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archivetar

Archivetar is a term used in digital archiving to describe tar-based archives prepared for long-term preservation. It combines the general tar archive format with structured preservation metadata to improve accessibility, integrity, and provenance over time.

A typical archivetar package consists of a tarball containing the objects and, optionally, a metadata bundle

Usage and workflow: create the tarball, generate checksums for each file, assemble a manifest, and, where possible,

Advantages and limitations: Archivetar is portable and broadly supported by common tooling, aiding long-term preservation and

See also: Tar (archiving), PREMIS, METS, digital preservation, checksums.

that
documents
provenance,
file
formats,
checksums,
and
events
(creation,
modification,
transfer).
Preservation
metadata
commonly
follows
standards
such
as
PREMIS
for
the
data's
provenance
and
events
and
METS
for
structural
metadata;
checksums
are
recorded
in
a
manifest
file.
Some
implementations
store
metadata
in
sidecar
files
or
as
extended
attributes.
sign
the
package.
Examples:
tar
-czf
archive.tar.gz
data/;
sha256sum
archive.tar.gz
>
archive.sha256;
store
both
in
a
repository
with
a
metadata
descriptor.
transfer.
Metadata
standards
enable
future
discovery
and
interoperability.
However,
tar
lacks
intrinsic
metadata
semantics
and
cryptographic
integrity
by
itself,
so
archivetar
relies
on
external
metadata
and
integrity
verification
and
may
require
additional
tooling
for
robust
long-term
preservation
and
emulation.