EDIT: Putting this at the top because not everyone is seeing what I actually need. I can unpack the rar archive just fine. What I can’t do (on arm) is add to/update the files in the rar archive. I have unrar already installed. What I can’t install is the rar package to create/update rar archives.
So I’ve been banging my head against the wall for about half an hour trying to install the rar package from the multiverse repository on an Ubuntu 23.10 vm I have running on my m1 mac mini. I finally ended up on https://pkgs.org and searched up rar to see if I could download it directly instead of using apt.
And it was there I realized there’s no arm version of rar.
Side note, any recommendations for an arm utility that handles rar files? I already have unrar-free installed, but what I need is something to update/add files to existing rar files.
Worst case scenario I unrar them and then repackage them with tar or zip, but if I can just work with the rar archive, I’d prefer that.
Edit: I got excited for a second remembering that I’ve got rar installed via homebrew on that same m1 mac, but when I tried to install homebrew in the vm, I learned that homebrew doesn’t officially support arm.
Offtopic, but why on earth would anyone use .rar? It’s a proprietary format. The reason there’s basically no software to create or modify .rar archives is due licensing, which makes it illegal to write software that can do it.
Looking at the rarlab’s website, it appears that only the MacOS version has an ARM build. For Linux, only x86 and x64 are listed.
So, either use MacOS, use emulation to run the x86/x64 version or break the law.
No idea. I didn’t choose rar. These are archives that I have to deal with.
I’m doing a favor for a friend, and the files were given to me as rar archives. Obviously my first mistake was offering to help, though the reason I offered is because I’m learning scripting and regex. It’s a good challenge for me, and I’m learning stuff I didn’t know, so goal accomplished for me. Also none of this is paid or business/work related stuff. Just helping a friend out.
Anyway, now that I’ve learned that rar is proprietary, I’m gonna see if they care if I convert them all to zip or tar. The scripting to convert them will be another good challenge and will avoid this rar problem.
The most compatible archive type is probably zip. Your friend is probably using WinRAR (why on Earth someone would use WinRAR in 2024 is beyond me), and it can handle standard .zip files just fine.
Just do
zip .zip ...
As an added bonus, you can list all the files in an unrar file (with
unrar -l .rar
), extract them to a specific directory, add them all into a zip file with the above command, and then empty the unzipped directory for the next .rar.
deleted by creator
Thank you!! I will try that!!
It can only do that with the unfree unrar plugin. Do not expect your distro to ship it by default due to that issue.
deleted by creator
Damn rat files…
I just opened a
nix-shell
withunrar
in it on aarch64-linux and am able to execute it, so yes, it can be made to work.deleted by creator
Im an idiot(leg) /s
Hahahaha
Can 7zip unrar? That’s my go-to form anything compression.
Unrar isn’t the problem though. I’ve already installled unrar to read the file in the rar I need to modify.
What I was looking for is rar so that I can modify the text in the file and update the rar archive.
Only with the unfree unrar plugin.
Yes, it can
There is unrar which is source-available but its license is unfree because it restricts usage. See: https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Licensing:Unrar
I do have unrar installed, but I’m not able to modify in place or add new files to the archive with it, which is the functionality I’m missing.
Indeed it won’t modify rar archives. What do you need those for?
The typical flow for rar archives is to unpack them and then either leave the files on disk as plain files or put them into a better archive format such as 7z.
My initial goal (before learning what a headache rar is) was to preserve the original file format. Now my plan is to convert them. I have to confer with my friend to see what format they’d prefer for the files. Probably end up using regular old zip.
You could install qemu-user and register it in binfmt in the vm, that lets you run programs for other architectures.
This sounds interesting. I’m gonna look into it. Thank you!
the answer for “what can unpack this archive” is pretty much always: bsdtar from libarchive
edit: sorry, I can’t read. libarchive unfortunately can’t write RAR archives.
unar is the free version and should be in Ubuntu
I’ve got unrar installed already, but what I want to be able to do is add/update files in the rar archives, which unrar can’t do.
Have you tried building it?
RAR isn’t open source.
As a last resort you could install docker from apt, build an image from a distro has rar in its arm repos, then run containers ephemerallly, mounting your work dir into the container where rar runs. Try the suggested methods of getting a binary first. 😅
docker run --rm -v /your/work/dir:/destination/in/container your_image rar ...
Haha. Definitely last resort. Having learned what a pain rar is due to its propriety nature, I’m going to see if they care if I convert them to tar or zip first.
Yup, moving away from rar would probably be best.