2688 lines
		
	
	
		
			122 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			HTML
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			2688 lines
		
	
	
		
			122 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			HTML
		
	
	
	
	
	
| <html>
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| <head>
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| <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1">
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| <title>bzip2 and libbzip2, version 1.0.3</title>
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| </style>
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| </head>
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| <body bgcolor="white" text="black" link="#0000FF" vlink="#840084" alink="#0000FF"><div class="book" lang="en">
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| <div class="titlepage">
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| <div>
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| <div><h1 class="title">
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| <a name="userman"></a>bzip2 and libbzip2, version 1.0.3</h1></div>
 | ||
| <div><h2 class="subtitle">A program and library for data compression</h2></div>
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| <div><div class="authorgroup"><div class="author">
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| <h3 class="author">
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| <span class="firstname">Julian</span> <span class="surname">Seward</span>
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| </h3>
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| <div class="affiliation"><span class="orgname">http://www.bzip.org<br></span></div>
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| </div></div></div>
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| <div><p class="releaseinfo">Version 1.0.3 of 15 February 2005</p></div>
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| <div><p class="copyright">Copyright <20> 1996-2005 Julian Seward</p></div>
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| <div><div class="legalnotice">
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| <p>This program, <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt>, the
 | ||
|   associated library <tt class="computeroutput">libbzip2</tt>, and
 | ||
|   all documentation, are copyright <20> 1996-2005 Julian 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:</p>
 | ||
| <div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="bullet">
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p>Redistributions of source code must retain the
 | ||
|    above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the
 | ||
|    following disclaimer.</p></li>
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p>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.</p></li>
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p>Altered source versions must be plainly marked
 | ||
|    as such, and must not be misrepresented as being the original
 | ||
|    software.</p></li>
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p>The name of the author may not be used to
 | ||
|    endorse or promote products derived from this software without
 | ||
|    specific prior written permission.</p></li>
 | ||
| </ul></div>
 | ||
| <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>PATENTS: To the best of my knowledge,
 | ||
|  <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> and
 | ||
|  <tt class="computeroutput">libbzip2</tt> do not use any patented
 | ||
|  algorithms.  However, I do not have the resources to carry
 | ||
|  out a patent search.  Therefore I cannot give any guarantee of
 | ||
|  the above statement.
 | ||
|  </p>
 | ||
| </div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
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| <div></div>
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| <hr>
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| </div>
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| <div class="toc">
 | ||
| <p><b>Table of Contents</b></p>
 | ||
| <dl>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="chapter"><a href="#intro">1. Introduction</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="chapter"><a href="#using">2. How to use bzip2</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><dl>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#name">2.1. NAME</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#synopsis">2.2. SYNOPSIS</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#description">2.3. DESCRIPTION</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#options">2.4. OPTIONS</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#memory-management">2.5. MEMORY MANAGEMENT</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#recovering">2.6. RECOVERING DATA FROM DAMAGED FILES</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#performance">2.7. PERFORMANCE NOTES</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#caveats">2.8. CAVEATS</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#author">2.9. AUTHOR</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| </dl></dd>
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| <dt><span class="chapter"><a href="#libprog">3. 
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| Programming with libbzip2
 | ||
| </a></span></dt>
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| <dd><dl>
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| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#top-level">3.1. Top-level structure</a></span></dt>
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| <dd><dl>
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| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#ll-summary">3.1.1. Low-level summary</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#hl-summary">3.1.2. High-level summary</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#util-fns-summary">3.1.3. Utility functions summary</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| </dl></dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#err-handling">3.2. Error handling</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#low-level">3.3. Low-level interface</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><dl>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#bzcompress-init">3.3.1. BZ2_bzCompressInit</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#bzCompress">3.3.2. BZ2_bzCompress</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#bzCompress-end">3.3.3. BZ2_bzCompressEnd</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#bzDecompress-init">3.3.4. BZ2_bzDecompressInit</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#bzDecompress">3.3.5. BZ2_bzDecompress</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#bzDecompress-end">3.3.6. BZ2_bzDecompressEnd</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| </dl></dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#hl-interface">3.4. High-level interface</a></span></dt>
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| <dd><dl>
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| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#bzreadopen">3.4.1. BZ2_bzReadOpen</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#bzread">3.4.2. BZ2_bzRead</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#bzreadgetunused">3.4.3. BZ2_bzReadGetUnused</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#bzreadclose">3.4.4. BZ2_bzReadClose</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#bzwriteopen">3.4.5. BZ2_bzWriteOpen</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#bzwrite">3.4.6. BZ2_bzWrite</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#bzwriteclose">3.4.7. BZ2_bzWriteClose</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#embed">3.4.8. Handling embedded compressed data streams</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#std-rdwr">3.4.9. Standard file-reading/writing code</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| </dl></dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#util-fns">3.5. Utility functions</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><dl>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#bzbufftobuffcompress">3.5.1. BZ2_bzBuffToBuffCompress</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#bzbufftobuffdecompress">3.5.2. BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompress</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| </dl></dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#zlib-compat">3.6. zlib compatibility functions</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#stdio-free">3.7. Using the library in a stdio-free environment</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><dl>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#stdio-bye">3.7.1. Getting rid of stdio</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#critical-error">3.7.2. Critical error handling</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| </dl></dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#win-dll">3.8. Making a Windows DLL</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| </dl></dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="chapter"><a href="#misc">4. Miscellanea</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><dl>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#limits">4.1. Limitations of the compressed file format</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#port-issues">4.2. Portability issues</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#bugs">4.3. Reporting bugs</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#package">4.4. Did you get the right package?</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#reading">4.5. Further Reading</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| </dl></dd>
 | ||
| </dl>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="chapter" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h2 class="title">
 | ||
| <a name="intro"></a>1.<2E>Introduction</h2></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <p><tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> 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><tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> is built on top of
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">libbzip2</tt>, a flexible library for
 | ||
| handling compressed data in the
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> 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>
 | ||
| <div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="bullet">
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p><a href="#using">How to use bzip2</a> describes how to use
 | ||
|  <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt>; this is the only part
 | ||
|  you need to read if you just want to know how to operate the
 | ||
|  program.</p></li>
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p><a href="#libprog">Programming with libbzip2</a> describes the
 | ||
|  programming interfaces in detail, and</p></li>
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p><a href="#misc">Miscellanea</a> records some
 | ||
|  miscellaneous notes which I thought ought to be recorded
 | ||
|  somewhere.</p></li>
 | ||
| </ul></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="chapter" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h2 class="title">
 | ||
| <a name="using"></a>2.<2E>How to use bzip2</h2></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="toc">
 | ||
| <p><b>Table of Contents</b></p>
 | ||
| <dl>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#name">2.1. NAME</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#synopsis">2.2. SYNOPSIS</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#description">2.3. DESCRIPTION</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#options">2.4. OPTIONS</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#memory-management">2.5. MEMORY MANAGEMENT</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#recovering">2.6. RECOVERING DATA FROM DAMAGED FILES</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#performance">2.7. PERFORMANCE NOTES</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#caveats">2.8. CAVEATS</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#author">2.9. AUTHOR</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| </dl>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <p>This chapter contains a copy of the
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> man page, and nothing
 | ||
| else.</p>
 | ||
| <div class="sect1" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both">
 | ||
| <a name="name"></a>2.1.<2E>NAME</h2></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="bullet">
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p><tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt>,
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">bunzip2</tt> - a block-sorting file
 | ||
|   compressor, v1.0.3</p></li>
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p><tt class="computeroutput">bzcat</tt> -
 | ||
|    decompresses files to stdout</p></li>
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p><tt class="computeroutput">bzip2recover</tt> -
 | ||
|    recovers data from damaged bzip2 files</p></li>
 | ||
| </ul></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect1" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both">
 | ||
| <a name="synopsis"></a>2.2.<2E>SYNOPSIS</h2></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="bullet">
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p><tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> [
 | ||
|   -cdfkqstvzVL123456789 ] [ filenames ...  ]</p></li>
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p><tt class="computeroutput">bunzip2</tt> [
 | ||
|   -fkvsVL ] [ filenames ...  ]</p></li>
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p><tt class="computeroutput">bzcat</tt> [ -s ] [
 | ||
|   filenames ...  ]</p></li>
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p><tt class="computeroutput">bzip2recover</tt>
 | ||
|   filename</p></li>
 | ||
| </ul></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect1" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both">
 | ||
| <a name="description"></a>2.3.<2E>DESCRIPTION</h2></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <p><tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> 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 <tt class="computeroutput">gzip</tt>, but they are
 | ||
| not identical.</p>
 | ||
| <p><tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> 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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">original_name.bz2</tt>.  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><tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bunzip2</tt> will by default not
 | ||
| overwrite existing files.  If you want this to happen, specify
 | ||
| the <tt class="computeroutput">-f</tt> flag.</p>
 | ||
| <p>If no file names are specified,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> compresses from standard
 | ||
| input to standard output.  In this case,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> will decline to write
 | ||
| compressed output to a terminal, as this would be entirely
 | ||
| incomprehensible and therefore pointless.</p>
 | ||
| <p><tt class="computeroutput">bunzip2</tt> (or
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2 -d</tt>) decompresses all
 | ||
| specified files.  Files which were not created by
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> will be detected and
 | ||
| ignored, and a warning issued.
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> attempts to guess the
 | ||
| filename for the decompressed file from that of the compressed
 | ||
| file as follows:</p>
 | ||
| <div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="bullet">
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p><tt class="computeroutput">filename.bz2 </tt>
 | ||
|   becomes
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">filename</tt></p></li>
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p><tt class="computeroutput">filename.bz </tt>
 | ||
|   becomes
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">filename</tt></p></li>
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p><tt class="computeroutput">filename.tbz2</tt>
 | ||
|   becomes
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">filename.tar</tt></p></li>
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p><tt class="computeroutput">filename.tbz </tt>
 | ||
|   becomes
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">filename.tar</tt></p></li>
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p><tt class="computeroutput">anyothername </tt>
 | ||
|   becomes
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">anyothername.out</tt></p></li>
 | ||
| </ul></div>
 | ||
| <p>If the file does not end in one of the recognised endings,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">.bz2</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">.bz</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">.tbz2</tt> or
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">.tbz</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> complains that it cannot
 | ||
| guess the name of the original file, and uses the original name
 | ||
| with <tt class="computeroutput">.out</tt> appended.</p>
 | ||
| <p>As with compression, supplying no filenames causes
 | ||
| decompression from standard input to standard output.</p>
 | ||
| <p><tt class="computeroutput">bunzip2</tt> 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
 | ||
| (<tt class="computeroutput">-t</tt>) of concatenated compressed
 | ||
| files is also supported.</p>
 | ||
| <p>You can also compress or decompress files to the standard
 | ||
| output by giving the <tt class="computeroutput">-c</tt> 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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> version 0.9.0 or later.
 | ||
| Earlier versions of <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> will
 | ||
| stop after decompressing the first file in the stream.</p>
 | ||
| <p><tt class="computeroutput">bzcat</tt> (or
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2 -dc</tt>) decompresses all
 | ||
| specified files to the standard output.</p>
 | ||
| <p><tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> will read arguments
 | ||
| from the environment variables
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZIP2</tt> and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZIP</tt>, 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,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> 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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> (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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2recover</tt> 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, etc.), 2
 | ||
| to indicate a corrupt compressed file, 3 for an internal
 | ||
| consistency error (eg, bug) which caused
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> to panic.</p>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect1" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both">
 | ||
| <a name="options"></a>2.4.<2E>OPTIONS</h2></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="variablelist"><dl>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="term"><tt class="computeroutput">-c --stdout</tt></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><p>Compress or decompress to standard
 | ||
|   output.</p></dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="term"><tt class="computeroutput">-d --decompress</tt></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><p>Force decompression.
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt>,
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">bunzip2</tt> and
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">bzcat</tt> 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.</p></dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="term"><tt class="computeroutput">-z --compress</tt></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><p>The complement to
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">-d</tt>: forces compression,
 | ||
|   regardless of the invokation name.</p></dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="term"><tt class="computeroutput">-t --test</tt></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><p>Check integrity of the specified file(s), but
 | ||
|   don't decompress them.  This really performs a trial
 | ||
|   decompression and throws away the result.</p></dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="term"><tt class="computeroutput">-f --force</tt></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd>
 | ||
| <p>Force overwrite of output files.  Normally,
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> will not overwrite
 | ||
|   existing output files.  Also forces
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> to break hard links to
 | ||
|   files, which it otherwise wouldn't do.</p>
 | ||
| <p><tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> normally declines
 | ||
|   to decompress files which don't have the correct magic header
 | ||
|   bytes. If forced (<tt class="computeroutput">-f</tt>),
 | ||
|   however, it will pass such files through unmodified. This is
 | ||
|   how GNU <tt class="computeroutput">gzip</tt> behaves.</p>
 | ||
| </dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="term"><tt class="computeroutput">-k --keep</tt></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><p>Keep (don't delete) input files during
 | ||
|   compression or decompression.</p></dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="term"><tt class="computeroutput">-s --small</tt></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd>
 | ||
| <p>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.</p>
 | ||
| <p>During compression, <tt class="computeroutput">-s</tt>
 | ||
|   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 <tt class="computeroutput">-s</tt> for everything.  See
 | ||
|   <a href="#memory-management">MEMORY MANAGEMENT</a> below.</p>
 | ||
| </dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="term"><tt class="computeroutput">-q --quiet</tt></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><p>Suppress non-essential warning messages.
 | ||
|   Messages pertaining to I/O errors and other critical events
 | ||
|   will not be suppressed.</p></dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="term"><tt class="computeroutput">-v --verbose</tt></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><p>Verbose mode -- show the compression ratio for
 | ||
|   each file processed.  Further
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">-v</tt>'s increase the verbosity
 | ||
|   level, spewing out lots of information which is primarily of
 | ||
|   interest for diagnostic purposes.</p></dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="term"><tt class="computeroutput">-L --license -V --version</tt></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><p>Display the software version, license terms and
 | ||
|   conditions.</p></dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="term"><tt class="computeroutput">-1</tt> (or
 | ||
|  <tt class="computeroutput">--fast</tt>) to
 | ||
|  <tt class="computeroutput">-9</tt> (or
 | ||
|  <tt class="computeroutput">-best</tt>)</span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><p>Set the block size to 100 k, 200 k ...  900 k
 | ||
|   when compressing.  Has no effect when decompressing.  See <a href="#memory-management">MEMORY MANAGEMENT</a> below.  The
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">--fast</tt> and
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">--best</tt> aliases are primarily
 | ||
|   for GNU <tt class="computeroutput">gzip</tt> compatibility.
 | ||
|   In particular, <tt class="computeroutput">--fast</tt> doesn't
 | ||
|   make things significantly faster.  And
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">--best</tt> merely selects the
 | ||
|   default behaviour.</p></dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="term"><tt class="computeroutput">--</tt></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><p>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:
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2 --
 | ||
|   -myfilename</tt>.</p></dd>
 | ||
| <dt>
 | ||
| <span class="term"><tt class="computeroutput">--repetitive-fast</tt>, </span><span class="term"><tt class="computeroutput">--repetitive-best</tt>, </span>
 | ||
| </dt>
 | ||
| <dd><p>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.</p></dd>
 | ||
| </dl></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect1" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both">
 | ||
| <a name="memory-management"></a>2.5.<2E>MEMORY MANAGEMENT</h2></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <p><tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> 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 <tt class="computeroutput">-1</tt>
 | ||
| through <tt class="computeroutput">-9</tt> 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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bunzip2</tt> then allocates itself
 | ||
| just enough memory to decompress the file.  Since block sizes are
 | ||
| stored in compressed files, it follows that the flags
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">-1</tt> to
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">-9</tt> are irrelevant to and so
 | ||
| ignored during decompression.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Compression and decompression requirements, in bytes, can be
 | ||
| estimated as:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">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 <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> 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,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bunzip2</tt> will require about 3700
 | ||
| kbytes to decompress.  To support decompression of any file on a
 | ||
| 4 megabyte machine, <tt class="computeroutput">bunzip2</tt> 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 <tt class="computeroutput">-s</tt>.</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 <tt class="computeroutput">-9</tt> 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.</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">        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>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect1" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both">
 | ||
| <a name="recovering"></a>2.6.<2E>RECOVERING DATA FROM DAMAGED FILES</h2></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <p><tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> compresses files in
 | ||
| blocks, usually 900kbytes long.  Each block is handled
 | ||
| independently.  If a media or transmission error causes a
 | ||
| multi-block <tt class="computeroutput">.bz2</tt> 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><tt class="computeroutput">bzip2recover</tt> is a simple
 | ||
| program whose purpose is to search for blocks in
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">.bz2</tt> files, and write each block
 | ||
| out into its own <tt class="computeroutput">.bz2</tt> file.  You
 | ||
| can then use <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2 -t</tt> to test
 | ||
| the integrity of the resulting files, and decompress those which
 | ||
| are undamaged.</p>
 | ||
| <p><tt class="computeroutput">bzip2recover</tt> takes a
 | ||
| single argument, the name of the damaged file, and writes a
 | ||
| number of files <tt class="computeroutput">rec0001file.bz2</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">rec0002file.bz2</tt>, etc, containing
 | ||
| the extracted blocks.  The output filenames are designed so that
 | ||
| the use of wildcards in subsequent processing -- for example,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2 -dc rec*file.bz2 >
 | ||
| recovered_data</tt> -- lists the files in the correct
 | ||
| order.</p>
 | ||
| <p><tt class="computeroutput">bzip2recover</tt> should be of
 | ||
| most use dealing with large <tt class="computeroutput">.bz2</tt>
 | ||
| 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>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect1" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both">
 | ||
| <a name="performance"></a>2.7.<2E>PERFORMANCE NOTES</h2></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">-vvvv</tt> option to monitor progress
 | ||
| in great detail, if you want.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Decompression speed is unaffected by these
 | ||
| phenomena.</p>
 | ||
| <p><tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> 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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> will perform best on
 | ||
| machines with very large caches.</p>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect1" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both">
 | ||
| <a name="caveats"></a>2.8.<2E>CAVEATS</h2></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <p>I/O error messages are not as helpful as they could be.
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> 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 1.0.3 of
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt>.  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, 1.0.0, 1.0.1 and 1.0.2, 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><tt class="computeroutput">bzip2recover</tt> versions
 | ||
| prior to 1.0.2 used 32-bit integers to represent bit positions in
 | ||
| compressed files, so it could not handle compressed files more
 | ||
| than 512 megabytes long.  Versions 1.0.2 and above use 64-bit ints
 | ||
| on some platforms which support them (GNU supported targets, and
 | ||
| Windows). To establish whether or not
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2recover</tt> was built with such
 | ||
| a limitation, run it without arguments. In any event you can
 | ||
| build yourself an unlimited version if you can recompile it with
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">MaybeUInt64</tt> set to be an
 | ||
| unsigned 64-bit integer.</p>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect1" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both">
 | ||
| <a name="author"></a>2.9.<2E>AUTHOR</h2></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <p>Julian Seward,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">jseward@bzip.org</tt></p>
 | ||
| <p>The ideas embodied in
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> 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 <tt class="computeroutput">bzip</tt>, and many
 | ||
| refinements), and Alistair Moffat, Radford Neal and Ian Witten
 | ||
| (for the arithmetic coder in the original
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip</tt>).  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.  
 | ||
| Donna Robinson XMLised the documentation.
 | ||
| Many people sent
 | ||
| patches, helped with portability problems, lent machines, gave
 | ||
| advice and were generally helpful.</p>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="chapter" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h2 class="title">
 | ||
| <a name="libprog"></a>3.<2E>
 | ||
| Programming with <tt class="computeroutput">libbzip2</tt>
 | ||
| </h2></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="toc">
 | ||
| <p><b>Table of Contents</b></p>
 | ||
| <dl>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#top-level">3.1. Top-level structure</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><dl>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#ll-summary">3.1.1. Low-level summary</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#hl-summary">3.1.2. High-level summary</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#util-fns-summary">3.1.3. Utility functions summary</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| </dl></dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#err-handling">3.2. Error handling</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#low-level">3.3. Low-level interface</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><dl>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#bzcompress-init">3.3.1. BZ2_bzCompressInit</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#bzCompress">3.3.2. BZ2_bzCompress</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#bzCompress-end">3.3.3. BZ2_bzCompressEnd</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#bzDecompress-init">3.3.4. BZ2_bzDecompressInit</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#bzDecompress">3.3.5. BZ2_bzDecompress</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#bzDecompress-end">3.3.6. BZ2_bzDecompressEnd</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| </dl></dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#hl-interface">3.4. High-level interface</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><dl>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#bzreadopen">3.4.1. BZ2_bzReadOpen</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#bzread">3.4.2. BZ2_bzRead</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#bzreadgetunused">3.4.3. BZ2_bzReadGetUnused</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#bzreadclose">3.4.4. BZ2_bzReadClose</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#bzwriteopen">3.4.5. BZ2_bzWriteOpen</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#bzwrite">3.4.6. BZ2_bzWrite</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#bzwriteclose">3.4.7. BZ2_bzWriteClose</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#embed">3.4.8. Handling embedded compressed data streams</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#std-rdwr">3.4.9. Standard file-reading/writing code</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| </dl></dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#util-fns">3.5. Utility functions</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><dl>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#bzbufftobuffcompress">3.5.1. BZ2_bzBuffToBuffCompress</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#bzbufftobuffdecompress">3.5.2. BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompress</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| </dl></dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#zlib-compat">3.6. zlib compatibility functions</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#stdio-free">3.7. Using the library in a stdio-free environment</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><dl>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#stdio-bye">3.7.1. Getting rid of stdio</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect2"><a href="#critical-error">3.7.2. Critical error handling</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| </dl></dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#win-dll">3.8. Making a Windows DLL</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| </dl>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <p>This chapter describes the programming interface to
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">libbzip2</tt>.</p>
 | ||
| <p>For general background information, particularly about
 | ||
| memory use and performance aspects, you'd be well advised to read
 | ||
| <a href="#using">How to use bzip2</a> as well.</p>
 | ||
| <div class="sect1" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both">
 | ||
| <a name="top-level"></a>3.1.<2E>Top-level structure</h2></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <p><tt class="computeroutput">libbzip2</tt> is a flexible
 | ||
| library for compressing and decompressing data in the
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> 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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">libbzip2</tt>'s interfaces is similar
 | ||
| to that of Jean-loup Gailly's and Mark Adler's excellent
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">zlib</tt> library.</p>
 | ||
| <p>All externally visible symbols have names beginning
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_</tt>.  This is new in version
 | ||
| 1.0.  The intention is to minimise pollution of the namespaces of
 | ||
| library clients.</p>
 | ||
| <p>To use any part of the library, you need to
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">#include <bzlib.h></tt>
 | ||
| into your sources.</p>
 | ||
| <div class="sect2" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h3 class="title">
 | ||
| <a name="ll-summary"></a>3.1.1.<2E>Low-level summary</h3></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">stdio.h</tt>, 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:
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompressInit</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompress</tt>, and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompressEnd</tt> for
 | ||
| compression, and a corresponding trio
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzDecompressInit</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzDecompress</tt> and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzDecompressEnd</tt> for
 | ||
| decompression.  The <tt class="computeroutput">*Init</tt>
 | ||
| functions allocate memory for compression/decompression and do
 | ||
| other initialisations, whilst the
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">*End</tt> functions close down
 | ||
| operations and release memory.</p>
 | ||
| <p>The real work is done by
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompress</tt> and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzDecompress</tt>.  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>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect2" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h3 class="title">
 | ||
| <a name="hl-summary"></a>3.1.2.<2E>High-level summary</h3></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <p>This interface provides some handy wrappers around the
 | ||
| low-level interface to facilitate reading and writing
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> format files
 | ||
| (<tt class="computeroutput">.bz2</tt> files).  The routines
 | ||
| provide hooks to facilitate reading files in which the
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> data stream is embedded
 | ||
| within some larger-scale file structure, or where there are
 | ||
| multiple <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> data streams
 | ||
| concatenated end-to-end.</p>
 | ||
| <p>For reading files,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzReadOpen</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzRead</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzReadClose</tt> and 
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzReadGetUnused</tt> are
 | ||
| supplied.  For writing files,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzWriteOpen</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzWrite</tt> and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzWriteFinish</tt> 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 <tt class="computeroutput">errno</tt> to
 | ||
| determine the cause of the error.  In that case, you'd need a C
 | ||
| library which correctly supports
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">errno</tt> in a multithreaded
 | ||
| environment.</p>
 | ||
| <p>To make the library a little simpler and more portable,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzReadOpen</tt> and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzWriteOpen</tt> require you to
 | ||
| pass them file handles (<tt class="computeroutput">FILE*</tt>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>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect2" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h3 class="title">
 | ||
| <a name="util-fns-summary"></a>3.1.3.<2E>Utility functions summary</h3></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <p>For very simple needs,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzBuffToBuffCompress</tt> and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompress</tt> 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
 | ||
| (<tt class="computeroutput">QWF00133@niftyserve.or.jp</tt> /
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">tsuneo-y@is.aist-nara.ac.jp</tt>) has
 | ||
| contributed some functions to give better
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">zlib</tt> compatibility.  These
 | ||
| functions are <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzopen</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzread</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzwrite</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzflush</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzclose</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzerror</tt> and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzlibVersion</tt>.  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>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect1" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both">
 | ||
| <a name="err-handling"></a>3.2.<2E>Error handling</h2></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <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 1.0.3 more robust in this respect than any
 | ||
| previous version.  Investigations with Valgrind (a tool for detecting
 | ||
| problems with memory management) 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 uses of uninitialised data, no out of
 | ||
| range reads or writes, and no infinite looping in the decompressor.
 | ||
| So it's certainly pretty robust, although
 | ||
| I wouldn't claim it to be totally bombproof.</p>
 | ||
| <p>The file <tt class="computeroutput">bzlib.h</tt> contains
 | ||
| all definitions needed to use the library.  In particular, you
 | ||
| should definitely not include
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzlib_private.h</tt>.</p>
 | ||
| <p>In <tt class="computeroutput">bzlib.h</tt>, 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.</p>
 | ||
| <div class="variablelist"><dl>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="term"><tt class="computeroutput">BZ_OK</tt></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><p>The requested action was completed
 | ||
|    successfully.</p></dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="term"><tt class="computeroutput">BZ_RUN_OK, BZ_FLUSH_OK,
 | ||
|     BZ_FINISH_OK</tt></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><p>In 
 | ||
|    <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompress</tt>, the requested
 | ||
|    flush/finish/nothing-special action was completed
 | ||
|    successfully.</p></dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="term"><tt class="computeroutput">BZ_STREAM_END</tt></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><p>Compression of data was completed, or the
 | ||
|    logical stream end was detected during
 | ||
|    decompression.</p></dd>
 | ||
| </dl></div>
 | ||
| <p>The following return values indicate an error of some
 | ||
| kind.</p>
 | ||
| <div class="variablelist"><dl>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="term"><tt class="computeroutput">BZ_CONFIG_ERROR</tt></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><p>Indicates that the library has been improperly
 | ||
|    compiled on your platform -- a major configuration error.
 | ||
|    Specifically, it means that
 | ||
|    <tt class="computeroutput">sizeof(char)</tt>,
 | ||
|    <tt class="computeroutput">sizeof(short)</tt> and
 | ||
|    <tt class="computeroutput">sizeof(int)</tt> 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
 | ||
|    <tt class="computeroutput">sizeof(long)</tt> and
 | ||
|    <tt class="computeroutput">sizeof(void*)</tt> are 8.  Under
 | ||
|    LP64, <tt class="computeroutput">sizeof(int)</tt> is still 4,
 | ||
|    so <tt class="computeroutput">libbzip2</tt>, which doesn't
 | ||
|    use the <tt class="computeroutput">long</tt> type, is
 | ||
|    OK.</p></dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="term"><tt class="computeroutput">BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR</tt></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><p>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.
 | ||
|    <tt class="computeroutput">libbzip2</tt> checks as much as it
 | ||
|    can to ensure this is happening, and returns
 | ||
|    <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR</tt> 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.</p></dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="term"><tt class="computeroutput">BZ_PARAM_ERROR</tt></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><p>Returned when a parameter to a function call is
 | ||
|    out of range or otherwise manifestly incorrect.  As with
 | ||
|    <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR</tt>, this
 | ||
|    denotes a bug in the client code.  The distinction between
 | ||
|    <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_PARAM_ERROR</tt> and
 | ||
|    <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR</tt> is a bit
 | ||
|    hazy, but still worth making.</p></dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="term"><tt class="computeroutput">BZ_MEM_ERROR</tt></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><p>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
 | ||
|    <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzDecompress</tt> and
 | ||
|    <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzRead</tt> may return
 | ||
|    <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_MEM_ERROR</tt> even though some
 | ||
|    of the compressed data has been read.  The same is not true
 | ||
|    for compression; once
 | ||
|    <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompressInit</tt> or
 | ||
|    <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzWriteOpen</tt> have
 | ||
|    successfully completed,
 | ||
|    <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_MEM_ERROR</tt> cannot
 | ||
|    occur.</p></dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="term"><tt class="computeroutput">BZ_DATA_ERROR</tt></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><p>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.</p></dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="term"><tt class="computeroutput">BZ_DATA_ERROR_MAGIC</tt></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><p>As a special case of
 | ||
|    <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_DATA_ERROR</tt>, it is
 | ||
|    sometimes useful to know when the compressed stream does not
 | ||
|    start with the correct magic bytes (<tt class="computeroutput">'B' 'Z'
 | ||
|    'h'</tt>).</p></dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="term"><tt class="computeroutput">BZ_IO_ERROR</tt></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><p>Returned by
 | ||
|    <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzRead</tt> and
 | ||
|    <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzWrite</tt> when there is an
 | ||
|    error reading or writing in the compressed file, and by
 | ||
|    <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzReadOpen</tt> and
 | ||
|    <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzWriteOpen</tt> for attempts
 | ||
|    to use a file for which the error indicator (viz,
 | ||
|    <tt class="computeroutput">ferror(f)</tt>) is set.  On
 | ||
|    receipt of <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_IO_ERROR</tt>, the
 | ||
|    caller should consult <tt class="computeroutput">errno</tt>
 | ||
|    and/or <tt class="computeroutput">perror</tt> to acquire
 | ||
|    operating-system specific information about the
 | ||
|    problem.</p></dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="term"><tt class="computeroutput">BZ_UNEXPECTED_EOF</tt></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><p>Returned by
 | ||
|    <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzRead</tt> when the
 | ||
|    compressed file finishes before the logical end of stream is
 | ||
|    detected.</p></dd>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="term"><tt class="computeroutput">BZ_OUTBUFF_FULL</tt></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dd><p>Returned by
 | ||
|    <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzBuffToBuffCompress</tt> and
 | ||
|    <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompress</tt> to
 | ||
|    indicate that the output data will not fit into the output
 | ||
|    buffer provided.</p></dd>
 | ||
| </dl></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect1" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both">
 | ||
| <a name="low-level"></a>3.3.<2E>Low-level interface</h2></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect2" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h3 class="title">
 | ||
| <a name="bzcompress-init"></a>3.3.1.<2E><tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompressInit</tt></h3></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bz_stream</tt> structure holds all
 | ||
| data pertaining to the compression activity.  A
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bz_stream</tt> structure should be
 | ||
| allocated and initialised prior to the call.  The fields of
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bz_stream</tt> comprise the entirety
 | ||
| of the user-visible data.  <tt class="computeroutput">state</tt>
 | ||
| is a pointer to the private data structures required for
 | ||
| compression.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Custom memory allocators are supported, via fields
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzalloc</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzfree</tt>, and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">opaque</tt>.  The value
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">opaque</tt> is passed to as the first
 | ||
| argument to all calls to <tt class="computeroutput">bzalloc</tt>
 | ||
| and <tt class="computeroutput">bzfree</tt>, but is otherwise
 | ||
| ignored by the library.  The call <tt class="computeroutput">bzalloc (
 | ||
| opaque, n, m )</tt> is expected to return a pointer
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">p</tt> to <tt class="computeroutput">n *
 | ||
| m</tt> bytes of memory, and <tt class="computeroutput">bzfree (
 | ||
| opaque, p )</tt> should free that memory.</p>
 | ||
| <p>If you don't want to use a custom memory allocator, set
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzalloc</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzfree</tt> and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">opaque</tt> to
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">NULL</tt>, and the library will then
 | ||
| use the standard <tt class="computeroutput">malloc</tt> /
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">free</tt> routines.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Before calling
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompressInit</tt>, fields
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzalloc</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzfree</tt> and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">opaque</tt> should be filled
 | ||
| appropriately, as just described.  Upon return, the internal
 | ||
| state will have been allocated and initialised, and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">total_in_lo32</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">total_in_hi32</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">total_out_lo32</tt> and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">total_out_hi32</tt> 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 <tt class="computeroutput">_hi32</tt>
 | ||
| fields to store the upper 32 bits of the count.  So, for example,
 | ||
| the total amount of data in is <tt class="computeroutput">(total_in_hi32
 | ||
| << 32) + total_in_lo32</tt>.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Parameter <tt class="computeroutput">blockSize100k</tt>
 | ||
| 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 <tt class="computeroutput">verbosity</tt> 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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">-DBZ_NO_STDIO</tt>, no such output
 | ||
| will appear for any verbosity setting.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Parameter <tt class="computeroutput">workFactor</tt>
 | ||
| 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 <tt class="computeroutput">workFactor</tt>
 | ||
| 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:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">BZ_CONFIG_ERROR
 | ||
|   if the library has been mis-compiled
 | ||
| BZ_PARAM_ERROR
 | ||
|   if strm is NULL 
 | ||
|   or blockSize < 1 or blockSize > 9
 | ||
|   or verbosity < 0 or verbosity > 4
 | ||
|   or workFactor < 0 or workFactor > 250
 | ||
| BZ_MEM_ERROR 
 | ||
|   if not enough memory is available
 | ||
| BZ_OK 
 | ||
|   otherwise</pre>
 | ||
| <p>Allowable next actions:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">BZ2_bzCompress
 | ||
|   if BZ_OK is returned
 | ||
|   no specific action needed in case of error</pre>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect2" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h3 class="title">
 | ||
| <a name="bzCompress"></a>3.3.2.<2E><tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompress</tt></h3></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">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 <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompress</tt> to transfer
 | ||
| data between them.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Before each call to
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompress</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">next_in</tt> should point at the data
 | ||
| to be compressed, and <tt class="computeroutput">avail_in</tt>
 | ||
| should indicate how many bytes the library may read.
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompress</tt> updates
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">next_in</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">avail_in</tt> and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">total_in</tt> to reflect the number
 | ||
| of bytes it has read.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Similarly, <tt class="computeroutput">next_out</tt> should
 | ||
| point to a buffer in which the compressed data is to be placed,
 | ||
| with <tt class="computeroutput">avail_out</tt> indicating how
 | ||
| much output space is available.
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompress</tt> updates
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">next_out</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">avail_out</tt> and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">total_out</tt> 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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompress</tt>.  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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompress</tt> 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
 | ||
| (<tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompressInit</tt>) and after
 | ||
| termination (<tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompressEnd</tt>),
 | ||
| a stream is regarded as IDLE.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Upon initialisation
 | ||
| (<tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompressInit</tt>), the stream
 | ||
| is placed in the RUNNING state.  Subsequent calls to
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompress</tt> should pass
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_RUN</tt> as the requested action;
 | ||
| other actions are illegal and will result in
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR</tt>.</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,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompress</tt> will no longer
 | ||
| attempt to read data from
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">next_in</tt>, but it will want to
 | ||
| write data to <tt class="computeroutput">next_out</tt>.  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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompress</tt>.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Instead, the calling program passes
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_FINISH</tt> as an action to
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompress</tt>.  This changes
 | ||
| the stream's state to FINISHING.  Any remaining input (ie,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">next_in[0 .. avail_in-1]</tt>) is
 | ||
| compressed and transferred to the output buffer.  To do this,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompress</tt> must be called
 | ||
| repeatedly until all the output has been consumed.  At that
 | ||
| point, <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompress</tt> returns
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_STREAM_END</tt>, and the stream's
 | ||
| state is set back to IDLE.
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompressEnd</tt> should then be
 | ||
| called.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Just to make sure the calling program does not cheat, the
 | ||
| library makes a note of <tt class="computeroutput">avail_in</tt>
 | ||
| at the time of the first call to
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompress</tt> which has
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_FINISH</tt> 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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">avail_in</tt> over subsequent calls
 | ||
| to <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompress</tt>, the library
 | ||
| can detect any attempts to slip in more data to compress.  Any
 | ||
| calls for which this is detected will return
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR</tt>.  This
 | ||
| indicates a programming mistake which should be corrected.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Instead of asking to finish, the calling program may ask
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompress</tt> 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 <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompress</tt>
 | ||
| with an action of <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_FLUSH</tt>,
 | ||
| remove output data, and persist with the
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_FLUSH</tt> action until the value
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_RUN</tt> is returned.  As with
 | ||
| finishing, <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompress</tt>
 | ||
| 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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompress</tt>.</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">IDLE/any
 | ||
|   Illegal.  IDLE state only exists after BZ2_bzCompressEnd or
 | ||
|   before BZ2_bzCompressInit.
 | ||
|   Return value = BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| RUNNING/BZ_RUN
 | ||
|   Compress from next_in to next_out as much as possible.
 | ||
|   Next state = RUNNING
 | ||
|   Return value = BZ_RUN_OK
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| RUNNING/BZ_FLUSH
 | ||
|   Remember current value of next_in. Compress from next_in
 | ||
|   to next_out as much as possible, but do not accept any more input.
 | ||
|   Next state = FLUSHING
 | ||
|   Return value = BZ_FLUSH_OK
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| RUNNING/BZ_FINISH
 | ||
|   Remember current value of next_in. Compress from next_in
 | ||
|   to next_out as much as possible, but do not accept any more input.
 | ||
|   Next state = FINISHING
 | ||
|   Return value = BZ_FINISH_OK
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| FLUSHING/BZ_FLUSH
 | ||
|   Compress from next_in to 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 = BZ_RUN_OK
 | ||
|   else
 | ||
|     Next state = FLUSHING; Return value = BZ_FLUSH_OK
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| FLUSHING/other     
 | ||
|   Illegal.
 | ||
|   Return value = BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| FINISHING/BZ_FINISH
 | ||
|   Compress from next_in to 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 = BZ_STREAM_END
 | ||
|   else
 | ||
|     Next state = FINISHING; Return value = BZ_FINISHING
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| FINISHING/other
 | ||
|   Illegal.
 | ||
|   Return value = BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR</pre>
 | ||
| <p>That still looks complicated?  Well, fair enough.  The
 | ||
| usual sequence of calls for compressing a load of data is:</p>
 | ||
| <div class="orderedlist"><ol type="1">
 | ||
| <li><p>Get started with
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompressInit</tt>.</p></li>
 | ||
| <li><p>Shovel data in and shlurp out its compressed form
 | ||
|   using zero or more calls of
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompress</tt> with action =
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_RUN</tt>.</p></li>
 | ||
| <li><p>Finish up. Repeatedly call
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompress</tt> with action =
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_FINISH</tt>, copying out the
 | ||
|   compressed output, until
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_STREAM_END</tt> is
 | ||
|   returned.</p></li>
 | ||
| <li><p>Close up and go home.  Call
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompressEnd</tt>.</p></li>
 | ||
| </ol></div>
 | ||
| <p>If the data you want to compress fits into your input
 | ||
| buffer all at once, you can skip the calls of
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompress ( ..., BZ_RUN )</tt>
 | ||
| and just do the <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompress ( ..., BZ_FINISH
 | ||
| )</tt> calls.</p>
 | ||
| <p>All required memory is allocated by
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompressInit</tt>.  The
 | ||
| compression library can accept any data at all (obviously).  So
 | ||
| you shouldn't get any error return values from the
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompress</tt> calls.  If you
 | ||
| do, they will be
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR</tt>, and indicate
 | ||
| a bug in your programming.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Trivial other possible return values:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">BZ_PARAM_ERROR
 | ||
|   if strm is NULL, or strm->s is NULL</pre>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect2" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h3 class="title">
 | ||
| <a name="bzCompress-end"></a>3.3.3.<2E><tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompressEnd</tt></h3></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">int BZ2_bzCompressEnd ( bz_stream *strm );</pre>
 | ||
| <p>Releases all memory associated with a compression
 | ||
| stream.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Possible return values:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">BZ_PARAM_ERROR  if strm is NULL or strm->s is NULL
 | ||
| BZ_OK           otherwise</pre>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect2" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h3 class="title">
 | ||
| <a name="bzDecompress-init"></a>3.3.4.<2E><tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzDecompressInit</tt></h3></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">int BZ2_bzDecompressInit ( bz_stream *strm, int verbosity, int small );</pre>
 | ||
| <p>Prepares for decompression.  As with
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompressInit</tt>, a
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bz_stream</tt> record should be
 | ||
| allocated and initialised before the call.  Fields
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzalloc</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzfree</tt> and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">opaque</tt> should be set if a custom
 | ||
| memory allocator is required, or made
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">NULL</tt> for the normal
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">malloc</tt> /
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">free</tt> routines.  Upon return, the
 | ||
| internal state will have been initialised, and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">total_in</tt> and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">total_out</tt> will be zero.</p>
 | ||
| <p>For the meaning of parameter
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">verbosity</tt>, see
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompressInit</tt>.</p>
 | ||
| <p>If <tt class="computeroutput">small</tt> 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 <a href="#using">How to use bzip2</a>
 | ||
| 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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzDecompressInit</tt> succeeds, a
 | ||
| subsequent <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzDecompress</tt>
 | ||
| could fail with
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_MEM_ERROR</tt>.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Possible return values:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">BZ_CONFIG_ERROR
 | ||
|   if the library has been mis-compiled
 | ||
| BZ_PARAM_ERROR
 | ||
|   if ( small != 0 && small != 1 )
 | ||
|   or (verbosity <; 0 || verbosity > 4)
 | ||
| BZ_MEM_ERROR
 | ||
|   if insufficient memory is available</pre>
 | ||
| <p>Allowable next actions:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">BZ2_bzDecompress
 | ||
|   if BZ_OK was returned
 | ||
|   no specific action required in case of error</pre>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect2" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h3 class="title">
 | ||
| <a name="bzDecompress"></a>3.3.5.<2E><tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzDecompress</tt></h3></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzDecompress</tt> to transfer
 | ||
| data between them.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Before each call to
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzDecompress</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">next_in</tt> should point at the
 | ||
| compressed data, and <tt class="computeroutput">avail_in</tt>
 | ||
| should indicate how many bytes the library may read.
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzDecompress</tt> updates
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">next_in</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">avail_in</tt> and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">total_in</tt> to reflect the number
 | ||
| of bytes it has read.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Similarly, <tt class="computeroutput">next_out</tt> should
 | ||
| point to a buffer in which the uncompressed output is to be
 | ||
| placed, with <tt class="computeroutput">avail_out</tt>
 | ||
| indicating how much output space is available.
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompress</tt> updates
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">next_out</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">avail_out</tt> and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">total_out</tt> 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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzDecompress</tt>.  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 <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzDecompress</tt> is
 | ||
| simpler than
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompress</tt>.</p>
 | ||
| <p>You should provide input and remove output as described
 | ||
| above, and repeatedly call
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzDecompress</tt> until
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_STREAM_END</tt> is returned.
 | ||
| Appearance of <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_STREAM_END</tt>
 | ||
| denotes that <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzDecompress</tt>
 | ||
| has detected the logical end of the compressed stream.
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzDecompress</tt> will not
 | ||
| produce <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_STREAM_END</tt> until all
 | ||
| output data has been placed into the output buffer, so once
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_STREAM_END</tt> appears, you are
 | ||
| guaranteed to have available all the decompressed output, and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzDecompressEnd</tt> can safely
 | ||
| be called.</p>
 | ||
| <p>If case of an error return value, you should call
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzDecompressEnd</tt> to clean up
 | ||
| and release memory.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Possible return values:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">BZ_PARAM_ERROR
 | ||
|   if strm is NULL or strm->s is NULL
 | ||
|   or strm->avail_out < 1
 | ||
| BZ_DATA_ERROR
 | ||
|   if a data integrity error is detected in the compressed stream
 | ||
| BZ_DATA_ERROR_MAGIC
 | ||
|   if the compressed stream doesn't begin with the right magic bytes
 | ||
| BZ_MEM_ERROR
 | ||
|   if there wasn't enough memory available
 | ||
| BZ_STREAM_END
 | ||
|   if the logical end of the data stream was detected and all
 | ||
|   output in has been consumed, eg s-->avail_out > 0
 | ||
| BZ_OK
 | ||
|   otherwise</pre>
 | ||
| <p>Allowable next actions:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">BZ2_bzDecompress
 | ||
|   if BZ_OK was returned
 | ||
| BZ2_bzDecompressEnd
 | ||
|   otherwise</pre>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect2" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h3 class="title">
 | ||
| <a name="bzDecompress-end"></a>3.3.6.<2E><tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzDecompressEnd</tt></h3></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">int BZ2_bzDecompressEnd ( bz_stream *strm );</pre>
 | ||
| <p>Releases all memory associated with a decompression
 | ||
| stream.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Possible return values:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">BZ_PARAM_ERROR
 | ||
|   if strm is NULL or strm->s is NULL
 | ||
| BZ_OK
 | ||
|   otherwise</pre>
 | ||
| <p>Allowable next actions:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">  None.</pre>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect1" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both">
 | ||
| <a name="hl-interface"></a>3.4.<2E>High-level interface</h2></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <p>This interface provides functions for reading and writing
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> format files.  First, some
 | ||
| general points.</p>
 | ||
| <div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="bullet">
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p>All of the functions take an
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">int*</tt> first argument,
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">bzerror</tt>.  After each call,
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">bzerror</tt> should be consulted
 | ||
|   first to determine the outcome of the call.  If
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">bzerror</tt> is
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_OK</tt>, the call completed
 | ||
|   successfully, and only then should the return value of the
 | ||
|   function (if any) be consulted.  If
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">bzerror</tt> is
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_IO_ERROR</tt>, there was an
 | ||
|   error reading/writing the underlying compressed file, and you
 | ||
|   should then consult <tt class="computeroutput">errno</tt> /
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">perror</tt> to determine the cause
 | ||
|   of the difficulty.  <tt class="computeroutput">bzerror</tt>
 | ||
|   may also be set to various other values; precise details are
 | ||
|   given on a per-function basis below.</p></li>
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p>If <tt class="computeroutput">bzerror</tt> indicates
 | ||
|   an error (ie, anything except
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_OK</tt> and
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_STREAM_END</tt>), you should
 | ||
|   immediately call
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzReadClose</tt> (or
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzWriteClose</tt>, 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
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzReadClose</tt>
 | ||
|   (<tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzWriteClose</tt>) is
 | ||
|   undefined.  The implication is that (1)
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">bzerror</tt> should be checked
 | ||
|   after each call, and (2) if
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">bzerror</tt> indicates an error,
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzReadClose</tt>
 | ||
|   (<tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzWriteClose</tt>) should then
 | ||
|   be called to clean up.</p></li>
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p>The <tt class="computeroutput">FILE*</tt> arguments
 | ||
|   passed to <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzReadOpen</tt> /
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzWriteOpen</tt> 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.</p></li>
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p>Memory allocation requests are handled by
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">malloc</tt> /
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">free</tt>.  At present there is no
 | ||
|   facility for user-defined memory allocators in the file I/O
 | ||
|   functions (could easily be added, though).</p></li>
 | ||
| </ul></div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect2" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h3 class="title">
 | ||
| <a name="bzreadopen"></a>3.4.1.<2E><tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzReadOpen</tt></h3></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">typedef void BZFILE;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| BZFILE *BZ2_bzReadOpen( int *bzerror, FILE *f, 
 | ||
|                         int verbosity, int small,
 | ||
|                         void *unused, int nUnused );</pre>
 | ||
| <p>Prepare to read compressed data from file handle
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">f</tt>.
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">f</tt> should refer to a file which
 | ||
| has been opened for reading, and for which the error indicator
 | ||
| (<tt class="computeroutput">ferror(f)</tt>)is not set.  If
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">small</tt> is 1, the library will try
 | ||
| to decompress using less memory, at the expense of speed.</p>
 | ||
| <p>For reasons explained below,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzRead</tt> will decompress the
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">nUnused</tt> bytes starting at
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">unused</tt>, before starting to read
 | ||
| from the file <tt class="computeroutput">f</tt>.  At most
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_MAX_UNUSED</tt> bytes may be
 | ||
| supplied like this.  If this facility is not required, you should
 | ||
| pass <tt class="computeroutput">NULL</tt> and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">0</tt> for
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">unused</tt> and
 | ||
| n<tt class="computeroutput">Unused</tt> respectively.</p>
 | ||
| <p>For the meaning of parameters
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">small</tt> and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">verbosity</tt>, see
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzDecompressInit</tt>.</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 <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzReadOpen</tt>
 | ||
| returns <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_OK</tt> but a subsequent
 | ||
| call of <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzRead</tt> will return
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_MEM_ERROR</tt>.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Possible assignments to
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzerror</tt>:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">BZ_CONFIG_ERROR
 | ||
|   if the library has been mis-compiled
 | ||
| BZ_PARAM_ERROR
 | ||
|   if f is NULL
 | ||
|   or small is neither 0 nor 1
 | ||
|   or ( unused == NULL && nUnused != 0 )
 | ||
|   or ( unused != NULL && !(0 <= nUnused <= BZ_MAX_UNUSED) )
 | ||
| BZ_IO_ERROR
 | ||
|   if ferror(f) is nonzero
 | ||
| BZ_MEM_ERROR
 | ||
|   if insufficient memory is available
 | ||
| BZ_OK
 | ||
|   otherwise.</pre>
 | ||
| <p>Possible return values:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">Pointer to an abstract BZFILE
 | ||
|   if bzerror is BZ_OK
 | ||
| NULL
 | ||
|   otherwise</pre>
 | ||
| <p>Allowable next actions:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">BZ2_bzRead
 | ||
|   if bzerror is BZ_OK
 | ||
| BZ2_bzClose
 | ||
|   otherwise</pre>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect2" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h3 class="title">
 | ||
| <a name="bzread"></a>3.4.2.<2E><tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzRead</tt></h3></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">int BZ2_bzRead ( int *bzerror, BZFILE *b, void *buf, int len );</pre>
 | ||
| <p>Reads up to <tt class="computeroutput">len</tt>
 | ||
| (uncompressed) bytes from the compressed file
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">b</tt> into the buffer
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">buf</tt>.  If the read was
 | ||
| successful, <tt class="computeroutput">bzerror</tt> is set to
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_OK</tt> and the number of bytes
 | ||
| read is returned.  If the logical end-of-stream was detected,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzerror</tt> will be set to
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_STREAM_END</tt>, and the number of
 | ||
| bytes read is returned.  All other
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzerror</tt> values denote an
 | ||
| error.</p>
 | ||
| <p><tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzRead</tt> will supply
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">len</tt> 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 <tt class="computeroutput">bzerror</tt> after every call
 | ||
| and watch out for
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_STREAM_END</tt>.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Internally, <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzRead</tt>
 | ||
| copies data from the compressed file in chunks of size
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_MAX_UNUSED</tt> bytes before
 | ||
| decompressing it.  If the file contains more bytes than strictly
 | ||
| needed to reach the logical end-of-stream,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzRead</tt> will almost certainly
 | ||
| read some of the trailing data before signalling
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_SEQUENCE_END</tt>.  To collect the
 | ||
| read but unused data once
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_SEQUENCE_END</tt> has appeared,
 | ||
| call <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzReadGetUnused</tt>
 | ||
| immediately before
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzReadClose</tt>.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Possible assignments to
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzerror</tt>:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">BZ_PARAM_ERROR
 | ||
|   if b is NULL or buf is NULL or len < 0
 | ||
| BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR
 | ||
|   if b was opened with BZ2_bzWriteOpen
 | ||
| BZ_IO_ERROR
 | ||
|   if there is an error reading from the compressed file
 | ||
| BZ_UNEXPECTED_EOF
 | ||
|   if the compressed file ended before 
 | ||
|   the logical end-of-stream was detected
 | ||
| BZ_DATA_ERROR
 | ||
|   if a data integrity error was detected in the compressed stream
 | ||
| BZ_DATA_ERROR_MAGIC
 | ||
|   if the stream does not begin with the requisite header bytes 
 | ||
|   (ie, is not a bzip2 data file).  This is really 
 | ||
|   a special case of BZ_DATA_ERROR.
 | ||
| BZ_MEM_ERROR
 | ||
|   if insufficient memory was available
 | ||
| BZ_STREAM_END
 | ||
|   if the logical end of stream was detected.
 | ||
| BZ_OK
 | ||
|   otherwise.</pre>
 | ||
| <p>Possible return values:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">number of bytes read
 | ||
|   if bzerror is BZ_OK or BZ_STREAM_END
 | ||
| undefined
 | ||
|   otherwise</pre>
 | ||
| <p>Allowable next actions:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">collect data from buf, then BZ2_bzRead or BZ2_bzReadClose
 | ||
|   if bzerror is BZ_OK
 | ||
| collect data from buf, then BZ2_bzReadClose or BZ2_bzReadGetUnused
 | ||
|   if bzerror is BZ_SEQUENCE_END
 | ||
| BZ2_bzReadClose
 | ||
|   otherwise</pre>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect2" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h3 class="title">
 | ||
| <a name="bzreadgetunused"></a>3.4.3.<2E><tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzReadGetUnused</tt></h3></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">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.
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">*unused</tt> is set to the address of
 | ||
| the data, and <tt class="computeroutput">*nUnused</tt> to the
 | ||
| number of bytes.  <tt class="computeroutput">*nUnused</tt> will
 | ||
| be set to a value between <tt class="computeroutput">0</tt> and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_MAX_UNUSED</tt> inclusive.</p>
 | ||
| <p>This function may only be called once
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzRead</tt> has signalled
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_STREAM_END</tt> but before
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzReadClose</tt>.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Possible assignments to
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzerror</tt>:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">BZ_PARAM_ERROR
 | ||
|   if b is NULL
 | ||
|   or unused is NULL or nUnused is NULL
 | ||
| BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR
 | ||
|   if BZ_STREAM_END has not been signalled
 | ||
|   or if b was opened with BZ2_bzWriteOpen
 | ||
| BZ_OK
 | ||
|   otherwise</pre>
 | ||
| <p>Allowable next actions:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">BZ2_bzReadClose</pre>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect2" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h3 class="title">
 | ||
| <a name="bzreadclose"></a>3.4.4.<2E><tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzReadClose</tt></h3></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">void BZ2_bzReadClose ( int *bzerror, BZFILE *b );</pre>
 | ||
| <p>Releases all memory pertaining to the compressed file
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">b</tt>.
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzReadClose</tt> does not call
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">fclose</tt> on the underlying file
 | ||
| handle, so you should do that yourself if appropriate.
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzReadClose</tt> should be called
 | ||
| to clean up after all error situations.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Possible assignments to
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzerror</tt>:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR
 | ||
|   if b was opened with BZ2_bzOpenWrite
 | ||
| BZ_OK
 | ||
|   otherwise</pre>
 | ||
| <p>Allowable next actions:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">none</pre>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect2" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h3 class="title">
 | ||
| <a name="bzwriteopen"></a>3.4.5.<2E><tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzWriteOpen</tt></h3></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">BZFILE *BZ2_bzWriteOpen( int *bzerror, FILE *f, 
 | ||
|                          int blockSize100k, int verbosity,
 | ||
|                          int workFactor );</pre>
 | ||
| <p>Prepare to write compressed data to file handle
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">f</tt>.
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">f</tt> should refer to a file which
 | ||
| has been opened for writing, and for which the error indicator
 | ||
| (<tt class="computeroutput">ferror(f)</tt>)is not set.</p>
 | ||
| <p>For the meaning of parameters
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">blockSize100k</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">verbosity</tt> and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">workFactor</tt>, see
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompressInit</tt>.</p>
 | ||
| <p>All required memory is allocated at this stage, so if the
 | ||
| call completes successfully,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_MEM_ERROR</tt> cannot be signalled
 | ||
| by a subsequent call to
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzWrite</tt>.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Possible assignments to
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzerror</tt>:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">BZ_CONFIG_ERROR
 | ||
|   if the library has been mis-compiled
 | ||
| BZ_PARAM_ERROR
 | ||
|   if f is NULL
 | ||
|   or blockSize100k < 1 or blockSize100k > 9
 | ||
| BZ_IO_ERROR
 | ||
|   if ferror(f) is nonzero
 | ||
| BZ_MEM_ERROR
 | ||
|   if insufficient memory is available
 | ||
| BZ_OK
 | ||
|   otherwise</pre>
 | ||
| <p>Possible return values:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">Pointer to an abstract BZFILE
 | ||
|   if bzerror is BZ_OK
 | ||
| NULL
 | ||
|   otherwise</pre>
 | ||
| <p>Allowable next actions:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">BZ2_bzWrite
 | ||
|   if bzerror is BZ_OK
 | ||
|   (you could go directly to BZ2_bzWriteClose, but this would be pretty pointless)
 | ||
| BZ2_bzWriteClose
 | ||
|   otherwise</pre>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect2" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h3 class="title">
 | ||
| <a name="bzwrite"></a>3.4.6.<2E><tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzWrite</tt></h3></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">void BZ2_bzWrite ( int *bzerror, BZFILE *b, void *buf, int len );</pre>
 | ||
| <p>Absorbs <tt class="computeroutput">len</tt> bytes from the
 | ||
| buffer <tt class="computeroutput">buf</tt>, eventually to be
 | ||
| compressed and written to the file.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Possible assignments to
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzerror</tt>:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">BZ_PARAM_ERROR
 | ||
|   if b is NULL or buf is NULL or len < 0
 | ||
| BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR
 | ||
|   if b was opened with BZ2_bzReadOpen
 | ||
| BZ_IO_ERROR
 | ||
|   if there is an error writing the compressed file.
 | ||
| BZ_OK
 | ||
|   otherwise</pre>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect2" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h3 class="title">
 | ||
| <a name="bzwriteclose"></a>3.4.7.<2E><tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzWriteClose</tt></h3></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">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 <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzWrite</tt>.
 | ||
| The logical end-of-stream markers are also written, so subsequent
 | ||
| calls to <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzWrite</tt> are
 | ||
| illegal.  All memory associated with the compressed file
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">b</tt> is released.
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">fflush</tt> is called on the
 | ||
| compressed file, but it is not
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">fclose</tt>'d.</p>
 | ||
| <p>If <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzWriteClose</tt> 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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">fflush</tt> the compressed file.  You
 | ||
| can force this behaviour to happen even in the case of no error,
 | ||
| by passing a nonzero value to
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">abandon</tt>.</p>
 | ||
| <p>If <tt class="computeroutput">nbytes_in</tt> is non-null,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">*nbytes_in</tt> will be set to be the
 | ||
| total volume of uncompressed data handled.  Similarly,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">nbytes_out</tt> will be set to the
 | ||
| total volume of compressed data written.  For compatibility with
 | ||
| older versions of the library,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzWriteClose</tt> only yields the
 | ||
| lower 32 bits of these counts.  Use
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzWriteClose64</tt> if you want
 | ||
| the full 64 bit counts.  These two functions are otherwise
 | ||
| absolutely identical.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Possible assignments to
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzerror</tt>:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">BZ_SEQUENCE_ERROR
 | ||
|   if b was opened with BZ2_bzReadOpen
 | ||
| BZ_IO_ERROR
 | ||
|   if there is an error writing the compressed file
 | ||
| BZ_OK
 | ||
|   otherwise</pre>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect2" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h3 class="title">
 | ||
| <a name="embed"></a>3.4.8.<2E>Handling embedded compressed data streams</h3></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <p>The high-level library facilitates use of
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> data streams which form
 | ||
| some part of a surrounding, larger data stream.</p>
 | ||
| <div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="bullet">
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p>For writing, the library takes an open file handle,
 | ||
|   writes compressed data to it,
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">fflush</tt>es it but does not
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">fclose</tt> it.  The calling
 | ||
|   application can write its own data before and after the
 | ||
|   compressed data stream, using that same file handle.</p></li>
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p>Reading is more complex, and the facilities are not as
 | ||
|   general as they could be since generality is hard to reconcile
 | ||
|   with efficiency.  <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzRead</tt>
 | ||
|   reads from the compressed file in blocks of size
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_MAX_UNUSED</tt> bytes, and in
 | ||
|   doing so probably will overshoot the logical end of compressed
 | ||
|   stream.  To recover this data once decompression has ended,
 | ||
|   call <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzReadGetUnused</tt> after
 | ||
|   the last call of <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzRead</tt>
 | ||
|   (the one returning
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_STREAM_END</tt>) but before
 | ||
|   calling
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzReadClose</tt>.</p></li>
 | ||
| </ul></div>
 | ||
| <p>This mechanism makes it easy to decompress multiple
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> streams placed end-to-end.
 | ||
| As the end of one stream, when
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzRead</tt> returns
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_STREAM_END</tt>, call
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzReadGetUnused</tt> 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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzReadOpen</tt> again, feeding in
 | ||
| the unused data via the <tt class="computeroutput">unused</tt> /
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">nUnused</tt> parameters.  Keep doing
 | ||
| this until <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_STREAM_END</tt> return
 | ||
| coincides with the physical end of file
 | ||
| (<tt class="computeroutput">feof(f)</tt>).  In this situation
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzReadGetUnused</tt> 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>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect2" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h3 class="title">
 | ||
| <a name="std-rdwr"></a>3.4.9.<2E>Standard file-reading/writing code</h3></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <p>Here's how you'd write data to a compressed file:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">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:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">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>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect1" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both">
 | ||
| <a name="util-fns"></a>3.5.<2E>Utility functions</h2></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect2" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h3 class="title">
 | ||
| <a name="bzbufftobuffcompress"></a>3.5.1.<2E><tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzBuffToBuffCompress</tt></h3></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">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 <tt class="computeroutput">source[0
 | ||
| .. sourceLen-1]</tt> into the destination buffer,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">dest[0 .. *destLen-1]</tt>.  If the
 | ||
| destination buffer is big enough,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">*destLen</tt> is set to the size of
 | ||
| the compressed data, and <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_OK</tt>
 | ||
| is returned.  If the compressed data won't fit,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">*destLen</tt> is unchanged, and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_OUTBUFF_FULL</tt> 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 <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> 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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">blockSize100k</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">verbosity</tt> and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">workFactor</tt>, see
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompressInit</tt>.</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><tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompress</tt>
 | ||
| will not write data at or beyond
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">dest[*destLen]</tt>, even in case of
 | ||
| buffer overflow.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Possible return values:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">BZ_CONFIG_ERROR
 | ||
|   if the library has been mis-compiled
 | ||
| BZ_PARAM_ERROR
 | ||
|   if dest is NULL or destLen is NULL
 | ||
|   or blockSize100k < 1 or blockSize100k > 9
 | ||
|   or verbosity < 0 or verbosity > 4
 | ||
|   or workFactor < 0 or workFactor > 250
 | ||
| BZ_MEM_ERROR
 | ||
|   if insufficient memory is available 
 | ||
| BZ_OUTBUFF_FULL
 | ||
|   if the size of the compressed data exceeds *destLen
 | ||
| BZ_OK
 | ||
|   otherwise</pre>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect2" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h3 class="title">
 | ||
| <a name="bzbufftobuffdecompress"></a>3.5.2.<2E><tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompress</tt></h3></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">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 <tt class="computeroutput">source[0
 | ||
| .. sourceLen-1]</tt> into the destination buffer,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">dest[0 .. *destLen-1]</tt>.  If the
 | ||
| destination buffer is big enough,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">*destLen</tt> is set to the size of
 | ||
| the uncompressed data, and <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_OK</tt>
 | ||
| is returned.  If the compressed data won't fit,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">*destLen</tt> is unchanged, and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_OUTBUFF_FULL</tt> is
 | ||
| returned.</p>
 | ||
| <p><tt class="computeroutput">source</tt> is assumed to hold
 | ||
| a complete <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> format data
 | ||
| stream.
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompress</tt> tries
 | ||
| to decompress the entirety of the stream into the output
 | ||
| buffer.</p>
 | ||
| <p>For the meaning of parameters
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">small</tt> and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">verbosity</tt>, see
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzDecompressInit</tt>.</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><tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompress</tt>
 | ||
| will not write data at or beyond
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">dest[*destLen]</tt>, even in case of
 | ||
| buffer overflow.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Possible return values:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">BZ_CONFIG_ERROR
 | ||
|   if the library has been mis-compiled
 | ||
| BZ_PARAM_ERROR
 | ||
|   if dest is NULL or destLen is NULL
 | ||
|   or small != 0 && small != 1
 | ||
|   or verbosity < 0 or verbosity > 4
 | ||
| BZ_MEM_ERROR
 | ||
|   if insufficient memory is available 
 | ||
| BZ_OUTBUFF_FULL
 | ||
|   if the size of the compressed data exceeds *destLen
 | ||
| BZ_DATA_ERROR
 | ||
|   if a data integrity error was detected in the compressed data
 | ||
| BZ_DATA_ERROR_MAGIC
 | ||
|   if the compressed data doesn't begin with the right magic bytes
 | ||
| BZ_UNEXPECTED_EOF
 | ||
|   if the compressed data ends unexpectedly
 | ||
| BZ_OK
 | ||
|   otherwise</pre>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect1" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both">
 | ||
| <a name="zlib-compat"></a>3.6.<2E><tt class="computeroutput">zlib</tt> compatibility functions</h2></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <p>Yoshioka Tsuneo has contributed some functions to give
 | ||
| better <tt class="computeroutput">zlib</tt> compatibility.
 | ||
| These functions are <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzopen</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzread</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzwrite</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzflush</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzclose</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzerror</tt> and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzlibVersion</tt>.  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.</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">typedef void BZFILE;
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| const char * BZ2_bzlibVersion ( void );</pre>
 | ||
| <p>Returns a string indicating the library version.</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">BZFILE * BZ2_bzopen  ( const char *path, const char *mode );
 | ||
| BZFILE * BZ2_bzdopen ( int        fd,    const char *mode );</pre>
 | ||
| <p>Opens a <tt class="computeroutput">.bz2</tt> file for
 | ||
| reading or writing, using either its name or a pre-existing file
 | ||
| descriptor.  Analogous to <tt class="computeroutput">fopen</tt>
 | ||
| and <tt class="computeroutput">fdopen</tt>.</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZFILE</tt>.  Analogous to
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">fread</tt> and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">fwrite</tt>.</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">int  BZ2_bzflush ( BZFILE* b );
 | ||
| void BZ2_bzclose ( BZFILE* b );</pre>
 | ||
| <p>Flushes/closes a <tt class="computeroutput">BZFILE</tt>.
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzflush</tt> doesn't actually do
 | ||
| anything.  Analogous to <tt class="computeroutput">fflush</tt>
 | ||
| and <tt class="computeroutput">fclose</tt>.</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">const char * BZ2_bzerror ( BZFILE *b, int *errnum )</pre>
 | ||
| <p>Returns a string describing the more recent error status of
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">b</tt>, and also sets
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">*errnum</tt> to its numerical
 | ||
| value.</p>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect1" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both">
 | ||
| <a name="stdio-free"></a>3.7.<2E>Using the library in a <tt class="computeroutput">stdio</tt>-free environment</h2></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect2" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h3 class="title">
 | ||
| <a name="stdio-bye"></a>3.7.1.<2E>Getting rid of <tt class="computeroutput">stdio</tt></h3></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_NO_STDIO</tt> defined.  Doing this
 | ||
| gives you a library containing only the following eight
 | ||
| functions:</p>
 | ||
| <p><tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompressInit</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompress</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzCompressEnd</tt>
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzDecompressInit</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzDecompress</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzDecompressEnd</tt>
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzBuffToBuffCompress</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ2_bzBuffToBuffDecompress</tt></p>
 | ||
| <p>When compiled like this, all functions will ignore
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">verbosity</tt> settings.</p>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect2" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h3 class="title">
 | ||
| <a name="critical-error"></a>3.7.2.<2E>Critical error handling</h3></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <p><tt class="computeroutput">libbzip2</tt> 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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_NO_STDIO</tt> set.</p>
 | ||
| <p>For a normal compile, an assertion failure yields the
 | ||
| message:</p>
 | ||
| <div class="blockquote"><blockquote class="blockquote">
 | ||
| <p>bzip2/libbzip2: internal error number N.</p>
 | ||
| <p>This is a bug in bzip2/libbzip2, 1.0.3 of 15 February 2005.
 | ||
| Please report it to me at: jseward@bzip.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, 15 February 2005.
 | ||
| </p>
 | ||
| </blockquote></div>
 | ||
| <p>where <tt class="computeroutput">N</tt> is some error code
 | ||
| number.  If <tt class="computeroutput">N == 1007</tt>, it also
 | ||
| prints some extra text advising the reader that unreliable memory
 | ||
| is often associated with internal error 1007. (This is a
 | ||
| frequently-observed-phenomenon with versions 1.0.0/1.0.1).</p>
 | ||
| <p><tt class="computeroutput">exit(3)</tt> is then
 | ||
| called.</p>
 | ||
| <p>For a <tt class="computeroutput">stdio</tt>-free library,
 | ||
| assertion failures result in a call to a function declared
 | ||
| as:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bz_stream</tt> 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>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect1" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both">
 | ||
| <a name="win-dll"></a>3.8.<2E>Making a Windows DLL</h2></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <p>Everything related to Windows has been contributed by
 | ||
| Yoshioka Tsuneo
 | ||
| (<tt class="computeroutput">QWF00133@niftyserve.or.jp</tt> /
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">tsuneo-y@is.aist-nara.ac.jp</tt>), so
 | ||
| you should send your queries to him (but perhaps Cc: me,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">jseward@bzip.org</tt>).</p>
 | ||
| <p>My vague understanding of what to do is: using Visual C++
 | ||
| 5.0, open the project file
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">libbz2.dsp</tt>, 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:
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">blocksort.c</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzlib.c</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">compress.c</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">crctable.c</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">decompress.c</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">huffman.c</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">randtable.c</tt> and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">libbz2.def</tt>.  You will also need
 | ||
| to name the header files <tt class="computeroutput">bzlib.h</tt>
 | ||
| and <tt class="computeroutput">bzlib_private.h</tt>.</p>
 | ||
| <p>If you don't use VC++, you may need to define the
 | ||
| proprocessor symbol
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">_WIN32</tt>.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Finally, <tt class="computeroutput">dlltest.c</tt> is a
 | ||
| sample program using the DLL.  It has a project file,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">dlltest.dsp</tt>.</p>
 | ||
| <p>If you just want a makefile for Visual C, have a look at
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">makefile.msc</tt>.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Be aware that if you compile
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> itself on Win32, you must
 | ||
| set <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_UNIX</tt> to 0 and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_LCCWIN32</tt> to 1, in the file
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2.c</tt>, 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>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="chapter" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h2 class="title">
 | ||
| <a name="misc"></a>4.<2E>Miscellanea</h2></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="toc">
 | ||
| <p><b>Table of Contents</b></p>
 | ||
| <dl>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#limits">4.1. Limitations of the compressed file format</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#port-issues">4.2. Portability issues</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#bugs">4.3. Reporting bugs</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#package">4.4. Did you get the right package?</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| <dt><span class="sect1"><a href="#reading">4.5. Further Reading</a></span></dt>
 | ||
| </dl>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <p>These are just some random thoughts of mine.  Your mileage
 | ||
| may vary.</p>
 | ||
| <div class="sect1" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both">
 | ||
| <a name="limits"></a>4.1.<2E>Limitations of the compressed file format</h2></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <p><tt class="computeroutput">bzip2-1.0.X</tt>,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">0.9.5</tt> and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">0.9.0</tt> use exactly the same file
 | ||
| format as the original version,
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2-0.1</tt>.  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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2-0.1</tt> in August 1997 has
 | ||
| shown complexities in the file format which slow down
 | ||
| decompression and, in retrospect, are unnecessary.  These
 | ||
| are:</p>
 | ||
| <div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="bullet">
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p>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.</p></li>
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc">
 | ||
| <p>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.</p>
 | ||
| <p>I could have changed to Sadakane's algorithm, but I find
 | ||
|    it to be slower than <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt>'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
 | ||
|    <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2-0.1</tt>'s performance on
 | ||
|    repetitive data, so perhaps it isn't a problem for real
 | ||
|    inputs.</p>
 | ||
| <p>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.</p>
 | ||
| </li>
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p>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
 | ||
|    <tt class="computeroutput">decompress.c</tt> 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.</p></li>
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p>An Adler-32 checksum, rather than a CRC32 checksum,
 | ||
|    would be faster to compute.</p></li>
 | ||
| </ul></div>
 | ||
| <p>It would be fair to say that the
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> 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:</p>
 | ||
| <div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="bullet">
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p>Single array implementation of the inverse BWT.  This
 | ||
|   significantly speeds up decompression, presumably because it
 | ||
|   reduces the number of cache misses.</p></li>
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p>Faster inverse MTF transform for large MTF values.
 | ||
|   The new implementation is based on the notion of sliding blocks
 | ||
|   of values.</p></li>
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p><tt class="computeroutput">bzip2-0.9.0</tt> now reads
 | ||
|   and writes files with <tt class="computeroutput">fread</tt>
 | ||
|   and <tt class="computeroutput">fwrite</tt>; version 0.1 used
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">putc</tt> and
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">getc</tt>.  Duh!  Well, you live
 | ||
|   and learn.</p></li>
 | ||
| </ul></div>
 | ||
| <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>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect1" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both">
 | ||
| <a name="port-issues"></a>4.2.<2E>Portability issues</h2></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <p>After some consideration, I have decided not to use GNU
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">autoconf</tt> to configure 0.9.5 or
 | ||
| 1.0.</p>
 | ||
| <p><tt class="computeroutput">autoconf</tt>, admirable and
 | ||
| wonderful though it is, mainly assists with portability problems
 | ||
| between Unix-like platforms.  But
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> 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.  <tt class="computeroutput">autoconf</tt> 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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">__inline__</tt> directives in the
 | ||
| code.  GNU C (<tt class="computeroutput">gcc</tt>) 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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">#define</tt>
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">__inline__</tt> to be
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">/* */</tt>.  One easy way to do this
 | ||
| is to compile with the flag
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">-D__inline__=</tt>, which should be
 | ||
| understood by most Unix compilers.</p>
 | ||
| <p>If you still have difficulties, try compiling with the
 | ||
| macro <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_STRICT_ANSI</tt> 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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt>'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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> binary for public distribution,
 | ||
| please consider linking it statically (<tt class="computeroutput">gcc
 | ||
| -static</tt>).  This avoids all sorts of library-version
 | ||
| issues that others may encounter later on.</p>
 | ||
| <p>If you build <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> on
 | ||
| Win32, you must set <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_UNIX</tt> to 0
 | ||
| and <tt class="computeroutput">BZ_LCCWIN32</tt> to 1, in the
 | ||
| file <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2.c</tt>, before compiling.
 | ||
| Otherwise the resulting binary won't work correctly.</p>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect1" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both">
 | ||
| <a name="bugs"></a>4.3.<2E>Reporting bugs</h2></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <p>I tried pretty hard to make sure
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> is bug free, both by
 | ||
| design and by testing.  Hopefully you'll never need to read this
 | ||
| section for real.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Nevertheless, if <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> dies
 | ||
| with a segmentation fault, a bus error or an internal assertion
 | ||
| failure, it will ask you to email me a bug report.  Experience from
 | ||
| years of feedback of bzip2 users indicates that almost all these
 | ||
| problems can be traced to either compiler bugs or hardware
 | ||
| problems.</p>
 | ||
| <div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="bullet">
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc">
 | ||
| <p>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
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt>, and I've run across two
 | ||
|   such examples myself.</p>
 | ||
| <p>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
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">-O2</tt>
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">-fomit-frame-pointer</tt>
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">-fno-strength-reduce</tt>.  You
 | ||
|   should specifically <span class="emphasis"><em>not</em></span> use
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">-funroll-loops</tt>.</p>
 | ||
| <p>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.</p>
 | ||
| </li>
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc">
 | ||
| <p>If <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt>
 | ||
|   crashes randomly, and the crashes are not repeatable, you may
 | ||
|   have a flaky memory subsystem.
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> 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.</p>
 | ||
| <p>Try using a different machine of the same type, and see
 | ||
|   if you can repeat the problem.</p>
 | ||
| </li>
 | ||
| <li style="list-style-type: disc"><p>This isn't really a bug, but ... If
 | ||
|   <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> 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.</p></li>
 | ||
| </ul></div>
 | ||
| <p>If you've incorporated
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">libbzip2</tt> 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:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">bzip2 crashed with segmentation fault on my machine</pre>
 | ||
| <p>and absolutely nothing else.  Needless to say, a such a
 | ||
| report is <span class="emphasis"><em>totally, utterly, completely and
 | ||
| comprehensively 100% useless; a waste of your time, my time, and
 | ||
| net bandwidth</em></span>.  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:</p>
 | ||
| <pre class="programlisting">Machine type.  Operating system version.  
 | ||
| Exact version of bzip2 (do bzip2 -V).  
 | ||
| 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>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect1" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both">
 | ||
| <a name="package"></a>4.4.<2E>Did you get the right package?</h2></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <p><tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> 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, <tt class="computeroutput">zlib-1.2.1</tt> and
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">gzip-1.2.4</tt>.  Look for them at 
 | ||
| <a href="http://www.zlib.org" target="_top">http://www.zlib.org</a> and 
 | ||
| <a href="http://www.gzip.org" target="_top">http://www.gzip.org</a>
 | ||
| respectively.</p>
 | ||
| <p>For something faster and lighter still, you might try Markus F
 | ||
| X J Oberhumer's <tt class="computeroutput">LZO</tt> real-time
 | ||
| compression/decompression library, at 
 | ||
| <a href="http://www.oberhumer.com/opensource" target="_top">http://www.oberhumer.com/opensource</a>.</p>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <div class="sect1" lang="en">
 | ||
| <div class="titlepage">
 | ||
| <div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both">
 | ||
| <a name="reading"></a>4.5.<2E>Further Reading</h2></div></div>
 | ||
| <div></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| <p><tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt> 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
 | ||
| <tt class="computeroutput">bzip2</tt>:</p>
 | ||
| <div class="literallayout"><p>Michael<EFBFBD>Burrows<EFBFBD>and<EFBFBD>D.<2E>J.<2E>Wheeler:<br>
 | ||
| <EFBFBD><EFBFBD>"A<>block-sorting<6E>lossless<73>data<74>compression<6F>algorithm"<br>
 | ||
| <EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>10th<EFBFBD>May<EFBFBD>1994.<2E><br>
 | ||
| <EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>Digital<EFBFBD>SRC<EFBFBD>Research<EFBFBD>Report<EFBFBD>124.<br>
 | ||
| <EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>ftp://ftp.digital.com/pub/DEC/SRC/research-reports/SRC-124.ps.gz<br>
 | ||
| <EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>If<EFBFBD>you<EFBFBD>have<EFBFBD>trouble<EFBFBD>finding<EFBFBD>it,<2C>try<72>searching<6E>at<61>the<br>
 | ||
| <EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>New<EFBFBD>Zealand<EFBFBD>Digital<EFBFBD>Library,<2C>http://www.nzdl.org.<br>
 | ||
| <br>
 | ||
| Daniel<EFBFBD>S.<2E>Hirschberg<72>and<6E>Debra<72>A.<2E>LeLewer<br>
 | ||
| <EFBFBD><EFBFBD>"Efficient<6E>Decoding<6E>of<6F>Prefix<69>Codes"<br>
 | ||
| <EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>Communications<EFBFBD>of<EFBFBD>the<EFBFBD>ACM,<2C>April<69>1990,<2C>Vol<6F>33,<2C>Number<65>4.<br>
 | ||
| <EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>You<EFBFBD>might<EFBFBD>be<EFBFBD>able<EFBFBD>to<EFBFBD>get<EFBFBD>an<EFBFBD>electronic<EFBFBD>copy<EFBFBD>of<EFBFBD>this<br>
 | ||
| <EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>from<EFBFBD>the<EFBFBD>ACM<EFBFBD>Digital<EFBFBD>Library.<br>
 | ||
| <br>
 | ||
| David<EFBFBD>J.<2E>Wheeler<br>
 | ||
| <EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>Program<EFBFBD>bred3.c<>and<6E>accompanying<6E>document<6E>bred3.ps.<br>
 | ||
| <EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>This<EFBFBD>contains<EFBFBD>the<EFBFBD>idea<EFBFBD>behind<EFBFBD>the<EFBFBD>multi-table<6C>Huffman<61>coding<6E>scheme.<br>
 | ||
| <EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>ftp://ftp.cl.cam.ac.uk/users/djw3/<br>
 | ||
| <br>
 | ||
| Jon<EFBFBD>L.<2E>Bentley<65>and<6E>Robert<72>Sedgewick<br>
 | ||
| <EFBFBD><EFBFBD>"Fast<73>Algorithms<6D>for<6F>Sorting<6E>and<6E>Searching<6E>Strings"<br>
 | ||
| <EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>Available<EFBFBD>from<EFBFBD>Sedgewick's<>web<65>page,<br>
 | ||
| <EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>www.cs.princeton.edu/~rs<br>
 | ||
| </p></div>
 | ||
| <p>The following paper gives valuable additional insights into
 | ||
| the algorithm, but is not immediately the basis of any code used
 | ||
| in bzip2.</p>
 | ||
| <div class="literallayout"><p>Peter<EFBFBD>Fenwick:<br>
 | ||
| <EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>Block<EFBFBD>Sorting<EFBFBD>Text<EFBFBD>Compression<br>
 | ||
| <EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>Proceedings<EFBFBD>of<EFBFBD>the<EFBFBD>19th<EFBFBD>Australasian<EFBFBD>Computer<EFBFBD>Science<EFBFBD>Conference,<br>
 | ||
| <EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>Melbourne,<2C>Australia.<2E><>Jan<61>31<33>-<2D>Feb<65>2,<2C>1996.<br>
 | ||
| <EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>ftp://ftp.cs.auckland.ac.nz/pub/peter-f/ACSC96paper.ps</p></div>
 | ||
| <p>Kunihiko Sadakane's sorting algorithm, mentioned above, is
 | ||
| available from:</p>
 | ||
| <div class="literallayout"><p>http://naomi.is.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp/~sada/papers/Sada98b.ps.gz<br>
 | ||
| </p></div>
 | ||
| <p>The Manber-Myers suffix array construction algorithm is
 | ||
| described in a paper available from:</p>
 | ||
| <div class="literallayout"><p>http://www.cs.arizona.edu/people/gene/PAPERS/suffix.ps<br>
 | ||
| </p></div>
 | ||
| <p>Finally, the following papers document some
 | ||
| investigations I made into the performance of sorting
 | ||
| and decompression algorithms:</p>
 | ||
| <div class="literallayout"><p>Julian<EFBFBD>Seward<br>
 | ||
| <EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>On<EFBFBD>the<EFBFBD>Performance<EFBFBD>of<EFBFBD>BWT<EFBFBD>Sorting<EFBFBD>Algorithms<br>
 | ||
| <EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>Proceedings<EFBFBD>of<EFBFBD>the<EFBFBD>IEEE<EFBFBD>Data<EFBFBD>Compression<EFBFBD>Conference<EFBFBD>2000<br>
 | ||
| <EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>Snowbird,<2C>Utah.<2E><>28-30<33>March<63>2000.<br>
 | ||
| <br>
 | ||
| Julian<EFBFBD>Seward<br>
 | ||
| <EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>Space-time<6D>Tradeoffs<66>in<69>the<68>Inverse<73>B-W<>Transform<br>
 | ||
| <EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>Proceedings<EFBFBD>of<EFBFBD>the<EFBFBD>IEEE<EFBFBD>Data<EFBFBD>Compression<EFBFBD>Conference<EFBFBD>2001<br>
 | ||
| <EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>Snowbird,<2C>Utah.<2E><>27-29<32>March<63>2001.<br>
 | ||
| </p></div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| </div>
 | ||
| </div></body>
 | ||
| </html>
 | 
