CPIO to RAR Converter

Transform CPIO into RAR with compression online free

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Powerful Compression

RAR excels at compression with built-in error recovery. Converting your uncompressed CPIO archive to RAR makes it smaller, safer to transfer, and easier to share.

Simple Three-Step Flow

Upload your CPIO archive, choose RAR, and download the result. No command-line tools, no manual configuration — convertio.tools keeps it straightforward.

Cloud-Driven Processing

The CPIO to RAR conversion runs entirely on our servers, so your local device stays fast and unaffected regardless of the archive size.

How to convert CPIO to RAR

1

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

2

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

3

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

About formats

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
RAR (Roshal Archive) is a proprietary compressed archive format created by Russian software engineer Eugene Roshal in March 1993, distributed through the WinRAR) archiver that became one of the most widely installed Windows applications worldwide. The format uses a sophisticated compression algorithm that has evolved through several major versions (RAR 1.3, 2.0, 3.0, 5.0), with each revision improving compression ratios and adding features. RAR5, the current version, employs a dictionary-based algorithm with dictionary sizes up to 1 GB and supports optional BLAKE2sp hashing for integrity verification. The format provides solid compression (treating multiple files as a continuous stream), multi-volume archive splitting, recovery records for repairing damaged archives, AES-256 encryption for both content and filenames, and Unicode filename support. One advantage is reliable error recovery — RAR's recovery record feature can reconstruct damaged archive portions, a capability that made it popular for distributing large files across unreliable connections and Usenet posts. Strong compression performance is another key strength: RAR consistently ranks among the top formats for general-purpose compression ratios, particularly on heterogeneous file collections. While the compression algorithm is proprietary and creating RAR archives requires licensed software, the decompression code is freely available, and extraction is supported by virtually every archiving tool across all platforms. RAR remains one of the most common archive formats encountered online.
Developer: Eugene Roshal
Initial release: March 1993

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert CPIO to RAR?

CPIO is a Unix-only format most people cannot open. RAR is widely recognized, adds strong compression and error recovery, and can be extracted with popular tools on all platforms.

How do I open a RAR archive?

WinRAR is the dedicated RAR tool. Free alternatives like 7-Zip (Windows/Linux) and The Unarchiver (macOS) also extract RAR files without any issues.

Will RAR compress my CPIO contents?

Absolutely. CPIO itself stores data uncompressed — RAR will apply powerful compression that typically achieves substantial size reduction.

Does this work on macOS or Linux?

Yes. Convertio operates entirely in your web browser, so it works on macOS, Linux, Windows, ChromeOS, and mobile platforms alike.

Is CPIO to RAR conversion really free?

It is. Convertio.tools offers this conversion at no cost — upload, convert, and download with no subscription or account required.

CPIO to RAR Quality Rating

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