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1 | |
2 | XZ data compression in Linux | |
3 | ============================ | |
4 | ||
5 | Introduction | |
6 | ||
7 | XZ is a general purpose data compression format with high compression | |
8 | ratio and relatively fast decompression. The primary compression | |
9 | algorithm (filter) is LZMA2. Additional filters can be used to improve | |
10 | compression ratio even further. E.g. Branch/Call/Jump (BCJ) filters | |
11 | improve compression ratio of executable data. | |
12 | ||
13 | The XZ decompressor in Linux is called XZ Embedded. It supports | |
14 | the LZMA2 filter and optionally also BCJ filters. CRC32 is supported | |
15 | for integrity checking. The home page of XZ Embedded is at | |
16 | <http://tukaani.org/xz/embedded.html>, where you can find the | |
17 | latest version and also information about using the code outside | |
18 | the Linux kernel. | |
19 | ||
20 | For userspace, XZ Utils provide a zlib-like compression library | |
21 | and a gzip-like command line tool. XZ Utils can be downloaded from | |
22 | <http://tukaani.org/xz/>. | |
23 | ||
24 | XZ related components in the kernel | |
25 | ||
26 | The xz_dec module provides XZ decompressor with single-call (buffer | |
27 | to buffer) and multi-call (stateful) APIs. The usage of the xz_dec | |
28 | module is documented in include/linux/xz.h. | |
29 | ||
30 | The xz_dec_test module is for testing xz_dec. xz_dec_test is not | |
31 | useful unless you are hacking the XZ decompressor. xz_dec_test | |
32 | allocates a char device major dynamically to which one can write | |
33 | .xz files from userspace. The decompressed output is thrown away. | |
34 | Keep an eye on dmesg to see diagnostics printed by xz_dec_test. | |
35 | See the xz_dec_test source code for the details. | |
36 | ||
37 | For decompressing the kernel image, initramfs, and initrd, there | |
38 | is a wrapper function in lib/decompress_unxz.c. Its API is the | |
39 | same as in other decompress_*.c files, which is defined in | |
40 | include/linux/decompress/generic.h. | |
41 | ||
42 | scripts/xz_wrap.sh is a wrapper for the xz command line tool found | |
43 | from XZ Utils. The wrapper sets compression options to values suitable | |
44 | for compressing the kernel image. | |
45 | ||
46 | For kernel makefiles, two commands are provided for use with | |
47 | $(call if_needed). The kernel image should be compressed with | |
48 | $(call if_needed,xzkern) which will use a BCJ filter and a big LZMA2 | |
49 | dictionary. It will also append a four-byte trailer containing the | |
50 | uncompressed size of the file, which is needed by the boot code. | |
51 | Other things should be compressed with $(call if_needed,xzmisc) | |
52 | which will use no BCJ filter and 1 MiB LZMA2 dictionary. | |
53 | ||
54 | Notes on compression options | |
55 | ||
56 | Since the XZ Embedded supports only streams with no integrity check or | |
57 | CRC32, make sure that you don't use some other integrity check type | |
58 | when encoding files that are supposed to be decoded by the kernel. With | |
59 | liblzma, you need to use either LZMA_CHECK_NONE or LZMA_CHECK_CRC32 | |
60 | when encoding. With the xz command line tool, use --check=none or | |
61 | --check=crc32. | |
62 | ||
63 | Using CRC32 is strongly recommended unless there is some other layer | |
64 | which will verify the integrity of the uncompressed data anyway. | |
65 | Double checking the integrity would probably be waste of CPU cycles. | |
66 | Note that the headers will always have a CRC32 which will be validated | |
67 | by the decoder; you can only change the integrity check type (or | |
68 | disable it) for the actual uncompressed data. | |
69 | ||
70 | In userspace, LZMA2 is typically used with dictionary sizes of several | |
71 | megabytes. The decoder needs to have the dictionary in RAM, thus big | |
72 | dictionaries cannot be used for files that are intended to be decoded | |
73 | by the kernel. 1 MiB is probably the maximum reasonable dictionary | |
74 | size for in-kernel use (maybe more is OK for initramfs). The presets | |
75 | in XZ Utils may not be optimal when creating files for the kernel, | |
76 | so don't hesitate to use custom settings. Example: | |
77 | ||
78 | xz --check=crc32 --lzma2=dict=512KiB inputfile | |
79 | ||
80 | An exception to above dictionary size limitation is when the decoder | |
81 | is used in single-call mode. Decompressing the kernel itself is an | |
82 | example of this situation. In single-call mode, the memory usage | |
83 | doesn't depend on the dictionary size, and it is perfectly fine to | |
84 | use a big dictionary: for maximum compression, the dictionary should | |
85 | be at least as big as the uncompressed data itself. | |
86 | ||
87 | Future plans | |
88 | ||
89 | Creating a limited XZ encoder may be considered if people think it is | |
90 | useful. LZMA2 is slower to compress than e.g. Deflate or LZO even at | |
91 | the fastest settings, so it isn't clear if LZMA2 encoder is wanted | |
92 | into the kernel. | |
93 | ||
94 | Support for limited random-access reading is planned for the | |
95 | decompression code. I don't know if it could have any use in the | |
96 | kernel, but I know that it would be useful in some embedded projects | |
97 | outside the Linux kernel. | |
98 | ||
99 | Conformance to the .xz file format specification | |
100 | ||
101 | There are a couple of corner cases where things have been simplified | |
102 | at expense of detecting errors as early as possible. These should not | |
103 | matter in practice all, since they don't cause security issues. But | |
104 | it is good to know this if testing the code e.g. with the test files | |
105 | from XZ Utils. | |
106 | ||
107 | Reporting bugs | |
108 | ||
109 | Before reporting a bug, please check that it's not fixed already | |
110 | at upstream. See <http://tukaani.org/xz/embedded.html> to get the | |
111 | latest code. | |
112 | ||
113 | Report bugs to <lasse.collin@tukaani.org> or visit #tukaani on | |
114 | Freenode and talk to Larhzu. I don't actively read LKML or other | |
115 | kernel-related mailing lists, so if there's something I should know, | |
116 | you should email to me personally or use IRC. | |
117 | ||
118 | Don't bother Igor Pavlov with questions about the XZ implementation | |
119 | in the kernel or about XZ Utils. While these two implementations | |
120 | include essential code that is directly based on Igor Pavlov's code, | |
121 | these implementations aren't maintained nor supported by him. |