Skills tzst

Use when the user needs to create, extract, flatten, list, test, install, script, or troubleshoot `tzst` CLI workflows for `.tzst` or `.tar.zst` archives, including compression levels, streaming mode, extraction filters, conflict resolution, JSON output, or standalone binary setup, even if they describe the archive task without naming `tzst`.

install
source · Clone the upstream repo
git clone https://github.com/xixu-me/skills
Claude Code · Install into ~/.claude/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/xixu-me/skills "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/tzst" ~/.claude/skills/xixu-me-skills-tzst && rm -rf "$T"
manifest: skills/tzst/SKILL.md
source content

Use this skill for the

tzst
command-line interface. Default to execution when the user clearly wants a real archive action and the required paths or archive names are already known.

This skill is CLI-only. If the user is asking about Python code such as

from tzst import ...
, treat that as a general Python library or API documentation task instead of using this skill as the main guide.

When to Use

Use this skill when the user:

  • mentions
    .tzst
    or
    .tar.zst
    archives
  • wants to create, extract, flatten, list, or test a
    tzst
    archive
  • needs help installing
    tzst
    or choosing CLI flags
  • wants machine-readable
    tzst
    output for scripting or automation
  • needs safe conflict handling or extraction filter guidance

Do not use this skill for generic

tar
,
zip
, or Python API questions unless
tzst
is actually part of the request.

Preflight

  1. Check whether
    tzst
    is available with
    tzst --version
    or
    tzst --help
    .
  2. If it is missing, prefer one of these installation paths:
  3. Re-run
    tzst --version
    or
    tzst --help
    before doing real work.

Workflow

  1. Decide whether the request is execution or guidance. Requests like "archive these files", "extract this backup", "list what is inside", "test this archive", or "install tzst" are execution intent.
  2. Choose the command that matches the request:
    • a
      ,
      add
      ,
      create
      for archive creation
    • x
      ,
      extract
      for normal extraction with directory structure preserved
    • e
      ,
      extract-flat
      only when the user explicitly wants flattened output
    • l
      ,
      list
      for archive inspection
    • t
      ,
      test
      for integrity checks
  3. If the user wants to extract only a few members and the member names are uncertain, list first.
  4. Load
    references/cli-reference.md
    when you need the command matrix, exact flag names, or copy-paste examples.

Safe Defaults

  • Prefer
    x
    over
    e
    unless flattening is explicitly requested.
  • Keep
    --filter data
    as the default extraction mode.
  • Use
    --filter tar
    only when the user needs standard tar-style compatibility.
  • Use
    --filter fully_trusted
    only when the user explicitly says the archive source is completely trusted.
  • Keep atomic archive creation enabled. Only reach for
    --no-atomic
    when the user explicitly wants it.
  • Prefer
    --streaming
    for large archives or memory-constrained environments.
  • For automation or pipelines, prefer
    tzst --json --no-banner ...
    .
  • For automated extraction, require an explicit non-interactive
    --conflict-resolution
    choice such as
    replace_all
    ,
    skip_all
    , or
    auto_rename_all
    .
  • Do not combine
    --json
    with interactive conflict prompting.

Scripting Notes

  • Put global flags before the subcommand in examples, such as
    tzst --json --no-banner l archive.tzst
    .
  • Use exit codes in scripts:
    0
    for success,
    1
    for operation errors,
    2
    for argument parsing errors, and
    130
    for interruption.
  • When archive naming matters, tell the user that
    tzst
    may normalize a creation target to
    .tzst
    or
    .tar.zst
    .

Common Mistakes

  • Using
    e
    when the user expected the original directory structure to be preserved
  • Recommending
    fully_trusted
    for archives from an unknown or untrusted source
  • Forgetting an explicit conflict strategy for non-interactive extraction
  • Treating a Python API question as a CLI question
  • Guessing flags from
    tar
    habits instead of checking the bundled reference or the installed CLI help