flate2/lib.rs
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//! A DEFLATE-based stream compression/decompression library
//!
//! This library provides support for compression and decompression of
//! DEFLATE-based streams:
//!
//! * the DEFLATE format itself
//! * the zlib format
//! * gzip
//!
//! These three formats are all closely related and largely only differ in their
//! headers/footers. This crate has three types in each submodule for dealing
//! with these three formats.
//!
//! # Implementation
//!
//! In addition to supporting three formats, this crate supports several different
//! backends, controlled through this crate's features:
//!
//! * `default`, or `rust_backend` - this implementation uses the `miniz_oxide`
//! crate which is a port of `miniz.c` (below) to Rust. This feature does not
//! require a C compiler and only requires Rust code.
//!
//! * `zlib` - this feature will enable linking against the `libz` library, typically found on most
//! Linux systems by default. If the library isn't found to already be on the system it will be
//! compiled from source (this is a C library).
//!
//! There's various tradeoffs associated with each implementation, but in general you probably
//! won't have to tweak the defaults. The default choice is selected to avoid the need for a C
//! compiler at build time. `zlib-ng-compat` is useful if you're using zlib for compatibility but
//! want performance via zlib-ng's zlib-compat mode. `zlib` is useful if something else in your
//! dependencies links the original zlib so you cannot use zlib-ng-compat. The compression ratios
//! and performance of each of these feature should be roughly comparable, but you'll likely want
//! to run your own tests if you're curious about the performance.
//!
//! # Organization
//!
//! This crate consists mainly of three modules, [`read`], [`write`], and
//! [`bufread`]. Each module contains a number of types used to encode and
//! decode various streams of data.
//!
//! All types in the [`write`] module work on instances of [`Write`][write],
//! whereas all types in the [`read`] module work on instances of
//! [`Read`][read] and [`bufread`] works with [`BufRead`][bufread]. If you
//! are decoding directly from a `&[u8]`, use the [`bufread`] types.
//!
//! ```
//! use flate2::write::GzEncoder;
//! use flate2::Compression;
//! use std::io;
//! use std::io::prelude::*;
//!
//! # fn main() { let _ = run(); }
//! # fn run() -> io::Result<()> {
//! let mut encoder = GzEncoder::new(Vec::new(), Compression::default());
//! encoder.write_all(b"Example")?;
//! # Ok(())
//! # }
//! ```
//!
//!
//! Other various types are provided at the top-level of the crate for
//! management and dealing with encoders/decoders. Also note that types which
//! operate over a specific trait often implement the mirroring trait as well.
//! For example a `flate2::read::DeflateDecoder<T>` *also* implements the
//! `Write` trait if `T: Write`. That is, the "dual trait" is forwarded directly
//! to the underlying object if available.
//!
//! # About multi-member Gzip files
//!
//! While most `gzip` files one encounters will have a single *member* that can be read
//! with the [`GzDecoder`], there may be some files which have multiple members.
//!
//! A [`GzDecoder`] will only read the first member of gzip data, which may unexpectedly
//! provide partial results when a multi-member gzip file is encountered. `GzDecoder` is appropriate
//! for data that is designed to be read as single members from a multi-member file. `bufread::GzDecoder`
//! and `write::GzDecoder` also allow non-gzip data following gzip data to be handled.
//!
//! The [`MultiGzDecoder`] on the other hand will decode all members of a `gzip` file
//! into one consecutive stream of bytes, which hides the underlying *members* entirely.
//! If a file contains non-gzip data after the gzip data, MultiGzDecoder will
//! emit an error after decoding the gzip data. This behavior matches the `gzip`,
//! `gunzip`, and `zcat` command line tools.
//!
//! [`read`]: read/index.html
//! [`bufread`]: bufread/index.html
//! [`write`]: write/index.html
//! [read]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/io/trait.Read.html
//! [write]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/io/trait.Write.html
//! [bufread]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/io/trait.BufRead.html
//! [`GzDecoder`]: read/struct.GzDecoder.html
//! [`MultiGzDecoder`]: read/struct.MultiGzDecoder.html
#![doc(html_root_url = "https://docs.rs/flate2/0.2")]
#![deny(missing_docs)]
#![deny(missing_debug_implementations)]
#![allow(trivial_numeric_casts)]
#![cfg_attr(test, deny(warnings))]
#![cfg_attr(docsrs, feature(doc_auto_cfg))]
#[cfg(not(feature = "any_impl",))]
compile_error!("You need to choose a zlib backend");
pub use crate::crc::{Crc, CrcReader, CrcWriter};
pub use crate::gz::GzBuilder;
pub use crate::gz::GzHeader;
pub use crate::mem::{Compress, CompressError, Decompress, DecompressError, Status};
pub use crate::mem::{FlushCompress, FlushDecompress};
mod bufreader;
mod crc;
mod deflate;
mod ffi;
mod gz;
mod mem;
mod zio;
mod zlib;
/// Types which operate over [`Read`] streams, both encoders and decoders for
/// various formats.
///
/// Note that the `read` decoder types may read past the end of the compressed
/// data while decoding. If the caller requires subsequent reads to start
/// immediately following the compressed data wrap the `Read` type in a
/// [`BufReader`] and use the `BufReader` with the equivalent decoder from the
/// `bufread` module and also for the subsequent reads.
///
/// [`Read`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/io/trait.Read.html
/// [`BufReader`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/io/struct.BufReader.html
pub mod read {
pub use crate::deflate::read::DeflateDecoder;
pub use crate::deflate::read::DeflateEncoder;
pub use crate::gz::read::GzDecoder;
pub use crate::gz::read::GzEncoder;
pub use crate::gz::read::MultiGzDecoder;
pub use crate::zlib::read::ZlibDecoder;
pub use crate::zlib::read::ZlibEncoder;
}
/// Types which operate over [`Write`] streams, both encoders and decoders for
/// various formats.
///
/// [`Write`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/io/trait.Write.html
pub mod write {
pub use crate::deflate::write::DeflateDecoder;
pub use crate::deflate::write::DeflateEncoder;
pub use crate::gz::write::GzDecoder;
pub use crate::gz::write::GzEncoder;
pub use crate::gz::write::MultiGzDecoder;
pub use crate::zlib::write::ZlibDecoder;
pub use crate::zlib::write::ZlibEncoder;
}
/// Types which operate over [`BufRead`] streams, both encoders and decoders for
/// various formats.
///
/// [`BufRead`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/io/trait.BufRead.html
pub mod bufread {
pub use crate::deflate::bufread::DeflateDecoder;
pub use crate::deflate::bufread::DeflateEncoder;
pub use crate::gz::bufread::GzDecoder;
pub use crate::gz::bufread::GzEncoder;
pub use crate::gz::bufread::MultiGzDecoder;
pub use crate::zlib::bufread::ZlibDecoder;
pub use crate::zlib::bufread::ZlibEncoder;
}
fn _assert_send_sync() {
fn _assert_send_sync<T: Send + Sync>() {}
_assert_send_sync::<read::DeflateEncoder<&[u8]>>();
_assert_send_sync::<read::DeflateDecoder<&[u8]>>();
_assert_send_sync::<read::ZlibEncoder<&[u8]>>();
_assert_send_sync::<read::ZlibDecoder<&[u8]>>();
_assert_send_sync::<read::GzEncoder<&[u8]>>();
_assert_send_sync::<read::GzDecoder<&[u8]>>();
_assert_send_sync::<read::MultiGzDecoder<&[u8]>>();
_assert_send_sync::<write::DeflateEncoder<Vec<u8>>>();
_assert_send_sync::<write::DeflateDecoder<Vec<u8>>>();
_assert_send_sync::<write::ZlibEncoder<Vec<u8>>>();
_assert_send_sync::<write::ZlibDecoder<Vec<u8>>>();
_assert_send_sync::<write::GzEncoder<Vec<u8>>>();
_assert_send_sync::<write::GzDecoder<Vec<u8>>>();
}
/// When compressing data, the compression level can be specified by a value in
/// this struct.
#[derive(Copy, Clone, PartialEq, Eq, Debug)]
pub struct Compression(u32);
impl Compression {
/// Creates a new description of the compression level with an explicitly
/// specified integer.
///
/// The integer here is typically on a scale of 0-9 where 0 means "no
/// compression" and 9 means "take as long as you'd like".
///
/// ### Backend differences
///
/// The [`miniz_oxide`](https://crates.io/crates/miniz_oxide) backend for flate2
/// does not support level 0 or `Compression::none()`. Instead it interprets them
/// as the default compression level, which is quite slow.
/// `Compression::fast()` should be used instead.
///
/// `miniz_oxide` also supports a non-compliant compression level 10.
/// It is even slower and may result in higher compression, but
/// **only miniz_oxide will be able to read the data** compressed with level 10.
/// Do **not** use level 10 if you need other software to be able to read it!
pub const fn new(level: u32) -> Compression {
Compression(level)
}
/// No compression is to be performed, this may actually inflate data
/// slightly when encoding.
pub const fn none() -> Compression {
Compression(0)
}
/// Optimize for the best speed of encoding.
pub const fn fast() -> Compression {
Compression(1)
}
/// Optimize for the size of data being encoded.
pub const fn best() -> Compression {
Compression(9)
}
/// Returns an integer representing the compression level, typically on a
/// scale of 0-9. See [`new`](Self::new) for details about compression levels.
pub fn level(&self) -> u32 {
self.0
}
}
impl Default for Compression {
fn default() -> Compression {
Compression(6)
}
}
#[cfg(test)]
fn random_bytes() -> impl Iterator<Item = u8> {
use rand::Rng;
use std::iter;
iter::repeat(()).map(|_| rand::thread_rng().gen())
}