lzip

Lzip
Developer(s) Antonio Diaz Diaz
Initial release 2008 (2008)
Stable release 1.20 (14 February 2018 (2018-02-14)) [±]
Repository Edit this at Wikidata
Written in C++ or C
Operating system Unix-like, Windows
Type Data compression
License GPLv2+ (Free software)
Website lzip.nongnu.org/lzip.html
lzip
Filename extension .lz
Internet media type application/x-lzip
Magic number 0x4C, 0x5A, 0x49, 0x50
Developed by Antonio Diaz Diaz
Type of format Data compression
Open format? Yes

lzip is a free, command-line tool for the compression of data; it employs the Lempel–Ziv–Markov chain algorithm (LZMA) with a user interface that is familiar to users of usual Unix compression tools, such as gzip and bzip2.

Like gzip and bzip2, concatenation is supported to compress multiple files, but the convention is to bundle a file that is an archive itself, such as those created by the tar or cpio Unix programs. Lzip can split the output for the creation of multivolume archives.

The file that is produced by lzip is usually given .lz as its filename extension, and the data is described by the MIME type application/x-lzip.

The lzip suite of programs was written in C++ and C by Antonio Diaz Diaz and is being distributed as free software under the terms of version 2 or later of the GNU General Public License (GPL).

File integrity

lzip is capable of creating archives with independently decompressible data sections called a "multimember archive" (as well as split output for the creation of multivolume archives).[1] For example, if the underlying file is a tar archive, this can allow extracting any undamaged files, even if other parts of the archive are damaged.

As for the file format, special emphasis has been put on enabling integrity checks by means of an integrated 32-bit checksum for each compressed stream;[2] this is used in combination with the lziprecover program to detect and reconstruct damaged data.[1]

The recovery tool can merge multiple copies of an archive where each copy may have damage in a different part of the file.

History

7-Zip was released in 2000; a tool employing LZMA first became available on Unix-like operating systems in 2004 when a port of the command-line version of 7-Zip (p7zip) was released. In the same year, the LZMA SDK became available, which included the program called “lzma_alone”; less than a year later, Lasse Collin released LZMA Utils, which at first only consisted of a set of wrapper scripts implementing a gzip-like interface to lzma_alone. In 2008, Antonio Diaz Diaz released lzip, which uses a proper container format with checksums and magic numbers instead of the raw LZMA data stream, providing a complete Unix-style solution for using LZMA. Nevertheless, LZMA Utils was extended to have similar features and then renamed to XZ Utils.[3]

Adoption

The Linux distribution Dragora GNU/Linux-Libre employs lzip for its software packages.

In popular Linux distributions, lzip can usually be installed from official package repositories.[4][5][6]

Cygwin offers lzip as a maintained optional package (Archive category of its setup installer), and its tar utility program has support for .lz archives (with --lzip option for creation).

MinGW-w64 (see Mingw) distributes lzip through a maintained package (pacman -S lzip).

GNOME's archiving tool, Archive Manager, supports lzip files.

The GNU Autotools support lzip. Adding dist-lzip to AM_INIT_AUTOMAKE will build lzip-ed tarballs.[7]

Versions 1.23 and newer of GNU tar support using lzip to handle compressed files transparently.[8]

Lzip is used to distribute the Time Zone Database from IANA,[9] and the GNU version of the Linux kernel.[10]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Antonio Diaz Diaz (2011-12-20). "Lzip Manual: Introduction". Lzip can produce multimember files and safely recover, with lziprecover, the undamaged members in case of file damage. Lzip can also split the compressed output in volumes of a given size, even when reading from standard input. This allows the direct creation of multivolume compressed tar archives.
  2. Antonio Diaz Diaz (2011-12-20). "Lzip Manual: Introduction". As a self-check for your protection, lzip stores in the member trailer the 32-bit CRC of the original data and the size of the original data, to make sure that the decompressed version of the data is identical to the original.
  3. Brian Lindholm (May 2009), "New Options in the World of File Compression" (in German), Linux Gazette (162), http://linuxgazette.net/162/lindholm.html. Retrieved 2011-01-07
  4. http://packages.debian.org/lzip
  5. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-07-17. Retrieved 2011-01-08.
  6. http://software.opensuse.org/search?q=lzip
  7. https://www.gnu.org/software/automake/manual/html_node/List-of-Automake-options.html
  8. http://www.gnu.org/software/tar/manual/html_node/gzip.html
  9. http://www.iana.org/time-zones
  10. http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/linux-libre/4.x/4.12-gnu/
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.