DEB to TAR.LZO (TLZO) Converter
Convert your deb files to tar.lzo online & free
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tar.lzo
How to convert DEB to TAR.LZO
Select files from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, URL or by dragging it on the page.
Choose tar.lzo or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)
Let the file convert and you can download your tar.lzo file right afterwards
About formats
DEB is the software package format used by the Debian project and its numerous derivatives, including Ubuntu, Linux Mint, and other Debian-based Linux distributions. Created alongside the Debian project's founding in August 1993, the format packages compiled software binaries, configuration files, documentation, and installation scripts into a structured archive for automated software management. A DEB file is actually an ar archive containing three members: debian-binary (a text file with the format version), control.tar (metadata including package name, version, dependencies, maintainer scripts), and data.tar (the actual files to install, compressed with gzip, xz, or zstd). The dpkg tool and higher-level package managers like APT handle DEB installation, dependency resolution, upgrades, and removal. One advantage is the sophisticated dependency system — DEB packages declare precise relationships (depends, recommends, suggests, conflicts, replaces) enabling APT to automatically resolve and install entire dependency chains from repositories. The maintainer script system is another strength, allowing packages to execute pre/post installation and removal logic for tasks like creating system users, initializing databases, or registering services. With Debian and Ubuntu powering a substantial share of servers, desktops, and embedded Linux deployments worldwide, DEB is one of the two dominant Linux packaging formats alongside RPM.
TAR.LZO is a compound archive format pairing TAR archiving with LZO (Lempel-Ziv-Oberhumer) compression, created by Markus Oberhumer in 1996. The TAR layer bundles files with Unix metadata, and the LZO algorithm compresses the stream prioritizing decompression speed above all else. LZO is an asymmetric compressor — it sacrifices compression ratio for extremely fast decompression, operating at speeds that approach raw memory bandwidth on modern hardware. This makes TAR.LZO ideal for scenarios where archives must be extracted quickly and frequently, such as real-time backup systems and embedded device firmware images. One advantage is decompression performance — LZO extraction is several times faster than gzip and an order of magnitude faster than bzip2, critical for time-sensitive operations like boot-time filesystem initialization or rapid backup restoration. The low CPU overhead during extraction is another strength, making TAR.LZO practical on resource-constrained embedded systems and for streaming decompression without buffering. The lzop command-line tool integrates with tar via pipeline, and the format is used in the Linux kernel's initramfs, Btrfs filesystem compression, and various real-time data processing systems where extraction latency matters more than archive size.