999. The format uses an open, modular architecture that supports multiple compression algorithms — LZMA and LZMA2 (the defaults), PPMd for text-heavy data, BWT, and Deflate — selectable per file within the same archive. LZMA typically achieves 30-70% better compression ratios than Deflate-based ZIP files on comparable data, making 7Z one of the most space-efficient general-purpose archive formats available. The container structure stores files with full directory hierarchy, timestamps, and attributes, while supporting solid compression (treating multiple files as a continuous data stream) for additional ratio gains on archives with many similar files. Encryption uses AES-256 with key derivation based on iterative SHA-256 hashing, and both file contents and filenames can be encrypted. One advantage is superior compression density — 7Z consistently produces smaller archives than ZIP or RAR on most data types, valuable when minimizing storage or bandwidth matters. The open architecture is another strength: the format specification and 7-Zip source code are publicly available under the GNU LGPL, enabling any developer to implement 7Z support without licensing constraints. Cross-platform tools supporting 7Z exist for Windows, macOS, Linux, and mobile platforms, and the format has gained widespread recognition as the preferred choice when maximum compression is the priority.
Developer: Igor Pavlov
Initial release: 1999
CPIO (Copy In, Copy Out) is a Unix archive format dating to the PWB/UNIX system at AT&T Bell Labs in 1977, predating even the tar format. The name describes the tool's original operation: copying files in to an archive and out from an archive. CPIO stores files sequentially with per-file headers containing the filename, inode information, permissions, ownership, timestamps, and file size, followed by the file data itself. The format exists in several variants: the original binary format, the POSIX.1-defined octet-oriented (ODC) format, the SVR4 newc format with expanded device and inode fields, and the CRC variant that adds checksum verification. Unlike tar, CPIO reads the list of files to archive from standard input, making it naturally composable with find and other Unix utilities through pipes. One advantage is faithful Unix metadata preservation — CPIO records device numbers, inode information, and hard link relationships with higher fidelity than early tar implementations, making it suitable for system-level backups and device file archiving. The format's central role in Linux package management is another practical significance: the RPM package format uses CPIO as its internal payload container, meaning every RPM-based Linux installation relies on CPIO extraction. While tar has become more common for general archiving, CPIO persists in system administration, initramfs images, and package management infrastructure.
Developer: AT&T / Unix
Initial release: 1977

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert 7Z to CPIO?

CPIO is essential for building RPM packages, Linux initramfs images, and certain Unix backup scripts. Converting from 7Z provides the proper container these tools expect.

How do I open a CPIO archive?

Use the cpio command on any Unix/Linux system. On Windows, 7-Zip can extract CPIO archives. macOS users can rely on the built-in Terminal or third-party tools.

Does the conversion keep directory structure?

Yes — your complete folder hierarchy from the 7Z archive is reproduced faithfully inside the CPIO output, including nested directories and all file paths.

Can I run this on a Chromebook?

Definitely. The conversion happens entirely in the cloud via your browser, so any device with web access — including Chromebooks — works perfectly.

Is 7Z to CPIO conversion free?

It is free to use on convertio.tools. Premium plans are available for users who need larger upload allowances or faster processing speeds.

How secure is the upload process?

Files transfer over encrypted connections. Uploaded 7Z archives are deleted right after conversion, and generated CPIO files are removed from servers within 24 hours.

7Z to CPIO Quality Rating

4.6 (10 votes)
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