4:62 +l4() *WƛS }[_I|$w1. Compression algorithm (deflate) The deflation algorithm used by gzip (also zip and zlib) is a variation of LZ77 (Lempel-Ziv 1977, see reference below). It finds duplicated strings in the input data. The second occurrence of a string is replaced by a pointer to the previous string, in the form of a pair (distance, length). Distances are limited to 32K bytes, and lengths are limited to 258 bytes. When a string does not occur anywhere in the previous 32K bytes, it is emitted as a sequence of literal bytes. (In this description, `string' must be taken as an arbitrary sequence of bytes, and is not restricted to printable characters.) Literals or match lengths are compressed with one Huffman tree, and match distances are compressed with another tree. The trees are stored in a compact form at the start of each block. The blocks can have any size (except that the compressed data for one block must fit in available memory). A block is terminated when deflate() determines that it would be useful to start another block with fresh trees. (This is somewhat similar to the behavior of LZW-based _compress_.) Duplicated strings are found using a hash table. All input strings of length 3 are inserted in the hash table. A hash index is computed for the next 3 bytes. If the hash chain for this index is not empty, all strings in the chain are compared with the current input string, and the longest match is selected. The hash chains are searched starting with the most recent strings, to favor small distances and thus take advantage of the Huffman encoding. The hash chains are singly linked. There are no deletions from the hash chains, the algorithm simply discards matches that are too old. To avoid a worst-case situation, very long hash chains are arbitrarily truncated at a certain length, determined by a runtime option (level parameter of deflateInit). So deflate() does not always find the longest possible match but generally finds a match which is long enough. deflate() also defers the selection of matches with a lazy evaluation mechanism. After a match of length N has been found, deflate() searches for a longer match at the next input byte. If a longer match is found, the previous match is truncated to a length of one (thus producing a single literal byte) and the process of lazy evaluation begins again. Otherwise, the original match is kept, and the next match search is attempted only N steps later. The lazy match evaluation is also subject to a runtime parameter. If the current match is long enough, deflate() reduces the search for a longer match, thus speeding up the whole process. If compression ratio is more important than speed, deflate() attempts a complete second search even if the first match is already long enough. The lazy match evaluation is not performed for the fastest compression modes (level parameter 1 to 3). For these fast modes, new strings are inserted in the hash table only when no match was found, or when the match is not too long. This degrades the compression ratio but saves time since there are both fewer insertions and fewer searches. 2. Decompression algorithm (inflate) 2.1 Introduction The key question is how to represent a Huffman code (or any prefix code) so that you can decode fast. The most important characteristic is that shorter codes are much more common than longer codes, so pay attention to decoding the short codes fast, and let the long codes take longer to decode. inflate() sets up a first level table that covers some number of bits of input less than the length of longest code. It gets that many bits from the stream, and looks it up in the table. The table will tell if the next code is that many bits or less and how many, and if it is, it will tell the value, else it will point to the next level table for which inflate() grabs more bits and tries to decode a longer code. How many bits to make the first lookup is a tradeoff between the time it takes to decode and the time it takes to build the table. If building