Windows 11 will soon extract RAR, 7z and other archive formats natively
Microsoft's Build 2023 developer conference first day has brought a number of important announcements regarding the future of Windows 11. While AI integration has been the main focus so far, Microsoft did reveal non-AI features that are coming to the Windows operating system.
Panos Panay, Chief Product Officer, Windows and Devices, published a very long post on the official Windows blog about AI and Windows 11. Panay unveiled the new Dev Home application and Windows Copilot improvements, as well as Bing Chat plugins for Windows and more.
Readers who have made it all the way to the bottom of the, very long, post, may notice the following paragraph: "We have added native support for additional archive formats, including tar, 7-zip, rar, gz and many others using the libarchive open-source project. You now can get improved performance of archive functionality during compression on Windows."
It confirms that Microsoft's Windows 11 operating system will soon be able to open more archive formats natively. Panay lists rar, tar, 7z and gz formats specifically, but mentions that other archive formats will also be supported.
Windows 11 will use libarchive for that, an open source multi-format archive and compression library. Libarchive supports several other formats, including lha, cab, xar or cpio archives. Whether all of these will be added to Windows 11 is unclear at this point. It is also unclear if advanced archive features, such as password protection, will be supported.
The change improves usability for users of the Windows 11 operating system as it gives them the option to unpack more archives without having to install a third-party software on the system first.
Windows 11 supports a few archive formats only, including zip, currently. A right-click on a zip archive displays an option to extract the contents of the archive to the current directory.
Once support for the additional archive formats is added, right-clicks on supported archives will show the same option to users of the operating system.
Windows 11 users who want to create archives still need to use an archive software for that. The applications may offer other features, such as the ability to repair archives or extract individual files from them, which Windows does not support.
The introduction may impact downloads of archive software on the Windows platform.
Closing Words
The option to extract multiple archive formats natively on Windows is a useful usability feature. While it will remain limited in some aspects, it may be sufficient for users who just need to extract the occasional archive on their device.
Now You: how do you extract archives on your devices?
Very nice feature, however I wonder how the encrypted compressed files will be managed.
Can only open = pretty useless as a full replacement to winrar/7zip.
Actually there is a really badass one called info-zip which works thru command line, but winrar is my go-to.
This is so Windows can open your archives and look inside, not you. /DOH
Given how slow people are adopting I stick to ZIP forever, so the normies cannot lie they couldn’t open my archive. Reminds me of me getting very vocal when someone said he couldn’t open my ZIP and I yelled “even stock Windows XP can open it!”.
Can Macs open these in stock OSX? I rather keep it simple.
Wow, that took only like 30 years to implement… Then again, that is the single most useful new option in a Windows OS in the last 16 years. Bravo, Microsoft, who knew there’s someone left in your braindead company with an actual functioning brain.
I’m unsure about the excitement surrounding this. Microsoft has once again offered an unfinished product. You will still need to install 7zip and Winrar because it can only open files, not create them.
Users: I want no bloat!
Also users: I want all the features!
…
Later on: Why is my OS bloated now and the attack surface quadrupled?
This could have been solved with an optional upacker from the windows store, as I will use 7zip and WinRAR regardless of Redmond’s plans.