When using unrar.online, it submits your data on a remote server for temporary processing. We remove all your files from our cloud shortly after the conversion. We will not use it otherwise or look at it.

That removed the package unrar magnaged by pacman why do you think that would remove /usr/local/bin/unrar that you manually installed without the use of pacman?

Edit:

Tips_and_tricks#Identify_files_not_owned_by_any_package


Unrar


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Wonder if you can help; I've been having problems lately with RAR files not fully extracting - e.g. video files which only partially extract. I think probably it's something like the hard drive failing - I thought the logs might be able to shed some light on it, but I can't see a logging option for unrar in the help file - and googling hasn't helped either.

The -t (test) function passes my rar file, but unrar -x produces an unreadable file that ls thinks is 94164548805788 bytes long (about 86 petabytes), but still shows plenty of free space on the disk anyway.

I have a file that I'm trying to extract that was broken up into multiple .rar files (.rar, .r00, .r01, etc). I've tried dtrx, unrar-free and unp but all three failed. I also tried installing unrar, but it couldn't install. I ended up using 7zip over the network to get my file extracted.


I've copied down what the terminal outputs for each program I've tried on the same file, and also what happened when i tried to install unrar via terminal. I installed the other three programs through the apttool plug in.


Any suggestions on how to fix my issue?


Bonus points if you can suggest a way to auto unrar files in a folder once a download finishes or if that is not possible, to run a command once on a directory and have it extract from all sub directories.

As for automatically unrar files, when a download finish, it depends on what you download and with what. Most likely the software can trigger something when a download is done. If not, use another downloader. There are many, many solutions to your problem. It has been solved thousands of times already. And in a thousand different ways...

Or simply brute-force it: Try to unrar everything that looks like a valid rar file every X minutes, again and again. Setup a cron task. And if/when the unrar is successful, have the script move the unrared files away.

Or slightly more finesse: Have a script check modified times or sizes of files in the download folder. When a file hasn't been changed in X minutes, try to unrar it. Try again after some other file has finished downloading.

Have a sensor detect when you approach the computer to look to see if it is done. Then have the software try to unrar everything. Then everything that can be unrared will be unrared as you are by the computer to check.

gderf Adoby Do you guys know what the difference between unrar e and unrar x is supposed to be? It seems to behave the same way when I run the command, in that the unrar'd file ends up in the directory the command was called in.


e - Extract files to current directory.

x - Extract files with full path.

I have a problem finding the correct way to unrar multiple files with the help of Winrar command.

With a button, I managed to unrar them all, but all in the same time. It's not very efficient...

The best solution is to unrar them sequentialy, but I can't find the correct winrar command to do this. ff782bc1db

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