This is the command nomarch that can be run in the OnWorks free hosting provider using one of our multiple free online workstations such as Ubuntu Online, Fedora Online, Windows online emulator or MAC OS online emulator
PROGRAM:
NAME
nomarch - extract `.arc' archives
SYNOPSIS
nomarch [-hlptUv] [archive.arc] [match1 [match2 ... ]]
DESCRIPTION
nomarch lists, extracts, or tests `.arc' archives. (An alternate extension sometimes used
was `.ark'; these work too.) This is a very outdated file format which should certainly
not be used for anything new, but you may still need an extraction utility, and here it
is. :-)
The default action is to extract all files in the specified archive; see OPTIONS below for
how to do other things instead.
OPTIONS
-h give terse usage help.
-l list files in archive. If verbose listings are enabled, it shows the filename,
compression method, compressed/uncompressed size, date/time, and CRC; but by
default, it just shows the filename, uncompressed size, and date/time.
-p extract to standard output, rather than to separate files.
-t test files in archive (more precisely, check file CRCs).
-U use uppercase filenames; more precisely, preserve original case from archive.
-v give verbose output (when used with `-l').
archive.arc
the archive to operate on.
match1 etc.
optionally specify which archive members to list/extract/test. Those which match
any of these filenames/wildcards are processed. Wildcard operators supported are
shell-like `*' and `?', but don't forget to quote arguments which use these (e.g.
`nomarch foo.arc '*.bar'').
EXTRACTING MULTIPLE ARCHIVES
nomarch follows the `unzip'-like practice of working on only one archive per run, with
further `filenames' given on the command-line actually specifying files to extract (or
whatever). The easiest way to work on multiple files with nomarch is simply to run it
multiple times using for; for example:
for i in *.arc; do nomarch $i; done
The above would extract all archives in the current directory.
USING THE PROGRAM FROM EMACS
Emacs's arc-mode facility lets you work with various kinds of archive file directly from
the editor. Making it use nomarch for extracting `.arc' files isn't too hard. Just add the
following to your ~/.emacs file:
(setq archive-arc-extract '("nomarch" "-U"))
Use nomarch online using onworks.net services