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lz4 tar

CONVERT
LZ4 → TAR

Fast, secure LZ4 to TAR conversion. No registration required.

Encrypted & secure Fast cloud processing 100% free

DRAG. DROP. DONE.

Upload any file and our engines will handle format detection automatically.

Max 100 MB · Free plan · No signup required

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Opening note — LZ4 is an archive format that bundles multiple files into a single compressed container. The TAR you want is two clicks away. Converting LZ4 to TAR means repacking the files inside one archive container into another format without extracting them to disk first. KaijuConverter runs 7-Zip and libarchive server-side, so a LZ4 full of thousands of entries becomes a clean TAR with the same tree, timestamps and permissions preserved. Background. LZ4 is an archive format that bundles multiple files into a single compressed container. Destination side, TAR is the Unix tape archive — a concatenation of files without compression.

lz4

LZ4 Compressed

Source format

LZ4 is an extremely fast lossless compression algorithm focused on speed over compression ratio. It can compress at over 500 MB/s per core and decompress at multiple GB/s, making it the standard choice for real-time and in-memory compression.

tar

TAR Archive

Target format

TAR is a Unix archive format that bundles files together without compression. It is commonly combined with gzip or bzip2 for compressed archives and is the standard for Linux software distribution.

LZ4 vs TAR — What's the difference?

Why convert LZ4 to TAR

TAR is supported by more systems out of the box than LZ4. Windows reads TAR without extra software; macOS and most Linux distros ship decoders too. Converting upstream saves every downstream user from installing a utility just to read your bundle.

HOW TO CONVERT
LZ4 → TAR

1

Upload the LZ4

Send the archive file to KaijuConverter. Entries are never written to disk in cleartext.

2

Repack through 7-Zip

Our pipeline opens the LZ4 in streaming mode, walks every entry and writes it into a fresh TAR container.

3

Download the TAR

The new archive is ready in seconds. Both files auto-delete within two hours.

Common Use Cases

Cross-platform distribution

Send a TAR to mixed-OS teams when only Windows users can open your LZ4 reliably.

Backup migration

Move historical backups from legacy LZ4 into TAR as your archival standard evolves.

Upload-cap-friendly packaging

Cloud portals with a 50/100 MB upload cap accept a TAR that the larger LZ4 would not fit in.

Game and mod repacking

Mod distribution platforms typically require TAR; repack your LZ4 build once before upload.

LZ4 vs TAR — Strengths and limitations

What each format does best, and where it falls short.

LZ4 Strengths

  • Decompression speed — approaches memcpy throughput.
  • Very fast compression — can keep up with SSD write speeds.
  • Stable format — reference implementation unchanged for years.
  • Widely deployed in databases, filesystems, and kernels.
  • BSD-licensed library.

Limitations

  • Compression ratio lags gzip by 20-30%.
  • Not designed for long-term archival where ratio matters.
  • Older than zstd, which beats LZ4 at comparable speed at slightly better ratio.

TAR Strengths

  • Streamable — you can tar files straight to a network pipe, no seek needed.
  • Preserves Unix permissions, ownership, symbolic links, and timestamps.
  • Universally supported on Unix-like systems.
  • Simple format — the GNU tar source has been stable for decades.
  • No compression overhead — pair with gzip/xz/zstd as needed.

Limitations

  • No built-in compression — plain .tar files are the same size as their contents.
  • No random access — reading one file requires scanning from the start.
  • Windows tooling is second-class — PowerShell only added native tar in 2018.

LZ4 vs TAR — Technical specifications

Side-by-side comparison of the technical details.

Specification LZ4 TAR
MIME type application/x-lz4 application/x-tar
Extensions .lz4
Algorithm LZ77 variant with fast byte-level parsing
License BSD 2-Clause (library), GPL v2 (CLI)
Typical integrations Linux kernel, ZFS, Kafka, RocksDB, Cassandra
Extension .tar
Block size 512 bytes (traditional)
Header variants v7, ustar, POSIX.1-2001 (pax), GNU
Max filename length 100 bytes (v7); unlimited (pax extended headers)

LZ4 vs TAR — Typical file sizes

Approximate file sizes for common scenarios.

LZ4

  • Text file 40-60% of original
  • Already-compressed data (JPEG, MP4) 99%+ (no gain)
  • Database page (typical) 55-70% of original

TAR

  • 1 MB of source files (uncompressed .tar) ~1 MB
  • Same files as .tar.gz 150-400 KB
  • Linux kernel source (.tar.xz) ~120 MB

Quality & Compatibility

Archive conversion is strictly lossless. Byte-for-byte the files inside the TAR are the same as those that were inside the LZ4; hashes of individual entries match pre- and post-conversion. Only the container wrapper changes.

Tips for Best Results

Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. The free tier accepts files up to 100 MB without registration, email capture or watermarks. Paid plans raise the size cap, enable batch conversions and provide a REST API for automation, but nothing on the free tier is quality-limited — the output is exactly the same as on any paid plan.

Yes — because LZ4 and TAR use different compression codecs, every entry is decompressed from the LZ4 and re-compressed for the TAR. The uncompressed data is identical on both sides, and the re-compression happens entirely inside our processing container.

Uploads run over HTTPS, files are processed in isolated containers, and both the source LZ4 and the TAR output are auto-deleted within two hours. No account is required, file contents are never logged, and KaijuConverter does not use uploads for AI training. The paid plan adds a signable data-processing agreement for regulated workflows.

Usually yes, modestly, when the original LZ4 used an older codec like Deflate. Against modern LZMA2 / Zstd TAR containers expect 10-30% savings on mixed content and almost no change on pre-compressed payloads. Advanced → compression level lets you trade speed for ratio.

Most files finish in well under a minute. Small images and documents are typically ready in a few seconds; large video or audio files scale roughly with duration. Upload speed from your network is usually the dominant factor, not server time.

Yes. Provide the password during upload; we use it only to decrypt inside the processing container and never log or persist it. The resulting TAR can be re-encrypted with a password of your choice (AES where the target format supports it).

Related comparisons

See these formats side by side to understand which fits your use case best.

Related Guides

Secure & Private Conversion

Your files are encrypted during transfer, processed in isolated containers, and automatically deleted within 60 minutes. We never read, share, or store your data.