ALZ to TAR Converter

Extract ALZ archives into Unix TAR format free online

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Unix-Native Format

TAR preserves file permissions, ownership, and symbolic links — essential metadata that ALZ does not handle. Ideal for Linux deployment.

Server-Side Conversion

No need to install ALZip or any TAR tools locally. Convertio's cloud servers handle the entire ALZ to TAR repacking process.

Bulk Uploads Supported

Convert multiple ALZ archives to TAR in a single session. Upload them all and let convertio.co process the batch for you.

How to convert ALZ to TAR

1

Select files from Computer, Google Drive, Dropbox, URL or by dragging it on the page.

2

Choose tar or any other format you need as a result (more than 200 formats supported)

3

Let the file convert and you can download your tar file right afterwards

About formats

ALZ is a proprietary archive format created by ESTsoft, a South Korean software company, as the native format of their ALZip archiver first released in 1999. The format was designed to address a specific need in the Korean market: splitting large archives into multiple volumes for distribution when email attachment size limits and slow internet connections made transferring large files impractical. ALZ archives support file compression, multi-volume splitting with configurable segment sizes, and basic file organization with directory structures. The format became widely adopted in South Korea, where ALZip established itself as one of the most popular archiving utilities due to its free availability for personal use and localized Korean interface. At its peak, ALZip was installed on a majority of Korean personal computers, making ALZ a common interchange format for file sharing within the country. One advantage is reliable multi-volume handling — ALZ was specifically engineered for splitting and reassembling archives across volume boundaries, a feature that was central to its design rather than an afterthought. The format's tight integration with ALZip provides a streamlined user experience for compression and extraction tasks. While ALZ saw limited adoption outside South Korea due to the availability of universal formats like ZIP and RAR, it remains encountered in files originating from Korean sources and can be extracted using ALZip, 7-Zip, and other compatible utilities.
Developer: ESTsoft
Initial release: 1999
TAR (Tape Archive) is a Unix archive format originating in Version 7 Unix) at AT&T Bell Labs in January 1979, originally designed for writing file backups to magnetic tape drives. Unlike ZIP or RAR, TAR is a pure archiving format that concatenates multiple files into a single stream without applying compression — each file is preceded by a 512-byte header block containing the filename, permissions, ownership, size, modification time, and checksum, followed by the file data padded to 512-byte boundaries. The format has evolved through several standards: the original V7 format, the POSIX.1-1988 ustar format (extending path lengths and adding support for more file types), and the POSIX.1-2001 pax format supporting extended attributes, arbitrary-length paths, and large file sizes. TAR is almost always paired with a compression tool — gzip (.tar.gz/.tgz), bzip2 (.tar.bz2/.tbz2), xz (.tar.xz), or others — producing a two-layer structure where compression operates on the entire stream for maximum efficiency. One advantage is exceptional Unix metadata fidelity — TAR preserves permissions, ownership, symbolic links, hard links, device files, and extended attributes with greater precision than most competing formats. Universal availability is another core strength: tar is a POSIX-mandated utility present on every Unix-like system, and tools on Windows and macOS handle TAR files natively. TAR remains the standard distribution format for source code, Linux filesystem images, container layers, and system backups.
Developer: AT&T / Unix
Initial release: January 1979

Frequently Asked Questions

Why convert ALZ to TAR?

TAR is the standard archive format on Linux and Unix. If you need to deploy ALZ contents on a Linux server, TAR is the right choice.

What programs open TAR files?

The tar command is built into Linux and macOS. On Windows, 7-Zip and PeaZip both extract TAR archives without any difficulty.

Does TAR compress files?

No — TAR bundles files without compression. It preserves Unix permissions and ownership. For compression, pair TAR with gzip or xz.

Can I use this to move files to a Linux server?

Absolutely. TAR is the native way to package files for Linux. Converting your ALZ to TAR makes deployment straightforward.

Is the ALZ to TAR conversion really free?

Yes — convertio.co offers this conversion at no charge. Sign up for a free account to unlock higher file size limits.

Are my files protected during conversion?

Your uploaded ALZ archive is deleted immediately after processing. TAR output files are removed from servers within 24 hours.

ALZ to TAR Quality Rating

3.8 (2 votes)
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