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Post by Soelaas on Aug 15, 2016 9:10:52 GMT
Use the -s switch on the zip command in terminal. So if your folder was called FolderName
zip -r -s 64 archive.zip FolderName/ 64 is the size of the split (in this case 64Mb).
Use -s to set the split size and create a split archive. The size is given as a number followed optionally by one of k (kB), m (MB), g (GB), or t (TB) (the default is m). [1] Use zipsplit to split a zip file in to multiple smaller zipfiles. Use the -n switch to set the size of the splits.
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Post by Soelaas on Aug 18, 2016 12:14:29 GMT
Use the -s switch on the zip command in terminal. So if your folder was called FolderName zip -r -s 64 archive.zip FolderName/ 64 is the size of the split (in this case 64Mb). Use -s to set the split size and create a split archive. The size is given as a number followed optionally by one of k (kB), m (MB), g (GB), or t (TB) (the default is m). [1] Use zipsplit to split a zip file in to multiple smaller zipfiles. Use the -n switch to set the size of the splits.
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jani
New Member
Posts: 5
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Post by jani on Aug 26, 2017 12:50:25 GMT
nice
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