title | section | header | footer | date |
---|---|---|---|---|
MOUNT-ZIP |
1 |
User Manual |
mount-zip 1.0 |
September 2024 |
mount-zip - Mount a ZIP archive as a FUSE filesystem.
mount-zip [options] zip-file [mount-point]
mount-zip mounts a ZIP archive as a read-only FUSE filesystem. It starts quickly, uses little memory, decodes encrypted files, and provides on-the-go decompression and caching for maximum efficiency.
mount-zip automatically creates the target mount point if it doesn't exist yet. If no mount point is provided, mount-zip creates a mount point in the same directory as the ZIP archive.
--help -h : print help
--version : print version
--quiet -q : print fewer log messages
--verbose : print more log messages
--redact : redact file names from log messages
--force : mount ZIP even if password is wrong or missing, or if the encryption or compression method is unsupported
--precache : preemptively decompress and cache data
--cache=DIR
: cache directory (default is $TMPDIR
or /tmp
)
--memcache : cache decompressed data in memory
--nocache : no caching of decompressed data
-o encoding=CHARSET : original encoding of file names
-o nospecials : hide special files (FIFOs, sockets, devices)
-o nosymlinks : hide symbolic links
-o nohardlinks : hide hard links
-f : foreground mode
-d : foreground mode with debug output
Mount a ZIP archive:
$ mount-zip foobar.zip mnt
The mounted ZIP archive can be explored and read using any application:
$ tree mnt
mnt
└── foo
0 directories, 1 file
$ cat mnt/foo
bar
When finished, unmount the file system:
$ fusermount -u mnt
- Read-only view
- Instant mounting, even with big ZIP archives
- Compression methods: deflate, bzip2
- Encryption methods: AES and legacy ZIP encryption
- Asks for decryption password if necessary
- Detects file name encoding
- Converts file names to Unicode UTF-8
- Deduplicates files in case of name collisions
- Unpacks files when reading them (on-the-go decompression)
- Supports all file types, including named sockets, FIFOs, block and character devices, symbolic links and hard links
- Supports UNIX access modes and DOS file permissions
- Supports owner and group information (UID and GID)
- Supports relative and absolute paths
- Supports high precision time stamps
- Works on 32-bit and 64-bit devices
- Supports ZIP64 extensions, even on 32-bit devices:
- Supports ZIP archives containing more than 65,535 files
- Supports ZIP archives and files bigger than 4 GB
- Supports ZIP format extensions:
- 000A PKWARE NTFS Extra Field: High-precision timestamps
- 000D PKWARE UNIX Extra Field: File type
- 5455 Extended Timestamp
- 5855 Info-ZIP Unix Extra Field (type 1)
- 7855 Info-ZIP Unix Extra Field (type 2)
- 7875 Info-ZIP New Unix Extra Field: Variable-length UIDs and GIDs
mount-zip is fully Unicode compliant. It converts the file names stored in the ZIP archive from their original encoding to UTF-8.
In order to interpret these file names correctly, mount-zip needs to determine their original encoding. By default mount-zip tries to guess this encoding using the detection feature provided by the ICU library. It can automatically recognize the following encodings:
- UTF-8
- CP437
- Shift JIS
- Big5
- EUC-JP
- EUC-KR
- GB18030
- ISO-2022-CN
- ISO-2022-JP
- ISO-2022-KR
- KOI8-R
For example, when mounting a ZIP containing a Shift JIS-encoded file name, the encoding is correctly detected:
$ mount-zip sjis-filename.zip mnt
$ tree mnt
mnt
└── 新しいテキスト ドキュメント.txt
0 directories, 1 file
This system is not foolproof, and doesn't recognize a number of popular encodings. For example, when mounting a ZIP containing file names encoded in CP866, they are interpreted as CP437 and rendered as Mojibake:
$ mount-zip cp866.zip mnt
$ tree mnt
mnt
├── äáΓá
└── ÆѬßΓ«óδ⌐ ñ«¬π¼Ñ¡Γ.txt
0 directories, 2 files
In this case, the user needs to explicitly specify the original file name
encoding using the -o encoding
mount option:
$ mount-zip -o encoding=cp866 cp866.zip mnt
$ tree mnt
mnt
├── Дата
└── Текстовый документ.txt
0 directories, 2 files
In case of name collision, mount-zip adds a number to deduplicate the conflicting file name:
$ unzip -l file-dir-same-name.zip
Length Date Time Name
--------- ---------- ----- ----
25 2021-10-29 14:22 pet/cat
21 2021-10-29 14:22 pet
30 2021-10-29 14:22 pet/cat/fish
0 2021-10-29 14:22 pet/cat/fish/
26 2021-10-29 14:22 pet/cat
22 2021-10-29 14:22 pet
31 2021-10-29 14:22 pet/cat/fish
--------- -------
155 7 files
$ mount-zip file-dir-same-name.zip mnt
$ tree -F mnt
mnt
├── pet/
│ ├── cat/
│ │ ├── fish/
│ │ ├── fish (1)
│ │ └── fish (2)
│ ├── cat (1)
│ └── cat (2)
├── pet (1)
└── pet (2)
3 directories, 6 files
Directories are never renamed. If a file name is colliding with a directory name, the file is the one getting renamed.
mount-zip supports encrypted ZIP archives. It understand both the legacy ZIP encryption scheme, and the more recent AES encryption schemes.
When mount-zip finds an encrypted file while mounting a ZIP archive, it asks for a password. If the given password does not decrypt the file, then mount-zip refuses to mount the ZIP archive and returns an error:
$ unzip -l different-encryptions.zip
Archive: different-encryptions.zip
Length Date Time Name
--------- ---------- ----- ----
23 2020-08-28 15:22 ClearText.txt
32 2020-08-28 15:23 Encrypted AES-128.txt
32 2020-08-28 15:23 Encrypted AES-192.txt
32 2020-08-28 15:23 Encrypted AES-256.txt
34 2020-08-28 15:23 Encrypted ZipCrypto.txt
--------- -------
153 5 files
$ mount-zip different-encryptions.zip mnt
Need password for File [1] '/Encrypted AES-128.txt'
Password > Got it!
Use the --force option to mount an encrypted ZIP with a wrong password
Cannot open File [1] '/Encrypted AES-128.txt': Wrong password provided
Providing the correct password allows mount-zip to mount the ZIP archive and decode the files:
$ mount-zip different-encryptions.zip mnt
Need password for File [1] '/Encrypted AES-128.txt'
Password > Got it!
Password is Ok
$ tree mnt
mnt
├── ClearText.txt
├── Encrypted AES-128.txt
├── Encrypted AES-192.txt
├── Encrypted AES-256.txt
└── Encrypted ZipCrypto.txt
0 directories, 5 files
$ md5sum mnt/*
7a542815e2c51837b3d8a8b2ebf36490 mnt/ClearText.txt
07c4edd2a55c9d5614457a21fb40aa56 mnt/Encrypted AES-128.txt
e48d57930ef96ff2ad45867202d3250d mnt/Encrypted AES-192.txt
ca5e064a0835d186f2f6326f88a7078f mnt/Encrypted AES-256.txt
275e8c5aed7e7ce2f32dd1e5e9ee4a5b mnt/Encrypted ZipCrypto.txt
$ cat mnt/*
This is not encrypted.
This is encrypted with AES-128.
This is encrypted with AES-192.
This is encrypted with AES-256.
This is encrypted with ZipCrypto.
You can force mount-zip to mount an encrypted ZIP even without providing the
right password by using the --force
option:
$ mount-zip --force different-encryptions.zip mnt
Need password for File [1] '/Encrypted AES-128.txt'
Password > Got it!
Continuing despite wrong password because of --force option
In this case, the files can be listed, but trying to open an encrypted file for which the given password doesn't work results in an I/O error:
$ tree mnt
mnt
├── ClearText.txt
├── Encrypted AES-128.txt
├── Encrypted AES-192.txt
├── Encrypted AES-256.txt
└── Encrypted ZipCrypto.txt
0 directories, 5 files
$ md5sum mnt/*
7a542815e2c51837b3d8a8b2ebf36490 mnt/ClearText.txt
md5sum: 'mnt/Encrypted AES-128.txt': Input/output error
md5sum: 'mnt/Encrypted AES-192.txt': Input/output error
md5sum: 'mnt/Encrypted AES-256.txt': Input/output error
md5sum: 'mnt/Encrypted ZipCrypto.txt': Input/output error
$ cat mnt/*
This is not encrypted.
cat: 'mnt/Encrypted AES-128.txt': Input/output error
cat: 'mnt/Encrypted AES-192.txt': Input/output error
cat: 'mnt/Encrypted AES-256.txt': Input/output error
cat: 'mnt/Encrypted ZipCrypto.txt': Input/output error
For security reasons, mount-zip doesn't allow the password to be specified on the command line. However, it is possible to pipe the password to mount-zip's standard input:
$ echo password | mount-zip different-encryptions.zip mnt
Need password for File [1] '/Encrypted AES-128.txt'
Password is Ok
mount-zip shows symbolic links recorded in the ZIP archive:
$ mount-zip symlink.zip mnt
$ tree mnt
mnt
├── date
└── symlink -> ../tmp/date
Note that symbolic links can refer to files located outside the mounted ZIP archive. In some circumstances, these links could pose a security risk.
Symbolic links can be suppressed with the -o nosymlinks
option:
$ mount-zip -o nosymlinks symlink.zip mnt
Skipped Symlink [1] '/symlink'
2021-10-28 20:05:01 laptop ~/mount-zip/tests/blackbox/data (intrusive)
$ tree mnt
mnt
└── date
0 directories, 1 file
mount-zip shows special files (sockets, FIFOs or pipes, character and block devices) recorded in the ZIP archive:
$ mount-zip pkware-specials.zip mnt
$ ls -n mnt
brw-rw---- 1 0 6 8, 1 Aug 3 2019 block
crw--w---- 1 0 5 4, 0 Aug 3 2019 char
prw-r--r-- 1 1000 1000 0 Aug 15 2019 fifo
-rw-r--r-- 3 1000 1000 32 Aug 9 2019 regular
srw------- 1 1000 1000 0 Aug 3 2019 socket
lrwxrwxrwx 1 1000 1000 7 Aug 3 2019 symlink -> regular
lrwxrwxrwx 1 1000 1000 7 Aug 25 2019 symlink2 -> regular
-rw-r--r-- 3 1000 1000 32 Aug 9 2019 z-hardlink1
-rw-r--r-- 3 1000 1000 32 Aug 9 2019 z-hardlink2
brw-rw---- 1 0 6 8, 1 Aug 3 2019 z-hardlink-block
crw--w---- 1 0 5 4, 0 Aug 3 2019 z-hardlink-char
prw-r--r-- 1 1000 1000 0 Aug 15 2019 z-hardlink-fifo
srw------- 1 1000 1000 0 Aug 3 2019 z-hardlink-socket
lrwxrwxrwx 1 1000 1000 7 Aug 3 2019 z-hardlink-symlink -> regular
Special files can be suppressed with the -o nospecials
option:
$ mount-zip -o nospecials pkware-specials.zip mnt
Skipped Block Device [0] '/block'
Skipped Character Device [1] '/char'
Skipped Pipe [2] '/fifo'
Skipped Socket [4] '/socket'
Skipped Block Device [7] '/z-hardlink-block'
Skipped Character Device [8] '/z-hardlink-char'
Skipped Pipe [9] '/z-hardlink-fifo'
Skipped Socket [10] '/z-hardlink-socket'
$ ls -n mnt
-rw-r--r-- 3 1000 1000 32 Aug 9 2019 regular
lrwxrwxrwx 1 1000 1000 7 Aug 3 2019 symlink -> regular
lrwxrwxrwx 1 1000 1000 7 Aug 25 2019 symlink2 -> regular
-rw-r--r-- 3 1000 1000 32 Aug 9 2019 z-hardlink1
-rw-r--r-- 3 1000 1000 32 Aug 9 2019 z-hardlink2
lrwxrwxrwx 1 1000 1000 7 Aug 3 2019 z-hardlink-symlink -> regular
mount-zip shows hard links recorded in the ZIP archive.
In this example, the three file entries 0regular
, hlink1
and hlink2
point
to the same inode number (2) and their reference count is 3:
$ mount-zip -o use_ino hlink-chain.zip mnt
$ ls -ni mnt
2 -rw-r----- 3 0 0 10 Aug 14 2019 0regular
2 -rw-r----- 3 0 0 10 Aug 14 2019 hlink1
2 -rw-r----- 3 0 0 10 Aug 14 2019 hlink2
$ md5sum mnt/*
e09c80c42fda55f9d992e59ca6b3307d mnt/0regular
e09c80c42fda55f9d992e59ca6b3307d mnt/hlink1
e09c80c42fda55f9d992e59ca6b3307d mnt/hlink2
Some tools can use the inode number to detect duplicated hard links. In this
example, du
only counts the size of the inode (2) once, even though there are
three file entries pointing to it, and only reports 10 bytes instead of 30
bytes:
$ du -b mnt
10 mnt
Duplicated hard links can be suppressed with the -o nohardlinks
option:
$ mount-zip -o nohardlinks hlink-chain.zip mnt
Skipped File [1]: Hardlinks are ignored
Skipped File [2]: Hardlinks are ignored
$ ls -ni mnt
2 -rw-r----- 1 0 0 10 Aug 14 2019 0regular
mount-zip shows the Unix file permissions and ownership (UIDs and GIDs) as recorded in the ZIP archive:
$ mount-zip unix-perm.zip mnt
$ ls -n mnt
-rw-r----- 1 1000 1000 0 Jan 5 2014 640
-rw-r---w- 1 1000 1000 0 Jan 5 2014 642
-rw-rw-rw- 1 1000 1000 0 Jan 5 2014 666
-rwsrwsr-x 1 1000 1000 0 Jan 5 2014 6775
-rwxrwxrwx 1 1000 1000 0 Jan 5 2014 777
Note that these access permissions are not enforced by default. In this example,
I am able to read the file 640
even though I don't own it and I don't have the
read permission:
$ md5sum mnt/*
d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e mnt/640
d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e mnt/642
d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e mnt/666
d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e mnt/6775
d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e mnt/777
To enforce the access permission check, use the -o default_permissions
mount
option:
$ mount-zip -o default_permissions unix-perm.zip mnt
$ md5sum mnt/*
md5sum: mnt/640: Permission denied
md5sum: mnt/642: Permission denied
d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e mnt/666
d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e mnt/6775
d41d8cd98f00b204e9800998ecf8427e mnt/777
mount-zip supports absolute and parent-relative paths in file names.
Absolute paths are displayed under the ROOT
directory. For parent-relative
paths, every ..
is replaced by UP
. Finally, ordinary relative paths are
placed under the CUR
directory:
$ unzip -l mixed-paths.zip
Length Date Time Name
-------- ---------- ----- ----
49 2021-11-02 13:55 normal.txt
29 2021-11-02 13:55 ../up-1.txt
30 2021-11-02 13:55 ../../up-2.txt
40 2021-11-02 13:55 /top.txt
45 2021-11-02 13:55 /../over-the-top.txt
-------- -------
193 5 files
$ mount-zip mixed-paths.zip mnt
mount-zip[2886935]: Bad file name: '/../over-the-top.txt'
mount-zip[2886935]: Skipped File [4]: Cannot normalize path
$ tree mnt
mnt
├── CUR
│ └── normal.txt
├── ROOT
│ └── top.txt
├── UP
│ └── up-1.txt
└── UPUP
└── up-2.txt
4 directories, 4 files
mount-zip only does the minimum amount of work required to serve the requested data. When reading a compressed file, mount-zip only decompresses enough data to serve the reading application. This is called lazy or on-the-go decompression.
Accessing the beginning of a big compressed file is therefore instantaneous:
$ mount-zip 'Big One.zip' mnt
$ ls -lh mnt/
-rw-rw-r-- 1 root root 6.4G Mar 26 2020 'Big One.txt'
$ time head -4 'mnt/Big One.txt'
We're going on a bear hunt.
We're going to catch a big one.
What a beautiful day!
We're not scared.
real 0m0.030s
user 0m0.015s
sys 0m0.014s
mount-zip generally avoids caching decompressed data. If you read a compressed file several times, it is getting decompressed each time:
$ dd if='mnt/Big One.txt' of=/dev/null status=progress
6777995272 bytes (6.8 GB, 6.3 GiB) copied, 24.9395 s, 272 MB/s
$ dd if='mnt/Big One.txt' of=/dev/null status=progress
6777995272 bytes (6.8 GB, 6.3 GiB) copied, 24.961 s, 272 MB/s
But mount-zip will start caching a file if it detects that this file is getting read in a non-sequential way (ie the reading application starts jumping to different positions of the file).
For example, tail
jumps to the end of the file. The first time this happens,
mount-zip decompresses the whole file and caches the decompressed data (in
about 13 seconds in this instance):
$ time tail -1 'mnt/Big One.txt'
The End
real 0m12.631s
user 0m0.024s
sys 0m0.656s
A subsequent call to tail
is instantaneous, because mount-zip has now
cached the decompressed data:
$ time tail -1 'mnt/Big One.txt'
The End
real 0m0.032s
user 0m0.018s
sys 0m0.018s
Decompressed data is cached in a temporary file located in the cache directory
($TMPDIR
or /tmp
by default). The cache directory can be changed with the
--cache=DIR
option. The cache file is only created if necessary, and
automatically deleted when the ZIP is unmounted.
Alternatively, the --memcache
option caches the decompressed data in memory.
Be cautious with this option since it can cause mount-zip to use a lot of
memory.
You can preemtively cache data at mount time by using the --precache
option.
The cost of decompression in incurred upfront, and this ensures that any
subsequent access to the mounted data is fast.
If mount-zip cannot create and expand the cache file, or if it was passed
the --nocache
option, it will do its best using a small rolling buffer in
memory. However, some data access patterns might then result in poor
performance, especially if mount-zip has to repeatedly extract the same
file.
mount-zip works well with large archives containing many files. For example on my laptop, a ZIP archive containing more than 70,000 files is mounted in half a second:
$ ls -lh linux-5.14.15.zip
-rw-r--r-- 1 fdegros primarygroup 231M Oct 28 15:48 linux-5.14.15.zip
$ time mount-zip linux-5.14.15.zip mnt
real 0m0.561s
user 0m0.344s
sys 0m0.212s
$ tree mnt
mnt
└── linux-5.14.15
├── arch
...
4817 directories, 72539 files
$ du -sh mnt
1.1G mnt
The full contents of this mounted ZIP, totalling 1.1 GB, can be extracted with
cp -R
in 14 seconds:
$ time cp -R mnt out
real 0m13.810s
user 0m0.605s
sys 0m5.356s
For comparison, unzip
extracts the contents of the same ZIP in 8.5 seconds:
$ time unzip -q -d out linux-5.14.15.zip
real 0m8.411s
user 0m6.067s
sys 0m2.270s
Mounting an 8-GB ZIP containing only a few files is instantaneous:
$ ls -lh bru.zip
-rw-r----- 1 fdegros primarygroup 7.9G Sep 2 22:37 bru.zip
$ time mount-zip bru.zip mnt
real 0m0.033s
user 0m0.018s
sys 0m0.011s
$ tree -h mnt
mnt
├── [2.0M] bios
├── [ 25G] disk
└── [ 64M] tools
0 directories, 3 files
Decompressing and reading the 25-GB file from this mounted ZIP takes less than two minutes:
$ dd if=mnt/disk of=/dev/null status=progress
26843545600 bytes (27 GB, 25 GiB) copied, 104.586 s, 257 MB/s
There is no lag when opening and reading the file, and only a moderate amount of
memory is used. The file is getting lazily decompressed by mount-zip as it
is getting read by the dd
program.
mount-zip records log messages into /var/log/user.log
. They can help
troubleshooting issues, especially if you are facing I/O errors when reading
files from the mounted ZIP.
To read mount-zip's log messages:
$ grep mount-zip /var/log/user.log | less -S
To follow mount-zip's log messages as they are being written:
$ tail -F /var/log/user.log | grep mount-zip
Alternatively, you can run mount-zip in foreground mode with the -f
option
and read all the log messages on the terminal.
By default, mount-zip writes INFO and ERROR messages. You can decrease the
logging level to just ERROR messages with the --quiet
option. Or you can
increase the logging level to include DEBUG messages with the --verbose
option:
$ mount-zip -f --verbose foobar.zip mnt
Indexing 'foobar.zip'...
Allocating 16 buckets
Detected encoding UTF-8 with 15% confidence
Indexed 'foobar.zip' in 0 ms
Mounted 'foobar.zip' on 'mnt' in 2 ms
Reader 1: Opened File [0]
Reader 1: Closed
Unmounting 'foobar.zip' from 'mnt'...
Unmounted 'foobar.zip' in 0 ms
To prevent file names from being recorded in mount-zip's log messages, use
the --redact
option:
$ mount-zip -f --verbose --redact bad-crc.zip mnt
Indexing (redacted)...
Allocating 16 buckets
Indexed (redacted) in 0 ms
Mounted (redacted) on (redacted) in 2 ms
Reader 1: Opened File [0]
Cannot read (redacted): Cannot read file: CRC error
Reader 1: Closed
Unmounting (redacted) from (redacted)...
Unmounted (redacted) in 0 ms
mount-zip returns distinct error codes for different error conditions related the ZIP archive itself:
0 : Success.
1 : Generic error code for: missing argument, unknown option, unknown file name encoding, mount point cannot be created, mount point is not empty, etc.
11 : The archive is a multipart ZIP.
15 : mount-zip cannot read the ZIP archive.
19 : mount-zip cannot find the ZIP archive.
21 : mount-zip cannot open the ZIP archive.
23
: Zlib data error. This is probably the sign of a wrong password. Use
--force
to bypass the password verification.
26
: Unsupported compression method. Use --force
to bypass the compression
method verification.
29 : The archive is not recognized as a valid ZIP.
31 : The ZIP archive has an inconsistent structure.
34
: Unsupported encryption method. Use --force
to bypass the encryption method
verification.
36
: Needs password. The ZIP archive contains an encrypted file, but no password
was provided. Use --force
to bypass the password verification.
37
: Wrong password. The ZIP archive contains an encrypted file, and the provided
password does not decrypt it. Use --force
to bypass the password
verification.
45 : Possibly truncated or corrupted ZIP archive, as detected by libzip 1.11 or higher.
mount-zip started as a fork of fuse-zip.
The original fuse-zip project was created in 2008 by Alexander Galanin and is available on Bitbucket.
The mount-zip project was then forked from fuse-zip in 2021 and further developed by François Degros. The ability to write and modify ZIP archives has been removed, but a number of optimisations and features have been added:
Feature | mount-zip | fuse-zip |
---|---|---|
Read-Write Mode | ❌ | ✅ |
Read-Only Mode | ✅ | ✅ |
Shows Symbolic Links | ✅ | ✅ |
Shows Hard Links | ✅ | ✅ |
Shows Special Files | ✅ | ✅ |
Shows Precise Timestamps | ✅ | ✅ |
Random Access | ✅ | ✅ |
Can Cache Data in Memory | ✅ | ✅ |
Can Cache Data in Temp File | ✅ | ❌ |
Smart Caching | ✅ | ❌ |
Decompresses Data Lazily | ✅ | ❌ |
Handles Huge Files | ✅ | ❌ |
Decrypts Encrypted Files | ✅ | ❌ |
Detects Name Encoding | ✅ | ❌ |
Deduplicates Names | ✅ | ❌ |
Can Hide Symlinks | ✅ | ❌ |
Can Hide Hard Links | ✅ | ❌ |
Can Hide Special Files | ✅ | ❌ |
Can Redact Log Messages | ✅ | ❌ |
Returns Distinct Error Codes | ✅ | ❌ |
mount-zip is released under the GNU General Public License Version 3 or later.
fuse-zip(1), fusermount(1), fuse(8), umount(8)