Introduction to UnZip
        
        
          The UnZip package contains
          ZIP extraction utilities. These are
          useful for extracting files from ZIP
          archives. ZIP archives are created
          with PKZIP or Info-ZIP utilities, primarily in a DOS
          environment.
        
        
          This package is known to build and work properly using an LFS-8.3
          platform.
        
        
          ![[Caution]](images/caution.png) 
          
            Caution
          
          
            The previous version of the UnZip package had some locale related
            issues. Currently there are no BLFS editors capable of testing
            these locale issues. Therefore, the locale related information is
            left on this page, but has not been tested.
          
         
        
          Package Information
        
        
        
          User Notes: http://wiki.linuxfromscratch.org/blfs/wiki/unzip
        
       
      
        
          UnZip
          Locale Issues
        
        
          ![[Note]](images/note.png) 
          
            Note
          
          
            Use of UnZip in the JDK, Mozilla, DocBook or any other BLFS package
            installation is not a problem, as BLFS instructions never use
            UnZip to extract a file with
            non-ASCII characters in the file's name.
          
         
        
          The UnZip package assumes that
          filenames stored in the ZIP archives created on non-Unix systems
          are encoded in CP850, and that they should be converted to
          ISO-8859-1 when writing files onto the filesystem. Such assumptions
          are not always valid. In fact, inside the ZIP archive, filenames
          are encoded in the DOS codepage that is in use in the relevant
          country, and the filenames on disk should be in the locale
          encoding. In MS Windows, the OemToChar() C function (from
          User32.DLL) does the correct
          conversion (which is indeed the conversion from CP850 to a superset
          of ISO-8859-1 if MS Windows is set up to use the US English
          language), but there is no equivalent in Linux.
        
        
          When using unzip to
          unpack a ZIP archive containing non-ASCII filenames, the filenames
          are damaged because unzip uses improper conversion
          when any of its encoding assumptions are incorrect. For example, in
          the ru_RU.KOI8-R locale, conversion of filenames from CP866 to
          KOI8-R is required, but conversion from CP850 to ISO-8859-1 is
          done, which produces filenames consisting of undecipherable
          characters instead of words (the closest equivalent understandable
          example for English-only users is rot13). There are several ways
          around this limitation:
        
        
          1) For unpacking ZIP archives with filenames containing non-ASCII
          characters, use WinZip while running the Wine Windows emulator.
        
        
          2) After running unzip, fix the damage made to the
          filenames using the convmv tool (http://j3e.de/linux/convmv/). The
          following is an example for the ru_RU.KOI8-R locale:
        
        
          
            
              Step 1. Undo the conversion done by unzip:
            
            
convmv -f iso-8859-1 -t cp850 -r --nosmart --notest \
    </path/to/unzipped/files>
            
              Step 2. Do the correct conversion instead:
            
            
convmv -f cp866 -t koi8-r -r --nosmart --notest \
    </path/to/unzipped/files>
          
         
       
      
        
          Installation of UnZip
        
        
make -f unix/Makefile generic
        
          The test suite does not work for present target “generic”.
        
        
          Now, as the root user:
        
        
make prefix=/usr MANDIR=/usr/share/man/man1 \
 -f unix/Makefile install
       
      
        
          Command Explanations
        
        
          make -f unix/Makefile
          generic: This target begins by running a configure
          script (unlike the older targets such as linux and linux_noasm)
          which creates a flags file that is then used in the build. This
          ensures that the 32-bit x86 build receives the right flags to unzip
          files which which are larger than 2GB when extracted.