diff options
author | jbj <devnull@localhost> | 2001-11-21 19:43:12 +0000 |
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committer | jbj <devnull@localhost> | 2001-11-21 19:43:12 +0000 |
commit | d17885422f51f54f78426e112ae08b5934ff52a9 (patch) | |
tree | 78d7bec596b10a70e0f66b5647147a73c9d85f04 /bzip2 | |
parent | a224782884d6ab6f147033277a93e6a4f06fd6a0 (diff) | |
download | rpm-d17885422f51f54f78426e112ae08b5934ff52a9.tar.gz rpm-d17885422f51f54f78426e112ae08b5934ff52a9.tar.bz2 rpm-d17885422f51f54f78426e112ae08b5934ff52a9.zip |
Initial revision
CVS patchset: 5197
CVS date: 2001/11/21 19:43:12
Diffstat (limited to 'bzip2')
45 files changed, 49619 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/bzip2/CHANGES b/bzip2/CHANGES new file mode 100644 index 000000000..ecaf4170e --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/CHANGES @@ -0,0 +1,167 @@ + + +0.9.0 +~~~~~ +First version. + + +0.9.0a +~~~~~~ +Removed 'ranlib' from Makefile, since most modern Unix-es +don't need it, or even know about it. + + +0.9.0b +~~~~~~ +Fixed a problem with error reporting in bzip2.c. This does not effect +the library in any way. Problem is: versions 0.9.0 and 0.9.0a (of the +program proper) compress and decompress correctly, but give misleading +error messages (internal panics) when an I/O error occurs, instead of +reporting the problem correctly. This shouldn't give any data loss +(as far as I can see), but is confusing. + +Made the inline declarations disappear for non-GCC compilers. + + +0.9.0c +~~~~~~ +Fixed some problems in the library pertaining to some boundary cases. +This makes the library behave more correctly in those situations. The +fixes apply only to features (calls and parameters) not used by +bzip2.c, so the non-fixedness of them in previous versions has no +effect on reliability of bzip2.c. + +In bzlib.c: + * made zero-length BZ_FLUSH work correctly in bzCompress(). + * fixed bzWrite/bzRead to ignore zero-length requests. + * fixed bzread to correctly handle read requests after EOF. + * wrong parameter order in call to bzDecompressInit in + bzBuffToBuffDecompress. Fixed. + +In compress.c: + * changed setting of nGroups in sendMTFValues() so as to + do a bit better on small files. This _does_ effect + bzip2.c. + + +0.9.5a +~~~~~~ +Major change: add a fallback sorting algorithm (blocksort.c) +to give reasonable behaviour even for very repetitive inputs. +Nuked --repetitive-best and --repetitive-fast since they are +no longer useful. + +Minor changes: mostly a whole bunch of small changes/ +bugfixes in the driver (bzip2.c). Changes pertaining to the +user interface are: + + allow decompression of symlink'd files to stdout + decompress/test files even without .bz2 extension + give more accurate error messages for I/O errors + when compressing/decompressing to stdout, don't catch control-C + read flags from BZIP2 and BZIP environment variables + decline to break hard links to a file unless forced with -f + allow -c flag even with no filenames + preserve file ownerships as far as possible + make -s -1 give the expected block size (100k) + add a flag -q --quiet to suppress nonessential warnings + stop decoding flags after --, so files beginning in - can be handled + resolved inconsistent naming: bzcat or bz2cat ? + bzip2 --help now returns 0 + +Programming-level changes are: + + fixed syntax error in GET_LL4 for Borland C++ 5.02 + let bzBuffToBuffDecompress return BZ_DATA_ERROR{_MAGIC} + fix overshoot of mode-string end in bzopen_or_bzdopen + wrapped bzlib.h in #ifdef __cplusplus ... extern "C" { ... } + close file handles under all error conditions + added minor mods so it compiles with DJGPP out of the box + fixed Makefile so it doesn't give problems with BSD make + fix uninitialised memory reads in dlltest.c + +0.9.5b +~~~~~~ +Open stdin/stdout in binary mode for DJGPP. + +0.9.5c +~~~~~~ +Changed BZ_N_OVERSHOOT to be ... + 2 instead of ... + 1. The + 1 +version could cause the sorted order to be wrong in some extremely +obscure cases. Also changed setting of quadrant in blocksort.c. + +0.9.5d +~~~~~~ +The only functional change is to make bzlibVersion() in the library +return the correct string. This has no effect whatsoever on the +functioning of the bzip2 program or library. Added a couple of casts +so the library compiles without warnings at level 3 in MS Visual +Studio 6.0. Included a Y2K statement in the file Y2K_INFO. All other +changes are minor documentation changes. + +1.0 +~~~ +Several minor bugfixes and enhancements: + +* Large file support. The library uses 64-bit counters to + count the volume of data passing through it. bzip2.c + is now compiled with -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 to get large + file support from the C library. -v correctly prints out + file sizes greater than 4 gigabytes. All these changes have + been made without assuming a 64-bit platform or a C compiler + which supports 64-bit ints, so, except for the C library + aspect, they are fully portable. + +* Decompression robustness. The library/program should be + robust to any corruption of compressed data, detecting and + handling _all_ corruption, instead of merely relying on + the CRCs. What this means is that the program should + never crash, given corrupted data, and the library should + always return BZ_DATA_ERROR. + +* Fixed an obscure race-condition bug only ever observed on + Solaris, in which, if you were very unlucky and issued + control-C at exactly the wrong time, both input and output + files would be deleted. + +* Don't run out of file handles on test/decompression when + large numbers of files have invalid magic numbers. + +* Avoid library namespace pollution. Prefix all exported + symbols with BZ2_. + +* Minor sorting enhancements from my DCC2000 paper. + +* Advance the version number to 1.0, so as to counteract the + (false-in-this-case) impression some people have that programs + with version numbers less than 1.0 are in someway, experimental, + pre-release versions. + +* Create an initial Makefile-libbz2_so to build a shared library. + Yes, I know I should really use libtool et al ... + +* Make the program exit with 2 instead of 0 when decompression + fails due to a bad magic number (ie, an invalid bzip2 header). + Also exit with 1 (as the manual claims :-) whenever a diagnostic + message would have been printed AND the corresponding operation + is aborted, for example + bzip2: Output file xx already exists. + When a diagnostic message is printed but the operation is not + aborted, for example + bzip2: Can't guess original name for wurble -- using wurble.out + then the exit value 0 is returned, unless some other problem is + also detected. + + I think it corresponds more closely to what the manual claims now. + + +1.0.1 +~~~~~ +* Modified dlltest.c so it uses the new BZ2_ naming scheme. +* Modified makefile-msc to fix minor build probs on Win2k. +* Updated README.COMPILATION.PROBLEMS. + +There are no functionality changes or bug fixes relative to version +1.0.0. This is just a documentation update + a fix for minor Win32 +build problems. For almost everyone, upgrading from 1.0.0 to 1.0.1 is +utterly pointless. Don't bother. diff --git a/bzip2/LICENSE b/bzip2/LICENSE new file mode 100644 index 000000000..88fa6d88a --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/LICENSE @@ -0,0 +1,39 @@ + +This program, "bzip2" and associated library "libbzip2", are +copyright (C) 1996-2000 Julian R Seward. All rights reserved. + +Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without +modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions +are met: + +1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright + notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. + +2. The origin of this software must not be misrepresented; you must + not claim that you wrote the original software. If you use this + software in a product, an acknowledgment in the product + documentation would be appreciated but is not required. + +3. Altered source versions must be plainly marked as such, and must + not be misrepresented as being the original software. + +4. The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote + products derived from this software without specific prior written + permission. + +THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS +OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED +WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE +ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY +DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL +DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE +GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS +INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, +WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING +NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS +SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. + +Julian Seward, Cambridge, UK. +jseward@acm.org +bzip2/libbzip2 version 1.0 of 21 March 2000 + diff --git a/bzip2/Makefile b/bzip2/Makefile new file mode 100644 index 000000000..ab17f4979 --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/Makefile @@ -0,0 +1,141 @@ + +SHELL=/bin/sh +CC=gcc +BIGFILES=-D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 +CFLAGS=-Wall -Winline -O2 -fomit-frame-pointer -fno-strength-reduce $(BIGFILES) + +OBJS= blocksort.o \ + huffman.o \ + crctable.o \ + randtable.o \ + compress.o \ + decompress.o \ + bzlib.o + +all: libbz2.a bzip2 bzip2recover test + +bzip2: libbz2.a bzip2.o + $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -o bzip2 bzip2.o -L. -lbz2 + +bzip2recover: bzip2recover.o + $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -o bzip2recover bzip2recover.o + +libbz2.a: $(OBJS) + rm -f libbz2.a + ar cq libbz2.a $(OBJS) + @if ( test -f /usr/bin/ranlib -o -f /bin/ranlib -o \ + -f /usr/ccs/bin/ranlib ) ; then \ + echo ranlib libbz2.a ; \ + ranlib libbz2.a ; \ + fi + +test: bzip2 + @cat words1 + ./bzip2 -1 < sample1.ref > sample1.rb2 + ./bzip2 -2 < sample2.ref > sample2.rb2 + ./bzip2 -3 < sample3.ref > sample3.rb2 + ./bzip2 -d < sample1.bz2 > sample1.tst + ./bzip2 -d < sample2.bz2 > sample2.tst + ./bzip2 -ds < sample3.bz2 > sample3.tst + cmp sample1.bz2 sample1.rb2 + cmp sample2.bz2 sample2.rb2 + cmp sample3.bz2 sample3.rb2 + cmp sample1.tst sample1.ref + cmp sample2.tst sample2.ref + cmp sample3.tst sample3.ref + @cat words3 + +PREFIX=/usr + +install: bzip2 bzip2recover + if ( test ! -d $(PREFIX)/bin ) ; then mkdir $(PREFIX)/bin ; fi + if ( test ! -d $(PREFIX)/lib ) ; then mkdir $(PREFIX)/lib ; fi + if ( test ! -d $(PREFIX)/man ) ; then mkdir $(PREFIX)/man ; fi + if ( test ! -d $(PREFIX)/man/man1 ) ; then mkdir $(PREFIX)/man/man1 ; fi + if ( test ! -d $(PREFIX)/include ) ; then mkdir $(PREFIX)/include ; fi + cp -f bzip2 $(PREFIX)/bin/bzip2 + cp -f bzip2 $(PREFIX)/bin/bunzip2 + cp -f bzip2 $(PREFIX)/bin/bzcat + cp -f bzip2recover $(PREFIX)/bin/bzip2recover + chmod a+x $(PREFIX)/bin/bzip2 + chmod a+x $(PREFIX)/bin/bunzip2 + chmod a+x $(PREFIX)/bin/bzcat + chmod a+x $(PREFIX)/bin/bzip2recover + cp -f bzip2.1 $(PREFIX)/man/man1 + chmod a+r $(PREFIX)/man/man1/bzip2.1 + cp -f bzlib.h $(PREFIX)/include + chmod a+r $(PREFIX)/include/bzlib.h + cp -f libbz2.a $(PREFIX)/lib + chmod a+r $(PREFIX)/lib/libbz2.a + +clean: + rm -f *.o libbz2.a bzip2 bzip2recover \ + sample1.rb2 sample2.rb2 sample3.rb2 \ + sample1.tst sample2.tst sample3.tst + +blocksort.o: blocksort.c + @cat words0 + $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c blocksort.c +huffman.o: huffman.c + $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c huffman.c +crctable.o: crctable.c + $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c crctable.c +randtable.o: randtable.c + $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c randtable.c +compress.o: compress.c + $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c compress.c +decompress.o: decompress.c + $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c decompress.c +bzlib.o: bzlib.c + $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c bzlib.c +bzip2.o: bzip2.c + $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c bzip2.c +bzip2recover.o: bzip2recover.c + $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c bzip2recover.c + +DISTNAME=bzip2-1.0.1 +tarfile: + rm -f $(DISTNAME) + ln -sf . $(DISTNAME) + tar cvf $(DISTNAME).tar \ + $(DISTNAME)/blocksort.c \ + $(DISTNAME)/huffman.c \ + $(DISTNAME)/crctable.c \ + $(DISTNAME)/randtable.c \ + $(DISTNAME)/compress.c \ + $(DISTNAME)/decompress.c \ + $(DISTNAME)/bzlib.c \ + $(DISTNAME)/bzip2.c \ + $(DISTNAME)/bzip2recover.c \ + $(DISTNAME)/bzlib.h \ + $(DISTNAME)/bzlib_private.h \ + $(DISTNAME)/Makefile \ + $(DISTNAME)/manual.texi \ + $(DISTNAME)/manual.ps \ + $(DISTNAME)/LICENSE \ + $(DISTNAME)/bzip2.1 \ + $(DISTNAME)/bzip2.1.preformatted \ + $(DISTNAME)/bzip2.txt \ + $(DISTNAME)/words0 \ + $(DISTNAME)/words1 \ + $(DISTNAME)/words2 \ + $(DISTNAME)/words3 \ + $(DISTNAME)/sample1.ref \ + $(DISTNAME)/sample2.ref \ + $(DISTNAME)/sample3.ref \ + $(DISTNAME)/sample1.bz2 \ + $(DISTNAME)/sample2.bz2 \ + $(DISTNAME)/sample3.bz2 \ + $(DISTNAME)/dlltest.c \ + $(DISTNAME)/*.html \ + $(DISTNAME)/README \ + $(DISTNAME)/README.COMPILATION.PROBLEMS \ + $(DISTNAME)/CHANGES \ + $(DISTNAME)/libbz2.def \ + $(DISTNAME)/libbz2.dsp \ + $(DISTNAME)/dlltest.dsp \ + $(DISTNAME)/makefile.msc \ + $(DISTNAME)/Y2K_INFO \ + $(DISTNAME)/unzcrash.c \ + $(DISTNAME)/spewG.c \ + $(DISTNAME)/Makefile-libbz2_so diff --git a/bzip2/Makefile-libbz2_so b/bzip2/Makefile-libbz2_so new file mode 100644 index 000000000..a347c50e9 --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/Makefile-libbz2_so @@ -0,0 +1,43 @@ + +# This Makefile builds a shared version of the library, +# libbz2.so.1.0.1, with soname libbz2.so.1.0, +# at least on x86-Linux (RedHat 5.2), +# with gcc-2.7.2.3. Please see the README file for some +# important info about building the library like this. + +SHELL=/bin/sh +CC=gcc +BIGFILES=-D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 +CFLAGS=-fpic -fPIC -Wall -Winline -O2 -fomit-frame-pointer -fno-strength-reduce $(BIGFILES) + +OBJS= blocksort.o \ + huffman.o \ + crctable.o \ + randtable.o \ + compress.o \ + decompress.o \ + bzlib.o + +all: $(OBJS) + $(CC) -shared -Wl,-soname -Wl,libbz2.so.1.0 -o libbz2.so.1.0.1 $(OBJS) + $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -o bzip2-shared bzip2.c libbz2.so.1.0.1 + rm -f libbz2.so.1.0 + ln -s libbz2.so.1.0.1 libbz2.so.1.0 + +clean: + rm -f $(OBJS) bzip2.o libbz2.so.1.0.1 libbz2.so.1.0 bzip2-shared + +blocksort.o: blocksort.c + $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c blocksort.c +huffman.o: huffman.c + $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c huffman.c +crctable.o: crctable.c + $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c crctable.c +randtable.o: randtable.c + $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c randtable.c +compress.o: compress.c + $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c compress.c +decompress.o: decompress.c + $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c decompress.c +bzlib.o: bzlib.c + $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c bzlib.c diff --git a/bzip2/README b/bzip2/README new file mode 100644 index 000000000..22945a256 --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/README @@ -0,0 +1,166 @@ + +This is the README for bzip2, a block-sorting file compressor, version +1.0. This version is fully compatible with the previous public +releases, bzip2-0.1pl2, bzip2-0.9.0 and bzip2-0.9.5. + +bzip2-1.0 is distributed under a BSD-style license. For details, +see the file LICENSE. + +Complete documentation is available in Postscript form (manual.ps) or +html (manual_toc.html). A plain-text version of the manual page is +available as bzip2.txt. A statement about Y2K issues is now included +in the file Y2K_INFO. + + +HOW TO BUILD -- UNIX + +Type `make'. This builds the library libbz2.a and then the +programs bzip2 and bzip2recover. Six self-tests are run. +If the self-tests complete ok, carry on to installation: + +To install in /usr/bin, /usr/lib, /usr/man and /usr/include, type + make install +To install somewhere else, eg, /xxx/yyy/{bin,lib,man,include}, type + make install PREFIX=/xxx/yyy +If you are (justifiably) paranoid and want to see what 'make install' +is going to do, you can first do + make -n install or + make -n install PREFIX=/xxx/yyy respectively. +The -n instructs make to show the commands it would execute, but +not actually execute them. + + +HOW TO BUILD -- UNIX, shared library libbz2.so. + +Do 'make -f Makefile-libbz2_so'. This Makefile seems to work for +Linux-ELF (RedHat 5.2 on an x86 box), with gcc. I make no claims +that it works for any other platform, though I suspect it probably +will work for most platforms employing both ELF and gcc. + +bzip2-shared, a client of the shared library, is also build, but +not self-tested. So I suggest you also build using the normal +Makefile, since that conducts a self-test. + +Important note for people upgrading .so's from 0.9.0/0.9.5 to +version 1.0. All the functions in the library have been renamed, +from (eg) bzCompress to BZ2_bzCompress, to avoid namespace pollution. +Unfortunately this means that the libbz2.so created by +Makefile-libbz2_so will not work with any program which used an +older version of the library. Sorry. I do encourage library +clients to make the effort to upgrade to use version 1.0, since +it is both faster and more robust than previous versions. + + +HOW TO BUILD -- Windows 95, NT, DOS, Mac, etc. + +It's difficult for me to support compilation on all these platforms. +My approach is to collect binaries for these platforms, and put them +on the master web page (http://sourceware.cygnus.com/bzip2). Look +there. However (FWIW), bzip2-1.0 is very standard ANSI C and should +compile unmodified with MS Visual C. For Win32, there is one +important caveat: in bzip2.c, you must set BZ_UNIX to 0 and +BZ_LCCWIN32 to 1 before building. If you have difficulties building, +you might want to read README.COMPILATION.PROBLEMS. + + +VALIDATION + +Correct operation, in the sense that a compressed file can always be +decompressed to reproduce the original, is obviously of paramount +importance. To validate bzip2, I used a modified version of Mark +Nelson's churn program. Churn is an automated test driver which +recursively traverses a directory structure, using bzip2 to compress +and then decompress each file it encounters, and checking that the +decompressed data is the same as the original. There are more details +in Section 4 of the user guide. + + + +Please read and be aware of the following: + +WARNING: + + This program (attempts to) compress data by performing several + non-trivial transformations on it. Unless you are 100% familiar + with *all* the algorithms contained herein, and with the + consequences of modifying them, you should NOT meddle with the + compression or decompression machinery. Incorrect changes can and + very likely *will* lead to disastrous loss of data. + + +DISCLAIMER: + + I TAKE NO RESPONSIBILITY FOR ANY LOSS OF DATA ARISING FROM THE + USE OF THIS PROGRAM, HOWSOEVER CAUSED. + + Every compression of a file implies an assumption that the + compressed file can be decompressed to reproduce the original. + Great efforts in design, coding and testing have been made to + ensure that this program works correctly. However, the complexity + of the algorithms, and, in particular, the presence of various + special cases in the code which occur with very low but non-zero + probability make it impossible to rule out the possibility of bugs + remaining in the program. DO NOT COMPRESS ANY DATA WITH THIS + PROGRAM UNLESS YOU ARE PREPARED TO ACCEPT THE POSSIBILITY, HOWEVER + SMALL, THAT THE DATA WILL NOT BE RECOVERABLE. + + That is not to say this program is inherently unreliable. Indeed, + I very much hope the opposite is true. bzip2 has been carefully + constructed and extensively tested. + + +PATENTS: + + To the best of my knowledge, bzip2 does not use any patented + algorithms. However, I do not have the resources available to + carry out a full patent search. Therefore I cannot give any + guarantee of the above statement. + +End of legalities. + + +WHAT'S NEW IN 0.9.0 (as compared to 0.1pl2) ? + + * Approx 10% faster compression, 30% faster decompression + * -t (test mode) is a lot quicker + * Can decompress concatenated compressed files + * Programming interface, so programs can directly read/write .bz2 files + * Less restrictive (BSD-style) licensing + * Flag handling more compatible with GNU gzip + * Much more documentation, i.e., a proper user manual + * Hopefully, improved portability (at least of the library) + +WHAT'S NEW IN 0.9.5 ? + + * Compression speed is much less sensitive to the input + data than in previous versions. Specifically, the very + slow performance caused by repetitive data is fixed. + * Many small improvements in file and flag handling. + * A Y2K statement. + +WHAT'S NEW IN 1.0 + + See the CHANGES file. + +I hope you find bzip2 useful. Feel free to contact me at + jseward@acm.org +if you have any suggestions or queries. Many people mailed me with +comments, suggestions and patches after the releases of bzip-0.15, +bzip-0.21, bzip2-0.1pl2 and bzip2-0.9.0, and the changes in bzip2 are +largely a result of this feedback. I thank you for your comments. + +At least for the time being, bzip2's "home" is (or can be reached via) +http://www.muraroa.demon.co.uk. + +Julian Seward +jseward@acm.org + +Cambridge, UK +18 July 1996 (version 0.15) +25 August 1996 (version 0.21) + 7 August 1997 (bzip2, version 0.1) +29 August 1997 (bzip2, version 0.1pl2) +23 August 1998 (bzip2, version 0.9.0) + 8 June 1999 (bzip2, version 0.9.5) + 4 Sept 1999 (bzip2, version 0.9.5d) + 5 May 2000 (bzip2, version 1.0pre8) diff --git a/bzip2/README.COMPILATION.PROBLEMS b/bzip2/README.COMPILATION.PROBLEMS new file mode 100644 index 000000000..d621ad597 --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/README.COMPILATION.PROBLEMS @@ -0,0 +1,130 @@ + +bzip2-1.0 should compile without problems on the vast majority of +platforms. Using the supplied Makefile, I've built and tested it +myself for x86-linux, sparc-solaris, alpha-linux, x86-cygwin32 and +alpha-tru64unix. With makefile.msc, Visual C++ 6.0 and nmake, you can +build a native Win32 version too. Large file support seems to work +correctly on at least alpha-tru64unix and x86-cygwin32 (on Windows +2000). + +When I say "large file" I mean a file of size 2,147,483,648 (2^31) +bytes or above. Many older OSs can't handle files above this size, +but many newer ones can. Large files are pretty huge -- most files +you'll encounter are not Large Files. + +Earlier versions of bzip2 (0.1, 0.9.0, 0.9.5) compiled on a wide +variety of platforms without difficulty, and I hope this version will +continue in that tradition. However, in order to support large files, +I've had to include the define -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 in the Makefile. +This can cause problems. + +The technique of adding -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 to get large file +support is, as far as I know, the Recommended Way to get correct large +file support. For more details, see the Large File Support +Specification, published by the Large File Summit, at + http://www.sas.com/standard/large.file/ + +As a general comment, if you get compilation errors which you think +are related to large file support, try removing the above define from +the Makefile, ie, delete the line + BIGFILES=-D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 +from the Makefile, and do 'make clean ; make'. This will give you a +version of bzip2 without large file support, which, for most +applications, is probably not a problem. + +Alternatively, try some of the platform-specific hints listed below. + +You can use the spewG.c program to generate huge files to test bzip2's +large file support, if you are feeling paranoid. Be aware though that +any compilation problems which affect bzip2 will also affect spewG.c, +alas. + + +Known problems as of 1.0pre8: +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +* HP/UX 10.20 and 11.00, using gcc (2.7.2.3 and 2.95.2): A large + number of warnings appear, including the following: + + /usr/include/sys/resource.h: In function `getrlimit': + /usr/include/sys/resource.h:168: + warning: implicit declaration of function `__getrlimit64' + /usr/include/sys/resource.h: In function `setrlimit': + /usr/include/sys/resource.h:170: + warning: implicit declaration of function `__setrlimit64' + + This would appear to be a problem with large file support, header + files and gcc. gcc may or may not give up at this point. If it + fails, you might be able to improve matters by adding + -D__STDC_EXT__=1 + to the BIGFILES variable in the Makefile (ie, change its definition + to + BIGFILES=-D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 -D__STDC_EXT__=1 + + Even if gcc does produce a binary which appears to work (ie passes + its self-tests), you might want to test it to see if it works properly + on large files. + + +* HP/UX 10.20 and 11.00, using HP's cc compiler. + + No specific problems for this combination, except that you'll need to + specify the -Ae flag, and zap the gcc-specific stuff + -Wall -Winline -O2 -fomit-frame-pointer -fno-strength-reduce. + You should retain -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 in order to get large + file support -- which is reported to work ok for this HP/UX + cc + combination. + + +* SunOS 4.1.X. + + Amazingly, there are still people out there using this venerable old + banger. I shouldn't be too rude -- I started life on SunOS, and + it was a pretty darn good OS, way back then. Anyway: + + SunOS doesn't seem to have strerror(), so you'll have to use + perror(), perhaps by doing adding this (warning: UNTESTED CODE): + + char* strerror ( int errnum ) + { + if (errnum < 0 || errnum >= sys_nerr) + return "Unknown error"; + else + return sys_errlist[errnum]; + } + + Or you could comment out the relevant calls to strerror; they're + not mission-critical. Or you could upgrade to Solaris. Ha ha ha! + (what?? you think I've got Bad Attitude?) + + +* Making a shared library on Solaris. (Not really a compilation + problem, but many people ask ...) + + Firstly, if you have Solaris 8, either you have libbz2.so already + on your system, or you can install it from the Solaris CD. + + Secondly, be aware that there are potential naming conflicts + between the .so file supplied with Solaris 8, and the .so file + which Makefile-libbz2_so will make. Makefile-libbz2_so creates + a .so which has the names which I intend to be "official" as + of version 1.0.0 and onwards. Unfortunately, the .so in + Solaris 8 appeared before I decided on the final names, so + the two libraries are incompatible. We have since communicated + and I hope that the problems will have been solved in the next + version of Solaris, whenever that might appear. + + All that said: you might be able to get somewhere + by finding the line in Makefile-libbz2_so which says + + $(CC) -shared -Wl,-soname -Wl,libbz2.so.1.0 -o libbz2.so.1.0.1 $(OBJS) + + and replacing with + + ($CC) -G -shared -o libbz2.so.1.0.1 -h libbz2.so.1.0 $(OBJS) + + If gcc objects to the combination -fpic -fPIC, get rid of + the second one, leaving just "-fpic". + + +That's the end of the currently known compilation problems. diff --git a/bzip2/Y2K_INFO b/bzip2/Y2K_INFO new file mode 100644 index 000000000..55fd56a2e --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/Y2K_INFO @@ -0,0 +1,34 @@ + +Y2K status of bzip2 and libbzip2, versions 0.1, 0.9.0 and 0.9.5 +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Informally speaking: + bzip2 is a compression program built on top of libbzip2, + a library which does the real work of compression and + decompression. As far as I am aware, libbzip2 does not have + any date-related code at all. + + bzip2 itself copies dates from source to destination files + when compressing or decompressing, using the 'stat' and 'utime' + UNIX system calls. It doesn't examine, manipulate or store the + dates in any way. So as far as I can see, there shouldn't be any + problem with bzip2 providing 'stat' and 'utime' work correctly + on your system. + + On non-unix platforms (those for which BZ_UNIX in bzip2.c is + not set to 1), bzip2 doesn't even do the date copying. + + Overall, informally speaking, I don't think bzip2 or libbzip2 + have a Y2K problem. + +Formally speaking: + I am not prepared to offer you any assurance whatsoever + regarding Y2K issues in my software. You alone assume the + entire risk of using the software. The disclaimer of liability + in the LICENSE file in the bzip2 source distribution continues + to apply on this issue as with every other issue pertaining + to the software. + +Julian Seward +Cambridge, UK +25 August 1999 diff --git a/bzip2/blocksort.c b/bzip2/blocksort.c new file mode 100644 index 000000000..ec426725b --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/blocksort.c @@ -0,0 +1,1134 @@ + +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- Block sorting machinery ---*/ +/*--- blocksort.c ---*/ +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ + +/*-- + This file is a part of bzip2 and/or libbzip2, a program and + library for lossless, block-sorting data compression. + + Copyright (C) 1996-2000 Julian R Seward. All rights reserved. + + Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without + modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions + are met: + + 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright + notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. + + 2. The origin of this software must not be misrepresented; you must + not claim that you wrote the original software. If you use this + software in a product, an acknowledgment in the product + documentation would be appreciated but is not required. + + 3. Altered source versions must be plainly marked as such, and must + not be misrepresented as being the original software. + + 4. The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote + products derived from this software without specific prior written + permission. + + THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS + OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED + WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE + ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY + DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL + DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE + GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS + INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, + WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING + NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS + SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. + + Julian Seward, Cambridge, UK. + jseward@acm.org + bzip2/libbzip2 version 1.0 of 21 March 2000 + + This program is based on (at least) the work of: + Mike Burrows + David Wheeler + Peter Fenwick + Alistair Moffat + Radford Neal + Ian H. Witten + Robert Sedgewick + Jon L. Bentley + + For more information on these sources, see the manual. + + To get some idea how the block sorting algorithms in this file + work, read my paper + On the Performance of BWT Sorting Algorithms + in Proceedings of the IEEE Data Compression Conference 2000, + Snowbird, Utah, USA, 27-30 March 2000. The main sort in this + file implements the algorithm called cache in the paper. +--*/ + + +#include "bzlib_private.h" + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- Fallback O(N log(N)^2) sorting ---*/ +/*--- algorithm, for repetitive blocks ---*/ +/*---------------------------------------------*/ + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +__inline__ +void fallbackSimpleSort ( UInt32* fmap, + UInt32* eclass, + Int32 lo, + Int32 hi ) +{ + Int32 i, j, tmp; + UInt32 ec_tmp; + + if (lo == hi) return; + + if (hi - lo > 3) { + for ( i = hi-4; i >= lo; i-- ) { + tmp = fmap[i]; + ec_tmp = eclass[tmp]; + for ( j = i+4; j <= hi && ec_tmp > eclass[fmap[j]]; j += 4 ) + fmap[j-4] = fmap[j]; + fmap[j-4] = tmp; + } + } + + for ( i = hi-1; i >= lo; i-- ) { + tmp = fmap[i]; + ec_tmp = eclass[tmp]; + for ( j = i+1; j <= hi && ec_tmp > eclass[fmap[j]]; j++ ) + fmap[j-1] = fmap[j]; + fmap[j-1] = tmp; + } +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +#define fswap(zz1, zz2) \ + { Int32 zztmp = zz1; zz1 = zz2; zz2 = zztmp; } + +#define fvswap(zzp1, zzp2, zzn) \ +{ \ + Int32 yyp1 = (zzp1); \ + Int32 yyp2 = (zzp2); \ + Int32 yyn = (zzn); \ + while (yyn > 0) { \ + fswap(fmap[yyp1], fmap[yyp2]); \ + yyp1++; yyp2++; yyn--; \ + } \ +} + + +#define fmin(a,b) ((a) < (b)) ? (a) : (b) + +#define fpush(lz,hz) { stackLo[sp] = lz; \ + stackHi[sp] = hz; \ + sp++; } + +#define fpop(lz,hz) { sp--; \ + lz = stackLo[sp]; \ + hz = stackHi[sp]; } + +#define FALLBACK_QSORT_SMALL_THRESH 10 +#define FALLBACK_QSORT_STACK_SIZE 100 + + +static +void fallbackQSort3 ( UInt32* fmap, + UInt32* eclass, + Int32 loSt, + Int32 hiSt ) +{ + Int32 unLo, unHi, ltLo, gtHi, n, m; + Int32 sp, lo, hi; + UInt32 med, r, r3; + Int32 stackLo[FALLBACK_QSORT_STACK_SIZE]; + Int32 stackHi[FALLBACK_QSORT_STACK_SIZE]; + + r = 0; + + sp = 0; + fpush ( loSt, hiSt ); + + while (sp > 0) { + + AssertH ( sp < FALLBACK_QSORT_STACK_SIZE, 1004 ); + + fpop ( lo, hi ); + if (hi - lo < FALLBACK_QSORT_SMALL_THRESH) { + fallbackSimpleSort ( fmap, eclass, lo, hi ); + continue; + } + + /* Random partitioning. Median of 3 sometimes fails to + avoid bad cases. Median of 9 seems to help but + looks rather expensive. This too seems to work but + is cheaper. Guidance for the magic constants + 7621 and 32768 is taken from Sedgewick's algorithms + book, chapter 35. + */ + r = ((r * 7621) + 1) % 32768; + r3 = r % 3; + if (r3 == 0) med = eclass[fmap[lo]]; else + if (r3 == 1) med = eclass[fmap[(lo+hi)>>1]]; else + med = eclass[fmap[hi]]; + + unLo = ltLo = lo; + unHi = gtHi = hi; + + while (1) { + while (1) { + if (unLo > unHi) break; + n = (Int32)eclass[fmap[unLo]] - (Int32)med; + if (n == 0) { + fswap(fmap[unLo], fmap[ltLo]); + ltLo++; unLo++; + continue; + }; + if (n > 0) break; + unLo++; + } + while (1) { + if (unLo > unHi) break; + n = (Int32)eclass[fmap[unHi]] - (Int32)med; + if (n == 0) { + fswap(fmap[unHi], fmap[gtHi]); + gtHi--; unHi--; + continue; + }; + if (n < 0) break; + unHi--; + } + if (unLo > unHi) break; + fswap(fmap[unLo], fmap[unHi]); unLo++; unHi--; + } + + AssertD ( unHi == unLo-1, "fallbackQSort3(2)" ); + + if (gtHi < ltLo) continue; + + n = fmin(ltLo-lo, unLo-ltLo); fvswap(lo, unLo-n, n); + m = fmin(hi-gtHi, gtHi-unHi); fvswap(unLo, hi-m+1, m); + + n = lo + unLo - ltLo - 1; + m = hi - (gtHi - unHi) + 1; + + if (n - lo > hi - m) { + fpush ( lo, n ); + fpush ( m, hi ); + } else { + fpush ( m, hi ); + fpush ( lo, n ); + } + } +} + +#undef fmin +#undef fpush +#undef fpop +#undef fswap +#undef fvswap +#undef FALLBACK_QSORT_SMALL_THRESH +#undef FALLBACK_QSORT_STACK_SIZE + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +/* Pre: + nblock > 0 + eclass exists for [0 .. nblock-1] + ((UChar*)eclass) [0 .. nblock-1] holds block + ptr exists for [0 .. nblock-1] + + Post: + ((UChar*)eclass) [0 .. nblock-1] holds block + All other areas of eclass destroyed + fmap [0 .. nblock-1] holds sorted order + bhtab [ 0 .. 2+(nblock/32) ] destroyed +*/ + +#define SET_BH(zz) bhtab[(zz) >> 5] |= (1 << ((zz) & 31)) +#define CLEAR_BH(zz) bhtab[(zz) >> 5] &= ~(1 << ((zz) & 31)) +#define ISSET_BH(zz) (bhtab[(zz) >> 5] & (1 << ((zz) & 31))) +#define WORD_BH(zz) bhtab[(zz) >> 5] +#define UNALIGNED_BH(zz) ((zz) & 0x01f) + +static +void fallbackSort ( UInt32* fmap, + UInt32* eclass, + UInt32* bhtab, + Int32 nblock, + Int32 verb ) +{ + Int32 ftab[257]; + Int32 ftabCopy[256]; + Int32 H, i, j, k, l, r, cc, cc1; + Int32 nNotDone; + Int32 nBhtab; + UChar* eclass8 = (UChar*)eclass; + + /*-- + Initial 1-char radix sort to generate + initial fmap and initial BH bits. + --*/ + if (verb >= 4) + VPrintf0 ( " bucket sorting ...\n" ); + for (i = 0; i < 257; i++) ftab[i] = 0; + for (i = 0; i < nblock; i++) ftab[eclass8[i]]++; + for (i = 0; i < 256; i++) ftabCopy[i] = ftab[i]; + for (i = 1; i < 257; i++) ftab[i] += ftab[i-1]; + + for (i = 0; i < nblock; i++) { + j = eclass8[i]; + k = ftab[j] - 1; + ftab[j] = k; + fmap[k] = i; + } + + nBhtab = 2 + (nblock / 32); + for (i = 0; i < nBhtab; i++) bhtab[i] = 0; + for (i = 0; i < 256; i++) SET_BH(ftab[i]); + + /*-- + Inductively refine the buckets. Kind-of an + "exponential radix sort" (!), inspired by the + Manber-Myers suffix array construction algorithm. + --*/ + + /*-- set sentinel bits for block-end detection --*/ + for (i = 0; i < 32; i++) { + SET_BH(nblock + 2*i); + CLEAR_BH(nblock + 2*i + 1); + } + + /*-- the log(N) loop --*/ + H = 1; + while (1) { + + if (verb >= 4) + VPrintf1 ( " depth %6d has ", H ); + + j = 0; + for (i = 0; i < nblock; i++) { + if (ISSET_BH(i)) j = i; + k = fmap[i] - H; if (k < 0) k += nblock; + eclass[k] = j; + } + + nNotDone = 0; + r = -1; + while (1) { + + /*-- find the next non-singleton bucket --*/ + k = r + 1; + while (ISSET_BH(k) && UNALIGNED_BH(k)) k++; + if (ISSET_BH(k)) { + while (WORD_BH(k) == 0xffffffff) k += 32; + while (ISSET_BH(k)) k++; + } + l = k - 1; + if (l >= nblock) break; + while (!ISSET_BH(k) && UNALIGNED_BH(k)) k++; + if (!ISSET_BH(k)) { + while (WORD_BH(k) == 0x00000000) k += 32; + while (!ISSET_BH(k)) k++; + } + r = k - 1; + if (r >= nblock) break; + + /*-- now [l, r] bracket current bucket --*/ + if (r > l) { + nNotDone += (r - l + 1); + fallbackQSort3 ( fmap, eclass, l, r ); + + /*-- scan bucket and generate header bits-- */ + cc = -1; + for (i = l; i <= r; i++) { + cc1 = eclass[fmap[i]]; + if (cc != cc1) { SET_BH(i); cc = cc1; }; + } + } + } + + if (verb >= 4) + VPrintf1 ( "%6d unresolved strings\n", nNotDone ); + + H *= 2; + if (H > nblock || nNotDone == 0) break; + } + + /*-- + Reconstruct the original block in + eclass8 [0 .. nblock-1], since the + previous phase destroyed it. + --*/ + if (verb >= 4) + VPrintf0 ( " reconstructing block ...\n" ); + j = 0; + for (i = 0; i < nblock; i++) { + while (ftabCopy[j] == 0) j++; + ftabCopy[j]--; + eclass8[fmap[i]] = (UChar)j; + } + AssertH ( j < 256, 1005 ); +} + +#undef SET_BH +#undef CLEAR_BH +#undef ISSET_BH +#undef WORD_BH +#undef UNALIGNED_BH + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- The main, O(N^2 log(N)) sorting ---*/ +/*--- algorithm. Faster for "normal" ---*/ +/*--- non-repetitive blocks. ---*/ +/*---------------------------------------------*/ + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +__inline__ +Bool mainGtU ( UInt32 i1, + UInt32 i2, + UChar* block, + UInt16* quadrant, + UInt32 nblock, + Int32* budget ) +{ + Int32 k; + UChar c1, c2; + UInt16 s1, s2; + + AssertD ( i1 != i2, "mainGtU" ); + /* 1 */ + c1 = block[i1]; c2 = block[i2]; + if (c1 != c2) return (c1 > c2); + i1++; i2++; + /* 2 */ + c1 = block[i1]; c2 = block[i2]; + if (c1 != c2) return (c1 > c2); + i1++; i2++; + /* 3 */ + c1 = block[i1]; c2 = block[i2]; + if (c1 != c2) return (c1 > c2); + i1++; i2++; + /* 4 */ + c1 = block[i1]; c2 = block[i2]; + if (c1 != c2) return (c1 > c2); + i1++; i2++; + /* 5 */ + c1 = block[i1]; c2 = block[i2]; + if (c1 != c2) return (c1 > c2); + i1++; i2++; + /* 6 */ + c1 = block[i1]; c2 = block[i2]; + if (c1 != c2) return (c1 > c2); + i1++; i2++; + /* 7 */ + c1 = block[i1]; c2 = block[i2]; + if (c1 != c2) return (c1 > c2); + i1++; i2++; + /* 8 */ + c1 = block[i1]; c2 = block[i2]; + if (c1 != c2) return (c1 > c2); + i1++; i2++; + /* 9 */ + c1 = block[i1]; c2 = block[i2]; + if (c1 != c2) return (c1 > c2); + i1++; i2++; + /* 10 */ + c1 = block[i1]; c2 = block[i2]; + if (c1 != c2) return (c1 > c2); + i1++; i2++; + /* 11 */ + c1 = block[i1]; c2 = block[i2]; + if (c1 != c2) return (c1 > c2); + i1++; i2++; + /* 12 */ + c1 = block[i1]; c2 = block[i2]; + if (c1 != c2) return (c1 > c2); + i1++; i2++; + + k = nblock + 8; + + do { + /* 1 */ + c1 = block[i1]; c2 = block[i2]; + if (c1 != c2) return (c1 > c2); + s1 = quadrant[i1]; s2 = quadrant[i2]; + if (s1 != s2) return (s1 > s2); + i1++; i2++; + /* 2 */ + c1 = block[i1]; c2 = block[i2]; + if (c1 != c2) return (c1 > c2); + s1 = quadrant[i1]; s2 = quadrant[i2]; + if (s1 != s2) return (s1 > s2); + i1++; i2++; + /* 3 */ + c1 = block[i1]; c2 = block[i2]; + if (c1 != c2) return (c1 > c2); + s1 = quadrant[i1]; s2 = quadrant[i2]; + if (s1 != s2) return (s1 > s2); + i1++; i2++; + /* 4 */ + c1 = block[i1]; c2 = block[i2]; + if (c1 != c2) return (c1 > c2); + s1 = quadrant[i1]; s2 = quadrant[i2]; + if (s1 != s2) return (s1 > s2); + i1++; i2++; + /* 5 */ + c1 = block[i1]; c2 = block[i2]; + if (c1 != c2) return (c1 > c2); + s1 = quadrant[i1]; s2 = quadrant[i2]; + if (s1 != s2) return (s1 > s2); + i1++; i2++; + /* 6 */ + c1 = block[i1]; c2 = block[i2]; + if (c1 != c2) return (c1 > c2); + s1 = quadrant[i1]; s2 = quadrant[i2]; + if (s1 != s2) return (s1 > s2); + i1++; i2++; + /* 7 */ + c1 = block[i1]; c2 = block[i2]; + if (c1 != c2) return (c1 > c2); + s1 = quadrant[i1]; s2 = quadrant[i2]; + if (s1 != s2) return (s1 > s2); + i1++; i2++; + /* 8 */ + c1 = block[i1]; c2 = block[i2]; + if (c1 != c2) return (c1 > c2); + s1 = quadrant[i1]; s2 = quadrant[i2]; + if (s1 != s2) return (s1 > s2); + i1++; i2++; + + if (i1 >= nblock) i1 -= nblock; + if (i2 >= nblock) i2 -= nblock; + + k -= 8; + (*budget)--; + } + while (k >= 0); + + return False; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +/*-- + Knuth's increments seem to work better + than Incerpi-Sedgewick here. Possibly + because the number of elems to sort is + usually small, typically <= 20. +--*/ +static +Int32 incs[14] = { 1, 4, 13, 40, 121, 364, 1093, 3280, + 9841, 29524, 88573, 265720, + 797161, 2391484 }; + +static +void mainSimpleSort ( UInt32* ptr, + UChar* block, + UInt16* quadrant, + Int32 nblock, + Int32 lo, + Int32 hi, + Int32 d, + Int32* budget ) +{ + Int32 i, j, h, bigN, hp; + UInt32 v; + + bigN = hi - lo + 1; + if (bigN < 2) return; + + hp = 0; + while (incs[hp] < bigN) hp++; + hp--; + + for (; hp >= 0; hp--) { + h = incs[hp]; + + i = lo + h; + while (True) { + + /*-- copy 1 --*/ + if (i > hi) break; + v = ptr[i]; + j = i; + while ( mainGtU ( + ptr[j-h]+d, v+d, block, quadrant, nblock, budget + ) ) { + ptr[j] = ptr[j-h]; + j = j - h; + if (j <= (lo + h - 1)) break; + } + ptr[j] = v; + i++; + + /*-- copy 2 --*/ + if (i > hi) break; + v = ptr[i]; + j = i; + while ( mainGtU ( + ptr[j-h]+d, v+d, block, quadrant, nblock, budget + ) ) { + ptr[j] = ptr[j-h]; + j = j - h; + if (j <= (lo + h - 1)) break; + } + ptr[j] = v; + i++; + + /*-- copy 3 --*/ + if (i > hi) break; + v = ptr[i]; + j = i; + while ( mainGtU ( + ptr[j-h]+d, v+d, block, quadrant, nblock, budget + ) ) { + ptr[j] = ptr[j-h]; + j = j - h; + if (j <= (lo + h - 1)) break; + } + ptr[j] = v; + i++; + + if (*budget < 0) return; + } + } +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +/*-- + The following is an implementation of + an elegant 3-way quicksort for strings, + described in a paper "Fast Algorithms for + Sorting and Searching Strings", by Robert + Sedgewick and Jon L. Bentley. +--*/ + +#define mswap(zz1, zz2) \ + { Int32 zztmp = zz1; zz1 = zz2; zz2 = zztmp; } + +#define mvswap(zzp1, zzp2, zzn) \ +{ \ + Int32 yyp1 = (zzp1); \ + Int32 yyp2 = (zzp2); \ + Int32 yyn = (zzn); \ + while (yyn > 0) { \ + mswap(ptr[yyp1], ptr[yyp2]); \ + yyp1++; yyp2++; yyn--; \ + } \ +} + +static +__inline__ +UChar mmed3 ( UChar a, UChar b, UChar c ) +{ + UChar t; + if (a > b) { t = a; a = b; b = t; }; + if (b > c) { + b = c; + if (a > b) b = a; + } + return b; +} + +#define mmin(a,b) ((a) < (b)) ? (a) : (b) + +#define mpush(lz,hz,dz) { stackLo[sp] = lz; \ + stackHi[sp] = hz; \ + stackD [sp] = dz; \ + sp++; } + +#define mpop(lz,hz,dz) { sp--; \ + lz = stackLo[sp]; \ + hz = stackHi[sp]; \ + dz = stackD [sp]; } + + +#define mnextsize(az) (nextHi[az]-nextLo[az]) + +#define mnextswap(az,bz) \ + { Int32 tz; \ + tz = nextLo[az]; nextLo[az] = nextLo[bz]; nextLo[bz] = tz; \ + tz = nextHi[az]; nextHi[az] = nextHi[bz]; nextHi[bz] = tz; \ + tz = nextD [az]; nextD [az] = nextD [bz]; nextD [bz] = tz; } + + +#define MAIN_QSORT_SMALL_THRESH 20 +#define MAIN_QSORT_DEPTH_THRESH (BZ_N_RADIX + BZ_N_QSORT) +#define MAIN_QSORT_STACK_SIZE 100 + +static +void mainQSort3 ( UInt32* ptr, + UChar* block, + UInt16* quadrant, + Int32 nblock, + Int32 loSt, + Int32 hiSt, + Int32 dSt, + Int32* budget ) +{ + Int32 unLo, unHi, ltLo, gtHi, n, m, med; + Int32 sp, lo, hi, d; + + Int32 stackLo[MAIN_QSORT_STACK_SIZE]; + Int32 stackHi[MAIN_QSORT_STACK_SIZE]; + Int32 stackD [MAIN_QSORT_STACK_SIZE]; + + Int32 nextLo[3]; + Int32 nextHi[3]; + Int32 nextD [3]; + + sp = 0; + mpush ( loSt, hiSt, dSt ); + + while (sp > 0) { + + AssertH ( sp < MAIN_QSORT_STACK_SIZE, 1001 ); + + mpop ( lo, hi, d ); + if (hi - lo < MAIN_QSORT_SMALL_THRESH || + d > MAIN_QSORT_DEPTH_THRESH) { + mainSimpleSort ( ptr, block, quadrant, nblock, lo, hi, d, budget ); + if (*budget < 0) return; + continue; + } + + med = (Int32) + mmed3 ( block[ptr[ lo ]+d], + block[ptr[ hi ]+d], + block[ptr[ (lo+hi)>>1 ]+d] ); + + unLo = ltLo = lo; + unHi = gtHi = hi; + + while (True) { + while (True) { + if (unLo > unHi) break; + n = ((Int32)block[ptr[unLo]+d]) - med; + if (n == 0) { + mswap(ptr[unLo], ptr[ltLo]); + ltLo++; unLo++; continue; + }; + if (n > 0) break; + unLo++; + } + while (True) { + if (unLo > unHi) break; + n = ((Int32)block[ptr[unHi]+d]) - med; + if (n == 0) { + mswap(ptr[unHi], ptr[gtHi]); + gtHi--; unHi--; continue; + }; + if (n < 0) break; + unHi--; + } + if (unLo > unHi) break; + mswap(ptr[unLo], ptr[unHi]); unLo++; unHi--; + } + + AssertD ( unHi == unLo-1, "mainQSort3(2)" ); + + if (gtHi < ltLo) { + mpush(lo, hi, d+1 ); + continue; + } + + n = mmin(ltLo-lo, unLo-ltLo); mvswap(lo, unLo-n, n); + m = mmin(hi-gtHi, gtHi-unHi); mvswap(unLo, hi-m+1, m); + + n = lo + unLo - ltLo - 1; + m = hi - (gtHi - unHi) + 1; + + nextLo[0] = lo; nextHi[0] = n; nextD[0] = d; + nextLo[1] = m; nextHi[1] = hi; nextD[1] = d; + nextLo[2] = n+1; nextHi[2] = m-1; nextD[2] = d+1; + + if (mnextsize(0) < mnextsize(1)) mnextswap(0,1); + if (mnextsize(1) < mnextsize(2)) mnextswap(1,2); + if (mnextsize(0) < mnextsize(1)) mnextswap(0,1); + + AssertD (mnextsize(0) >= mnextsize(1), "mainQSort3(8)" ); + AssertD (mnextsize(1) >= mnextsize(2), "mainQSort3(9)" ); + + mpush (nextLo[0], nextHi[0], nextD[0]); + mpush (nextLo[1], nextHi[1], nextD[1]); + mpush (nextLo[2], nextHi[2], nextD[2]); + } +} + +#undef mswap +#undef mvswap +#undef mpush +#undef mpop +#undef mmin +#undef mnextsize +#undef mnextswap +#undef MAIN_QSORT_SMALL_THRESH +#undef MAIN_QSORT_DEPTH_THRESH +#undef MAIN_QSORT_STACK_SIZE + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +/* Pre: + nblock > N_OVERSHOOT + block32 exists for [0 .. nblock-1 +N_OVERSHOOT] + ((UChar*)block32) [0 .. nblock-1] holds block + ptr exists for [0 .. nblock-1] + + Post: + ((UChar*)block32) [0 .. nblock-1] holds block + All other areas of block32 destroyed + ftab [0 .. 65536 ] destroyed + ptr [0 .. nblock-1] holds sorted order + if (*budget < 0), sorting was abandoned +*/ + +#define BIGFREQ(b) (ftab[((b)+1) << 8] - ftab[(b) << 8]) +#define SETMASK (1 << 21) +#define CLEARMASK (~(SETMASK)) + +static +void mainSort ( UInt32* ptr, + UChar* block, + UInt16* quadrant, + UInt32* ftab, + Int32 nblock, + Int32 verb, + Int32* budget ) +{ + Int32 i, j, k, ss, sb; + Int32 runningOrder[256]; + Bool bigDone[256]; + Int32 copyStart[256]; + Int32 copyEnd [256]; + UChar c1; + Int32 numQSorted; + UInt16 s; + if (verb >= 4) VPrintf0 ( " main sort initialise ...\n" ); + + /*-- set up the 2-byte frequency table --*/ + for (i = 65536; i >= 0; i--) ftab[i] = 0; + + j = block[0] << 8; + i = nblock-1; + for (; i >= 3; i -= 4) { + quadrant[i] = 0; + j = (j >> 8) | ( ((UInt16)block[i]) << 8); + ftab[j]++; + quadrant[i-1] = 0; + j = (j >> 8) | ( ((UInt16)block[i-1]) << 8); + ftab[j]++; + quadrant[i-2] = 0; + j = (j >> 8) | ( ((UInt16)block[i-2]) << 8); + ftab[j]++; + quadrant[i-3] = 0; + j = (j >> 8) | ( ((UInt16)block[i-3]) << 8); + ftab[j]++; + } + for (; i >= 0; i--) { + quadrant[i] = 0; + j = (j >> 8) | ( ((UInt16)block[i]) << 8); + ftab[j]++; + } + + /*-- (emphasises close relationship of block & quadrant) --*/ + for (i = 0; i < BZ_N_OVERSHOOT; i++) { + block [nblock+i] = block[i]; + quadrant[nblock+i] = 0; + } + + if (verb >= 4) VPrintf0 ( " bucket sorting ...\n" ); + + /*-- Complete the initial radix sort --*/ + for (i = 1; i <= 65536; i++) ftab[i] += ftab[i-1]; + + s = block[0] << 8; + i = nblock-1; + for (; i >= 3; i -= 4) { + s = (s >> 8) | (block[i] << 8); + j = ftab[s] -1; + ftab[s] = j; + ptr[j] = i; + s = (s >> 8) | (block[i-1] << 8); + j = ftab[s] -1; + ftab[s] = j; + ptr[j] = i-1; + s = (s >> 8) | (block[i-2] << 8); + j = ftab[s] -1; + ftab[s] = j; + ptr[j] = i-2; + s = (s >> 8) | (block[i-3] << 8); + j = ftab[s] -1; + ftab[s] = j; + ptr[j] = i-3; + } + for (; i >= 0; i--) { + s = (s >> 8) | (block[i] << 8); + j = ftab[s] -1; + ftab[s] = j; + ptr[j] = i; + } + + /*-- + Now ftab contains the first loc of every small bucket. + Calculate the running order, from smallest to largest + big bucket. + --*/ + for (i = 0; i <= 255; i++) { + bigDone [i] = False; + runningOrder[i] = i; + } + + { + Int32 vv; + Int32 h = 1; + do h = 3 * h + 1; while (h <= 256); + do { + h = h / 3; + for (i = h; i <= 255; i++) { + vv = runningOrder[i]; + j = i; + while ( BIGFREQ(runningOrder[j-h]) > BIGFREQ(vv) ) { + runningOrder[j] = runningOrder[j-h]; + j = j - h; + if (j <= (h - 1)) goto zero; + } + zero: + runningOrder[j] = vv; + } + } while (h != 1); + } + + /*-- + The main sorting loop. + --*/ + + numQSorted = 0; + + for (i = 0; i <= 255; i++) { + + /*-- + Process big buckets, starting with the least full. + Basically this is a 3-step process in which we call + mainQSort3 to sort the small buckets [ss, j], but + also make a big effort to avoid the calls if we can. + --*/ + ss = runningOrder[i]; + + /*-- + Step 1: + Complete the big bucket [ss] by quicksorting + any unsorted small buckets [ss, j], for j != ss. + Hopefully previous pointer-scanning phases have already + completed many of the small buckets [ss, j], so + we don't have to sort them at all. + --*/ + for (j = 0; j <= 255; j++) { + if (j != ss) { + sb = (ss << 8) + j; + if ( ! (ftab[sb] & SETMASK) ) { + Int32 lo = ftab[sb] & CLEARMASK; + Int32 hi = (ftab[sb+1] & CLEARMASK) - 1; + if (hi > lo) { + if (verb >= 4) + VPrintf4 ( " qsort [0x%x, 0x%x] " + "done %d this %d\n", + ss, j, numQSorted, hi - lo + 1 ); + mainQSort3 ( + ptr, block, quadrant, nblock, + lo, hi, BZ_N_RADIX, budget + ); + numQSorted += (hi - lo + 1); + if (*budget < 0) return; + } + } + ftab[sb] |= SETMASK; + } + } + + AssertH ( !bigDone[ss], 1006 ); + + /*-- + Step 2: + Now scan this big bucket [ss] so as to synthesise the + sorted order for small buckets [t, ss] for all t, + including, magically, the bucket [ss,ss] too. + This will avoid doing Real Work in subsequent Step 1's. + --*/ + { + for (j = 0; j <= 255; j++) { + copyStart[j] = ftab[(j << 8) + ss] & CLEARMASK; + copyEnd [j] = (ftab[(j << 8) + ss + 1] & CLEARMASK) - 1; + } + for (j = ftab[ss << 8] & CLEARMASK; j < copyStart[ss]; j++) { + k = ptr[j]-1; if (k < 0) k += nblock; + c1 = block[k]; + if (!bigDone[c1]) + ptr[ copyStart[c1]++ ] = k; + } + for (j = (ftab[(ss+1) << 8] & CLEARMASK) - 1; j > copyEnd[ss]; j--) { + k = ptr[j]-1; if (k < 0) k += nblock; + c1 = block[k]; + if (!bigDone[c1]) + ptr[ copyEnd[c1]-- ] = k; + } + } + + AssertH ( copyStart[ss]-1 == copyEnd[ss], 1007 ); + + for (j = 0; j <= 255; j++) ftab[(j << 8) + ss] |= SETMASK; + + /*-- + Step 3: + The [ss] big bucket is now done. Record this fact, + and update the quadrant descriptors. Remember to + update quadrants in the overshoot area too, if + necessary. The "if (i < 255)" test merely skips + this updating for the last bucket processed, since + updating for the last bucket is pointless. + + The quadrant array provides a way to incrementally + cache sort orderings, as they appear, so as to + make subsequent comparisons in fullGtU() complete + faster. For repetitive blocks this makes a big + difference (but not big enough to be able to avoid + the fallback sorting mechanism, exponential radix sort). + + The precise meaning is: at all times: + + for 0 <= i < nblock and 0 <= j <= nblock + + if block[i] != block[j], + + then the relative values of quadrant[i] and + quadrant[j] are meaningless. + + else { + if quadrant[i] < quadrant[j] + then the string starting at i lexicographically + precedes the string starting at j + + else if quadrant[i] > quadrant[j] + then the string starting at j lexicographically + precedes the string starting at i + + else + the relative ordering of the strings starting + at i and j has not yet been determined. + } + --*/ + bigDone[ss] = True; + + if (i < 255) { + Int32 bbStart = ftab[ss << 8] & CLEARMASK; + Int32 bbSize = (ftab[(ss+1) << 8] & CLEARMASK) - bbStart; + Int32 shifts = 0; + + while ((bbSize >> shifts) > 65534) shifts++; + + for (j = bbSize-1; j >= 0; j--) { + Int32 a2update = ptr[bbStart + j]; + UInt16 qVal = (UInt16)(j >> shifts); + quadrant[a2update] = qVal; + if (a2update < BZ_N_OVERSHOOT) + quadrant[a2update + nblock] = qVal; + } + AssertH ( ((bbSize-1) >> shifts) <= 65535, 1002 ); + } + + } + + if (verb >= 4) + VPrintf3 ( " %d pointers, %d sorted, %d scanned\n", + nblock, numQSorted, nblock - numQSorted ); +} + +#undef BIGFREQ +#undef SETMASK +#undef CLEARMASK + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +/* Pre: + nblock > 0 + arr2 exists for [0 .. nblock-1 +N_OVERSHOOT] + ((UChar*)arr2) [0 .. nblock-1] holds block + arr1 exists for [0 .. nblock-1] + + Post: + ((UChar*)arr2) [0 .. nblock-1] holds block + All other areas of block destroyed + ftab [ 0 .. 65536 ] destroyed + arr1 [0 .. nblock-1] holds sorted order +*/ +void BZ2_blockSort ( EState* s ) +{ + UInt32* ptr = s->ptr; + UChar* block = s->block; + UInt32* ftab = s->ftab; + Int32 nblock = s->nblock; + Int32 verb = s->verbosity; + Int32 wfact = s->workFactor; + UInt16* quadrant; + Int32 budget; + Int32 budgetInit; + Int32 i; + + if (nblock < 10000) { + fallbackSort ( s->arr1, s->arr2, ftab, nblock, verb ); + } else { + /* Calculate the location for quadrant, remembering to get + the alignment right. Assumes that &(block[0]) is at least + 2-byte aligned -- this should be ok since block is really + the first section of arr2. + */ + i = nblock+BZ_N_OVERSHOOT; + if (i & 1) i++; + quadrant = (UInt16*)(&(block[i])); + + /* (wfact-1) / 3 puts the default-factor-30 + transition point at very roughly the same place as + with v0.1 and v0.9.0. + Not that it particularly matters any more, since the + resulting compressed stream is now the same regardless + of whether or not we use the main sort or fallback sort. + */ + if (wfact < 1 ) wfact = 1; + if (wfact > 100) wfact = 100; + budgetInit = nblock * ((wfact-1) / 3); + budget = budgetInit; + + mainSort ( ptr, block, quadrant, ftab, nblock, verb, &budget ); + if (verb >= 3) + VPrintf3 ( " %d work, %d block, ratio %5.2f\n", + budgetInit - budget, + nblock, + (float)(budgetInit - budget) / + (float)(nblock==0 ? 1 : nblock) ); + if (budget < 0) { + if (verb >= 2) + VPrintf0 ( " too repetitive; using fallback" + " sorting algorithm\n" ); + fallbackSort ( s->arr1, s->arr2, ftab, nblock, verb ); + } + } + + s->origPtr = -1; + for (i = 0; i < s->nblock; i++) + if (ptr[i] == 0) + { s->origPtr = i; break; }; + + AssertH( s->origPtr != -1, 1003 ); +} + + +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- end blocksort.c ---*/ +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ diff --git a/bzip2/bzip2.1 b/bzip2/bzip2.1 new file mode 100644 index 000000000..7de54a011 --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/bzip2.1 @@ -0,0 +1,439 @@ +.PU +.TH bzip2 1 +.SH NAME +bzip2, bunzip2 \- a block-sorting file compressor, v1.0 +.br +bzcat \- decompresses files to stdout +.br +bzip2recover \- recovers data from damaged bzip2 files + +.SH SYNOPSIS +.ll +8 +.B bzip2 +.RB [ " \-cdfkqstvzVL123456789 " ] +[ +.I "filenames \&..." +] +.ll -8 +.br +.B bunzip2 +.RB [ " \-fkvsVL " ] +[ +.I "filenames \&..." +] +.br +.B bzcat +.RB [ " \-s " ] +[ +.I "filenames \&..." +] +.br +.B bzip2recover +.I "filename" + +.SH DESCRIPTION +.I bzip2 +compresses files using the Burrows-Wheeler block sorting +text compression algorithm, and Huffman coding. Compression is +generally considerably better than that achieved by more conventional +LZ77/LZ78-based compressors, and approaches the performance of the PPM +family of statistical compressors. + +The command-line options are deliberately very similar to +those of +.I GNU gzip, +but they are not identical. + +.I bzip2 +expects a list of file names to accompany the +command-line flags. Each file is replaced by a compressed version of +itself, with the name "original_name.bz2". +Each compressed file +has the same modification date, permissions, and, when possible, +ownership as the corresponding original, so that these properties can +be correctly restored at decompression time. File name handling is +naive in the sense that there is no mechanism for preserving original +file names, permissions, ownerships or dates in filesystems which lack +these concepts, or have serious file name length restrictions, such as +MS-DOS. + +.I bzip2 +and +.I bunzip2 +will by default not overwrite existing +files. If you want this to happen, specify the \-f flag. + +If no file names are specified, +.I bzip2 +compresses from standard +input to standard output. In this case, +.I bzip2 +will decline to +write compressed output to a terminal, as this would be entirely +incomprehensible and therefore pointless. + +.I bunzip2 +(or +.I bzip2 \-d) +decompresses all +specified files. Files which were not created by +.I bzip2 +will be detected and ignored, and a warning issued. +.I bzip2 +attempts to guess the filename for the decompressed file +from that of the compressed file as follows: + + filename.bz2 becomes filename + filename.bz becomes filename + filename.tbz2 becomes filename.tar + filename.tbz becomes filename.tar + anyothername becomes anyothername.out + +If the file does not end in one of the recognised endings, +.I .bz2, +.I .bz, +.I .tbz2 +or +.I .tbz, +.I bzip2 +complains that it cannot +guess the name of the original file, and uses the original name +with +.I .out +appended. + +As with compression, supplying no +filenames causes decompression from +standard input to standard output. + +.I bunzip2 +will correctly decompress a file which is the +concatenation of two or more compressed files. The result is the +concatenation of the corresponding uncompressed files. Integrity +testing (\-t) +of concatenated +compressed files is also supported. + +You can also compress or decompress files to the standard output by +giving the \-c flag. Multiple files may be compressed and +decompressed like this. The resulting outputs are fed sequentially to +stdout. Compression of multiple files +in this manner generates a stream +containing multiple compressed file representations. Such a stream +can be decompressed correctly only by +.I bzip2 +version 0.9.0 or +later. Earlier versions of +.I bzip2 +will stop after decompressing +the first file in the stream. + +.I bzcat +(or +.I bzip2 -dc) +decompresses all specified files to +the standard output. + +.I bzip2 +will read arguments from the environment variables +.I BZIP2 +and +.I BZIP, +in that order, and will process them +before any arguments read from the command line. This gives a +convenient way to supply default arguments. + +Compression is always performed, even if the compressed +file is slightly +larger than the original. Files of less than about one hundred bytes +tend to get larger, since the compression mechanism has a constant +overhead in the region of 50 bytes. Random data (including the output +of most file compressors) is coded at about 8.05 bits per byte, giving +an expansion of around 0.5%. + +As a self-check for your protection, +.I +bzip2 +uses 32-bit CRCs to +make sure that the decompressed version of a file is identical to the +original. This guards against corruption of the compressed data, and +against undetected bugs in +.I bzip2 +(hopefully very unlikely). The +chances of data corruption going undetected is microscopic, about one +chance in four billion for each file processed. Be aware, though, that +the check occurs upon decompression, so it can only tell you that +something is wrong. It can't help you +recover the original uncompressed +data. You can use +.I bzip2recover +to try to recover data from +damaged files. + +Return values: 0 for a normal exit, 1 for environmental problems (file +not found, invalid flags, I/O errors, &c), 2 to indicate a corrupt +compressed file, 3 for an internal consistency error (eg, bug) which +caused +.I bzip2 +to panic. + +.SH OPTIONS +.TP +.B \-c --stdout +Compress or decompress to standard output. +.TP +.B \-d --decompress +Force decompression. +.I bzip2, +.I bunzip2 +and +.I bzcat +are +really the same program, and the decision about what actions to take is +done on the basis of which name is used. This flag overrides that +mechanism, and forces +.I bzip2 +to decompress. +.TP +.B \-z --compress +The complement to \-d: forces compression, regardless of the +invokation name. +.TP +.B \-t --test +Check integrity of the specified file(s), but don't decompress them. +This really performs a trial decompression and throws away the result. +.TP +.B \-f --force +Force overwrite of output files. Normally, +.I bzip2 +will not overwrite +existing output files. Also forces +.I bzip2 +to break hard links +to files, which it otherwise wouldn't do. +.TP +.B \-k --keep +Keep (don't delete) input files during compression +or decompression. +.TP +.B \-s --small +Reduce memory usage, for compression, decompression and testing. Files +are decompressed and tested using a modified algorithm which only +requires 2.5 bytes per block byte. This means any file can be +decompressed in 2300k of memory, albeit at about half the normal speed. + +During compression, \-s selects a block size of 200k, which limits +memory use to around the same figure, at the expense of your compression +ratio. In short, if your machine is low on memory (8 megabytes or +less), use \-s for everything. See MEMORY MANAGEMENT below. +.TP +.B \-q --quiet +Suppress non-essential warning messages. Messages pertaining to +I/O errors and other critical events will not be suppressed. +.TP +.B \-v --verbose +Verbose mode -- show the compression ratio for each file processed. +Further \-v's increase the verbosity level, spewing out lots of +information which is primarily of interest for diagnostic purposes. +.TP +.B \-L --license -V --version +Display the software version, license terms and conditions. +.TP +.B \-1 to \-9 +Set the block size to 100 k, 200 k .. 900 k when compressing. Has no +effect when decompressing. See MEMORY MANAGEMENT below. +.TP +.B \-- +Treats all subsequent arguments as file names, even if they start +with a dash. This is so you can handle files with names beginning +with a dash, for example: bzip2 \-- \-myfilename. +.TP +.B \--repetitive-fast --repetitive-best +These flags are redundant in versions 0.9.5 and above. They provided +some coarse control over the behaviour of the sorting algorithm in +earlier versions, which was sometimes useful. 0.9.5 and above have an +improved algorithm which renders these flags irrelevant. + +.SH MEMORY MANAGEMENT +.I bzip2 +compresses large files in blocks. The block size affects +both the compression ratio achieved, and the amount of memory needed for +compression and decompression. The flags \-1 through \-9 +specify the block size to be 100,000 bytes through 900,000 bytes (the +default) respectively. At decompression time, the block size used for +compression is read from the header of the compressed file, and +.I bunzip2 +then allocates itself just enough memory to decompress +the file. Since block sizes are stored in compressed files, it follows +that the flags \-1 to \-9 are irrelevant to and so ignored +during decompression. + +Compression and decompression requirements, +in bytes, can be estimated as: + + Compression: 400k + ( 8 x block size ) + + Decompression: 100k + ( 4 x block size ), or + 100k + ( 2.5 x block size ) + +Larger block sizes give rapidly diminishing marginal returns. Most of +the compression comes from the first two or three hundred k of block +size, a fact worth bearing in mind when using +.I bzip2 +on small machines. +It is also important to appreciate that the decompression memory +requirement is set at compression time by the choice of block size. + +For files compressed with the default 900k block size, +.I bunzip2 +will require about 3700 kbytes to decompress. To support decompression +of any file on a 4 megabyte machine, +.I bunzip2 +has an option to +decompress using approximately half this amount of memory, about 2300 +kbytes. Decompression speed is also halved, so you should use this +option only where necessary. The relevant flag is -s. + +In general, try and use the largest block size memory constraints allow, +since that maximises the compression achieved. Compression and +decompression speed are virtually unaffected by block size. + +Another significant point applies to files which fit in a single block +-- that means most files you'd encounter using a large block size. The +amount of real memory touched is proportional to the size of the file, +since the file is smaller than a block. For example, compressing a file +20,000 bytes long with the flag -9 will cause the compressor to +allocate around 7600k of memory, but only touch 400k + 20000 * 8 = 560 +kbytes of it. Similarly, the decompressor will allocate 3700k but only +touch 100k + 20000 * 4 = 180 kbytes. + +Here is a table which summarises the maximum memory usage for different +block sizes. Also recorded is the total compressed size for 14 files of +the Calgary Text Compression Corpus totalling 3,141,622 bytes. This +column gives some feel for how compression varies with block size. +These figures tend to understate the advantage of larger block sizes for +larger files, since the Corpus is dominated by smaller files. + + Compress Decompress Decompress Corpus + Flag usage usage -s usage Size + + -1 1200k 500k 350k 914704 + -2 2000k 900k 600k 877703 + -3 2800k 1300k 850k 860338 + -4 3600k 1700k 1100k 846899 + -5 4400k 2100k 1350k 845160 + -6 5200k 2500k 1600k 838626 + -7 6100k 2900k 1850k 834096 + -8 6800k 3300k 2100k 828642 + -9 7600k 3700k 2350k 828642 + +.SH RECOVERING DATA FROM DAMAGED FILES +.I bzip2 +compresses files in blocks, usually 900kbytes long. Each +block is handled independently. If a media or transmission error causes +a multi-block .bz2 +file to become damaged, it may be possible to +recover data from the undamaged blocks in the file. + +The compressed representation of each block is delimited by a 48-bit +pattern, which makes it possible to find the block boundaries with +reasonable certainty. Each block also carries its own 32-bit CRC, so +damaged blocks can be distinguished from undamaged ones. + +.I bzip2recover +is a simple program whose purpose is to search for +blocks in .bz2 files, and write each block out into its own .bz2 +file. You can then use +.I bzip2 +\-t +to test the +integrity of the resulting files, and decompress those which are +undamaged. + +.I bzip2recover +takes a single argument, the name of the damaged file, +and writes a number of files "rec0001file.bz2", +"rec0002file.bz2", etc, containing the extracted blocks. +The output filenames are designed so that the use of +wildcards in subsequent processing -- for example, +"bzip2 -dc rec*file.bz2 > recovered_data" -- lists the files in +the correct order. + +.I bzip2recover +should be of most use dealing with large .bz2 +files, as these will contain many blocks. It is clearly +futile to use it on damaged single-block files, since a +damaged block cannot be recovered. If you wish to minimise +any potential data loss through media or transmission errors, +you might consider compressing with a smaller +block size. + +.SH PERFORMANCE NOTES +The sorting phase of compression gathers together similar strings in the +file. Because of this, files containing very long runs of repeated +symbols, like "aabaabaabaab ..." (repeated several hundred times) may +compress more slowly than normal. Versions 0.9.5 and above fare much +better than previous versions in this respect. The ratio between +worst-case and average-case compression time is in the region of 10:1. +For previous versions, this figure was more like 100:1. You can use the +\-vvvv option to monitor progress in great detail, if you want. + +Decompression speed is unaffected by these phenomena. + +.I bzip2 +usually allocates several megabytes of memory to operate +in, and then charges all over it in a fairly random fashion. This means +that performance, both for compressing and decompressing, is largely +determined by the speed at which your machine can service cache misses. +Because of this, small changes to the code to reduce the miss rate have +been observed to give disproportionately large performance improvements. +I imagine +.I bzip2 +will perform best on machines with very large caches. + +.SH CAVEATS +I/O error messages are not as helpful as they could be. +.I bzip2 +tries hard to detect I/O errors and exit cleanly, but the details of +what the problem is sometimes seem rather misleading. + +This manual page pertains to version 1.0 of +.I bzip2. +Compressed +data created by this version is entirely forwards and backwards +compatible with the previous public releases, versions 0.1pl2, 0.9.0 +and 0.9.5, +but with the following exception: 0.9.0 and above can correctly +decompress multiple concatenated compressed files. 0.1pl2 cannot do +this; it will stop after decompressing just the first file in the +stream. + +.I bzip2recover +uses 32-bit integers to represent bit positions in +compressed files, so it cannot handle compressed files more than 512 +megabytes long. This could easily be fixed. + +.SH AUTHOR +Julian Seward, jseward@acm.org. + +http://sourceware.cygnus.com/bzip2 +http://www.muraroa.demon.co.uk + +The ideas embodied in +.I bzip2 +are due to (at least) the following +people: Michael Burrows and David Wheeler (for the block sorting +transformation), David Wheeler (again, for the Huffman coder), Peter +Fenwick (for the structured coding model in the original +.I bzip, +and many refinements), and Alistair Moffat, Radford Neal and Ian Witten +(for the arithmetic coder in the original +.I bzip). +I am much +indebted for their help, support and advice. See the manual in the +source distribution for pointers to sources of documentation. Christian +von Roques encouraged me to look for faster sorting algorithms, so as to +speed up compression. Bela Lubkin encouraged me to improve the +worst-case compression performance. Many people sent patches, helped +with portability problems, lent machines, gave advice and were generally +helpful. diff --git a/bzip2/bzip2.1.preformatted b/bzip2/bzip2.1.preformatted new file mode 100644 index 000000000..9f18339e9 --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/bzip2.1.preformatted @@ -0,0 +1,462 @@ + + + +bzip2(1) bzip2(1) + + +NNAAMMEE + bzip2, bunzip2 - a block-sorting file compressor, v1.0 + bzcat - decompresses files to stdout + bzip2recover - recovers data from damaged bzip2 files + + +SSYYNNOOPPSSIISS + bbzziipp22 [ --ccddffkkqqssttvvzzVVLL112233445566778899 ] [ _f_i_l_e_n_a_m_e_s _._._. ] + bbuunnzziipp22 [ --ffkkvvssVVLL ] [ _f_i_l_e_n_a_m_e_s _._._. ] + bbzzccaatt [ --ss ] [ _f_i_l_e_n_a_m_e_s _._._. ] + bbzziipp22rreeccoovveerr _f_i_l_e_n_a_m_e + + +DDEESSCCRRIIPPTTIIOONN + _b_z_i_p_2 compresses files using the Burrows-Wheeler block + sorting text compression algorithm, and Huffman coding. + Compression is generally considerably better than that + achieved by more conventional LZ77/LZ78-based compressors, + and approaches the performance of the PPM family of sta- + tistical compressors. + + The command-line options are deliberately very similar to + those of _G_N_U _g_z_i_p_, but they are not identical. + + _b_z_i_p_2 expects a list of file names to accompany the com- + mand-line flags. Each file is replaced by a compressed + version of itself, with the name "original_name.bz2". + Each compressed file has the same modification date, per- + missions, and, when possible, ownership as the correspond- + ing original, so that these properties can be correctly + restored at decompression time. File name handling is + naive in the sense that there is no mechanism for preserv- + ing original file names, permissions, ownerships or dates + in filesystems which lack these concepts, or have serious + file name length restrictions, such as MS-DOS. + + _b_z_i_p_2 and _b_u_n_z_i_p_2 will by default not overwrite existing + files. If you want this to happen, specify the -f flag. + + If no file names are specified, _b_z_i_p_2 compresses from + standard input to standard output. In this case, _b_z_i_p_2 + will decline to write compressed output to a terminal, as + this would be entirely incomprehensible and therefore + pointless. + + _b_u_n_z_i_p_2 (or _b_z_i_p_2 _-_d_) decompresses all specified files. + Files which were not created by _b_z_i_p_2 will be detected and + ignored, and a warning issued. _b_z_i_p_2 attempts to guess + the filename for the decompressed file from that of the + compressed file as follows: + + filename.bz2 becomes filename + filename.bz becomes filename + filename.tbz2 becomes filename.tar + + + + 1 + + + + + +bzip2(1) bzip2(1) + + + filename.tbz becomes filename.tar + anyothername becomes anyothername.out + + If the file does not end in one of the recognised endings, + _._b_z_2_, _._b_z_, _._t_b_z_2 or _._t_b_z_, _b_z_i_p_2 complains that it cannot + guess the name of the original file, and uses the original + name with _._o_u_t appended. + + As with compression, supplying no filenames causes decom- + pression from standard input to standard output. + + _b_u_n_z_i_p_2 will correctly decompress a file which is the con- + catenation of two or more compressed files. The result is + the concatenation of the corresponding uncompressed files. + Integrity testing (-t) of concatenated compressed files is + also supported. + + You can also compress or decompress files to the standard + output by giving the -c flag. Multiple files may be com- + pressed and decompressed like this. The resulting outputs + are fed sequentially to stdout. Compression of multiple + files in this manner generates a stream containing multi- + ple compressed file representations. Such a stream can be + decompressed correctly only by _b_z_i_p_2 version 0.9.0 or + later. Earlier versions of _b_z_i_p_2 will stop after decom- + pressing the first file in the stream. + + _b_z_c_a_t (or _b_z_i_p_2 _-_d_c_) decompresses all specified files to + the standard output. + + _b_z_i_p_2 will read arguments from the environment variables + _B_Z_I_P_2 and _B_Z_I_P_, in that order, and will process them + before any arguments read from the command line. This + gives a convenient way to supply default arguments. + + Compression is always performed, even if the compressed + file is slightly larger than the original. Files of less + than about one hundred bytes tend to get larger, since the + compression mechanism has a constant overhead in the + region of 50 bytes. Random data (including the output of + most file compressors) is coded at about 8.05 bits per + byte, giving an expansion of around 0.5%. + + As a self-check for your protection, _b_z_i_p_2 uses 32-bit + CRCs to make sure that the decompressed version of a file + is identical to the original. This guards against corrup- + tion of the compressed data, and against undetected bugs + in _b_z_i_p_2 (hopefully very unlikely). The chances of data + corruption going undetected is microscopic, about one + chance in four billion for each file processed. Be aware, + though, that the check occurs upon decompression, so it + can only tell you that something is wrong. It can't help + you recover the original uncompressed data. You can use + _b_z_i_p_2_r_e_c_o_v_e_r to try to recover data from damaged files. + + + + 2 + + + + + +bzip2(1) bzip2(1) + + + Return values: 0 for a normal exit, 1 for environmental + problems (file not found, invalid flags, I/O errors, &c), + 2 to indicate a corrupt compressed file, 3 for an internal + consistency error (eg, bug) which caused _b_z_i_p_2 to panic. + + +OOPPTTIIOONNSS + --cc ----ssttddoouutt + Compress or decompress to standard output. + + --dd ----ddeeccoommpprreessss + Force decompression. _b_z_i_p_2_, _b_u_n_z_i_p_2 and _b_z_c_a_t are + really the same program, and the decision about + what actions to take is done on the basis of which + name is used. This flag overrides that mechanism, + and forces _b_z_i_p_2 to decompress. + + --zz ----ccoommpprreessss + The complement to -d: forces compression, regard- + less of the invokation name. + + --tt ----tteesstt + Check integrity of the specified file(s), but don't + decompress them. This really performs a trial + decompression and throws away the result. + + --ff ----ffoorrccee + Force overwrite of output files. Normally, _b_z_i_p_2 + will not overwrite existing output files. Also + forces _b_z_i_p_2 to break hard links to files, which it + otherwise wouldn't do. + + --kk ----kkeeeepp + Keep (don't delete) input files during compression + or decompression. + + --ss ----ssmmaallll + Reduce memory usage, for compression, decompression + and testing. Files are decompressed and tested + using a modified algorithm which only requires 2.5 + bytes per block byte. This means any file can be + decompressed in 2300k of memory, albeit at about + half the normal speed. + + During compression, -s selects a block size of + 200k, which limits memory use to around the same + figure, at the expense of your compression ratio. + In short, if your machine is low on memory (8 + megabytes or less), use -s for everything. See + MEMORY MANAGEMENT below. + + --qq ----qquuiieett + Suppress non-essential warning messages. Messages + pertaining to I/O errors and other critical events + + + + 3 + + + + + +bzip2(1) bzip2(1) + + + will not be suppressed. + + --vv ----vveerrbboossee + Verbose mode -- show the compression ratio for each + file processed. Further -v's increase the ver- + bosity level, spewing out lots of information which + is primarily of interest for diagnostic purposes. + + --LL ----lliicceennssee --VV ----vveerrssiioonn + Display the software version, license terms and + conditions. + + --11 ttoo --99 + Set the block size to 100 k, 200 k .. 900 k when + compressing. Has no effect when decompressing. + See MEMORY MANAGEMENT below. + + ---- Treats all subsequent arguments as file names, even + if they start with a dash. This is so you can han- + dle files with names beginning with a dash, for + example: bzip2 -- -myfilename. + + ----rreeppeettiittiivvee--ffaasstt ----rreeppeettiittiivvee--bbeesstt + These flags are redundant in versions 0.9.5 and + above. They provided some coarse control over the + behaviour of the sorting algorithm in earlier ver- + sions, which was sometimes useful. 0.9.5 and above + have an improved algorithm which renders these + flags irrelevant. + + +MMEEMMOORRYY MMAANNAAGGEEMMEENNTT + _b_z_i_p_2 compresses large files in blocks. The block size + affects both the compression ratio achieved, and the + amount of memory needed for compression and decompression. + The flags -1 through -9 specify the block size to be + 100,000 bytes through 900,000 bytes (the default) respec- + tively. At decompression time, the block size used for + compression is read from the header of the compressed + file, and _b_u_n_z_i_p_2 then allocates itself just enough memory + to decompress the file. Since block sizes are stored in + compressed files, it follows that the flags -1 to -9 are + irrelevant to and so ignored during decompression. + + Compression and decompression requirements, in bytes, can + be estimated as: + + Compression: 400k + ( 8 x block size ) + + Decompression: 100k + ( 4 x block size ), or + 100k + ( 2.5 x block size ) + + Larger block sizes give rapidly diminishing marginal + returns. Most of the compression comes from the first two + + + + 4 + + + + + +bzip2(1) bzip2(1) + + + or three hundred k of block size, a fact worth bearing in + mind when using _b_z_i_p_2 on small machines. It is also + important to appreciate that the decompression memory + requirement is set at compression time by the choice of + block size. + + For files compressed with the default 900k block size, + _b_u_n_z_i_p_2 will require about 3700 kbytes to decompress. To + support decompression of any file on a 4 megabyte machine, + _b_u_n_z_i_p_2 has an option to decompress using approximately + half this amount of memory, about 2300 kbytes. Decompres- + sion speed is also halved, so you should use this option + only where necessary. The relevant flag is -s. + + In general, try and use the largest block size memory con- + straints allow, since that maximises the compression + achieved. Compression and decompression speed are virtu- + ally unaffected by block size. + + Another significant point applies to files which fit in a + single block -- that means most files you'd encounter + using a large block size. The amount of real memory + touched is proportional to the size of the file, since the + file is smaller than a block. For example, compressing a + file 20,000 bytes long with the flag -9 will cause the + compressor to allocate around 7600k of memory, but only + touch 400k + 20000 * 8 = 560 kbytes of it. Similarly, the + decompressor will allocate 3700k but only touch 100k + + 20000 * 4 = 180 kbytes. + + Here is a table which summarises the maximum memory usage + for different block sizes. Also recorded is the total + compressed size for 14 files of the Calgary Text Compres- + sion Corpus totalling 3,141,622 bytes. This column gives + some feel for how compression varies with block size. + These figures tend to understate the advantage of larger + block sizes for larger files, since the Corpus is domi- + nated by smaller files. + + Compress Decompress Decompress Corpus + Flag usage usage -s usage Size + + -1 1200k 500k 350k 914704 + -2 2000k 900k 600k 877703 + -3 2800k 1300k 850k 860338 + -4 3600k 1700k 1100k 846899 + -5 4400k 2100k 1350k 845160 + -6 5200k 2500k 1600k 838626 + -7 6100k 2900k 1850k 834096 + -8 6800k 3300k 2100k 828642 + -9 7600k 3700k 2350k 828642 + + + + + + + 5 + + + + + +bzip2(1) bzip2(1) + + +RREECCOOVVEERRIINNGG DDAATTAA FFRROOMM DDAAMMAAGGEEDD FFIILLEESS + _b_z_i_p_2 compresses files in blocks, usually 900kbytes long. + Each block is handled independently. If a media or trans- + mission error causes a multi-block .bz2 file to become + damaged, it may be possible to recover data from the + undamaged blocks in the file. + + The compressed representation of each block is delimited + by a 48-bit pattern, which makes it possible to find the + block boundaries with reasonable certainty. Each block + also carries its own 32-bit CRC, so damaged blocks can be + distinguished from undamaged ones. + + _b_z_i_p_2_r_e_c_o_v_e_r is a simple program whose purpose is to + search for blocks in .bz2 files, and write each block out + into its own .bz2 file. You can then use _b_z_i_p_2 -t to test + the integrity of the resulting files, and decompress those + which are undamaged. + + _b_z_i_p_2_r_e_c_o_v_e_r takes a single argument, the name of the dam- + aged file, and writes a number of files "rec0001file.bz2", + "rec0002file.bz2", etc, containing the extracted blocks. + The output filenames are designed so that the use of + wildcards in subsequent processing -- for example, "bzip2 + -dc rec*file.bz2 > recovered_data" -- lists the files in + the correct order. + + _b_z_i_p_2_r_e_c_o_v_e_r should be of most use dealing with large .bz2 + files, as these will contain many blocks. It is clearly + futile to use it on damaged single-block files, since a + damaged block cannot be recovered. If you wish to min- + imise any potential data loss through media or transmis- + sion errors, you might consider compressing with a smaller + block size. + + +PPEERRFFOORRMMAANNCCEE NNOOTTEESS + The sorting phase of compression gathers together similar + strings in the file. Because of this, files containing + very long runs of repeated symbols, like "aabaabaabaab + ..." (repeated several hundred times) may compress more + slowly than normal. Versions 0.9.5 and above fare much + better than previous versions in this respect. The ratio + between worst-case and average-case compression time is in + the region of 10:1. For previous versions, this figure + was more like 100:1. You can use the -vvvv option to mon- + itor progress in great detail, if you want. + + Decompression speed is unaffected by these phenomena. + + _b_z_i_p_2 usually allocates several megabytes of memory to + operate in, and then charges all over it in a fairly ran- + dom fashion. This means that performance, both for com- + pressing and decompressing, is largely determined by the + + + + 6 + + + + + +bzip2(1) bzip2(1) + + + speed at which your machine can service cache misses. + Because of this, small changes to the code to reduce the + miss rate have been observed to give disproportionately + large performance improvements. I imagine _b_z_i_p_2 will per- + form best on machines with very large caches. + + +CCAAVVEEAATTSS + I/O error messages are not as helpful as they could be. + _b_z_i_p_2 tries hard to detect I/O errors and exit cleanly, + but the details of what the problem is sometimes seem + rather misleading. + + This manual page pertains to version 1.0 of _b_z_i_p_2_. Com- + pressed data created by this version is entirely forwards + and backwards compatible with the previous public + releases, versions 0.1pl2, 0.9.0 and 0.9.5, but with the + following exception: 0.9.0 and above can correctly decom- + press multiple concatenated compressed files. 0.1pl2 can- + not do this; it will stop after decompressing just the + first file in the stream. + + _b_z_i_p_2_r_e_c_o_v_e_r uses 32-bit integers to represent bit posi- + tions in compressed files, so it cannot handle compressed + files more than 512 megabytes long. This could easily be + fixed. + + +AAUUTTHHOORR + Julian Seward, jseward@acm.org. + + http://sourceware.cygnus.com/bzip2 + http://www.muraroa.demon.co.uk + + The ideas embodied in _b_z_i_p_2 are due to (at least) the fol- + lowing people: Michael Burrows and David Wheeler (for the + block sorting transformation), David Wheeler (again, for + the Huffman coder), Peter Fenwick (for the structured cod- + ing model in the original _b_z_i_p_, and many refinements), and + Alistair Moffat, Radford Neal and Ian Witten (for the + arithmetic coder in the original _b_z_i_p_)_. I am much + indebted for their help, support and advice. See the man- + ual in the source distribution for pointers to sources of + documentation. Christian von Roques encouraged me to look + for faster sorting algorithms, so as to speed up compres- + sion. Bela Lubkin encouraged me to improve the worst-case + compression performance. Many people sent patches, helped + with portability problems, lent machines, gave advice and + were generally helpful. + + + + + + + + + 7 + + diff --git a/bzip2/bzip2.c b/bzip2/bzip2.c new file mode 100644 index 000000000..56adfdcbc --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/bzip2.c @@ -0,0 +1,2044 @@ + +/*-----------------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- A block-sorting, lossless compressor bzip2.c ---*/ +/*-----------------------------------------------------------*/ + +/*-- + This file is a part of bzip2 and/or libbzip2, a program and + library for lossless, block-sorting data compression. + + Copyright (C) 1996-2000 Julian R Seward. All rights reserved. + + Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without + modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions + are met: + + 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright + notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. + + 2. The origin of this software must not be misrepresented; you must + not claim that you wrote the original software. If you use this + software in a product, an acknowledgment in the product + documentation would be appreciated but is not required. + + 3. Altered source versions must be plainly marked as such, and must + not be misrepresented as being the original software. + + 4. The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote + products derived from this software without specific prior written + permission. + + THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS + OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED + WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE + ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY + DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL + DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE + GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS + INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, + WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING + NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS + SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. + + Julian Seward, Cambridge, UK. + jseward@acm.org + bzip2/libbzip2 version 1.0 of 21 March 2000 + + This program is based on (at least) the work of: + Mike Burrows + David Wheeler + Peter Fenwick + Alistair Moffat + Radford Neal + Ian H. Witten + Robert Sedgewick + Jon L. Bentley + + For more information on these sources, see the manual. +--*/ + + +/*----------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- IMPORTANT ---*/ +/*----------------------------------------------------*/ + +/*-- + WARNING: + This program and library (attempts to) compress data by + performing several non-trivial transformations on it. + Unless you are 100% familiar with *all* the algorithms + contained herein, and with the consequences of modifying them, + you should NOT meddle with the compression or decompression + machinery. Incorrect changes can and very likely *will* + lead to disasterous loss of data. + + DISCLAIMER: + I TAKE NO RESPONSIBILITY FOR ANY LOSS OF DATA ARISING FROM THE + USE OF THIS PROGRAM, HOWSOEVER CAUSED. + + Every compression of a file implies an assumption that the + compressed file can be decompressed to reproduce the original. + Great efforts in design, coding and testing have been made to + ensure that this program works correctly. However, the + complexity of the algorithms, and, in particular, the presence + of various special cases in the code which occur with very low + but non-zero probability make it impossible to rule out the + possibility of bugs remaining in the program. DO NOT COMPRESS + ANY DATA WITH THIS PROGRAM AND/OR LIBRARY UNLESS YOU ARE PREPARED + TO ACCEPT THE POSSIBILITY, HOWEVER SMALL, THAT THE DATA WILL + NOT BE RECOVERABLE. + + That is not to say this program is inherently unreliable. + Indeed, I very much hope the opposite is true. bzip2/libbzip2 + has been carefully constructed and extensively tested. + + PATENTS: + To the best of my knowledge, bzip2/libbzip2 does not use any + patented algorithms. However, I do not have the resources + available to carry out a full patent search. Therefore I cannot + give any guarantee of the above statement. +--*/ + + + +/*----------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- and now for something much more pleasant :-) ---*/ +/*----------------------------------------------------*/ + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +/*-- + Place a 1 beside your platform, and 0 elsewhere. +--*/ + +/*-- + Generic 32-bit Unix. + Also works on 64-bit Unix boxes. +--*/ +#define BZ_UNIX 1 + +/*-- + Win32, as seen by Jacob Navia's excellent + port of (Chris Fraser & David Hanson)'s excellent + lcc compiler. +--*/ +#define BZ_LCCWIN32 0 + +#if defined(_WIN32) && !defined(__CYGWIN__) +#undef BZ_LCCWIN32 +#define BZ_LCCWIN32 1 +#undef BZ_UNIX +#define BZ_UNIX 0 +#endif + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +/*-- + Some stuff for all platforms. +--*/ + +#include <stdio.h> +#include <stdlib.h> +#include <string.h> +#include <signal.h> +#include <math.h> +#include <errno.h> +#include <ctype.h> +#include "bzlib.h" + +#define ERROR_IF_EOF(i) { if ((i) == EOF) ioError(); } +#define ERROR_IF_NOT_ZERO(i) { if ((i) != 0) ioError(); } +#define ERROR_IF_MINUS_ONE(i) { if ((i) == (-1)) ioError(); } + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +/*-- + Platform-specific stuff. +--*/ + +#if BZ_UNIX +# include <sys/types.h> +# include <utime.h> +# include <unistd.h> +# include <sys/stat.h> +# include <sys/times.h> + +# define PATH_SEP '/' +# define MY_LSTAT lstat +# define MY_S_IFREG S_ISREG +# define MY_STAT stat + +# define APPEND_FILESPEC(root, name) \ + root=snocString((root), (name)) + +# define APPEND_FLAG(root, name) \ + root=snocString((root), (name)) + +# define SET_BINARY_MODE(fd) /**/ + +# ifdef __GNUC__ +# define NORETURN __attribute__ ((noreturn)) +# else +# define NORETURN /**/ +# endif +# ifdef __DJGPP__ +# include <io.h> +# include <fcntl.h> +# undef MY_LSTAT +# define MY_LSTAT stat +# undef SET_BINARY_MODE +# define SET_BINARY_MODE(fd) \ + do { \ + int retVal = setmode ( fileno ( fd ), \ + O_BINARY ); \ + ERROR_IF_MINUS_ONE ( retVal ); \ + } while ( 0 ) +# endif +# ifdef __CYGWIN__ +# include <io.h> +# include <fcntl.h> +# undef SET_BINARY_MODE +# define SET_BINARY_MODE(fd) \ + do { \ + int retVal = setmode ( fileno ( fd ), \ + O_BINARY ); \ + ERROR_IF_MINUS_ONE ( retVal ); \ + } while ( 0 ) +# endif +#endif + + + +#if BZ_LCCWIN32 +# include <io.h> +# include <fcntl.h> +# include <sys\stat.h> + +# define NORETURN /**/ +# define PATH_SEP '\\' +# define MY_LSTAT _stat +# define MY_STAT _stat +# define MY_S_IFREG(x) ((x) & _S_IFREG) + +# define APPEND_FLAG(root, name) \ + root=snocString((root), (name)) + +# if 0 + /*-- lcc-win32 seems to expand wildcards itself --*/ +# define APPEND_FILESPEC(root, spec) \ + do { \ + if ((spec)[0] == '-') { \ + root = snocString((root), (spec)); \ + } else { \ + struct _finddata_t c_file; \ + long hFile; \ + hFile = _findfirst((spec), &c_file); \ + if ( hFile == -1L ) { \ + root = snocString ((root), (spec)); \ + } else { \ + int anInt = 0; \ + while ( anInt == 0 ) { \ + root = snocString((root), \ + &c_file.name[0]); \ + anInt = _findnext(hFile, &c_file); \ + } \ + } \ + } \ + } while ( 0 ) +# else +# define APPEND_FILESPEC(root, name) \ + root = snocString ((root), (name)) +# endif + +# define SET_BINARY_MODE(fd) \ + do { \ + int retVal = setmode ( fileno ( fd ), \ + O_BINARY ); \ + ERROR_IF_MINUS_ONE ( retVal ); \ + } while ( 0 ) + +#endif + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +/*-- + Some more stuff for all platforms :-) +--*/ + +typedef char Char; +typedef unsigned char Bool; +typedef unsigned char UChar; +typedef int Int32; +typedef unsigned int UInt32; +typedef short Int16; +typedef unsigned short UInt16; + +#define True ((Bool)1) +#define False ((Bool)0) + +/*-- + IntNative is your platform's `native' int size. + Only here to avoid probs with 64-bit platforms. +--*/ +typedef int IntNative; + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- Misc (file handling) data decls ---*/ +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ + +Int32 verbosity; +Bool keepInputFiles, smallMode, deleteOutputOnInterrupt; +Bool forceOverwrite, testFailsExist, unzFailsExist, noisy; +Int32 numFileNames, numFilesProcessed, blockSize100k; +Int32 exitValue; + +/*-- source modes; F==file, I==stdin, O==stdout --*/ +#define SM_I2O 1 +#define SM_F2O 2 +#define SM_F2F 3 + +/*-- operation modes --*/ +#define OM_Z 1 +#define OM_UNZ 2 +#define OM_TEST 3 + +Int32 opMode; +Int32 srcMode; + +#define FILE_NAME_LEN 1034 + +Int32 longestFileName; +Char inName [FILE_NAME_LEN]; +Char outName[FILE_NAME_LEN]; +Char tmpName[FILE_NAME_LEN]; +Char *progName; +Char progNameReally[FILE_NAME_LEN]; +FILE *outputHandleJustInCase; +Int32 workFactor; + +static void panic ( Char* ) NORETURN; +static void ioError ( void ) NORETURN; +static void outOfMemory ( void ) NORETURN; +static void configError ( void ) NORETURN; +static void crcError ( void ) NORETURN; +static void cleanUpAndFail ( Int32 ) NORETURN; +static void compressedStreamEOF ( void ) NORETURN; + +static void copyFileName ( Char*, Char* ); +static void* myMalloc ( Int32 ); + + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- An implementation of 64-bit ints. Sigh. ---*/ +/*--- Roll on widespread deployment of ANSI C9X ! ---*/ +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ + +typedef + struct { UChar b[8]; } + UInt64; + +static +void uInt64_from_UInt32s ( UInt64* n, UInt32 lo32, UInt32 hi32 ) +{ + n->b[7] = (UChar)((hi32 >> 24) & 0xFF); + n->b[6] = (UChar)((hi32 >> 16) & 0xFF); + n->b[5] = (UChar)((hi32 >> 8) & 0xFF); + n->b[4] = (UChar) (hi32 & 0xFF); + n->b[3] = (UChar)((lo32 >> 24) & 0xFF); + n->b[2] = (UChar)((lo32 >> 16) & 0xFF); + n->b[1] = (UChar)((lo32 >> 8) & 0xFF); + n->b[0] = (UChar) (lo32 & 0xFF); +} + +static +double uInt64_to_double ( UInt64* n ) +{ + Int32 i; + double base = 1.0; + double sum = 0.0; + for (i = 0; i < 8; i++) { + sum += base * (double)(n->b[i]); + base *= 256.0; + } + return sum; +} + +static +void uInt64_add ( UInt64* src, UInt64* dst ) +{ + Int32 i; + Int32 carry = 0; + for (i = 0; i < 8; i++) { + carry += ( ((Int32)src->b[i]) + ((Int32)dst->b[i]) ); + dst->b[i] = (UChar)(carry & 0xFF); + carry >>= 8; + } +} + +static +void uInt64_sub ( UInt64* src, UInt64* dst ) +{ + Int32 t, i; + Int32 borrow = 0; + for (i = 0; i < 8; i++) { + t = ((Int32)dst->b[i]) - ((Int32)src->b[i]) - borrow; + if (t < 0) { + dst->b[i] = (UChar)(t + 256); + borrow = 1; + } else { + dst->b[i] = (UChar)t; + borrow = 0; + } + } +} + +static +void uInt64_mul ( UInt64* a, UInt64* b, UInt64* r_hi, UInt64* r_lo ) +{ + UChar sum[16]; + Int32 ia, ib, carry; + for (ia = 0; ia < 16; ia++) sum[ia] = 0; + for (ia = 0; ia < 8; ia++) { + carry = 0; + for (ib = 0; ib < 8; ib++) { + carry += ( ((Int32)sum[ia+ib]) + + ((Int32)a->b[ia]) * ((Int32)b->b[ib]) ); + sum[ia+ib] = (UChar)(carry & 0xFF); + carry >>= 8; + } + sum[ia+8] = (UChar)(carry & 0xFF); + if ((carry >>= 8) != 0) panic ( "uInt64_mul" ); + } + + for (ia = 0; ia < 8; ia++) r_hi->b[ia] = sum[ia+8]; + for (ia = 0; ia < 8; ia++) r_lo->b[ia] = sum[ia]; +} + + +static +void uInt64_shr1 ( UInt64* n ) +{ + Int32 i; + for (i = 0; i < 8; i++) { + n->b[i] >>= 1; + if (i < 7 && (n->b[i+1] & 1)) n->b[i] |= 0x80; + } +} + +static +void uInt64_shl1 ( UInt64* n ) +{ + Int32 i; + for (i = 7; i >= 0; i--) { + n->b[i] <<= 1; + if (i > 0 && (n->b[i-1] & 0x80)) n->b[i]++; + } +} + +static +Bool uInt64_isZero ( UInt64* n ) +{ + Int32 i; + for (i = 0; i < 8; i++) + if (n->b[i] != 0) return 0; + return 1; +} + +static +Int32 uInt64_qrm10 ( UInt64* n ) +{ + /* Divide *n by 10, and return the remainder. Long division + is difficult, so we cheat and instead multiply by + 0xCCCC CCCC CCCC CCCD, which is 0.8 (viz, 0.1 << 3). + */ + Int32 i; + UInt64 tmp1, tmp2, n_orig, zero_point_eight; + + zero_point_eight.b[1] = zero_point_eight.b[2] = + zero_point_eight.b[3] = zero_point_eight.b[4] = + zero_point_eight.b[5] = zero_point_eight.b[6] = + zero_point_eight.b[7] = 0xCC; + zero_point_eight.b[0] = 0xCD; + + n_orig = *n; + + /* divide n by 10, + by multiplying by 0.8 and then shifting right 3 times */ + uInt64_mul ( n, &zero_point_eight, &tmp1, &tmp2 ); + uInt64_shr1(&tmp1); uInt64_shr1(&tmp1); uInt64_shr1(&tmp1); + *n = tmp1; + + /* tmp1 = 8*n, tmp2 = 2*n */ + uInt64_shl1(&tmp1); uInt64_shl1(&tmp1); uInt64_shl1(&tmp1); + tmp2 = *n; uInt64_shl1(&tmp2); + + /* tmp1 = 10*n */ + uInt64_add ( &tmp2, &tmp1 ); + + /* n_orig = n_orig - 10*n */ + uInt64_sub ( &tmp1, &n_orig ); + + /* n_orig should now hold quotient, in range 0 .. 9 */ + for (i = 7; i >= 1; i--) + if (n_orig.b[i] != 0) panic ( "uInt64_qrm10(1)" ); + if (n_orig.b[0] > 9) + panic ( "uInt64_qrm10(2)" ); + + return (int)n_orig.b[0]; +} + +/* ... and the Whole Entire Point of all this UInt64 stuff is + so that we can supply the following function. +*/ +static +void uInt64_toAscii ( char* outbuf, UInt64* n ) +{ + Int32 i, q; + UChar buf[32]; + Int32 nBuf = 0; + UInt64 n_copy = *n; + do { + q = uInt64_qrm10 ( &n_copy ); + buf[nBuf] = q + '0'; + nBuf++; + } while (!uInt64_isZero(&n_copy)); + outbuf[nBuf] = 0; + for (i = 0; i < nBuf; i++) outbuf[i] = buf[nBuf-i-1]; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- Processing of complete files and streams ---*/ +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +Bool myfeof ( FILE* f ) +{ + Int32 c = fgetc ( f ); + if (c == EOF) return True; + ungetc ( c, f ); + return False; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +void compressStream ( FILE *stream, FILE *zStream ) +{ + BZFILE* bzf = NULL; + UChar ibuf[5000]; + Int32 nIbuf; + UInt32 nbytes_in_lo32, nbytes_in_hi32; + UInt32 nbytes_out_lo32, nbytes_out_hi32; + Int32 bzerr, bzerr_dummy, ret; + + SET_BINARY_MODE(stream); + SET_BINARY_MODE(zStream); + + if (ferror(stream)) goto errhandler_io; + if (ferror(zStream)) goto errhandler_io; + + bzf = BZ2_bzWriteOpen ( &bzerr, zStream, + blockSize100k, verbosity, workFactor ); + if (bzerr != BZ_OK) goto errhandler; + + if (verbosity >= 2) fprintf ( stderr, "\n" ); + + while (True) { + + if (myfeof(stream)) break; + nIbuf = fread ( ibuf, sizeof(UChar), 5000, stream ); + if (ferror(stream)) goto errhandler_io; + if (nIbuf > 0) BZ2_bzWrite ( &bzerr, bzf, (void*)ibuf, nIbuf ); + if (bzerr != BZ_OK) goto errhandler; + + } + + BZ2_bzWriteClose64 ( &bzerr, bzf, 0, + &nbytes_in_lo32, &nbytes_in_hi32, + &nbytes_out_lo32, &nbytes_out_hi32 ); + if (bzerr != BZ_OK) goto errhandler; + + if (ferror(zStream)) goto errhandler_io; + ret = fflush ( zStream ); + if (ret == EOF) goto errhandler_io; + if (zStream != stdout) { + ret = fclose ( zStream ); + if (ret == EOF) goto errhandler_io; + } + if (ferror(stream)) goto errhandler_io; + ret = fclose ( stream ); + if (ret == EOF) goto errhandler_io; + + if (nbytes_in_lo32 == 0 && nbytes_in_hi32 == 0) + nbytes_in_lo32 = 1; + + if (verbosity >= 1) { + Char buf_nin[32], buf_nout[32]; + UInt64 nbytes_in, nbytes_out; + double nbytes_in_d, nbytes_out_d; + uInt64_from_UInt32s ( &nbytes_in, + nbytes_in_lo32, nbytes_in_hi32 ); + uInt64_from_UInt32s ( &nbytes_out, + nbytes_out_lo32, nbytes_out_hi32 ); + nbytes_in_d = uInt64_to_double ( &nbytes_in ); + nbytes_out_d = uInt64_to_double ( &nbytes_out ); + uInt64_toAscii ( buf_nin, &nbytes_in ); + uInt64_toAscii ( buf_nout, &nbytes_out ); + fprintf ( stderr, "%6.3f:1, %6.3f bits/byte, " + "%5.2f%% saved, %s in, %s out.\n", + nbytes_in_d / nbytes_out_d, + (8.0 * nbytes_out_d) / nbytes_in_d, + 100.0 * (1.0 - nbytes_out_d / nbytes_in_d), + buf_nin, + buf_nout + ); + } + + return; + + errhandler: + BZ2_bzWriteClose64 ( &bzerr_dummy, bzf, 1, + &nbytes_in_lo32, &nbytes_in_hi32, + &nbytes_out_lo32, &nbytes_out_hi32 ); + switch (bzerr) { + case BZ_CONFIG_ERROR: + configError(); break; + case BZ_MEM_ERROR: + outOfMemory (); break; + case BZ_IO_ERROR: + errhandler_io: + ioError(); break; + default: + panic ( "compress:unexpected error" ); + } + + panic ( "compress:end" ); + /*notreached*/ +} + + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +Bool uncompressStream ( FILE *zStream, FILE *stream ) +{ + BZFILE* bzf = NULL; + Int32 bzerr, bzerr_dummy, ret, nread, streamNo, i; + UChar obuf[5000]; + UChar unused[BZ_MAX_UNUSED]; + Int32 nUnused; + UChar* unusedTmp; + + nUnused = 0; + streamNo = 0; + + SET_BINARY_MODE(stream); + SET_BINARY_MODE(zStream); + + if (ferror(stream)) goto errhandler_io; + if (ferror(zStream)) goto errhandler_io; + + while (True) { + + bzf = BZ2_bzReadOpen ( + &bzerr, zStream, verbosity, + (int)smallMode, unused, nUnused + ); + if (bzf == NULL || bzerr != BZ_OK) goto errhandler; + streamNo++; + + while (bzerr == BZ_OK) { + nread = BZ2_bzRead ( &bzerr, bzf, obuf, 5000 ); + if (bzerr == BZ_DATA_ERROR_MAGIC) goto errhandler; + if ((bzerr == BZ_OK || bzerr == BZ_STREAM_END) && nread > 0) + fwrite ( obuf, sizeof(UChar), nread, stream ); + if (ferror(stream)) goto errhandler_io; + } + if (bzerr != BZ_STREAM_END) goto errhandler; + + BZ2_bzReadGetUnused ( &bzerr, bzf, (void**)(&unusedTmp), &nUnused ); + if (bzerr != BZ_OK) panic ( "decompress:bzReadGetUnused" ); + + for (i = 0; i < nUnused; i++) unused[i] = unusedTmp[i]; + + BZ2_bzReadClose ( &bzerr, bzf ); + if (bzerr != BZ_OK) panic ( "decompress:bzReadGetUnused" ); + + if (nUnused == 0 && myfeof(zStream)) break; + + } + + if (ferror(zStream)) goto errhandler_io; + ret = fclose ( zStream ); + if (ret == EOF) goto errhandler_io; + + if (ferror(stream)) goto errhandler_io; + ret = fflush ( stream ); + if (ret != 0) goto errhandler_io; + if (stream != stdout) { + ret = fclose ( stream ); + if (ret == EOF) goto errhandler_io; + } + if (verbosity >= 2) fprintf ( stderr, "\n " ); + return True; + + errhandler: + BZ2_bzReadClose ( &bzerr_dummy, bzf ); + switch (bzerr) { + case BZ_CONFIG_ERROR: + configError(); break; + case BZ_IO_ERROR: + errhandler_io: + ioError(); break; + case BZ_DATA_ERROR: + crcError(); + case BZ_MEM_ERROR: + outOfMemory(); + case BZ_UNEXPECTED_EOF: + compressedStreamEOF(); + case BZ_DATA_ERROR_MAGIC: + if (zStream != stdin) fclose(zStream); + if (stream != stdout) fclose(stream); + if (streamNo == 1) { + return False; + } else { + if (noisy) + fprintf ( stderr, + "\n%s: %s: trailing garbage after EOF ignored\n", + progName, inName ); + return True; + } + default: + panic ( "decompress:unexpected error" ); + } + + panic ( "decompress:end" ); + return True; /*notreached*/ +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +Bool testStream ( FILE *zStream ) +{ + BZFILE* bzf = NULL; + Int32 bzerr, bzerr_dummy, ret, nread, streamNo, i; + UChar obuf[5000]; + UChar unused[BZ_MAX_UNUSED]; + Int32 nUnused; + UChar* unusedTmp; + + nUnused = 0; + streamNo = 0; + + SET_BINARY_MODE(zStream); + if (ferror(zStream)) goto errhandler_io; + + while (True) { + + bzf = BZ2_bzReadOpen ( + &bzerr, zStream, verbosity, + (int)smallMode, unused, nUnused + ); + if (bzf == NULL || bzerr != BZ_OK) goto errhandler; + streamNo++; + + while (bzerr == BZ_OK) { + nread = BZ2_bzRead ( &bzerr, bzf, obuf, 5000 ); + if (bzerr == BZ_DATA_ERROR_MAGIC) goto errhandler; + } + if (bzerr != BZ_STREAM_END) goto errhandler; + + BZ2_bzReadGetUnused ( &bzerr, bzf, (void**)(&unusedTmp), &nUnused ); + if (bzerr != BZ_OK) panic ( "test:bzReadGetUnused" ); + + for (i = 0; i < nUnused; i++) unused[i] = unusedTmp[i]; + + BZ2_bzReadClose ( &bzerr, bzf ); + if (bzerr != BZ_OK) panic ( "test:bzReadGetUnused" ); + if (nUnused == 0 && myfeof(zStream)) break; + + } + + if (ferror(zStream)) goto errhandler_io; + ret = fclose ( zStream ); + if (ret == EOF) goto errhandler_io; + + if (verbosity >= 2) fprintf ( stderr, "\n " ); + return True; + + errhandler: + BZ2_bzReadClose ( &bzerr_dummy, bzf ); + if (verbosity == 0) + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: %s: ", progName, inName ); + switch (bzerr) { + case BZ_CONFIG_ERROR: + configError(); break; + case BZ_IO_ERROR: + errhandler_io: + ioError(); break; + case BZ_DATA_ERROR: + fprintf ( stderr, + "data integrity (CRC) error in data\n" ); + return False; + case BZ_MEM_ERROR: + outOfMemory(); + case BZ_UNEXPECTED_EOF: + fprintf ( stderr, + "file ends unexpectedly\n" ); + return False; + case BZ_DATA_ERROR_MAGIC: + if (zStream != stdin) fclose(zStream); + if (streamNo == 1) { + fprintf ( stderr, + "bad magic number (file not created by bzip2)\n" ); + return False; + } else { + if (noisy) + fprintf ( stderr, + "trailing garbage after EOF ignored\n" ); + return True; + } + default: + panic ( "test:unexpected error" ); + } + + panic ( "test:end" ); + return True; /*notreached*/ +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- Error [non-] handling grunge ---*/ +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +void setExit ( Int32 v ) +{ + if (v > exitValue) exitValue = v; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +void cadvise ( void ) +{ + if (noisy) + fprintf ( + stderr, + "\nIt is possible that the compressed file(s) have become corrupted.\n" + "You can use the -tvv option to test integrity of such files.\n\n" + "You can use the `bzip2recover' program to *attempt* to recover\n" + "data from undamaged sections of corrupted files.\n\n" + ); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +void showFileNames ( void ) +{ + if (noisy) + fprintf ( + stderr, + "\tInput file = %s, output file = %s\n", + inName, outName + ); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +void cleanUpAndFail ( Int32 ec ) +{ + IntNative retVal; + + if ( srcMode == SM_F2F + && opMode != OM_TEST + && deleteOutputOnInterrupt ) { + if (noisy) + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: Deleting output file %s, if it exists.\n", + progName, outName ); + if (outputHandleJustInCase != NULL) + fclose ( outputHandleJustInCase ); + retVal = remove ( outName ); + if (retVal != 0) + fprintf ( stderr, + "%s: WARNING: deletion of output file (apparently) failed.\n", + progName ); + } + if (noisy && numFileNames > 0 && numFilesProcessed < numFileNames) { + fprintf ( stderr, + "%s: WARNING: some files have not been processed:\n" + "\t%d specified on command line, %d not processed yet.\n\n", + progName, numFileNames, + numFileNames - numFilesProcessed ); + } + setExit(ec); + exit(exitValue); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +void panic ( Char* s ) +{ + fprintf ( stderr, + "\n%s: PANIC -- internal consistency error:\n" + "\t%s\n" + "\tThis is a BUG. Please report it to me at:\n" + "\tjseward@acm.org\n", + progName, s ); + showFileNames(); + cleanUpAndFail( 3 ); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +void crcError ( void ) +{ + fprintf ( stderr, + "\n%s: Data integrity error when decompressing.\n", + progName ); + showFileNames(); + cadvise(); + cleanUpAndFail( 2 ); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +void compressedStreamEOF ( void ) +{ + fprintf ( stderr, + "\n%s: Compressed file ends unexpectedly;\n\t" + "perhaps it is corrupted? *Possible* reason follows.\n", + progName ); + perror ( progName ); + showFileNames(); + cadvise(); + cleanUpAndFail( 2 ); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +void ioError ( void ) +{ + fprintf ( stderr, + "\n%s: I/O or other error, bailing out. " + "Possible reason follows.\n", + progName ); + perror ( progName ); + showFileNames(); + cleanUpAndFail( 1 ); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +void mySignalCatcher ( IntNative n ) +{ + fprintf ( stderr, + "\n%s: Control-C or similar caught, quitting.\n", + progName ); + cleanUpAndFail(1); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +void mySIGSEGVorSIGBUScatcher ( IntNative n ) +{ + if (opMode == OM_Z) + fprintf ( + stderr, + "\n%s: Caught a SIGSEGV or SIGBUS whilst compressing.\n" + "\n" + " Possible causes are (most likely first):\n" + " (1) This computer has unreliable memory or cache hardware\n" + " (a surprisingly common problem; try a different machine.)\n" + " (2) A bug in the compiler used to create this executable\n" + " (unlikely, if you didn't compile bzip2 yourself.)\n" + " (3) A real bug in bzip2 -- I hope this should never be the case.\n" + " The user's manual, Section 4.3, has more info on (1) and (2).\n" + " \n" + " If you suspect this is a bug in bzip2, or are unsure about (1)\n" + " or (2), feel free to report it to me at: jseward@acm.org.\n" + " Section 4.3 of the user's manual describes the info a useful\n" + " bug report should have. If the manual is available on your\n" + " system, please try and read it before mailing me. If you don't\n" + " have the manual or can't be bothered to read it, mail me anyway.\n" + "\n", + progName ); + else + fprintf ( + stderr, + "\n%s: Caught a SIGSEGV or SIGBUS whilst decompressing.\n" + "\n" + " Possible causes are (most likely first):\n" + " (1) The compressed data is corrupted, and bzip2's usual checks\n" + " failed to detect this. Try bzip2 -tvv my_file.bz2.\n" + " (2) This computer has unreliable memory or cache hardware\n" + " (a surprisingly common problem; try a different machine.)\n" + " (3) A bug in the compiler used to create this executable\n" + " (unlikely, if you didn't compile bzip2 yourself.)\n" + " (4) A real bug in bzip2 -- I hope this should never be the case.\n" + " The user's manual, Section 4.3, has more info on (2) and (3).\n" + " \n" + " If you suspect this is a bug in bzip2, or are unsure about (2)\n" + " or (3), feel free to report it to me at: jseward@acm.org.\n" + " Section 4.3 of the user's manual describes the info a useful\n" + " bug report should have. If the manual is available on your\n" + " system, please try and read it before mailing me. If you don't\n" + " have the manual or can't be bothered to read it, mail me anyway.\n" + "\n", + progName ); + + showFileNames(); + if (opMode == OM_Z) + cleanUpAndFail( 3 ); else + { cadvise(); cleanUpAndFail( 2 ); } +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +void outOfMemory ( void ) +{ + fprintf ( stderr, + "\n%s: couldn't allocate enough memory\n", + progName ); + showFileNames(); + cleanUpAndFail(1); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +void configError ( void ) +{ + fprintf ( stderr, + "bzip2: I'm not configured correctly for this platform!\n" + "\tI require Int32, Int16 and Char to have sizes\n" + "\tof 4, 2 and 1 bytes to run properly, and they don't.\n" + "\tProbably you can fix this by defining them correctly,\n" + "\tand recompiling. Bye!\n" ); + setExit(3); + exit(exitValue); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- The main driver machinery ---*/ +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +void pad ( Char *s ) +{ + Int32 i; + if ( (Int32)strlen(s) >= longestFileName ) return; + for (i = 1; i <= longestFileName - (Int32)strlen(s); i++) + fprintf ( stderr, " " ); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +void copyFileName ( Char* to, Char* from ) +{ + if ( strlen(from) > FILE_NAME_LEN-10 ) { + fprintf ( + stderr, + "bzip2: file name\n`%s'\n" + "is suspiciously (more than %d chars) long.\n" + "Try using a reasonable file name instead. Sorry! :-)\n", + from, FILE_NAME_LEN-10 + ); + setExit(1); + exit(exitValue); + } + + strncpy(to,from,FILE_NAME_LEN-10); + to[FILE_NAME_LEN-10]='\0'; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +Bool fileExists ( Char* name ) +{ + FILE *tmp = fopen ( name, "rb" ); + Bool exists = (tmp != NULL); + if (tmp != NULL) fclose ( tmp ); + return exists; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +/*-- + if in doubt, return True +--*/ +static +Bool notAStandardFile ( Char* name ) +{ + IntNative i; + struct MY_STAT statBuf; + + i = MY_LSTAT ( name, &statBuf ); + if (i != 0) return True; + if (MY_S_IFREG(statBuf.st_mode)) return False; + return True; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +/*-- + rac 11/21/98 see if file has hard links to it +--*/ +static +Int32 countHardLinks ( Char* name ) +{ + IntNative i; + struct MY_STAT statBuf; + + i = MY_LSTAT ( name, &statBuf ); + if (i != 0) return 0; + return (statBuf.st_nlink - 1); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +void copyDatePermissionsAndOwner ( Char *srcName, Char *dstName ) +{ +#if BZ_UNIX + IntNative retVal; + struct MY_STAT statBuf; + struct utimbuf uTimBuf; + + retVal = MY_LSTAT ( srcName, &statBuf ); + ERROR_IF_NOT_ZERO ( retVal ); + uTimBuf.actime = statBuf.st_atime; + uTimBuf.modtime = statBuf.st_mtime; + + retVal = chmod ( dstName, statBuf.st_mode ); + ERROR_IF_NOT_ZERO ( retVal ); + + retVal = utime ( dstName, &uTimBuf ); + ERROR_IF_NOT_ZERO ( retVal ); + + retVal = chown ( dstName, statBuf.st_uid, statBuf.st_gid ); + /* chown() will in many cases return with EPERM, which can + be safely ignored. + */ +#endif +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +void setInterimPermissions ( Char *dstName ) +{ +#if BZ_UNIX + IntNative retVal; + retVal = chmod ( dstName, S_IRUSR | S_IWUSR ); + ERROR_IF_NOT_ZERO ( retVal ); +#endif +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +Bool containsDubiousChars ( Char* name ) +{ + Bool cdc = False; + for (; *name != '\0'; name++) + if (*name == '?' || *name == '*') cdc = True; + return cdc; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +#define BZ_N_SUFFIX_PAIRS 4 + +Char* zSuffix[BZ_N_SUFFIX_PAIRS] + = { ".bz2", ".bz", ".tbz2", ".tbz" }; +Char* unzSuffix[BZ_N_SUFFIX_PAIRS] + = { "", "", ".tar", ".tar" }; + +static +Bool hasSuffix ( Char* s, Char* suffix ) +{ + Int32 ns = strlen(s); + Int32 nx = strlen(suffix); + if (ns < nx) return False; + if (strcmp(s + ns - nx, suffix) == 0) return True; + return False; +} + +static +Bool mapSuffix ( Char* name, + Char* oldSuffix, Char* newSuffix ) +{ + if (!hasSuffix(name,oldSuffix)) return False; + name[strlen(name)-strlen(oldSuffix)] = 0; + strcat ( name, newSuffix ); + return True; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +void compress ( Char *name ) +{ + FILE *inStr; + FILE *outStr; + Int32 n, i; + + deleteOutputOnInterrupt = False; + + if (name == NULL && srcMode != SM_I2O) + panic ( "compress: bad modes\n" ); + + switch (srcMode) { + case SM_I2O: + copyFileName ( inName, "(stdin)" ); + copyFileName ( outName, "(stdout)" ); + break; + case SM_F2F: + copyFileName ( inName, name ); + copyFileName ( outName, name ); + strcat ( outName, ".bz2" ); + break; + case SM_F2O: + copyFileName ( inName, name ); + copyFileName ( outName, "(stdout)" ); + break; + } + + if ( srcMode != SM_I2O && containsDubiousChars ( inName ) ) { + if (noisy) + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: There are no files matching `%s'.\n", + progName, inName ); + setExit(1); + return; + } + if ( srcMode != SM_I2O && !fileExists ( inName ) ) { + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: Can't open input file %s: %s.\n", + progName, inName, strerror(errno) ); + setExit(1); + return; + } + for (i = 0; i < BZ_N_SUFFIX_PAIRS; i++) { + if (hasSuffix(inName, zSuffix[i])) { + if (noisy) + fprintf ( stderr, + "%s: Input file %s already has %s suffix.\n", + progName, inName, zSuffix[i] ); + setExit(1); + return; + } + } + if ( srcMode == SM_F2F && !forceOverwrite && notAStandardFile ( inName )) { + if (noisy) + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: Input file %s is not a normal file.\n", + progName, inName ); + setExit(1); + return; + } + if ( srcMode == SM_F2F && !forceOverwrite && fileExists ( outName ) ) { + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: Output file %s already exists.\n", + progName, outName ); + setExit(1); + return; + } + if ( srcMode == SM_F2F && !forceOverwrite && + (n=countHardLinks ( inName )) > 0) { + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: Input file %s has %d other link%s.\n", + progName, inName, n, n > 1 ? "s" : "" ); + setExit(1); + return; + } + + switch ( srcMode ) { + + case SM_I2O: + inStr = stdin; + outStr = stdout; + if ( isatty ( fileno ( stdout ) ) ) { + fprintf ( stderr, + "%s: I won't write compressed data to a terminal.\n", + progName ); + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: For help, type: `%s --help'.\n", + progName, progName ); + setExit(1); + return; + }; + break; + + case SM_F2O: + inStr = fopen ( inName, "rb" ); + outStr = stdout; + if ( isatty ( fileno ( stdout ) ) ) { + fprintf ( stderr, + "%s: I won't write compressed data to a terminal.\n", + progName ); + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: For help, type: `%s --help'.\n", + progName, progName ); + if ( inStr != NULL ) fclose ( inStr ); + setExit(1); + return; + }; + if ( inStr == NULL ) { + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: Can't open input file %s: %s.\n", + progName, inName, strerror(errno) ); + setExit(1); + return; + }; + break; + + case SM_F2F: + inStr = fopen ( inName, "rb" ); + outStr = fopen ( outName, "wb" ); + if ( outStr == NULL) { + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: Can't create output file %s: %s.\n", + progName, outName, strerror(errno) ); + if ( inStr != NULL ) fclose ( inStr ); + setExit(1); + return; + } + if ( inStr == NULL ) { + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: Can't open input file %s: %s.\n", + progName, inName, strerror(errno) ); + if ( outStr != NULL ) fclose ( outStr ); + setExit(1); + return; + }; + setInterimPermissions ( outName ); + break; + + default: + panic ( "compress: bad srcMode" ); + break; + } + + if (verbosity >= 1) { + fprintf ( stderr, " %s: ", inName ); + pad ( inName ); + fflush ( stderr ); + } + + /*--- Now the input and output handles are sane. Do the Biz. ---*/ + outputHandleJustInCase = outStr; + deleteOutputOnInterrupt = True; + compressStream ( inStr, outStr ); + outputHandleJustInCase = NULL; + + /*--- If there was an I/O error, we won't get here. ---*/ + if ( srcMode == SM_F2F ) { + copyDatePermissionsAndOwner ( inName, outName ); + deleteOutputOnInterrupt = False; + if ( !keepInputFiles ) { + IntNative retVal = remove ( inName ); + ERROR_IF_NOT_ZERO ( retVal ); + } + } + + deleteOutputOnInterrupt = False; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +void uncompress ( Char *name ) +{ + FILE *inStr; + FILE *outStr; + Int32 n, i; + Bool magicNumberOK; + Bool cantGuess; + + deleteOutputOnInterrupt = False; + + if (name == NULL && srcMode != SM_I2O) + panic ( "uncompress: bad modes\n" ); + + cantGuess = False; + switch (srcMode) { + case SM_I2O: + copyFileName ( inName, "(stdin)" ); + copyFileName ( outName, "(stdout)" ); + break; + case SM_F2F: + copyFileName ( inName, name ); + copyFileName ( outName, name ); + for (i = 0; i < BZ_N_SUFFIX_PAIRS; i++) + if (mapSuffix(outName,zSuffix[i],unzSuffix[i])) + goto zzz; + cantGuess = True; + strcat ( outName, ".out" ); + break; + case SM_F2O: + copyFileName ( inName, name ); + copyFileName ( outName, "(stdout)" ); + break; + } + + zzz: + if ( srcMode != SM_I2O && containsDubiousChars ( inName ) ) { + if (noisy) + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: There are no files matching `%s'.\n", + progName, inName ); + setExit(1); + return; + } + if ( srcMode != SM_I2O && !fileExists ( inName ) ) { + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: Can't open input file %s: %s.\n", + progName, inName, strerror(errno) ); + setExit(1); + return; + } + if ( srcMode == SM_F2F && !forceOverwrite && notAStandardFile ( inName )) { + if (noisy) + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: Input file %s is not a normal file.\n", + progName, inName ); + setExit(1); + return; + } + if ( /* srcMode == SM_F2F implied && */ cantGuess ) { + if (noisy) + fprintf ( stderr, + "%s: Can't guess original name for %s -- using %s\n", + progName, inName, outName ); + /* just a warning, no return */ + } + if ( srcMode == SM_F2F && !forceOverwrite && fileExists ( outName ) ) { + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: Output file %s already exists.\n", + progName, outName ); + setExit(1); + return; + } + if ( srcMode == SM_F2F && !forceOverwrite && + (n=countHardLinks ( inName ) ) > 0) { + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: Input file %s has %d other link%s.\n", + progName, inName, n, n > 1 ? "s" : "" ); + setExit(1); + return; + } + + switch ( srcMode ) { + + case SM_I2O: + inStr = stdin; + outStr = stdout; + if ( isatty ( fileno ( stdin ) ) ) { + fprintf ( stderr, + "%s: I won't read compressed data from a terminal.\n", + progName ); + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: For help, type: `%s --help'.\n", + progName, progName ); + setExit(1); + return; + }; + break; + + case SM_F2O: + inStr = fopen ( inName, "rb" ); + outStr = stdout; + if ( inStr == NULL ) { + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: Can't open input file %s:%s.\n", + progName, inName, strerror(errno) ); + if ( inStr != NULL ) fclose ( inStr ); + setExit(1); + return; + }; + break; + + case SM_F2F: + inStr = fopen ( inName, "rb" ); + outStr = fopen ( outName, "wb" ); + if ( outStr == NULL) { + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: Can't create output file %s: %s.\n", + progName, outName, strerror(errno) ); + if ( inStr != NULL ) fclose ( inStr ); + setExit(1); + return; + } + if ( inStr == NULL ) { + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: Can't open input file %s: %s.\n", + progName, inName, strerror(errno) ); + if ( outStr != NULL ) fclose ( outStr ); + setExit(1); + return; + }; + setInterimPermissions ( outName ); + break; + + default: + panic ( "uncompress: bad srcMode" ); + break; + } + + if (verbosity >= 1) { + fprintf ( stderr, " %s: ", inName ); + pad ( inName ); + fflush ( stderr ); + } + + /*--- Now the input and output handles are sane. Do the Biz. ---*/ + outputHandleJustInCase = outStr; + deleteOutputOnInterrupt = True; + magicNumberOK = uncompressStream ( inStr, outStr ); + outputHandleJustInCase = NULL; + + /*--- If there was an I/O error, we won't get here. ---*/ + if ( magicNumberOK ) { + if ( srcMode == SM_F2F ) { + copyDatePermissionsAndOwner ( inName, outName ); + deleteOutputOnInterrupt = False; + if ( !keepInputFiles ) { + IntNative retVal = remove ( inName ); + ERROR_IF_NOT_ZERO ( retVal ); + } + } + } else { + unzFailsExist = True; + deleteOutputOnInterrupt = False; + if ( srcMode == SM_F2F ) { + IntNative retVal = remove ( outName ); + ERROR_IF_NOT_ZERO ( retVal ); + } + } + deleteOutputOnInterrupt = False; + + if ( magicNumberOK ) { + if (verbosity >= 1) + fprintf ( stderr, "done\n" ); + } else { + setExit(2); + if (verbosity >= 1) + fprintf ( stderr, "not a bzip2 file.\n" ); else + fprintf ( stderr, + "%s: %s is not a bzip2 file.\n", + progName, inName ); + } + +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +void testf ( Char *name ) +{ + FILE *inStr; + Bool allOK; + + deleteOutputOnInterrupt = False; + + if (name == NULL && srcMode != SM_I2O) + panic ( "testf: bad modes\n" ); + + copyFileName ( outName, "(none)" ); + switch (srcMode) { + case SM_I2O: copyFileName ( inName, "(stdin)" ); break; + case SM_F2F: copyFileName ( inName, name ); break; + case SM_F2O: copyFileName ( inName, name ); break; + } + + if ( srcMode != SM_I2O && containsDubiousChars ( inName ) ) { + if (noisy) + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: There are no files matching `%s'.\n", + progName, inName ); + setExit(1); + return; + } + if ( srcMode != SM_I2O && !fileExists ( inName ) ) { + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: Can't open input %s: %s.\n", + progName, inName, strerror(errno) ); + setExit(1); + return; + } + + switch ( srcMode ) { + + case SM_I2O: + if ( isatty ( fileno ( stdin ) ) ) { + fprintf ( stderr, + "%s: I won't read compressed data from a terminal.\n", + progName ); + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: For help, type: `%s --help'.\n", + progName, progName ); + setExit(1); + return; + }; + inStr = stdin; + break; + + case SM_F2O: case SM_F2F: + inStr = fopen ( inName, "rb" ); + if ( inStr == NULL ) { + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: Can't open input file %s:%s.\n", + progName, inName, strerror(errno) ); + setExit(1); + return; + }; + break; + + default: + panic ( "testf: bad srcMode" ); + break; + } + + if (verbosity >= 1) { + fprintf ( stderr, " %s: ", inName ); + pad ( inName ); + fflush ( stderr ); + } + + /*--- Now the input handle is sane. Do the Biz. ---*/ + allOK = testStream ( inStr ); + + if (allOK && verbosity >= 1) fprintf ( stderr, "ok\n" ); + if (!allOK) testFailsExist = True; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +void license ( void ) +{ + fprintf ( stderr, + + "bzip2, a block-sorting file compressor. " + "Version %s.\n" + " \n" + " Copyright (C) 1996-2000 by Julian Seward.\n" + " \n" + " This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify\n" + " it under the terms set out in the LICENSE file, which is included\n" + " in the bzip2-1.0 source distribution.\n" + " \n" + " This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,\n" + " but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of\n" + " MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the\n" + " LICENSE file for more details.\n" + " \n", + BZ2_bzlibVersion() + ); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +void usage ( Char *fullProgName ) +{ + fprintf ( + stderr, + "bzip2, a block-sorting file compressor. " + "Version %s.\n" + "\n usage: %s [flags and input files in any order]\n" + "\n" + " -h --help print this message\n" + " -d --decompress force decompression\n" + " -z --compress force compression\n" + " -k --keep keep (don't delete) input files\n" + " -f --force overwrite existing output files\n" + " -t --test test compressed file integrity\n" + " -c --stdout output to standard out\n" + " -q --quiet suppress noncritical error messages\n" + " -v --verbose be verbose (a 2nd -v gives more)\n" + " -L --license display software version & license\n" + " -V --version display software version & license\n" + " -s --small use less memory (at most 2500k)\n" + " -1 .. -9 set block size to 100k .. 900k\n" + "\n" + " If invoked as `bzip2', default action is to compress.\n" + " as `bunzip2', default action is to decompress.\n" + " as `bzcat', default action is to decompress to stdout.\n" + "\n" + " If no file names are given, bzip2 compresses or decompresses\n" + " from standard input to standard output. You can combine\n" + " short flags, so `-v -4' means the same as -v4 or -4v, &c.\n" +#if BZ_UNIX + "\n" +#endif + , + + BZ2_bzlibVersion(), + fullProgName + ); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +void redundant ( Char* flag ) +{ + fprintf ( + stderr, + "%s: %s is redundant in versions 0.9.5 and above\n", + progName, flag ); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +/*-- + All the garbage from here to main() is purely to + implement a linked list of command-line arguments, + into which main() copies argv[1 .. argc-1]. + + The purpose of this exercise is to facilitate + the expansion of wildcard characters * and ? in + filenames for OSs which don't know how to do it + themselves, like MSDOS, Windows 95 and NT. + + The actual Dirty Work is done by the platform- + specific macro APPEND_FILESPEC. +--*/ + +typedef + struct zzzz { + Char *name; + struct zzzz *link; + } + Cell; + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +void *myMalloc ( Int32 n ) +{ + void* p; + + p = malloc ( (size_t)n ); + if (p == NULL) outOfMemory (); + return p; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +Cell *mkCell ( void ) +{ + Cell *c; + + c = (Cell*) myMalloc ( sizeof ( Cell ) ); + c->name = NULL; + c->link = NULL; + return c; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +Cell *snocString ( Cell *root, Char *name ) +{ + if (root == NULL) { + Cell *tmp = mkCell(); + tmp->name = (Char*) myMalloc ( 5 + strlen(name) ); + strcpy ( tmp->name, name ); + return tmp; + } else { + Cell *tmp = root; + while (tmp->link != NULL) tmp = tmp->link; + tmp->link = snocString ( tmp->link, name ); + return root; + } +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static +void addFlagsFromEnvVar ( Cell** argList, Char* varName ) +{ + Int32 i, j, k; + Char *envbase, *p; + + envbase = getenv(varName); + if (envbase != NULL) { + p = envbase; + i = 0; + while (True) { + if (p[i] == 0) break; + p += i; + i = 0; + while (isspace((Int32)(p[0]))) p++; + while (p[i] != 0 && !isspace((Int32)(p[i]))) i++; + if (i > 0) { + k = i; if (k > FILE_NAME_LEN-10) k = FILE_NAME_LEN-10; + for (j = 0; j < k; j++) tmpName[j] = p[j]; + tmpName[k] = 0; + APPEND_FLAG(*argList, tmpName); + } + } + } +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +#define ISFLAG(s) (strcmp(aa->name, (s))==0) + +IntNative main ( IntNative argc, Char *argv[] ) +{ + Int32 i, j; + Char *tmp; + Cell *argList; + Cell *aa; + Bool decode; + + /*-- Be really really really paranoid :-) --*/ + if (sizeof(Int32) != 4 || sizeof(UInt32) != 4 || + sizeof(Int16) != 2 || sizeof(UInt16) != 2 || + sizeof(Char) != 1 || sizeof(UChar) != 1) + configError(); + + /*-- Initialise --*/ + outputHandleJustInCase = NULL; + smallMode = False; + keepInputFiles = False; + forceOverwrite = False; + noisy = True; + verbosity = 0; + blockSize100k = 9; + testFailsExist = False; + unzFailsExist = False; + numFileNames = 0; + numFilesProcessed = 0; + workFactor = 30; + deleteOutputOnInterrupt = False; + exitValue = 0; + i = j = 0; /* avoid bogus warning from egcs-1.1.X */ + + /*-- Set up signal handlers for mem access errors --*/ + signal (SIGSEGV, mySIGSEGVorSIGBUScatcher); +#if BZ_UNIX +#ifndef __DJGPP__ + signal (SIGBUS, mySIGSEGVorSIGBUScatcher); +#endif +#endif + + copyFileName ( inName, "(none)" ); + copyFileName ( outName, "(none)" ); + + copyFileName ( progNameReally, argv[0] ); + progName = &progNameReally[0]; + for (tmp = &progNameReally[0]; *tmp != '\0'; tmp++) + if (*tmp == PATH_SEP) progName = tmp + 1; + + + /*-- Copy flags from env var BZIP2, and + expand filename wildcards in arg list. + --*/ + argList = NULL; + addFlagsFromEnvVar ( &argList, "BZIP2" ); + addFlagsFromEnvVar ( &argList, "BZIP" ); + for (i = 1; i <= argc-1; i++) + APPEND_FILESPEC(argList, argv[i]); + + + /*-- Find the length of the longest filename --*/ + longestFileName = 7; + numFileNames = 0; + decode = True; + for (aa = argList; aa != NULL; aa = aa->link) { + if (ISFLAG("--")) { decode = False; continue; } + if (aa->name[0] == '-' && decode) continue; + numFileNames++; + if (longestFileName < (Int32)strlen(aa->name) ) + longestFileName = (Int32)strlen(aa->name); + } + + + /*-- Determine source modes; flag handling may change this too. --*/ + if (numFileNames == 0) + srcMode = SM_I2O; else srcMode = SM_F2F; + + + /*-- Determine what to do (compress/uncompress/test/cat). --*/ + /*-- Note that subsequent flag handling may change this. --*/ + opMode = OM_Z; + + if ( (strstr ( progName, "unzip" ) != 0) || + (strstr ( progName, "UNZIP" ) != 0) ) + opMode = OM_UNZ; + + if ( (strstr ( progName, "z2cat" ) != 0) || + (strstr ( progName, "Z2CAT" ) != 0) || + (strstr ( progName, "zcat" ) != 0) || + (strstr ( progName, "ZCAT" ) != 0) ) { + opMode = OM_UNZ; + srcMode = (numFileNames == 0) ? SM_I2O : SM_F2O; + } + + + /*-- Look at the flags. --*/ + for (aa = argList; aa != NULL; aa = aa->link) { + if (ISFLAG("--")) break; + if (aa->name[0] == '-' && aa->name[1] != '-') { + for (j = 1; aa->name[j] != '\0'; j++) { + switch (aa->name[j]) { + case 'c': srcMode = SM_F2O; break; + case 'd': opMode = OM_UNZ; break; + case 'z': opMode = OM_Z; break; + case 'f': forceOverwrite = True; break; + case 't': opMode = OM_TEST; break; + case 'k': keepInputFiles = True; break; + case 's': smallMode = True; break; + case 'q': noisy = False; break; + case '1': blockSize100k = 1; break; + case '2': blockSize100k = 2; break; + case '3': blockSize100k = 3; break; + case '4': blockSize100k = 4; break; + case '5': blockSize100k = 5; break; + case '6': blockSize100k = 6; break; + case '7': blockSize100k = 7; break; + case '8': blockSize100k = 8; break; + case '9': blockSize100k = 9; break; + case 'V': + case 'L': license(); break; + case 'v': verbosity++; break; + case 'h': usage ( progName ); + exit ( 0 ); + break; + default: fprintf ( stderr, "%s: Bad flag `%s'\n", + progName, aa->name ); + usage ( progName ); + exit ( 1 ); + break; + } + } + } + } + + /*-- And again ... --*/ + for (aa = argList; aa != NULL; aa = aa->link) { + if (ISFLAG("--")) break; + if (ISFLAG("--stdout")) srcMode = SM_F2O; else + if (ISFLAG("--decompress")) opMode = OM_UNZ; else + if (ISFLAG("--compress")) opMode = OM_Z; else + if (ISFLAG("--force")) forceOverwrite = True; else + if (ISFLAG("--test")) opMode = OM_TEST; else + if (ISFLAG("--keep")) keepInputFiles = True; else + if (ISFLAG("--small")) smallMode = True; else + if (ISFLAG("--quiet")) noisy = False; else + if (ISFLAG("--version")) license(); else + if (ISFLAG("--license")) license(); else + if (ISFLAG("--exponential")) workFactor = 1; else + if (ISFLAG("--repetitive-best")) redundant(aa->name); else + if (ISFLAG("--repetitive-fast")) redundant(aa->name); else + if (ISFLAG("--verbose")) verbosity++; else + if (ISFLAG("--help")) { usage ( progName ); exit ( 0 ); } + else + if (strncmp ( aa->name, "--", 2) == 0) { + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: Bad flag `%s'\n", progName, aa->name ); + usage ( progName ); + exit ( 1 ); + } + } + + if (verbosity > 4) verbosity = 4; + if (opMode == OM_Z && smallMode && blockSize100k > 2) + blockSize100k = 2; + + if (opMode == OM_TEST && srcMode == SM_F2O) { + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: -c and -t cannot be used together.\n", + progName ); + exit ( 1 ); + } + + if (srcMode == SM_F2O && numFileNames == 0) + srcMode = SM_I2O; + + if (opMode != OM_Z) blockSize100k = 0; + + if (srcMode == SM_F2F) { + signal (SIGINT, mySignalCatcher); + signal (SIGTERM, mySignalCatcher); +# if BZ_UNIX + signal (SIGHUP, mySignalCatcher); +# endif + } + + if (opMode == OM_Z) { + if (srcMode == SM_I2O) { + compress ( NULL ); + } else { + decode = True; + for (aa = argList; aa != NULL; aa = aa->link) { + if (ISFLAG("--")) { decode = False; continue; } + if (aa->name[0] == '-' && decode) continue; + numFilesProcessed++; + compress ( aa->name ); + } + } + } + else + + if (opMode == OM_UNZ) { + unzFailsExist = False; + if (srcMode == SM_I2O) { + uncompress ( NULL ); + } else { + decode = True; + for (aa = argList; aa != NULL; aa = aa->link) { + if (ISFLAG("--")) { decode = False; continue; } + if (aa->name[0] == '-' && decode) continue; + numFilesProcessed++; + uncompress ( aa->name ); + } + } + if (unzFailsExist) { + setExit(2); + exit(exitValue); + } + } + + else { + testFailsExist = False; + if (srcMode == SM_I2O) { + testf ( NULL ); + } else { + decode = True; + for (aa = argList; aa != NULL; aa = aa->link) { + if (ISFLAG("--")) { decode = False; continue; } + if (aa->name[0] == '-' && decode) continue; + numFilesProcessed++; + testf ( aa->name ); + } + } + if (testFailsExist && noisy) { + fprintf ( stderr, + "\n" + "You can use the `bzip2recover' program to attempt to recover\n" + "data from undamaged sections of corrupted files.\n\n" + ); + setExit(2); + exit(exitValue); + } + } + + /* Free the argument list memory to mollify leak detectors + (eg) Purify, Checker. Serves no other useful purpose. + */ + aa = argList; + while (aa != NULL) { + Cell* aa2 = aa->link; + if (aa->name != NULL) free(aa->name); + free(aa); + aa = aa2; + } + + return exitValue; +} + + +/*-----------------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- end bzip2.c ---*/ +/*-----------------------------------------------------------*/ diff --git a/bzip2/bzip2.txt b/bzip2/bzip2.txt new file mode 100644 index 000000000..4f1ae8620 --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/bzip2.txt @@ -0,0 +1,376 @@ + + +NAME + bzip2, bunzip2 - a block-sorting file compressor, v1.0 + bzcat - decompresses files to stdout + bzip2recover - recovers data from damaged bzip2 files + + +SYNOPSIS + bzip2 [ -cdfkqstvzVL123456789 ] [ filenames ... ] + bunzip2 [ -fkvsVL ] [ filenames ... ] + bzcat [ -s ] [ filenames ... ] + bzip2recover filename + + +DESCRIPTION + bzip2 compresses files using the Burrows-Wheeler block + sorting text compression algorithm, and Huffman coding. + Compression is generally considerably better than that + achieved by more conventional LZ77/LZ78-based compressors, + and approaches the performance of the PPM family of sta- + tistical compressors. + + The command-line options are deliberately very similar to + those of GNU gzip, but they are not identical. + + bzip2 expects a list of file names to accompany the com- + mand-line flags. Each file is replaced by a compressed + version of itself, with the name "original_name.bz2". + Each compressed file has the same modification date, per- + missions, and, when possible, ownership as the correspond- + ing original, so that these properties can be correctly + restored at decompression time. File name handling is + naive in the sense that there is no mechanism for preserv- + ing original file names, permissions, ownerships or dates + in filesystems which lack these concepts, or have serious + file name length restrictions, such as MS-DOS. + + bzip2 and bunzip2 will by default not overwrite existing + files. If you want this to happen, specify the -f flag. + + If no file names are specified, bzip2 compresses from + standard input to standard output. In this case, bzip2 + will decline to write compressed output to a terminal, as + this would be entirely incomprehensible and therefore + pointless. + + bunzip2 (or bzip2 -d) decompresses all specified files. + Files which were not created by bzip2 will be detected and + ignored, and a warning issued. bzip2 attempts to guess + the filename for the decompressed file from that of the + compressed file as follows: + + filename.bz2 becomes filename + filename.bz becomes filename + filename.tbz2 becomes filename.tar + filename.tbz becomes filename.tar + anyothername becomes anyothername.out + + If the file does not end in one of the recognised endings, + .bz2, .bz, .tbz2 or .tbz, bzip2 complains that it cannot + guess the name of the original file, and uses the original + name with .out appended. + + As with compression, supplying no filenames causes decom- + pression from standard input to standard output. + + bunzip2 will correctly decompress a file which is the con- + catenation of two or more compressed files. The result is + the concatenation of the corresponding uncompressed files. + Integrity testing (-t) of concatenated compressed files is + also supported. + + You can also compress or decompress files to the standard + output by giving the -c flag. Multiple files may be com- + pressed and decompressed like this. The resulting outputs + are fed sequentially to stdout. Compression of multiple + files in this manner generates a stream containing multi- + ple compressed file representations. Such a stream can be + decompressed correctly only by bzip2 version 0.9.0 or + later. Earlier versions of bzip2 will stop after decom- + pressing the first file in the stream. + + bzcat (or bzip2 -dc) decompresses all specified files to + the standard output. + + bzip2 will read arguments from the environment variables + BZIP2 and BZIP, in that order, and will process them + before any arguments read from the command line. This + gives a convenient way to supply default arguments. + + Compression is always performed, even if the compressed + file is slightly larger than the original. Files of less + than about one hundred bytes tend to get larger, since the + compression mechanism has a constant overhead in the + region of 50 bytes. Random data (including the output of + most file compressors) is coded at about 8.05 bits per + byte, giving an expansion of around 0.5%. + + As a self-check for your protection, bzip2 uses 32-bit + CRCs to make sure that the decompressed version of a file + is identical to the original. This guards against corrup- + tion of the compressed data, and against undetected bugs + in bzip2 (hopefully very unlikely). The chances of data + corruption going undetected is microscopic, about one + chance in four billion for each file processed. Be aware, + though, that the check occurs upon decompression, so it + can only tell you that something is wrong. It can't help + you recover the original uncompressed data. You can use + bzip2recover to try to recover data from damaged files. + + Return values: 0 for a normal exit, 1 for environmental + problems (file not found, invalid flags, I/O errors, &c), + 2 to indicate a corrupt compressed file, 3 for an internal + consistency error (eg, bug) which caused bzip2 to panic. + + +OPTIONS + -c --stdout + Compress or decompress to standard output. + + -d --decompress + Force decompression. bzip2, bunzip2 and bzcat are + really the same program, and the decision about + what actions to take is done on the basis of which + name is used. This flag overrides that mechanism, + and forces bzip2 to decompress. + + -z --compress + The complement to -d: forces compression, regard- + less of the invokation name. + + -t --test + Check integrity of the specified file(s), but don't + decompress them. This really performs a trial + decompression and throws away the result. + + -f --force + Force overwrite of output files. Normally, bzip2 + will not overwrite existing output files. Also + forces bzip2 to break hard links to files, which it + otherwise wouldn't do. + + -k --keep + Keep (don't delete) input files during compression + or decompression. + + -s --small + Reduce memory usage, for compression, decompression + and testing. Files are decompressed and tested + using a modified algorithm which only requires 2.5 + bytes per block byte. This means any file can be + decompressed in 2300k of memory, albeit at about + half the normal speed. + + During compression, -s selects a block size of + 200k, which limits memory use to around the same + figure, at the expense of your compression ratio. + In short, if your machine is low on memory (8 + megabytes or less), use -s for everything. See + MEMORY MANAGEMENT below. + + -q --quiet + Suppress non-essential warning messages. Messages + pertaining to I/O errors and other critical events + will not be suppressed. + + -v --verbose + Verbose mode -- show the compression ratio for each + file processed. Further -v's increase the ver- + bosity level, spewing out lots of information which + is primarily of interest for diagnostic purposes. + + -L --license -V --version + Display the software version, license terms and + conditions. + + -1 to -9 + Set the block size to 100 k, 200 k .. 900 k when + compressing. Has no effect when decompressing. + See MEMORY MANAGEMENT below. + + -- Treats all subsequent arguments as file names, even + if they start with a dash. This is so you can han- + dle files with names beginning with a dash, for + example: bzip2 -- -myfilename. + + --repetitive-fast --repetitive-best + These flags are redundant in versions 0.9.5 and + above. They provided some coarse control over the + behaviour of the sorting algorithm in earlier ver- + sions, which was sometimes useful. 0.9.5 and above + have an improved algorithm which renders these + flags irrelevant. + + +MEMORY MANAGEMENT + bzip2 compresses large files in blocks. The block size + affects both the compression ratio achieved, and the + amount of memory needed for compression and decompression. + The flags -1 through -9 specify the block size to be + 100,000 bytes through 900,000 bytes (the default) respec- + tively. At decompression time, the block size used for + compression is read from the header of the compressed + file, and bunzip2 then allocates itself just enough memory + to decompress the file. Since block sizes are stored in + compressed files, it follows that the flags -1 to -9 are + irrelevant to and so ignored during decompression. + + Compression and decompression requirements, in bytes, can + be estimated as: + + Compression: 400k + ( 8 x block size ) + + Decompression: 100k + ( 4 x block size ), or + 100k + ( 2.5 x block size ) + + Larger block sizes give rapidly diminishing marginal + returns. Most of the compression comes from the first two + or three hundred k of block size, a fact worth bearing in + mind when using bzip2 on small machines. It is also + important to appreciate that the decompression memory + requirement is set at compression time by the choice of + block size. + + For files compressed with the default 900k block size, + bunzip2 will require about 3700 kbytes to decompress. To + support decompression of any file on a 4 megabyte machine, + bunzip2 has an option to decompress using approximately + half this amount of memory, about 2300 kbytes. Decompres- + sion speed is also halved, so you should use this option + only where necessary. The relevant flag is -s. + + In general, try and use the largest block size memory con- + straints allow, since that maximises the compression + achieved. Compression and decompression speed are virtu- + ally unaffected by block size. + + Another significant point applies to files which fit in a + single block -- that means most files you'd encounter + using a large block size. The amount of real memory + touched is proportional to the size of the file, since the + file is smaller than a block. For example, compressing a + file 20,000 bytes long with the flag -9 will cause the + compressor to allocate around 7600k of memory, but only + touch 400k + 20000 * 8 = 560 kbytes of it. Similarly, the + decompressor will allocate 3700k but only touch 100k + + 20000 * 4 = 180 kbytes. + + Here is a table which summarises the maximum memory usage + for different block sizes. Also recorded is the total + compressed size for 14 files of the Calgary Text Compres- + sion Corpus totalling 3,141,622 bytes. This column gives + some feel for how compression varies with block size. + These figures tend to understate the advantage of larger + block sizes for larger files, since the Corpus is domi- + nated by smaller files. + + Compress Decompress Decompress Corpus + Flag usage usage -s usage Size + + -1 1200k 500k 350k 914704 + -2 2000k 900k 600k 877703 + -3 2800k 1300k 850k 860338 + -4 3600k 1700k 1100k 846899 + -5 4400k 2100k 1350k 845160 + -6 5200k 2500k 1600k 838626 + -7 6100k 2900k 1850k 834096 + -8 6800k 3300k 2100k 828642 + -9 7600k 3700k 2350k 828642 + + +RECOVERING DATA FROM DAMAGED FILES + bzip2 compresses files in blocks, usually 900kbytes long. + Each block is handled independently. If a media or trans- + mission error causes a multi-block .bz2 file to become + damaged, it may be possible to recover data from the + undamaged blocks in the file. + + The compressed representation of each block is delimited + by a 48-bit pattern, which makes it possible to find the + block boundaries with reasonable certainty. Each block + also carries its own 32-bit CRC, so damaged blocks can be + distinguished from undamaged ones. + + bzip2recover is a simple program whose purpose is to + search for blocks in .bz2 files, and write each block out + into its own .bz2 file. You can then use bzip2 -t to test + the integrity of the resulting files, and decompress those + which are undamaged. + + bzip2recover takes a single argument, the name of the dam- + aged file, and writes a number of files "rec0001file.bz2", + "rec0002file.bz2", etc, containing the extracted blocks. + The output filenames are designed so that the use of + wildcards in subsequent processing -- for example, "bzip2 + -dc rec*file.bz2 > recovered_data" -- lists the files in + the correct order. + + bzip2recover should be of most use dealing with large .bz2 + files, as these will contain many blocks. It is clearly + futile to use it on damaged single-block files, since a + damaged block cannot be recovered. If you wish to min- + imise any potential data loss through media or transmis- + sion errors, you might consider compressing with a smaller + block size. + + +PERFORMANCE NOTES + The sorting phase of compression gathers together similar + strings in the file. Because of this, files containing + very long runs of repeated symbols, like "aabaabaabaab + ..." (repeated several hundred times) may compress more + slowly than normal. Versions 0.9.5 and above fare much + better than previous versions in this respect. The ratio + between worst-case and average-case compression time is in + the region of 10:1. For previous versions, this figure + was more like 100:1. You can use the -vvvv option to mon- + itor progress in great detail, if you want. + + Decompression speed is unaffected by these phenomena. + + bzip2 usually allocates several megabytes of memory to + operate in, and then charges all over it in a fairly ran- + dom fashion. This means that performance, both for com- + pressing and decompressing, is largely determined by the + speed at which your machine can service cache misses. + Because of this, small changes to the code to reduce the + miss rate have been observed to give disproportionately + large performance improvements. I imagine bzip2 will per- + form best on machines with very large caches. + + +CAVEATS + I/O error messages are not as helpful as they could be. + bzip2 tries hard to detect I/O errors and exit cleanly, + but the details of what the problem is sometimes seem + rather misleading. + + This manual page pertains to version 1.0 of bzip2. Com- + pressed data created by this version is entirely forwards + and backwards compatible with the previous public + releases, versions 0.1pl2, 0.9.0 and 0.9.5, but with the + following exception: 0.9.0 and above can correctly decom- + press multiple concatenated compressed files. 0.1pl2 can- + not do this; it will stop after decompressing just the + first file in the stream. + + bzip2recover uses 32-bit integers to represent bit posi- + tions in compressed files, so it cannot handle compressed + files more than 512 megabytes long. This could easily be + fixed. + + +AUTHOR + Julian Seward, jseward@acm.org. + + http://sourceware.cygnus.com/bzip2 + http://www.muraroa.demon.co.uk + + The ideas embodied in bzip2 are due to (at least) the fol- + lowing people: Michael Burrows and David Wheeler (for the + block sorting transformation), David Wheeler (again, for + the Huffman coder), Peter Fenwick (for the structured cod- + ing model in the original bzip, and many refinements), and + Alistair Moffat, Radford Neal and Ian Witten (for the + arithmetic coder in the original bzip). I am much + indebted for their help, support and advice. See the man- + ual in the source distribution for pointers to sources of + documentation. Christian von Roques encouraged me to look + for faster sorting algorithms, so as to speed up compres- + sion. Bela Lubkin encouraged me to improve the worst-case + compression performance. Many people sent patches, helped + with portability problems, lent machines, gave advice and + were generally helpful. + diff --git a/bzip2/bzip2recover.c b/bzip2/bzip2recover.c new file mode 100644 index 000000000..ba3d17563 --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/bzip2recover.c @@ -0,0 +1,435 @@ + +/*-----------------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- Block recoverer program for bzip2 ---*/ +/*--- bzip2recover.c ---*/ +/*-----------------------------------------------------------*/ + +/*-- + This program is bzip2recover, a program to attempt data + salvage from damaged files created by the accompanying + bzip2-1.0 program. + + Copyright (C) 1996-2000 Julian R Seward. All rights reserved. + + Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without + modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions + are met: + + 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright + notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. + + 2. The origin of this software must not be misrepresented; you must + not claim that you wrote the original software. If you use this + software in a product, an acknowledgment in the product + documentation would be appreciated but is not required. + + 3. Altered source versions must be plainly marked as such, and must + not be misrepresented as being the original software. + + 4. The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote + products derived from this software without specific prior written + permission. + + THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS + OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED + WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE + ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY + DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL + DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE + GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS + INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, + WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING + NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS + SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. + + Julian Seward, Cambridge, UK. + jseward@acm.org + bzip2/libbzip2 version 1.0 of 21 March 2000 +--*/ + +/*-- + This program is a complete hack and should be rewritten + properly. It isn't very complicated. +--*/ + +#include <stdio.h> +#include <errno.h> +#include <stdlib.h> +#include <string.h> + +typedef unsigned int UInt32; +typedef int Int32; +typedef unsigned char UChar; +typedef char Char; +typedef unsigned char Bool; +#define True ((Bool)1) +#define False ((Bool)0) + + +Char inFileName[2000]; +Char outFileName[2000]; +Char progName[2000]; + +UInt32 bytesOut = 0; +UInt32 bytesIn = 0; + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- I/O errors ---*/ +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +void readError ( void ) +{ + fprintf ( stderr, + "%s: I/O error reading `%s', possible reason follows.\n", + progName, inFileName ); + perror ( progName ); + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: warning: output file(s) may be incomplete.\n", + progName ); + exit ( 1 ); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +void writeError ( void ) +{ + fprintf ( stderr, + "%s: I/O error reading `%s', possible reason follows.\n", + progName, inFileName ); + perror ( progName ); + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: warning: output file(s) may be incomplete.\n", + progName ); + exit ( 1 ); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +void mallocFail ( Int32 n ) +{ + fprintf ( stderr, + "%s: malloc failed on request for %d bytes.\n", + progName, n ); + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: warning: output file(s) may be incomplete.\n", + progName ); + exit ( 1 ); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- Bit stream I/O ---*/ +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ + +typedef + struct { + FILE* handle; + Int32 buffer; + Int32 buffLive; + Char mode; + } + BitStream; + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +BitStream* bsOpenReadStream ( FILE* stream ) +{ + BitStream *bs = malloc ( sizeof(BitStream) ); + if (bs == NULL) mallocFail ( sizeof(BitStream) ); + bs->handle = stream; + bs->buffer = 0; + bs->buffLive = 0; + bs->mode = 'r'; + return bs; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +BitStream* bsOpenWriteStream ( FILE* stream ) +{ + BitStream *bs = malloc ( sizeof(BitStream) ); + if (bs == NULL) mallocFail ( sizeof(BitStream) ); + bs->handle = stream; + bs->buffer = 0; + bs->buffLive = 0; + bs->mode = 'w'; + return bs; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +void bsPutBit ( BitStream* bs, Int32 bit ) +{ + if (bs->buffLive == 8) { + Int32 retVal = putc ( (UChar) bs->buffer, bs->handle ); + if (retVal == EOF) writeError(); + bytesOut++; + bs->buffLive = 1; + bs->buffer = bit & 0x1; + } else { + bs->buffer = ( (bs->buffer << 1) | (bit & 0x1) ); + bs->buffLive++; + }; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +/*-- + Returns 0 or 1, or 2 to indicate EOF. +--*/ +Int32 bsGetBit ( BitStream* bs ) +{ + if (bs->buffLive > 0) { + bs->buffLive --; + return ( ((bs->buffer) >> (bs->buffLive)) & 0x1 ); + } else { + Int32 retVal = getc ( bs->handle ); + if ( retVal == EOF ) { + if (errno != 0) readError(); + return 2; + } + bs->buffLive = 7; + bs->buffer = retVal; + return ( ((bs->buffer) >> 7) & 0x1 ); + } +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +void bsClose ( BitStream* bs ) +{ + Int32 retVal; + + if ( bs->mode == 'w' ) { + while ( bs->buffLive < 8 ) { + bs->buffLive++; + bs->buffer <<= 1; + }; + retVal = putc ( (UChar) (bs->buffer), bs->handle ); + if (retVal == EOF) writeError(); + bytesOut++; + retVal = fflush ( bs->handle ); + if (retVal == EOF) writeError(); + } + retVal = fclose ( bs->handle ); + if (retVal == EOF) { + if (bs->mode == 'w') writeError(); else readError(); + } + free ( bs ); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +void bsPutUChar ( BitStream* bs, UChar c ) +{ + Int32 i; + for (i = 7; i >= 0; i--) + bsPutBit ( bs, (((UInt32) c) >> i) & 0x1 ); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +void bsPutUInt32 ( BitStream* bs, UInt32 c ) +{ + Int32 i; + + for (i = 31; i >= 0; i--) + bsPutBit ( bs, (c >> i) & 0x1 ); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +Bool endsInBz2 ( Char* name ) +{ + Int32 n = strlen ( name ); + if (n <= 4) return False; + return + (name[n-4] == '.' && + name[n-3] == 'b' && + name[n-2] == 'z' && + name[n-1] == '2'); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- ---*/ +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ + +#define BLOCK_HEADER_HI 0x00003141UL +#define BLOCK_HEADER_LO 0x59265359UL + +#define BLOCK_ENDMARK_HI 0x00001772UL +#define BLOCK_ENDMARK_LO 0x45385090UL + + +UInt32 bStart[20000]; +UInt32 bEnd[20000]; +UInt32 rbStart[20000]; +UInt32 rbEnd[20000]; + +Int32 main ( Int32 argc, Char** argv ) +{ + FILE* inFile; + FILE* outFile; + BitStream* bsIn, *bsWr; + Int32 currBlock, b, wrBlock; + UInt32 bitsRead; + Int32 rbCtr; + + + UInt32 buffHi, buffLo, blockCRC; + Char* p; + + strcpy ( progName, argv[0] ); + inFileName[0] = outFileName[0] = 0; + + fprintf ( stderr, "bzip2recover 1.0: extracts blocks from damaged .bz2 files.\n" ); + + if (argc != 2) { + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: usage is `%s damaged_file_name'.\n", + progName, progName ); + exit(1); + } + + strcpy ( inFileName, argv[1] ); + + inFile = fopen ( inFileName, "rb" ); + if (inFile == NULL) { + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: can't read `%s'\n", progName, inFileName ); + exit(1); + } + + bsIn = bsOpenReadStream ( inFile ); + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: searching for block boundaries ...\n", progName ); + + bitsRead = 0; + buffHi = buffLo = 0; + currBlock = 0; + bStart[currBlock] = 0; + + rbCtr = 0; + + while (True) { + b = bsGetBit ( bsIn ); + bitsRead++; + if (b == 2) { + if (bitsRead >= bStart[currBlock] && + (bitsRead - bStart[currBlock]) >= 40) { + bEnd[currBlock] = bitsRead-1; + if (currBlock > 0) + fprintf ( stderr, " block %d runs from %d to %d (incomplete)\n", + currBlock, bStart[currBlock], bEnd[currBlock] ); + } else + currBlock--; + break; + } + buffHi = (buffHi << 1) | (buffLo >> 31); + buffLo = (buffLo << 1) | (b & 1); + if ( ( (buffHi & 0x0000ffff) == BLOCK_HEADER_HI + && buffLo == BLOCK_HEADER_LO) + || + ( (buffHi & 0x0000ffff) == BLOCK_ENDMARK_HI + && buffLo == BLOCK_ENDMARK_LO) + ) { + if (bitsRead > 49) + bEnd[currBlock] = bitsRead-49; else + bEnd[currBlock] = 0; + if (currBlock > 0 && + (bEnd[currBlock] - bStart[currBlock]) >= 130) { + fprintf ( stderr, " block %d runs from %d to %d\n", + rbCtr+1, bStart[currBlock], bEnd[currBlock] ); + rbStart[rbCtr] = bStart[currBlock]; + rbEnd[rbCtr] = bEnd[currBlock]; + rbCtr++; + } + currBlock++; + + bStart[currBlock] = bitsRead; + } + } + + bsClose ( bsIn ); + + /*-- identified blocks run from 1 to rbCtr inclusive. --*/ + + if (rbCtr < 1) { + fprintf ( stderr, + "%s: sorry, I couldn't find any block boundaries.\n", + progName ); + exit(1); + }; + + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: splitting into blocks\n", progName ); + + inFile = fopen ( inFileName, "rb" ); + if (inFile == NULL) { + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: can't open `%s'\n", progName, inFileName ); + exit(1); + } + bsIn = bsOpenReadStream ( inFile ); + + /*-- placate gcc's dataflow analyser --*/ + blockCRC = 0; bsWr = 0; + + bitsRead = 0; + outFile = NULL; + wrBlock = 0; + while (True) { + b = bsGetBit(bsIn); + if (b == 2) break; + buffHi = (buffHi << 1) | (buffLo >> 31); + buffLo = (buffLo << 1) | (b & 1); + if (bitsRead == 47+rbStart[wrBlock]) + blockCRC = (buffHi << 16) | (buffLo >> 16); + + if (outFile != NULL && bitsRead >= rbStart[wrBlock] + && bitsRead <= rbEnd[wrBlock]) { + bsPutBit ( bsWr, b ); + } + + bitsRead++; + + if (bitsRead == rbEnd[wrBlock]+1) { + if (outFile != NULL) { + bsPutUChar ( bsWr, 0x17 ); bsPutUChar ( bsWr, 0x72 ); + bsPutUChar ( bsWr, 0x45 ); bsPutUChar ( bsWr, 0x38 ); + bsPutUChar ( bsWr, 0x50 ); bsPutUChar ( bsWr, 0x90 ); + bsPutUInt32 ( bsWr, blockCRC ); + bsClose ( bsWr ); + } + if (wrBlock >= rbCtr) break; + wrBlock++; + } else + if (bitsRead == rbStart[wrBlock]) { + outFileName[0] = 0; + sprintf ( outFileName, "rec%4d", wrBlock+1 ); + for (p = outFileName; *p != 0; p++) if (*p == ' ') *p = '0'; + strcat ( outFileName, inFileName ); + if ( !endsInBz2(outFileName)) strcat ( outFileName, ".bz2" ); + + fprintf ( stderr, " writing block %d to `%s' ...\n", + wrBlock+1, outFileName ); + + outFile = fopen ( outFileName, "wb" ); + if (outFile == NULL) { + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: can't write `%s'\n", + progName, outFileName ); + exit(1); + } + bsWr = bsOpenWriteStream ( outFile ); + bsPutUChar ( bsWr, 'B' ); bsPutUChar ( bsWr, 'Z' ); + bsPutUChar ( bsWr, 'h' ); bsPutUChar ( bsWr, '9' ); + bsPutUChar ( bsWr, 0x31 ); bsPutUChar ( bsWr, 0x41 ); + bsPutUChar ( bsWr, 0x59 ); bsPutUChar ( bsWr, 0x26 ); + bsPutUChar ( bsWr, 0x53 ); bsPutUChar ( bsWr, 0x59 ); + } + } + + fprintf ( stderr, "%s: finished\n", progName ); + return 0; +} + + + +/*-----------------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- end bzip2recover.c ---*/ +/*-----------------------------------------------------------*/ diff --git a/bzip2/bzlib.c b/bzip2/bzlib.c new file mode 100644 index 000000000..4a06d9f14 --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/bzlib.c @@ -0,0 +1,1564 @@ + +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- Library top-level functions. ---*/ +/*--- bzlib.c ---*/ +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ + +/*-- + This file is a part of bzip2 and/or libbzip2, a program and + library for lossless, block-sorting data compression. + + Copyright (C) 1996-2000 Julian R Seward. All rights reserved. + + Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without + modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions + are met: + + 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright + notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. + + 2. The origin of this software must not be misrepresented; you must + not claim that you wrote the original software. If you use this + software in a product, an acknowledgment in the product + documentation would be appreciated but is not required. + + 3. Altered source versions must be plainly marked as such, and must + not be misrepresented as being the original software. + + 4. The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote + products derived from this software without specific prior written + permission. + + THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS + OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED + WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE + ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY + DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL + DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE + GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS + INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, + WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING + NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS + SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. + + Julian Seward, Cambridge, UK. + jseward@acm.org + bzip2/libbzip2 version 1.0 of 21 March 2000 + + This program is based on (at least) the work of: + Mike Burrows + David Wheeler + Peter Fenwick + Alistair Moffat + Radford Neal + Ian H. Witten + Robert Sedgewick + Jon L. Bentley + + For more information on these sources, see the manual. +--*/ + +/*-- + CHANGES + ~~~~~~~ + 0.9.0 -- original version. + + 0.9.0a/b -- no changes in this file. + + 0.9.0c + * made zero-length BZ_FLUSH work correctly in bzCompress(). + * fixed bzWrite/bzRead to ignore zero-length requests. + * fixed bzread to correctly handle read requests after EOF. + * wrong parameter order in call to bzDecompressInit in + bzBuffToBuffDecompress. Fixed. +--*/ + +#include "bzlib_private.h" + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- Compression stuff ---*/ +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +#ifndef BZ_NO_STDIO +void BZ2_bz__AssertH__fail ( int errcode ) +{ + fprintf(stderr, + "\n\nbzip2/libbzip2: internal error number %d.\n" + "This is a bug in bzip2/libbzip2, %s.\n" + "Please report it to me at: jseward@acm.org. If this happened\n" + "when you were using some program which uses libbzip2 as a\n" + "component, you should also report this bug to the author(s)\n" + "of that program. Please make an effort to report this bug;\n" + "timely and accurate bug reports eventually lead to higher\n" + "quality software. Thanks. Julian Seward, 21 March 2000.\n\n", + errcode, + BZ2_bzlibVersion() + ); + exit(3); +} +#endif + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +static +int bz_config_ok ( void ) +{ + if (sizeof(int) != 4) return 0; + if (sizeof(short) != 2) return 0; + if (sizeof(char) != 1) return 0; + return 1; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +static +void* default_bzalloc ( void* opaque, Int32 items, Int32 size ) +{ + void* v = malloc ( items * size ); + return v; +} + +static +void default_bzfree ( void* opaque, void* addr ) +{ + if (addr != NULL) free ( addr ); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +static +void prepare_new_block ( EState* s ) +{ + Int32 i; + s->nblock = 0; + s->numZ = 0; + s->state_out_pos = 0; + BZ_INITIALISE_CRC ( s->blockCRC ); + for (i = 0; i < 256; i++) s->inUse[i] = False; + s->blockNo++; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +static +void init_RL ( EState* s ) +{ + s->state_in_ch = 256; + s->state_in_len = 0; +} + + +static +Bool isempty_RL ( EState* s ) +{ + if (s->state_in_ch < 256 && s->state_in_len > 0) + return False; else + return True; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +int BZ_API(BZ2_bzCompressInit) + ( bz_stream* strm, + int blockSize100k, + int verbosity, + int workFactor ) +{ + Int32 n; + EState* s; + + if (!bz_config_ok()) return BZ_CONFIG_ERROR; + + if (strm == NULL || + blockSize100k < 1 || blockSize100k > 9 || + workFactor < 0 || workFactor > 250) + return BZ_PARAM_ERROR; + + if (workFactor == 0) workFactor = 30; + if (strm->bzalloc == NULL) strm->bzalloc = default_bzalloc; + if (strm->bzfree == NULL) strm->bzfree = default_bzfree; + + s = BZALLOC( sizeof(EState) ); + if (s == NULL) return BZ_MEM_ERROR; + s->strm = strm; + + s->arr1 = NULL; + s->arr2 = NULL; + s->ftab = NULL; + + n = 100000 * blockSize100k; + s->arr1 = BZALLOC( n * sizeof(UInt32) ); + s->arr2 = BZALLOC( (n+BZ_N_OVERSHOOT) * sizeof(UInt32) ); + s->ftab = BZALLOC( 65537 * sizeof(UInt32) ); + + if (s->arr1 == NULL || s->arr2 == NULL || s->ftab == NULL) { + if (s->arr1 != NULL) BZFREE(s->arr1); + if (s->arr2 != NULL) BZFREE(s->arr2); + if (s->ftab != NULL) BZFREE(s->ftab); + if (s != NULL) BZFREE(s); + return BZ_MEM_ERROR; + } + + s->blockNo = 0; + s->state = BZ_S_INPUT; + s->mode = BZ_M_RUNNING; + s->combinedCRC = 0; + s->blockSize100k = blockSize100k; + s->nblockMAX = 100000 * blockSize100k - 19; + s->verbosity = verbosity; + s->workFactor = workFactor; + + s->block = (UChar*)s->arr2; + s->mtfv = (UInt16*)s->arr1; + s->zbits = NULL; + s->ptr = (UInt32*)s->arr1; + + strm->state = s; + strm->total_in_lo32 = 0; + strm->total_in_hi32 = 0; + strm->total_out_lo32 = 0; + strm->total_out_hi32 = 0; + init_RL ( s ); + prepare_new_block ( s ); + return BZ_OK; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +static +void add_pair_to_block ( EState* s ) +{ + Int32 i; + UChar ch = (UChar)(s->state_in_ch); + for (i = 0; i < s->state_in_len; i++) { + BZ_UPDATE_CRC( s->blockCRC, ch ); + } + s->inUse[s->state_in_ch] = True; + switch (s->state_in_len) { + case 1: + s->block[s->nblock] = (UChar)ch; s->nblock++; + break; + case 2: + s->block[s->nblock] = (UChar)ch; s->nblock++; + s->block[s->nblock] = (UChar)ch; s->nblock++; + break; + case 3: + s->block[s->nblock] = (UChar)ch; s->nblock++; + s->block[s->nblock] = (UChar)ch; s->nblock++; + s->block[s->nblock] = (UChar)ch; s->nblock++; + break; + default: + s->inUse[s->state_in_len-4] = True; + s->block[s->nblock] = (UChar)ch; s->nblock++; + s->block[s->nblock] = (UChar)ch; s->nblock++; + s->block[s->nblock] = (UChar)ch; s->nblock++; + s->block[s->nblock] = (UChar)ch; s->nblock++; + s->block[s->nblock] = ((UChar)(s->state_in_len-4)); + s->nblock++; + break; + } +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +static +void flush_RL ( EState* s ) +{ + if (s->state_in_ch < 256) add_pair_to_block ( s ); + init_RL ( s ); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +#define ADD_CHAR_TO_BLOCK(zs,zchh0) \ +{ \ + UInt32 zchh = (UInt32)(zchh0); \ + /*-- fast track the common case --*/ \ + if (zchh != zs->state_in_ch && \ + zs->state_in_len == 1) { \ + UChar ch = (UChar)(zs->state_in_ch); \ + BZ_UPDATE_CRC( zs->blockCRC, ch ); \ + zs->inUse[zs->state_in_ch] = True; \ + zs->block[zs->nblock] = (UChar)ch; \ + zs->nblock++; \ + zs->state_in_ch = zchh; \ + } \ + else \ + /*-- general, uncommon cases --*/ \ + if (zchh != zs->state_in_ch || \ + zs->state_in_len == 255) { \ + if (zs->state_in_ch < 256) \ + add_pair_to_block ( zs ); \ + zs->state_in_ch = zchh; \ + zs->state_in_len = 1; \ + } else { \ + zs->state_in_len++; \ + } \ +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +static +Bool copy_input_until_stop ( EState* s ) +{ + Bool progress_in = False; + + if (s->mode == BZ_M_RUNNING) { + + /*-- fast track the common case --*/ + while (True) { + /*-- block full? --*/ + if (s->nblock >= s->nblockMAX) break; + /*-- no input? --*/ + if (s->strm->avail_in == 0) break; + progress_in = True; + ADD_CHAR_TO_BLOCK ( s, (UInt32)(*((UChar*)(s->strm->next_in))) ); + s->strm->next_in++; + s->strm->avail_in--; + s->strm->total_in_lo32++; + if (s->strm->total_in_lo32 == 0) s->strm->total_in_hi32++; + } + + } else { + + /*-- general, uncommon case --*/ + while (True) { + /*-- block full? --*/ + if (s->nblock >= s->nblockMAX) break; + /*-- no input? --*/ + if (s->strm->avail_in == 0) break; + /*-- flush/finish end? --*/ + if (s->avail_in_expect == 0) break; + progress_in = True; + ADD_CHAR_TO_BLOCK ( s, (UInt32)(*((UChar*)(s->strm->next_in))) ); + s->strm->next_in++; + s->strm->avail_in--; + s->strm->total_in_lo32++; + if (s->strm->total_in_lo32 == 0) s->strm->total_in_hi32++; + s->avail_in_expect--; + } + } + return progress_in; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +static +Bool copy_output_until_stop ( EState* s ) +{ + Bool progress_out = False; + + while (True) { + + /*-- no output space? --*/ + if (s->strm->avail_out == 0) break; + + /*-- block done? --*/ + if (s->state_out_pos >= s->numZ) break; + + progress_out = True; + *(s->strm->next_out) = s->zbits[s->state_out_pos]; + s->state_out_pos++; + s->strm->avail_out--; + s->strm->next_out++; + s->strm->total_out_lo32++; + if (s->strm->total_out_lo32 == 0) s->strm->total_out_hi32++; + } + + return progress_out; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +static +Bool handle_compress ( bz_stream* strm ) +{ + Bool progress_in = False; + Bool progress_out = False; + EState* s = strm->state; + + while (True) { + + if (s->state == BZ_S_OUTPUT) { + progress_out |= copy_output_until_stop ( s ); + if (s->state_out_pos < s->numZ) break; + if (s->mode == BZ_M_FINISHING && + s->avail_in_expect == 0 && + isempty_RL(s)) break; + prepare_new_block ( s ); + s->state = BZ_S_INPUT; + if (s->mode == BZ_M_FLUSHING && + s->avail_in_expect == 0 && + isempty_RL(s)) break; + } + + if (s->state == BZ_S_INPUT) { + progress_in |= copy_input_until_stop ( s ); + if (s->mode != BZ_M_RUNNING && s->avail_in_expect == 0) { + flush_RL ( s ); + BZ2_compressBlock ( s, (Bool)(s->mode == BZ_M_FINISHING) ); + s->state = BZ_S_OUTPUT; + } + else + if (s->nblock >= s->nblockMAX) { + BZ2_compressBlock ( s, False ); + s->state = BZ_S_OUTPUT; + } + else + if (s->strm->avail_in == 0) { + break; + } + } + + } + + return progress_in || progress_out; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +int BZ_API(BZ2_bzCompress) ( bz_stream *strm, int action ) +{ + Bool progress; + EState* s; + if (strm == NULL) return BZ_PARAM_ERROR; + s = strm->state; + if (s == NULL) return BZ_PARAM_ERROR; + if (s->strm != strm) return BZ_PARAM_ERROR; + + preswitch: + switch (s->mode) { + + case BZ_M_IDLE: + return BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR; + + case BZ_M_RUNNING: + if (action == BZ_RUN) { + progress = handle_compress ( strm ); + return progress ? BZ_RUN_OK : BZ_PARAM_ERROR; + } + else + if (action == BZ_FLUSH) { + s->avail_in_expect = strm->avail_in; + s->mode = BZ_M_FLUSHING; + goto preswitch; + } + else + if (action == BZ_FINISH) { + s->avail_in_expect = strm->avail_in; + s->mode = BZ_M_FINISHING; + goto preswitch; + } + else + return BZ_PARAM_ERROR; + + case BZ_M_FLUSHING: + if (action != BZ_FLUSH) return BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR; + if (s->avail_in_expect != s->strm->avail_in) + return BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR; + progress = handle_compress ( strm ); + if (s->avail_in_expect > 0 || !isempty_RL(s) || + s->state_out_pos < s->numZ) return BZ_FLUSH_OK; + s->mode = BZ_M_RUNNING; + return BZ_RUN_OK; + + case BZ_M_FINISHING: + if (action != BZ_FINISH) return BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR; + if (s->avail_in_expect != s->strm->avail_in) + return BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR; + progress = handle_compress ( strm ); + if (!progress) return BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR; + if (s->avail_in_expect > 0 || !isempty_RL(s) || + s->state_out_pos < s->numZ) return BZ_FINISH_OK; + s->mode = BZ_M_IDLE; + return BZ_STREAM_END; + } + return BZ_OK; /*--not reached--*/ +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +int BZ_API(BZ2_bzCompressEnd) ( bz_stream *strm ) +{ + EState* s; + if (strm == NULL) return BZ_PARAM_ERROR; + s = strm->state; + if (s == NULL) return BZ_PARAM_ERROR; + if (s->strm != strm) return BZ_PARAM_ERROR; + + if (s->arr1 != NULL) BZFREE(s->arr1); + if (s->arr2 != NULL) BZFREE(s->arr2); + if (s->ftab != NULL) BZFREE(s->ftab); + BZFREE(strm->state); + + strm->state = NULL; + + return BZ_OK; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- Decompression stuff ---*/ +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +int BZ_API(BZ2_bzDecompressInit) + ( bz_stream* strm, + int verbosity, + int small ) +{ + DState* s; + + if (!bz_config_ok()) return BZ_CONFIG_ERROR; + + if (strm == NULL) return BZ_PARAM_ERROR; + if (small != 0 && small != 1) return BZ_PARAM_ERROR; + if (verbosity < 0 || verbosity > 4) return BZ_PARAM_ERROR; + + if (strm->bzalloc == NULL) strm->bzalloc = default_bzalloc; + if (strm->bzfree == NULL) strm->bzfree = default_bzfree; + + s = BZALLOC( sizeof(DState) ); + if (s == NULL) return BZ_MEM_ERROR; + s->strm = strm; + strm->state = s; + s->state = BZ_X_MAGIC_1; + s->bsLive = 0; + s->bsBuff = 0; + s->calculatedCombinedCRC = 0; + strm->total_in_lo32 = 0; + strm->total_in_hi32 = 0; + strm->total_out_lo32 = 0; + strm->total_out_hi32 = 0; + s->smallDecompress = (Bool)small; + s->ll4 = NULL; + s->ll16 = NULL; + s->tt = NULL; + s->currBlockNo = 0; + s->verbosity = verbosity; + + return BZ_OK; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +static +void unRLE_obuf_to_output_FAST ( DState* s ) +{ + UChar k1; + + if (s->blockRandomised) { + + while (True) { + /* try to finish existing run */ + while (True) { + if (s->strm->avail_out == 0) return; + if (s->state_out_len == 0) break; + *( (UChar*)(s->strm->next_out) ) = s->state_out_ch; + BZ_UPDATE_CRC ( s->calculatedBlockCRC, s->state_out_ch ); + s->state_out_len--; + s->strm->next_out++; + s->strm->avail_out--; + s->strm->total_out_lo32++; + if (s->strm->total_out_lo32 == 0) s->strm->total_out_hi32++; + } + + /* can a new run be started? */ + if (s->nblock_used == s->save_nblock+1) return; + + + s->state_out_len = 1; + s->state_out_ch = s->k0; + BZ_GET_FAST(k1); BZ_RAND_UPD_MASK; + k1 ^= BZ_RAND_MASK; s->nblock_used++; + if (s->nblock_used == s->save_nblock+1) continue; + if (k1 != s->k0) { s->k0 = k1; continue; }; + + s->state_out_len = 2; + BZ_GET_FAST(k1); BZ_RAND_UPD_MASK; + k1 ^= BZ_RAND_MASK; s->nblock_used++; + if (s->nblock_used == s->save_nblock+1) continue; + if (k1 != s->k0) { s->k0 = k1; continue; }; + + s->state_out_len = 3; + BZ_GET_FAST(k1); BZ_RAND_UPD_MASK; + k1 ^= BZ_RAND_MASK; s->nblock_used++; + if (s->nblock_used == s->save_nblock+1) continue; + if (k1 != s->k0) { s->k0 = k1; continue; }; + + BZ_GET_FAST(k1); BZ_RAND_UPD_MASK; + k1 ^= BZ_RAND_MASK; s->nblock_used++; + s->state_out_len = ((Int32)k1) + 4; + BZ_GET_FAST(s->k0); BZ_RAND_UPD_MASK; + s->k0 ^= BZ_RAND_MASK; s->nblock_used++; + } + + } else { + + /* restore */ + UInt32 c_calculatedBlockCRC = s->calculatedBlockCRC; + UChar c_state_out_ch = s->state_out_ch; + Int32 c_state_out_len = s->state_out_len; + Int32 c_nblock_used = s->nblock_used; + Int32 c_k0 = s->k0; + UInt32* c_tt = s->tt; + UInt32 c_tPos = s->tPos; + char* cs_next_out = s->strm->next_out; + unsigned int cs_avail_out = s->strm->avail_out; + /* end restore */ + + UInt32 avail_out_INIT = cs_avail_out; + Int32 s_save_nblockPP = s->save_nblock+1; + unsigned int total_out_lo32_old; + + while (True) { + + /* try to finish existing run */ + if (c_state_out_len > 0) { + while (True) { + if (cs_avail_out == 0) goto return_notr; + if (c_state_out_len == 1) break; + *( (UChar*)(cs_next_out) ) = c_state_out_ch; + BZ_UPDATE_CRC ( c_calculatedBlockCRC, c_state_out_ch ); + c_state_out_len--; + cs_next_out++; + cs_avail_out--; + } + s_state_out_len_eq_one: + { + if (cs_avail_out == 0) { + c_state_out_len = 1; goto return_notr; + }; + *( (UChar*)(cs_next_out) ) = c_state_out_ch; + BZ_UPDATE_CRC ( c_calculatedBlockCRC, c_state_out_ch ); + cs_next_out++; + cs_avail_out--; + } + } + /* can a new run be started? */ + if (c_nblock_used == s_save_nblockPP) { + c_state_out_len = 0; goto return_notr; + }; + c_state_out_ch = c_k0; + BZ_GET_FAST_C(k1); c_nblock_used++; + if (k1 != c_k0) { + c_k0 = k1; goto s_state_out_len_eq_one; + }; + if (c_nblock_used == s_save_nblockPP) + goto s_state_out_len_eq_one; + + c_state_out_len = 2; + BZ_GET_FAST_C(k1); c_nblock_used++; + if (c_nblock_used == s_save_nblockPP) continue; + if (k1 != c_k0) { c_k0 = k1; continue; }; + + c_state_out_len = 3; + BZ_GET_FAST_C(k1); c_nblock_used++; + if (c_nblock_used == s_save_nblockPP) continue; + if (k1 != c_k0) { c_k0 = k1; continue; }; + + BZ_GET_FAST_C(k1); c_nblock_used++; + c_state_out_len = ((Int32)k1) + 4; + BZ_GET_FAST_C(c_k0); c_nblock_used++; + } + + return_notr: + total_out_lo32_old = s->strm->total_out_lo32; + s->strm->total_out_lo32 += (avail_out_INIT - cs_avail_out); + if (s->strm->total_out_lo32 < total_out_lo32_old) + s->strm->total_out_hi32++; + + /* save */ + s->calculatedBlockCRC = c_calculatedBlockCRC; + s->state_out_ch = c_state_out_ch; + s->state_out_len = c_state_out_len; + s->nblock_used = c_nblock_used; + s->k0 = c_k0; + s->tt = c_tt; + s->tPos = c_tPos; + s->strm->next_out = cs_next_out; + s->strm->avail_out = cs_avail_out; + /* end save */ + } +} + + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +__inline__ Int32 BZ2_indexIntoF ( Int32 indx, Int32 *cftab ) +{ + Int32 nb, na, mid; + nb = 0; + na = 256; + do { + mid = (nb + na) >> 1; + if (indx >= cftab[mid]) nb = mid; else na = mid; + } + while (na - nb != 1); + return nb; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +static +void unRLE_obuf_to_output_SMALL ( DState* s ) +{ + UChar k1; + + if (s->blockRandomised) { + + while (True) { + /* try to finish existing run */ + while (True) { + if (s->strm->avail_out == 0) return; + if (s->state_out_len == 0) break; + *( (UChar*)(s->strm->next_out) ) = s->state_out_ch; + BZ_UPDATE_CRC ( s->calculatedBlockCRC, s->state_out_ch ); + s->state_out_len--; + s->strm->next_out++; + s->strm->avail_out--; + s->strm->total_out_lo32++; + if (s->strm->total_out_lo32 == 0) s->strm->total_out_hi32++; + } + + /* can a new run be started? */ + if (s->nblock_used == s->save_nblock+1) return; + + + s->state_out_len = 1; + s->state_out_ch = s->k0; + BZ_GET_SMALL(k1); BZ_RAND_UPD_MASK; + k1 ^= BZ_RAND_MASK; s->nblock_used++; + if (s->nblock_used == s->save_nblock+1) continue; + if (k1 != s->k0) { s->k0 = k1; continue; }; + + s->state_out_len = 2; + BZ_GET_SMALL(k1); BZ_RAND_UPD_MASK; + k1 ^= BZ_RAND_MASK; s->nblock_used++; + if (s->nblock_used == s->save_nblock+1) continue; + if (k1 != s->k0) { s->k0 = k1; continue; }; + + s->state_out_len = 3; + BZ_GET_SMALL(k1); BZ_RAND_UPD_MASK; + k1 ^= BZ_RAND_MASK; s->nblock_used++; + if (s->nblock_used == s->save_nblock+1) continue; + if (k1 != s->k0) { s->k0 = k1; continue; }; + + BZ_GET_SMALL(k1); BZ_RAND_UPD_MASK; + k1 ^= BZ_RAND_MASK; s->nblock_used++; + s->state_out_len = ((Int32)k1) + 4; + BZ_GET_SMALL(s->k0); BZ_RAND_UPD_MASK; + s->k0 ^= BZ_RAND_MASK; s->nblock_used++; + } + + } else { + + while (True) { + /* try to finish existing run */ + while (True) { + if (s->strm->avail_out == 0) return; + if (s->state_out_len == 0) break; + *( (UChar*)(s->strm->next_out) ) = s->state_out_ch; + BZ_UPDATE_CRC ( s->calculatedBlockCRC, s->state_out_ch ); + s->state_out_len--; + s->strm->next_out++; + s->strm->avail_out--; + s->strm->total_out_lo32++; + if (s->strm->total_out_lo32 == 0) s->strm->total_out_hi32++; + } + + /* can a new run be started? */ + if (s->nblock_used == s->save_nblock+1) return; + + s->state_out_len = 1; + s->state_out_ch = s->k0; + BZ_GET_SMALL(k1); s->nblock_used++; + if (s->nblock_used == s->save_nblock+1) continue; + if (k1 != s->k0) { s->k0 = k1; continue; }; + + s->state_out_len = 2; + BZ_GET_SMALL(k1); s->nblock_used++; + if (s->nblock_used == s->save_nblock+1) continue; + if (k1 != s->k0) { s->k0 = k1; continue; }; + + s->state_out_len = 3; + BZ_GET_SMALL(k1); s->nblock_used++; + if (s->nblock_used == s->save_nblock+1) continue; + if (k1 != s->k0) { s->k0 = k1; continue; }; + + BZ_GET_SMALL(k1); s->nblock_used++; + s->state_out_len = ((Int32)k1) + 4; + BZ_GET_SMALL(s->k0); s->nblock_used++; + } + + } +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +int BZ_API(BZ2_bzDecompress) ( bz_stream *strm ) +{ + DState* s; + if (strm == NULL) return BZ_PARAM_ERROR; + s = strm->state; + if (s == NULL) return BZ_PARAM_ERROR; + if (s->strm != strm) return BZ_PARAM_ERROR; + + while (True) { + if (s->state == BZ_X_IDLE) return BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR; + if (s->state == BZ_X_OUTPUT) { + if (s->smallDecompress) + unRLE_obuf_to_output_SMALL ( s ); else + unRLE_obuf_to_output_FAST ( s ); + if (s->nblock_used == s->save_nblock+1 && s->state_out_len == 0) { + BZ_FINALISE_CRC ( s->calculatedBlockCRC ); + if (s->verbosity >= 3) + VPrintf2 ( " {0x%x, 0x%x}", s->storedBlockCRC, + s->calculatedBlockCRC ); + if (s->verbosity >= 2) VPrintf0 ( "]" ); + if (s->calculatedBlockCRC != s->storedBlockCRC) + return BZ_DATA_ERROR; + s->calculatedCombinedCRC + = (s->calculatedCombinedCRC << 1) | + (s->calculatedCombinedCRC >> 31); + s->calculatedCombinedCRC ^= s->calculatedBlockCRC; + s->state = BZ_X_BLKHDR_1; + } else { + return BZ_OK; + } + } + if (s->state >= BZ_X_MAGIC_1) { + Int32 r = BZ2_decompress ( s ); + if (r == BZ_STREAM_END) { + if (s->verbosity >= 3) + VPrintf2 ( "\n combined CRCs: stored = 0x%x, computed = 0x%x", + s->storedCombinedCRC, s->calculatedCombinedCRC ); + if (s->calculatedCombinedCRC != s->storedCombinedCRC) + return BZ_DATA_ERROR; + return r; + } + if (s->state != BZ_X_OUTPUT) return r; + } + } + + AssertH ( 0, 6001 ); + + return 0; /*NOTREACHED*/ +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +int BZ_API(BZ2_bzDecompressEnd) ( bz_stream *strm ) +{ + DState* s; + if (strm == NULL) return BZ_PARAM_ERROR; + s = strm->state; + if (s == NULL) return BZ_PARAM_ERROR; + if (s->strm != strm) return BZ_PARAM_ERROR; + + if (s->tt != NULL) BZFREE(s->tt); + if (s->ll16 != NULL) BZFREE(s->ll16); + if (s->ll4 != NULL) BZFREE(s->ll4); + + BZFREE(strm->state); + strm->state = NULL; + + return BZ_OK; +} + + +#ifndef BZ_NO_STDIO +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- File I/O stuff ---*/ +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ + +#define BZ_SETERR(eee) \ +{ \ + if (bzerror != NULL) *bzerror = eee; \ + if (bzf != NULL) bzf->lastErr = eee; \ +} + +typedef + struct { + FILE* handle; + Char buf[BZ_MAX_UNUSED]; + Int32 bufN; + Bool writing; + bz_stream strm; + Int32 lastErr; + Bool initialisedOk; + } + bzFile; + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +static Bool myfeof ( FILE* f ) +{ + Int32 c = fgetc ( f ); + if (c == EOF) return True; + ungetc ( c, f ); + return False; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +BZFILE* BZ_API(BZ2_bzWriteOpen) + ( int* bzerror, + FILE* f, + int blockSize100k, + int verbosity, + int workFactor ) +{ + Int32 ret; + bzFile* bzf = NULL; + + BZ_SETERR(BZ_OK); + + if (f == NULL || + (blockSize100k < 1 || blockSize100k > 9) || + (workFactor < 0 || workFactor > 250) || + (verbosity < 0 || verbosity > 4)) + { BZ_SETERR(BZ_PARAM_ERROR); return NULL; }; + + if (ferror(f)) + { BZ_SETERR(BZ_IO_ERROR); return NULL; }; + + bzf = malloc ( sizeof(bzFile) ); + if (bzf == NULL) + { BZ_SETERR(BZ_MEM_ERROR); return NULL; }; + + BZ_SETERR(BZ_OK); + bzf->initialisedOk = False; + bzf->bufN = 0; + bzf->handle = f; + bzf->writing = True; + bzf->strm.bzalloc = NULL; + bzf->strm.bzfree = NULL; + bzf->strm.opaque = NULL; + + if (workFactor == 0) workFactor = 30; + ret = BZ2_bzCompressInit ( &(bzf->strm), blockSize100k, + verbosity, workFactor ); + if (ret != BZ_OK) + { BZ_SETERR(ret); free(bzf); return NULL; }; + + bzf->strm.avail_in = 0; + bzf->initialisedOk = True; + return bzf; +} + + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +void BZ_API(BZ2_bzWrite) + ( int* bzerror, + BZFILE* b, + void* buf, + int len ) +{ + Int32 n, n2, ret; + bzFile* bzf = (bzFile*)b; + + BZ_SETERR(BZ_OK); + if (bzf == NULL || buf == NULL || len < 0) + { BZ_SETERR(BZ_PARAM_ERROR); return; }; + if (!(bzf->writing)) + { BZ_SETERR(BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR); return; }; + if (ferror(bzf->handle)) + { BZ_SETERR(BZ_IO_ERROR); return; }; + + if (len == 0) + { BZ_SETERR(BZ_OK); return; }; + + bzf->strm.avail_in = len; + bzf->strm.next_in = buf; + + while (True) { + bzf->strm.avail_out = BZ_MAX_UNUSED; + bzf->strm.next_out = bzf->buf; + ret = BZ2_bzCompress ( &(bzf->strm), BZ_RUN ); + if (ret != BZ_RUN_OK) + { BZ_SETERR(ret); return; }; + + if (bzf->strm.avail_out < BZ_MAX_UNUSED) { + n = BZ_MAX_UNUSED - bzf->strm.avail_out; + n2 = fwrite ( (void*)(bzf->buf), sizeof(UChar), + n, bzf->handle ); + if (n != n2 || ferror(bzf->handle)) + { BZ_SETERR(BZ_IO_ERROR); return; }; + } + + if (bzf->strm.avail_in == 0) + { BZ_SETERR(BZ_OK); return; }; + } +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +void BZ_API(BZ2_bzWriteClose) + ( int* bzerror, + BZFILE* b, + int abandon, + unsigned int* nbytes_in, + unsigned int* nbytes_out ) +{ + BZ2_bzWriteClose64 ( bzerror, b, abandon, + nbytes_in, NULL, nbytes_out, NULL ); +} + + +void BZ_API(BZ2_bzWriteClose64) + ( int* bzerror, + BZFILE* b, + int abandon, + unsigned int* nbytes_in_lo32, + unsigned int* nbytes_in_hi32, + unsigned int* nbytes_out_lo32, + unsigned int* nbytes_out_hi32 ) +{ + Int32 n, n2, ret; + bzFile* bzf = (bzFile*)b; + + if (bzf == NULL) + { BZ_SETERR(BZ_OK); return; }; + if (!(bzf->writing)) + { BZ_SETERR(BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR); return; }; + if (ferror(bzf->handle)) + { BZ_SETERR(BZ_IO_ERROR); return; }; + + if (nbytes_in_lo32 != NULL) *nbytes_in_lo32 = 0; + if (nbytes_in_hi32 != NULL) *nbytes_in_hi32 = 0; + if (nbytes_out_lo32 != NULL) *nbytes_out_lo32 = 0; + if (nbytes_out_hi32 != NULL) *nbytes_out_hi32 = 0; + + if ((!abandon) && bzf->lastErr == BZ_OK) { + while (True) { + bzf->strm.avail_out = BZ_MAX_UNUSED; + bzf->strm.next_out = bzf->buf; + ret = BZ2_bzCompress ( &(bzf->strm), BZ_FINISH ); + if (ret != BZ_FINISH_OK && ret != BZ_STREAM_END) + { BZ_SETERR(ret); return; }; + + if (bzf->strm.avail_out < BZ_MAX_UNUSED) { + n = BZ_MAX_UNUSED - bzf->strm.avail_out; + n2 = fwrite ( (void*)(bzf->buf), sizeof(UChar), + n, bzf->handle ); + if (n != n2 || ferror(bzf->handle)) + { BZ_SETERR(BZ_IO_ERROR); return; }; + } + + if (ret == BZ_STREAM_END) break; + } + } + + if ( !abandon && !ferror ( bzf->handle ) ) { + fflush ( bzf->handle ); + if (ferror(bzf->handle)) + { BZ_SETERR(BZ_IO_ERROR); return; }; + } + + if (nbytes_in_lo32 != NULL) + *nbytes_in_lo32 = bzf->strm.total_in_lo32; + if (nbytes_in_hi32 != NULL) + *nbytes_in_hi32 = bzf->strm.total_in_hi32; + if (nbytes_out_lo32 != NULL) + *nbytes_out_lo32 = bzf->strm.total_out_lo32; + if (nbytes_out_hi32 != NULL) + *nbytes_out_hi32 = bzf->strm.total_out_hi32; + + BZ_SETERR(BZ_OK); + BZ2_bzCompressEnd ( &(bzf->strm) ); + free ( bzf ); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +BZFILE* BZ_API(BZ2_bzReadOpen) + ( int* bzerror, + FILE* f, + int verbosity, + int small, + void* unused, + int nUnused ) +{ + bzFile* bzf = NULL; + int ret; + + BZ_SETERR(BZ_OK); + + if (f == NULL || + (small != 0 && small != 1) || + (verbosity < 0 || verbosity > 4) || + (unused == NULL && nUnused != 0) || + (unused != NULL && (nUnused < 0 || nUnused > BZ_MAX_UNUSED))) + { BZ_SETERR(BZ_PARAM_ERROR); return NULL; }; + + if (ferror(f)) + { BZ_SETERR(BZ_IO_ERROR); return NULL; }; + + bzf = malloc ( sizeof(bzFile) ); + if (bzf == NULL) + { BZ_SETERR(BZ_MEM_ERROR); return NULL; }; + + BZ_SETERR(BZ_OK); + + bzf->initialisedOk = False; + bzf->handle = f; + bzf->bufN = 0; + bzf->writing = False; + bzf->strm.bzalloc = NULL; + bzf->strm.bzfree = NULL; + bzf->strm.opaque = NULL; + + while (nUnused > 0) { + bzf->buf[bzf->bufN] = *((UChar*)(unused)); bzf->bufN++; + unused = ((void*)( 1 + ((UChar*)(unused)) )); + nUnused--; + } + + ret = BZ2_bzDecompressInit ( &(bzf->strm), verbosity, small ); + if (ret != BZ_OK) + { BZ_SETERR(ret); free(bzf); return NULL; }; + + bzf->strm.avail_in = bzf->bufN; + bzf->strm.next_in = bzf->buf; + + bzf->initialisedOk = True; + return bzf; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +void BZ_API(BZ2_bzReadClose) ( int *bzerror, BZFILE *b ) +{ + bzFile* bzf = (bzFile*)b; + + BZ_SETERR(BZ_OK); + if (bzf == NULL) + { BZ_SETERR(BZ_OK); return; }; + + if (bzf->writing) + { BZ_SETERR(BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR); return; }; + + if (bzf->initialisedOk) + (void)BZ2_bzDecompressEnd ( &(bzf->strm) ); + free ( bzf ); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +int BZ_API(BZ2_bzRead) + ( int* bzerror, + BZFILE* b, + void* buf, + int len ) +{ + Int32 n, ret; + bzFile* bzf = (bzFile*)b; + + BZ_SETERR(BZ_OK); + + if (bzf == NULL || buf == NULL || len < 0) + { BZ_SETERR(BZ_PARAM_ERROR); return 0; }; + + if (bzf->writing) + { BZ_SETERR(BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR); return 0; }; + + if (len == 0) + { BZ_SETERR(BZ_OK); return 0; }; + + bzf->strm.avail_out = len; + bzf->strm.next_out = buf; + + while (True) { + + if (ferror(bzf->handle)) + { BZ_SETERR(BZ_IO_ERROR); return 0; }; + + if (bzf->strm.avail_in == 0 && !myfeof(bzf->handle)) { + n = fread ( bzf->buf, sizeof(UChar), + BZ_MAX_UNUSED, bzf->handle ); + if (ferror(bzf->handle)) + { BZ_SETERR(BZ_IO_ERROR); return 0; }; + bzf->bufN = n; + bzf->strm.avail_in = bzf->bufN; + bzf->strm.next_in = bzf->buf; + } + + ret = BZ2_bzDecompress ( &(bzf->strm) ); + + if (ret != BZ_OK && ret != BZ_STREAM_END) + { BZ_SETERR(ret); return 0; }; + + if (ret == BZ_OK && myfeof(bzf->handle) && + bzf->strm.avail_in == 0 && bzf->strm.avail_out > 0) + { BZ_SETERR(BZ_UNEXPECTED_EOF); return 0; }; + + if (ret == BZ_STREAM_END) + { BZ_SETERR(BZ_STREAM_END); + return len - bzf->strm.avail_out; }; + if (bzf->strm.avail_out == 0) + { BZ_SETERR(BZ_OK); return len; }; + + } + + return 0; /*not reached*/ +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +void BZ_API(BZ2_bzReadGetUnused) + ( int* bzerror, + BZFILE* b, + void** unused, + int* nUnused ) +{ + bzFile* bzf = (bzFile*)b; + if (bzf == NULL) + { BZ_SETERR(BZ_PARAM_ERROR); return; }; + if (bzf->lastErr != BZ_STREAM_END) + { BZ_SETERR(BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR); return; }; + if (unused == NULL || nUnused == NULL) + { BZ_SETERR(BZ_PARAM_ERROR); return; }; + + BZ_SETERR(BZ_OK); + *nUnused = bzf->strm.avail_in; + *unused = bzf->strm.next_in; +} +#endif + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- Misc convenience stuff ---*/ +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +int BZ_API(BZ2_bzBuffToBuffCompress) + ( char* dest, + unsigned int* destLen, + char* source, + unsigned int sourceLen, + int blockSize100k, + int verbosity, + int workFactor ) +{ + bz_stream strm; + int ret; + + if (dest == NULL || destLen == NULL || + source == NULL || + blockSize100k < 1 || blockSize100k > 9 || + verbosity < 0 || verbosity > 4 || + workFactor < 0 || workFactor > 250) + return BZ_PARAM_ERROR; + + if (workFactor == 0) workFactor = 30; + strm.bzalloc = NULL; + strm.bzfree = NULL; + strm.opaque = NULL; + ret = BZ2_bzCompressInit ( &strm, blockSize100k, + verbosity, workFactor ); + if (ret != BZ_OK) return ret; + + strm.next_in = source; + strm.next_out = dest; + strm.avail_in = sourceLen; + strm.avail_out = *destLen; + + ret = BZ2_bzCompress ( &strm, BZ_FINISH ); + if (ret == BZ_FINISH_OK) goto output_overflow; + if (ret != BZ_STREAM_END) goto errhandler; + + /* normal termination */ + *destLen -= strm.avail_out; + BZ2_bzCompressEnd ( &strm ); + return BZ_OK; + + output_overflow: + BZ2_bzCompressEnd ( &strm ); + return BZ_OUTBUFF_FULL; + + errhandler: + BZ2_bzCompressEnd ( &strm ); + return ret; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +int BZ_API(BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompress) + ( char* dest, + unsigned int* destLen, + char* source, + unsigned int sourceLen, + int small, + int verbosity ) +{ + bz_stream strm; + int ret; + + if (dest == NULL || destLen == NULL || + source == NULL || + (small != 0 && small != 1) || + verbosity < 0 || verbosity > 4) + return BZ_PARAM_ERROR; + + strm.bzalloc = NULL; + strm.bzfree = NULL; + strm.opaque = NULL; + ret = BZ2_bzDecompressInit ( &strm, verbosity, small ); + if (ret != BZ_OK) return ret; + + strm.next_in = source; + strm.next_out = dest; + strm.avail_in = sourceLen; + strm.avail_out = *destLen; + + ret = BZ2_bzDecompress ( &strm ); + if (ret == BZ_OK) goto output_overflow_or_eof; + if (ret != BZ_STREAM_END) goto errhandler; + + /* normal termination */ + *destLen -= strm.avail_out; + BZ2_bzDecompressEnd ( &strm ); + return BZ_OK; + + output_overflow_or_eof: + if (strm.avail_out > 0) { + BZ2_bzDecompressEnd ( &strm ); + return BZ_UNEXPECTED_EOF; + } else { + BZ2_bzDecompressEnd ( &strm ); + return BZ_OUTBUFF_FULL; + }; + + errhandler: + BZ2_bzDecompressEnd ( &strm ); + return ret; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +/*-- + Code contributed by Yoshioka Tsuneo + (QWF00133@niftyserve.or.jp/tsuneo-y@is.aist-nara.ac.jp), + to support better zlib compatibility. + This code is not _officially_ part of libbzip2 (yet); + I haven't tested it, documented it, or considered the + threading-safeness of it. + If this code breaks, please contact both Yoshioka and me. +--*/ +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +/*-- + return version like "0.9.0c". +--*/ +const char * BZ_API(BZ2_bzlibVersion)(void) +{ + return BZ_VERSION; +} + + +#ifndef BZ_NO_STDIO +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ + +#if defined(_WIN32) || defined(OS2) || defined(MSDOS) +# include <fcntl.h> +# include <io.h> +# define SET_BINARY_MODE(file) setmode(fileno(file),O_BINARY) +#else +# define SET_BINARY_MODE(file) +#endif +static +BZFILE * bzopen_or_bzdopen + ( const char *path, /* no use when bzdopen */ + int fd, /* no use when bzdopen */ + const char *mode, + int open_mode) /* bzopen: 0, bzdopen:1 */ +{ + int bzerr; + char unused[BZ_MAX_UNUSED]; + int blockSize100k = 9; + int writing = 0; + char mode2[10] = ""; + FILE *fp = NULL; + BZFILE *bzfp = NULL; + int verbosity = 0; + int workFactor = 30; + int smallMode = 0; + int nUnused = 0; + + if (mode == NULL) return NULL; + while (*mode) { + switch (*mode) { + case 'r': + writing = 0; break; + case 'w': + writing = 1; break; + case 's': + smallMode = 1; break; + default: + if (isdigit((int)(*mode))) { + blockSize100k = *mode-'0'; + } + } + mode++; + } + strcat(mode2, writing ? "w" : "r" ); + strcat(mode2,"b"); /* binary mode */ + + if (open_mode==0) { + if (path==NULL || strcmp(path,"")==0) { + fp = (writing ? stdout : stdin); + SET_BINARY_MODE(fp); + } else { + fp = fopen(path,mode2); + } + } else { +#ifdef BZ_STRICT_ANSI + fp = NULL; +#else + fp = fdopen(fd,mode2); +#endif + } + if (fp == NULL) return NULL; + + if (writing) { + /* Guard against total chaos and anarchy -- JRS */ + if (blockSize100k < 1) blockSize100k = 1; + if (blockSize100k > 9) blockSize100k = 9; + bzfp = BZ2_bzWriteOpen(&bzerr,fp,blockSize100k, + verbosity,workFactor); + } else { + bzfp = BZ2_bzReadOpen(&bzerr,fp,verbosity,smallMode, + unused,nUnused); + } + if (bzfp == NULL) { + if (fp != stdin && fp != stdout) fclose(fp); + return NULL; + } + return bzfp; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +/*-- + open file for read or write. + ex) bzopen("file","w9") + case path="" or NULL => use stdin or stdout. +--*/ +BZFILE * BZ_API(BZ2_bzopen) + ( const char *path, + const char *mode ) +{ + return bzopen_or_bzdopen(path,-1,mode,/*bzopen*/0); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +BZFILE * BZ_API(BZ2_bzdopen) + ( int fd, + const char *mode ) +{ + return bzopen_or_bzdopen(NULL,fd,mode,/*bzdopen*/1); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +int BZ_API(BZ2_bzread) (BZFILE* b, void* buf, int len ) +{ + int bzerr, nread; + if (((bzFile*)b)->lastErr == BZ_STREAM_END) return 0; + nread = BZ2_bzRead(&bzerr,b,buf,len); + if (bzerr == BZ_OK || bzerr == BZ_STREAM_END) { + return nread; + } else { + return -1; + } +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +int BZ_API(BZ2_bzwrite) (BZFILE* b, void* buf, int len ) +{ + int bzerr; + + BZ2_bzWrite(&bzerr,b,buf,len); + if(bzerr == BZ_OK){ + return len; + }else{ + return -1; + } +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +int BZ_API(BZ2_bzflush) (BZFILE *b) +{ + /* do nothing now... */ + return 0; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +void BZ_API(BZ2_bzclose) (BZFILE* b) +{ + int bzerr; + FILE *fp = ((bzFile *)b)->handle; + + if (b==NULL) {return;} + if(((bzFile*)b)->writing){ + BZ2_bzWriteClose(&bzerr,b,0,NULL,NULL); + if(bzerr != BZ_OK){ + BZ2_bzWriteClose(NULL,b,1,NULL,NULL); + } + }else{ + BZ2_bzReadClose(&bzerr,b); + } + if(fp!=stdin && fp!=stdout){ + fclose(fp); + } +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +/*-- + return last error code +--*/ +static char *bzerrorstrings[] = { + "OK" + ,"SEQUENCE_ERROR" + ,"PARAM_ERROR" + ,"MEM_ERROR" + ,"DATA_ERROR" + ,"DATA_ERROR_MAGIC" + ,"IO_ERROR" + ,"UNEXPECTED_EOF" + ,"OUTBUFF_FULL" + ,"CONFIG_ERROR" + ,"???" /* for future */ + ,"???" /* for future */ + ,"???" /* for future */ + ,"???" /* for future */ + ,"???" /* for future */ + ,"???" /* for future */ +}; + + +const char * BZ_API(BZ2_bzerror) (BZFILE *b, int *errnum) +{ + int err = ((bzFile *)b)->lastErr; + + if(err>0) err = 0; + *errnum = err; + return bzerrorstrings[err*-1]; +} +#endif + + +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- end bzlib.c ---*/ +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ diff --git a/bzip2/bzlib.h b/bzip2/bzlib.h new file mode 100644 index 000000000..c9447a295 --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/bzlib.h @@ -0,0 +1,319 @@ + +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- Public header file for the library. ---*/ +/*--- bzlib.h ---*/ +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ + +/*-- + This file is a part of bzip2 and/or libbzip2, a program and + library for lossless, block-sorting data compression. + + Copyright (C) 1996-2000 Julian R Seward. All rights reserved. + + Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without + modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions + are met: + + 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright + notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. + + 2. The origin of this software must not be misrepresented; you must + not claim that you wrote the original software. If you use this + software in a product, an acknowledgment in the product + documentation would be appreciated but is not required. + + 3. Altered source versions must be plainly marked as such, and must + not be misrepresented as being the original software. + + 4. The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote + products derived from this software without specific prior written + permission. + + THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS + OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED + WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE + ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY + DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL + DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE + GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS + INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, + WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING + NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS + SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. + + Julian Seward, Cambridge, UK. + jseward@acm.org + bzip2/libbzip2 version 1.0 of 21 March 2000 + + This program is based on (at least) the work of: + Mike Burrows + David Wheeler + Peter Fenwick + Alistair Moffat + Radford Neal + Ian H. Witten + Robert Sedgewick + Jon L. Bentley + + For more information on these sources, see the manual. +--*/ + + +#ifndef _BZLIB_H +#define _BZLIB_H + +#ifdef __cplusplus +extern "C" { +#endif + +#define BZ_RUN 0 +#define BZ_FLUSH 1 +#define BZ_FINISH 2 + +#define BZ_OK 0 +#define BZ_RUN_OK 1 +#define BZ_FLUSH_OK 2 +#define BZ_FINISH_OK 3 +#define BZ_STREAM_END 4 +#define BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR (-1) +#define BZ_PARAM_ERROR (-2) +#define BZ_MEM_ERROR (-3) +#define BZ_DATA_ERROR (-4) +#define BZ_DATA_ERROR_MAGIC (-5) +#define BZ_IO_ERROR (-6) +#define BZ_UNEXPECTED_EOF (-7) +#define BZ_OUTBUFF_FULL (-8) +#define BZ_CONFIG_ERROR (-9) + +typedef + struct { + char *next_in; + unsigned int avail_in; + unsigned int total_in_lo32; + unsigned int total_in_hi32; + + char *next_out; + unsigned int avail_out; + unsigned int total_out_lo32; + unsigned int total_out_hi32; + + void *state; + + void *(*bzalloc)(void *,int,int); + void (*bzfree)(void *,void *); + void *opaque; + } + bz_stream; + + +#ifndef BZ_IMPORT +#define BZ_EXPORT +#endif + +#ifdef _WIN32 +# include <stdio.h> +# include <windows.h> +# ifdef small + /* windows.h define small to char */ +# undef small +# endif +# ifdef BZ_EXPORT +# define BZ_API(func) WINAPI func +# define BZ_EXTERN extern +# else + /* import windows dll dynamically */ +# define BZ_API(func) (WINAPI * func) +# define BZ_EXTERN +# endif +#else +# define BZ_API(func) func +# define BZ_EXTERN extern +#endif + + +/*-- Core (low-level) library functions --*/ + +BZ_EXTERN int BZ_API(BZ2_bzCompressInit) ( + bz_stream* strm, + int blockSize100k, + int verbosity, + int workFactor + ); + +BZ_EXTERN int BZ_API(BZ2_bzCompress) ( + bz_stream* strm, + int action + ); + +BZ_EXTERN int BZ_API(BZ2_bzCompressEnd) ( + bz_stream* strm + ); + +BZ_EXTERN int BZ_API(BZ2_bzDecompressInit) ( + bz_stream *strm, + int verbosity, + int small + ); + +BZ_EXTERN int BZ_API(BZ2_bzDecompress) ( + bz_stream* strm + ); + +BZ_EXTERN int BZ_API(BZ2_bzDecompressEnd) ( + bz_stream *strm + ); + + + +/*-- High(er) level library functions --*/ + +#ifndef BZ_NO_STDIO +#define BZ_MAX_UNUSED 5000 + +typedef void BZFILE; + +BZ_EXTERN BZFILE* BZ_API(BZ2_bzReadOpen) ( + int* bzerror, + FILE* f, + int verbosity, + int small, + void* unused, + int nUnused + ); + +BZ_EXTERN void BZ_API(BZ2_bzReadClose) ( + int* bzerror, + BZFILE* b + ); + +BZ_EXTERN void BZ_API(BZ2_bzReadGetUnused) ( + int* bzerror, + BZFILE* b, + void** unused, + int* nUnused + ); + +BZ_EXTERN int BZ_API(BZ2_bzRead) ( + int* bzerror, + BZFILE* b, + void* buf, + int len + ); + +BZ_EXTERN BZFILE* BZ_API(BZ2_bzWriteOpen) ( + int* bzerror, + FILE* f, + int blockSize100k, + int verbosity, + int workFactor + ); + +BZ_EXTERN void BZ_API(BZ2_bzWrite) ( + int* bzerror, + BZFILE* b, + void* buf, + int len + ); + +BZ_EXTERN void BZ_API(BZ2_bzWriteClose) ( + int* bzerror, + BZFILE* b, + int abandon, + unsigned int* nbytes_in, + unsigned int* nbytes_out + ); + +BZ_EXTERN void BZ_API(BZ2_bzWriteClose64) ( + int* bzerror, + BZFILE* b, + int abandon, + unsigned int* nbytes_in_lo32, + unsigned int* nbytes_in_hi32, + unsigned int* nbytes_out_lo32, + unsigned int* nbytes_out_hi32 + ); +#endif + + +/*-- Utility functions --*/ + +BZ_EXTERN int BZ_API(BZ2_bzBuffToBuffCompress) ( + char* dest, + unsigned int* destLen, + char* source, + unsigned int sourceLen, + int blockSize100k, + int verbosity, + int workFactor + ); + +BZ_EXTERN int BZ_API(BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompress) ( + char* dest, + unsigned int* destLen, + char* source, + unsigned int sourceLen, + int small, + int verbosity + ); + + +/*-- + Code contributed by Yoshioka Tsuneo + (QWF00133@niftyserve.or.jp/tsuneo-y@is.aist-nara.ac.jp), + to support better zlib compatibility. + This code is not _officially_ part of libbzip2 (yet); + I haven't tested it, documented it, or considered the + threading-safeness of it. + If this code breaks, please contact both Yoshioka and me. +--*/ + +BZ_EXTERN const char * BZ_API(BZ2_bzlibVersion) ( + void + ); + +#ifndef BZ_NO_STDIO +BZ_EXTERN BZFILE * BZ_API(BZ2_bzopen) ( + const char *path, + const char *mode + ); + +BZ_EXTERN BZFILE * BZ_API(BZ2_bzdopen) ( + int fd, + const char *mode + ); + +BZ_EXTERN int BZ_API(BZ2_bzread) ( + BZFILE* b, + void* buf, + int len + ); + +BZ_EXTERN int BZ_API(BZ2_bzwrite) ( + BZFILE* b, + void* buf, + int len + ); + +BZ_EXTERN int BZ_API(BZ2_bzflush) ( + BZFILE* b + ); + +BZ_EXTERN void BZ_API(BZ2_bzclose) ( + BZFILE* b + ); + +BZ_EXTERN const char * BZ_API(BZ2_bzerror) ( + BZFILE *b, + int *errnum + ); +#endif + +#ifdef __cplusplus +} +#endif + +#endif + +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- end bzlib.h ---*/ +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ diff --git a/bzip2/bzlib_private.h b/bzip2/bzlib_private.h new file mode 100644 index 000000000..fb51c7a1d --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/bzlib_private.h @@ -0,0 +1,530 @@ + +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- Private header file for the library. ---*/ +/*--- bzlib_private.h ---*/ +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ + +/*-- + This file is a part of bzip2 and/or libbzip2, a program and + library for lossless, block-sorting data compression. + + Copyright (C) 1996-2000 Julian R Seward. All rights reserved. + + Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without + modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions + are met: + + 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright + notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. + + 2. The origin of this software must not be misrepresented; you must + not claim that you wrote the original software. If you use this + software in a product, an acknowledgment in the product + documentation would be appreciated but is not required. + + 3. Altered source versions must be plainly marked as such, and must + not be misrepresented as being the original software. + + 4. The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote + products derived from this software without specific prior written + permission. + + THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS + OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED + WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE + ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY + DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL + DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE + GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS + INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, + WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING + NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS + SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. + + Julian Seward, Cambridge, UK. + jseward@acm.org + bzip2/libbzip2 version 1.0 of 21 March 2000 + + This program is based on (at least) the work of: + Mike Burrows + David Wheeler + Peter Fenwick + Alistair Moffat + Radford Neal + Ian H. Witten + Robert Sedgewick + Jon L. Bentley + + For more information on these sources, see the manual. +--*/ + + +#ifndef _BZLIB_PRIVATE_H +#define _BZLIB_PRIVATE_H + +#include <stdlib.h> + +#ifndef BZ_NO_STDIO +#include <stdio.h> +#include <ctype.h> +#include <string.h> +#endif + +#include "bzlib.h" + + + +/*-- General stuff. --*/ + +#define BZ_VERSION "1.0.1, 23-June-2000" + +typedef char Char; +typedef unsigned char Bool; +typedef unsigned char UChar; +typedef int Int32; +typedef unsigned int UInt32; +typedef short Int16; +typedef unsigned short UInt16; + +#define True ((Bool)1) +#define False ((Bool)0) + +#ifndef __GNUC__ +#define __inline__ /* */ +#endif + +#ifndef BZ_NO_STDIO +extern void BZ2_bz__AssertH__fail ( int errcode ); +#define AssertH(cond,errcode) \ + { if (!(cond)) BZ2_bz__AssertH__fail ( errcode ); } +#if BZ_DEBUG +#define AssertD(cond,msg) \ + { if (!(cond)) { \ + fprintf ( stderr, \ + "\n\nlibbzip2(debug build): internal error\n\t%s\n", msg );\ + exit(1); \ + }} +#else +#define AssertD(cond,msg) /* */ +#endif +#define VPrintf0(zf) \ + fprintf(stderr,zf) +#define VPrintf1(zf,za1) \ + fprintf(stderr,zf,za1) +#define VPrintf2(zf,za1,za2) \ + fprintf(stderr,zf,za1,za2) +#define VPrintf3(zf,za1,za2,za3) \ + fprintf(stderr,zf,za1,za2,za3) +#define VPrintf4(zf,za1,za2,za3,za4) \ + fprintf(stderr,zf,za1,za2,za3,za4) +#define VPrintf5(zf,za1,za2,za3,za4,za5) \ + fprintf(stderr,zf,za1,za2,za3,za4,za5) +#else +extern void bz_internal_error ( int errcode ); +#define AssertH(cond,errcode) \ + { if (!(cond)) bz_internal_error ( errcode ); } +#define AssertD(cond,msg) /* */ +#define VPrintf0(zf) /* */ +#define VPrintf1(zf,za1) /* */ +#define VPrintf2(zf,za1,za2) /* */ +#define VPrintf3(zf,za1,za2,za3) /* */ +#define VPrintf4(zf,za1,za2,za3,za4) /* */ +#define VPrintf5(zf,za1,za2,za3,za4,za5) /* */ +#endif + + +#define BZALLOC(nnn) (strm->bzalloc)(strm->opaque,(nnn),1) +#define BZFREE(ppp) (strm->bzfree)(strm->opaque,(ppp)) + + +/*-- Constants for the back end. --*/ + +#define BZ_MAX_ALPHA_SIZE 258 +#define BZ_MAX_CODE_LEN 23 + +#define BZ_RUNA 0 +#define BZ_RUNB 1 + +#define BZ_N_GROUPS 6 +#define BZ_G_SIZE 50 +#define BZ_N_ITERS 4 + +#define BZ_MAX_SELECTORS (2 + (900000 / BZ_G_SIZE)) + + + +/*-- Stuff for randomising repetitive blocks. --*/ + +extern Int32 BZ2_rNums[512]; + +#define BZ_RAND_DECLS \ + Int32 rNToGo; \ + Int32 rTPos \ + +#define BZ_RAND_INIT_MASK \ + s->rNToGo = 0; \ + s->rTPos = 0 \ + +#define BZ_RAND_MASK ((s->rNToGo == 1) ? 1 : 0) + +#define BZ_RAND_UPD_MASK \ + if (s->rNToGo == 0) { \ + s->rNToGo = BZ2_rNums[s->rTPos]; \ + s->rTPos++; \ + if (s->rTPos == 512) s->rTPos = 0; \ + } \ + s->rNToGo--; + + + +/*-- Stuff for doing CRCs. --*/ + +extern UInt32 BZ2_crc32Table[256]; + +#define BZ_INITIALISE_CRC(crcVar) \ +{ \ + crcVar = 0xffffffffL; \ +} + +#define BZ_FINALISE_CRC(crcVar) \ +{ \ + crcVar = ~(crcVar); \ +} + +#define BZ_UPDATE_CRC(crcVar,cha) \ +{ \ + crcVar = (crcVar << 8) ^ \ + BZ2_crc32Table[(crcVar >> 24) ^ \ + ((UChar)cha)]; \ +} + + + +/*-- States and modes for compression. --*/ + +#define BZ_M_IDLE 1 +#define BZ_M_RUNNING 2 +#define BZ_M_FLUSHING 3 +#define BZ_M_FINISHING 4 + +#define BZ_S_OUTPUT 1 +#define BZ_S_INPUT 2 + +#define BZ_N_RADIX 2 +#define BZ_N_QSORT 12 +#define BZ_N_SHELL 18 +#define BZ_N_OVERSHOOT (BZ_N_RADIX + BZ_N_QSORT + BZ_N_SHELL + 2) + + + + +/*-- Structure holding all the compression-side stuff. --*/ + +typedef + struct { + /* pointer back to the struct bz_stream */ + bz_stream* strm; + + /* mode this stream is in, and whether inputting */ + /* or outputting data */ + Int32 mode; + Int32 state; + + /* remembers avail_in when flush/finish requested */ + UInt32 avail_in_expect; + + /* for doing the block sorting */ + UInt32* arr1; + UInt32* arr2; + UInt32* ftab; + Int32 origPtr; + + /* aliases for arr1 and arr2 */ + UInt32* ptr; + UChar* block; + UInt16* mtfv; + UChar* zbits; + + /* for deciding when to use the fallback sorting algorithm */ + Int32 workFactor; + + /* run-length-encoding of the input */ + UInt32 state_in_ch; + Int32 state_in_len; + BZ_RAND_DECLS; + + /* input and output limits and current posns */ + Int32 nblock; + Int32 nblockMAX; + Int32 numZ; + Int32 state_out_pos; + + /* map of bytes used in block */ + Int32 nInUse; + Bool inUse[256]; + UChar unseqToSeq[256]; + + /* the buffer for bit stream creation */ + UInt32 bsBuff; + Int32 bsLive; + + /* block and combined CRCs */ + UInt32 blockCRC; + UInt32 combinedCRC; + + /* misc administratium */ + Int32 verbosity; + Int32 blockNo; + Int32 blockSize100k; + + /* stuff for coding the MTF values */ + Int32 nMTF; + Int32 mtfFreq [BZ_MAX_ALPHA_SIZE]; + UChar selector [BZ_MAX_SELECTORS]; + UChar selectorMtf[BZ_MAX_SELECTORS]; + + UChar len [BZ_N_GROUPS][BZ_MAX_ALPHA_SIZE]; + Int32 code [BZ_N_GROUPS][BZ_MAX_ALPHA_SIZE]; + Int32 rfreq [BZ_N_GROUPS][BZ_MAX_ALPHA_SIZE]; + /* second dimension: only 3 needed; 4 makes index calculations faster */ + UInt32 len_pack[BZ_MAX_ALPHA_SIZE][4]; + + } + EState; + + + +/*-- externs for compression. --*/ + +extern void +BZ2_blockSort ( EState* ); + +extern void +BZ2_compressBlock ( EState*, Bool ); + +extern void +BZ2_bsInitWrite ( EState* ); + +extern void +BZ2_hbAssignCodes ( Int32*, UChar*, Int32, Int32, Int32 ); + +extern void +BZ2_hbMakeCodeLengths ( UChar*, Int32*, Int32, Int32 ); + + + +/*-- states for decompression. --*/ + +#define BZ_X_IDLE 1 +#define BZ_X_OUTPUT 2 + +#define BZ_X_MAGIC_1 10 +#define BZ_X_MAGIC_2 11 +#define BZ_X_MAGIC_3 12 +#define BZ_X_MAGIC_4 13 +#define BZ_X_BLKHDR_1 14 +#define BZ_X_BLKHDR_2 15 +#define BZ_X_BLKHDR_3 16 +#define BZ_X_BLKHDR_4 17 +#define BZ_X_BLKHDR_5 18 +#define BZ_X_BLKHDR_6 19 +#define BZ_X_BCRC_1 20 +#define BZ_X_BCRC_2 21 +#define BZ_X_BCRC_3 22 +#define BZ_X_BCRC_4 23 +#define BZ_X_RANDBIT 24 +#define BZ_X_ORIGPTR_1 25 +#define BZ_X_ORIGPTR_2 26 +#define BZ_X_ORIGPTR_3 27 +#define BZ_X_MAPPING_1 28 +#define BZ_X_MAPPING_2 29 +#define BZ_X_SELECTOR_1 30 +#define BZ_X_SELECTOR_2 31 +#define BZ_X_SELECTOR_3 32 +#define BZ_X_CODING_1 33 +#define BZ_X_CODING_2 34 +#define BZ_X_CODING_3 35 +#define BZ_X_MTF_1 36 +#define BZ_X_MTF_2 37 +#define BZ_X_MTF_3 38 +#define BZ_X_MTF_4 39 +#define BZ_X_MTF_5 40 +#define BZ_X_MTF_6 41 +#define BZ_X_ENDHDR_2 42 +#define BZ_X_ENDHDR_3 43 +#define BZ_X_ENDHDR_4 44 +#define BZ_X_ENDHDR_5 45 +#define BZ_X_ENDHDR_6 46 +#define BZ_X_CCRC_1 47 +#define BZ_X_CCRC_2 48 +#define BZ_X_CCRC_3 49 +#define BZ_X_CCRC_4 50 + + + +/*-- Constants for the fast MTF decoder. --*/ + +#define MTFA_SIZE 4096 +#define MTFL_SIZE 16 + + + +/*-- Structure holding all the decompression-side stuff. --*/ + +typedef + struct { + /* pointer back to the struct bz_stream */ + bz_stream* strm; + + /* state indicator for this stream */ + Int32 state; + + /* for doing the final run-length decoding */ + UChar state_out_ch; + Int32 state_out_len; + Bool blockRandomised; + BZ_RAND_DECLS; + + /* the buffer for bit stream reading */ + UInt32 bsBuff; + Int32 bsLive; + + /* misc administratium */ + Int32 blockSize100k; + Bool smallDecompress; + Int32 currBlockNo; + Int32 verbosity; + + /* for undoing the Burrows-Wheeler transform */ + Int32 origPtr; + UInt32 tPos; + Int32 k0; + Int32 unzftab[256]; + Int32 nblock_used; + Int32 cftab[257]; + Int32 cftabCopy[257]; + + /* for undoing the Burrows-Wheeler transform (FAST) */ + UInt32 *tt; + + /* for undoing the Burrows-Wheeler transform (SMALL) */ + UInt16 *ll16; + UChar *ll4; + + /* stored and calculated CRCs */ + UInt32 storedBlockCRC; + UInt32 storedCombinedCRC; + UInt32 calculatedBlockCRC; + UInt32 calculatedCombinedCRC; + + /* map of bytes used in block */ + Int32 nInUse; + Bool inUse[256]; + Bool inUse16[16]; + UChar seqToUnseq[256]; + + /* for decoding the MTF values */ + UChar mtfa [MTFA_SIZE]; + Int32 mtfbase[256 / MTFL_SIZE]; + UChar selector [BZ_MAX_SELECTORS]; + UChar selectorMtf[BZ_MAX_SELECTORS]; + UChar len [BZ_N_GROUPS][BZ_MAX_ALPHA_SIZE]; + + Int32 limit [BZ_N_GROUPS][BZ_MAX_ALPHA_SIZE]; + Int32 base [BZ_N_GROUPS][BZ_MAX_ALPHA_SIZE]; + Int32 perm [BZ_N_GROUPS][BZ_MAX_ALPHA_SIZE]; + Int32 minLens[BZ_N_GROUPS]; + + /* save area for scalars in the main decompress code */ + Int32 save_i; + Int32 save_j; + Int32 save_t; + Int32 save_alphaSize; + Int32 save_nGroups; + Int32 save_nSelectors; + Int32 save_EOB; + Int32 save_groupNo; + Int32 save_groupPos; + Int32 save_nextSym; + Int32 save_nblockMAX; + Int32 save_nblock; + Int32 save_es; + Int32 save_N; + Int32 save_curr; + Int32 save_zt; + Int32 save_zn; + Int32 save_zvec; + Int32 save_zj; + Int32 save_gSel; + Int32 save_gMinlen; + Int32* save_gLimit; + Int32* save_gBase; + Int32* save_gPerm; + + } + DState; + + + +/*-- Macros for decompression. --*/ + +#define BZ_GET_FAST(cccc) \ + s->tPos = s->tt[s->tPos]; \ + cccc = (UChar)(s->tPos & 0xff); \ + s->tPos >>= 8; + +#define BZ_GET_FAST_C(cccc) \ + c_tPos = c_tt[c_tPos]; \ + cccc = (UChar)(c_tPos & 0xff); \ + c_tPos >>= 8; + +#define SET_LL4(i,n) \ + { if (((i) & 0x1) == 0) \ + s->ll4[(i) >> 1] = (s->ll4[(i) >> 1] & 0xf0) | (n); else \ + s->ll4[(i) >> 1] = (s->ll4[(i) >> 1] & 0x0f) | ((n) << 4); \ + } + +#define GET_LL4(i) \ + ((((UInt32)(s->ll4[(i) >> 1])) >> (((i) << 2) & 0x4)) & 0xF) + +#define SET_LL(i,n) \ + { s->ll16[i] = (UInt16)(n & 0x0000ffff); \ + SET_LL4(i, n >> 16); \ + } + +#define GET_LL(i) \ + (((UInt32)s->ll16[i]) | (GET_LL4(i) << 16)) + +#define BZ_GET_SMALL(cccc) \ + cccc = BZ2_indexIntoF ( s->tPos, s->cftab ); \ + s->tPos = GET_LL(s->tPos); + + +/*-- externs for decompression. --*/ + +extern Int32 +BZ2_indexIntoF ( Int32, Int32* ); + +extern Int32 +BZ2_decompress ( DState* ); + +extern void +BZ2_hbCreateDecodeTables ( Int32*, Int32*, Int32*, UChar*, + Int32, Int32, Int32 ); + + +#endif + + +/*-- BZ_NO_STDIO seems to make NULL disappear on some platforms. --*/ + +#ifdef BZ_NO_STDIO +#ifndef NULL +#define NULL 0 +#endif +#endif + + +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- end bzlib_private.h ---*/ +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ diff --git a/bzip2/compress.c b/bzip2/compress.c new file mode 100644 index 000000000..cc5e31d6f --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/compress.c @@ -0,0 +1,714 @@ + +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- Compression machinery (not incl block sorting) ---*/ +/*--- compress.c ---*/ +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ + +/*-- + This file is a part of bzip2 and/or libbzip2, a program and + library for lossless, block-sorting data compression. + + Copyright (C) 1996-2000 Julian R Seward. All rights reserved. + + Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without + modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions + are met: + + 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright + notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. + + 2. The origin of this software must not be misrepresented; you must + not claim that you wrote the original software. If you use this + software in a product, an acknowledgment in the product + documentation would be appreciated but is not required. + + 3. Altered source versions must be plainly marked as such, and must + not be misrepresented as being the original software. + + 4. The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote + products derived from this software without specific prior written + permission. + + THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS + OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED + WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE + ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY + DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL + DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE + GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS + INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, + WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING + NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS + SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. + + Julian Seward, Cambridge, UK. + jseward@acm.org + bzip2/libbzip2 version 1.0 of 21 March 2000 + + This program is based on (at least) the work of: + Mike Burrows + David Wheeler + Peter Fenwick + Alistair Moffat + Radford Neal + Ian H. Witten + Robert Sedgewick + Jon L. Bentley + + For more information on these sources, see the manual. +--*/ + +/*-- + CHANGES + ~~~~~~~ + 0.9.0 -- original version. + + 0.9.0a/b -- no changes in this file. + + 0.9.0c + * changed setting of nGroups in sendMTFValues() so as to + do a bit better on small files +--*/ + +#include "bzlib_private.h" + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- Bit stream I/O ---*/ +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +void BZ2_bsInitWrite ( EState* s ) +{ + s->bsLive = 0; + s->bsBuff = 0; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +static +void bsFinishWrite ( EState* s ) +{ + while (s->bsLive > 0) { + s->zbits[s->numZ] = (UChar)(s->bsBuff >> 24); + s->numZ++; + s->bsBuff <<= 8; + s->bsLive -= 8; + } +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +#define bsNEEDW(nz) \ +{ \ + while (s->bsLive >= 8) { \ + s->zbits[s->numZ] \ + = (UChar)(s->bsBuff >> 24); \ + s->numZ++; \ + s->bsBuff <<= 8; \ + s->bsLive -= 8; \ + } \ +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +static +__inline__ +void bsW ( EState* s, Int32 n, UInt32 v ) +{ + bsNEEDW ( n ); + s->bsBuff |= (v << (32 - s->bsLive - n)); + s->bsLive += n; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +static +void bsPutUInt32 ( EState* s, UInt32 u ) +{ + bsW ( s, 8, (u >> 24) & 0xffL ); + bsW ( s, 8, (u >> 16) & 0xffL ); + bsW ( s, 8, (u >> 8) & 0xffL ); + bsW ( s, 8, u & 0xffL ); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +static +void bsPutUChar ( EState* s, UChar c ) +{ + bsW( s, 8, (UInt32)c ); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- The back end proper ---*/ +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +static +void makeMaps_e ( EState* s ) +{ + Int32 i; + s->nInUse = 0; + for (i = 0; i < 256; i++) + if (s->inUse[i]) { + s->unseqToSeq[i] = s->nInUse; + s->nInUse++; + } +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +static +void generateMTFValues ( EState* s ) +{ + UChar yy[256]; + Int32 i, j; + Int32 zPend; + Int32 wr; + Int32 EOB; + + /* + After sorting (eg, here), + s->arr1 [ 0 .. s->nblock-1 ] holds sorted order, + and + ((UChar*)s->arr2) [ 0 .. s->nblock-1 ] + holds the original block data. + + The first thing to do is generate the MTF values, + and put them in + ((UInt16*)s->arr1) [ 0 .. s->nblock-1 ]. + Because there are strictly fewer or equal MTF values + than block values, ptr values in this area are overwritten + with MTF values only when they are no longer needed. + + The final compressed bitstream is generated into the + area starting at + (UChar*) (&((UChar*)s->arr2)[s->nblock]) + + These storage aliases are set up in bzCompressInit(), + except for the last one, which is arranged in + compressBlock(). + */ + UInt32* ptr = s->ptr; + UChar* block = s->block; + UInt16* mtfv = s->mtfv; + + makeMaps_e ( s ); + EOB = s->nInUse+1; + + for (i = 0; i <= EOB; i++) s->mtfFreq[i] = 0; + + wr = 0; + zPend = 0; + for (i = 0; i < s->nInUse; i++) yy[i] = (UChar) i; + + for (i = 0; i < s->nblock; i++) { + UChar ll_i; + AssertD ( wr <= i, "generateMTFValues(1)" ); + j = ptr[i]-1; if (j < 0) j += s->nblock; + ll_i = s->unseqToSeq[block[j]]; + AssertD ( ll_i < s->nInUse, "generateMTFValues(2a)" ); + + if (yy[0] == ll_i) { + zPend++; + } else { + + if (zPend > 0) { + zPend--; + while (True) { + if (zPend & 1) { + mtfv[wr] = BZ_RUNB; wr++; + s->mtfFreq[BZ_RUNB]++; + } else { + mtfv[wr] = BZ_RUNA; wr++; + s->mtfFreq[BZ_RUNA]++; + } + if (zPend < 2) break; + zPend = (zPend - 2) / 2; + }; + zPend = 0; + } + { + register UChar rtmp; + register UChar* ryy_j; + register UChar rll_i; + rtmp = yy[1]; + yy[1] = yy[0]; + ryy_j = &(yy[1]); + rll_i = ll_i; + while ( rll_i != rtmp ) { + register UChar rtmp2; + ryy_j++; + rtmp2 = rtmp; + rtmp = *ryy_j; + *ryy_j = rtmp2; + }; + yy[0] = rtmp; + j = ryy_j - &(yy[0]); + mtfv[wr] = j+1; wr++; s->mtfFreq[j+1]++; + } + + } + } + + if (zPend > 0) { + zPend--; + while (True) { + if (zPend & 1) { + mtfv[wr] = BZ_RUNB; wr++; + s->mtfFreq[BZ_RUNB]++; + } else { + mtfv[wr] = BZ_RUNA; wr++; + s->mtfFreq[BZ_RUNA]++; + } + if (zPend < 2) break; + zPend = (zPend - 2) / 2; + }; + zPend = 0; + } + + mtfv[wr] = EOB; wr++; s->mtfFreq[EOB]++; + + s->nMTF = wr; +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +#define BZ_LESSER_ICOST 0 +#define BZ_GREATER_ICOST 15 + +static +void sendMTFValues ( EState* s ) +{ + Int32 v, t, i, j, gs, ge, totc, bt, bc, iter; + Int32 nSelectors, alphaSize, minLen, maxLen, selCtr; + Int32 nGroups, nBytes; + + /*-- + UChar len [BZ_N_GROUPS][BZ_MAX_ALPHA_SIZE]; + is a global since the decoder also needs it. + + Int32 code[BZ_N_GROUPS][BZ_MAX_ALPHA_SIZE]; + Int32 rfreq[BZ_N_GROUPS][BZ_MAX_ALPHA_SIZE]; + are also globals only used in this proc. + Made global to keep stack frame size small. + --*/ + + + UInt16 cost[BZ_N_GROUPS]; + Int32 fave[BZ_N_GROUPS]; + + UInt16* mtfv = s->mtfv; + + if (s->verbosity >= 3) + VPrintf3( " %d in block, %d after MTF & 1-2 coding, " + "%d+2 syms in use\n", + s->nblock, s->nMTF, s->nInUse ); + + alphaSize = s->nInUse+2; + for (t = 0; t < BZ_N_GROUPS; t++) + for (v = 0; v < alphaSize; v++) + s->len[t][v] = BZ_GREATER_ICOST; + + /*--- Decide how many coding tables to use ---*/ + AssertH ( s->nMTF > 0, 3001 ); + if (s->nMTF < 200) nGroups = 2; else + if (s->nMTF < 600) nGroups = 3; else + if (s->nMTF < 1200) nGroups = 4; else + if (s->nMTF < 2400) nGroups = 5; else + nGroups = 6; + + /*--- Generate an initial set of coding tables ---*/ + { + Int32 nPart, remF, tFreq, aFreq; + + nPart = nGroups; + remF = s->nMTF; + gs = 0; + while (nPart > 0) { + tFreq = remF / nPart; + ge = gs-1; + aFreq = 0; + while (aFreq < tFreq && ge < alphaSize-1) { + ge++; + aFreq += s->mtfFreq[ge]; + } + + if (ge > gs + && nPart != nGroups && nPart != 1 + && ((nGroups-nPart) % 2 == 1)) { + aFreq -= s->mtfFreq[ge]; + ge--; + } + + if (s->verbosity >= 3) + VPrintf5( " initial group %d, [%d .. %d], " + "has %d syms (%4.1f%%)\n", + nPart, gs, ge, aFreq, + (100.0 * (float)aFreq) / (float)(s->nMTF) ); + + for (v = 0; v < alphaSize; v++) + if (v >= gs && v <= ge) + s->len[nPart-1][v] = BZ_LESSER_ICOST; else + s->len[nPart-1][v] = BZ_GREATER_ICOST; + + nPart--; + gs = ge+1; + remF -= aFreq; + } + } + + /*--- + Iterate up to BZ_N_ITERS times to improve the tables. + ---*/ + for (iter = 0; iter < BZ_N_ITERS; iter++) { + + for (t = 0; t < nGroups; t++) fave[t] = 0; + + for (t = 0; t < nGroups; t++) + for (v = 0; v < alphaSize; v++) + s->rfreq[t][v] = 0; + + /*--- + Set up an auxiliary length table which is used to fast-track + the common case (nGroups == 6). + ---*/ + if (nGroups == 6) { + for (v = 0; v < alphaSize; v++) { + s->len_pack[v][0] = (s->len[1][v] << 16) | s->len[0][v]; + s->len_pack[v][1] = (s->len[3][v] << 16) | s->len[2][v]; + s->len_pack[v][2] = (s->len[5][v] << 16) | s->len[4][v]; + } + } + + nSelectors = 0; + totc = 0; + gs = 0; + while (True) { + + /*--- Set group start & end marks. --*/ + if (gs >= s->nMTF) break; + ge = gs + BZ_G_SIZE - 1; + if (ge >= s->nMTF) ge = s->nMTF-1; + + /*-- + Calculate the cost of this group as coded + by each of the coding tables. + --*/ + for (t = 0; t < nGroups; t++) cost[t] = 0; + + if (nGroups == 6 && 50 == ge-gs+1) { + /*--- fast track the common case ---*/ + register UInt32 cost01, cost23, cost45; + register UInt16 icv; + cost01 = cost23 = cost45 = 0; + +# define BZ_ITER(nn) \ + icv = mtfv[gs+(nn)]; \ + cost01 += s->len_pack[icv][0]; \ + cost23 += s->len_pack[icv][1]; \ + cost45 += s->len_pack[icv][2]; \ + + BZ_ITER(0); BZ_ITER(1); BZ_ITER(2); BZ_ITER(3); BZ_ITER(4); + BZ_ITER(5); BZ_ITER(6); BZ_ITER(7); BZ_ITER(8); BZ_ITER(9); + BZ_ITER(10); BZ_ITER(11); BZ_ITER(12); BZ_ITER(13); BZ_ITER(14); + BZ_ITER(15); BZ_ITER(16); BZ_ITER(17); BZ_ITER(18); BZ_ITER(19); + BZ_ITER(20); BZ_ITER(21); BZ_ITER(22); BZ_ITER(23); BZ_ITER(24); + BZ_ITER(25); BZ_ITER(26); BZ_ITER(27); BZ_ITER(28); BZ_ITER(29); + BZ_ITER(30); BZ_ITER(31); BZ_ITER(32); BZ_ITER(33); BZ_ITER(34); + BZ_ITER(35); BZ_ITER(36); BZ_ITER(37); BZ_ITER(38); BZ_ITER(39); + BZ_ITER(40); BZ_ITER(41); BZ_ITER(42); BZ_ITER(43); BZ_ITER(44); + BZ_ITER(45); BZ_ITER(46); BZ_ITER(47); BZ_ITER(48); BZ_ITER(49); + +# undef BZ_ITER + + cost[0] = cost01 & 0xffff; cost[1] = cost01 >> 16; + cost[2] = cost23 & 0xffff; cost[3] = cost23 >> 16; + cost[4] = cost45 & 0xffff; cost[5] = cost45 >> 16; + + } else { + /*--- slow version which correctly handles all situations ---*/ + for (i = gs; i <= ge; i++) { + UInt16 icv = mtfv[i]; + for (t = 0; t < nGroups; t++) cost[t] += s->len[t][icv]; + } + } + + /*-- + Find the coding table which is best for this group, + and record its identity in the selector table. + --*/ + bc = 999999999; bt = -1; + for (t = 0; t < nGroups; t++) + if (cost[t] < bc) { bc = cost[t]; bt = t; }; + totc += bc; + fave[bt]++; + s->selector[nSelectors] = bt; + nSelectors++; + + /*-- + Increment the symbol frequencies for the selected table. + --*/ + if (nGroups == 6 && 50 == ge-gs+1) { + /*--- fast track the common case ---*/ + +# define BZ_ITUR(nn) s->rfreq[bt][ mtfv[gs+(nn)] ]++ + + BZ_ITUR(0); BZ_ITUR(1); BZ_ITUR(2); BZ_ITUR(3); BZ_ITUR(4); + BZ_ITUR(5); BZ_ITUR(6); BZ_ITUR(7); BZ_ITUR(8); BZ_ITUR(9); + BZ_ITUR(10); BZ_ITUR(11); BZ_ITUR(12); BZ_ITUR(13); BZ_ITUR(14); + BZ_ITUR(15); BZ_ITUR(16); BZ_ITUR(17); BZ_ITUR(18); BZ_ITUR(19); + BZ_ITUR(20); BZ_ITUR(21); BZ_ITUR(22); BZ_ITUR(23); BZ_ITUR(24); + BZ_ITUR(25); BZ_ITUR(26); BZ_ITUR(27); BZ_ITUR(28); BZ_ITUR(29); + BZ_ITUR(30); BZ_ITUR(31); BZ_ITUR(32); BZ_ITUR(33); BZ_ITUR(34); + BZ_ITUR(35); BZ_ITUR(36); BZ_ITUR(37); BZ_ITUR(38); BZ_ITUR(39); + BZ_ITUR(40); BZ_ITUR(41); BZ_ITUR(42); BZ_ITUR(43); BZ_ITUR(44); + BZ_ITUR(45); BZ_ITUR(46); BZ_ITUR(47); BZ_ITUR(48); BZ_ITUR(49); + +# undef BZ_ITUR + + } else { + /*--- slow version which correctly handles all situations ---*/ + for (i = gs; i <= ge; i++) + s->rfreq[bt][ mtfv[i] ]++; + } + + gs = ge+1; + } + if (s->verbosity >= 3) { + VPrintf2 ( " pass %d: size is %d, grp uses are ", + iter+1, totc/8 ); + for (t = 0; t < nGroups; t++) + VPrintf1 ( "%d ", fave[t] ); + VPrintf0 ( "\n" ); + } + + /*-- + Recompute the tables based on the accumulated frequencies. + --*/ + for (t = 0; t < nGroups; t++) + BZ2_hbMakeCodeLengths ( &(s->len[t][0]), &(s->rfreq[t][0]), + alphaSize, 20 ); + } + + + AssertH( nGroups < 8, 3002 ); + AssertH( nSelectors < 32768 && + nSelectors <= (2 + (900000 / BZ_G_SIZE)), + 3003 ); + + + /*--- Compute MTF values for the selectors. ---*/ + { + UChar pos[BZ_N_GROUPS], ll_i, tmp2, tmp; + for (i = 0; i < nGroups; i++) pos[i] = i; + for (i = 0; i < nSelectors; i++) { + ll_i = s->selector[i]; + j = 0; + tmp = pos[j]; + while ( ll_i != tmp ) { + j++; + tmp2 = tmp; + tmp = pos[j]; + pos[j] = tmp2; + }; + pos[0] = tmp; + s->selectorMtf[i] = j; + } + }; + + /*--- Assign actual codes for the tables. --*/ + for (t = 0; t < nGroups; t++) { + minLen = 32; + maxLen = 0; + for (i = 0; i < alphaSize; i++) { + if (s->len[t][i] > maxLen) maxLen = s->len[t][i]; + if (s->len[t][i] < minLen) minLen = s->len[t][i]; + } + AssertH ( !(maxLen > 20), 3004 ); + AssertH ( !(minLen < 1), 3005 ); + BZ2_hbAssignCodes ( &(s->code[t][0]), &(s->len[t][0]), + minLen, maxLen, alphaSize ); + } + + /*--- Transmit the mapping table. ---*/ + { + Bool inUse16[16]; + for (i = 0; i < 16; i++) { + inUse16[i] = False; + for (j = 0; j < 16; j++) + if (s->inUse[i * 16 + j]) inUse16[i] = True; + } + + nBytes = s->numZ; + for (i = 0; i < 16; i++) + if (inUse16[i]) bsW(s,1,1); else bsW(s,1,0); + + for (i = 0; i < 16; i++) + if (inUse16[i]) + for (j = 0; j < 16; j++) { + if (s->inUse[i * 16 + j]) bsW(s,1,1); else bsW(s,1,0); + } + + if (s->verbosity >= 3) + VPrintf1( " bytes: mapping %d, ", s->numZ-nBytes ); + } + + /*--- Now the selectors. ---*/ + nBytes = s->numZ; + bsW ( s, 3, nGroups ); + bsW ( s, 15, nSelectors ); + for (i = 0; i < nSelectors; i++) { + for (j = 0; j < s->selectorMtf[i]; j++) bsW(s,1,1); + bsW(s,1,0); + } + if (s->verbosity >= 3) + VPrintf1( "selectors %d, ", s->numZ-nBytes ); + + /*--- Now the coding tables. ---*/ + nBytes = s->numZ; + + for (t = 0; t < nGroups; t++) { + Int32 curr = s->len[t][0]; + bsW ( s, 5, curr ); + for (i = 0; i < alphaSize; i++) { + while (curr < s->len[t][i]) { bsW(s,2,2); curr++; /* 10 */ }; + while (curr > s->len[t][i]) { bsW(s,2,3); curr--; /* 11 */ }; + bsW ( s, 1, 0 ); + } + } + + if (s->verbosity >= 3) + VPrintf1 ( "code lengths %d, ", s->numZ-nBytes ); + + /*--- And finally, the block data proper ---*/ + nBytes = s->numZ; + selCtr = 0; + gs = 0; + while (True) { + if (gs >= s->nMTF) break; + ge = gs + BZ_G_SIZE - 1; + if (ge >= s->nMTF) ge = s->nMTF-1; + AssertH ( s->selector[selCtr] < nGroups, 3006 ); + + if (nGroups == 6 && 50 == ge-gs+1) { + /*--- fast track the common case ---*/ + UInt16 mtfv_i; + UChar* s_len_sel_selCtr + = &(s->len[s->selector[selCtr]][0]); + Int32* s_code_sel_selCtr + = &(s->code[s->selector[selCtr]][0]); + +# define BZ_ITAH(nn) \ + mtfv_i = mtfv[gs+(nn)]; \ + bsW ( s, \ + s_len_sel_selCtr[mtfv_i], \ + s_code_sel_selCtr[mtfv_i] ) + + BZ_ITAH(0); BZ_ITAH(1); BZ_ITAH(2); BZ_ITAH(3); BZ_ITAH(4); + BZ_ITAH(5); BZ_ITAH(6); BZ_ITAH(7); BZ_ITAH(8); BZ_ITAH(9); + BZ_ITAH(10); BZ_ITAH(11); BZ_ITAH(12); BZ_ITAH(13); BZ_ITAH(14); + BZ_ITAH(15); BZ_ITAH(16); BZ_ITAH(17); BZ_ITAH(18); BZ_ITAH(19); + BZ_ITAH(20); BZ_ITAH(21); BZ_ITAH(22); BZ_ITAH(23); BZ_ITAH(24); + BZ_ITAH(25); BZ_ITAH(26); BZ_ITAH(27); BZ_ITAH(28); BZ_ITAH(29); + BZ_ITAH(30); BZ_ITAH(31); BZ_ITAH(32); BZ_ITAH(33); BZ_ITAH(34); + BZ_ITAH(35); BZ_ITAH(36); BZ_ITAH(37); BZ_ITAH(38); BZ_ITAH(39); + BZ_ITAH(40); BZ_ITAH(41); BZ_ITAH(42); BZ_ITAH(43); BZ_ITAH(44); + BZ_ITAH(45); BZ_ITAH(46); BZ_ITAH(47); BZ_ITAH(48); BZ_ITAH(49); + +# undef BZ_ITAH + + } else { + /*--- slow version which correctly handles all situations ---*/ + for (i = gs; i <= ge; i++) { + bsW ( s, + s->len [s->selector[selCtr]] [mtfv[i]], + s->code [s->selector[selCtr]] [mtfv[i]] ); + } + } + + + gs = ge+1; + selCtr++; + } + AssertH( selCtr == nSelectors, 3007 ); + + if (s->verbosity >= 3) + VPrintf1( "codes %d\n", s->numZ-nBytes ); +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +void BZ2_compressBlock ( EState* s, Bool is_last_block ) +{ + if (s->nblock > 0) { + + BZ_FINALISE_CRC ( s->blockCRC ); + s->combinedCRC = (s->combinedCRC << 1) | (s->combinedCRC >> 31); + s->combinedCRC ^= s->blockCRC; + if (s->blockNo > 1) s->numZ = 0; + + if (s->verbosity >= 2) + VPrintf4( " block %d: crc = 0x%8x, " + "combined CRC = 0x%8x, size = %d\n", + s->blockNo, s->blockCRC, s->combinedCRC, s->nblock ); + + BZ2_blockSort ( s ); + } + + s->zbits = (UChar*) (&((UChar*)s->arr2)[s->nblock]); + + /*-- If this is the first block, create the stream header. --*/ + if (s->blockNo == 1) { + BZ2_bsInitWrite ( s ); + bsPutUChar ( s, 'B' ); + bsPutUChar ( s, 'Z' ); + bsPutUChar ( s, 'h' ); + bsPutUChar ( s, (UChar)('0' + s->blockSize100k) ); + } + + if (s->nblock > 0) { + + bsPutUChar ( s, 0x31 ); bsPutUChar ( s, 0x41 ); + bsPutUChar ( s, 0x59 ); bsPutUChar ( s, 0x26 ); + bsPutUChar ( s, 0x53 ); bsPutUChar ( s, 0x59 ); + + /*-- Now the block's CRC, so it is in a known place. --*/ + bsPutUInt32 ( s, s->blockCRC ); + + /*-- + Now a single bit indicating (non-)randomisation. + As of version 0.9.5, we use a better sorting algorithm + which makes randomisation unnecessary. So always set + the randomised bit to 'no'. Of course, the decoder + still needs to be able to handle randomised blocks + so as to maintain backwards compatibility with + older versions of bzip2. + --*/ + bsW(s,1,0); + + bsW ( s, 24, s->origPtr ); + generateMTFValues ( s ); + sendMTFValues ( s ); + } + + + /*-- If this is the last block, add the stream trailer. --*/ + if (is_last_block) { + + bsPutUChar ( s, 0x17 ); bsPutUChar ( s, 0x72 ); + bsPutUChar ( s, 0x45 ); bsPutUChar ( s, 0x38 ); + bsPutUChar ( s, 0x50 ); bsPutUChar ( s, 0x90 ); + bsPutUInt32 ( s, s->combinedCRC ); + if (s->verbosity >= 2) + VPrintf1( " final combined CRC = 0x%x\n ", s->combinedCRC ); + bsFinishWrite ( s ); + } +} + + +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- end compress.c ---*/ +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ diff --git a/bzip2/crctable.c b/bzip2/crctable.c new file mode 100644 index 000000000..61c040c4f --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/crctable.c @@ -0,0 +1,144 @@ + +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- Table for doing CRCs ---*/ +/*--- crctable.c ---*/ +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ + +/*-- + This file is a part of bzip2 and/or libbzip2, a program and + library for lossless, block-sorting data compression. + + Copyright (C) 1996-2000 Julian R Seward. All rights reserved. + + Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without + modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions + are met: + + 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright + notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. + + 2. The origin of this software must not be misrepresented; you must + not claim that you wrote the original software. If you use this + software in a product, an acknowledgment in the product + documentation would be appreciated but is not required. + + 3. Altered source versions must be plainly marked as such, and must + not be misrepresented as being the original software. + + 4. The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote + products derived from this software without specific prior written + permission. + + THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS + OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED + WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE + ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY + DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL + DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE + GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS + INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, + WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING + NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS + SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. + + Julian Seward, Cambridge, UK. + jseward@acm.org + bzip2/libbzip2 version 1.0 of 21 March 2000 + + This program is based on (at least) the work of: + Mike Burrows + David Wheeler + Peter Fenwick + Alistair Moffat + Radford Neal + Ian H. Witten + Robert Sedgewick + Jon L. Bentley + + For more information on these sources, see the manual. +--*/ + + +#include "bzlib_private.h" + +/*-- + I think this is an implementation of the AUTODIN-II, + Ethernet & FDDI 32-bit CRC standard. Vaguely derived + from code by Rob Warnock, in Section 51 of the + comp.compression FAQ. +--*/ + +UInt32 BZ2_crc32Table[256] = { + + /*-- Ugly, innit? --*/ + + 0x00000000L, 0x04c11db7L, 0x09823b6eL, 0x0d4326d9L, + 0x130476dcL, 0x17c56b6bL, 0x1a864db2L, 0x1e475005L, + 0x2608edb8L, 0x22c9f00fL, 0x2f8ad6d6L, 0x2b4bcb61L, + 0x350c9b64L, 0x31cd86d3L, 0x3c8ea00aL, 0x384fbdbdL, + 0x4c11db70L, 0x48d0c6c7L, 0x4593e01eL, 0x4152fda9L, + 0x5f15adacL, 0x5bd4b01bL, 0x569796c2L, 0x52568b75L, + 0x6a1936c8L, 0x6ed82b7fL, 0x639b0da6L, 0x675a1011L, + 0x791d4014L, 0x7ddc5da3L, 0x709f7b7aL, 0x745e66cdL, + 0x9823b6e0L, 0x9ce2ab57L, 0x91a18d8eL, 0x95609039L, + 0x8b27c03cL, 0x8fe6dd8bL, 0x82a5fb52L, 0x8664e6e5L, + 0xbe2b5b58L, 0xbaea46efL, 0xb7a96036L, 0xb3687d81L, + 0xad2f2d84L, 0xa9ee3033L, 0xa4ad16eaL, 0xa06c0b5dL, + 0xd4326d90L, 0xd0f37027L, 0xddb056feL, 0xd9714b49L, + 0xc7361b4cL, 0xc3f706fbL, 0xceb42022L, 0xca753d95L, + 0xf23a8028L, 0xf6fb9d9fL, 0xfbb8bb46L, 0xff79a6f1L, + 0xe13ef6f4L, 0xe5ffeb43L, 0xe8bccd9aL, 0xec7dd02dL, + 0x34867077L, 0x30476dc0L, 0x3d044b19L, 0x39c556aeL, + 0x278206abL, 0x23431b1cL, 0x2e003dc5L, 0x2ac12072L, + 0x128e9dcfL, 0x164f8078L, 0x1b0ca6a1L, 0x1fcdbb16L, + 0x018aeb13L, 0x054bf6a4L, 0x0808d07dL, 0x0cc9cdcaL, + 0x7897ab07L, 0x7c56b6b0L, 0x71159069L, 0x75d48ddeL, + 0x6b93dddbL, 0x6f52c06cL, 0x6211e6b5L, 0x66d0fb02L, + 0x5e9f46bfL, 0x5a5e5b08L, 0x571d7dd1L, 0x53dc6066L, + 0x4d9b3063L, 0x495a2dd4L, 0x44190b0dL, 0x40d816baL, + 0xaca5c697L, 0xa864db20L, 0xa527fdf9L, 0xa1e6e04eL, + 0xbfa1b04bL, 0xbb60adfcL, 0xb6238b25L, 0xb2e29692L, + 0x8aad2b2fL, 0x8e6c3698L, 0x832f1041L, 0x87ee0df6L, + 0x99a95df3L, 0x9d684044L, 0x902b669dL, 0x94ea7b2aL, + 0xe0b41de7L, 0xe4750050L, 0xe9362689L, 0xedf73b3eL, + 0xf3b06b3bL, 0xf771768cL, 0xfa325055L, 0xfef34de2L, + 0xc6bcf05fL, 0xc27dede8L, 0xcf3ecb31L, 0xcbffd686L, + 0xd5b88683L, 0xd1799b34L, 0xdc3abdedL, 0xd8fba05aL, + 0x690ce0eeL, 0x6dcdfd59L, 0x608edb80L, 0x644fc637L, + 0x7a089632L, 0x7ec98b85L, 0x738aad5cL, 0x774bb0ebL, + 0x4f040d56L, 0x4bc510e1L, 0x46863638L, 0x42472b8fL, + 0x5c007b8aL, 0x58c1663dL, 0x558240e4L, 0x51435d53L, + 0x251d3b9eL, 0x21dc2629L, 0x2c9f00f0L, 0x285e1d47L, + 0x36194d42L, 0x32d850f5L, 0x3f9b762cL, 0x3b5a6b9bL, + 0x0315d626L, 0x07d4cb91L, 0x0a97ed48L, 0x0e56f0ffL, + 0x1011a0faL, 0x14d0bd4dL, 0x19939b94L, 0x1d528623L, + 0xf12f560eL, 0xf5ee4bb9L, 0xf8ad6d60L, 0xfc6c70d7L, + 0xe22b20d2L, 0xe6ea3d65L, 0xeba91bbcL, 0xef68060bL, + 0xd727bbb6L, 0xd3e6a601L, 0xdea580d8L, 0xda649d6fL, + 0xc423cd6aL, 0xc0e2d0ddL, 0xcda1f604L, 0xc960ebb3L, + 0xbd3e8d7eL, 0xb9ff90c9L, 0xb4bcb610L, 0xb07daba7L, + 0xae3afba2L, 0xaafbe615L, 0xa7b8c0ccL, 0xa379dd7bL, + 0x9b3660c6L, 0x9ff77d71L, 0x92b45ba8L, 0x9675461fL, + 0x8832161aL, 0x8cf30badL, 0x81b02d74L, 0x857130c3L, + 0x5d8a9099L, 0x594b8d2eL, 0x5408abf7L, 0x50c9b640L, + 0x4e8ee645L, 0x4a4ffbf2L, 0x470cdd2bL, 0x43cdc09cL, + 0x7b827d21L, 0x7f436096L, 0x7200464fL, 0x76c15bf8L, + 0x68860bfdL, 0x6c47164aL, 0x61043093L, 0x65c52d24L, + 0x119b4be9L, 0x155a565eL, 0x18197087L, 0x1cd86d30L, + 0x029f3d35L, 0x065e2082L, 0x0b1d065bL, 0x0fdc1becL, + 0x3793a651L, 0x3352bbe6L, 0x3e119d3fL, 0x3ad08088L, + 0x2497d08dL, 0x2056cd3aL, 0x2d15ebe3L, 0x29d4f654L, + 0xc5a92679L, 0xc1683bceL, 0xcc2b1d17L, 0xc8ea00a0L, + 0xd6ad50a5L, 0xd26c4d12L, 0xdf2f6bcbL, 0xdbee767cL, + 0xe3a1cbc1L, 0xe760d676L, 0xea23f0afL, 0xeee2ed18L, + 0xf0a5bd1dL, 0xf464a0aaL, 0xf9278673L, 0xfde69bc4L, + 0x89b8fd09L, 0x8d79e0beL, 0x803ac667L, 0x84fbdbd0L, + 0x9abc8bd5L, 0x9e7d9662L, 0x933eb0bbL, 0x97ffad0cL, + 0xafb010b1L, 0xab710d06L, 0xa6322bdfL, 0xa2f33668L, + 0xbcb4666dL, 0xb8757bdaL, 0xb5365d03L, 0xb1f740b4L +}; + + +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- end crctable.c ---*/ +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ diff --git a/bzip2/decompress.c b/bzip2/decompress.c new file mode 100644 index 000000000..cdced1889 --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/decompress.c @@ -0,0 +1,660 @@ + +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- Decompression machinery ---*/ +/*--- decompress.c ---*/ +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ + +/*-- + This file is a part of bzip2 and/or libbzip2, a program and + library for lossless, block-sorting data compression. + + Copyright (C) 1996-2000 Julian R Seward. All rights reserved. + + Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without + modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions + are met: + + 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright + notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. + + 2. The origin of this software must not be misrepresented; you must + not claim that you wrote the original software. If you use this + software in a product, an acknowledgment in the product + documentation would be appreciated but is not required. + + 3. Altered source versions must be plainly marked as such, and must + not be misrepresented as being the original software. + + 4. The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote + products derived from this software without specific prior written + permission. + + THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS + OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED + WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE + ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY + DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL + DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE + GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS + INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, + WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING + NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS + SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. + + Julian Seward, Cambridge, UK. + jseward@acm.org + bzip2/libbzip2 version 1.0 of 21 March 2000 + + This program is based on (at least) the work of: + Mike Burrows + David Wheeler + Peter Fenwick + Alistair Moffat + Radford Neal + Ian H. Witten + Robert Sedgewick + Jon L. Bentley + + For more information on these sources, see the manual. +--*/ + + +#include "bzlib_private.h" + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +static +void makeMaps_d ( DState* s ) +{ + Int32 i; + s->nInUse = 0; + for (i = 0; i < 256; i++) + if (s->inUse[i]) { + s->seqToUnseq[s->nInUse] = i; + s->nInUse++; + } +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +#define RETURN(rrr) \ + { retVal = rrr; goto save_state_and_return; }; + +#define GET_BITS(lll,vvv,nnn) \ + case lll: s->state = lll; \ + while (True) { \ + if (s->bsLive >= nnn) { \ + UInt32 v; \ + v = (s->bsBuff >> \ + (s->bsLive-nnn)) & ((1 << nnn)-1); \ + s->bsLive -= nnn; \ + vvv = v; \ + break; \ + } \ + if (s->strm->avail_in == 0) RETURN(BZ_OK); \ + s->bsBuff \ + = (s->bsBuff << 8) | \ + ((UInt32) \ + (*((UChar*)(s->strm->next_in)))); \ + s->bsLive += 8; \ + s->strm->next_in++; \ + s->strm->avail_in--; \ + s->strm->total_in_lo32++; \ + if (s->strm->total_in_lo32 == 0) \ + s->strm->total_in_hi32++; \ + } + +#define GET_UCHAR(lll,uuu) \ + GET_BITS(lll,uuu,8) + +#define GET_BIT(lll,uuu) \ + GET_BITS(lll,uuu,1) + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +#define GET_MTF_VAL(label1,label2,lval) \ +{ \ + if (groupPos == 0) { \ + groupNo++; \ + if (groupNo >= nSelectors) \ + RETURN(BZ_DATA_ERROR); \ + groupPos = BZ_G_SIZE; \ + gSel = s->selector[groupNo]; \ + gMinlen = s->minLens[gSel]; \ + gLimit = &(s->limit[gSel][0]); \ + gPerm = &(s->perm[gSel][0]); \ + gBase = &(s->base[gSel][0]); \ + } \ + groupPos--; \ + zn = gMinlen; \ + GET_BITS(label1, zvec, zn); \ + while (1) { \ + if (zn > 20 /* the longest code */) \ + RETURN(BZ_DATA_ERROR); \ + if (zvec <= gLimit[zn]) break; \ + zn++; \ + GET_BIT(label2, zj); \ + zvec = (zvec << 1) | zj; \ + }; \ + if (zvec - gBase[zn] < 0 \ + || zvec - gBase[zn] >= BZ_MAX_ALPHA_SIZE) \ + RETURN(BZ_DATA_ERROR); \ + lval = gPerm[zvec - gBase[zn]]; \ +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +Int32 BZ2_decompress ( DState* s ) +{ + UChar uc; + Int32 retVal; + Int32 minLen, maxLen; + bz_stream* strm = s->strm; + + /* stuff that needs to be saved/restored */ + Int32 i; + Int32 j; + Int32 t; + Int32 alphaSize; + Int32 nGroups; + Int32 nSelectors; + Int32 EOB; + Int32 groupNo; + Int32 groupPos; + Int32 nextSym; + Int32 nblockMAX; + Int32 nblock; + Int32 es; + Int32 N; + Int32 curr; + Int32 zt; + Int32 zn; + Int32 zvec; + Int32 zj; + Int32 gSel; + Int32 gMinlen; + Int32* gLimit; + Int32* gBase; + Int32* gPerm; + + if (s->state == BZ_X_MAGIC_1) { + /*initialise the save area*/ + s->save_i = 0; + s->save_j = 0; + s->save_t = 0; + s->save_alphaSize = 0; + s->save_nGroups = 0; + s->save_nSelectors = 0; + s->save_EOB = 0; + s->save_groupNo = 0; + s->save_groupPos = 0; + s->save_nextSym = 0; + s->save_nblockMAX = 0; + s->save_nblock = 0; + s->save_es = 0; + s->save_N = 0; + s->save_curr = 0; + s->save_zt = 0; + s->save_zn = 0; + s->save_zvec = 0; + s->save_zj = 0; + s->save_gSel = 0; + s->save_gMinlen = 0; + s->save_gLimit = NULL; + s->save_gBase = NULL; + s->save_gPerm = NULL; + } + + /*restore from the save area*/ + i = s->save_i; + j = s->save_j; + t = s->save_t; + alphaSize = s->save_alphaSize; + nGroups = s->save_nGroups; + nSelectors = s->save_nSelectors; + EOB = s->save_EOB; + groupNo = s->save_groupNo; + groupPos = s->save_groupPos; + nextSym = s->save_nextSym; + nblockMAX = s->save_nblockMAX; + nblock = s->save_nblock; + es = s->save_es; + N = s->save_N; + curr = s->save_curr; + zt = s->save_zt; + zn = s->save_zn; + zvec = s->save_zvec; + zj = s->save_zj; + gSel = s->save_gSel; + gMinlen = s->save_gMinlen; + gLimit = s->save_gLimit; + gBase = s->save_gBase; + gPerm = s->save_gPerm; + + retVal = BZ_OK; + + switch (s->state) { + + GET_UCHAR(BZ_X_MAGIC_1, uc); + if (uc != 'B') RETURN(BZ_DATA_ERROR_MAGIC); + + GET_UCHAR(BZ_X_MAGIC_2, uc); + if (uc != 'Z') RETURN(BZ_DATA_ERROR_MAGIC); + + GET_UCHAR(BZ_X_MAGIC_3, uc) + if (uc != 'h') RETURN(BZ_DATA_ERROR_MAGIC); + + GET_BITS(BZ_X_MAGIC_4, s->blockSize100k, 8) + if (s->blockSize100k < '1' || + s->blockSize100k > '9') RETURN(BZ_DATA_ERROR_MAGIC); + s->blockSize100k -= '0'; + + if (s->smallDecompress) { + s->ll16 = BZALLOC( s->blockSize100k * 100000 * sizeof(UInt16) ); + s->ll4 = BZALLOC( + ((1 + s->blockSize100k * 100000) >> 1) * sizeof(UChar) + ); + if (s->ll16 == NULL || s->ll4 == NULL) RETURN(BZ_MEM_ERROR); + } else { + s->tt = BZALLOC( s->blockSize100k * 100000 * sizeof(Int32) ); + if (s->tt == NULL) RETURN(BZ_MEM_ERROR); + } + + GET_UCHAR(BZ_X_BLKHDR_1, uc); + + if (uc == 0x17) goto endhdr_2; + if (uc != 0x31) RETURN(BZ_DATA_ERROR); + GET_UCHAR(BZ_X_BLKHDR_2, uc); + if (uc != 0x41) RETURN(BZ_DATA_ERROR); + GET_UCHAR(BZ_X_BLKHDR_3, uc); + if (uc != 0x59) RETURN(BZ_DATA_ERROR); + GET_UCHAR(BZ_X_BLKHDR_4, uc); + if (uc != 0x26) RETURN(BZ_DATA_ERROR); + GET_UCHAR(BZ_X_BLKHDR_5, uc); + if (uc != 0x53) RETURN(BZ_DATA_ERROR); + GET_UCHAR(BZ_X_BLKHDR_6, uc); + if (uc != 0x59) RETURN(BZ_DATA_ERROR); + + s->currBlockNo++; + if (s->verbosity >= 2) + VPrintf1 ( "\n [%d: huff+mtf ", s->currBlockNo ); + + s->storedBlockCRC = 0; + GET_UCHAR(BZ_X_BCRC_1, uc); + s->storedBlockCRC = (s->storedBlockCRC << 8) | ((UInt32)uc); + GET_UCHAR(BZ_X_BCRC_2, uc); + s->storedBlockCRC = (s->storedBlockCRC << 8) | ((UInt32)uc); + GET_UCHAR(BZ_X_BCRC_3, uc); + s->storedBlockCRC = (s->storedBlockCRC << 8) | ((UInt32)uc); + GET_UCHAR(BZ_X_BCRC_4, uc); + s->storedBlockCRC = (s->storedBlockCRC << 8) | ((UInt32)uc); + + GET_BITS(BZ_X_RANDBIT, s->blockRandomised, 1); + + s->origPtr = 0; + GET_UCHAR(BZ_X_ORIGPTR_1, uc); + s->origPtr = (s->origPtr << 8) | ((Int32)uc); + GET_UCHAR(BZ_X_ORIGPTR_2, uc); + s->origPtr = (s->origPtr << 8) | ((Int32)uc); + GET_UCHAR(BZ_X_ORIGPTR_3, uc); + s->origPtr = (s->origPtr << 8) | ((Int32)uc); + + if (s->origPtr < 0) + RETURN(BZ_DATA_ERROR); + if (s->origPtr > 10 + 100000*s->blockSize100k) + RETURN(BZ_DATA_ERROR); + + /*--- Receive the mapping table ---*/ + for (i = 0; i < 16; i++) { + GET_BIT(BZ_X_MAPPING_1, uc); + if (uc == 1) + s->inUse16[i] = True; else + s->inUse16[i] = False; + } + + for (i = 0; i < 256; i++) s->inUse[i] = False; + + for (i = 0; i < 16; i++) + if (s->inUse16[i]) + for (j = 0; j < 16; j++) { + GET_BIT(BZ_X_MAPPING_2, uc); + if (uc == 1) s->inUse[i * 16 + j] = True; + } + makeMaps_d ( s ); + if (s->nInUse == 0) RETURN(BZ_DATA_ERROR); + alphaSize = s->nInUse+2; + + /*--- Now the selectors ---*/ + GET_BITS(BZ_X_SELECTOR_1, nGroups, 3); + if (nGroups < 2 || nGroups > 6) RETURN(BZ_DATA_ERROR); + GET_BITS(BZ_X_SELECTOR_2, nSelectors, 15); + if (nSelectors < 1) RETURN(BZ_DATA_ERROR); + for (i = 0; i < nSelectors; i++) { + j = 0; + while (True) { + GET_BIT(BZ_X_SELECTOR_3, uc); + if (uc == 0) break; + j++; + if (j >= nGroups) RETURN(BZ_DATA_ERROR); + } + s->selectorMtf[i] = j; + } + + /*--- Undo the MTF values for the selectors. ---*/ + { + UChar pos[BZ_N_GROUPS], tmp, v; + for (v = 0; v < nGroups; v++) pos[v] = v; + + for (i = 0; i < nSelectors; i++) { + v = s->selectorMtf[i]; + tmp = pos[v]; + while (v > 0) { pos[v] = pos[v-1]; v--; } + pos[0] = tmp; + s->selector[i] = tmp; + } + } + + /*--- Now the coding tables ---*/ + for (t = 0; t < nGroups; t++) { + GET_BITS(BZ_X_CODING_1, curr, 5); + for (i = 0; i < alphaSize; i++) { + while (True) { + if (curr < 1 || curr > 20) RETURN(BZ_DATA_ERROR); + GET_BIT(BZ_X_CODING_2, uc); + if (uc == 0) break; + GET_BIT(BZ_X_CODING_3, uc); + if (uc == 0) curr++; else curr--; + } + s->len[t][i] = curr; + } + } + + /*--- Create the Huffman decoding tables ---*/ + for (t = 0; t < nGroups; t++) { + minLen = 32; + maxLen = 0; + for (i = 0; i < alphaSize; i++) { + if (s->len[t][i] > maxLen) maxLen = s->len[t][i]; + if (s->len[t][i] < minLen) minLen = s->len[t][i]; + } + BZ2_hbCreateDecodeTables ( + &(s->limit[t][0]), + &(s->base[t][0]), + &(s->perm[t][0]), + &(s->len[t][0]), + minLen, maxLen, alphaSize + ); + s->minLens[t] = minLen; + } + + /*--- Now the MTF values ---*/ + + EOB = s->nInUse+1; + nblockMAX = 100000 * s->blockSize100k; + groupNo = -1; + groupPos = 0; + + for (i = 0; i <= 255; i++) s->unzftab[i] = 0; + + /*-- MTF init --*/ + { + Int32 ii, jj, kk; + kk = MTFA_SIZE-1; + for (ii = 256 / MTFL_SIZE - 1; ii >= 0; ii--) { + for (jj = MTFL_SIZE-1; jj >= 0; jj--) { + s->mtfa[kk] = (UChar)(ii * MTFL_SIZE + jj); + kk--; + } + s->mtfbase[ii] = kk + 1; + } + } + /*-- end MTF init --*/ + + nblock = 0; + GET_MTF_VAL(BZ_X_MTF_1, BZ_X_MTF_2, nextSym); + + while (True) { + + if (nextSym == EOB) break; + + if (nextSym == BZ_RUNA || nextSym == BZ_RUNB) { + + es = -1; + N = 1; + do { + if (nextSym == BZ_RUNA) es = es + (0+1) * N; else + if (nextSym == BZ_RUNB) es = es + (1+1) * N; + N = N * 2; + GET_MTF_VAL(BZ_X_MTF_3, BZ_X_MTF_4, nextSym); + } + while (nextSym == BZ_RUNA || nextSym == BZ_RUNB); + + es++; + uc = s->seqToUnseq[ s->mtfa[s->mtfbase[0]] ]; + s->unzftab[uc] += es; + + if (s->smallDecompress) + while (es > 0) { + if (nblock >= nblockMAX) RETURN(BZ_DATA_ERROR); + s->ll16[nblock] = (UInt16)uc; + nblock++; + es--; + } + else + while (es > 0) { + if (nblock >= nblockMAX) RETURN(BZ_DATA_ERROR); + s->tt[nblock] = (UInt32)uc; + nblock++; + es--; + }; + + continue; + + } else { + + if (nblock >= nblockMAX) RETURN(BZ_DATA_ERROR); + + /*-- uc = MTF ( nextSym-1 ) --*/ + { + Int32 ii, jj, kk, pp, lno, off; + UInt32 nn; + nn = (UInt32)(nextSym - 1); + + if (nn < MTFL_SIZE) { + /* avoid general-case expense */ + pp = s->mtfbase[0]; + uc = s->mtfa[pp+nn]; + while (nn > 3) { + Int32 z = pp+nn; + s->mtfa[(z) ] = s->mtfa[(z)-1]; + s->mtfa[(z)-1] = s->mtfa[(z)-2]; + s->mtfa[(z)-2] = s->mtfa[(z)-3]; + s->mtfa[(z)-3] = s->mtfa[(z)-4]; + nn -= 4; + } + while (nn > 0) { + s->mtfa[(pp+nn)] = s->mtfa[(pp+nn)-1]; nn--; + }; + s->mtfa[pp] = uc; + } else { + /* general case */ + lno = nn / MTFL_SIZE; + off = nn % MTFL_SIZE; + pp = s->mtfbase[lno] + off; + uc = s->mtfa[pp]; + while (pp > s->mtfbase[lno]) { + s->mtfa[pp] = s->mtfa[pp-1]; pp--; + }; + s->mtfbase[lno]++; + while (lno > 0) { + s->mtfbase[lno]--; + s->mtfa[s->mtfbase[lno]] + = s->mtfa[s->mtfbase[lno-1] + MTFL_SIZE - 1]; + lno--; + } + s->mtfbase[0]--; + s->mtfa[s->mtfbase[0]] = uc; + if (s->mtfbase[0] == 0) { + kk = MTFA_SIZE-1; + for (ii = 256 / MTFL_SIZE-1; ii >= 0; ii--) { + for (jj = MTFL_SIZE-1; jj >= 0; jj--) { + s->mtfa[kk] = s->mtfa[s->mtfbase[ii] + jj]; + kk--; + } + s->mtfbase[ii] = kk + 1; + } + } + } + } + /*-- end uc = MTF ( nextSym-1 ) --*/ + + s->unzftab[s->seqToUnseq[uc]]++; + if (s->smallDecompress) + s->ll16[nblock] = (UInt16)(s->seqToUnseq[uc]); else + s->tt[nblock] = (UInt32)(s->seqToUnseq[uc]); + nblock++; + + GET_MTF_VAL(BZ_X_MTF_5, BZ_X_MTF_6, nextSym); + continue; + } + } + + /* Now we know what nblock is, we can do a better sanity + check on s->origPtr. + */ + if (s->origPtr < 0 || s->origPtr >= nblock) + RETURN(BZ_DATA_ERROR); + + s->state_out_len = 0; + s->state_out_ch = 0; + BZ_INITIALISE_CRC ( s->calculatedBlockCRC ); + s->state = BZ_X_OUTPUT; + if (s->verbosity >= 2) VPrintf0 ( "rt+rld" ); + + /*-- Set up cftab to facilitate generation of T^(-1) --*/ + s->cftab[0] = 0; + for (i = 1; i <= 256; i++) s->cftab[i] = s->unzftab[i-1]; + for (i = 1; i <= 256; i++) s->cftab[i] += s->cftab[i-1]; + + if (s->smallDecompress) { + + /*-- Make a copy of cftab, used in generation of T --*/ + for (i = 0; i <= 256; i++) s->cftabCopy[i] = s->cftab[i]; + + /*-- compute the T vector --*/ + for (i = 0; i < nblock; i++) { + uc = (UChar)(s->ll16[i]); + SET_LL(i, s->cftabCopy[uc]); + s->cftabCopy[uc]++; + } + + /*-- Compute T^(-1) by pointer reversal on T --*/ + i = s->origPtr; + j = GET_LL(i); + do { + Int32 tmp = GET_LL(j); + SET_LL(j, i); + i = j; + j = tmp; + } + while (i != s->origPtr); + + s->tPos = s->origPtr; + s->nblock_used = 0; + if (s->blockRandomised) { + BZ_RAND_INIT_MASK; + BZ_GET_SMALL(s->k0); s->nblock_used++; + BZ_RAND_UPD_MASK; s->k0 ^= BZ_RAND_MASK; + } else { + BZ_GET_SMALL(s->k0); s->nblock_used++; + } + + } else { + + /*-- compute the T^(-1) vector --*/ + for (i = 0; i < nblock; i++) { + uc = (UChar)(s->tt[i] & 0xff); + s->tt[s->cftab[uc]] |= (i << 8); + s->cftab[uc]++; + } + + s->tPos = s->tt[s->origPtr] >> 8; + s->nblock_used = 0; + if (s->blockRandomised) { + BZ_RAND_INIT_MASK; + BZ_GET_FAST(s->k0); s->nblock_used++; + BZ_RAND_UPD_MASK; s->k0 ^= BZ_RAND_MASK; + } else { + BZ_GET_FAST(s->k0); s->nblock_used++; + } + + } + + RETURN(BZ_OK); + + + + endhdr_2: + + GET_UCHAR(BZ_X_ENDHDR_2, uc); + if (uc != 0x72) RETURN(BZ_DATA_ERROR); + GET_UCHAR(BZ_X_ENDHDR_3, uc); + if (uc != 0x45) RETURN(BZ_DATA_ERROR); + GET_UCHAR(BZ_X_ENDHDR_4, uc); + if (uc != 0x38) RETURN(BZ_DATA_ERROR); + GET_UCHAR(BZ_X_ENDHDR_5, uc); + if (uc != 0x50) RETURN(BZ_DATA_ERROR); + GET_UCHAR(BZ_X_ENDHDR_6, uc); + if (uc != 0x90) RETURN(BZ_DATA_ERROR); + + s->storedCombinedCRC = 0; + GET_UCHAR(BZ_X_CCRC_1, uc); + s->storedCombinedCRC = (s->storedCombinedCRC << 8) | ((UInt32)uc); + GET_UCHAR(BZ_X_CCRC_2, uc); + s->storedCombinedCRC = (s->storedCombinedCRC << 8) | ((UInt32)uc); + GET_UCHAR(BZ_X_CCRC_3, uc); + s->storedCombinedCRC = (s->storedCombinedCRC << 8) | ((UInt32)uc); + GET_UCHAR(BZ_X_CCRC_4, uc); + s->storedCombinedCRC = (s->storedCombinedCRC << 8) | ((UInt32)uc); + + s->state = BZ_X_IDLE; + RETURN(BZ_STREAM_END); + + default: AssertH ( False, 4001 ); + } + + AssertH ( False, 4002 ); + + save_state_and_return: + + s->save_i = i; + s->save_j = j; + s->save_t = t; + s->save_alphaSize = alphaSize; + s->save_nGroups = nGroups; + s->save_nSelectors = nSelectors; + s->save_EOB = EOB; + s->save_groupNo = groupNo; + s->save_groupPos = groupPos; + s->save_nextSym = nextSym; + s->save_nblockMAX = nblockMAX; + s->save_nblock = nblock; + s->save_es = es; + s->save_N = N; + s->save_curr = curr; + s->save_zt = zt; + s->save_zn = zn; + s->save_zvec = zvec; + s->save_zj = zj; + s->save_gSel = gSel; + s->save_gMinlen = gMinlen; + s->save_gLimit = gLimit; + s->save_gBase = gBase; + s->save_gPerm = gPerm; + + return retVal; +} + + +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- end decompress.c ---*/ +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ diff --git a/bzip2/dlltest.c b/bzip2/dlltest.c new file mode 100644 index 000000000..f79279cef --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/dlltest.c @@ -0,0 +1,176 @@ +/*
+ minibz2
+ libbz2.dll test program.
+ by Yoshioka Tsuneo(QWF00133@nifty.ne.jp/tsuneo-y@is.aist-nara.ac.jp)
+ This file is Public Domain.
+ welcome any email to me.
+
+ usage: minibz2 [-d] [-{1,2,..9}] [[srcfilename] destfilename]
+*/
+
+#define BZ_IMPORT
+#include <stdio.h>
+#include <stdlib.h>
+#include "bzlib.h"
+#ifdef _WIN32
+#include <io.h>
+#endif
+
+
+#ifdef _WIN32
+
+#define BZ2_LIBNAME "libbz2-1.0.0.DLL"
+
+#include <windows.h>
+static int BZ2DLLLoaded = 0;
+static HINSTANCE BZ2DLLhLib;
+int BZ2DLLLoadLibrary(void)
+{
+ HINSTANCE hLib;
+
+ if(BZ2DLLLoaded==1){return 0;}
+ hLib=LoadLibrary(BZ2_LIBNAME);
+ if(hLib == NULL){
+ fprintf(stderr,"Can't load %s\n",BZ2_LIBNAME);
+ return -1;
+ }
+ BZ2_bzlibVersion=GetProcAddress(hLib,"BZ2_bzlibVersion");
+ BZ2_bzopen=GetProcAddress(hLib,"BZ2_bzopen");
+ BZ2_bzdopen=GetProcAddress(hLib,"BZ2_bzdopen");
+ BZ2_bzread=GetProcAddress(hLib,"BZ2_bzread");
+ BZ2_bzwrite=GetProcAddress(hLib,"BZ2_bzwrite");
+ BZ2_bzflush=GetProcAddress(hLib,"BZ2_bzflush");
+ BZ2_bzclose=GetProcAddress(hLib,"BZ2_bzclose");
+ BZ2_bzerror=GetProcAddress(hLib,"BZ2_bzerror");
+
+ if (!BZ2_bzlibVersion || !BZ2_bzopen || !BZ2_bzdopen
+ || !BZ2_bzread || !BZ2_bzwrite || !BZ2_bzflush
+ || !BZ2_bzclose || !BZ2_bzerror) {
+ fprintf(stderr,"GetProcAddress failed.\n");
+ return -1;
+ }
+ BZ2DLLLoaded=1;
+ BZ2DLLhLib=hLib;
+ return 0;
+
+}
+int BZ2DLLFreeLibrary(void)
+{
+ if(BZ2DLLLoaded==0){return 0;}
+ FreeLibrary(BZ2DLLhLib);
+ BZ2DLLLoaded=0;
+}
+#endif /* WIN32 */
+
+void usage(void)
+{
+ puts("usage: minibz2 [-d] [-{1,2,..9}] [[srcfilename] destfilename]");
+}
+
+int main(int argc,char *argv[])
+{
+ int decompress = 0;
+ int level = 9;
+ char *fn_r = NULL;
+ char *fn_w = NULL;
+
+#ifdef _WIN32
+ if(BZ2DLLLoadLibrary()<0){
+ fprintf(stderr,"Loading of %s failed. Giving up.\n", BZ2_LIBNAME);
+ exit(1);
+ }
+ printf("Loading of %s succeeded. Library version is %s.\n",
+ BZ2_LIBNAME, BZ2_bzlibVersion() );
+#endif
+ while(++argv,--argc){
+ if(**argv =='-' || **argv=='/'){
+ char *p;
+
+ for(p=*argv+1;*p;p++){
+ if(*p=='d'){
+ decompress = 1;
+ }else if('1'<=*p && *p<='9'){
+ level = *p - '0';
+ }else{
+ usage();
+ exit(1);
+ }
+ }
+ }else{
+ break;
+ }
+ }
+ if(argc>=1){
+ fn_r = *argv;
+ argc--;argv++;
+ }else{
+ fn_r = NULL;
+ }
+ if(argc>=1){
+ fn_w = *argv;
+ argc--;argv++;
+ }else{
+ fn_w = NULL;
+ }
+ {
+ int len;
+ char buff[0x1000];
+ char mode[10];
+
+ if(decompress){
+ BZFILE *BZ2fp_r = NULL;
+ FILE *fp_w = NULL;
+
+ if(fn_w){
+ if((fp_w = fopen(fn_w,"wb"))==NULL){
+ printf("can't open [%s]\n",fn_w);
+ perror("reason:");
+ exit(1);
+ }
+ }else{
+ fp_w = stdout;
+ }
+ if((BZ2fp_r == NULL && (BZ2fp_r = BZ2_bzdopen(fileno(stdin),"rb"))==NULL)
+ || (BZ2fp_r != NULL && (BZ2fp_r = BZ2_bzopen(fn_r,"rb"))==NULL)){
+ printf("can't bz2openstream\n");
+ exit(1);
+ }
+ while((len=BZ2_bzread(BZ2fp_r,buff,0x1000))>0){
+ fwrite(buff,1,len,fp_w);
+ }
+ BZ2_bzclose(BZ2fp_r);
+ if(fp_w != stdout) fclose(fp_w);
+ }else{
+ BZFILE *BZ2fp_w = NULL;
+ FILE *fp_r = NULL;
+
+ if(fn_r){
+ if((fp_r = fopen(fn_r,"rb"))==NULL){
+ printf("can't open [%s]\n",fn_r);
+ perror("reason:");
+ exit(1);
+ }
+ }else{
+ fp_r = stdin;
+ }
+ mode[0]='w';
+ mode[1] = '0' + level;
+ mode[2] = '\0';
+
+ if((fn_w == NULL && (BZ2fp_w = BZ2_bzdopen(fileno(stdout),mode))==NULL)
+ || (fn_w !=NULL && (BZ2fp_w = BZ2_bzopen(fn_w,mode))==NULL)){
+ printf("can't bz2openstream\n");
+ exit(1);
+ }
+ while((len=fread(buff,1,0x1000,fp_r))>0){
+ BZ2_bzwrite(BZ2fp_w,buff,len);
+ }
+ BZ2_bzclose(BZ2fp_w);
+ if(fp_r!=stdin)fclose(fp_r);
+ }
+ }
+#ifdef _WIN32
+ BZ2DLLFreeLibrary();
+#endif
+ return 0;
+}
diff --git a/bzip2/dlltest.dsp b/bzip2/dlltest.dsp new file mode 100644 index 000000000..4b1615edc --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/dlltest.dsp @@ -0,0 +1,93 @@ +# Microsoft Developer Studio Project File - Name="dlltest" - Package Owner=<4>
+# Microsoft Developer Studio Generated Build File, Format Version 5.00
+# ** •ÒW‚µ‚È‚¢‚Å‚‚¾‚³‚¢ **
+
+# TARGTYPE "Win32 (x86) Console Application" 0x0103
+
+CFG=dlltest - Win32 Debug
+!MESSAGE ‚±‚ê‚Í—LŒø‚ÈÒ²¸Ì§²Ù‚Å‚Í‚ ‚è‚Ü‚¹‚ñB ‚±‚ÌÌßÛ¼Þª¸Ä‚ðËÞÙÄÞ‚·‚邽‚ß‚É‚Í NMAKE ‚ðŽg—p‚µ‚Ä‚‚¾‚³‚¢B
+!MESSAGE [Ò²¸Ì§²Ù‚Ì´¸½Îß°Ä] ºÏÝÄÞ‚ðŽg—p‚µ‚ÄŽÀs‚µ‚Ä‚‚¾‚³‚¢
+!MESSAGE
+!MESSAGE NMAKE /f "dlltest.mak".
+!MESSAGE
+!MESSAGE NMAKE ‚ÌŽÀsŽž‚É\¬‚ðŽw’è‚Å‚«‚Ü‚·
+!MESSAGE ºÏÝÄÞ ×²Ýã‚ÅϸۂÌÝ’è‚ð’è‹`‚µ‚Ü‚·B—á:
+!MESSAGE
+!MESSAGE NMAKE /f "dlltest.mak" CFG="dlltest - Win32 Debug"
+!MESSAGE
+!MESSAGE ‘I‘ð‰Â”\‚ÈËÞÙÄÞ Ó°ÄÞ:
+!MESSAGE
+!MESSAGE "dlltest - Win32 Release" ("Win32 (x86) Console Application" —p)
+!MESSAGE "dlltest - Win32 Debug" ("Win32 (x86) Console Application" —p)
+!MESSAGE
+
+# Begin Project
+# PROP Scc_ProjName ""
+# PROP Scc_LocalPath ""
+CPP=cl.exe
+RSC=rc.exe
+
+!IF "$(CFG)" == "dlltest - Win32 Release"
+
+# PROP BASE Use_MFC 0
+# PROP BASE Use_Debug_Libraries 0
+# PROP BASE Output_Dir "Release"
+# PROP BASE Intermediate_Dir "Release"
+# PROP BASE Target_Dir ""
+# PROP Use_MFC 0
+# PROP Use_Debug_Libraries 0
+# PROP Output_Dir "Release"
+# PROP Intermediate_Dir "Release"
+# PROP Ignore_Export_Lib 0
+# PROP Target_Dir ""
+# ADD BASE CPP /nologo /W3 /GX /O2 /D "WIN32" /D "NDEBUG" /D "_CONSOLE" /D "_MBCS" /YX /FD /c
+# ADD CPP /nologo /W3 /GX /O2 /D "WIN32" /D "NDEBUG" /D "_CONSOLE" /D "_MBCS" /YX /FD /c
+# ADD BASE RSC /l 0x411 /d "NDEBUG"
+# ADD RSC /l 0x411 /d "NDEBUG"
+BSC32=bscmake.exe
+# ADD BASE BSC32 /nologo
+# ADD BSC32 /nologo
+LINK32=link.exe
+# ADD BASE LINK32 kernel32.lib user32.lib gdi32.lib winspool.lib comdlg32.lib advapi32.lib shell32.lib ole32.lib oleaut32.lib uuid.lib odbc32.lib odbccp32.lib /nologo /subsystem:console /machine:I386
+# ADD LINK32 kernel32.lib user32.lib gdi32.lib winspool.lib comdlg32.lib advapi32.lib shell32.lib ole32.lib oleaut32.lib uuid.lib odbc32.lib odbccp32.lib /nologo /subsystem:console /machine:I386 /out:"minibz2.exe"
+
+!ELSEIF "$(CFG)" == "dlltest - Win32 Debug"
+
+# PROP BASE Use_MFC 0
+# PROP BASE Use_Debug_Libraries 1
+# PROP BASE Output_Dir "dlltest_"
+# PROP BASE Intermediate_Dir "dlltest_"
+# PROP BASE Target_Dir ""
+# PROP Use_MFC 0
+# PROP Use_Debug_Libraries 1
+# PROP Output_Dir "dlltest_"
+# PROP Intermediate_Dir "dlltest_"
+# PROP Ignore_Export_Lib 0
+# PROP Target_Dir ""
+# ADD BASE CPP /nologo /W3 /Gm /GX /Zi /Od /D "WIN32" /D "_DEBUG" /D "_CONSOLE" /D "_MBCS" /YX /FD /c
+# ADD CPP /nologo /W3 /Gm /GX /Zi /Od /D "WIN32" /D "_DEBUG" /D "_CONSOLE" /D "_MBCS" /YX /FD /c
+# ADD BASE RSC /l 0x411 /d "_DEBUG"
+# ADD RSC /l 0x411 /d "_DEBUG"
+BSC32=bscmake.exe
+# ADD BASE BSC32 /nologo
+# ADD BSC32 /nologo
+LINK32=link.exe
+# ADD BASE LINK32 kernel32.lib user32.lib gdi32.lib winspool.lib comdlg32.lib advapi32.lib shell32.lib ole32.lib oleaut32.lib uuid.lib odbc32.lib odbccp32.lib /nologo /subsystem:console /debug /machine:I386 /pdbtype:sept
+# ADD LINK32 kernel32.lib user32.lib gdi32.lib winspool.lib comdlg32.lib advapi32.lib shell32.lib ole32.lib oleaut32.lib uuid.lib odbc32.lib odbccp32.lib /nologo /subsystem:console /debug /machine:I386 /out:"minibz2.exe" /pdbtype:sept
+
+!ENDIF
+
+# Begin Target
+
+# Name "dlltest - Win32 Release"
+# Name "dlltest - Win32 Debug"
+# Begin Source File
+
+SOURCE=.\bzlib.h
+# End Source File
+# Begin Source File
+
+SOURCE=.\dlltest.c
+# End Source File
+# End Target
+# End Project
diff --git a/bzip2/huffman.c b/bzip2/huffman.c new file mode 100644 index 000000000..9b446c4b3 --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/huffman.c @@ -0,0 +1,228 @@ + +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- Huffman coding low-level stuff ---*/ +/*--- huffman.c ---*/ +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ + +/*-- + This file is a part of bzip2 and/or libbzip2, a program and + library for lossless, block-sorting data compression. + + Copyright (C) 1996-2000 Julian R Seward. All rights reserved. + + Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without + modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions + are met: + + 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright + notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. + + 2. The origin of this software must not be misrepresented; you must + not claim that you wrote the original software. If you use this + software in a product, an acknowledgment in the product + documentation would be appreciated but is not required. + + 3. Altered source versions must be plainly marked as such, and must + not be misrepresented as being the original software. + + 4. The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote + products derived from this software without specific prior written + permission. + + THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS + OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED + WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE + ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY + DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL + DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE + GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS + INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, + WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING + NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS + SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. + + Julian Seward, Cambridge, UK. + jseward@acm.org + bzip2/libbzip2 version 1.0 of 21 March 2000 + + This program is based on (at least) the work of: + Mike Burrows + David Wheeler + Peter Fenwick + Alistair Moffat + Radford Neal + Ian H. Witten + Robert Sedgewick + Jon L. Bentley + + For more information on these sources, see the manual. +--*/ + + +#include "bzlib_private.h" + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +#define WEIGHTOF(zz0) ((zz0) & 0xffffff00) +#define DEPTHOF(zz1) ((zz1) & 0x000000ff) +#define MYMAX(zz2,zz3) ((zz2) > (zz3) ? (zz2) : (zz3)) + +#define ADDWEIGHTS(zw1,zw2) \ + (WEIGHTOF(zw1)+WEIGHTOF(zw2)) | \ + (1 + MYMAX(DEPTHOF(zw1),DEPTHOF(zw2))) + +#define UPHEAP(z) \ +{ \ + Int32 zz, tmp; \ + zz = z; tmp = heap[zz]; \ + while (weight[tmp] < weight[heap[zz >> 1]]) { \ + heap[zz] = heap[zz >> 1]; \ + zz >>= 1; \ + } \ + heap[zz] = tmp; \ +} + +#define DOWNHEAP(z) \ +{ \ + Int32 zz, yy, tmp; \ + zz = z; tmp = heap[zz]; \ + while (True) { \ + yy = zz << 1; \ + if (yy > nHeap) break; \ + if (yy < nHeap && \ + weight[heap[yy+1]] < weight[heap[yy]]) \ + yy++; \ + if (weight[tmp] < weight[heap[yy]]) break; \ + heap[zz] = heap[yy]; \ + zz = yy; \ + } \ + heap[zz] = tmp; \ +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +void BZ2_hbMakeCodeLengths ( UChar *len, + Int32 *freq, + Int32 alphaSize, + Int32 maxLen ) +{ + /*-- + Nodes and heap entries run from 1. Entry 0 + for both the heap and nodes is a sentinel. + --*/ + Int32 nNodes, nHeap, n1, n2, i, j, k; + Bool tooLong; + + Int32 heap [ BZ_MAX_ALPHA_SIZE + 2 ]; + Int32 weight [ BZ_MAX_ALPHA_SIZE * 2 ]; + Int32 parent [ BZ_MAX_ALPHA_SIZE * 2 ]; + + for (i = 0; i < alphaSize; i++) + weight[i+1] = (freq[i] == 0 ? 1 : freq[i]) << 8; + + while (True) { + + nNodes = alphaSize; + nHeap = 0; + + heap[0] = 0; + weight[0] = 0; + parent[0] = -2; + + for (i = 1; i <= alphaSize; i++) { + parent[i] = -1; + nHeap++; + heap[nHeap] = i; + UPHEAP(nHeap); + } + + AssertH( nHeap < (BZ_MAX_ALPHA_SIZE+2), 2001 ); + + while (nHeap > 1) { + n1 = heap[1]; heap[1] = heap[nHeap]; nHeap--; DOWNHEAP(1); + n2 = heap[1]; heap[1] = heap[nHeap]; nHeap--; DOWNHEAP(1); + nNodes++; + parent[n1] = parent[n2] = nNodes; + weight[nNodes] = ADDWEIGHTS(weight[n1], weight[n2]); + parent[nNodes] = -1; + nHeap++; + heap[nHeap] = nNodes; + UPHEAP(nHeap); + } + + AssertH( nNodes < (BZ_MAX_ALPHA_SIZE * 2), 2002 ); + + tooLong = False; + for (i = 1; i <= alphaSize; i++) { + j = 0; + k = i; + while (parent[k] >= 0) { k = parent[k]; j++; } + len[i-1] = j; + if (j > maxLen) tooLong = True; + } + + if (! tooLong) break; + + for (i = 1; i < alphaSize; i++) { + j = weight[i] >> 8; + j = 1 + (j / 2); + weight[i] = j << 8; + } + } +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +void BZ2_hbAssignCodes ( Int32 *code, + UChar *length, + Int32 minLen, + Int32 maxLen, + Int32 alphaSize ) +{ + Int32 n, vec, i; + + vec = 0; + for (n = minLen; n <= maxLen; n++) { + for (i = 0; i < alphaSize; i++) + if (length[i] == n) { code[i] = vec; vec++; }; + vec <<= 1; + } +} + + +/*---------------------------------------------------*/ +void BZ2_hbCreateDecodeTables ( Int32 *limit, + Int32 *base, + Int32 *perm, + UChar *length, + Int32 minLen, + Int32 maxLen, + Int32 alphaSize ) +{ + Int32 pp, i, j, vec; + + pp = 0; + for (i = minLen; i <= maxLen; i++) + for (j = 0; j < alphaSize; j++) + if (length[j] == i) { perm[pp] = j; pp++; }; + + for (i = 0; i < BZ_MAX_CODE_LEN; i++) base[i] = 0; + for (i = 0; i < alphaSize; i++) base[length[i]+1]++; + + for (i = 1; i < BZ_MAX_CODE_LEN; i++) base[i] += base[i-1]; + + for (i = 0; i < BZ_MAX_CODE_LEN; i++) limit[i] = 0; + vec = 0; + + for (i = minLen; i <= maxLen; i++) { + vec += (base[i+1] - base[i]); + limit[i] = vec-1; + vec <<= 1; + } + for (i = minLen + 1; i <= maxLen; i++) + base[i] = ((limit[i-1] + 1) << 1) - base[i]; +} + + +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- end huffman.c ---*/ +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ diff --git a/bzip2/libbz2.def b/bzip2/libbz2.def new file mode 100644 index 000000000..2dc0dd891 --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/libbz2.def @@ -0,0 +1,27 @@ +LIBRARY LIBBZ2
+DESCRIPTION "libbzip2: library for data compression"
+EXPORTS
+ BZ2_bzCompressInit
+ BZ2_bzCompress
+ BZ2_bzCompressEnd
+ BZ2_bzDecompressInit
+ BZ2_bzDecompress
+ BZ2_bzDecompressEnd
+ BZ2_bzReadOpen
+ BZ2_bzReadClose
+ BZ2_bzReadGetUnused
+ BZ2_bzRead
+ BZ2_bzWriteOpen
+ BZ2_bzWrite
+ BZ2_bzWriteClose
+ BZ2_bzWriteClose64
+ BZ2_bzBuffToBuffCompress
+ BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompress
+ BZ2_bzlibVersion
+ BZ2_bzopen
+ BZ2_bzdopen
+ BZ2_bzread
+ BZ2_bzwrite
+ BZ2_bzflush
+ BZ2_bzclose
+ BZ2_bzerror
diff --git a/bzip2/libbz2.dsp b/bzip2/libbz2.dsp new file mode 100644 index 000000000..a21a20f75 --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/libbz2.dsp @@ -0,0 +1,130 @@ +# Microsoft Developer Studio Project File - Name="libbz2" - Package Owner=<4>
+# Microsoft Developer Studio Generated Build File, Format Version 5.00
+# ** •ÒW‚µ‚È‚¢‚Å‚‚¾‚³‚¢ **
+
+# TARGTYPE "Win32 (x86) Dynamic-Link Library" 0x0102
+
+CFG=libbz2 - Win32 Debug
+!MESSAGE ‚±‚ê‚Í—LŒø‚ÈÒ²¸Ì§²Ù‚Å‚Í‚ ‚è‚Ü‚¹‚ñB ‚±‚ÌÌßÛ¼Þª¸Ä‚ðËÞÙÄÞ‚·‚邽‚ß‚É‚Í NMAKE ‚ðŽg—p‚µ‚Ä‚‚¾‚³‚¢B
+!MESSAGE [Ò²¸Ì§²Ù‚Ì´¸½Îß°Ä] ºÏÝÄÞ‚ðŽg—p‚µ‚ÄŽÀs‚µ‚Ä‚‚¾‚³‚¢
+!MESSAGE
+!MESSAGE NMAKE /f "libbz2.mak".
+!MESSAGE
+!MESSAGE NMAKE ‚ÌŽÀsŽž‚É\¬‚ðŽw’è‚Å‚«‚Ü‚·
+!MESSAGE ºÏÝÄÞ ×²Ýã‚ÅϸۂÌÝ’è‚ð’è‹`‚µ‚Ü‚·B—á:
+!MESSAGE
+!MESSAGE NMAKE /f "libbz2.mak" CFG="libbz2 - Win32 Debug"
+!MESSAGE
+!MESSAGE ‘I‘ð‰Â”\‚ÈËÞÙÄÞ Ó°ÄÞ:
+!MESSAGE
+!MESSAGE "libbz2 - Win32 Release" ("Win32 (x86) Dynamic-Link Library" —p)
+!MESSAGE "libbz2 - Win32 Debug" ("Win32 (x86) Dynamic-Link Library" —p)
+!MESSAGE
+
+# Begin Project
+# PROP Scc_ProjName ""
+# PROP Scc_LocalPath ""
+CPP=cl.exe
+MTL=midl.exe
+RSC=rc.exe
+
+!IF "$(CFG)" == "libbz2 - Win32 Release"
+
+# PROP BASE Use_MFC 0
+# PROP BASE Use_Debug_Libraries 0
+# PROP BASE Output_Dir "Release"
+# PROP BASE Intermediate_Dir "Release"
+# PROP BASE Target_Dir ""
+# PROP Use_MFC 0
+# PROP Use_Debug_Libraries 0
+# PROP Output_Dir "Release"
+# PROP Intermediate_Dir "Release"
+# PROP Ignore_Export_Lib 0
+# PROP Target_Dir ""
+# ADD BASE CPP /nologo /MT /W3 /GX /O2 /D "WIN32" /D "NDEBUG" /D "_WINDOWS" /YX /FD /c
+# ADD CPP /nologo /MT /W3 /GX /O2 /D "WIN32" /D "NDEBUG" /D "_WINDOWS" /YX /FD /c
+# ADD BASE MTL /nologo /D "NDEBUG" /mktyplib203 /o NUL /win32
+# ADD MTL /nologo /D "NDEBUG" /mktyplib203 /o NUL /win32
+# ADD BASE RSC /l 0x411 /d "NDEBUG"
+# ADD RSC /l 0x411 /d "NDEBUG"
+BSC32=bscmake.exe
+# ADD BASE BSC32 /nologo
+# ADD BSC32 /nologo
+LINK32=link.exe
+# ADD BASE LINK32 kernel32.lib user32.lib gdi32.lib winspool.lib comdlg32.lib advapi32.lib shell32.lib ole32.lib oleaut32.lib uuid.lib odbc32.lib odbccp32.lib /nologo /subsystem:windows /dll /machine:I386
+# ADD LINK32 kernel32.lib user32.lib gdi32.lib winspool.lib comdlg32.lib advapi32.lib shell32.lib ole32.lib oleaut32.lib uuid.lib odbc32.lib odbccp32.lib /nologo /subsystem:windows /dll /machine:I386 /out:"libbz2.dll"
+
+!ELSEIF "$(CFG)" == "libbz2 - Win32 Debug"
+
+# PROP BASE Use_MFC 0
+# PROP BASE Use_Debug_Libraries 1
+# PROP BASE Output_Dir "Debug"
+# PROP BASE Intermediate_Dir "Debug"
+# PROP BASE Target_Dir ""
+# PROP Use_MFC 0
+# PROP Use_Debug_Libraries 1
+# PROP Output_Dir "Debug"
+# PROP Intermediate_Dir "Debug"
+# PROP Ignore_Export_Lib 0
+# PROP Target_Dir ""
+# ADD BASE CPP /nologo /MTd /W3 /Gm /GX /Zi /Od /D "WIN32" /D "_DEBUG" /D "_WINDOWS" /YX /FD /c
+# ADD CPP /nologo /MTd /W3 /Gm /GX /Zi /Od /D "WIN32" /D "_DEBUG" /D "_WINDOWS" /YX /FD /c
+# ADD BASE MTL /nologo /D "_DEBUG" /mktyplib203 /o NUL /win32
+# ADD MTL /nologo /D "_DEBUG" /mktyplib203 /o NUL /win32
+# ADD BASE RSC /l 0x411 /d "_DEBUG"
+# ADD RSC /l 0x411 /d "_DEBUG"
+BSC32=bscmake.exe
+# ADD BASE BSC32 /nologo
+# ADD BSC32 /nologo
+LINK32=link.exe
+# ADD BASE LINK32 kernel32.lib user32.lib gdi32.lib winspool.lib comdlg32.lib advapi32.lib shell32.lib ole32.lib oleaut32.lib uuid.lib odbc32.lib odbccp32.lib /nologo /subsystem:windows /dll /debug /machine:I386 /pdbtype:sept
+# ADD LINK32 kernel32.lib user32.lib gdi32.lib winspool.lib comdlg32.lib advapi32.lib shell32.lib ole32.lib oleaut32.lib uuid.lib odbc32.lib odbccp32.lib /nologo /subsystem:windows /dll /debug /machine:I386 /out:"libbz2.dll" /pdbtype:sept
+
+!ENDIF
+
+# Begin Target
+
+# Name "libbz2 - Win32 Release"
+# Name "libbz2 - Win32 Debug"
+# Begin Source File
+
+SOURCE=.\blocksort.c
+# End Source File
+# Begin Source File
+
+SOURCE=.\bzlib.c
+# End Source File
+# Begin Source File
+
+SOURCE=.\bzlib.h
+# End Source File
+# Begin Source File
+
+SOURCE=.\bzlib_private.h
+# End Source File
+# Begin Source File
+
+SOURCE=.\compress.c
+# End Source File
+# Begin Source File
+
+SOURCE=.\crctable.c
+# End Source File
+# Begin Source File
+
+SOURCE=.\decompress.c
+# End Source File
+# Begin Source File
+
+SOURCE=.\huffman.c
+# End Source File
+# Begin Source File
+
+SOURCE=.\libbz2.def
+# End Source File
+# Begin Source File
+
+SOURCE=.\randtable.c
+# End Source File
+# End Target
+# End Project
diff --git a/bzip2/makefile.msc b/bzip2/makefile.msc new file mode 100644 index 000000000..3fe42324a --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/makefile.msc @@ -0,0 +1,63 @@ +# Makefile for Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0
+# usage: nmake -f makefile.msc
+# K.M. Syring (syring@gsf.de)
+# Fixed up by JRS for bzip2-0.9.5d release.
+
+CC=cl
+CFLAGS= -DWIN32 -MD -Ox -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64
+
+OBJS= blocksort.obj \
+ huffman.obj \
+ crctable.obj \
+ randtable.obj \
+ compress.obj \
+ decompress.obj \
+ bzlib.obj
+
+all: lib bzip2 test
+
+bzip2: lib
+ $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -o bzip2 bzip2.c libbz2.lib setargv.obj
+ $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -o bzip2recover bzip2recover.c
+
+lib: $(OBJS)
+ lib /out:libbz2.lib $(OBJS)
+
+test: bzip2
+ type words1
+ .\\bzip2 -1 < sample1.ref > sample1.rb2
+ .\\bzip2 -2 < sample2.ref > sample2.rb2
+ .\\bzip2 -3 < sample3.ref > sample3.rb2
+ .\\bzip2 -d < sample1.bz2 > sample1.tst
+ .\\bzip2 -d < sample2.bz2 > sample2.tst
+ .\\bzip2 -ds < sample3.bz2 > sample3.tst
+ @echo All six of the fc's should find no differences.
+ @echo If fc finds an error on sample3.bz2, this could be
+ @echo because WinZip's 'TAR file smart CR/LF conversion'
+ @echo is too clever for its own good. Disable this option.
+ @echo The correct size for sample3.ref is 120,244. If it
+ @echo is 150,251, WinZip has messed it up.
+ fc sample1.bz2 sample1.rb2
+ fc sample2.bz2 sample2.rb2
+ fc sample3.bz2 sample3.rb2
+ fc sample1.tst sample1.ref
+ fc sample2.tst sample2.ref
+ fc sample3.tst sample3.ref
+
+
+
+clean:
+ del *.obj
+ del libbz2.lib
+ del bzip2.exe
+ del bzip2recover.exe
+ del sample1.rb2
+ del sample2.rb2
+ del sample3.rb2
+ del sample1.tst
+ del sample2.tst
+ del sample3.tst
+
+.c.obj:
+ $(CC) $(CFLAGS) -c $*.c -o $*.obj
+
diff --git a/bzip2/manual.ps b/bzip2/manual.ps new file mode 100644 index 000000000..1a7dbac85 --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/manual.ps @@ -0,0 +1,3808 @@ +%!PS-Adobe-2.0 +%%Creator: dvips(k) 5.78 Copyright 1998 Radical Eye Software (www.radicaleye.com) +%%Title: manual.dvi +%%Pages: 39 +%%PageOrder: Ascend +%%BoundingBox: 0 0 596 842 +%%EndComments +%DVIPSCommandLine: dvips -o manual.ps manual.dvi +%DVIPSParameters: dpi=600, compressed +%DVIPSSource: TeX output 2000.03.23:2343 +%%BeginProcSet: texc.pro +%! +/TeXDict 300 dict def TeXDict begin /N{def}def /B{bind def}N /S{exch}N +/X{S N}B /TR{translate}N /isls false N /vsize 11 72 mul N /hsize 8.5 72 +mul N /landplus90{false}def /@rigin{isls{[0 landplus90{1 -1}{-1 1} +ifelse 0 0 0]concat}if 72 Resolution div 72 VResolution div neg scale +isls{landplus90{VResolution 72 div vsize mul 0 exch}{Resolution -72 div +hsize mul 0}ifelse TR}if Resolution VResolution vsize -72 div 1 add mul +TR[matrix currentmatrix{dup dup round sub abs 0.00001 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+Fj(strm->s)d Fl(is)h Fj(NULL)150 652 y Ff(3.3.3)63 b +Fe(BZ2_bzCompressEnd)390 839 y Fj(int)47 b(BZ2_bzCompressEnd)c(\()k +(bz_stream)f(*strm)g(\);)150 996 y Fl(Releases)31 b(all)e(memory)h +(asso)s(ciated)h(with)e(a)i(compression)e(stream.)150 +1153 y(P)m(ossible)g(return)h(v)-5 b(alues:)481 1304 +y Fj(BZ_PARAM_ERROR)117 b Fl(if)30 b Fj(strm)f Fl(is)g +Fj(NULL)g Fl(or)i Fj(strm->s)d Fl(is)i Fj(NULL)481 1408 +y(BZ_OK)120 b Fl(otherwise)150 1657 y Ff(3.3.4)63 b Fe +(BZ2_bzDecompressInit)390 1844 y Fj(int)47 b(BZ2_bzDecompressInit)42 +b(\()48 b(bz_stream)d(*strm,)h(int)h(verbosity,)e(int)i(small)f(\);)150 +2001 y Fl(Prepares)30 b(for)f(decompression.)40 b(As)29 +b(with)g Fj(BZ2_bzCompressInit)p Fl(,)c(a)31 b Fj(bz_stream)c +Fl(record)j(should)e(b)s(e)150 2110 y(allo)s(cated)c(and)f(initialised) +e(b)s(efore)i(the)i(call.)38 b(Fields)22 b Fj(bzalloc)p +Fl(,)i Fj(bzfree)e Fl(and)i Fj(opaque)e Fl(should)g(b)s(e)h(set)i(if) +150 2220 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+Fj(BZ2_bzBuffToBuffCompres)o(s)22 b Fa(.)15 b(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g +(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)h(.)f(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)57 b Fl(26)748 +5044 y(3.5.2)93 b Fj(BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompr)o(ess)17 +b Fa(.)e(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.) +53 b Fl(27)449 5153 y(3.6)92 b Fj(zlib)29 b Fl(compatibilit)m(y)g +(functions)23 b Fa(.)13 b(.)i(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)h +(.)f(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)52 +b Fl(28)449 5263 y(3.7)92 b(Using)30 b(the)g(library)e(in)h(a)i +Fj(stdio)p Fl(-free)e(en)m(vironmen)m(t)23 b Fa(.)15 +b(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)h(.)52 b Fl(29)p +eop +%%Page: -2 39 +-2 38 bop 3699 -116 a Fl(ii)748 83 y(3.7.1)93 b(Getting)31 +b(rid)d(of)j Fj(stdio)20 b Fa(.)13 b(.)i(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.) +g(.)g(.)h(.)f(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)49 +b Fl(29)748 193 y(3.7.2)93 b(Critical)28 b(error)i(handling)22 +b Fa(.)15 b(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g +(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)54 b Fl(29)449 302 +y(3.8)92 b(Making)30 b(a)h(Windo)m(ws)e(DLL)15 b Fa(.)h(.)f(.)g(.)g(.)g +(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.) +g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)h(.)f(.)g(.)g(.)44 b Fl(30)150 545 +y Fk(4)135 b(Miscellanea)11 b Fb(.)21 b(.)f(.)f(.)h(.)f(.)g(.)h(.)f(.)h +(.)f(.)h(.)f(.)g(.)h(.)f(.)h(.)f(.)h(.)f(.)g(.)h(.)f(.)h(.)f(.)h(.)f(.) +h(.)f(.)g(.)h(.)56 b Fk(31)449 682 y Fl(4.1)92 b(Limitations)29 +b(of)h(the)h(compressed)f(\014le)f(format)9 b Fa(.)15 +b(.)h(.)f(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)38 +b Fl(31)449 791 y(4.2)92 b(P)m(ortabilit)m(y)30 b(issues)14 +b Fa(.)f(.)j(.)f(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.) +g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g +(.)g(.)h(.)f(.)g(.)43 b Fl(32)449 901 y(4.3)92 b(Rep)s(orting)29 +b(bugs)f Fa(.)15 b(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g +(.)h(.)f(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.) +g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)58 b Fl(32)449 1010 y(4.4)92 +b(Did)29 b(y)m(ou)i(get)h(the)e(righ)m(t)g(pac)m(k)-5 +b(age?)22 b Fa(.)17 b(.)e(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)h +(.)f(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)51 +b Fl(34)449 1120 y(4.5)92 b(T)-8 b(esting)16 b Fa(.)f(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g +(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)h(.)f(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.) +g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g +(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)h(.)45 b Fl(34)449 1230 y(4.6)92 +b(F)-8 b(urther)30 b(reading)22 b Fa(.)14 b(.)h(.)g(.)h(.)f(.)g(.)g(.)g +(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.) +g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)g(.)h(.)f(.)51 +b Fl(35)p eop +%%Trailer +end +userdict /end-hook known{end-hook}if +%%EOF diff --git a/bzip2/manual.texi b/bzip2/manual.texi new file mode 100644 index 000000000..336776ab8 --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/manual.texi @@ -0,0 +1,2215 @@ +\input texinfo @c -*- Texinfo -*- +@setfilename bzip2.info + +@ignore +This file documents bzip2 version 1.0, and associated library +libbzip2, written by Julian Seward (jseward@acm.org). + +Copyright (C) 1996-2000 Julian R Seward + +Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of +this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice +are preserved on all copies. + +Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual +into another language, under the above conditions for verbatim copies. +@end ignore + +@ifinfo +@format +START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY +* Bzip2: (bzip2). A program and library for data compression. +END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY +@end format + +@end ifinfo + +@iftex +@c @finalout +@settitle bzip2 and libbzip2 +@titlepage +@title bzip2 and libbzip2 +@subtitle a program and library for data compression +@subtitle copyright (C) 1996-2000 Julian Seward +@subtitle version 1.0 of 21 March 2000 +@author Julian Seward + +@end titlepage + +@parindent 0mm +@parskip 2mm + +@end iftex +@node Top, Overview, (dir), (dir) + +This program, @code{bzip2}, +and associated library @code{libbzip2}, are +Copyright (C) 1996-2000 Julian R Seward. All rights reserved. + +Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without +modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions +are met: +@itemize @bullet +@item + Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright + notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. +@item + The origin of this software must not be misrepresented; you must + not claim that you wrote the original software. If you use this + software in a product, an acknowledgment in the product + documentation would be appreciated but is not required. +@item + Altered source versions must be plainly marked as such, and must + not be misrepresented as being the original software. +@item + The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote + products derived from this software without specific prior written + permission. +@end itemize +THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS +OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED +WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE +ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY +DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL +DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE +GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS +INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, +WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING +NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS +SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. + +Julian Seward, Cambridge, UK. + +@code{jseward@@acm.org} + +@code{http://sourceware.cygnus.com/bzip2} + +@code{http://www.cacheprof.org} + +@code{http://www.muraroa.demon.co.uk} + +@code{bzip2}/@code{libbzip2} version 1.0 of 21 March 2000. + +PATENTS: To the best of my knowledge, @code{bzip2} does not use any patented +algorithms. However, I do not have the resources available to carry out +a full patent search. Therefore I cannot give any guarantee of the +above statement. + + + + + + + +@node Overview, Implementation, Top, Top +@chapter Introduction + +@code{bzip2} compresses files using the Burrows-Wheeler +block-sorting text compression algorithm, and Huffman coding. +Compression is generally considerably better than that +achieved by more conventional LZ77/LZ78-based compressors, +and approaches the performance of the PPM family of statistical compressors. + +@code{bzip2} is built on top of @code{libbzip2}, a flexible library +for handling compressed data in the @code{bzip2} format. This manual +describes both how to use the program and +how to work with the library interface. Most of the +manual is devoted to this library, not the program, +which is good news if your interest is only in the program. + +Chapter 2 describes how to use @code{bzip2}; this is the only part +you need to read if you just want to know how to operate the program. +Chapter 3 describes the programming interfaces in detail, and +Chapter 4 records some miscellaneous notes which I thought +ought to be recorded somewhere. + + +@chapter How to use @code{bzip2} + +This chapter contains a copy of the @code{bzip2} man page, +and nothing else. + +@quotation + +@unnumberedsubsubsec NAME +@itemize +@item @code{bzip2}, @code{bunzip2} +- a block-sorting file compressor, v1.0 +@item @code{bzcat} +- decompresses files to stdout +@item @code{bzip2recover} +- recovers data from damaged bzip2 files +@end itemize + +@unnumberedsubsubsec SYNOPSIS +@itemize +@item @code{bzip2} [ -cdfkqstvzVL123456789 ] [ filenames ... ] +@item @code{bunzip2} [ -fkvsVL ] [ filenames ... ] +@item @code{bzcat} [ -s ] [ filenames ... ] +@item @code{bzip2recover} filename +@end itemize + +@unnumberedsubsubsec DESCRIPTION + +@code{bzip2} compresses files using the Burrows-Wheeler block sorting +text compression algorithm, and Huffman coding. Compression is +generally considerably better than that achieved by more conventional +LZ77/LZ78-based compressors, and approaches the performance of the PPM +family of statistical compressors. + +The command-line options are deliberately very similar to those of GNU +@code{gzip}, but they are not identical. + +@code{bzip2} expects a list of file names to accompany the command-line +flags. Each file is replaced by a compressed version of itself, with +the name @code{original_name.bz2}. Each compressed file has the same +modification date, permissions, and, when possible, ownership as the +corresponding original, so that these properties can be correctly +restored at decompression time. File name handling is naive in the +sense that there is no mechanism for preserving original file names, +permissions, ownerships or dates in filesystems which lack these +concepts, or have serious file name length restrictions, such as MS-DOS. + +@code{bzip2} and @code{bunzip2} will by default not overwrite existing +files. If you want this to happen, specify the @code{-f} flag. + +If no file names are specified, @code{bzip2} compresses from standard +input to standard output. In this case, @code{bzip2} will decline to +write compressed output to a terminal, as this would be entirely +incomprehensible and therefore pointless. + +@code{bunzip2} (or @code{bzip2 -d}) decompresses all +specified files. Files which were not created by @code{bzip2} +will be detected and ignored, and a warning issued. +@code{bzip2} attempts to guess the filename for the decompressed file +from that of the compressed file as follows: +@itemize +@item @code{filename.bz2 } becomes @code{filename} +@item @code{filename.bz } becomes @code{filename} +@item @code{filename.tbz2} becomes @code{filename.tar} +@item @code{filename.tbz } becomes @code{filename.tar} +@item @code{anyothername } becomes @code{anyothername.out} +@end itemize +If the file does not end in one of the recognised endings, +@code{.bz2}, @code{.bz}, +@code{.tbz2} or @code{.tbz}, @code{bzip2} complains that it cannot +guess the name of the original file, and uses the original name +with @code{.out} appended. + +As with compression, supplying no +filenames causes decompression from standard input to standard output. + +@code{bunzip2} will correctly decompress a file which is the +concatenation of two or more compressed files. The result is the +concatenation of the corresponding uncompressed files. Integrity +testing (@code{-t}) of concatenated compressed files is also supported. + +You can also compress or decompress files to the standard output by +giving the @code{-c} flag. Multiple files may be compressed and +decompressed like this. The resulting outputs are fed sequentially to +stdout. Compression of multiple files in this manner generates a stream +containing multiple compressed file representations. Such a stream +can be decompressed correctly only by @code{bzip2} version 0.9.0 or +later. Earlier versions of @code{bzip2} will stop after decompressing +the first file in the stream. + +@code{bzcat} (or @code{bzip2 -dc}) decompresses all specified files to +the standard output. + +@code{bzip2} will read arguments from the environment variables +@code{BZIP2} and @code{BZIP}, in that order, and will process them +before any arguments read from the command line. This gives a +convenient way to supply default arguments. + +Compression is always performed, even if the compressed file is slightly +larger than the original. Files of less than about one hundred bytes +tend to get larger, since the compression mechanism has a constant +overhead in the region of 50 bytes. Random data (including the output +of most file compressors) is coded at about 8.05 bits per byte, giving +an expansion of around 0.5%. + +As a self-check for your protection, @code{bzip2} uses 32-bit CRCs to +make sure that the decompressed version of a file is identical to the +original. This guards against corruption of the compressed data, and +against undetected bugs in @code{bzip2} (hopefully very unlikely). The +chances of data corruption going undetected is microscopic, about one +chance in four billion for each file processed. Be aware, though, that +the check occurs upon decompression, so it can only tell you that +something is wrong. It can't help you recover the original uncompressed +data. You can use @code{bzip2recover} to try to recover data from +damaged files. + +Return values: 0 for a normal exit, 1 for environmental problems (file +not found, invalid flags, I/O errors, &c), 2 to indicate a corrupt +compressed file, 3 for an internal consistency error (eg, bug) which +caused @code{bzip2} to panic. + + +@unnumberedsubsubsec OPTIONS +@table @code +@item -c --stdout +Compress or decompress to standard output. +@item -d --decompress +Force decompression. @code{bzip2}, @code{bunzip2} and @code{bzcat} are +really the same program, and the decision about what actions to take is +done on the basis of which name is used. This flag overrides that +mechanism, and forces bzip2 to decompress. +@item -z --compress +The complement to @code{-d}: forces compression, regardless of the +invokation name. +@item -t --test +Check integrity of the specified file(s), but don't decompress them. +This really performs a trial decompression and throws away the result. +@item -f --force +Force overwrite of output files. Normally, @code{bzip2} will not overwrite +existing output files. Also forces @code{bzip2} to break hard links +to files, which it otherwise wouldn't do. +@item -k --keep +Keep (don't delete) input files during compression +or decompression. +@item -s --small +Reduce memory usage, for compression, decompression and testing. Files +are decompressed and tested using a modified algorithm which only +requires 2.5 bytes per block byte. This means any file can be +decompressed in 2300k of memory, albeit at about half the normal speed. + +During compression, @code{-s} selects a block size of 200k, which limits +memory use to around the same figure, at the expense of your compression +ratio. In short, if your machine is low on memory (8 megabytes or +less), use -s for everything. See MEMORY MANAGEMENT below. +@item -q --quiet +Suppress non-essential warning messages. Messages pertaining to +I/O errors and other critical events will not be suppressed. +@item -v --verbose +Verbose mode -- show the compression ratio for each file processed. +Further @code{-v}'s increase the verbosity level, spewing out lots of +information which is primarily of interest for diagnostic purposes. +@item -L --license -V --version +Display the software version, license terms and conditions. +@item -1 to -9 +Set the block size to 100 k, 200 k .. 900 k when compressing. Has no +effect when decompressing. See MEMORY MANAGEMENT below. +@item -- +Treats all subsequent arguments as file names, even if they start +with a dash. This is so you can handle files with names beginning +with a dash, for example: @code{bzip2 -- -myfilename}. +@item --repetitive-fast +@item --repetitive-best +These flags are redundant in versions 0.9.5 and above. They provided +some coarse control over the behaviour of the sorting algorithm in +earlier versions, which was sometimes useful. 0.9.5 and above have an +improved algorithm which renders these flags irrelevant. +@end table + + +@unnumberedsubsubsec MEMORY MANAGEMENT + +@code{bzip2} compresses large files in blocks. The block size affects +both the compression ratio achieved, and the amount of memory needed for +compression and decompression. The flags @code{-1} through @code{-9} +specify the block size to be 100,000 bytes through 900,000 bytes (the +default) respectively. At decompression time, the block size used for +compression is read from the header of the compressed file, and +@code{bunzip2} then allocates itself just enough memory to decompress +the file. Since block sizes are stored in compressed files, it follows +that the flags @code{-1} to @code{-9} are irrelevant to and so ignored +during decompression. + +Compression and decompression requirements, in bytes, can be estimated +as: +@example + Compression: 400k + ( 8 x block size ) + + Decompression: 100k + ( 4 x block size ), or + 100k + ( 2.5 x block size ) +@end example +Larger block sizes give rapidly diminishing marginal returns. Most of +the compression comes from the first two or three hundred k of block +size, a fact worth bearing in mind when using @code{bzip2} on small machines. +It is also important to appreciate that the decompression memory +requirement is set at compression time by the choice of block size. + +For files compressed with the default 900k block size, @code{bunzip2} +will require about 3700 kbytes to decompress. To support decompression +of any file on a 4 megabyte machine, @code{bunzip2} has an option to +decompress using approximately half this amount of memory, about 2300 +kbytes. Decompression speed is also halved, so you should use this +option only where necessary. The relevant flag is @code{-s}. + +In general, try and use the largest block size memory constraints allow, +since that maximises the compression achieved. Compression and +decompression speed are virtually unaffected by block size. + +Another significant point applies to files which fit in a single block +-- that means most files you'd encounter using a large block size. The +amount of real memory touched is proportional to the size of the file, +since the file is smaller than a block. For example, compressing a file +20,000 bytes long with the flag @code{-9} will cause the compressor to +allocate around 7600k of memory, but only touch 400k + 20000 * 8 = 560 +kbytes of it. Similarly, the decompressor will allocate 3700k but only +touch 100k + 20000 * 4 = 180 kbytes. + +Here is a table which summarises the maximum memory usage for different +block sizes. Also recorded is the total compressed size for 14 files of +the Calgary Text Compression Corpus totalling 3,141,622 bytes. This +column gives some feel for how compression varies with block size. +These figures tend to understate the advantage of larger block sizes for +larger files, since the Corpus is dominated by smaller files. +@example + Compress Decompress Decompress Corpus + Flag usage usage -s usage Size + + -1 1200k 500k 350k 914704 + -2 2000k 900k 600k 877703 + -3 2800k 1300k 850k 860338 + -4 3600k 1700k 1100k 846899 + -5 4400k 2100k 1350k 845160 + -6 5200k 2500k 1600k 838626 + -7 6100k 2900k 1850k 834096 + -8 6800k 3300k 2100k 828642 + -9 7600k 3700k 2350k 828642 +@end example + +@unnumberedsubsubsec RECOVERING DATA FROM DAMAGED FILES + +@code{bzip2} compresses files in blocks, usually 900kbytes long. Each +block is handled independently. If a media or transmission error causes +a multi-block @code{.bz2} file to become damaged, it may be possible to +recover data from the undamaged blocks in the file. + +The compressed representation of each block is delimited by a 48-bit +pattern, which makes it possible to find the block boundaries with +reasonable certainty. Each block also carries its own 32-bit CRC, so +damaged blocks can be distinguished from undamaged ones. + +@code{bzip2recover} is a simple program whose purpose is to search for +blocks in @code{.bz2} files, and write each block out into its own +@code{.bz2} file. You can then use @code{bzip2 -t} to test the +integrity of the resulting files, and decompress those which are +undamaged. + +@code{bzip2recover} +takes a single argument, the name of the damaged file, +and writes a number of files @code{rec0001file.bz2}, + @code{rec0002file.bz2}, etc, containing the extracted blocks. + The output filenames are designed so that the use of + wildcards in subsequent processing -- for example, +@code{bzip2 -dc rec*file.bz2 > recovered_data} -- lists the files in + the correct order. + +@code{bzip2recover} should be of most use dealing with large @code{.bz2} + files, as these will contain many blocks. It is clearly + futile to use it on damaged single-block files, since a + damaged block cannot be recovered. If you wish to minimise +any potential data loss through media or transmission errors, +you might consider compressing with a smaller + block size. + + +@unnumberedsubsubsec PERFORMANCE NOTES + +The sorting phase of compression gathers together similar strings in the +file. Because of this, files containing very long runs of repeated +symbols, like "aabaabaabaab ..." (repeated several hundred times) may +compress more slowly than normal. Versions 0.9.5 and above fare much +better than previous versions in this respect. The ratio between +worst-case and average-case compression time is in the region of 10:1. +For previous versions, this figure was more like 100:1. You can use the +@code{-vvvv} option to monitor progress in great detail, if you want. + +Decompression speed is unaffected by these phenomena. + +@code{bzip2} usually allocates several megabytes of memory to operate +in, and then charges all over it in a fairly random fashion. This means +that performance, both for compressing and decompressing, is largely +determined by the speed at which your machine can service cache misses. +Because of this, small changes to the code to reduce the miss rate have +been observed to give disproportionately large performance improvements. +I imagine @code{bzip2} will perform best on machines with very large +caches. + + +@unnumberedsubsubsec CAVEATS + +I/O error messages are not as helpful as they could be. @code{bzip2} +tries hard to detect I/O errors and exit cleanly, but the details of +what the problem is sometimes seem rather misleading. + +This manual page pertains to version 1.0 of @code{bzip2}. Compressed +data created by this version is entirely forwards and backwards +compatible with the previous public releases, versions 0.1pl2, 0.9.0 and +0.9.5, but with the following exception: 0.9.0 and above can correctly +decompress multiple concatenated compressed files. 0.1pl2 cannot do +this; it will stop after decompressing just the first file in the +stream. + +@code{bzip2recover} uses 32-bit integers to represent bit positions in +compressed files, so it cannot handle compressed files more than 512 +megabytes long. This could easily be fixed. + + +@unnumberedsubsubsec AUTHOR +Julian Seward, @code{jseward@@acm.org}. + +The ideas embodied in @code{bzip2} are due to (at least) the following +people: Michael Burrows and David Wheeler (for the block sorting +transformation), David Wheeler (again, for the Huffman coder), Peter +Fenwick (for the structured coding model in the original @code{bzip}, +and many refinements), and Alistair Moffat, Radford Neal and Ian Witten +(for the arithmetic coder in the original @code{bzip}). I am much +indebted for their help, support and advice. See the manual in the +source distribution for pointers to sources of documentation. Christian +von Roques encouraged me to look for faster sorting algorithms, so as to +speed up compression. Bela Lubkin encouraged me to improve the +worst-case compression performance. Many people sent patches, helped +with portability problems, lent machines, gave advice and were generally +helpful. + +@end quotation + + + + +@chapter Programming with @code{libbzip2} + +This chapter describes the programming interface to @code{libbzip2}. + +For general background information, particularly about memory +use and performance aspects, you'd be well advised to read Chapter 2 +as well. + +@section Top-level structure + +@code{libbzip2} is a flexible library for compressing and decompressing +data in the @code{bzip2} data format. Although packaged as a single +entity, it helps to regard the library as three separate parts: the low +level interface, and the high level interface, and some utility +functions. + +The structure of @code{libbzip2}'s interfaces is similar to +that of Jean-loup Gailly's and Mark Adler's excellent @code{zlib} +library. + +All externally visible symbols have names beginning @code{BZ2_}. +This is new in version 1.0. The intention is to minimise pollution +of the namespaces of library clients. + +@subsection Low-level summary + +This interface provides services for compressing and decompressing +data in memory. There's no provision for dealing with files, streams +or any other I/O mechanisms, just straight memory-to-memory work. +In fact, this part of the library can be compiled without inclusion +of @code{stdio.h}, which may be helpful for embedded applications. + +The low-level part of the library has no global variables and +is therefore thread-safe. + +Six routines make up the low level interface: +@code{BZ2_bzCompressInit}, @code{BZ2_bzCompress}, and @* @code{BZ2_bzCompressEnd} +for compression, +and a corresponding trio @code{BZ2_bzDecompressInit}, @* @code{BZ2_bzDecompress} +and @code{BZ2_bzDecompressEnd} for decompression. +The @code{*Init} functions allocate +memory for compression/decompression and do other +initialisations, whilst the @code{*End} functions close down operations +and release memory. + +The real work is done by @code{BZ2_bzCompress} and @code{BZ2_bzDecompress}. +These compress and decompress data from a user-supplied input buffer +to a user-supplied output buffer. These buffers can be any size; +arbitrary quantities of data are handled by making repeated calls +to these functions. This is a flexible mechanism allowing a +consumer-pull style of activity, or producer-push, or a mixture of +both. + + + +@subsection High-level summary + +This interface provides some handy wrappers around the low-level +interface to facilitate reading and writing @code{bzip2} format +files (@code{.bz2} files). The routines provide hooks to facilitate +reading files in which the @code{bzip2} data stream is embedded +within some larger-scale file structure, or where there are +multiple @code{bzip2} data streams concatenated end-to-end. + +For reading files, @code{BZ2_bzReadOpen}, @code{BZ2_bzRead}, +@code{BZ2_bzReadClose} and @* @code{BZ2_bzReadGetUnused} are supplied. For +writing files, @code{BZ2_bzWriteOpen}, @code{BZ2_bzWrite} and +@code{BZ2_bzWriteFinish} are available. + +As with the low-level library, no global variables are used +so the library is per se thread-safe. However, if I/O errors +occur whilst reading or writing the underlying compressed files, +you may have to consult @code{errno} to determine the cause of +the error. In that case, you'd need a C library which correctly +supports @code{errno} in a multithreaded environment. + +To make the library a little simpler and more portable, +@code{BZ2_bzReadOpen} and @code{BZ2_bzWriteOpen} require you to pass them file +handles (@code{FILE*}s) which have previously been opened for reading or +writing respectively. That avoids portability problems associated with +file operations and file attributes, whilst not being much of an +imposition on the programmer. + + + +@subsection Utility functions summary +For very simple needs, @code{BZ2_bzBuffToBuffCompress} and +@code{BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompress} are provided. These compress +data in memory from one buffer to another buffer in a single +function call. You should assess whether these functions +fulfill your memory-to-memory compression/decompression +requirements before investing effort in understanding the more +general but more complex low-level interface. + +Yoshioka Tsuneo (@code{QWF00133@@niftyserve.or.jp} / +@code{tsuneo-y@@is.aist-nara.ac.jp}) has contributed some functions to +give better @code{zlib} compatibility. These functions are +@code{BZ2_bzopen}, @code{BZ2_bzread}, @code{BZ2_bzwrite}, @code{BZ2_bzflush}, +@code{BZ2_bzclose}, +@code{BZ2_bzerror} and @code{BZ2_bzlibVersion}. You may find these functions +more convenient for simple file reading and writing, than those in the +high-level interface. These functions are not (yet) officially part of +the library, and are minimally documented here. If they break, you +get to keep all the pieces. I hope to document them properly when time +permits. + +Yoshioka also contributed modifications to allow the library to be +built as a Windows DLL. + + +@section Error handling + +The library is designed to recover cleanly in all situations, including +the worst-case situation of decompressing random data. I'm not +100% sure that it can always do this, so you might want to add +a signal handler to catch segmentation violations during decompression +if you are feeling especially paranoid. I would be interested in +hearing more about the robustness of the library to corrupted +compressed data. + +Version 1.0 is much more robust in this respect than +0.9.0 or 0.9.5. Investigations with Checker (a tool for +detecting problems with memory management, similar to Purify) +indicate that, at least for the few files I tested, all single-bit +errors in the decompressed data are caught properly, with no +segmentation faults, no reads of uninitialised data and no +out of range reads or writes. So it's certainly much improved, +although I wouldn't claim it to be totally bombproof. + +The file @code{bzlib.h} contains all definitions needed to use +the library. In particular, you should definitely not include +@code{bzlib_private.h}. + +In @code{bzlib.h}, the various return values are defined. The following +list is not intended as an exhaustive description of the circumstances +in which a given value may be returned -- those descriptions are given +later. Rather, it is intended to convey the rough meaning of each +return value. The first five actions are normal and not intended to +denote an error situation. +@table @code +@item BZ_OK +The requested action was completed successfully. +@item BZ_RUN_OK +@itemx BZ_FLUSH_OK +@itemx BZ_FINISH_OK +In @code{BZ2_bzCompress}, the requested flush/finish/nothing-special action +was completed successfully. +@item BZ_STREAM_END +Compression of data was completed, or the logical stream end was +detected during decompression. +@end table + +The following return values indicate an error of some kind. +@table @code +@item BZ_CONFIG_ERROR +Indicates that the library has been improperly compiled on your +platform -- a major configuration error. Specifically, it means +that @code{sizeof(char)}, @code{sizeof(short)} and @code{sizeof(int)} +are not 1, 2 and 4 respectively, as they should be. Note that the +library should still work properly on 64-bit platforms which follow +the LP64 programming model -- that is, where @code{sizeof(long)} +and @code{sizeof(void*)} are 8. Under LP64, @code{sizeof(int)} is +still 4, so @code{libbzip2}, which doesn't use the @code{long} type, +is OK. +@item BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR +When using the library, it is important to call the functions in the +correct sequence and with data structures (buffers etc) in the correct +states. @code{libbzip2} checks as much as it can to ensure this is +happening, and returns @code{BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR} if not. Code which +complies precisely with the function semantics, as detailed below, +should never receive this value; such an event denotes buggy code +which you should investigate. +@item BZ_PARAM_ERROR +Returned when a parameter to a function call is out of range +or otherwise manifestly incorrect. As with @code{BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR}, +this denotes a bug in the client code. The distinction between +@code{BZ_PARAM_ERROR} and @code{BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR} is a bit hazy, but still worth +making. +@item BZ_MEM_ERROR +Returned when a request to allocate memory failed. Note that the +quantity of memory needed to decompress a stream cannot be determined +until the stream's header has been read. So @code{BZ2_bzDecompress} and +@code{BZ2_bzRead} may return @code{BZ_MEM_ERROR} even though some of +the compressed data has been read. The same is not true for +compression; once @code{BZ2_bzCompressInit} or @code{BZ2_bzWriteOpen} have +successfully completed, @code{BZ_MEM_ERROR} cannot occur. +@item BZ_DATA_ERROR +Returned when a data integrity error is detected during decompression. +Most importantly, this means when stored and computed CRCs for the +data do not match. This value is also returned upon detection of any +other anomaly in the compressed data. +@item BZ_DATA_ERROR_MAGIC +As a special case of @code{BZ_DATA_ERROR}, it is sometimes useful to +know when the compressed stream does not start with the correct +magic bytes (@code{'B' 'Z' 'h'}). +@item BZ_IO_ERROR +Returned by @code{BZ2_bzRead} and @code{BZ2_bzWrite} when there is an error +reading or writing in the compressed file, and by @code{BZ2_bzReadOpen} +and @code{BZ2_bzWriteOpen} for attempts to use a file for which the +error indicator (viz, @code{ferror(f)}) is set. +On receipt of @code{BZ_IO_ERROR}, the caller should consult +@code{errno} and/or @code{perror} to acquire operating-system +specific information about the problem. +@item BZ_UNEXPECTED_EOF +Returned by @code{BZ2_bzRead} when the compressed file finishes +before the logical end of stream is detected. +@item BZ_OUTBUFF_FULL +Returned by @code{BZ2_bzBuffToBuffCompress} and +@code{BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompress} to indicate that the output data +will not fit into the output buffer provided. +@end table + + + +@section Low-level interface + +@subsection @code{BZ2_bzCompressInit} +@example +typedef + struct @{ + char *next_in; + unsigned int avail_in; + unsigned int total_in_lo32; + unsigned int total_in_hi32; + + char *next_out; + unsigned int avail_out; + unsigned int total_out_lo32; + unsigned int total_out_hi32; + + void *state; + + void *(*bzalloc)(void *,int,int); + void (*bzfree)(void *,void *); + void *opaque; + @} + bz_stream; + +int BZ2_bzCompressInit ( bz_stream *strm, + int blockSize100k, + int verbosity, + int workFactor ); + +@end example + +Prepares for compression. The @code{bz_stream} structure +holds all data pertaining to the compression activity. +A @code{bz_stream} structure should be allocated and initialised +prior to the call. +The fields of @code{bz_stream} +comprise the entirety of the user-visible data. @code{state} +is a pointer to the private data structures required for compression. + +Custom memory allocators are supported, via fields @code{bzalloc}, +@code{bzfree}, +and @code{opaque}. The value +@code{opaque} is passed to as the first argument to +all calls to @code{bzalloc} and @code{bzfree}, but is +otherwise ignored by the library. +The call @code{bzalloc ( opaque, n, m )} is expected to return a +pointer @code{p} to +@code{n * m} bytes of memory, and @code{bzfree ( opaque, p )} +should free +that memory. + +If you don't want to use a custom memory allocator, set @code{bzalloc}, +@code{bzfree} and +@code{opaque} to @code{NULL}, +and the library will then use the standard @code{malloc}/@code{free} +routines. + +Before calling @code{BZ2_bzCompressInit}, fields @code{bzalloc}, +@code{bzfree} and @code{opaque} should +be filled appropriately, as just described. Upon return, the internal +state will have been allocated and initialised, and @code{total_in_lo32}, +@code{total_in_hi32}, @code{total_out_lo32} and +@code{total_out_hi32} will have been set to zero. +These four fields are used by the library +to inform the caller of the total amount of data passed into and out of +the library, respectively. You should not try to change them. +As of version 1.0, 64-bit counts are maintained, even on 32-bit +platforms, using the @code{_hi32} fields to store the upper 32 bits +of the count. So, for example, the total amount of data in +is @code{(total_in_hi32 << 32) + total_in_lo32}. + +Parameter @code{blockSize100k} specifies the block size to be used for +compression. It should be a value between 1 and 9 inclusive, and the +actual block size used is 100000 x this figure. 9 gives the best +compression but takes most memory. + +Parameter @code{verbosity} should be set to a number between 0 and 4 +inclusive. 0 is silent, and greater numbers give increasingly verbose +monitoring/debugging output. If the library has been compiled with +@code{-DBZ_NO_STDIO}, no such output will appear for any verbosity +setting. + +Parameter @code{workFactor} controls how the compression phase behaves +when presented with worst case, highly repetitive, input data. If +compression runs into difficulties caused by repetitive data, the +library switches from the standard sorting algorithm to a fallback +algorithm. The fallback is slower than the standard algorithm by +perhaps a factor of three, but always behaves reasonably, no matter how +bad the input. + +Lower values of @code{workFactor} reduce the amount of effort the +standard algorithm will expend before resorting to the fallback. You +should set this parameter carefully; too low, and many inputs will be +handled by the fallback algorithm and so compress rather slowly, too +high, and your average-to-worst case compression times can become very +large. The default value of 30 gives reasonable behaviour over a wide +range of circumstances. + +Allowable values range from 0 to 250 inclusive. 0 is a special case, +equivalent to using the default value of 30. + +Note that the compressed output generated is the same regardless of +whether or not the fallback algorithm is used. + +Be aware also that this parameter may disappear entirely in future +versions of the library. In principle it should be possible to devise a +good way to automatically choose which algorithm to use. Such a +mechanism would render the parameter obsolete. + +Possible return values: +@display + @code{BZ_CONFIG_ERROR} + if the library has been mis-compiled + @code{BZ_PARAM_ERROR} + if @code{strm} is @code{NULL} + or @code{blockSize} < 1 or @code{blockSize} > 9 + or @code{verbosity} < 0 or @code{verbosity} > 4 + or @code{workFactor} < 0 or @code{workFactor} > 250 + @code{BZ_MEM_ERROR} + if not enough memory is available + @code{BZ_OK} + otherwise +@end display +Allowable next actions: +@display + @code{BZ2_bzCompress} + if @code{BZ_OK} is returned + no specific action needed in case of error +@end display + +@subsection @code{BZ2_bzCompress} +@example + int BZ2_bzCompress ( bz_stream *strm, int action ); +@end example +Provides more input and/or output buffer space for the library. The +caller maintains input and output buffers, and calls @code{BZ2_bzCompress} to +transfer data between them. + +Before each call to @code{BZ2_bzCompress}, @code{next_in} should point at +the data to be compressed, and @code{avail_in} should indicate how many +bytes the library may read. @code{BZ2_bzCompress} updates @code{next_in}, +@code{avail_in} and @code{total_in} to reflect the number of bytes it +has read. + +Similarly, @code{next_out} should point to a buffer in which the +compressed data is to be placed, with @code{avail_out} indicating how +much output space is available. @code{BZ2_bzCompress} updates +@code{next_out}, @code{avail_out} and @code{total_out} to reflect the +number of bytes output. + +You may provide and remove as little or as much data as you like on each +call of @code{BZ2_bzCompress}. In the limit, it is acceptable to supply and +remove data one byte at a time, although this would be terribly +inefficient. You should always ensure that at least one byte of output +space is available at each call. + +A second purpose of @code{BZ2_bzCompress} is to request a change of mode of the +compressed stream. + +Conceptually, a compressed stream can be in one of four states: IDLE, +RUNNING, FLUSHING and FINISHING. Before initialisation +(@code{BZ2_bzCompressInit}) and after termination (@code{BZ2_bzCompressEnd}), a +stream is regarded as IDLE. + +Upon initialisation (@code{BZ2_bzCompressInit}), the stream is placed in the +RUNNING state. Subsequent calls to @code{BZ2_bzCompress} should pass +@code{BZ_RUN} as the requested action; other actions are illegal and +will result in @code{BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR}. + +At some point, the calling program will have provided all the input data +it wants to. It will then want to finish up -- in effect, asking the +library to process any data it might have buffered internally. In this +state, @code{BZ2_bzCompress} will no longer attempt to read data from +@code{next_in}, but it will want to write data to @code{next_out}. +Because the output buffer supplied by the user can be arbitrarily small, +the finishing-up operation cannot necessarily be done with a single call +of @code{BZ2_bzCompress}. + +Instead, the calling program passes @code{BZ_FINISH} as an action to +@code{BZ2_bzCompress}. This changes the stream's state to FINISHING. Any +remaining input (ie, @code{next_in[0 .. avail_in-1]}) is compressed and +transferred to the output buffer. To do this, @code{BZ2_bzCompress} must be +called repeatedly until all the output has been consumed. At that +point, @code{BZ2_bzCompress} returns @code{BZ_STREAM_END}, and the stream's +state is set back to IDLE. @code{BZ2_bzCompressEnd} should then be +called. + +Just to make sure the calling program does not cheat, the library makes +a note of @code{avail_in} at the time of the first call to +@code{BZ2_bzCompress} which has @code{BZ_FINISH} as an action (ie, at the +time the program has announced its intention to not supply any more +input). By comparing this value with that of @code{avail_in} over +subsequent calls to @code{BZ2_bzCompress}, the library can detect any +attempts to slip in more data to compress. Any calls for which this is +detected will return @code{BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR}. This indicates a +programming mistake which should be corrected. + +Instead of asking to finish, the calling program may ask +@code{BZ2_bzCompress} to take all the remaining input, compress it and +terminate the current (Burrows-Wheeler) compression block. This could +be useful for error control purposes. The mechanism is analogous to +that for finishing: call @code{BZ2_bzCompress} with an action of +@code{BZ_FLUSH}, remove output data, and persist with the +@code{BZ_FLUSH} action until the value @code{BZ_RUN} is returned. As +with finishing, @code{BZ2_bzCompress} detects any attempt to provide more +input data once the flush has begun. + +Once the flush is complete, the stream returns to the normal RUNNING +state. + +This all sounds pretty complex, but isn't really. Here's a table +which shows which actions are allowable in each state, what action +will be taken, what the next state is, and what the non-error return +values are. Note that you can't explicitly ask what state the +stream is in, but nor do you need to -- it can be inferred from the +values returned by @code{BZ2_bzCompress}. +@display +IDLE/@code{any} + Illegal. IDLE state only exists after @code{BZ2_bzCompressEnd} or + before @code{BZ2_bzCompressInit}. + Return value = @code{BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR} + +RUNNING/@code{BZ_RUN} + Compress from @code{next_in} to @code{next_out} as much as possible. + Next state = RUNNING + Return value = @code{BZ_RUN_OK} + +RUNNING/@code{BZ_FLUSH} + Remember current value of @code{next_in}. Compress from @code{next_in} + to @code{next_out} as much as possible, but do not accept any more input. + Next state = FLUSHING + Return value = @code{BZ_FLUSH_OK} + +RUNNING/@code{BZ_FINISH} + Remember current value of @code{next_in}. Compress from @code{next_in} + to @code{next_out} as much as possible, but do not accept any more input. + Next state = FINISHING + Return value = @code{BZ_FINISH_OK} + +FLUSHING/@code{BZ_FLUSH} + Compress from @code{next_in} to @code{next_out} as much as possible, + but do not accept any more input. + If all the existing input has been used up and all compressed + output has been removed + Next state = RUNNING; Return value = @code{BZ_RUN_OK} + else + Next state = FLUSHING; Return value = @code{BZ_FLUSH_OK} + +FLUSHING/other + Illegal. + Return value = @code{BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR} + +FINISHING/@code{BZ_FINISH} + Compress from @code{next_in} to @code{next_out} as much as possible, + but to not accept any more input. + If all the existing input has been used up and all compressed + output has been removed + Next state = IDLE; Return value = @code{BZ_STREAM_END} + else + Next state = FINISHING; Return value = @code{BZ_FINISHING} + +FINISHING/other + Illegal. + Return value = @code{BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR} +@end display + +That still looks complicated? Well, fair enough. The usual sequence +of calls for compressing a load of data is: +@itemize @bullet +@item Get started with @code{BZ2_bzCompressInit}. +@item Shovel data in and shlurp out its compressed form using zero or more +calls of @code{BZ2_bzCompress} with action = @code{BZ_RUN}. +@item Finish up. +Repeatedly call @code{BZ2_bzCompress} with action = @code{BZ_FINISH}, +copying out the compressed output, until @code{BZ_STREAM_END} is returned. +@item Close up and go home. Call @code{BZ2_bzCompressEnd}. +@end itemize +If the data you want to compress fits into your input buffer all +at once, you can skip the calls of @code{BZ2_bzCompress ( ..., BZ_RUN )} and +just do the @code{BZ2_bzCompress ( ..., BZ_FINISH )} calls. + +All required memory is allocated by @code{BZ2_bzCompressInit}. The +compression library can accept any data at all (obviously). So you +shouldn't get any error return values from the @code{BZ2_bzCompress} calls. +If you do, they will be @code{BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR}, and indicate a bug in +your programming. + +Trivial other possible return values: +@display + @code{BZ_PARAM_ERROR} + if @code{strm} is @code{NULL}, or @code{strm->s} is @code{NULL} +@end display + +@subsection @code{BZ2_bzCompressEnd} +@example +int BZ2_bzCompressEnd ( bz_stream *strm ); +@end example +Releases all memory associated with a compression stream. + +Possible return values: +@display + @code{BZ_PARAM_ERROR} if @code{strm} is @code{NULL} or @code{strm->s} is @code{NULL} + @code{BZ_OK} otherwise +@end display + + +@subsection @code{BZ2_bzDecompressInit} +@example +int BZ2_bzDecompressInit ( bz_stream *strm, int verbosity, int small ); +@end example +Prepares for decompression. As with @code{BZ2_bzCompressInit}, a +@code{bz_stream} record should be allocated and initialised before the +call. Fields @code{bzalloc}, @code{bzfree} and @code{opaque} should be +set if a custom memory allocator is required, or made @code{NULL} for +the normal @code{malloc}/@code{free} routines. Upon return, the internal +state will have been initialised, and @code{total_in} and +@code{total_out} will be zero. + +For the meaning of parameter @code{verbosity}, see @code{BZ2_bzCompressInit}. + +If @code{small} is nonzero, the library will use an alternative +decompression algorithm which uses less memory but at the cost of +decompressing more slowly (roughly speaking, half the speed, but the +maximum memory requirement drops to around 2300k). See Chapter 2 for +more information on memory management. + +Note that the amount of memory needed to decompress +a stream cannot be determined until the stream's header has been read, +so even if @code{BZ2_bzDecompressInit} succeeds, a subsequent +@code{BZ2_bzDecompress} could fail with @code{BZ_MEM_ERROR}. + +Possible return values: +@display + @code{BZ_CONFIG_ERROR} + if the library has been mis-compiled + @code{BZ_PARAM_ERROR} + if @code{(small != 0 && small != 1)} + or @code{(verbosity < 0 || verbosity > 4)} + @code{BZ_MEM_ERROR} + if insufficient memory is available +@end display + +Allowable next actions: +@display + @code{BZ2_bzDecompress} + if @code{BZ_OK} was returned + no specific action required in case of error +@end display + + + +@subsection @code{BZ2_bzDecompress} +@example +int BZ2_bzDecompress ( bz_stream *strm ); +@end example +Provides more input and/out output buffer space for the library. The +caller maintains input and output buffers, and uses @code{BZ2_bzDecompress} +to transfer data between them. + +Before each call to @code{BZ2_bzDecompress}, @code{next_in} +should point at the compressed data, +and @code{avail_in} should indicate how many bytes the library +may read. @code{BZ2_bzDecompress} updates @code{next_in}, @code{avail_in} +and @code{total_in} +to reflect the number of bytes it has read. + +Similarly, @code{next_out} should point to a buffer in which the uncompressed +output is to be placed, with @code{avail_out} indicating how much output space +is available. @code{BZ2_bzCompress} updates @code{next_out}, +@code{avail_out} and @code{total_out} to reflect +the number of bytes output. + +You may provide and remove as little or as much data as you like on +each call of @code{BZ2_bzDecompress}. +In the limit, it is acceptable to +supply and remove data one byte at a time, although this would be +terribly inefficient. You should always ensure that at least one +byte of output space is available at each call. + +Use of @code{BZ2_bzDecompress} is simpler than @code{BZ2_bzCompress}. + +You should provide input and remove output as described above, and +repeatedly call @code{BZ2_bzDecompress} until @code{BZ_STREAM_END} is +returned. Appearance of @code{BZ_STREAM_END} denotes that +@code{BZ2_bzDecompress} has detected the logical end of the compressed +stream. @code{BZ2_bzDecompress} will not produce @code{BZ_STREAM_END} until +all output data has been placed into the output buffer, so once +@code{BZ_STREAM_END} appears, you are guaranteed to have available all +the decompressed output, and @code{BZ2_bzDecompressEnd} can safely be +called. + +If case of an error return value, you should call @code{BZ2_bzDecompressEnd} +to clean up and release memory. + +Possible return values: +@display + @code{BZ_PARAM_ERROR} + if @code{strm} is @code{NULL} or @code{strm->s} is @code{NULL} + or @code{strm->avail_out < 1} + @code{BZ_DATA_ERROR} + if a data integrity error is detected in the compressed stream + @code{BZ_DATA_ERROR_MAGIC} + if the compressed stream doesn't begin with the right magic bytes + @code{BZ_MEM_ERROR} + if there wasn't enough memory available + @code{BZ_STREAM_END} + if the logical end of the data stream was detected and all + output in has been consumed, eg @code{s->avail_out > 0} + @code{BZ_OK} + otherwise +@end display +Allowable next actions: +@display + @code{BZ2_bzDecompress} + if @code{BZ_OK} was returned + @code{BZ2_bzDecompressEnd} + otherwise +@end display + + +@subsection @code{BZ2_bzDecompressEnd} +@example +int BZ2_bzDecompressEnd ( bz_stream *strm ); +@end example +Releases all memory associated with a decompression stream. + +Possible return values: +@display + @code{BZ_PARAM_ERROR} + if @code{strm} is @code{NULL} or @code{strm->s} is @code{NULL} + @code{BZ_OK} + otherwise +@end display + +Allowable next actions: +@display + None. +@end display + + +@section High-level interface + +This interface provides functions for reading and writing +@code{bzip2} format files. First, some general points. + +@itemize @bullet +@item All of the functions take an @code{int*} first argument, + @code{bzerror}. + After each call, @code{bzerror} should be consulted first to determine + the outcome of the call. If @code{bzerror} is @code{BZ_OK}, + the call completed + successfully, and only then should the return value of the function + (if any) be consulted. If @code{bzerror} is @code{BZ_IO_ERROR}, + there was an error + reading/writing the underlying compressed file, and you should + then consult @code{errno}/@code{perror} to determine the + cause of the difficulty. + @code{bzerror} may also be set to various other values; precise details are + given on a per-function basis below. +@item If @code{bzerror} indicates an error + (ie, anything except @code{BZ_OK} and @code{BZ_STREAM_END}), + you should immediately call @code{BZ2_bzReadClose} (or @code{BZ2_bzWriteClose}, + depending on whether you are attempting to read or to write) + to free up all resources associated + with the stream. Once an error has been indicated, behaviour of all calls + except @code{BZ2_bzReadClose} (@code{BZ2_bzWriteClose}) is undefined. + The implication is that (1) @code{bzerror} should + be checked after each call, and (2) if @code{bzerror} indicates an error, + @code{BZ2_bzReadClose} (@code{BZ2_bzWriteClose}) should then be called to clean up. +@item The @code{FILE*} arguments passed to + @code{BZ2_bzReadOpen}/@code{BZ2_bzWriteOpen} + should be set to binary mode. + Most Unix systems will do this by default, but other platforms, + including Windows and Mac, will not. If you omit this, you may + encounter problems when moving code to new platforms. +@item Memory allocation requests are handled by + @code{malloc}/@code{free}. + At present + there is no facility for user-defined memory allocators in the file I/O + functions (could easily be added, though). +@end itemize + + + +@subsection @code{BZ2_bzReadOpen} +@example + typedef void BZFILE; + + BZFILE *BZ2_bzReadOpen ( int *bzerror, FILE *f, + int small, int verbosity, + void *unused, int nUnused ); +@end example +Prepare to read compressed data from file handle @code{f}. @code{f} +should refer to a file which has been opened for reading, and for which +the error indicator (@code{ferror(f)})is not set. If @code{small} is 1, +the library will try to decompress using less memory, at the expense of +speed. + +For reasons explained below, @code{BZ2_bzRead} will decompress the +@code{nUnused} bytes starting at @code{unused}, before starting to read +from the file @code{f}. At most @code{BZ_MAX_UNUSED} bytes may be +supplied like this. If this facility is not required, you should pass +@code{NULL} and @code{0} for @code{unused} and n@code{Unused} +respectively. + +For the meaning of parameters @code{small} and @code{verbosity}, +see @code{BZ2_bzDecompressInit}. + +The amount of memory needed to decompress a file cannot be determined +until the file's header has been read. So it is possible that +@code{BZ2_bzReadOpen} returns @code{BZ_OK} but a subsequent call of +@code{BZ2_bzRead} will return @code{BZ_MEM_ERROR}. + +Possible assignments to @code{bzerror}: +@display + @code{BZ_CONFIG_ERROR} + if the library has been mis-compiled + @code{BZ_PARAM_ERROR} + if @code{f} is @code{NULL} + or @code{small} is neither @code{0} nor @code{1} + or @code{(unused == NULL && nUnused != 0)} + or @code{(unused != NULL && !(0 <= nUnused <= BZ_MAX_UNUSED))} + @code{BZ_IO_ERROR} + if @code{ferror(f)} is nonzero + @code{BZ_MEM_ERROR} + if insufficient memory is available + @code{BZ_OK} + otherwise. +@end display + +Possible return values: +@display + Pointer to an abstract @code{BZFILE} + if @code{bzerror} is @code{BZ_OK} + @code{NULL} + otherwise +@end display + +Allowable next actions: +@display + @code{BZ2_bzRead} + if @code{bzerror} is @code{BZ_OK} + @code{BZ2_bzClose} + otherwise +@end display + + +@subsection @code{BZ2_bzRead} +@example + int BZ2_bzRead ( int *bzerror, BZFILE *b, void *buf, int len ); +@end example +Reads up to @code{len} (uncompressed) bytes from the compressed file +@code{b} into +the buffer @code{buf}. If the read was successful, +@code{bzerror} is set to @code{BZ_OK} +and the number of bytes read is returned. If the logical end-of-stream +was detected, @code{bzerror} will be set to @code{BZ_STREAM_END}, +and the number +of bytes read is returned. All other @code{bzerror} values denote an error. + +@code{BZ2_bzRead} will supply @code{len} bytes, +unless the logical stream end is detected +or an error occurs. Because of this, it is possible to detect the +stream end by observing when the number of bytes returned is +less than the number +requested. Nevertheless, this is regarded as inadvisable; you should +instead check @code{bzerror} after every call and watch out for +@code{BZ_STREAM_END}. + +Internally, @code{BZ2_bzRead} copies data from the compressed file in chunks +of size @code{BZ_MAX_UNUSED} bytes +before decompressing it. If the file contains more bytes than strictly +needed to reach the logical end-of-stream, @code{BZ2_bzRead} will almost certainly +read some of the trailing data before signalling @code{BZ_SEQUENCE_END}. +To collect the read but unused data once @code{BZ_SEQUENCE_END} has +appeared, call @code{BZ2_bzReadGetUnused} immediately before @code{BZ2_bzReadClose}. + +Possible assignments to @code{bzerror}: +@display + @code{BZ_PARAM_ERROR} + if @code{b} is @code{NULL} or @code{buf} is @code{NULL} or @code{len < 0} + @code{BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR} + if @code{b} was opened with @code{BZ2_bzWriteOpen} + @code{BZ_IO_ERROR} + if there is an error reading from the compressed file + @code{BZ_UNEXPECTED_EOF} + if the compressed file ended before the logical end-of-stream was detected + @code{BZ_DATA_ERROR} + if a data integrity error was detected in the compressed stream + @code{BZ_DATA_ERROR_MAGIC} + if the stream does not begin with the requisite header bytes (ie, is not + a @code{bzip2} data file). This is really a special case of @code{BZ_DATA_ERROR}. + @code{BZ_MEM_ERROR} + if insufficient memory was available + @code{BZ_STREAM_END} + if the logical end of stream was detected. + @code{BZ_OK} + otherwise. +@end display + +Possible return values: +@display + number of bytes read + if @code{bzerror} is @code{BZ_OK} or @code{BZ_STREAM_END} + undefined + otherwise +@end display + +Allowable next actions: +@display + collect data from @code{buf}, then @code{BZ2_bzRead} or @code{BZ2_bzReadClose} + if @code{bzerror} is @code{BZ_OK} + collect data from @code{buf}, then @code{BZ2_bzReadClose} or @code{BZ2_bzReadGetUnused} + if @code{bzerror} is @code{BZ_SEQUENCE_END} + @code{BZ2_bzReadClose} + otherwise +@end display + + + +@subsection @code{BZ2_bzReadGetUnused} +@example + void BZ2_bzReadGetUnused ( int* bzerror, BZFILE *b, + void** unused, int* nUnused ); +@end example +Returns data which was read from the compressed file but was not needed +to get to the logical end-of-stream. @code{*unused} is set to the address +of the data, and @code{*nUnused} to the number of bytes. @code{*nUnused} will +be set to a value between @code{0} and @code{BZ_MAX_UNUSED} inclusive. + +This function may only be called once @code{BZ2_bzRead} has signalled +@code{BZ_STREAM_END} but before @code{BZ2_bzReadClose}. + +Possible assignments to @code{bzerror}: +@display + @code{BZ_PARAM_ERROR} + if @code{b} is @code{NULL} + or @code{unused} is @code{NULL} or @code{nUnused} is @code{NULL} + @code{BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR} + if @code{BZ_STREAM_END} has not been signalled + or if @code{b} was opened with @code{BZ2_bzWriteOpen} + @code{BZ_OK} + otherwise +@end display + +Allowable next actions: +@display + @code{BZ2_bzReadClose} +@end display + + +@subsection @code{BZ2_bzReadClose} +@example + void BZ2_bzReadClose ( int *bzerror, BZFILE *b ); +@end example +Releases all memory pertaining to the compressed file @code{b}. +@code{BZ2_bzReadClose} does not call @code{fclose} on the underlying file +handle, so you should do that yourself if appropriate. +@code{BZ2_bzReadClose} should be called to clean up after all error +situations. + +Possible assignments to @code{bzerror}: +@display + @code{BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR} + if @code{b} was opened with @code{BZ2_bzOpenWrite} + @code{BZ_OK} + otherwise +@end display + +Allowable next actions: +@display + none +@end display + + + +@subsection @code{BZ2_bzWriteOpen} +@example + BZFILE *BZ2_bzWriteOpen ( int *bzerror, FILE *f, + int blockSize100k, int verbosity, + int workFactor ); +@end example +Prepare to write compressed data to file handle @code{f}. +@code{f} should refer to +a file which has been opened for writing, and for which the error +indicator (@code{ferror(f)})is not set. + +For the meaning of parameters @code{blockSize100k}, +@code{verbosity} and @code{workFactor}, see +@* @code{BZ2_bzCompressInit}. + +All required memory is allocated at this stage, so if the call +completes successfully, @code{BZ_MEM_ERROR} cannot be signalled by a +subsequent call to @code{BZ2_bzWrite}. + +Possible assignments to @code{bzerror}: +@display + @code{BZ_CONFIG_ERROR} + if the library has been mis-compiled + @code{BZ_PARAM_ERROR} + if @code{f} is @code{NULL} + or @code{blockSize100k < 1} or @code{blockSize100k > 9} + @code{BZ_IO_ERROR} + if @code{ferror(f)} is nonzero + @code{BZ_MEM_ERROR} + if insufficient memory is available + @code{BZ_OK} + otherwise +@end display + +Possible return values: +@display + Pointer to an abstract @code{BZFILE} + if @code{bzerror} is @code{BZ_OK} + @code{NULL} + otherwise +@end display + +Allowable next actions: +@display + @code{BZ2_bzWrite} + if @code{bzerror} is @code{BZ_OK} + (you could go directly to @code{BZ2_bzWriteClose}, but this would be pretty pointless) + @code{BZ2_bzWriteClose} + otherwise +@end display + + + +@subsection @code{BZ2_bzWrite} +@example + void BZ2_bzWrite ( int *bzerror, BZFILE *b, void *buf, int len ); +@end example +Absorbs @code{len} bytes from the buffer @code{buf}, eventually to be +compressed and written to the file. + +Possible assignments to @code{bzerror}: +@display + @code{BZ_PARAM_ERROR} + if @code{b} is @code{NULL} or @code{buf} is @code{NULL} or @code{len < 0} + @code{BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR} + if b was opened with @code{BZ2_bzReadOpen} + @code{BZ_IO_ERROR} + if there is an error writing the compressed file. + @code{BZ_OK} + otherwise +@end display + + + + +@subsection @code{BZ2_bzWriteClose} +@example + void BZ2_bzWriteClose ( int *bzerror, BZFILE* f, + int abandon, + unsigned int* nbytes_in, + unsigned int* nbytes_out ); + + void BZ2_bzWriteClose64 ( int *bzerror, BZFILE* f, + int abandon, + unsigned int* nbytes_in_lo32, + unsigned int* nbytes_in_hi32, + unsigned int* nbytes_out_lo32, + unsigned int* nbytes_out_hi32 ); +@end example + +Compresses and flushes to the compressed file all data so far supplied +by @code{BZ2_bzWrite}. The logical end-of-stream markers are also written, so +subsequent calls to @code{BZ2_bzWrite} are illegal. All memory associated +with the compressed file @code{b} is released. +@code{fflush} is called on the +compressed file, but it is not @code{fclose}'d. + +If @code{BZ2_bzWriteClose} is called to clean up after an error, the only +action is to release the memory. The library records the error codes +issued by previous calls, so this situation will be detected +automatically. There is no attempt to complete the compression +operation, nor to @code{fflush} the compressed file. You can force this +behaviour to happen even in the case of no error, by passing a nonzero +value to @code{abandon}. + +If @code{nbytes_in} is non-null, @code{*nbytes_in} will be set to be the +total volume of uncompressed data handled. Similarly, @code{nbytes_out} +will be set to the total volume of compressed data written. For +compatibility with older versions of the library, @code{BZ2_bzWriteClose} +only yields the lower 32 bits of these counts. Use +@code{BZ2_bzWriteClose64} if you want the full 64 bit counts. These +two functions are otherwise absolutely identical. + + +Possible assignments to @code{bzerror}: +@display + @code{BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR} + if @code{b} was opened with @code{BZ2_bzReadOpen} + @code{BZ_IO_ERROR} + if there is an error writing the compressed file + @code{BZ_OK} + otherwise +@end display + +@subsection Handling embedded compressed data streams + +The high-level library facilitates use of +@code{bzip2} data streams which form some part of a surrounding, larger +data stream. +@itemize @bullet +@item For writing, the library takes an open file handle, writes +compressed data to it, @code{fflush}es it but does not @code{fclose} it. +The calling application can write its own data before and after the +compressed data stream, using that same file handle. +@item Reading is more complex, and the facilities are not as general +as they could be since generality is hard to reconcile with efficiency. +@code{BZ2_bzRead} reads from the compressed file in blocks of size +@code{BZ_MAX_UNUSED} bytes, and in doing so probably will overshoot +the logical end of compressed stream. +To recover this data once decompression has +ended, call @code{BZ2_bzReadGetUnused} after the last call of @code{BZ2_bzRead} +(the one returning @code{BZ_STREAM_END}) but before calling +@code{BZ2_bzReadClose}. +@end itemize + +This mechanism makes it easy to decompress multiple @code{bzip2} +streams placed end-to-end. As the end of one stream, when @code{BZ2_bzRead} +returns @code{BZ_STREAM_END}, call @code{BZ2_bzReadGetUnused} to collect the +unused data (copy it into your own buffer somewhere). +That data forms the start of the next compressed stream. +To start uncompressing that next stream, call @code{BZ2_bzReadOpen} again, +feeding in the unused data via the @code{unused}/@code{nUnused} +parameters. +Keep doing this until @code{BZ_STREAM_END} return coincides with the +physical end of file (@code{feof(f)}). In this situation +@code{BZ2_bzReadGetUnused} +will of course return no data. + +This should give some feel for how the high-level interface can be used. +If you require extra flexibility, you'll have to bite the bullet and get +to grips with the low-level interface. + +@subsection Standard file-reading/writing code +Here's how you'd write data to a compressed file: +@example @code +FILE* f; +BZFILE* b; +int nBuf; +char buf[ /* whatever size you like */ ]; +int bzerror; +int nWritten; + +f = fopen ( "myfile.bz2", "w" ); +if (!f) @{ + /* handle error */ +@} +b = BZ2_bzWriteOpen ( &bzerror, f, 9 ); +if (bzerror != BZ_OK) @{ + BZ2_bzWriteClose ( b ); + /* handle error */ +@} + +while ( /* condition */ ) @{ + /* get data to write into buf, and set nBuf appropriately */ + nWritten = BZ2_bzWrite ( &bzerror, b, buf, nBuf ); + if (bzerror == BZ_IO_ERROR) @{ + BZ2_bzWriteClose ( &bzerror, b ); + /* handle error */ + @} +@} + +BZ2_bzWriteClose ( &bzerror, b ); +if (bzerror == BZ_IO_ERROR) @{ + /* handle error */ +@} +@end example +And to read from a compressed file: +@example +FILE* f; +BZFILE* b; +int nBuf; +char buf[ /* whatever size you like */ ]; +int bzerror; +int nWritten; + +f = fopen ( "myfile.bz2", "r" ); +if (!f) @{ + /* handle error */ +@} +b = BZ2_bzReadOpen ( &bzerror, f, 0, NULL, 0 ); +if (bzerror != BZ_OK) @{ + BZ2_bzReadClose ( &bzerror, b ); + /* handle error */ +@} + +bzerror = BZ_OK; +while (bzerror == BZ_OK && /* arbitrary other conditions */) @{ + nBuf = BZ2_bzRead ( &bzerror, b, buf, /* size of buf */ ); + if (bzerror == BZ_OK) @{ + /* do something with buf[0 .. nBuf-1] */ + @} +@} +if (bzerror != BZ_STREAM_END) @{ + BZ2_bzReadClose ( &bzerror, b ); + /* handle error */ +@} else @{ + BZ2_bzReadClose ( &bzerror ); +@} +@end example + + + +@section Utility functions +@subsection @code{BZ2_bzBuffToBuffCompress} +@example + int BZ2_bzBuffToBuffCompress( char* dest, + unsigned int* destLen, + char* source, + unsigned int sourceLen, + int blockSize100k, + int verbosity, + int workFactor ); +@end example +Attempts to compress the data in @code{source[0 .. sourceLen-1]} +into the destination buffer, @code{dest[0 .. *destLen-1]}. +If the destination buffer is big enough, @code{*destLen} is +set to the size of the compressed data, and @code{BZ_OK} is +returned. If the compressed data won't fit, @code{*destLen} +is unchanged, and @code{BZ_OUTBUFF_FULL} is returned. + +Compression in this manner is a one-shot event, done with a single call +to this function. The resulting compressed data is a complete +@code{bzip2} format data stream. There is no mechanism for making +additional calls to provide extra input data. If you want that kind of +mechanism, use the low-level interface. + +For the meaning of parameters @code{blockSize100k}, @code{verbosity} +and @code{workFactor}, @* see @code{BZ2_bzCompressInit}. + +To guarantee that the compressed data will fit in its buffer, allocate +an output buffer of size 1% larger than the uncompressed data, plus +six hundred extra bytes. + +@code{BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompress} will not write data at or +beyond @code{dest[*destLen]}, even in case of buffer overflow. + +Possible return values: +@display + @code{BZ_CONFIG_ERROR} + if the library has been mis-compiled + @code{BZ_PARAM_ERROR} + if @code{dest} is @code{NULL} or @code{destLen} is @code{NULL} + or @code{blockSize100k < 1} or @code{blockSize100k > 9} + or @code{verbosity < 0} or @code{verbosity > 4} + or @code{workFactor < 0} or @code{workFactor > 250} + @code{BZ_MEM_ERROR} + if insufficient memory is available + @code{BZ_OUTBUFF_FULL} + if the size of the compressed data exceeds @code{*destLen} + @code{BZ_OK} + otherwise +@end display + + + +@subsection @code{BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompress} +@example + int BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompress ( char* dest, + unsigned int* destLen, + char* source, + unsigned int sourceLen, + int small, + int verbosity ); +@end example +Attempts to decompress the data in @code{source[0 .. sourceLen-1]} +into the destination buffer, @code{dest[0 .. *destLen-1]}. +If the destination buffer is big enough, @code{*destLen} is +set to the size of the uncompressed data, and @code{BZ_OK} is +returned. If the compressed data won't fit, @code{*destLen} +is unchanged, and @code{BZ_OUTBUFF_FULL} is returned. + +@code{source} is assumed to hold a complete @code{bzip2} format +data stream. @* @code{BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompress} tries to decompress +the entirety of the stream into the output buffer. + +For the meaning of parameters @code{small} and @code{verbosity}, +see @code{BZ2_bzDecompressInit}. + +Because the compression ratio of the compressed data cannot be known in +advance, there is no easy way to guarantee that the output buffer will +be big enough. You may of course make arrangements in your code to +record the size of the uncompressed data, but such a mechanism is beyond +the scope of this library. + +@code{BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompress} will not write data at or +beyond @code{dest[*destLen]}, even in case of buffer overflow. + +Possible return values: +@display + @code{BZ_CONFIG_ERROR} + if the library has been mis-compiled + @code{BZ_PARAM_ERROR} + if @code{dest} is @code{NULL} or @code{destLen} is @code{NULL} + or @code{small != 0 && small != 1} + or @code{verbosity < 0} or @code{verbosity > 4} + @code{BZ_MEM_ERROR} + if insufficient memory is available + @code{BZ_OUTBUFF_FULL} + if the size of the compressed data exceeds @code{*destLen} + @code{BZ_DATA_ERROR} + if a data integrity error was detected in the compressed data + @code{BZ_DATA_ERROR_MAGIC} + if the compressed data doesn't begin with the right magic bytes + @code{BZ_UNEXPECTED_EOF} + if the compressed data ends unexpectedly + @code{BZ_OK} + otherwise +@end display + + + +@section @code{zlib} compatibility functions +Yoshioka Tsuneo has contributed some functions to +give better @code{zlib} compatibility. These functions are +@code{BZ2_bzopen}, @code{BZ2_bzread}, @code{BZ2_bzwrite}, @code{BZ2_bzflush}, +@code{BZ2_bzclose}, +@code{BZ2_bzerror} and @code{BZ2_bzlibVersion}. +These functions are not (yet) officially part of +the library. If they break, you get to keep all the pieces. +Nevertheless, I think they work ok. +@example +typedef void BZFILE; + +const char * BZ2_bzlibVersion ( void ); +@end example +Returns a string indicating the library version. +@example +BZFILE * BZ2_bzopen ( const char *path, const char *mode ); +BZFILE * BZ2_bzdopen ( int fd, const char *mode ); +@end example +Opens a @code{.bz2} file for reading or writing, using either its name +or a pre-existing file descriptor. +Analogous to @code{fopen} and @code{fdopen}. +@example +int BZ2_bzread ( BZFILE* b, void* buf, int len ); +int BZ2_bzwrite ( BZFILE* b, void* buf, int len ); +@end example +Reads/writes data from/to a previously opened @code{BZFILE}. +Analogous to @code{fread} and @code{fwrite}. +@example +int BZ2_bzflush ( BZFILE* b ); +void BZ2_bzclose ( BZFILE* b ); +@end example +Flushes/closes a @code{BZFILE}. @code{BZ2_bzflush} doesn't actually do +anything. Analogous to @code{fflush} and @code{fclose}. + +@example +const char * BZ2_bzerror ( BZFILE *b, int *errnum ) +@end example +Returns a string describing the more recent error status of +@code{b}, and also sets @code{*errnum} to its numerical value. + + +@section Using the library in a @code{stdio}-free environment + +@subsection Getting rid of @code{stdio} + +In a deeply embedded application, you might want to use just +the memory-to-memory functions. You can do this conveniently +by compiling the library with preprocessor symbol @code{BZ_NO_STDIO} +defined. Doing this gives you a library containing only the following +eight functions: + +@code{BZ2_bzCompressInit}, @code{BZ2_bzCompress}, @code{BZ2_bzCompressEnd} @* +@code{BZ2_bzDecompressInit}, @code{BZ2_bzDecompress}, @code{BZ2_bzDecompressEnd} @* +@code{BZ2_bzBuffToBuffCompress}, @code{BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompress} + +When compiled like this, all functions will ignore @code{verbosity} +settings. + +@subsection Critical error handling +@code{libbzip2} contains a number of internal assertion checks which +should, needless to say, never be activated. Nevertheless, if an +assertion should fail, behaviour depends on whether or not the library +was compiled with @code{BZ_NO_STDIO} set. + +For a normal compile, an assertion failure yields the message +@example + bzip2/libbzip2: internal error number N. + This is a bug in bzip2/libbzip2, 1.0 of 21-Mar-2000. + Please report it to me at: jseward@@acm.org. If this happened + when you were using some program which uses libbzip2 as a + component, you should also report this bug to the author(s) + of that program. Please make an effort to report this bug; + timely and accurate bug reports eventually lead to higher + quality software. Thanks. Julian Seward, 21 March 2000. +@end example +where @code{N} is some error code number. @code{exit(3)} +is then called. + +For a @code{stdio}-free library, assertion failures result +in a call to a function declared as: +@example + extern void bz_internal_error ( int errcode ); +@end example +The relevant code is passed as a parameter. You should supply +such a function. + +In either case, once an assertion failure has occurred, any +@code{bz_stream} records involved can be regarded as invalid. +You should not attempt to resume normal operation with them. + +You may, of course, change critical error handling to suit +your needs. As I said above, critical errors indicate bugs +in the library and should not occur. All "normal" error +situations are indicated via error return codes from functions, +and can be recovered from. + + +@section Making a Windows DLL +Everything related to Windows has been contributed by Yoshioka Tsuneo +@* (@code{QWF00133@@niftyserve.or.jp} / +@code{tsuneo-y@@is.aist-nara.ac.jp}), so you should send your queries to +him (but perhaps Cc: me, @code{jseward@@acm.org}). + +My vague understanding of what to do is: using Visual C++ 5.0, +open the project file @code{libbz2.dsp}, and build. That's all. + +If you can't +open the project file for some reason, make a new one, naming these files: +@code{blocksort.c}, @code{bzlib.c}, @code{compress.c}, +@code{crctable.c}, @code{decompress.c}, @code{huffman.c}, @* +@code{randtable.c} and @code{libbz2.def}. You will also need +to name the header files @code{bzlib.h} and @code{bzlib_private.h}. + +If you don't use VC++, you may need to define the proprocessor symbol +@code{_WIN32}. + +Finally, @code{dlltest.c} is a sample program using the DLL. It has a +project file, @code{dlltest.dsp}. + +If you just want a makefile for Visual C, have a look at +@code{makefile.msc}. + +Be aware that if you compile @code{bzip2} itself on Win32, you must set +@code{BZ_UNIX} to 0 and @code{BZ_LCCWIN32} to 1, in the file +@code{bzip2.c}, before compiling. Otherwise the resulting binary won't +work correctly. + +I haven't tried any of this stuff myself, but it all looks plausible. + + + +@chapter Miscellanea + +These are just some random thoughts of mine. Your mileage may +vary. + +@section Limitations of the compressed file format +@code{bzip2-1.0}, @code{0.9.5} and @code{0.9.0} +use exactly the same file format as the previous +version, @code{bzip2-0.1}. This decision was made in the interests of +stability. Creating yet another incompatible compressed file format +would create further confusion and disruption for users. + +Nevertheless, this is not a painless decision. Development +work since the release of @code{bzip2-0.1} in August 1997 +has shown complexities in the file format which slow down +decompression and, in retrospect, are unnecessary. These are: +@itemize @bullet +@item The run-length encoder, which is the first of the + compression transformations, is entirely irrelevant. + The original purpose was to protect the sorting algorithm + from the very worst case input: a string of repeated + symbols. But algorithm steps Q6a and Q6b in the original + Burrows-Wheeler technical report (SRC-124) show how + repeats can be handled without difficulty in block + sorting. +@item The randomisation mechanism doesn't really need to be + there. Udi Manber and Gene Myers published a suffix + array construction algorithm a few years back, which + can be employed to sort any block, no matter how + repetitive, in O(N log N) time. Subsequent work by + Kunihiko Sadakane has produced a derivative O(N (log N)^2) + algorithm which usually outperforms the Manber-Myers + algorithm. + + I could have changed to Sadakane's algorithm, but I find + it to be slower than @code{bzip2}'s existing algorithm for + most inputs, and the randomisation mechanism protects + adequately against bad cases. I didn't think it was + a good tradeoff to make. Partly this is due to the fact + that I was not flooded with email complaints about + @code{bzip2-0.1}'s performance on repetitive data, so + perhaps it isn't a problem for real inputs. + + Probably the best long-term solution, + and the one I have incorporated into 0.9.5 and above, + is to use the existing sorting + algorithm initially, and fall back to a O(N (log N)^2) + algorithm if the standard algorithm gets into difficulties. +@item The compressed file format was never designed to be + handled by a library, and I have had to jump though + some hoops to produce an efficient implementation of + decompression. It's a bit hairy. Try passing + @code{decompress.c} through the C preprocessor + and you'll see what I mean. Much of this complexity + could have been avoided if the compressed size of + each block of data was recorded in the data stream. +@item An Adler-32 checksum, rather than a CRC32 checksum, + would be faster to compute. +@end itemize +It would be fair to say that the @code{bzip2} format was frozen +before I properly and fully understood the performance +consequences of doing so. + +Improvements which I was able to incorporate into +0.9.0, despite using the same file format, are: +@itemize @bullet +@item Single array implementation of the inverse BWT. This + significantly speeds up decompression, presumably + because it reduces the number of cache misses. +@item Faster inverse MTF transform for large MTF values. The + new implementation is based on the notion of sliding blocks + of values. +@item @code{bzip2-0.9.0} now reads and writes files with @code{fread} + and @code{fwrite}; version 0.1 used @code{putc} and @code{getc}. + Duh! Well, you live and learn. + +@end itemize +Further ahead, it would be nice +to be able to do random access into files. This will +require some careful design of compressed file formats. + + + +@section Portability issues +After some consideration, I have decided not to use +GNU @code{autoconf} to configure 0.9.5 or 1.0. + +@code{autoconf}, admirable and wonderful though it is, +mainly assists with portability problems between Unix-like +platforms. But @code{bzip2} doesn't have much in the way +of portability problems on Unix; most of the difficulties appear +when porting to the Mac, or to Microsoft's operating systems. +@code{autoconf} doesn't help in those cases, and brings in a +whole load of new complexity. + +Most people should be able to compile the library and program +under Unix straight out-of-the-box, so to speak, especially +if you have a version of GNU C available. + +There are a couple of @code{__inline__} directives in the code. GNU C +(@code{gcc}) should be able to handle them. If you're not using +GNU C, your C compiler shouldn't see them at all. +If your compiler does, for some reason, see them and doesn't +like them, just @code{#define} @code{__inline__} to be @code{/* */}. One +easy way to do this is to compile with the flag @code{-D__inline__=}, +which should be understood by most Unix compilers. + +If you still have difficulties, try compiling with the macro +@code{BZ_STRICT_ANSI} defined. This should enable you to build the +library in a strictly ANSI compliant environment. Building the program +itself like this is dangerous and not supported, since you remove +@code{bzip2}'s checks against compressing directories, symbolic links, +devices, and other not-really-a-file entities. This could cause +filesystem corruption! + +One other thing: if you create a @code{bzip2} binary for public +distribution, please try and link it statically (@code{gcc -s}). This +avoids all sorts of library-version issues that others may encounter +later on. + +If you build @code{bzip2} on Win32, you must set @code{BZ_UNIX} to 0 and +@code{BZ_LCCWIN32} to 1, in the file @code{bzip2.c}, before compiling. +Otherwise the resulting binary won't work correctly. + + + +@section Reporting bugs +I tried pretty hard to make sure @code{bzip2} is +bug free, both by design and by testing. Hopefully +you'll never need to read this section for real. + +Nevertheless, if @code{bzip2} dies with a segmentation +fault, a bus error or an internal assertion failure, it +will ask you to email me a bug report. Experience with +version 0.1 shows that almost all these problems can +be traced to either compiler bugs or hardware problems. +@itemize @bullet +@item +Recompile the program with no optimisation, and see if it +works. And/or try a different compiler. +I heard all sorts of stories about various flavours +of GNU C (and other compilers) generating bad code for +@code{bzip2}, and I've run across two such examples myself. + +2.7.X versions of GNU C are known to generate bad code from +time to time, at high optimisation levels. +If you get problems, try using the flags +@code{-O2} @code{-fomit-frame-pointer} @code{-fno-strength-reduce}. +You should specifically @emph{not} use @code{-funroll-loops}. + +You may notice that the Makefile runs six tests as part of +the build process. If the program passes all of these, it's +a pretty good (but not 100%) indication that the compiler has +done its job correctly. +@item +If @code{bzip2} crashes randomly, and the crashes are not +repeatable, you may have a flaky memory subsystem. @code{bzip2} +really hammers your memory hierarchy, and if it's a bit marginal, +you may get these problems. Ditto if your disk or I/O subsystem +is slowly failing. Yup, this really does happen. + +Try using a different machine of the same type, and see if +you can repeat the problem. +@item This isn't really a bug, but ... If @code{bzip2} tells +you your file is corrupted on decompression, and you +obtained the file via FTP, there is a possibility that you +forgot to tell FTP to do a binary mode transfer. That absolutely +will cause the file to be non-decompressible. You'll have to transfer +it again. +@end itemize + +If you've incorporated @code{libbzip2} into your own program +and are getting problems, please, please, please, check that the +parameters you are passing in calls to the library, are +correct, and in accordance with what the documentation says +is allowable. I have tried to make the library robust against +such problems, but I'm sure I haven't succeeded. + +Finally, if the above comments don't help, you'll have to send +me a bug report. Now, it's just amazing how many people will +send me a bug report saying something like +@display + bzip2 crashed with segmentation fault on my machine +@end display +and absolutely nothing else. Needless to say, a such a report +is @emph{totally, utterly, completely and comprehensively 100% useless; +a waste of your time, my time, and net bandwidth}. +With no details at all, there's no way I can possibly begin +to figure out what the problem is. + +The rules of the game are: facts, facts, facts. Don't omit +them because "oh, they won't be relevant". At the bare +minimum: +@display + Machine type. Operating system version. + Exact version of @code{bzip2} (do @code{bzip2 -V}). + Exact version of the compiler used. + Flags passed to the compiler. +@end display +However, the most important single thing that will help me is +the file that you were trying to compress or decompress at the +time the problem happened. Without that, my ability to do anything +more than speculate about the cause, is limited. + +Please remember that I connect to the Internet with a modem, so +you should contact me before mailing me huge files. + + +@section Did you get the right package? + +@code{bzip2} is a resource hog. It soaks up large amounts of CPU cycles +and memory. Also, it gives very large latencies. In the worst case, you +can feed many megabytes of uncompressed data into the library before +getting any compressed output, so this probably rules out applications +requiring interactive behaviour. + +These aren't faults of my implementation, I hope, but more +an intrinsic property of the Burrows-Wheeler transform (unfortunately). +Maybe this isn't what you want. + +If you want a compressor and/or library which is faster, uses less +memory but gets pretty good compression, and has minimal latency, +consider Jean-loup +Gailly's and Mark Adler's work, @code{zlib-1.1.2} and +@code{gzip-1.2.4}. Look for them at + +@code{http://www.cdrom.com/pub/infozip/zlib} and +@code{http://www.gzip.org} respectively. + +For something faster and lighter still, you might try Markus F X J +Oberhumer's @code{LZO} real-time compression/decompression library, at +@* @code{http://wildsau.idv.uni-linz.ac.at/mfx/lzo.html}. + +If you want to use the @code{bzip2} algorithms to compress small blocks +of data, 64k bytes or smaller, for example on an on-the-fly disk +compressor, you'd be well advised not to use this library. Instead, +I've made a special library tuned for that kind of use. It's part of +@code{e2compr-0.40}, an on-the-fly disk compressor for the Linux +@code{ext2} filesystem. Look at +@code{http://www.netspace.net.au/~reiter/e2compr}. + + + +@section Testing + +A record of the tests I've done. + +First, some data sets: +@itemize @bullet +@item B: a directory containing 6001 files, one for every length in the + range 0 to 6000 bytes. The files contain random lowercase + letters. 18.7 megabytes. +@item H: my home directory tree. Documents, source code, mail files, + compressed data. H contains B, and also a directory of + files designed as boundary cases for the sorting; mostly very + repetitive, nasty files. 565 megabytes. +@item A: directory tree holding various applications built from source: + @code{egcs}, @code{gcc-2.8.1}, KDE, GTK, Octave, etc. + 2200 megabytes. +@end itemize +The tests conducted are as follows. Each test means compressing +(a copy of) each file in the data set, decompressing it and +comparing it against the original. + +First, a bunch of tests with block sizes and internal buffer +sizes set very small, +to detect any problems with the +blocking and buffering mechanisms. +This required modifying the source code so as to try to +break it. +@enumerate +@item Data set H, with + buffer size of 1 byte, and block size of 23 bytes. +@item Data set B, buffer sizes 1 byte, block size 1 byte. +@item As (2) but small-mode decompression. +@item As (2) with block size 2 bytes. +@item As (2) with block size 3 bytes. +@item As (2) with block size 4 bytes. +@item As (2) with block size 5 bytes. +@item As (2) with block size 6 bytes and small-mode decompression. +@item H with buffer size of 1 byte, but normal block + size (up to 900000 bytes). +@end enumerate +Then some tests with unmodified source code. +@enumerate +@item H, all settings normal. +@item As (1), with small-mode decompress. +@item H, compress with flag @code{-1}. +@item H, compress with flag @code{-s}, decompress with flag @code{-s}. +@item Forwards compatibility: H, @code{bzip2-0.1pl2} compressing, + @code{bzip2-0.9.5} decompressing, all settings normal. +@item Backwards compatibility: H, @code{bzip2-0.9.5} compressing, + @code{bzip2-0.1pl2} decompressing, all settings normal. +@item Bigger tests: A, all settings normal. +@item As (7), using the fallback (Sadakane-like) sorting algorithm. +@item As (8), compress with flag @code{-1}, decompress with flag + @code{-s}. +@item H, using the fallback sorting algorithm. +@item Forwards compatibility: A, @code{bzip2-0.1pl2} compressing, + @code{bzip2-0.9.5} decompressing, all settings normal. +@item Backwards compatibility: A, @code{bzip2-0.9.5} compressing, + @code{bzip2-0.1pl2} decompressing, all settings normal. +@item Misc test: about 400 megabytes of @code{.tar} files with + @code{bzip2} compiled with Checker (a memory access error + detector, like Purify). +@item Misc tests to make sure it builds and runs ok on non-Linux/x86 + platforms. +@end enumerate +These tests were conducted on a 225 MHz IDT WinChip machine, running +Linux 2.0.36. They represent nearly a week of continuous computation. +All tests completed successfully. + + +@section Further reading +@code{bzip2} is not research work, in the sense that it doesn't present +any new ideas. Rather, it's an engineering exercise based on existing +ideas. + +Four documents describe essentially all the ideas behind @code{bzip2}: +@example +Michael Burrows and D. J. Wheeler: + "A block-sorting lossless data compression algorithm" + 10th May 1994. + Digital SRC Research Report 124. + ftp://ftp.digital.com/pub/DEC/SRC/research-reports/SRC-124.ps.gz + If you have trouble finding it, try searching at the + New Zealand Digital Library, http://www.nzdl.org. + +Daniel S. Hirschberg and Debra A. LeLewer + "Efficient Decoding of Prefix Codes" + Communications of the ACM, April 1990, Vol 33, Number 4. + You might be able to get an electronic copy of this + from the ACM Digital Library. + +David J. Wheeler + Program bred3.c and accompanying document bred3.ps. + This contains the idea behind the multi-table Huffman + coding scheme. + ftp://ftp.cl.cam.ac.uk/users/djw3/ + +Jon L. Bentley and Robert Sedgewick + "Fast Algorithms for Sorting and Searching Strings" + Available from Sedgewick's web page, + www.cs.princeton.edu/~rs +@end example +The following paper gives valuable additional insights into the +algorithm, but is not immediately the basis of any code +used in bzip2. +@example +Peter Fenwick: + Block Sorting Text Compression + Proceedings of the 19th Australasian Computer Science Conference, + Melbourne, Australia. Jan 31 - Feb 2, 1996. + ftp://ftp.cs.auckland.ac.nz/pub/peter-f/ACSC96paper.ps +@end example +Kunihiko Sadakane's sorting algorithm, mentioned above, +is available from: +@example +http://naomi.is.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp/~sada/papers/Sada98b.ps.gz +@end example +The Manber-Myers suffix array construction +algorithm is described in a paper +available from: +@example +http://www.cs.arizona.edu/people/gene/PAPERS/suffix.ps +@end example +Finally, the following paper documents some recent investigations +I made into the performance of sorting algorithms: +@example +Julian Seward: + On the Performance of BWT Sorting Algorithms + Proceedings of the IEEE Data Compression Conference 2000 + Snowbird, Utah. 28-30 March 2000. +@end example + + +@contents + +@bye + diff --git a/bzip2/manual_1.html b/bzip2/manual_1.html new file mode 100644 index 000000000..92ba7c6df --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/manual_1.html @@ -0,0 +1,47 @@ +<HTML> +<HEAD> +<!-- This HTML file has been created by texi2html 1.54 + from manual.texi on 23 March 2000 --> + +<TITLE>bzip2 and libbzip2 - Introduction</TITLE> +<link href="manual_2.html" rel=Next> +<link href="manual_toc.html" rel=ToC> + +</HEAD> +<BODY> +<p>Go to the first, previous, <A HREF="manual_2.html">next</A>, <A HREF="manual_4.html">last</A> section, <A HREF="manual_toc.html">table of contents</A>. +<P><HR><P> + + +<H1><A NAME="SEC1" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC1">Introduction</A></H1> + +<P> +<CODE>bzip2</CODE> compresses files using the Burrows-Wheeler +block-sorting text compression algorithm, and Huffman coding. +Compression is generally considerably better than that +achieved by more conventional LZ77/LZ78-based compressors, +and approaches the performance of the PPM family of statistical compressors. + +</P> +<P> +<CODE>bzip2</CODE> is built on top of <CODE>libbzip2</CODE>, a flexible library +for handling compressed data in the <CODE>bzip2</CODE> format. This manual +describes both how to use the program and +how to work with the library interface. Most of the +manual is devoted to this library, not the program, +which is good news if your interest is only in the program. + +</P> +<P> +Chapter 2 describes how to use <CODE>bzip2</CODE>; this is the only part +you need to read if you just want to know how to operate the program. +Chapter 3 describes the programming interfaces in detail, and +Chapter 4 records some miscellaneous notes which I thought +ought to be recorded somewhere. + +</P> + +<P><HR><P> +<p>Go to the first, previous, <A HREF="manual_2.html">next</A>, <A HREF="manual_4.html">last</A> section, <A HREF="manual_toc.html">table of contents</A>. +</BODY> +</HTML> diff --git a/bzip2/manual_2.html b/bzip2/manual_2.html new file mode 100644 index 000000000..39453c42d --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/manual_2.html @@ -0,0 +1,484 @@ +<HTML> +<HEAD> +<!-- This HTML file has been created by texi2html 1.54 + from manual.texi on 23 March 2000 --> + +<TITLE>bzip2 and libbzip2 - How to use bzip2</TITLE> +<link href="manual_3.html" rel=Next> +<link href="manual_1.html" rel=Previous> +<link href="manual_toc.html" rel=ToC> + +</HEAD> +<BODY> +<p>Go to the <A HREF="manual_1.html">first</A>, <A HREF="manual_1.html">previous</A>, <A HREF="manual_3.html">next</A>, <A HREF="manual_4.html">last</A> section, <A HREF="manual_toc.html">table of contents</A>. +<P><HR><P> + + +<H1><A NAME="SEC2" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC2">How to use <CODE>bzip2</CODE></A></H1> + +<P> +This chapter contains a copy of the <CODE>bzip2</CODE> man page, +and nothing else. + +</P> + +<BLOCKQUOTE> + + + +<H4><A NAME="SEC3" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC3">NAME</A></H4> + +<UL> +<LI><CODE>bzip2</CODE>, <CODE>bunzip2</CODE> + +- a block-sorting file compressor, v1.0 +<LI><CODE>bzcat</CODE> + +- decompresses files to stdout +<LI><CODE>bzip2recover</CODE> + +- recovers data from damaged bzip2 files +</UL> + + + +<H4><A NAME="SEC4" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC4">SYNOPSIS</A></H4> + +<UL> +<LI><CODE>bzip2</CODE> [ -cdfkqstvzVL123456789 ] [ filenames ... ] + +<LI><CODE>bunzip2</CODE> [ -fkvsVL ] [ filenames ... ] + +<LI><CODE>bzcat</CODE> [ -s ] [ filenames ... ] + +<LI><CODE>bzip2recover</CODE> filename + +</UL> + + + +<H4><A NAME="SEC5" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC5">DESCRIPTION</A></H4> + +<P> +<CODE>bzip2</CODE> compresses files using the Burrows-Wheeler block sorting +text compression algorithm, and Huffman coding. Compression is +generally considerably better than that achieved by more conventional +LZ77/LZ78-based compressors, and approaches the performance of the PPM +family of statistical compressors. + +</P> +<P> +The command-line options are deliberately very similar to those of GNU +<CODE>gzip</CODE>, but they are not identical. + +</P> +<P> +<CODE>bzip2</CODE> expects a list of file names to accompany the command-line +flags. Each file is replaced by a compressed version of itself, with +the name <CODE>original_name.bz2</CODE>. Each compressed file has the same +modification date, permissions, and, when possible, ownership as the +corresponding original, so that these properties can be correctly +restored at decompression time. File name handling is naive in the +sense that there is no mechanism for preserving original file names, +permissions, ownerships or dates in filesystems which lack these +concepts, or have serious file name length restrictions, such as MS-DOS. + +</P> +<P> +<CODE>bzip2</CODE> and <CODE>bunzip2</CODE> will by default not overwrite existing +files. If you want this to happen, specify the <CODE>-f</CODE> flag. + +</P> +<P> +If no file names are specified, <CODE>bzip2</CODE> compresses from standard +input to standard output. In this case, <CODE>bzip2</CODE> will decline to +write compressed output to a terminal, as this would be entirely +incomprehensible and therefore pointless. + +</P> +<P> +<CODE>bunzip2</CODE> (or <CODE>bzip2 -d</CODE>) decompresses all +specified files. Files which were not created by <CODE>bzip2</CODE> +will be detected and ignored, and a warning issued. +<CODE>bzip2</CODE> attempts to guess the filename for the decompressed file +from that of the compressed file as follows: + +<UL> +<LI><CODE>filename.bz2 </CODE> becomes <CODE>filename</CODE> + +<LI><CODE>filename.bz </CODE> becomes <CODE>filename</CODE> + +<LI><CODE>filename.tbz2</CODE> becomes <CODE>filename.tar</CODE> + +<LI><CODE>filename.tbz </CODE> becomes <CODE>filename.tar</CODE> + +<LI><CODE>anyothername </CODE> becomes <CODE>anyothername.out</CODE> + +</UL> + +<P> +If the file does not end in one of the recognised endings, +<CODE>.bz2</CODE>, <CODE>.bz</CODE>, +<CODE>.tbz2</CODE> or <CODE>.tbz</CODE>, <CODE>bzip2</CODE> complains that it cannot +guess the name of the original file, and uses the original name +with <CODE>.out</CODE> appended. + +</P> +<P> +As with compression, supplying no +filenames causes decompression from standard input to standard output. + +</P> +<P> +<CODE>bunzip2</CODE> will correctly decompress a file which is the +concatenation of two or more compressed files. The result is the +concatenation of the corresponding uncompressed files. Integrity +testing (<CODE>-t</CODE>) of concatenated compressed files is also supported. + +</P> +<P> +You can also compress or decompress files to the standard output by +giving the <CODE>-c</CODE> flag. Multiple files may be compressed and +decompressed like this. The resulting outputs are fed sequentially to +stdout. Compression of multiple files in this manner generates a stream +containing multiple compressed file representations. Such a stream +can be decompressed correctly only by <CODE>bzip2</CODE> version 0.9.0 or +later. Earlier versions of <CODE>bzip2</CODE> will stop after decompressing +the first file in the stream. + +</P> +<P> +<CODE>bzcat</CODE> (or <CODE>bzip2 -dc</CODE>) decompresses all specified files to +the standard output. + +</P> +<P> +<CODE>bzip2</CODE> will read arguments from the environment variables +<CODE>BZIP2</CODE> and <CODE>BZIP</CODE>, in that order, and will process them +before any arguments read from the command line. This gives a +convenient way to supply default arguments. + +</P> +<P> +Compression is always performed, even if the compressed file is slightly +larger than the original. Files of less than about one hundred bytes +tend to get larger, since the compression mechanism has a constant +overhead in the region of 50 bytes. Random data (including the output +of most file compressors) is coded at about 8.05 bits per byte, giving +an expansion of around 0.5%. + +</P> +<P> +As a self-check for your protection, <CODE>bzip2</CODE> uses 32-bit CRCs to +make sure that the decompressed version of a file is identical to the +original. This guards against corruption of the compressed data, and +against undetected bugs in <CODE>bzip2</CODE> (hopefully very unlikely). The +chances of data corruption going undetected is microscopic, about one +chance in four billion for each file processed. Be aware, though, that +the check occurs upon decompression, so it can only tell you that +something is wrong. It can't help you recover the original uncompressed +data. You can use <CODE>bzip2recover</CODE> to try to recover data from +damaged files. + +</P> +<P> +Return values: 0 for a normal exit, 1 for environmental problems (file +not found, invalid flags, I/O errors, &c), 2 to indicate a corrupt +compressed file, 3 for an internal consistency error (eg, bug) which +caused <CODE>bzip2</CODE> to panic. + +</P> + + + +<H4><A NAME="SEC6" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC6">OPTIONS</A></H4> +<DL COMPACT> + +<DT><CODE>-c --stdout</CODE> +<DD> +Compress or decompress to standard output. +<DT><CODE>-d --decompress</CODE> +<DD> +Force decompression. <CODE>bzip2</CODE>, <CODE>bunzip2</CODE> and <CODE>bzcat</CODE> are +really the same program, and the decision about what actions to take is +done on the basis of which name is used. This flag overrides that +mechanism, and forces bzip2 to decompress. +<DT><CODE>-z --compress</CODE> +<DD> +The complement to <CODE>-d</CODE>: forces compression, regardless of the +invokation name. +<DT><CODE>-t --test</CODE> +<DD> +Check integrity of the specified file(s), but don't decompress them. +This really performs a trial decompression and throws away the result. +<DT><CODE>-f --force</CODE> +<DD> +Force overwrite of output files. Normally, <CODE>bzip2</CODE> will not overwrite +existing output files. Also forces <CODE>bzip2</CODE> to break hard links +to files, which it otherwise wouldn't do. +<DT><CODE>-k --keep</CODE> +<DD> +Keep (don't delete) input files during compression +or decompression. +<DT><CODE>-s --small</CODE> +<DD> +Reduce memory usage, for compression, decompression and testing. Files +are decompressed and tested using a modified algorithm which only +requires 2.5 bytes per block byte. This means any file can be +decompressed in 2300k of memory, albeit at about half the normal speed. + +During compression, <CODE>-s</CODE> selects a block size of 200k, which limits +memory use to around the same figure, at the expense of your compression +ratio. In short, if your machine is low on memory (8 megabytes or +less), use -s for everything. See MEMORY MANAGEMENT below. +<DT><CODE>-q --quiet</CODE> +<DD> +Suppress non-essential warning messages. Messages pertaining to +I/O errors and other critical events will not be suppressed. +<DT><CODE>-v --verbose</CODE> +<DD> +Verbose mode -- show the compression ratio for each file processed. +Further <CODE>-v</CODE>'s increase the verbosity level, spewing out lots of +information which is primarily of interest for diagnostic purposes. +<DT><CODE>-L --license -V --version</CODE> +<DD> +Display the software version, license terms and conditions. +<DT><CODE>-1 to -9</CODE> +<DD> +Set the block size to 100 k, 200 k .. 900 k when compressing. Has no +effect when decompressing. See MEMORY MANAGEMENT below. +<DT><CODE>--</CODE> +<DD> +Treats all subsequent arguments as file names, even if they start +with a dash. This is so you can handle files with names beginning +with a dash, for example: <CODE>bzip2 -- -myfilename</CODE>. +<DT><CODE>--repetitive-fast</CODE> +<DD> +<DT><CODE>--repetitive-best</CODE> +<DD> +These flags are redundant in versions 0.9.5 and above. They provided +some coarse control over the behaviour of the sorting algorithm in +earlier versions, which was sometimes useful. 0.9.5 and above have an +improved algorithm which renders these flags irrelevant. +</DL> + + + +<H4><A NAME="SEC7" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC7">MEMORY MANAGEMENT</A></H4> + +<P> +<CODE>bzip2</CODE> compresses large files in blocks. The block size affects +both the compression ratio achieved, and the amount of memory needed for +compression and decompression. The flags <CODE>-1</CODE> through <CODE>-9</CODE> +specify the block size to be 100,000 bytes through 900,000 bytes (the +default) respectively. At decompression time, the block size used for +compression is read from the header of the compressed file, and +<CODE>bunzip2</CODE> then allocates itself just enough memory to decompress +the file. Since block sizes are stored in compressed files, it follows +that the flags <CODE>-1</CODE> to <CODE>-9</CODE> are irrelevant to and so ignored +during decompression. + +</P> +<P> +Compression and decompression requirements, in bytes, can be estimated +as: + +<PRE> + Compression: 400k + ( 8 x block size ) + + Decompression: 100k + ( 4 x block size ), or + 100k + ( 2.5 x block size ) +</PRE> + +<P> +Larger block sizes give rapidly diminishing marginal returns. Most of +the compression comes from the first two or three hundred k of block +size, a fact worth bearing in mind when using <CODE>bzip2</CODE> on small machines. +It is also important to appreciate that the decompression memory +requirement is set at compression time by the choice of block size. + +</P> +<P> +For files compressed with the default 900k block size, <CODE>bunzip2</CODE> +will require about 3700 kbytes to decompress. To support decompression +of any file on a 4 megabyte machine, <CODE>bunzip2</CODE> has an option to +decompress using approximately half this amount of memory, about 2300 +kbytes. Decompression speed is also halved, so you should use this +option only where necessary. The relevant flag is <CODE>-s</CODE>. + +</P> +<P> +In general, try and use the largest block size memory constraints allow, +since that maximises the compression achieved. Compression and +decompression speed are virtually unaffected by block size. + +</P> +<P> +Another significant point applies to files which fit in a single block +-- that means most files you'd encounter using a large block size. The +amount of real memory touched is proportional to the size of the file, +since the file is smaller than a block. For example, compressing a file +20,000 bytes long with the flag <CODE>-9</CODE> will cause the compressor to +allocate around 7600k of memory, but only touch 400k + 20000 * 8 = 560 +kbytes of it. Similarly, the decompressor will allocate 3700k but only +touch 100k + 20000 * 4 = 180 kbytes. + +</P> +<P> +Here is a table which summarises the maximum memory usage for different +block sizes. Also recorded is the total compressed size for 14 files of +the Calgary Text Compression Corpus totalling 3,141,622 bytes. This +column gives some feel for how compression varies with block size. +These figures tend to understate the advantage of larger block sizes for +larger files, since the Corpus is dominated by smaller files. + +<PRE> + Compress Decompress Decompress Corpus + Flag usage usage -s usage Size + + -1 1200k 500k 350k 914704 + -2 2000k 900k 600k 877703 + -3 2800k 1300k 850k 860338 + -4 3600k 1700k 1100k 846899 + -5 4400k 2100k 1350k 845160 + -6 5200k 2500k 1600k 838626 + -7 6100k 2900k 1850k 834096 + -8 6800k 3300k 2100k 828642 + -9 7600k 3700k 2350k 828642 +</PRE> + + + +<H4><A NAME="SEC8" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC8">RECOVERING DATA FROM DAMAGED FILES</A></H4> + +<P> +<CODE>bzip2</CODE> compresses files in blocks, usually 900kbytes long. Each +block is handled independently. If a media or transmission error causes +a multi-block <CODE>.bz2</CODE> file to become damaged, it may be possible to +recover data from the undamaged blocks in the file. + +</P> +<P> +The compressed representation of each block is delimited by a 48-bit +pattern, which makes it possible to find the block boundaries with +reasonable certainty. Each block also carries its own 32-bit CRC, so +damaged blocks can be distinguished from undamaged ones. + +</P> +<P> +<CODE>bzip2recover</CODE> is a simple program whose purpose is to search for +blocks in <CODE>.bz2</CODE> files, and write each block out into its own +<CODE>.bz2</CODE> file. You can then use <CODE>bzip2 -t</CODE> to test the +integrity of the resulting files, and decompress those which are +undamaged. + +</P> +<P> +<CODE>bzip2recover</CODE> +takes a single argument, the name of the damaged file, +and writes a number of files <CODE>rec0001file.bz2</CODE>, + <CODE>rec0002file.bz2</CODE>, etc, containing the extracted blocks. + The output filenames are designed so that the use of + wildcards in subsequent processing -- for example, +<CODE>bzip2 -dc rec*file.bz2 > recovered_data</CODE> -- lists the files in + the correct order. + +</P> +<P> +<CODE>bzip2recover</CODE> should be of most use dealing with large <CODE>.bz2</CODE> + files, as these will contain many blocks. It is clearly + futile to use it on damaged single-block files, since a + damaged block cannot be recovered. If you wish to minimise +any potential data loss through media or transmission errors, +you might consider compressing with a smaller + block size. + +</P> + + + +<H4><A NAME="SEC9" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC9">PERFORMANCE NOTES</A></H4> + +<P> +The sorting phase of compression gathers together similar strings in the +file. Because of this, files containing very long runs of repeated +symbols, like "aabaabaabaab ..." (repeated several hundred times) may +compress more slowly than normal. Versions 0.9.5 and above fare much +better than previous versions in this respect. The ratio between +worst-case and average-case compression time is in the region of 10:1. +For previous versions, this figure was more like 100:1. You can use the +<CODE>-vvvv</CODE> option to monitor progress in great detail, if you want. + +</P> +<P> +Decompression speed is unaffected by these phenomena. + +</P> +<P> +<CODE>bzip2</CODE> usually allocates several megabytes of memory to operate +in, and then charges all over it in a fairly random fashion. This means +that performance, both for compressing and decompressing, is largely +determined by the speed at which your machine can service cache misses. +Because of this, small changes to the code to reduce the miss rate have +been observed to give disproportionately large performance improvements. +I imagine <CODE>bzip2</CODE> will perform best on machines with very large +caches. + +</P> + + + +<H4><A NAME="SEC10" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC10">CAVEATS</A></H4> + +<P> +I/O error messages are not as helpful as they could be. <CODE>bzip2</CODE> +tries hard to detect I/O errors and exit cleanly, but the details of +what the problem is sometimes seem rather misleading. + +</P> +<P> +This manual page pertains to version 1.0 of <CODE>bzip2</CODE>. Compressed +data created by this version is entirely forwards and backwards +compatible with the previous public releases, versions 0.1pl2, 0.9.0 and +0.9.5, but with the following exception: 0.9.0 and above can correctly +decompress multiple concatenated compressed files. 0.1pl2 cannot do +this; it will stop after decompressing just the first file in the +stream. + +</P> +<P> +<CODE>bzip2recover</CODE> uses 32-bit integers to represent bit positions in +compressed files, so it cannot handle compressed files more than 512 +megabytes long. This could easily be fixed. + +</P> + + + +<H4><A NAME="SEC11" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC11">AUTHOR</A></H4> +<P> +Julian Seward, <CODE>jseward@acm.org</CODE>. + +</P> +<P> +The ideas embodied in <CODE>bzip2</CODE> are due to (at least) the following +people: Michael Burrows and David Wheeler (for the block sorting +transformation), David Wheeler (again, for the Huffman coder), Peter +Fenwick (for the structured coding model in the original <CODE>bzip</CODE>, +and many refinements), and Alistair Moffat, Radford Neal and Ian Witten +(for the arithmetic coder in the original <CODE>bzip</CODE>). I am much +indebted for their help, support and advice. See the manual in the +source distribution for pointers to sources of documentation. Christian +von Roques encouraged me to look for faster sorting algorithms, so as to +speed up compression. Bela Lubkin encouraged me to improve the +worst-case compression performance. Many people sent patches, helped +with portability problems, lent machines, gave advice and were generally +helpful. + +</P> +</BLOCKQUOTE> + +<P><HR><P> +<p>Go to the <A HREF="manual_1.html">first</A>, <A HREF="manual_1.html">previous</A>, <A HREF="manual_3.html">next</A>, <A HREF="manual_4.html">last</A> section, <A HREF="manual_toc.html">table of contents</A>. +</BODY> +</HTML> diff --git a/bzip2/manual_3.html b/bzip2/manual_3.html new file mode 100644 index 000000000..a8fa7e682 --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/manual_3.html @@ -0,0 +1,1773 @@ +<HTML> +<HEAD> +<!-- This HTML file has been created by texi2html 1.54 + from manual.texi on 23 March 2000 --> + +<TITLE>bzip2 and libbzip2 - Programming with libbzip2</TITLE> +<link href="manual_4.html" rel=Next> +<link href="manual_2.html" rel=Previous> +<link href="manual_toc.html" rel=ToC> + +</HEAD> +<BODY> +<p>Go to the <A HREF="manual_1.html">first</A>, <A HREF="manual_2.html">previous</A>, <A HREF="manual_4.html">next</A>, <A HREF="manual_4.html">last</A> section, <A HREF="manual_toc.html">table of contents</A>. +<P><HR><P> + + +<H1><A NAME="SEC12" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC12">Programming with <CODE>libbzip2</CODE></A></H1> + +<P> +This chapter describes the programming interface to <CODE>libbzip2</CODE>. + +</P> +<P> +For general background information, particularly about memory +use and performance aspects, you'd be well advised to read Chapter 2 +as well. + +</P> + + +<H2><A NAME="SEC13" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC13">Top-level structure</A></H2> + +<P> +<CODE>libbzip2</CODE> is a flexible library for compressing and decompressing +data in the <CODE>bzip2</CODE> data format. Although packaged as a single +entity, it helps to regard the library as three separate parts: the low +level interface, and the high level interface, and some utility +functions. + +</P> +<P> +The structure of <CODE>libbzip2</CODE>'s interfaces is similar to +that of Jean-loup Gailly's and Mark Adler's excellent <CODE>zlib</CODE> +library. + +</P> +<P> +All externally visible symbols have names beginning <CODE>BZ2_</CODE>. +This is new in version 1.0. The intention is to minimise pollution +of the namespaces of library clients. + +</P> + + +<H3><A NAME="SEC14" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC14">Low-level summary</A></H3> + +<P> +This interface provides services for compressing and decompressing +data in memory. There's no provision for dealing with files, streams +or any other I/O mechanisms, just straight memory-to-memory work. +In fact, this part of the library can be compiled without inclusion +of <CODE>stdio.h</CODE>, which may be helpful for embedded applications. + +</P> +<P> +The low-level part of the library has no global variables and +is therefore thread-safe. + +</P> +<P> +Six routines make up the low level interface: +<CODE>BZ2_bzCompressInit</CODE>, <CODE>BZ2_bzCompress</CODE>, and <BR> <CODE>BZ2_bzCompressEnd</CODE> +for compression, +and a corresponding trio <CODE>BZ2_bzDecompressInit</CODE>, <BR> <CODE>BZ2_bzDecompress</CODE> +and <CODE>BZ2_bzDecompressEnd</CODE> for decompression. +The <CODE>*Init</CODE> functions allocate +memory for compression/decompression and do other +initialisations, whilst the <CODE>*End</CODE> functions close down operations +and release memory. + +</P> +<P> +The real work is done by <CODE>BZ2_bzCompress</CODE> and <CODE>BZ2_bzDecompress</CODE>. +These compress and decompress data from a user-supplied input buffer +to a user-supplied output buffer. These buffers can be any size; +arbitrary quantities of data are handled by making repeated calls +to these functions. This is a flexible mechanism allowing a +consumer-pull style of activity, or producer-push, or a mixture of +both. + +</P> + + + +<H3><A NAME="SEC15" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC15">High-level summary</A></H3> + +<P> +This interface provides some handy wrappers around the low-level +interface to facilitate reading and writing <CODE>bzip2</CODE> format +files (<CODE>.bz2</CODE> files). The routines provide hooks to facilitate +reading files in which the <CODE>bzip2</CODE> data stream is embedded +within some larger-scale file structure, or where there are +multiple <CODE>bzip2</CODE> data streams concatenated end-to-end. + +</P> +<P> +For reading files, <CODE>BZ2_bzReadOpen</CODE>, <CODE>BZ2_bzRead</CODE>, +<CODE>BZ2_bzReadClose</CODE> and <BR> <CODE>BZ2_bzReadGetUnused</CODE> are supplied. For +writing files, <CODE>BZ2_bzWriteOpen</CODE>, <CODE>BZ2_bzWrite</CODE> and +<CODE>BZ2_bzWriteFinish</CODE> are available. + +</P> +<P> +As with the low-level library, no global variables are used +so the library is per se thread-safe. However, if I/O errors +occur whilst reading or writing the underlying compressed files, +you may have to consult <CODE>errno</CODE> to determine the cause of +the error. In that case, you'd need a C library which correctly +supports <CODE>errno</CODE> in a multithreaded environment. + +</P> +<P> +To make the library a little simpler and more portable, +<CODE>BZ2_bzReadOpen</CODE> and <CODE>BZ2_bzWriteOpen</CODE> require you to pass them file +handles (<CODE>FILE*</CODE>s) which have previously been opened for reading or +writing respectively. That avoids portability problems associated with +file operations and file attributes, whilst not being much of an +imposition on the programmer. + +</P> + + + +<H3><A NAME="SEC16" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC16">Utility functions summary</A></H3> +<P> +For very simple needs, <CODE>BZ2_bzBuffToBuffCompress</CODE> and +<CODE>BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompress</CODE> are provided. These compress +data in memory from one buffer to another buffer in a single +function call. You should assess whether these functions +fulfill your memory-to-memory compression/decompression +requirements before investing effort in understanding the more +general but more complex low-level interface. + +</P> +<P> +Yoshioka Tsuneo (<CODE>QWF00133@niftyserve.or.jp</CODE> / +<CODE>tsuneo-y@is.aist-nara.ac.jp</CODE>) has contributed some functions to +give better <CODE>zlib</CODE> compatibility. These functions are +<CODE>BZ2_bzopen</CODE>, <CODE>BZ2_bzread</CODE>, <CODE>BZ2_bzwrite</CODE>, <CODE>BZ2_bzflush</CODE>, +<CODE>BZ2_bzclose</CODE>, +<CODE>BZ2_bzerror</CODE> and <CODE>BZ2_bzlibVersion</CODE>. You may find these functions +more convenient for simple file reading and writing, than those in the +high-level interface. These functions are not (yet) officially part of +the library, and are minimally documented here. If they break, you +get to keep all the pieces. I hope to document them properly when time +permits. + +</P> +<P> +Yoshioka also contributed modifications to allow the library to be +built as a Windows DLL. + +</P> + + + +<H2><A NAME="SEC17" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC17">Error handling</A></H2> + +<P> +The library is designed to recover cleanly in all situations, including +the worst-case situation of decompressing random data. I'm not +100% sure that it can always do this, so you might want to add +a signal handler to catch segmentation violations during decompression +if you are feeling especially paranoid. I would be interested in +hearing more about the robustness of the library to corrupted +compressed data. + +</P> +<P> +Version 1.0 is much more robust in this respect than +0.9.0 or 0.9.5. Investigations with Checker (a tool for +detecting problems with memory management, similar to Purify) +indicate that, at least for the few files I tested, all single-bit +errors in the decompressed data are caught properly, with no +segmentation faults, no reads of uninitialised data and no +out of range reads or writes. So it's certainly much improved, +although I wouldn't claim it to be totally bombproof. + +</P> +<P> +The file <CODE>bzlib.h</CODE> contains all definitions needed to use +the library. In particular, you should definitely not include +<CODE>bzlib_private.h</CODE>. + +</P> +<P> +In <CODE>bzlib.h</CODE>, the various return values are defined. The following +list is not intended as an exhaustive description of the circumstances +in which a given value may be returned -- those descriptions are given +later. Rather, it is intended to convey the rough meaning of each +return value. The first five actions are normal and not intended to +denote an error situation. +<DL COMPACT> + +<DT><CODE>BZ_OK</CODE> +<DD> +The requested action was completed successfully. +<DT><CODE>BZ_RUN_OK</CODE> +<DD> +<DT><CODE>BZ_FLUSH_OK</CODE> +<DD> +<DT><CODE>BZ_FINISH_OK</CODE> +<DD> +In <CODE>BZ2_bzCompress</CODE>, the requested flush/finish/nothing-special action +was completed successfully. +<DT><CODE>BZ_STREAM_END</CODE> +<DD> +Compression of data was completed, or the logical stream end was +detected during decompression. +</DL> + +<P> +The following return values indicate an error of some kind. +<DL COMPACT> + +<DT><CODE>BZ_CONFIG_ERROR</CODE> +<DD> +Indicates that the library has been improperly compiled on your +platform -- a major configuration error. Specifically, it means +that <CODE>sizeof(char)</CODE>, <CODE>sizeof(short)</CODE> and <CODE>sizeof(int)</CODE> +are not 1, 2 and 4 respectively, as they should be. Note that the +library should still work properly on 64-bit platforms which follow +the LP64 programming model -- that is, where <CODE>sizeof(long)</CODE> +and <CODE>sizeof(void*)</CODE> are 8. Under LP64, <CODE>sizeof(int)</CODE> is +still 4, so <CODE>libbzip2</CODE>, which doesn't use the <CODE>long</CODE> type, +is OK. +<DT><CODE>BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR</CODE> +<DD> +When using the library, it is important to call the functions in the +correct sequence and with data structures (buffers etc) in the correct +states. <CODE>libbzip2</CODE> checks as much as it can to ensure this is +happening, and returns <CODE>BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR</CODE> if not. Code which +complies precisely with the function semantics, as detailed below, +should never receive this value; such an event denotes buggy code +which you should investigate. +<DT><CODE>BZ_PARAM_ERROR</CODE> +<DD> +Returned when a parameter to a function call is out of range +or otherwise manifestly incorrect. As with <CODE>BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR</CODE>, +this denotes a bug in the client code. The distinction between +<CODE>BZ_PARAM_ERROR</CODE> and <CODE>BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR</CODE> is a bit hazy, but still worth +making. +<DT><CODE>BZ_MEM_ERROR</CODE> +<DD> +Returned when a request to allocate memory failed. Note that the +quantity of memory needed to decompress a stream cannot be determined +until the stream's header has been read. So <CODE>BZ2_bzDecompress</CODE> and +<CODE>BZ2_bzRead</CODE> may return <CODE>BZ_MEM_ERROR</CODE> even though some of +the compressed data has been read. The same is not true for +compression; once <CODE>BZ2_bzCompressInit</CODE> or <CODE>BZ2_bzWriteOpen</CODE> have +successfully completed, <CODE>BZ_MEM_ERROR</CODE> cannot occur. +<DT><CODE>BZ_DATA_ERROR</CODE> +<DD> +Returned when a data integrity error is detected during decompression. +Most importantly, this means when stored and computed CRCs for the +data do not match. This value is also returned upon detection of any +other anomaly in the compressed data. +<DT><CODE>BZ_DATA_ERROR_MAGIC</CODE> +<DD> +As a special case of <CODE>BZ_DATA_ERROR</CODE>, it is sometimes useful to +know when the compressed stream does not start with the correct +magic bytes (<CODE>'B' 'Z' 'h'</CODE>). +<DT><CODE>BZ_IO_ERROR</CODE> +<DD> +Returned by <CODE>BZ2_bzRead</CODE> and <CODE>BZ2_bzWrite</CODE> when there is an error +reading or writing in the compressed file, and by <CODE>BZ2_bzReadOpen</CODE> +and <CODE>BZ2_bzWriteOpen</CODE> for attempts to use a file for which the +error indicator (viz, <CODE>ferror(f)</CODE>) is set. +On receipt of <CODE>BZ_IO_ERROR</CODE>, the caller should consult +<CODE>errno</CODE> and/or <CODE>perror</CODE> to acquire operating-system +specific information about the problem. +<DT><CODE>BZ_UNEXPECTED_EOF</CODE> +<DD> +Returned by <CODE>BZ2_bzRead</CODE> when the compressed file finishes +before the logical end of stream is detected. +<DT><CODE>BZ_OUTBUFF_FULL</CODE> +<DD> +Returned by <CODE>BZ2_bzBuffToBuffCompress</CODE> and +<CODE>BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompress</CODE> to indicate that the output data +will not fit into the output buffer provided. +</DL> + + + +<H2><A NAME="SEC18" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC18">Low-level interface</A></H2> + + + +<H3><A NAME="SEC19" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC19"><CODE>BZ2_bzCompressInit</CODE></A></H3> + +<PRE> +typedef + struct { + char *next_in; + unsigned int avail_in; + unsigned int total_in_lo32; + unsigned int total_in_hi32; + + char *next_out; + unsigned int avail_out; + unsigned int total_out_lo32; + unsigned int total_out_hi32; + + void *state; + + void *(*bzalloc)(void *,int,int); + void (*bzfree)(void *,void *); + void *opaque; + } + bz_stream; + +int BZ2_bzCompressInit ( bz_stream *strm, + int blockSize100k, + int verbosity, + int workFactor ); + +</PRE> + +<P> +Prepares for compression. The <CODE>bz_stream</CODE> structure +holds all data pertaining to the compression activity. +A <CODE>bz_stream</CODE> structure should be allocated and initialised +prior to the call. +The fields of <CODE>bz_stream</CODE> +comprise the entirety of the user-visible data. <CODE>state</CODE> +is a pointer to the private data structures required for compression. + +</P> +<P> +Custom memory allocators are supported, via fields <CODE>bzalloc</CODE>, +<CODE>bzfree</CODE>, +and <CODE>opaque</CODE>. The value +<CODE>opaque</CODE> is passed to as the first argument to +all calls to <CODE>bzalloc</CODE> and <CODE>bzfree</CODE>, but is +otherwise ignored by the library. +The call <CODE>bzalloc ( opaque, n, m )</CODE> is expected to return a +pointer <CODE>p</CODE> to +<CODE>n * m</CODE> bytes of memory, and <CODE>bzfree ( opaque, p )</CODE> +should free +that memory. + +</P> +<P> +If you don't want to use a custom memory allocator, set <CODE>bzalloc</CODE>, +<CODE>bzfree</CODE> and +<CODE>opaque</CODE> to <CODE>NULL</CODE>, +and the library will then use the standard <CODE>malloc</CODE>/<CODE>free</CODE> +routines. + +</P> +<P> +Before calling <CODE>BZ2_bzCompressInit</CODE>, fields <CODE>bzalloc</CODE>, +<CODE>bzfree</CODE> and <CODE>opaque</CODE> should +be filled appropriately, as just described. Upon return, the internal +state will have been allocated and initialised, and <CODE>total_in_lo32</CODE>, +<CODE>total_in_hi32</CODE>, <CODE>total_out_lo32</CODE> and +<CODE>total_out_hi32</CODE> will have been set to zero. +These four fields are used by the library +to inform the caller of the total amount of data passed into and out of +the library, respectively. You should not try to change them. +As of version 1.0, 64-bit counts are maintained, even on 32-bit +platforms, using the <CODE>_hi32</CODE> fields to store the upper 32 bits +of the count. So, for example, the total amount of data in +is <CODE>(total_in_hi32 << 32) + total_in_lo32</CODE>. + +</P> +<P> +Parameter <CODE>blockSize100k</CODE> specifies the block size to be used for +compression. It should be a value between 1 and 9 inclusive, and the +actual block size used is 100000 x this figure. 9 gives the best +compression but takes most memory. + +</P> +<P> +Parameter <CODE>verbosity</CODE> should be set to a number between 0 and 4 +inclusive. 0 is silent, and greater numbers give increasingly verbose +monitoring/debugging output. If the library has been compiled with +<CODE>-DBZ_NO_STDIO</CODE>, no such output will appear for any verbosity +setting. + +</P> +<P> +Parameter <CODE>workFactor</CODE> controls how the compression phase behaves +when presented with worst case, highly repetitive, input data. If +compression runs into difficulties caused by repetitive data, the +library switches from the standard sorting algorithm to a fallback +algorithm. The fallback is slower than the standard algorithm by +perhaps a factor of three, but always behaves reasonably, no matter how +bad the input. + +</P> +<P> +Lower values of <CODE>workFactor</CODE> reduce the amount of effort the +standard algorithm will expend before resorting to the fallback. You +should set this parameter carefully; too low, and many inputs will be +handled by the fallback algorithm and so compress rather slowly, too +high, and your average-to-worst case compression times can become very +large. The default value of 30 gives reasonable behaviour over a wide +range of circumstances. + +</P> +<P> +Allowable values range from 0 to 250 inclusive. 0 is a special case, +equivalent to using the default value of 30. + +</P> +<P> +Note that the compressed output generated is the same regardless of +whether or not the fallback algorithm is used. + +</P> +<P> +Be aware also that this parameter may disappear entirely in future +versions of the library. In principle it should be possible to devise a +good way to automatically choose which algorithm to use. Such a +mechanism would render the parameter obsolete. + +</P> +<P> +Possible return values: + +<PRE> + <CODE>BZ_CONFIG_ERROR</CODE> + if the library has been mis-compiled + <CODE>BZ_PARAM_ERROR</CODE> + if <CODE>strm</CODE> is <CODE>NULL</CODE> + or <CODE>blockSize</CODE> < 1 or <CODE>blockSize</CODE> > 9 + or <CODE>verbosity</CODE> < 0 or <CODE>verbosity</CODE> > 4 + or <CODE>workFactor</CODE> < 0 or <CODE>workFactor</CODE> > 250 + <CODE>BZ_MEM_ERROR</CODE> + if not enough memory is available + <CODE>BZ_OK</CODE> + otherwise +</PRE> + +<P> +Allowable next actions: + +<PRE> + <CODE>BZ2_bzCompress</CODE> + if <CODE>BZ_OK</CODE> is returned + no specific action needed in case of error +</PRE> + + + +<H3><A NAME="SEC20" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC20"><CODE>BZ2_bzCompress</CODE></A></H3> + +<PRE> + int BZ2_bzCompress ( bz_stream *strm, int action ); +</PRE> + +<P> +Provides more input and/or output buffer space for the library. The +caller maintains input and output buffers, and calls <CODE>BZ2_bzCompress</CODE> to +transfer data between them. + +</P> +<P> +Before each call to <CODE>BZ2_bzCompress</CODE>, <CODE>next_in</CODE> should point at +the data to be compressed, and <CODE>avail_in</CODE> should indicate how many +bytes the library may read. <CODE>BZ2_bzCompress</CODE> updates <CODE>next_in</CODE>, +<CODE>avail_in</CODE> and <CODE>total_in</CODE> to reflect the number of bytes it +has read. + +</P> +<P> +Similarly, <CODE>next_out</CODE> should point to a buffer in which the +compressed data is to be placed, with <CODE>avail_out</CODE> indicating how +much output space is available. <CODE>BZ2_bzCompress</CODE> updates +<CODE>next_out</CODE>, <CODE>avail_out</CODE> and <CODE>total_out</CODE> to reflect the +number of bytes output. + +</P> +<P> +You may provide and remove as little or as much data as you like on each +call of <CODE>BZ2_bzCompress</CODE>. In the limit, it is acceptable to supply and +remove data one byte at a time, although this would be terribly +inefficient. You should always ensure that at least one byte of output +space is available at each call. + +</P> +<P> +A second purpose of <CODE>BZ2_bzCompress</CODE> is to request a change of mode of the +compressed stream. + +</P> +<P> +Conceptually, a compressed stream can be in one of four states: IDLE, +RUNNING, FLUSHING and FINISHING. Before initialisation +(<CODE>BZ2_bzCompressInit</CODE>) and after termination (<CODE>BZ2_bzCompressEnd</CODE>), a +stream is regarded as IDLE. + +</P> +<P> +Upon initialisation (<CODE>BZ2_bzCompressInit</CODE>), the stream is placed in the +RUNNING state. Subsequent calls to <CODE>BZ2_bzCompress</CODE> should pass +<CODE>BZ_RUN</CODE> as the requested action; other actions are illegal and +will result in <CODE>BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR</CODE>. + +</P> +<P> +At some point, the calling program will have provided all the input data +it wants to. It will then want to finish up -- in effect, asking the +library to process any data it might have buffered internally. In this +state, <CODE>BZ2_bzCompress</CODE> will no longer attempt to read data from +<CODE>next_in</CODE>, but it will want to write data to <CODE>next_out</CODE>. +Because the output buffer supplied by the user can be arbitrarily small, +the finishing-up operation cannot necessarily be done with a single call +of <CODE>BZ2_bzCompress</CODE>. + +</P> +<P> +Instead, the calling program passes <CODE>BZ_FINISH</CODE> as an action to +<CODE>BZ2_bzCompress</CODE>. This changes the stream's state to FINISHING. Any +remaining input (ie, <CODE>next_in[0 .. avail_in-1]</CODE>) is compressed and +transferred to the output buffer. To do this, <CODE>BZ2_bzCompress</CODE> must be +called repeatedly until all the output has been consumed. At that +point, <CODE>BZ2_bzCompress</CODE> returns <CODE>BZ_STREAM_END</CODE>, and the stream's +state is set back to IDLE. <CODE>BZ2_bzCompressEnd</CODE> should then be +called. + +</P> +<P> +Just to make sure the calling program does not cheat, the library makes +a note of <CODE>avail_in</CODE> at the time of the first call to +<CODE>BZ2_bzCompress</CODE> which has <CODE>BZ_FINISH</CODE> as an action (ie, at the +time the program has announced its intention to not supply any more +input). By comparing this value with that of <CODE>avail_in</CODE> over +subsequent calls to <CODE>BZ2_bzCompress</CODE>, the library can detect any +attempts to slip in more data to compress. Any calls for which this is +detected will return <CODE>BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR</CODE>. This indicates a +programming mistake which should be corrected. + +</P> +<P> +Instead of asking to finish, the calling program may ask +<CODE>BZ2_bzCompress</CODE> to take all the remaining input, compress it and +terminate the current (Burrows-Wheeler) compression block. This could +be useful for error control purposes. The mechanism is analogous to +that for finishing: call <CODE>BZ2_bzCompress</CODE> with an action of +<CODE>BZ_FLUSH</CODE>, remove output data, and persist with the +<CODE>BZ_FLUSH</CODE> action until the value <CODE>BZ_RUN</CODE> is returned. As +with finishing, <CODE>BZ2_bzCompress</CODE> detects any attempt to provide more +input data once the flush has begun. + +</P> +<P> +Once the flush is complete, the stream returns to the normal RUNNING +state. + +</P> +<P> +This all sounds pretty complex, but isn't really. Here's a table +which shows which actions are allowable in each state, what action +will be taken, what the next state is, and what the non-error return +values are. Note that you can't explicitly ask what state the +stream is in, but nor do you need to -- it can be inferred from the +values returned by <CODE>BZ2_bzCompress</CODE>. + +<PRE> +IDLE/<CODE>any</CODE> + Illegal. IDLE state only exists after <CODE>BZ2_bzCompressEnd</CODE> or + before <CODE>BZ2_bzCompressInit</CODE>. + Return value = <CODE>BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR</CODE> + +RUNNING/<CODE>BZ_RUN</CODE> + Compress from <CODE>next_in</CODE> to <CODE>next_out</CODE> as much as possible. + Next state = RUNNING + Return value = <CODE>BZ_RUN_OK</CODE> + +RUNNING/<CODE>BZ_FLUSH</CODE> + Remember current value of <CODE>next_in</CODE>. Compress from <CODE>next_in</CODE> + to <CODE>next_out</CODE> as much as possible, but do not accept any more input. + Next state = FLUSHING + Return value = <CODE>BZ_FLUSH_OK</CODE> + +RUNNING/<CODE>BZ_FINISH</CODE> + Remember current value of <CODE>next_in</CODE>. Compress from <CODE>next_in</CODE> + to <CODE>next_out</CODE> as much as possible, but do not accept any more input. + Next state = FINISHING + Return value = <CODE>BZ_FINISH_OK</CODE> + +FLUSHING/<CODE>BZ_FLUSH</CODE> + Compress from <CODE>next_in</CODE> to <CODE>next_out</CODE> as much as possible, + but do not accept any more input. + If all the existing input has been used up and all compressed + output has been removed + Next state = RUNNING; Return value = <CODE>BZ_RUN_OK</CODE> + else + Next state = FLUSHING; Return value = <CODE>BZ_FLUSH_OK</CODE> + +FLUSHING/other + Illegal. + Return value = <CODE>BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR</CODE> + +FINISHING/<CODE>BZ_FINISH</CODE> + Compress from <CODE>next_in</CODE> to <CODE>next_out</CODE> as much as possible, + but to not accept any more input. + If all the existing input has been used up and all compressed + output has been removed + Next state = IDLE; Return value = <CODE>BZ_STREAM_END</CODE> + else + Next state = FINISHING; Return value = <CODE>BZ_FINISHING</CODE> + +FINISHING/other + Illegal. + Return value = <CODE>BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR</CODE> +</PRE> + +<P> +That still looks complicated? Well, fair enough. The usual sequence +of calls for compressing a load of data is: + +<UL> +<LI>Get started with <CODE>BZ2_bzCompressInit</CODE>. + +<LI>Shovel data in and shlurp out its compressed form using zero or more + +calls of <CODE>BZ2_bzCompress</CODE> with action = <CODE>BZ_RUN</CODE>. +<LI>Finish up. + +Repeatedly call <CODE>BZ2_bzCompress</CODE> with action = <CODE>BZ_FINISH</CODE>, +copying out the compressed output, until <CODE>BZ_STREAM_END</CODE> is returned. +<LI>Close up and go home. Call <CODE>BZ2_bzCompressEnd</CODE>. + +</UL> + +<P> +If the data you want to compress fits into your input buffer all +at once, you can skip the calls of <CODE>BZ2_bzCompress ( ..., BZ_RUN )</CODE> and +just do the <CODE>BZ2_bzCompress ( ..., BZ_FINISH )</CODE> calls. + +</P> +<P> +All required memory is allocated by <CODE>BZ2_bzCompressInit</CODE>. The +compression library can accept any data at all (obviously). So you +shouldn't get any error return values from the <CODE>BZ2_bzCompress</CODE> calls. +If you do, they will be <CODE>BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR</CODE>, and indicate a bug in +your programming. + +</P> +<P> +Trivial other possible return values: + +<PRE> + <CODE>BZ_PARAM_ERROR</CODE> + if <CODE>strm</CODE> is <CODE>NULL</CODE>, or <CODE>strm->s</CODE> is <CODE>NULL</CODE> +</PRE> + + + +<H3><A NAME="SEC21" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC21"><CODE>BZ2_bzCompressEnd</CODE></A></H3> + +<PRE> +int BZ2_bzCompressEnd ( bz_stream *strm ); +</PRE> + +<P> +Releases all memory associated with a compression stream. + +</P> +<P> +Possible return values: + +<PRE> + <CODE>BZ_PARAM_ERROR</CODE> if <CODE>strm</CODE> is <CODE>NULL</CODE> or <CODE>strm->s</CODE> is <CODE>NULL</CODE> + <CODE>BZ_OK</CODE> otherwise +</PRE> + + + +<H3><A NAME="SEC22" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC22"><CODE>BZ2_bzDecompressInit</CODE></A></H3> + +<PRE> +int BZ2_bzDecompressInit ( bz_stream *strm, int verbosity, int small ); +</PRE> + +<P> +Prepares for decompression. As with <CODE>BZ2_bzCompressInit</CODE>, a +<CODE>bz_stream</CODE> record should be allocated and initialised before the +call. Fields <CODE>bzalloc</CODE>, <CODE>bzfree</CODE> and <CODE>opaque</CODE> should be +set if a custom memory allocator is required, or made <CODE>NULL</CODE> for +the normal <CODE>malloc</CODE>/<CODE>free</CODE> routines. Upon return, the internal +state will have been initialised, and <CODE>total_in</CODE> and +<CODE>total_out</CODE> will be zero. + +</P> +<P> +For the meaning of parameter <CODE>verbosity</CODE>, see <CODE>BZ2_bzCompressInit</CODE>. + +</P> +<P> +If <CODE>small</CODE> is nonzero, the library will use an alternative +decompression algorithm which uses less memory but at the cost of +decompressing more slowly (roughly speaking, half the speed, but the +maximum memory requirement drops to around 2300k). See Chapter 2 for +more information on memory management. + +</P> +<P> +Note that the amount of memory needed to decompress +a stream cannot be determined until the stream's header has been read, +so even if <CODE>BZ2_bzDecompressInit</CODE> succeeds, a subsequent +<CODE>BZ2_bzDecompress</CODE> could fail with <CODE>BZ_MEM_ERROR</CODE>. + +</P> +<P> +Possible return values: + +<PRE> + <CODE>BZ_CONFIG_ERROR</CODE> + if the library has been mis-compiled + <CODE>BZ_PARAM_ERROR</CODE> + if <CODE>(small != 0 && small != 1)</CODE> + or <CODE>(verbosity < 0 || verbosity > 4)</CODE> + <CODE>BZ_MEM_ERROR</CODE> + if insufficient memory is available +</PRE> + +<P> +Allowable next actions: + +<PRE> + <CODE>BZ2_bzDecompress</CODE> + if <CODE>BZ_OK</CODE> was returned + no specific action required in case of error +</PRE> + +<P> + + +</P> + + +<H3><A NAME="SEC23" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC23"><CODE>BZ2_bzDecompress</CODE></A></H3> + +<PRE> +int BZ2_bzDecompress ( bz_stream *strm ); +</PRE> + +<P> +Provides more input and/out output buffer space for the library. The +caller maintains input and output buffers, and uses <CODE>BZ2_bzDecompress</CODE> +to transfer data between them. + +</P> +<P> +Before each call to <CODE>BZ2_bzDecompress</CODE>, <CODE>next_in</CODE> +should point at the compressed data, +and <CODE>avail_in</CODE> should indicate how many bytes the library +may read. <CODE>BZ2_bzDecompress</CODE> updates <CODE>next_in</CODE>, <CODE>avail_in</CODE> +and <CODE>total_in</CODE> +to reflect the number of bytes it has read. + +</P> +<P> +Similarly, <CODE>next_out</CODE> should point to a buffer in which the uncompressed +output is to be placed, with <CODE>avail_out</CODE> indicating how much output space +is available. <CODE>BZ2_bzCompress</CODE> updates <CODE>next_out</CODE>, +<CODE>avail_out</CODE> and <CODE>total_out</CODE> to reflect +the number of bytes output. + +</P> +<P> +You may provide and remove as little or as much data as you like on +each call of <CODE>BZ2_bzDecompress</CODE>. +In the limit, it is acceptable to +supply and remove data one byte at a time, although this would be +terribly inefficient. You should always ensure that at least one +byte of output space is available at each call. + +</P> +<P> +Use of <CODE>BZ2_bzDecompress</CODE> is simpler than <CODE>BZ2_bzCompress</CODE>. + +</P> +<P> +You should provide input and remove output as described above, and +repeatedly call <CODE>BZ2_bzDecompress</CODE> until <CODE>BZ_STREAM_END</CODE> is +returned. Appearance of <CODE>BZ_STREAM_END</CODE> denotes that +<CODE>BZ2_bzDecompress</CODE> has detected the logical end of the compressed +stream. <CODE>BZ2_bzDecompress</CODE> will not produce <CODE>BZ_STREAM_END</CODE> until +all output data has been placed into the output buffer, so once +<CODE>BZ_STREAM_END</CODE> appears, you are guaranteed to have available all +the decompressed output, and <CODE>BZ2_bzDecompressEnd</CODE> can safely be +called. + +</P> +<P> +If case of an error return value, you should call <CODE>BZ2_bzDecompressEnd</CODE> +to clean up and release memory. + +</P> +<P> +Possible return values: + +<PRE> + <CODE>BZ_PARAM_ERROR</CODE> + if <CODE>strm</CODE> is <CODE>NULL</CODE> or <CODE>strm->s</CODE> is <CODE>NULL</CODE> + or <CODE>strm->avail_out < 1</CODE> + <CODE>BZ_DATA_ERROR</CODE> + if a data integrity error is detected in the compressed stream + <CODE>BZ_DATA_ERROR_MAGIC</CODE> + if the compressed stream doesn't begin with the right magic bytes + <CODE>BZ_MEM_ERROR</CODE> + if there wasn't enough memory available + <CODE>BZ_STREAM_END</CODE> + if the logical end of the data stream was detected and all + output in has been consumed, eg <CODE>s->avail_out > 0</CODE> + <CODE>BZ_OK</CODE> + otherwise +</PRE> + +<P> +Allowable next actions: + +<PRE> + <CODE>BZ2_bzDecompress</CODE> + if <CODE>BZ_OK</CODE> was returned + <CODE>BZ2_bzDecompressEnd</CODE> + otherwise +</PRE> + + + +<H3><A NAME="SEC24" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC24"><CODE>BZ2_bzDecompressEnd</CODE></A></H3> + +<PRE> +int BZ2_bzDecompressEnd ( bz_stream *strm ); +</PRE> + +<P> +Releases all memory associated with a decompression stream. + +</P> +<P> +Possible return values: + +<PRE> + <CODE>BZ_PARAM_ERROR</CODE> + if <CODE>strm</CODE> is <CODE>NULL</CODE> or <CODE>strm->s</CODE> is <CODE>NULL</CODE> + <CODE>BZ_OK</CODE> + otherwise +</PRE> + +<P> +Allowable next actions: + +<PRE> + None. +</PRE> + + + +<H2><A NAME="SEC25" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC25">High-level interface</A></H2> + +<P> +This interface provides functions for reading and writing +<CODE>bzip2</CODE> format files. First, some general points. + +</P> + +<UL> +<LI>All of the functions take an <CODE>int*</CODE> first argument, + + <CODE>bzerror</CODE>. + After each call, <CODE>bzerror</CODE> should be consulted first to determine + the outcome of the call. If <CODE>bzerror</CODE> is <CODE>BZ_OK</CODE>, + the call completed + successfully, and only then should the return value of the function + (if any) be consulted. If <CODE>bzerror</CODE> is <CODE>BZ_IO_ERROR</CODE>, + there was an error + reading/writing the underlying compressed file, and you should + then consult <CODE>errno</CODE>/<CODE>perror</CODE> to determine the + cause of the difficulty. + <CODE>bzerror</CODE> may also be set to various other values; precise details are + given on a per-function basis below. +<LI>If <CODE>bzerror</CODE> indicates an error + + (ie, anything except <CODE>BZ_OK</CODE> and <CODE>BZ_STREAM_END</CODE>), + you should immediately call <CODE>BZ2_bzReadClose</CODE> (or <CODE>BZ2_bzWriteClose</CODE>, + depending on whether you are attempting to read or to write) + to free up all resources associated + with the stream. Once an error has been indicated, behaviour of all calls + except <CODE>BZ2_bzReadClose</CODE> (<CODE>BZ2_bzWriteClose</CODE>) is undefined. + The implication is that (1) <CODE>bzerror</CODE> should + be checked after each call, and (2) if <CODE>bzerror</CODE> indicates an error, + <CODE>BZ2_bzReadClose</CODE> (<CODE>BZ2_bzWriteClose</CODE>) should then be called to clean up. +<LI>The <CODE>FILE*</CODE> arguments passed to + + <CODE>BZ2_bzReadOpen</CODE>/<CODE>BZ2_bzWriteOpen</CODE> + should be set to binary mode. + Most Unix systems will do this by default, but other platforms, + including Windows and Mac, will not. If you omit this, you may + encounter problems when moving code to new platforms. +<LI>Memory allocation requests are handled by + + <CODE>malloc</CODE>/<CODE>free</CODE>. + At present + there is no facility for user-defined memory allocators in the file I/O + functions (could easily be added, though). +</UL> + + + +<H3><A NAME="SEC26" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC26"><CODE>BZ2_bzReadOpen</CODE></A></H3> + +<PRE> + typedef void BZFILE; + + BZFILE *BZ2_bzReadOpen ( int *bzerror, FILE *f, + int small, int verbosity, + void *unused, int nUnused ); +</PRE> + +<P> +Prepare to read compressed data from file handle <CODE>f</CODE>. <CODE>f</CODE> +should refer to a file which has been opened for reading, and for which +the error indicator (<CODE>ferror(f)</CODE>)is not set. If <CODE>small</CODE> is 1, +the library will try to decompress using less memory, at the expense of +speed. + +</P> +<P> +For reasons explained below, <CODE>BZ2_bzRead</CODE> will decompress the +<CODE>nUnused</CODE> bytes starting at <CODE>unused</CODE>, before starting to read +from the file <CODE>f</CODE>. At most <CODE>BZ_MAX_UNUSED</CODE> bytes may be +supplied like this. If this facility is not required, you should pass +<CODE>NULL</CODE> and <CODE>0</CODE> for <CODE>unused</CODE> and n<CODE>Unused</CODE> +respectively. + +</P> +<P> +For the meaning of parameters <CODE>small</CODE> and <CODE>verbosity</CODE>, +see <CODE>BZ2_bzDecompressInit</CODE>. + +</P> +<P> +The amount of memory needed to decompress a file cannot be determined +until the file's header has been read. So it is possible that +<CODE>BZ2_bzReadOpen</CODE> returns <CODE>BZ_OK</CODE> but a subsequent call of +<CODE>BZ2_bzRead</CODE> will return <CODE>BZ_MEM_ERROR</CODE>. + +</P> +<P> +Possible assignments to <CODE>bzerror</CODE>: + +<PRE> + <CODE>BZ_CONFIG_ERROR</CODE> + if the library has been mis-compiled + <CODE>BZ_PARAM_ERROR</CODE> + if <CODE>f</CODE> is <CODE>NULL</CODE> + or <CODE>small</CODE> is neither <CODE>0</CODE> nor <CODE>1</CODE> + or <CODE>(unused == NULL && nUnused != 0)</CODE> + or <CODE>(unused != NULL && !(0 <= nUnused <= BZ_MAX_UNUSED))</CODE> + <CODE>BZ_IO_ERROR</CODE> + if <CODE>ferror(f)</CODE> is nonzero + <CODE>BZ_MEM_ERROR</CODE> + if insufficient memory is available + <CODE>BZ_OK</CODE> + otherwise. +</PRE> + +<P> +Possible return values: + +<PRE> + Pointer to an abstract <CODE>BZFILE</CODE> + if <CODE>bzerror</CODE> is <CODE>BZ_OK</CODE> + <CODE>NULL</CODE> + otherwise +</PRE> + +<P> +Allowable next actions: + +<PRE> + <CODE>BZ2_bzRead</CODE> + if <CODE>bzerror</CODE> is <CODE>BZ_OK</CODE> + <CODE>BZ2_bzClose</CODE> + otherwise +</PRE> + + + +<H3><A NAME="SEC27" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC27"><CODE>BZ2_bzRead</CODE></A></H3> + +<PRE> + int BZ2_bzRead ( int *bzerror, BZFILE *b, void *buf, int len ); +</PRE> + +<P> +Reads up to <CODE>len</CODE> (uncompressed) bytes from the compressed file +<CODE>b</CODE> into +the buffer <CODE>buf</CODE>. If the read was successful, +<CODE>bzerror</CODE> is set to <CODE>BZ_OK</CODE> +and the number of bytes read is returned. If the logical end-of-stream +was detected, <CODE>bzerror</CODE> will be set to <CODE>BZ_STREAM_END</CODE>, +and the number +of bytes read is returned. All other <CODE>bzerror</CODE> values denote an error. + +</P> +<P> +<CODE>BZ2_bzRead</CODE> will supply <CODE>len</CODE> bytes, +unless the logical stream end is detected +or an error occurs. Because of this, it is possible to detect the +stream end by observing when the number of bytes returned is +less than the number +requested. Nevertheless, this is regarded as inadvisable; you should +instead check <CODE>bzerror</CODE> after every call and watch out for +<CODE>BZ_STREAM_END</CODE>. + +</P> +<P> +Internally, <CODE>BZ2_bzRead</CODE> copies data from the compressed file in chunks +of size <CODE>BZ_MAX_UNUSED</CODE> bytes +before decompressing it. If the file contains more bytes than strictly +needed to reach the logical end-of-stream, <CODE>BZ2_bzRead</CODE> will almost certainly +read some of the trailing data before signalling <CODE>BZ_SEQUENCE_END</CODE>. +To collect the read but unused data once <CODE>BZ_SEQUENCE_END</CODE> has +appeared, call <CODE>BZ2_bzReadGetUnused</CODE> immediately before <CODE>BZ2_bzReadClose</CODE>. + +</P> +<P> +Possible assignments to <CODE>bzerror</CODE>: + +<PRE> + <CODE>BZ_PARAM_ERROR</CODE> + if <CODE>b</CODE> is <CODE>NULL</CODE> or <CODE>buf</CODE> is <CODE>NULL</CODE> or <CODE>len < 0</CODE> + <CODE>BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR</CODE> + if <CODE>b</CODE> was opened with <CODE>BZ2_bzWriteOpen</CODE> + <CODE>BZ_IO_ERROR</CODE> + if there is an error reading from the compressed file + <CODE>BZ_UNEXPECTED_EOF</CODE> + if the compressed file ended before the logical end-of-stream was detected + <CODE>BZ_DATA_ERROR</CODE> + if a data integrity error was detected in the compressed stream + <CODE>BZ_DATA_ERROR_MAGIC</CODE> + if the stream does not begin with the requisite header bytes (ie, is not + a <CODE>bzip2</CODE> data file). This is really a special case of <CODE>BZ_DATA_ERROR</CODE>. + <CODE>BZ_MEM_ERROR</CODE> + if insufficient memory was available + <CODE>BZ_STREAM_END</CODE> + if the logical end of stream was detected. + <CODE>BZ_OK</CODE> + otherwise. +</PRE> + +<P> +Possible return values: + +<PRE> + number of bytes read + if <CODE>bzerror</CODE> is <CODE>BZ_OK</CODE> or <CODE>BZ_STREAM_END</CODE> + undefined + otherwise +</PRE> + +<P> +Allowable next actions: + +<PRE> + collect data from <CODE>buf</CODE>, then <CODE>BZ2_bzRead</CODE> or <CODE>BZ2_bzReadClose</CODE> + if <CODE>bzerror</CODE> is <CODE>BZ_OK</CODE> + collect data from <CODE>buf</CODE>, then <CODE>BZ2_bzReadClose</CODE> or <CODE>BZ2_bzReadGetUnused</CODE> + if <CODE>bzerror</CODE> is <CODE>BZ_SEQUENCE_END</CODE> + <CODE>BZ2_bzReadClose</CODE> + otherwise +</PRE> + + + +<H3><A NAME="SEC28" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC28"><CODE>BZ2_bzReadGetUnused</CODE></A></H3> + +<PRE> + void BZ2_bzReadGetUnused ( int* bzerror, BZFILE *b, + void** unused, int* nUnused ); +</PRE> + +<P> +Returns data which was read from the compressed file but was not needed +to get to the logical end-of-stream. <CODE>*unused</CODE> is set to the address +of the data, and <CODE>*nUnused</CODE> to the number of bytes. <CODE>*nUnused</CODE> will +be set to a value between <CODE>0</CODE> and <CODE>BZ_MAX_UNUSED</CODE> inclusive. + +</P> +<P> +This function may only be called once <CODE>BZ2_bzRead</CODE> has signalled +<CODE>BZ_STREAM_END</CODE> but before <CODE>BZ2_bzReadClose</CODE>. + +</P> +<P> +Possible assignments to <CODE>bzerror</CODE>: + +<PRE> + <CODE>BZ_PARAM_ERROR</CODE> + if <CODE>b</CODE> is <CODE>NULL</CODE> + or <CODE>unused</CODE> is <CODE>NULL</CODE> or <CODE>nUnused</CODE> is <CODE>NULL</CODE> + <CODE>BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR</CODE> + if <CODE>BZ_STREAM_END</CODE> has not been signalled + or if <CODE>b</CODE> was opened with <CODE>BZ2_bzWriteOpen</CODE> + <CODE>BZ_OK</CODE> + otherwise +</PRE> + +<P> +Allowable next actions: + +<PRE> + <CODE>BZ2_bzReadClose</CODE> +</PRE> + + + +<H3><A NAME="SEC29" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC29"><CODE>BZ2_bzReadClose</CODE></A></H3> + +<PRE> + void BZ2_bzReadClose ( int *bzerror, BZFILE *b ); +</PRE> + +<P> +Releases all memory pertaining to the compressed file <CODE>b</CODE>. +<CODE>BZ2_bzReadClose</CODE> does not call <CODE>fclose</CODE> on the underlying file +handle, so you should do that yourself if appropriate. +<CODE>BZ2_bzReadClose</CODE> should be called to clean up after all error +situations. + +</P> +<P> +Possible assignments to <CODE>bzerror</CODE>: + +<PRE> + <CODE>BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR</CODE> + if <CODE>b</CODE> was opened with <CODE>BZ2_bzOpenWrite</CODE> + <CODE>BZ_OK</CODE> + otherwise +</PRE> + +<P> +Allowable next actions: + +<PRE> + none +</PRE> + + + +<H3><A NAME="SEC30" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC30"><CODE>BZ2_bzWriteOpen</CODE></A></H3> + +<PRE> + BZFILE *BZ2_bzWriteOpen ( int *bzerror, FILE *f, + int blockSize100k, int verbosity, + int workFactor ); +</PRE> + +<P> +Prepare to write compressed data to file handle <CODE>f</CODE>. +<CODE>f</CODE> should refer to +a file which has been opened for writing, and for which the error +indicator (<CODE>ferror(f)</CODE>)is not set. + +</P> +<P> +For the meaning of parameters <CODE>blockSize100k</CODE>, +<CODE>verbosity</CODE> and <CODE>workFactor</CODE>, see +<BR> <CODE>BZ2_bzCompressInit</CODE>. + +</P> +<P> +All required memory is allocated at this stage, so if the call +completes successfully, <CODE>BZ_MEM_ERROR</CODE> cannot be signalled by a +subsequent call to <CODE>BZ2_bzWrite</CODE>. + +</P> +<P> +Possible assignments to <CODE>bzerror</CODE>: + +<PRE> + <CODE>BZ_CONFIG_ERROR</CODE> + if the library has been mis-compiled + <CODE>BZ_PARAM_ERROR</CODE> + if <CODE>f</CODE> is <CODE>NULL</CODE> + or <CODE>blockSize100k < 1</CODE> or <CODE>blockSize100k > 9</CODE> + <CODE>BZ_IO_ERROR</CODE> + if <CODE>ferror(f)</CODE> is nonzero + <CODE>BZ_MEM_ERROR</CODE> + if insufficient memory is available + <CODE>BZ_OK</CODE> + otherwise +</PRE> + +<P> +Possible return values: + +<PRE> + Pointer to an abstract <CODE>BZFILE</CODE> + if <CODE>bzerror</CODE> is <CODE>BZ_OK</CODE> + <CODE>NULL</CODE> + otherwise +</PRE> + +<P> +Allowable next actions: + +<PRE> + <CODE>BZ2_bzWrite</CODE> + if <CODE>bzerror</CODE> is <CODE>BZ_OK</CODE> + (you could go directly to <CODE>BZ2_bzWriteClose</CODE>, but this would be pretty pointless) + <CODE>BZ2_bzWriteClose</CODE> + otherwise +</PRE> + + + +<H3><A NAME="SEC31" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC31"><CODE>BZ2_bzWrite</CODE></A></H3> + +<PRE> + void BZ2_bzWrite ( int *bzerror, BZFILE *b, void *buf, int len ); +</PRE> + +<P> +Absorbs <CODE>len</CODE> bytes from the buffer <CODE>buf</CODE>, eventually to be +compressed and written to the file. + +</P> +<P> +Possible assignments to <CODE>bzerror</CODE>: + +<PRE> + <CODE>BZ_PARAM_ERROR</CODE> + if <CODE>b</CODE> is <CODE>NULL</CODE> or <CODE>buf</CODE> is <CODE>NULL</CODE> or <CODE>len < 0</CODE> + <CODE>BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR</CODE> + if b was opened with <CODE>BZ2_bzReadOpen</CODE> + <CODE>BZ_IO_ERROR</CODE> + if there is an error writing the compressed file. + <CODE>BZ_OK</CODE> + otherwise +</PRE> + + + +<H3><A NAME="SEC32" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC32"><CODE>BZ2_bzWriteClose</CODE></A></H3> + +<PRE> + void BZ2_bzWriteClose ( int *bzerror, BZFILE* f, + int abandon, + unsigned int* nbytes_in, + unsigned int* nbytes_out ); + + void BZ2_bzWriteClose64 ( int *bzerror, BZFILE* f, + int abandon, + unsigned int* nbytes_in_lo32, + unsigned int* nbytes_in_hi32, + unsigned int* nbytes_out_lo32, + unsigned int* nbytes_out_hi32 ); +</PRE> + +<P> +Compresses and flushes to the compressed file all data so far supplied +by <CODE>BZ2_bzWrite</CODE>. The logical end-of-stream markers are also written, so +subsequent calls to <CODE>BZ2_bzWrite</CODE> are illegal. All memory associated +with the compressed file <CODE>b</CODE> is released. +<CODE>fflush</CODE> is called on the +compressed file, but it is not <CODE>fclose</CODE>'d. + +</P> +<P> +If <CODE>BZ2_bzWriteClose</CODE> is called to clean up after an error, the only +action is to release the memory. The library records the error codes +issued by previous calls, so this situation will be detected +automatically. There is no attempt to complete the compression +operation, nor to <CODE>fflush</CODE> the compressed file. You can force this +behaviour to happen even in the case of no error, by passing a nonzero +value to <CODE>abandon</CODE>. + +</P> +<P> +If <CODE>nbytes_in</CODE> is non-null, <CODE>*nbytes_in</CODE> will be set to be the +total volume of uncompressed data handled. Similarly, <CODE>nbytes_out</CODE> +will be set to the total volume of compressed data written. For +compatibility with older versions of the library, <CODE>BZ2_bzWriteClose</CODE> +only yields the lower 32 bits of these counts. Use +<CODE>BZ2_bzWriteClose64</CODE> if you want the full 64 bit counts. These +two functions are otherwise absolutely identical. + +</P> + +<P> +Possible assignments to <CODE>bzerror</CODE>: + +<PRE> + <CODE>BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR</CODE> + if <CODE>b</CODE> was opened with <CODE>BZ2_bzReadOpen</CODE> + <CODE>BZ_IO_ERROR</CODE> + if there is an error writing the compressed file + <CODE>BZ_OK</CODE> + otherwise +</PRE> + + + +<H3><A NAME="SEC33" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC33">Handling embedded compressed data streams</A></H3> + +<P> +The high-level library facilitates use of +<CODE>bzip2</CODE> data streams which form some part of a surrounding, larger +data stream. + +<UL> +<LI>For writing, the library takes an open file handle, writes + +compressed data to it, <CODE>fflush</CODE>es it but does not <CODE>fclose</CODE> it. +The calling application can write its own data before and after the +compressed data stream, using that same file handle. +<LI>Reading is more complex, and the facilities are not as general + +as they could be since generality is hard to reconcile with efficiency. +<CODE>BZ2_bzRead</CODE> reads from the compressed file in blocks of size +<CODE>BZ_MAX_UNUSED</CODE> bytes, and in doing so probably will overshoot +the logical end of compressed stream. +To recover this data once decompression has +ended, call <CODE>BZ2_bzReadGetUnused</CODE> after the last call of <CODE>BZ2_bzRead</CODE> +(the one returning <CODE>BZ_STREAM_END</CODE>) but before calling +<CODE>BZ2_bzReadClose</CODE>. +</UL> + +<P> +This mechanism makes it easy to decompress multiple <CODE>bzip2</CODE> +streams placed end-to-end. As the end of one stream, when <CODE>BZ2_bzRead</CODE> +returns <CODE>BZ_STREAM_END</CODE>, call <CODE>BZ2_bzReadGetUnused</CODE> to collect the +unused data (copy it into your own buffer somewhere). +That data forms the start of the next compressed stream. +To start uncompressing that next stream, call <CODE>BZ2_bzReadOpen</CODE> again, +feeding in the unused data via the <CODE>unused</CODE>/<CODE>nUnused</CODE> +parameters. +Keep doing this until <CODE>BZ_STREAM_END</CODE> return coincides with the +physical end of file (<CODE>feof(f)</CODE>). In this situation +<CODE>BZ2_bzReadGetUnused</CODE> +will of course return no data. + +</P> +<P> +This should give some feel for how the high-level interface can be used. +If you require extra flexibility, you'll have to bite the bullet and get +to grips with the low-level interface. + +</P> + + +<H3><A NAME="SEC34" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC34">Standard file-reading/writing code</A></H3> +<P> +Here's how you'd write data to a compressed file: + +<PRE> +FILE* f; +BZFILE* b; +int nBuf; +char buf[ /* whatever size you like */ ]; +int bzerror; +int nWritten; + +f = fopen ( "myfile.bz2", "w" ); +if (!f) { + /* handle error */ +} +b = BZ2_bzWriteOpen ( &bzerror, f, 9 ); +if (bzerror != BZ_OK) { + BZ2_bzWriteClose ( b ); + /* handle error */ +} + +while ( /* condition */ ) { + /* get data to write into buf, and set nBuf appropriately */ + nWritten = BZ2_bzWrite ( &bzerror, b, buf, nBuf ); + if (bzerror == BZ_IO_ERROR) { + BZ2_bzWriteClose ( &bzerror, b ); + /* handle error */ + } +} + +BZ2_bzWriteClose ( &bzerror, b ); +if (bzerror == BZ_IO_ERROR) { + /* handle error */ +} +</PRE> + +<P> +And to read from a compressed file: + +<PRE> +FILE* f; +BZFILE* b; +int nBuf; +char buf[ /* whatever size you like */ ]; +int bzerror; +int nWritten; + +f = fopen ( "myfile.bz2", "r" ); +if (!f) { + /* handle error */ +} +b = BZ2_bzReadOpen ( &bzerror, f, 0, NULL, 0 ); +if (bzerror != BZ_OK) { + BZ2_bzReadClose ( &bzerror, b ); + /* handle error */ +} + +bzerror = BZ_OK; +while (bzerror == BZ_OK && /* arbitrary other conditions */) { + nBuf = BZ2_bzRead ( &bzerror, b, buf, /* size of buf */ ); + if (bzerror == BZ_OK) { + /* do something with buf[0 .. nBuf-1] */ + } +} +if (bzerror != BZ_STREAM_END) { + BZ2_bzReadClose ( &bzerror, b ); + /* handle error */ +} else { + BZ2_bzReadClose ( &bzerror ); +} +</PRE> + + + +<H2><A NAME="SEC35" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC35">Utility functions</A></H2> + + +<H3><A NAME="SEC36" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC36"><CODE>BZ2_bzBuffToBuffCompress</CODE></A></H3> + +<PRE> + int BZ2_bzBuffToBuffCompress( char* dest, + unsigned int* destLen, + char* source, + unsigned int sourceLen, + int blockSize100k, + int verbosity, + int workFactor ); +</PRE> + +<P> +Attempts to compress the data in <CODE>source[0 .. sourceLen-1]</CODE> +into the destination buffer, <CODE>dest[0 .. *destLen-1]</CODE>. +If the destination buffer is big enough, <CODE>*destLen</CODE> is +set to the size of the compressed data, and <CODE>BZ_OK</CODE> is +returned. If the compressed data won't fit, <CODE>*destLen</CODE> +is unchanged, and <CODE>BZ_OUTBUFF_FULL</CODE> is returned. + +</P> +<P> +Compression in this manner is a one-shot event, done with a single call +to this function. The resulting compressed data is a complete +<CODE>bzip2</CODE> format data stream. There is no mechanism for making +additional calls to provide extra input data. If you want that kind of +mechanism, use the low-level interface. + +</P> +<P> +For the meaning of parameters <CODE>blockSize100k</CODE>, <CODE>verbosity</CODE> +and <CODE>workFactor</CODE>, <BR> see <CODE>BZ2_bzCompressInit</CODE>. + +</P> +<P> +To guarantee that the compressed data will fit in its buffer, allocate +an output buffer of size 1% larger than the uncompressed data, plus +six hundred extra bytes. + +</P> +<P> +<CODE>BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompress</CODE> will not write data at or +beyond <CODE>dest[*destLen]</CODE>, even in case of buffer overflow. + +</P> +<P> +Possible return values: + +<PRE> + <CODE>BZ_CONFIG_ERROR</CODE> + if the library has been mis-compiled + <CODE>BZ_PARAM_ERROR</CODE> + if <CODE>dest</CODE> is <CODE>NULL</CODE> or <CODE>destLen</CODE> is <CODE>NULL</CODE> + or <CODE>blockSize100k < 1</CODE> or <CODE>blockSize100k > 9</CODE> + or <CODE>verbosity < 0</CODE> or <CODE>verbosity > 4</CODE> + or <CODE>workFactor < 0</CODE> or <CODE>workFactor > 250</CODE> + <CODE>BZ_MEM_ERROR</CODE> + if insufficient memory is available + <CODE>BZ_OUTBUFF_FULL</CODE> + if the size of the compressed data exceeds <CODE>*destLen</CODE> + <CODE>BZ_OK</CODE> + otherwise +</PRE> + + + +<H3><A NAME="SEC37" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC37"><CODE>BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompress</CODE></A></H3> + +<PRE> + int BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompress ( char* dest, + unsigned int* destLen, + char* source, + unsigned int sourceLen, + int small, + int verbosity ); +</PRE> + +<P> +Attempts to decompress the data in <CODE>source[0 .. sourceLen-1]</CODE> +into the destination buffer, <CODE>dest[0 .. *destLen-1]</CODE>. +If the destination buffer is big enough, <CODE>*destLen</CODE> is +set to the size of the uncompressed data, and <CODE>BZ_OK</CODE> is +returned. If the compressed data won't fit, <CODE>*destLen</CODE> +is unchanged, and <CODE>BZ_OUTBUFF_FULL</CODE> is returned. + +</P> +<P> +<CODE>source</CODE> is assumed to hold a complete <CODE>bzip2</CODE> format +data stream. <BR> <CODE>BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompress</CODE> tries to decompress +the entirety of the stream into the output buffer. + +</P> +<P> +For the meaning of parameters <CODE>small</CODE> and <CODE>verbosity</CODE>, +see <CODE>BZ2_bzDecompressInit</CODE>. + +</P> +<P> +Because the compression ratio of the compressed data cannot be known in +advance, there is no easy way to guarantee that the output buffer will +be big enough. You may of course make arrangements in your code to +record the size of the uncompressed data, but such a mechanism is beyond +the scope of this library. + +</P> +<P> +<CODE>BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompress</CODE> will not write data at or +beyond <CODE>dest[*destLen]</CODE>, even in case of buffer overflow. + +</P> +<P> +Possible return values: + +<PRE> + <CODE>BZ_CONFIG_ERROR</CODE> + if the library has been mis-compiled + <CODE>BZ_PARAM_ERROR</CODE> + if <CODE>dest</CODE> is <CODE>NULL</CODE> or <CODE>destLen</CODE> is <CODE>NULL</CODE> + or <CODE>small != 0 && small != 1</CODE> + or <CODE>verbosity < 0</CODE> or <CODE>verbosity > 4</CODE> + <CODE>BZ_MEM_ERROR</CODE> + if insufficient memory is available + <CODE>BZ_OUTBUFF_FULL</CODE> + if the size of the compressed data exceeds <CODE>*destLen</CODE> + <CODE>BZ_DATA_ERROR</CODE> + if a data integrity error was detected in the compressed data + <CODE>BZ_DATA_ERROR_MAGIC</CODE> + if the compressed data doesn't begin with the right magic bytes + <CODE>BZ_UNEXPECTED_EOF</CODE> + if the compressed data ends unexpectedly + <CODE>BZ_OK</CODE> + otherwise +</PRE> + + + +<H2><A NAME="SEC38" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC38"><CODE>zlib</CODE> compatibility functions</A></H2> +<P> +Yoshioka Tsuneo has contributed some functions to +give better <CODE>zlib</CODE> compatibility. These functions are +<CODE>BZ2_bzopen</CODE>, <CODE>BZ2_bzread</CODE>, <CODE>BZ2_bzwrite</CODE>, <CODE>BZ2_bzflush</CODE>, +<CODE>BZ2_bzclose</CODE>, +<CODE>BZ2_bzerror</CODE> and <CODE>BZ2_bzlibVersion</CODE>. +These functions are not (yet) officially part of +the library. If they break, you get to keep all the pieces. +Nevertheless, I think they work ok. + +<PRE> +typedef void BZFILE; + +const char * BZ2_bzlibVersion ( void ); +</PRE> + +<P> +Returns a string indicating the library version. + +<PRE> +BZFILE * BZ2_bzopen ( const char *path, const char *mode ); +BZFILE * BZ2_bzdopen ( int fd, const char *mode ); +</PRE> + +<P> +Opens a <CODE>.bz2</CODE> file for reading or writing, using either its name +or a pre-existing file descriptor. +Analogous to <CODE>fopen</CODE> and <CODE>fdopen</CODE>. + +<PRE> +int BZ2_bzread ( BZFILE* b, void* buf, int len ); +int BZ2_bzwrite ( BZFILE* b, void* buf, int len ); +</PRE> + +<P> +Reads/writes data from/to a previously opened <CODE>BZFILE</CODE>. +Analogous to <CODE>fread</CODE> and <CODE>fwrite</CODE>. + +<PRE> +int BZ2_bzflush ( BZFILE* b ); +void BZ2_bzclose ( BZFILE* b ); +</PRE> + +<P> +Flushes/closes a <CODE>BZFILE</CODE>. <CODE>BZ2_bzflush</CODE> doesn't actually do +anything. Analogous to <CODE>fflush</CODE> and <CODE>fclose</CODE>. + +</P> + +<PRE> +const char * BZ2_bzerror ( BZFILE *b, int *errnum ) +</PRE> + +<P> +Returns a string describing the more recent error status of +<CODE>b</CODE>, and also sets <CODE>*errnum</CODE> to its numerical value. + +</P> + + + +<H2><A NAME="SEC39" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC39">Using the library in a <CODE>stdio</CODE>-free environment</A></H2> + + + +<H3><A NAME="SEC40" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC40">Getting rid of <CODE>stdio</CODE></A></H3> + +<P> +In a deeply embedded application, you might want to use just +the memory-to-memory functions. You can do this conveniently +by compiling the library with preprocessor symbol <CODE>BZ_NO_STDIO</CODE> +defined. Doing this gives you a library containing only the following +eight functions: + +</P> +<P> +<CODE>BZ2_bzCompressInit</CODE>, <CODE>BZ2_bzCompress</CODE>, <CODE>BZ2_bzCompressEnd</CODE> <BR> +<CODE>BZ2_bzDecompressInit</CODE>, <CODE>BZ2_bzDecompress</CODE>, <CODE>BZ2_bzDecompressEnd</CODE> <BR> +<CODE>BZ2_bzBuffToBuffCompress</CODE>, <CODE>BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompress</CODE> + +</P> +<P> +When compiled like this, all functions will ignore <CODE>verbosity</CODE> +settings. + +</P> + + +<H3><A NAME="SEC41" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC41">Critical error handling</A></H3> +<P> +<CODE>libbzip2</CODE> contains a number of internal assertion checks which +should, needless to say, never be activated. Nevertheless, if an +assertion should fail, behaviour depends on whether or not the library +was compiled with <CODE>BZ_NO_STDIO</CODE> set. + +</P> +<P> +For a normal compile, an assertion failure yields the message + +<PRE> + bzip2/libbzip2: internal error number N. + This is a bug in bzip2/libbzip2, 1.0 of 21-Mar-2000. + Please report it to me at: jseward@acm.org. If this happened + when you were using some program which uses libbzip2 as a + component, you should also report this bug to the author(s) + of that program. Please make an effort to report this bug; + timely and accurate bug reports eventually lead to higher + quality software. Thanks. Julian Seward, 21 March 2000. +</PRE> + +<P> +where <CODE>N</CODE> is some error code number. <CODE>exit(3)</CODE> +is then called. + +</P> +<P> +For a <CODE>stdio</CODE>-free library, assertion failures result +in a call to a function declared as: + +<PRE> + extern void bz_internal_error ( int errcode ); +</PRE> + +<P> +The relevant code is passed as a parameter. You should supply +such a function. + +</P> +<P> +In either case, once an assertion failure has occurred, any +<CODE>bz_stream</CODE> records involved can be regarded as invalid. +You should not attempt to resume normal operation with them. + +</P> +<P> +You may, of course, change critical error handling to suit +your needs. As I said above, critical errors indicate bugs +in the library and should not occur. All "normal" error +situations are indicated via error return codes from functions, +and can be recovered from. + +</P> + + + +<H2><A NAME="SEC42" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC42">Making a Windows DLL</A></H2> +<P> +Everything related to Windows has been contributed by Yoshioka Tsuneo +<BR> (<CODE>QWF00133@niftyserve.or.jp</CODE> / +<CODE>tsuneo-y@is.aist-nara.ac.jp</CODE>), so you should send your queries to +him (but perhaps Cc: me, <CODE>jseward@acm.org</CODE>). + +</P> +<P> +My vague understanding of what to do is: using Visual C++ 5.0, +open the project file <CODE>libbz2.dsp</CODE>, and build. That's all. + +</P> +<P> +If you can't +open the project file for some reason, make a new one, naming these files: +<CODE>blocksort.c</CODE>, <CODE>bzlib.c</CODE>, <CODE>compress.c</CODE>, +<CODE>crctable.c</CODE>, <CODE>decompress.c</CODE>, <CODE>huffman.c</CODE>, <BR> +<CODE>randtable.c</CODE> and <CODE>libbz2.def</CODE>. You will also need +to name the header files <CODE>bzlib.h</CODE> and <CODE>bzlib_private.h</CODE>. + +</P> +<P> +If you don't use VC++, you may need to define the proprocessor symbol +<CODE>_WIN32</CODE>. + +</P> +<P> +Finally, <CODE>dlltest.c</CODE> is a sample program using the DLL. It has a +project file, <CODE>dlltest.dsp</CODE>. + +</P> +<P> +If you just want a makefile for Visual C, have a look at +<CODE>makefile.msc</CODE>. + +</P> +<P> +Be aware that if you compile <CODE>bzip2</CODE> itself on Win32, you must set +<CODE>BZ_UNIX</CODE> to 0 and <CODE>BZ_LCCWIN32</CODE> to 1, in the file +<CODE>bzip2.c</CODE>, before compiling. Otherwise the resulting binary won't +work correctly. + +</P> +<P> +I haven't tried any of this stuff myself, but it all looks plausible. + +</P> + +<P><HR><P> +<p>Go to the <A HREF="manual_1.html">first</A>, <A HREF="manual_2.html">previous</A>, <A HREF="manual_4.html">next</A>, <A HREF="manual_4.html">last</A> section, <A HREF="manual_toc.html">table of contents</A>. +</BODY> +</HTML> diff --git a/bzip2/manual_4.html b/bzip2/manual_4.html new file mode 100644 index 000000000..9ab7fb24f --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/manual_4.html @@ -0,0 +1,528 @@ +<HTML> +<HEAD> +<!-- This HTML file has been created by texi2html 1.54 + from manual.texi on 23 March 2000 --> + +<TITLE>bzip2 and libbzip2 - Miscellanea</TITLE> +<link href="manual_3.html" rel=Previous> +<link href="manual_toc.html" rel=ToC> + +</HEAD> +<BODY> +<p>Go to the <A HREF="manual_1.html">first</A>, <A HREF="manual_3.html">previous</A>, next, last section, <A HREF="manual_toc.html">table of contents</A>. +<P><HR><P> + + +<H1><A NAME="SEC43" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC43">Miscellanea</A></H1> + +<P> +These are just some random thoughts of mine. Your mileage may +vary. + +</P> + + +<H2><A NAME="SEC44" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC44">Limitations of the compressed file format</A></H2> +<P> +<CODE>bzip2-1.0</CODE>, <CODE>0.9.5</CODE> and <CODE>0.9.0</CODE> +use exactly the same file format as the previous +version, <CODE>bzip2-0.1</CODE>. This decision was made in the interests of +stability. Creating yet another incompatible compressed file format +would create further confusion and disruption for users. + +</P> +<P> +Nevertheless, this is not a painless decision. Development +work since the release of <CODE>bzip2-0.1</CODE> in August 1997 +has shown complexities in the file format which slow down +decompression and, in retrospect, are unnecessary. These are: + +<UL> +<LI>The run-length encoder, which is the first of the + + compression transformations, is entirely irrelevant. + The original purpose was to protect the sorting algorithm + from the very worst case input: a string of repeated + symbols. But algorithm steps Q6a and Q6b in the original + Burrows-Wheeler technical report (SRC-124) show how + repeats can be handled without difficulty in block + sorting. +<LI>The randomisation mechanism doesn't really need to be + + there. Udi Manber and Gene Myers published a suffix + array construction algorithm a few years back, which + can be employed to sort any block, no matter how + repetitive, in O(N log N) time. Subsequent work by + Kunihiko Sadakane has produced a derivative O(N (log N)^2) + algorithm which usually outperforms the Manber-Myers + algorithm. + + I could have changed to Sadakane's algorithm, but I find + it to be slower than <CODE>bzip2</CODE>'s existing algorithm for + most inputs, and the randomisation mechanism protects + adequately against bad cases. I didn't think it was + a good tradeoff to make. Partly this is due to the fact + that I was not flooded with email complaints about + <CODE>bzip2-0.1</CODE>'s performance on repetitive data, so + perhaps it isn't a problem for real inputs. + + Probably the best long-term solution, + and the one I have incorporated into 0.9.5 and above, + is to use the existing sorting + algorithm initially, and fall back to a O(N (log N)^2) + algorithm if the standard algorithm gets into difficulties. +<LI>The compressed file format was never designed to be + + handled by a library, and I have had to jump though + some hoops to produce an efficient implementation of + decompression. It's a bit hairy. Try passing + <CODE>decompress.c</CODE> through the C preprocessor + and you'll see what I mean. Much of this complexity + could have been avoided if the compressed size of + each block of data was recorded in the data stream. +<LI>An Adler-32 checksum, rather than a CRC32 checksum, + + would be faster to compute. +</UL> + +<P> +It would be fair to say that the <CODE>bzip2</CODE> format was frozen +before I properly and fully understood the performance +consequences of doing so. + +</P> +<P> +Improvements which I was able to incorporate into +0.9.0, despite using the same file format, are: + +<UL> +<LI>Single array implementation of the inverse BWT. This + + significantly speeds up decompression, presumably + because it reduces the number of cache misses. +<LI>Faster inverse MTF transform for large MTF values. The + + new implementation is based on the notion of sliding blocks + of values. +<LI><CODE>bzip2-0.9.0</CODE> now reads and writes files with <CODE>fread</CODE> + + and <CODE>fwrite</CODE>; version 0.1 used <CODE>putc</CODE> and <CODE>getc</CODE>. + Duh! Well, you live and learn. + +</UL> + +<P> +Further ahead, it would be nice +to be able to do random access into files. This will +require some careful design of compressed file formats. + +</P> + + + +<H2><A NAME="SEC45" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC45">Portability issues</A></H2> +<P> +After some consideration, I have decided not to use +GNU <CODE>autoconf</CODE> to configure 0.9.5 or 1.0. + +</P> +<P> +<CODE>autoconf</CODE>, admirable and wonderful though it is, +mainly assists with portability problems between Unix-like +platforms. But <CODE>bzip2</CODE> doesn't have much in the way +of portability problems on Unix; most of the difficulties appear +when porting to the Mac, or to Microsoft's operating systems. +<CODE>autoconf</CODE> doesn't help in those cases, and brings in a +whole load of new complexity. + +</P> +<P> +Most people should be able to compile the library and program +under Unix straight out-of-the-box, so to speak, especially +if you have a version of GNU C available. + +</P> +<P> +There are a couple of <CODE>__inline__</CODE> directives in the code. GNU C +(<CODE>gcc</CODE>) should be able to handle them. If you're not using +GNU C, your C compiler shouldn't see them at all. +If your compiler does, for some reason, see them and doesn't +like them, just <CODE>#define</CODE> <CODE>__inline__</CODE> to be <CODE>/* */</CODE>. One +easy way to do this is to compile with the flag <CODE>-D__inline__=</CODE>, +which should be understood by most Unix compilers. + +</P> +<P> +If you still have difficulties, try compiling with the macro +<CODE>BZ_STRICT_ANSI</CODE> defined. This should enable you to build the +library in a strictly ANSI compliant environment. Building the program +itself like this is dangerous and not supported, since you remove +<CODE>bzip2</CODE>'s checks against compressing directories, symbolic links, +devices, and other not-really-a-file entities. This could cause +filesystem corruption! + +</P> +<P> +One other thing: if you create a <CODE>bzip2</CODE> binary for public +distribution, please try and link it statically (<CODE>gcc -s</CODE>). This +avoids all sorts of library-version issues that others may encounter +later on. + +</P> +<P> +If you build <CODE>bzip2</CODE> on Win32, you must set <CODE>BZ_UNIX</CODE> to 0 and +<CODE>BZ_LCCWIN32</CODE> to 1, in the file <CODE>bzip2.c</CODE>, before compiling. +Otherwise the resulting binary won't work correctly. + +</P> + + + +<H2><A NAME="SEC46" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC46">Reporting bugs</A></H2> +<P> +I tried pretty hard to make sure <CODE>bzip2</CODE> is +bug free, both by design and by testing. Hopefully +you'll never need to read this section for real. + +</P> +<P> +Nevertheless, if <CODE>bzip2</CODE> dies with a segmentation +fault, a bus error or an internal assertion failure, it +will ask you to email me a bug report. Experience with +version 0.1 shows that almost all these problems can +be traced to either compiler bugs or hardware problems. + +<UL> +<LI> + +Recompile the program with no optimisation, and see if it +works. And/or try a different compiler. +I heard all sorts of stories about various flavours +of GNU C (and other compilers) generating bad code for +<CODE>bzip2</CODE>, and I've run across two such examples myself. + +2.7.X versions of GNU C are known to generate bad code from +time to time, at high optimisation levels. +If you get problems, try using the flags +<CODE>-O2</CODE> <CODE>-fomit-frame-pointer</CODE> <CODE>-fno-strength-reduce</CODE>. +You should specifically <EM>not</EM> use <CODE>-funroll-loops</CODE>. + +You may notice that the Makefile runs six tests as part of +the build process. If the program passes all of these, it's +a pretty good (but not 100%) indication that the compiler has +done its job correctly. +<LI> + +If <CODE>bzip2</CODE> crashes randomly, and the crashes are not +repeatable, you may have a flaky memory subsystem. <CODE>bzip2</CODE> +really hammers your memory hierarchy, and if it's a bit marginal, +you may get these problems. Ditto if your disk or I/O subsystem +is slowly failing. Yup, this really does happen. + +Try using a different machine of the same type, and see if +you can repeat the problem. +<LI>This isn't really a bug, but ... If <CODE>bzip2</CODE> tells + +you your file is corrupted on decompression, and you +obtained the file via FTP, there is a possibility that you +forgot to tell FTP to do a binary mode transfer. That absolutely +will cause the file to be non-decompressible. You'll have to transfer +it again. +</UL> + +<P> +If you've incorporated <CODE>libbzip2</CODE> into your own program +and are getting problems, please, please, please, check that the +parameters you are passing in calls to the library, are +correct, and in accordance with what the documentation says +is allowable. I have tried to make the library robust against +such problems, but I'm sure I haven't succeeded. + +</P> +<P> +Finally, if the above comments don't help, you'll have to send +me a bug report. Now, it's just amazing how many people will +send me a bug report saying something like + +<PRE> + bzip2 crashed with segmentation fault on my machine +</PRE> + +<P> +and absolutely nothing else. Needless to say, a such a report +is <EM>totally, utterly, completely and comprehensively 100% useless; +a waste of your time, my time, and net bandwidth</EM>. +With no details at all, there's no way I can possibly begin +to figure out what the problem is. + +</P> +<P> +The rules of the game are: facts, facts, facts. Don't omit +them because "oh, they won't be relevant". At the bare +minimum: + +<PRE> + Machine type. Operating system version. + Exact version of <CODE>bzip2</CODE> (do <CODE>bzip2 -V</CODE>). + Exact version of the compiler used. + Flags passed to the compiler. +</PRE> + +<P> +However, the most important single thing that will help me is +the file that you were trying to compress or decompress at the +time the problem happened. Without that, my ability to do anything +more than speculate about the cause, is limited. + +</P> +<P> +Please remember that I connect to the Internet with a modem, so +you should contact me before mailing me huge files. + +</P> + + + +<H2><A NAME="SEC47" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC47">Did you get the right package?</A></H2> + +<P> +<CODE>bzip2</CODE> is a resource hog. It soaks up large amounts of CPU cycles +and memory. Also, it gives very large latencies. In the worst case, you +can feed many megabytes of uncompressed data into the library before +getting any compressed output, so this probably rules out applications +requiring interactive behaviour. + +</P> +<P> +These aren't faults of my implementation, I hope, but more +an intrinsic property of the Burrows-Wheeler transform (unfortunately). +Maybe this isn't what you want. + +</P> +<P> +If you want a compressor and/or library which is faster, uses less +memory but gets pretty good compression, and has minimal latency, +consider Jean-loup +Gailly's and Mark Adler's work, <CODE>zlib-1.1.2</CODE> and +<CODE>gzip-1.2.4</CODE>. Look for them at + +</P> +<P> +<CODE>http://www.cdrom.com/pub/infozip/zlib</CODE> and +<CODE>http://www.gzip.org</CODE> respectively. + +</P> +<P> +For something faster and lighter still, you might try Markus F X J +Oberhumer's <CODE>LZO</CODE> real-time compression/decompression library, at +<BR> <CODE>http://wildsau.idv.uni-linz.ac.at/mfx/lzo.html</CODE>. + +</P> +<P> +If you want to use the <CODE>bzip2</CODE> algorithms to compress small blocks +of data, 64k bytes or smaller, for example on an on-the-fly disk +compressor, you'd be well advised not to use this library. Instead, +I've made a special library tuned for that kind of use. It's part of +<CODE>e2compr-0.40</CODE>, an on-the-fly disk compressor for the Linux +<CODE>ext2</CODE> filesystem. Look at +<CODE>http://www.netspace.net.au/~reiter/e2compr</CODE>. + +</P> + + + +<H2><A NAME="SEC48" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC48">Testing</A></H2> + +<P> +A record of the tests I've done. + +</P> +<P> +First, some data sets: + +<UL> +<LI>B: a directory containing 6001 files, one for every length in the + + range 0 to 6000 bytes. The files contain random lowercase + letters. 18.7 megabytes. +<LI>H: my home directory tree. Documents, source code, mail files, + + compressed data. H contains B, and also a directory of + files designed as boundary cases for the sorting; mostly very + repetitive, nasty files. 565 megabytes. +<LI>A: directory tree holding various applications built from source: + + <CODE>egcs</CODE>, <CODE>gcc-2.8.1</CODE>, KDE, GTK, Octave, etc. + 2200 megabytes. +</UL> + +<P> +The tests conducted are as follows. Each test means compressing +(a copy of) each file in the data set, decompressing it and +comparing it against the original. + +</P> +<P> +First, a bunch of tests with block sizes and internal buffer +sizes set very small, +to detect any problems with the +blocking and buffering mechanisms. +This required modifying the source code so as to try to +break it. + +<OL> +<LI>Data set H, with + + buffer size of 1 byte, and block size of 23 bytes. +<LI>Data set B, buffer sizes 1 byte, block size 1 byte. + +<LI>As (2) but small-mode decompression. + +<LI>As (2) with block size 2 bytes. + +<LI>As (2) with block size 3 bytes. + +<LI>As (2) with block size 4 bytes. + +<LI>As (2) with block size 5 bytes. + +<LI>As (2) with block size 6 bytes and small-mode decompression. + +<LI>H with buffer size of 1 byte, but normal block + + size (up to 900000 bytes). +</OL> + +<P> +Then some tests with unmodified source code. + +<OL> +<LI>H, all settings normal. + +<LI>As (1), with small-mode decompress. + +<LI>H, compress with flag <CODE>-1</CODE>. + +<LI>H, compress with flag <CODE>-s</CODE>, decompress with flag <CODE>-s</CODE>. + +<LI>Forwards compatibility: H, <CODE>bzip2-0.1pl2</CODE> compressing, + + <CODE>bzip2-0.9.5</CODE> decompressing, all settings normal. +<LI>Backwards compatibility: H, <CODE>bzip2-0.9.5</CODE> compressing, + + <CODE>bzip2-0.1pl2</CODE> decompressing, all settings normal. +<LI>Bigger tests: A, all settings normal. + +<LI>As (7), using the fallback (Sadakane-like) sorting algorithm. + +<LI>As (8), compress with flag <CODE>-1</CODE>, decompress with flag + + <CODE>-s</CODE>. +<LI>H, using the fallback sorting algorithm. + +<LI>Forwards compatibility: A, <CODE>bzip2-0.1pl2</CODE> compressing, + + <CODE>bzip2-0.9.5</CODE> decompressing, all settings normal. +<LI>Backwards compatibility: A, <CODE>bzip2-0.9.5</CODE> compressing, + + <CODE>bzip2-0.1pl2</CODE> decompressing, all settings normal. +<LI>Misc test: about 400 megabytes of <CODE>.tar</CODE> files with + + <CODE>bzip2</CODE> compiled with Checker (a memory access error + detector, like Purify). +<LI>Misc tests to make sure it builds and runs ok on non-Linux/x86 + + platforms. +</OL> + +<P> +These tests were conducted on a 225 MHz IDT WinChip machine, running +Linux 2.0.36. They represent nearly a week of continuous computation. +All tests completed successfully. + +</P> + + + +<H2><A NAME="SEC49" HREF="manual_toc.html#TOC49">Further reading</A></H2> +<P> +<CODE>bzip2</CODE> is not research work, in the sense that it doesn't present +any new ideas. Rather, it's an engineering exercise based on existing +ideas. + +</P> +<P> +Four documents describe essentially all the ideas behind <CODE>bzip2</CODE>: + +<PRE> +Michael Burrows and D. J. Wheeler: + "A block-sorting lossless data compression algorithm" + 10th May 1994. + Digital SRC Research Report 124. + ftp://ftp.digital.com/pub/DEC/SRC/research-reports/SRC-124.ps.gz + If you have trouble finding it, try searching at the + New Zealand Digital Library, http://www.nzdl.org. + +Daniel S. Hirschberg and Debra A. LeLewer + "Efficient Decoding of Prefix Codes" + Communications of the ACM, April 1990, Vol 33, Number 4. + You might be able to get an electronic copy of this + from the ACM Digital Library. + +David J. Wheeler + Program bred3.c and accompanying document bred3.ps. + This contains the idea behind the multi-table Huffman + coding scheme. + ftp://ftp.cl.cam.ac.uk/users/djw3/ + +Jon L. Bentley and Robert Sedgewick + "Fast Algorithms for Sorting and Searching Strings" + Available from Sedgewick's web page, + www.cs.princeton.edu/~rs +</PRE> + +<P> +The following paper gives valuable additional insights into the +algorithm, but is not immediately the basis of any code +used in bzip2. + +<PRE> +Peter Fenwick: + Block Sorting Text Compression + Proceedings of the 19th Australasian Computer Science Conference, + Melbourne, Australia. Jan 31 - Feb 2, 1996. + ftp://ftp.cs.auckland.ac.nz/pub/peter-f/ACSC96paper.ps +</PRE> + +<P> +Kunihiko Sadakane's sorting algorithm, mentioned above, +is available from: + +<PRE> +http://naomi.is.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp/~sada/papers/Sada98b.ps.gz +</PRE> + +<P> +The Manber-Myers suffix array construction +algorithm is described in a paper +available from: + +<PRE> +http://www.cs.arizona.edu/people/gene/PAPERS/suffix.ps +</PRE> + +<P> +Finally, the following paper documents some recent investigations +I made into the performance of sorting algorithms: + +<PRE> +Julian Seward: + On the Performance of BWT Sorting Algorithms + Proceedings of the IEEE Data Compression Conference 2000 + Snowbird, Utah. 28-30 March 2000. +</PRE> + +<P><HR><P> +<p>Go to the <A HREF="manual_1.html">first</A>, <A HREF="manual_3.html">previous</A>, next, last section, <A HREF="manual_toc.html">table of contents</A>. +</BODY> +</HTML> diff --git a/bzip2/manual_toc.html b/bzip2/manual_toc.html new file mode 100644 index 000000000..d4132c435 --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/manual_toc.html @@ -0,0 +1,173 @@ +<HTML> +<HEAD> +<!-- This HTML file has been created by texi2html 1.54 + from manual.texi on 23 March 2000 --> + +<TITLE>bzip2 and libbzip2 - Table of Contents</TITLE> + +</HEAD> +<BODY> +<H1>bzip2 and libbzip2</H1> +<H2>a program and library for data compression</H2> +<H2>copyright (C) 1996-2000 Julian Seward</H2> +<H2>version 1.0 of 21 March 2000</H2> +<ADDRESS>Julian Seward</ADDRESS> +<P> +<P><HR><P> + +<P> +This program, <CODE>bzip2</CODE>, +and associated library <CODE>libbzip2</CODE>, are +Copyright (C) 1996-2000 Julian R Seward. All rights reserved. + +</P> +<P> +Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without +modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions +are met: + +<UL> +<LI> + + Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright + notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. +<LI> + + The origin of this software must not be misrepresented; you must + not claim that you wrote the original software. If you use this + software in a product, an acknowledgment in the product + documentation would be appreciated but is not required. +<LI> + + Altered source versions must be plainly marked as such, and must + not be misrepresented as being the original software. +<LI> + + The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote + products derived from this software without specific prior written + permission. +</UL> + +<P> +THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS +OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED +WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE +ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY +DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL +DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE +GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS +INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, +WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING +NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS +SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. + +</P> +<P> +Julian Seward, Cambridge, UK. + +</P> +<P> +<CODE>jseward@acm.org</CODE> + +</P> +<P> +<CODE>http://sourceware.cygnus.com/bzip2</CODE> + +</P> +<P> +<CODE>http://www.cacheprof.org</CODE> + +</P> +<P> +<CODE>http://www.muraroa.demon.co.uk</CODE> + +</P> +<P> +<CODE>bzip2</CODE>/<CODE>libbzip2</CODE> version 1.0 of 21 March 2000. + +</P> +<P> +PATENTS: To the best of my knowledge, <CODE>bzip2</CODE> does not use any patented +algorithms. However, I do not have the resources available to carry out +a full patent search. Therefore I cannot give any guarantee of the +above statement. + +</P> + +<UL> +<LI><A NAME="TOC1" HREF="manual_1.html#SEC1">Introduction</A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC2" HREF="manual_2.html#SEC2">How to use <CODE>bzip2</CODE></A> +<UL> +<UL> +<UL> +<LI><A NAME="TOC3" HREF="manual_2.html#SEC3">NAME</A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC4" HREF="manual_2.html#SEC4">SYNOPSIS</A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC5" HREF="manual_2.html#SEC5">DESCRIPTION</A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC6" HREF="manual_2.html#SEC6">OPTIONS</A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC7" HREF="manual_2.html#SEC7">MEMORY MANAGEMENT</A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC8" HREF="manual_2.html#SEC8">RECOVERING DATA FROM DAMAGED FILES</A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC9" HREF="manual_2.html#SEC9">PERFORMANCE NOTES</A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC10" HREF="manual_2.html#SEC10">CAVEATS</A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC11" HREF="manual_2.html#SEC11">AUTHOR</A> +</UL> +</UL> +</UL> +<LI><A NAME="TOC12" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC12">Programming with <CODE>libbzip2</CODE></A> +<UL> +<LI><A NAME="TOC13" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC13">Top-level structure</A> +<UL> +<LI><A NAME="TOC14" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC14">Low-level summary</A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC15" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC15">High-level summary</A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC16" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC16">Utility functions summary</A> +</UL> +<LI><A NAME="TOC17" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC17">Error handling</A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC18" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC18">Low-level interface</A> +<UL> +<LI><A NAME="TOC19" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC19"><CODE>BZ2_bzCompressInit</CODE></A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC20" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC20"><CODE>BZ2_bzCompress</CODE></A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC21" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC21"><CODE>BZ2_bzCompressEnd</CODE></A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC22" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC22"><CODE>BZ2_bzDecompressInit</CODE></A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC23" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC23"><CODE>BZ2_bzDecompress</CODE></A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC24" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC24"><CODE>BZ2_bzDecompressEnd</CODE></A> +</UL> +<LI><A NAME="TOC25" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC25">High-level interface</A> +<UL> +<LI><A NAME="TOC26" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC26"><CODE>BZ2_bzReadOpen</CODE></A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC27" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC27"><CODE>BZ2_bzRead</CODE></A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC28" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC28"><CODE>BZ2_bzReadGetUnused</CODE></A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC29" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC29"><CODE>BZ2_bzReadClose</CODE></A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC30" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC30"><CODE>BZ2_bzWriteOpen</CODE></A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC31" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC31"><CODE>BZ2_bzWrite</CODE></A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC32" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC32"><CODE>BZ2_bzWriteClose</CODE></A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC33" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC33">Handling embedded compressed data streams</A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC34" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC34">Standard file-reading/writing code</A> +</UL> +<LI><A NAME="TOC35" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC35">Utility functions</A> +<UL> +<LI><A NAME="TOC36" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC36"><CODE>BZ2_bzBuffToBuffCompress</CODE></A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC37" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC37"><CODE>BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompress</CODE></A> +</UL> +<LI><A NAME="TOC38" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC38"><CODE>zlib</CODE> compatibility functions</A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC39" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC39">Using the library in a <CODE>stdio</CODE>-free environment</A> +<UL> +<LI><A NAME="TOC40" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC40">Getting rid of <CODE>stdio</CODE></A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC41" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC41">Critical error handling</A> +</UL> +<LI><A NAME="TOC42" HREF="manual_3.html#SEC42">Making a Windows DLL</A> +</UL> +<LI><A NAME="TOC43" HREF="manual_4.html#SEC43">Miscellanea</A> +<UL> +<LI><A NAME="TOC44" HREF="manual_4.html#SEC44">Limitations of the compressed file format</A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC45" HREF="manual_4.html#SEC45">Portability issues</A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC46" HREF="manual_4.html#SEC46">Reporting bugs</A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC47" HREF="manual_4.html#SEC47">Did you get the right package?</A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC48" HREF="manual_4.html#SEC48">Testing</A> +<LI><A NAME="TOC49" HREF="manual_4.html#SEC49">Further reading</A> +</UL> +</UL> +<P><HR><P> +This document was generated on 23 March 2000 using the +<A HREF="http://wwwcn.cern.ch/dci/texi2html/">texi2html</A> +translator version 1.51a.</P> +</BODY> +</HTML> diff --git a/bzip2/randtable.c b/bzip2/randtable.c new file mode 100644 index 000000000..983089d46 --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/randtable.c @@ -0,0 +1,124 @@ + +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- Table for randomising repetitive blocks ---*/ +/*--- randtable.c ---*/ +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ + +/*-- + This file is a part of bzip2 and/or libbzip2, a program and + library for lossless, block-sorting data compression. + + Copyright (C) 1996-2000 Julian R Seward. All rights reserved. + + Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without + modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions + are met: + + 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright + notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. + + 2. The origin of this software must not be misrepresented; you must + not claim that you wrote the original software. If you use this + software in a product, an acknowledgment in the product + documentation would be appreciated but is not required. + + 3. Altered source versions must be plainly marked as such, and must + not be misrepresented as being the original software. + + 4. The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote + products derived from this software without specific prior written + permission. + + THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS + OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED + WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE + ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY + DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL + DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE + GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS + INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, + WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING + NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS + SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. + + Julian Seward, Cambridge, UK. + jseward@acm.org + bzip2/libbzip2 version 1.0 of 21 March 2000 + + This program is based on (at least) the work of: + Mike Burrows + David Wheeler + Peter Fenwick + Alistair Moffat + Radford Neal + Ian H. Witten + Robert Sedgewick + Jon L. Bentley + + For more information on these sources, see the manual. +--*/ + + +#include "bzlib_private.h" + + +/*---------------------------------------------*/ +Int32 BZ2_rNums[512] = { + 619, 720, 127, 481, 931, 816, 813, 233, 566, 247, + 985, 724, 205, 454, 863, 491, 741, 242, 949, 214, + 733, 859, 335, 708, 621, 574, 73, 654, 730, 472, + 419, 436, 278, 496, 867, 210, 399, 680, 480, 51, + 878, 465, 811, 169, 869, 675, 611, 697, 867, 561, + 862, 687, 507, 283, 482, 129, 807, 591, 733, 623, + 150, 238, 59, 379, 684, 877, 625, 169, 643, 105, + 170, 607, 520, 932, 727, 476, 693, 425, 174, 647, + 73, 122, 335, 530, 442, 853, 695, 249, 445, 515, + 909, 545, 703, 919, 874, 474, 882, 500, 594, 612, + 641, 801, 220, 162, 819, 984, 589, 513, 495, 799, + 161, 604, 958, 533, 221, 400, 386, 867, 600, 782, + 382, 596, 414, 171, 516, 375, 682, 485, 911, 276, + 98, 553, 163, 354, 666, 933, 424, 341, 533, 870, + 227, 730, 475, 186, 263, 647, 537, 686, 600, 224, + 469, 68, 770, 919, 190, 373, 294, 822, 808, 206, + 184, 943, 795, 384, 383, 461, 404, 758, 839, 887, + 715, 67, 618, 276, 204, 918, 873, 777, 604, 560, + 951, 160, 578, 722, 79, 804, 96, 409, 713, 940, + 652, 934, 970, 447, 318, 353, 859, 672, 112, 785, + 645, 863, 803, 350, 139, 93, 354, 99, 820, 908, + 609, 772, 154, 274, 580, 184, 79, 626, 630, 742, + 653, 282, 762, 623, 680, 81, 927, 626, 789, 125, + 411, 521, 938, 300, 821, 78, 343, 175, 128, 250, + 170, 774, 972, 275, 999, 639, 495, 78, 352, 126, + 857, 956, 358, 619, 580, 124, 737, 594, 701, 612, + 669, 112, 134, 694, 363, 992, 809, 743, 168, 974, + 944, 375, 748, 52, 600, 747, 642, 182, 862, 81, + 344, 805, 988, 739, 511, 655, 814, 334, 249, 515, + 897, 955, 664, 981, 649, 113, 974, 459, 893, 228, + 433, 837, 553, 268, 926, 240, 102, 654, 459, 51, + 686, 754, 806, 760, 493, 403, 415, 394, 687, 700, + 946, 670, 656, 610, 738, 392, 760, 799, 887, 653, + 978, 321, 576, 617, 626, 502, 894, 679, 243, 440, + 680, 879, 194, 572, 640, 724, 926, 56, 204, 700, + 707, 151, 457, 449, 797, 195, 791, 558, 945, 679, + 297, 59, 87, 824, 713, 663, 412, 693, 342, 606, + 134, 108, 571, 364, 631, 212, 174, 643, 304, 329, + 343, 97, 430, 751, 497, 314, 983, 374, 822, 928, + 140, 206, 73, 263, 980, 736, 876, 478, 430, 305, + 170, 514, 364, 692, 829, 82, 855, 953, 676, 246, + 369, 970, 294, 750, 807, 827, 150, 790, 288, 923, + 804, 378, 215, 828, 592, 281, 565, 555, 710, 82, + 896, 831, 547, 261, 524, 462, 293, 465, 502, 56, + 661, 821, 976, 991, 658, 869, 905, 758, 745, 193, + 768, 550, 608, 933, 378, 286, 215, 979, 792, 961, + 61, 688, 793, 644, 986, 403, 106, 366, 905, 644, + 372, 567, 466, 434, 645, 210, 389, 550, 919, 135, + 780, 773, 635, 389, 707, 100, 626, 958, 165, 504, + 920, 176, 193, 713, 857, 265, 203, 50, 668, 108, + 645, 990, 626, 197, 510, 357, 358, 850, 858, 364, + 936, 638 +}; + + +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ +/*--- end randtable.c ---*/ +/*-------------------------------------------------------------*/ diff --git a/bzip2/sample1.bz2 b/bzip2/sample1.bz2 Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 000000000..18dea6004 --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/sample1.bz2 diff --git a/bzip2/sample1.ref b/bzip2/sample1.ref Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 000000000..a56e52b77 --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/sample1.ref diff --git a/bzip2/sample2.bz2 b/bzip2/sample2.bz2 Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 000000000..d5a6160ba --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/sample2.bz2 diff --git a/bzip2/sample2.ref b/bzip2/sample2.ref Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 000000000..34af95839 --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/sample2.ref diff --git a/bzip2/sample3.bz2 b/bzip2/sample3.bz2 Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 000000000..d90cff920 --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/sample3.bz2 diff --git a/bzip2/sample3.ref b/bzip2/sample3.ref new file mode 100644 index 000000000..775a2f68e --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/sample3.ref @@ -0,0 +1,30007 @@ +This file is exceedingly boring. If you find yourself +reading it, please (1) take it from me that you can safely +guess what the rest of the file says, and (2) seek professional +help. + +ps. there are no further sarcastic remarks in this file. + +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh +ugh 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This is to help test + support for large files (> 2GB) in a reasonable amount of time. + I suggest you use the undocumented --exponential option to + bzip2 when compressing the resulting file; this saves a bit of + time. Note: *don't* bother with --exponential when compressing + Real Files; it'll just waste a lot of CPU time :-) + (but is otherwise harmless). +*/ + +#define _FILE_OFFSET_BITS 64 + +#include <stdio.h> +#include <stdlib.h> + +/* The number of megabytes of junk to spew out (roughly) */ +#define MEGABYTES 5000 + +#define N_BUF 1000000 +char buf[N_BUF]; + +int main ( int argc, char** argv ) +{ + int ii, kk, p; + srandom(1); + setbuffer ( stdout, buf, N_BUF ); + for (kk = 0; kk < MEGABYTES * 515; kk+=3) { + p = 25+random()%50; + for (ii = 0; ii < p; ii++) + printf ( "aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa" ); + for (ii = 0; ii < p-1; ii++) + printf ( "bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb" ); + for (ii = 0; ii < p+1; ii++) + printf ( "ccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccc" ); + } + fflush(stdout); + return 0; +} diff --git a/bzip2/unzcrash.c b/bzip2/unzcrash.c new file mode 100644 index 000000000..f0f17fcca --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/unzcrash.c @@ -0,0 +1,126 @@ + +/* A test program written to test robustness to decompression of + corrupted data. Usage is + unzcrash filename + and the program will read the specified file, compress it (in memory), + and then repeatedly decompress it, each time with a different bit of + the compressed data inverted, so as to test all possible one-bit errors. + This should not cause any invalid memory accesses. If it does, + I want to know about it! + + p.s. As you can see from the above description, the process is + incredibly slow. A file of size eg 5KB will cause it to run for + many hours. +*/ + +#include <stdio.h> +#include <assert.h> +#include "bzlib.h" + +#define M_BLOCK 1000000 + +typedef unsigned char uchar; + +#define M_BLOCK_OUT (M_BLOCK + 1000000) +uchar inbuf[M_BLOCK]; +uchar outbuf[M_BLOCK_OUT]; +uchar zbuf[M_BLOCK + 600 + (M_BLOCK / 100)]; + +int nIn, nOut, nZ; + +static char *bzerrorstrings[] = { + "OK" + ,"SEQUENCE_ERROR" + ,"PARAM_ERROR" + ,"MEM_ERROR" + ,"DATA_ERROR" + ,"DATA_ERROR_MAGIC" + ,"IO_ERROR" + ,"UNEXPECTED_EOF" + ,"OUTBUFF_FULL" + ,"???" /* for future */ + ,"???" /* for future */ + ,"???" /* for future */ + ,"???" /* for future */ + ,"???" /* for future */ + ,"???" /* for future */ +}; + +void flip_bit ( int bit ) +{ + int byteno = bit / 8; + int bitno = bit % 8; + uchar mask = 1 << bitno; + //fprintf ( stderr, "(byte %d bit %d mask %d)", + // byteno, bitno, (int)mask ); + zbuf[byteno] ^= mask; +} + +int main ( int argc, char** argv ) +{ + FILE* f; + int r; + int bit; + int i; + + if (argc != 2) { + fprintf ( stderr, "usage: unzcrash filename\n" ); + return 1; + } + + f = fopen ( argv[1], "r" ); + if (!f) { + fprintf ( stderr, "unzcrash: can't open %s\n", argv[1] ); + return 1; + } + + nIn = fread ( inbuf, 1, M_BLOCK, f ); + fprintf ( stderr, "%d bytes read\n", nIn ); + + nZ = M_BLOCK; + r = BZ2_bzBuffToBuffCompress ( + zbuf, &nZ, inbuf, nIn, 9, 0, 30 ); + + assert (r == BZ_OK); + fprintf ( stderr, "%d after compression\n", nZ ); + + for (bit = 0; bit < nZ*8; bit++) { + fprintf ( stderr, "bit %d ", bit ); + flip_bit ( bit ); + nOut = M_BLOCK_OUT; + r = BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompress ( + outbuf, &nOut, zbuf, nZ, 0, 0 ); + fprintf ( stderr, " %d %s ", r, bzerrorstrings[-r] ); + + if (r != BZ_OK) { + fprintf ( stderr, "\n" ); + } else { + if (nOut != nIn) { + fprintf(stderr, "nIn/nOut mismatch %d %d\n", nIn, nOut ); + return 1; + } else { + for (i = 0; i < nOut; i++) + if (inbuf[i] != outbuf[i]) { + fprintf(stderr, "mismatch at %d\n", i ); + return 1; + } + if (i == nOut) fprintf(stderr, "really ok!\n" ); + } + } + + flip_bit ( bit ); + } + +#if 0 + assert (nOut == nIn); + for (i = 0; i < nOut; i++) { + if (inbuf[i] != outbuf[i]) { + fprintf ( stderr, "difference at %d !\n", i ); + return 1; + } + } +#endif + + fprintf ( stderr, "all ok\n" ); + return 0; +} diff --git a/bzip2/words0 b/bzip2/words0 new file mode 100644 index 000000000..164a8ed28 --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/words0 @@ -0,0 +1,5 @@ + +If compilation produces errors, or a large number of warnings, +please read README.COMPILATION.PROBLEMS -- you might be able to +adjust the flags in this Makefile to improve matters. + diff --git a/bzip2/words1 b/bzip2/words1 new file mode 100644 index 000000000..2e83de9f0 --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/words1 @@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ + +Doing 6 tests (3 compress, 3 uncompress) ... +If there's a problem, things might stop at this point. + diff --git a/bzip2/words2 b/bzip2/words2 new file mode 100644 index 000000000..203ee39c4 --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/words2 @@ -0,0 +1,5 @@ + +Checking test results. If any of the four "cmp"s which follow +report any differences, something is wrong. If you can't easily +figure out what, please let me know (jseward@acm.org). + diff --git a/bzip2/words3 b/bzip2/words3 new file mode 100644 index 000000000..8486a84c8 --- /dev/null +++ b/bzip2/words3 @@ -0,0 +1,23 @@ + +If you got this far and the "cmp"s didn't complain, it looks +like you're in business. + +To install in /usr/bin, /usr/lib, /usr/man and /usr/include, type + make install +To install somewhere else, eg, /xxx/yyy/{bin,lib,man,include}, type + make install PREFIX=/xxx/yyy +If you are (justifiably) paranoid and want to see what 'make install' +is going to do, you can first do + make -n install or + make -n install PREFIX=/xxx/yyy respectively. +The -n instructs make to show the commands it would execute, but +not actually execute them. + +Instructions for use are in the preformatted manual page, in the file +bzip2.txt. For more detailed documentation, read the full manual. +It is available in Postscript form (manual.ps) and HTML form +(manual_toc.html). + +You can also do "bzip2 --help" to see some helpful information. +"bzip2 -L" displays the software license. + |