Password Protect Tar.gz File May 2026

SOURCE_DIR=$1 OUTPUT_BASE=$2

#!/bin/bash # Usage: ./secure-tar.sh <directory> <output_name> if [ $# -ne 2 ]; then echo "Usage: $0 <source_dir> <output_base_name>" exit 1 fi password protect tar.gz file

If you send a standard tar.gz file over the internet or store it on a shared cloud drive, anyone who gets hold of that file can extract its contents with a simple tar -xzf file.tar.gz command. There is no password, no key, no security. SOURCE_DIR=$1 OUTPUT_BASE=$2 #

| To do this... | Use this command... | |---------------|----------------------| | Encrypt an existing .tar.gz | openssl enc -aes-256-cbc -salt -in file.tar.gz -out file.enc | | Decrypt and extract | openssl enc -d -aes-256-cbc -in file.enc | tar xz | | Create from scratch (no trace) | tar cz folder/ | openssl enc -aes-256-cbc -out backup.enc | | Use GPG instead | gpg --symmetric --cipher-algo AES256 file.tar.gz | | Use this command

OpenSSL is a robust, cryptography-grade toolkit found on virtually every Linux distribution, macOS, and even Windows (via WSL or Git Bash). It uses military-grade AES (Advanced Encryption Standard) encryption. Assume you already have a file called backup.tar.gz . To password protect it, you will encrypt it into a new file.

zip -r -e --password=yourpassword -AES256 secured_backup.zip my_folder/ (Note: Not all zip versions on Linux support AES-256; check your man page.) If you already have a .tar.gz file, simply wrap it inside an encrypted zip container: