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NAMEcompress, uncompress, zcat, compressdir, uncompressdir — compress and expand data SYNOPSISCompress Filescompress
[-d]
[-f|-z]
[-z]
[-v]
[-c]
[-V]
[-b
maxbits]
[file ...] uncompress
[-f]
[-v]
[-c]
[-V]
[file ...] zcat
[-V]
[file ...] Compress Entire Directory Subtreescompressdir
[options]
[directory ...] uncompressdir
[options]
[directory ...] DESCRIPTIONThe following commands compress and uncompress files
and directory subtrees as indicated:
- compress
Reduce the size of the named
files
using adaptive Lempel-Ziv coding.
If reduction is possible, each
file
is replaced by a new file of the same name with the suffix
.Z
added to indicate that it is a compressed file.
Original ownership, modes, access, and modification times
are preserved.
If no
file
is specified, or if
-
is specified,
standard input is compressed to the standard output. - uncompress
Restore the compressed
files
to original form.
Resulting files have the original filename, ownership, and permissions,
and the
.Z
filename suffix is removed.
If no
file
is specified, or if
-
is specified,
standard input is uncompressed to the standard output. - zcat
Restore the compressed
files
to original form and send the result to standard output.
If no
file
is specified, or if
-
is specified,
standard input is uncompressed to the standard output. - compressdir
Front-end processor.
Recursively descend each specified
directory
subtree and use
compress
to compress each file in
directory.
Existing files are replaced by a compressed file
having the same name plus the suffix
.Z,
provided the resulting file is smaller than the original.
If no directories are specified, compression is applied
to all files starting with the current directory. options
may include any valid
compress
command options (they are passed through to
compress).
To force compression of all files, even when the result
is larger than the original file, use the
-f
option. - uncompressdir
Opposite of
compressdir.
Restore compressed files to their original form.
options
may include any valid
uncompress
command options (they are passed through to
uncompress).
The amount of compression obtained
depends on the size of the input, the maximum number of bits
(maxbits)
per code, and the distribution of common substrings.
Typically, text such as source code or English
is reduced by 50-60 percent.
Compression is generally much better than that achieved by
Huffman coding (as used in
pack),
or adaptive Huffman coding
(compact),
and takes less time to compute. OptionsThese commands recognize the following options in the combinations
shown above in
SYNOPSIS:
- -d
Decompress
file.
compress -d
is equivalent to
uncompress. - -f
Force compression of
file.
This is useful for compressing an entire directory,
even if some of the files do not actually shrink.
If
-f
is not given and
compress
is run in the foreground, the user is prompted
as to whether an existing file should be overwritten. - -z
This is the same as the
-f
option except that it does not force compression when there is null
compression. - -v
Print a message describing the percentage of
reduction for each file compressed. - -c
Force
compress
and
uncompress
to write to the standard output; no files are changed.
The nondestructive behavior of
zcat
is identical to that of
uncompress -c. - -V
Print the current version and compile options onto the standard error. - -b maxbits
Specify the maximum number of bits the
compress
algorithm will use.
The default is 16 and the range can be any integer between 9 and 16.
compress
uses the modified Lempel-Ziv algorithm popularized in
A Technique for High Performance Data Compression ,
Terry A. Welch,
IEEE Computer,
vol. 17, no. 6 (June 1984), pages 8-19.
Common substrings in the file are first replaced by 9-bit codes 257 and up.
When code 512 is reached, the algorithm switches to 10-bit codes and
continues to use more bits until the limit specified by the
-b
flag is reached (default 16). After the
maxbits
limit is attained,
compress
periodically checks the compression ratio.
If it is increasing,
compress
continues to use the existing code dictionary.
However, if the compression ratio is decreasing,
compress
discards the table of substrings and rebuilds it from scratch.
This allows the algorithm to adapt to the next "block" of the file. Note that the
-b
flag is omitted for
uncompress
since the
maxbits
parameter specified during compression is encoded within the output,
along with a magic number to ensure
that neither decompression of random data nor
recompression of compressed data is attempted. Access Control Listscompress
retains a file's access control list when compressing and expanding
data. EXTERNAL INFLUENCESEnvironment VariablesLC_MESSAGES
determines the language in which messages are displayed. If
LC_MESSAGES
is not specified in the environment or is set to
the empty string, the value of
LANG
is used as a default for each
unspecified or empty variable.
If
LANG
is not specified or is set to the empty string, a default of "C" (see
lang(5))
is used instead of
LANG. If any internationalization variable contains an invalid setting,
compress,
uncompress,
and
zcat
behave as if all internationalization variables are set to "C".
See
environ(5). International Code Set SupportSingle- and multi-byte character code sets are supported. RETURN VALUEThese commands return the following values upon completion:
- 0
Completed successfully. - 2
Last file is larger after (attempted) compression. - 1
An error occurred.
DIAGNOSTICS- Usage: compress [-f|-z] [-dvcV] [-b maxbits] [file ...]
Invalid options were specified on the command line. - Missing maxbits
maxbits
must follow
-b. - file: not in compressed format
The file specified to
uncompress
has not been compressed. - file: compressed with xxbits, can only handle yybits
file
was compressed by a program that could deal with a higher value of
maxbits
than the compress code on this machine.
Recompress the file with a lower value of
maxbits. - file: already has .Z suffix -- no change
The file is assumed to be already compressed.
Rename the file and try again. - file: filename too long to tack on .Z
The output file name, which is the source file name with a
.Z
extension, is too long for the file system
on which the source file resides.
Make the source file name shorter and try again. - file already exists; do you wish to overwrite (y or n)?
Respond
y
if you want the output to replace the existing file; otherwise, respond
n. - uncompress: corrupt input
A
SIGSEGV
violation was detected
which usually means that the input file has been corrupted. - Compression: xx.xx%
Percentage of the input saved by compression.
(Relevant only for
-v.) - -- not a regular file: unchanged
When the input file is not a regular file (a directory for example),
it is left unaltered. - -- has xxother links: unchanged
The input file has links which are not symbolic links and has been
left unchanged. See
ln(1)
for more information. - -- has symbolic links: unchanged
The input file has symbolic links and has been left unchanged.
See
ln(1)
for more information. - -- file unchanged
No savings is achieved by compression.
The input remains unaltered.
EXAMPLESCompress the file named
zenith
and print compression information to the terminal:
The terminal display shows either a line resembling
zenith: Compression: 23.55% -- replaced with zenith.Z indicating that the compressed file is 23.55% smaller than the original,
or a line resembling
zenith: Compression: -12.04% -- file unchanged indicating that an additional 12.04% space must be
used to compress the file. Undo the compression by typing either of the following commands:
uncompress zenith.Z
compress -d zenith.Z This restores file
zenith.Z
to its original uncompressed form and name. uncompress
will perform on standard input if no files are
specified.
For example, to list a compressed tar file:
uncompress -c arch.tar.Z | tar -tvf - WARNINGSAlthough compressed files are compatible between
machines with large memory,
-b12
should be used for file transfer to architectures with
a small process data space (64K bytes or less). NFSAccess control lists of networked files are summarized (as returned in
st_mode
by
stat(),
but not copied to the new file (see
stat(2)). AUTHORcompress
was developed by Joseph M. Orost, Kenneth E. Turkowski,
Spencer W. Thomas, and James A. Woods. FILES- *.Z
Compressed file created by
compress
and removed by
uncompress.
STANDARDS CONFORMANCEcompress: XPG4
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