$ ls -l Calculator.app/Contents/MacOS/Calculator/rsrc
-rwxrwxr-x 1 root admin 0 Nov 18 08:54 Calculator.app/Contents/MacOS/Calculator/rsrc
I don't think 'tar' handles resource forks. At least, it doesn't on my copy of 10.2.3. Your experience with 'tar' for applications may have something more to do with the way Mac OS X handles identifying and dealing with applications in the Finder than with resource forks.
Regards,
Justin
On Monday, December 23, 2002, at 04:38 AM, Kow K wrote:
Just a follow-up to my last post about resource fork,
Another possibility for the different result is that the tar we have on 10.2 now and the one we had before 10.2 ARE different. It is possible, at least theoretically, that the tar on 10.2 is a kind of hfstar even if it doesn't say so explicitly. If this is true, we don't need to worry about the resource fork problem anymore.
I'm not sure about this at all, and I have no idea to test it on my machine. If I had a 10.1 machine at hand, I could test it. Could someone on this list who's still on 10.1 test this possibility?
Kow
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