RPM to TAR.Z (TZ) Converter

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How to convert RPM to TAR.Z

1

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

2

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

3

Let the file convert and you can download your tar.z file right afterwards

About formats

RPM (originally Red Hat Package Manager, now a recursive acronym for RPM Package Manager) is a software package management format developed by Red Hat for Linux distributions, first introduced with Red Hat Linux 2.0 in 1995. An RPM file packages compiled software, configuration files, and documentation alongside rich metadata in a structured binary format consisting of a lead (format identifier), a signature header (integrity and authenticity verification), a metadata header (package name, version, description, dependency lists, file checksums, and installation scripts), and a compressed CPIO archive payload containing the actual files. The rpm tool and higher-level managers like YUM and DNF handle installation, upgrade, verification, and removal of RPM packages. One advantage is comprehensive dependency management — RPM packages declare capabilities they provide and require, enabling automatic resolution of complex dependency chains from configured repositories. The built-in verification system is another strength: rpm --verify checks every installed file against stored checksums, permissions, ownership, and timestamps, detecting unauthorized modifications or corruption. RPM serves as the packaging foundation for major enterprise Linux distributions including Red Hat Enterprise Linux, Fedora, CentOS, SUSE, and openSUSE. Alongside DEB, RPM is one of the two dominant Linux packaging formats, underpinning software management for millions of servers and workstations.
Developer: Red Hat
Initial release: 1995
TAR.Z is a compound archive format combining TAR) archiving with Unix compress, one of the earliest general-purpose data compression tools available on Unix systems. The compress utility, originally written by Spencer Thomas, Joe Orost, and others around 1985, implements adaptive LZW (Lempel-Ziv-Welch) compression — a dictionary-based algorithm that builds a translation table during compression and decompression. The TAR layer bundles files with full Unix metadata into a single stream, and compress reduces the stream size typically by 40-60%. TAR.Z was the standard compressed archive format on Unix systems throughout the 1980s and early 1990s, before gzip emerged as a patent-free replacement. The LZW algorithm used by compress) was subject to patent claims by Unisys (holders of the LZW patent through Sperry), which motivated the development of gzip as an unencumbered alternative. One advantage is universal legacy compatibility — TAR.Z files can be extracted on any Unix system, including very old installations where newer compression tools may not be available. The format's historical ubiquity means that decades of archived software, documentation, and system backups exist as TAR.Z files. While TAR.GZ and TAR.XZ have replaced TAR.Z for new archives, the uncompress/zcat tools remain standard on all Unix-like systems, ensuring continued accessibility of legacy archives.
Initial release: 1985

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