| 1 | /** |
| 2 | * \file lzma/lzma12.h |
| 3 | * \brief LZMA1 and LZMA2 filters |
| 4 | */ |
| 5 | |
| 6 | /* |
| 7 | * Author: Lasse Collin |
| 8 | * |
| 9 | * This file has been put into the public domain. |
| 10 | * You can do whatever you want with this file. |
| 11 | * |
| 12 | * See ../lzma.h for information about liblzma as a whole. |
| 13 | */ |
| 14 | |
| 15 | #ifndef LZMA_H_INTERNAL |
| 16 | # error Never include this file directly. Use <lzma.h> instead. |
| 17 | #endif |
| 18 | |
| 19 | |
| 20 | /** |
| 21 | * \brief LZMA1 Filter ID |
| 22 | * |
| 23 | * LZMA1 is the very same thing as what was called just LZMA in LZMA Utils, |
| 24 | * 7-Zip, and LZMA SDK. It's called LZMA1 here to prevent developers from |
| 25 | * accidentally using LZMA when they actually want LZMA2. |
| 26 | * |
| 27 | * LZMA1 shouldn't be used for new applications unless you _really_ know |
| 28 | * what you are doing. LZMA2 is almost always a better choice. |
| 29 | */ |
| 30 | #define LZMA_FILTER_LZMA1 LZMA_VLI_C(0x4000000000000001) |
| 31 | |
| 32 | /** |
| 33 | * \brief LZMA2 Filter ID |
| 34 | * |
| 35 | * Usually you want this instead of LZMA1. Compared to LZMA1, LZMA2 adds |
| 36 | * support for LZMA_SYNC_FLUSH, uncompressed chunks (smaller expansion |
| 37 | * when trying to compress uncompressible data), possibility to change |
| 38 | * lc/lp/pb in the middle of encoding, and some other internal improvements. |
| 39 | */ |
| 40 | #define LZMA_FILTER_LZMA2 LZMA_VLI_C(0x21) |
| 41 | |
| 42 | |
| 43 | /** |
| 44 | * \brief Match finders |
| 45 | * |
| 46 | * Match finder has major effect on both speed and compression ratio. |
| 47 | * Usually hash chains are faster than binary trees. |
| 48 | * |
| 49 | * If you will use LZMA_SYNC_FLUSH often, the hash chains may be a better |
| 50 | * choice, because binary trees get much higher compression ratio penalty |
| 51 | * with LZMA_SYNC_FLUSH. |
| 52 | * |
| 53 | * The memory usage formulas are only rough estimates, which are closest to |
| 54 | * reality when dict_size is a power of two. The formulas are more complex |
| 55 | * in reality, and can also change a little between liblzma versions. Use |
| 56 | * lzma_raw_encoder_memusage() to get more accurate estimate of memory usage. |
| 57 | */ |
| 58 | typedef enum { |
| 59 | LZMA_MF_HC3 = 0x03, |
| 60 | /**< |
| 61 | * \brief Hash Chain with 2- and 3-byte hashing |
| 62 | * |
| 63 | * Minimum nice_len: 3 |
| 64 | * |
| 65 | * Memory usage: |
| 66 | * - dict_size <= 16 MiB: dict_size * 7.5 |
| 67 | * - dict_size > 16 MiB: dict_size * 5.5 + 64 MiB |
| 68 | */ |
| 69 | |
| 70 | LZMA_MF_HC4 = 0x04, |
| 71 | /**< |
| 72 | * \brief Hash Chain with 2-, 3-, and 4-byte hashing |
| 73 | * |
| 74 | * Minimum nice_len: 4 |
| 75 | * |
| 76 | * Memory usage: |
| 77 | * - dict_size <= 32 MiB: dict_size * 7.5 |
| 78 | * - dict_size > 32 MiB: dict_size * 6.5 |
| 79 | */ |
| 80 | |
| 81 | LZMA_MF_BT2 = 0x12, |
| 82 | /**< |
| 83 | * \brief Binary Tree with 2-byte hashing |
| 84 | * |
| 85 | * Minimum nice_len: 2 |
| 86 | * |
| 87 | * Memory usage: dict_size * 9.5 |
| 88 | */ |
| 89 | |
| 90 | LZMA_MF_BT3 = 0x13, |
| 91 | /**< |
| 92 | * \brief Binary Tree with 2- and 3-byte hashing |
| 93 | * |
| 94 | * Minimum nice_len: 3 |
| 95 | * |
| 96 | * Memory usage: |
| 97 | * - dict_size <= 16 MiB: dict_size * 11.5 |
| 98 | * - dict_size > 16 MiB: dict_size * 9.5 + 64 MiB |
| 99 | */ |
| 100 | |
| 101 | LZMA_MF_BT4 = 0x14 |
| 102 | /**< |
| 103 | * \brief Binary Tree with 2-, 3-, and 4-byte hashing |
| 104 | * |
| 105 | * Minimum nice_len: 4 |
| 106 | * |
| 107 | * Memory usage: |
| 108 | * - dict_size <= 32 MiB: dict_size * 11.5 |
| 109 | * - dict_size > 32 MiB: dict_size * 10.5 |
| 110 | */ |
| 111 | } lzma_match_finder; |
| 112 | |
| 113 | |
| 114 | /** |
| 115 | * \brief Test if given match finder is supported |
| 116 | * |
| 117 | * Return true if the given match finder is supported by this liblzma build. |
| 118 | * Otherwise false is returned. It is safe to call this with a value that |
| 119 | * isn't listed in lzma_match_finder enumeration; the return value will be |
| 120 | * false. |
| 121 | * |
| 122 | * There is no way to list which match finders are available in this |
| 123 | * particular liblzma version and build. It would be useless, because |
| 124 | * a new match finder, which the application developer wasn't aware, |
| 125 | * could require giving additional options to the encoder that the older |
| 126 | * match finders don't need. |
| 127 | */ |
| 128 | extern LZMA_API(lzma_bool) lzma_mf_is_supported(lzma_match_finder match_finder) |
| 129 | lzma_nothrow lzma_attr_const; |
| 130 | |
| 131 | |
| 132 | /** |
| 133 | * \brief Compression modes |
| 134 | * |
| 135 | * This selects the function used to analyze the data produced by the match |
| 136 | * finder. |
| 137 | */ |
| 138 | typedef enum { |
| 139 | LZMA_MODE_FAST = 1, |
| 140 | /**< |
| 141 | * \brief Fast compression |
| 142 | * |
| 143 | * Fast mode is usually at its best when combined with |
| 144 | * a hash chain match finder. |
| 145 | */ |
| 146 | |
| 147 | LZMA_MODE_NORMAL = 2 |
| 148 | /**< |
| 149 | * \brief Normal compression |
| 150 | * |
| 151 | * This is usually notably slower than fast mode. Use this |
| 152 | * together with binary tree match finders to expose the |
| 153 | * full potential of the LZMA1 or LZMA2 encoder. |
| 154 | */ |
| 155 | } lzma_mode; |
| 156 | |
| 157 | |
| 158 | /** |
| 159 | * \brief Test if given compression mode is supported |
| 160 | * |
| 161 | * Return true if the given compression mode is supported by this liblzma |
| 162 | * build. Otherwise false is returned. It is safe to call this with a value |
| 163 | * that isn't listed in lzma_mode enumeration; the return value will be false. |
| 164 | * |
| 165 | * There is no way to list which modes are available in this particular |
| 166 | * liblzma version and build. It would be useless, because a new compression |
| 167 | * mode, which the application developer wasn't aware, could require giving |
| 168 | * additional options to the encoder that the older modes don't need. |
| 169 | */ |
| 170 | extern LZMA_API(lzma_bool) lzma_mode_is_supported(lzma_mode mode) |
| 171 | lzma_nothrow lzma_attr_const; |
| 172 | |
| 173 | |
| 174 | /** |
| 175 | * \brief Options specific to the LZMA1 and LZMA2 filters |
| 176 | * |
| 177 | * Since LZMA1 and LZMA2 share most of the code, it's simplest to share |
| 178 | * the options structure too. For encoding, all but the reserved variables |
| 179 | * need to be initialized unless specifically mentioned otherwise. |
| 180 | * lzma_lzma_preset() can be used to get a good starting point. |
| 181 | * |
| 182 | * For raw decoding, both LZMA1 and LZMA2 need dict_size, preset_dict, and |
| 183 | * preset_dict_size (if preset_dict != NULL). LZMA1 needs also lc, lp, and pb. |
| 184 | */ |
| 185 | typedef struct { |
| 186 | /** |
| 187 | * \brief Dictionary size in bytes |
| 188 | * |
| 189 | * Dictionary size indicates how many bytes of the recently processed |
| 190 | * uncompressed data is kept in memory. One method to reduce size of |
| 191 | * the uncompressed data is to store distance-length pairs, which |
| 192 | * indicate what data to repeat from the dictionary buffer. Thus, |
| 193 | * the bigger the dictionary, the better the compression ratio |
| 194 | * usually is. |
| 195 | * |
| 196 | * Maximum size of the dictionary depends on multiple things: |
| 197 | * - Memory usage limit |
| 198 | * - Available address space (not a problem on 64-bit systems) |
| 199 | * - Selected match finder (encoder only) |
| 200 | * |
| 201 | * Currently the maximum dictionary size for encoding is 1.5 GiB |
| 202 | * (i.e. (UINT32_C(1) << 30) + (UINT32_C(1) << 29)) even on 64-bit |
| 203 | * systems for certain match finder implementation reasons. In the |
| 204 | * future, there may be match finders that support bigger |
| 205 | * dictionaries. |
| 206 | * |
| 207 | * Decoder already supports dictionaries up to 4 GiB - 1 B (i.e. |
| 208 | * UINT32_MAX), so increasing the maximum dictionary size of the |
| 209 | * encoder won't cause problems for old decoders. |
| 210 | * |
| 211 | * Because extremely small dictionaries sizes would have unneeded |
| 212 | * overhead in the decoder, the minimum dictionary size is 4096 bytes. |
| 213 | * |
| 214 | * \note When decoding, too big dictionary does no other harm |
| 215 | * than wasting memory. |
| 216 | */ |
| 217 | uint32_t dict_size; |
| 218 | # define LZMA_DICT_SIZE_MIN UINT32_C(4096) |
| 219 | # define LZMA_DICT_SIZE_DEFAULT (UINT32_C(1) << 23) |
| 220 | |
| 221 | /** |
| 222 | * \brief Pointer to an initial dictionary |
| 223 | * |
| 224 | * It is possible to initialize the LZ77 history window using |
| 225 | * a preset dictionary. It is useful when compressing many |
| 226 | * similar, relatively small chunks of data independently from |
| 227 | * each other. The preset dictionary should contain typical |
| 228 | * strings that occur in the files being compressed. The most |
| 229 | * probable strings should be near the end of the preset dictionary. |
| 230 | * |
| 231 | * This feature should be used only in special situations. For |
| 232 | * now, it works correctly only with raw encoding and decoding. |
| 233 | * Currently none of the container formats supported by |
| 234 | * liblzma allow preset dictionary when decoding, thus if |
| 235 | * you create a .xz or .lzma file with preset dictionary, it |
| 236 | * cannot be decoded with the regular decoder functions. In the |
| 237 | * future, the .xz format will likely get support for preset |
| 238 | * dictionary though. |
| 239 | */ |
| 240 | const uint8_t *preset_dict; |
| 241 | |
| 242 | /** |
| 243 | * \brief Size of the preset dictionary |
| 244 | * |
| 245 | * Specifies the size of the preset dictionary. If the size is |
| 246 | * bigger than dict_size, only the last dict_size bytes are |
| 247 | * processed. |
| 248 | * |
| 249 | * This variable is read only when preset_dict is not NULL. |
| 250 | * If preset_dict is not NULL but preset_dict_size is zero, |
| 251 | * no preset dictionary is used (identical to only setting |
| 252 | * preset_dict to NULL). |
| 253 | */ |
| 254 | uint32_t preset_dict_size; |
| 255 | |
| 256 | /** |
| 257 | * \brief Number of literal context bits |
| 258 | * |
| 259 | * How many of the highest bits of the previous uncompressed |
| 260 | * eight-bit byte (also known as `literal') are taken into |
| 261 | * account when predicting the bits of the next literal. |
| 262 | * |
| 263 | * E.g. in typical English text, an upper-case letter is |
| 264 | * often followed by a lower-case letter, and a lower-case |
| 265 | * letter is usually followed by another lower-case letter. |
| 266 | * In the US-ASCII character set, the highest three bits are 010 |
| 267 | * for upper-case letters and 011 for lower-case letters. |
| 268 | * When lc is at least 3, the literal coding can take advantage of |
| 269 | * this property in the uncompressed data. |
| 270 | * |
| 271 | * There is a limit that applies to literal context bits and literal |
| 272 | * position bits together: lc + lp <= 4. Without this limit the |
| 273 | * decoding could become very slow, which could have security related |
| 274 | * results in some cases like email servers doing virus scanning. |
| 275 | * This limit also simplifies the internal implementation in liblzma. |
| 276 | * |
| 277 | * There may be LZMA1 streams that have lc + lp > 4 (maximum possible |
| 278 | * lc would be 8). It is not possible to decode such streams with |
| 279 | * liblzma. |
| 280 | */ |
| 281 | uint32_t lc; |
| 282 | # define LZMA_LCLP_MIN 0 |
| 283 | # define LZMA_LCLP_MAX 4 |
| 284 | # define LZMA_LC_DEFAULT 3 |
| 285 | |
| 286 | /** |
| 287 | * \brief Number of literal position bits |
| 288 | * |
| 289 | * lp affects what kind of alignment in the uncompressed data is |
| 290 | * assumed when encoding literals. A literal is a single 8-bit byte. |
| 291 | * See pb below for more information about alignment. |
| 292 | */ |
| 293 | uint32_t lp; |
| 294 | # define LZMA_LP_DEFAULT 0 |
| 295 | |
| 296 | /** |
| 297 | * \brief Number of position bits |
| 298 | * |
| 299 | * pb affects what kind of alignment in the uncompressed data is |
| 300 | * assumed in general. The default means four-byte alignment |
| 301 | * (2^ pb =2^2=4), which is often a good choice when there's |
| 302 | * no better guess. |
| 303 | * |
| 304 | * When the alignment is known, setting pb accordingly may reduce |
| 305 | * the file size a little. E.g. with text files having one-byte |
| 306 | * alignment (US-ASCII, ISO-8859-*, UTF-8), setting pb=0 can |
| 307 | * improve compression slightly. For UTF-16 text, pb=1 is a good |
| 308 | * choice. If the alignment is an odd number like 3 bytes, pb=0 |
| 309 | * might be the best choice. |
| 310 | * |
| 311 | * Even though the assumed alignment can be adjusted with pb and |
| 312 | * lp, LZMA1 and LZMA2 still slightly favor 16-byte alignment. |
| 313 | * It might be worth taking into account when designing file formats |
| 314 | * that are likely to be often compressed with LZMA1 or LZMA2. |
| 315 | */ |
| 316 | uint32_t pb; |
| 317 | # define LZMA_PB_MIN 0 |
| 318 | # define LZMA_PB_MAX 4 |
| 319 | # define LZMA_PB_DEFAULT 2 |
| 320 | |
| 321 | /** Compression mode */ |
| 322 | lzma_mode mode; |
| 323 | |
| 324 | /** |
| 325 | * \brief Nice length of a match |
| 326 | * |
| 327 | * This determines how many bytes the encoder compares from the match |
| 328 | * candidates when looking for the best match. Once a match of at |
| 329 | * least nice_len bytes long is found, the encoder stops looking for |
| 330 | * better candidates and encodes the match. (Naturally, if the found |
| 331 | * match is actually longer than nice_len, the actual length is |
| 332 | * encoded; it's not truncated to nice_len.) |
| 333 | * |
| 334 | * Bigger values usually increase the compression ratio and |
| 335 | * compression time. For most files, 32 to 128 is a good value, |
| 336 | * which gives very good compression ratio at good speed. |
| 337 | * |
| 338 | * The exact minimum value depends on the match finder. The maximum |
| 339 | * is 273, which is the maximum length of a match that LZMA1 and |
| 340 | * LZMA2 can encode. |
| 341 | */ |
| 342 | uint32_t nice_len; |
| 343 | |
| 344 | /** Match finder ID */ |
| 345 | lzma_match_finder mf; |
| 346 | |
| 347 | /** |
| 348 | * \brief Maximum search depth in the match finder |
| 349 | * |
| 350 | * For every input byte, match finder searches through the hash chain |
| 351 | * or binary tree in a loop, each iteration going one step deeper in |
| 352 | * the chain or tree. The searching stops if |
| 353 | * - a match of at least nice_len bytes long is found; |
| 354 | * - all match candidates from the hash chain or binary tree have |
| 355 | * been checked; or |
| 356 | * - maximum search depth is reached. |
| 357 | * |
| 358 | * Maximum search depth is needed to prevent the match finder from |
| 359 | * wasting too much time in case there are lots of short match |
| 360 | * candidates. On the other hand, stopping the search before all |
| 361 | * candidates have been checked can reduce compression ratio. |
| 362 | * |
| 363 | * Setting depth to zero tells liblzma to use an automatic default |
| 364 | * value, that depends on the selected match finder and nice_len. |
| 365 | * The default is in the range [4, 200] or so (it may vary between |
| 366 | * liblzma versions). |
| 367 | * |
| 368 | * Using a bigger depth value than the default can increase |
| 369 | * compression ratio in some cases. There is no strict maximum value, |
| 370 | * but high values (thousands or millions) should be used with care: |
| 371 | * the encoder could remain fast enough with typical input, but |
| 372 | * malicious input could cause the match finder to slow down |
| 373 | * dramatically, possibly creating a denial of service attack. |
| 374 | */ |
| 375 | uint32_t depth; |
| 376 | |
| 377 | /* |
| 378 | * Reserved space to allow possible future extensions without |
| 379 | * breaking the ABI. You should not touch these, because the names |
| 380 | * of these variables may change. These are and will never be used |
| 381 | * with the currently supported options, so it is safe to leave these |
| 382 | * uninitialized. |
| 383 | */ |
| 384 | uint32_t reserved_int1; |
| 385 | uint32_t reserved_int2; |
| 386 | uint32_t reserved_int3; |
| 387 | uint32_t reserved_int4; |
| 388 | uint32_t reserved_int5; |
| 389 | uint32_t reserved_int6; |
| 390 | uint32_t reserved_int7; |
| 391 | uint32_t reserved_int8; |
| 392 | lzma_reserved_enum reserved_enum1; |
| 393 | lzma_reserved_enum reserved_enum2; |
| 394 | lzma_reserved_enum reserved_enum3; |
| 395 | lzma_reserved_enum reserved_enum4; |
| 396 | void *reserved_ptr1; |
| 397 | void *reserved_ptr2; |
| 398 | |
| 399 | } lzma_options_lzma; |
| 400 | |
| 401 | |
| 402 | /** |
| 403 | * \brief Set a compression preset to lzma_options_lzma structure |
| 404 | * |
| 405 | * 0 is the fastest and 9 is the slowest. These match the switches -0 .. -9 |
| 406 | * of the xz command line tool. In addition, it is possible to bitwise-or |
| 407 | * flags to the preset. Currently only LZMA_PRESET_EXTREME is supported. |
| 408 | * The flags are defined in container.h, because the flags are used also |
| 409 | * with lzma_easy_encoder(). |
| 410 | * |
| 411 | * The preset values are subject to changes between liblzma versions. |
| 412 | * |
| 413 | * This function is available only if LZMA1 or LZMA2 encoder has been enabled |
| 414 | * when building liblzma. |
| 415 | * |
| 416 | * \return On success, false is returned. If the preset is not |
| 417 | * supported, true is returned. |
| 418 | */ |
| 419 | extern LZMA_API(lzma_bool) lzma_lzma_preset( |
| 420 | lzma_options_lzma *options, uint32_t preset) lzma_nothrow; |
| 421 | |