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This package provides the reference implementation of Brotli, a generic-purpose lossless compression algorithm that compresses data using a combination of a modern variant of the LZ77 algorithm, Huffman coding and 2nd order context modeling, with a compression ratio comparable to the best currently available general-purpose compression methods. It is similar in speed with deflate but offers more dense compression.
The specification of the Brotli Compressed Data Format is defined in RFC 7932.
The existing XZ Utils provide great compression in the .xz file format, but they produce just one big block of compressed data. Pixz instead produces a collection of smaller blocks which makes random access to the original data possible and can compress in parallel. This is especially useful for large tarballs.
Extracts files out of Microsoft Cabinet (.cab) archives
GNU sharutils is a package for creating and manipulating shell archives that can be readily emailed. A shell archive is a file that can be processed by a Bourne-type shell to unpack the original collection of files. This package is mostly for compatibility and historical interest.
This library allows reading and writing gzip-compressed JSON catalog files, which can be used to store GPG, PKCS-7 and SHA-256 checksums for each file.
Draco is a library for compressing and decompressing 3D geometric meshes and point clouds. It is intended to improve the storage and transmission of 3D graphics.
xdelta encodes only the differences between two binary files using the VCDIFF algorithm and patch file format described in RFC 3284. It can also be used to apply such patches. xdelta is similar to diff and patch, but is not limited to plain text and does not generate human-readable output.
lrzip is a compression utility that uses long-range redundancy reduction to improve the subsequent compression ratio of larger files. It can then further compress the result with the ZPAQ or LZMA algorithms for maximum compression, or LZO for maximum speed. This choice between size or speed allows for either better compression than even LZMA can provide, or a higher speed than gzip while compressing as well as bzip2.
libtar is a C library for manipulating POSIX tar files. It handles adding and extracting files to/from a tar archive.
minizip-ng is a zip manipulation library written in C, forked from the zip manipulation library found in the zlib distribution.
LZO is a data compression library which is suitable for data de-/compression in real-time. This means it favours speed over compression ratio.
LZO is written in ANSI C. Both the source code and the compressed data format are designed to be portable across platforms.
Plzip is a massively parallel (multi-threaded) lossless data compressor and decompressor that uses the lzip file format (.lz). Files produced by plzip are fully compatible with lzip and can be rescued with lziprecover. On multiprocessor machines, plzip can compress and decompress large files much faster than lzip, at the cost of a slightly reduced compression ratio (0.4% to 2%). The number of usable threads is limited by file size: on files of only a few MiB, plzip is no faster than lzip. Files that were compressed with regular lzip will also not be decompressed faster by plzip, unless the -b option was used: lzip usually produces single-member files which can't be decompressed in parallel.
minizip-ng is a zip manipulation library written in C, forked from the zip manipulation library found in the zlib distribution.
XZ Utils is free general-purpose data compression software with high compression ratio. XZ Utils were written for POSIX-like systems, but also work on some not-so-POSIX systems. XZ Utils are the successor to LZMA Utils.
The core of the XZ Utils compression code is based on LZMA SDK, but it has been modified quite a lot to be suitable for XZ Utils. The primary compression algorithm is currently LZMA2, which is used inside the .xz container format. With typical files, XZ Utils create 30 % smaller output than gzip and 15 % smaller output than bzip2.
unrar-free is a free software version of the non-free unrar utility. This program is a simple command-line front-end to libarchive, and can list and extract not only RAR archives but also other formats supported by libarchive. It does not rival the non-free unrar in terms of features, but special care has been taken to ensure it meets most user's needs.
bzip2 is a freely available, patent free (see below), high-quality data compressor. It typically compresses files to within 10% to 15% of the best available techniques (the PPM family of statistical compressors), whilst being around twice as fast at compression and six times faster at decompression.
UCL implements a number of compression algorithms that achieve an excellent compression ratio while allowing fast decompression. Decompression requires no additional memory.
Compared to LZO, the UCL algorithms achieve a better compression ratio but decompression is a little bit slower.
Pbzip2 is a parallel implementation of the bzip2 block-sorting file compressor that uses pthreads and achieves near-linear speedup on SMP machines. The output of this version is fully compatible with bzip2 v1.0.2 (i.e. anything compressed with pbzip2 can be decompressed with bzip2).
QuaZIP is a simple C++ wrapper over Gilles Vollant's ZIP/UNZIP package that can be used to access ZIP archives. It uses Trolltech's Qt toolkit.
QuaZIP allows you to access files inside ZIP archives using QIODevice API, and that means that you can also use QTextStream, QDataStream or whatever you would like to use on your zipped files.
QuaZIP provides complete abstraction of the ZIP/UNZIP API, for both reading from and writing to ZIP archives.
Ziptime helps make .zip archives reproducible by replacing timestamps in the file header with a fixed time (1 January 2008).
``Extra fields'' are not changed, so you'll need to use the -X option to zip to prevent it from storing the ``universal time'' field.
CBOR is a data format whose design goals include the possibility of extremely small code size, fairly small message size, and extensibility without the need for version negotiation. These design goals make it different from earlier binary serializations such as ASN.1 and MessagePack.
(N)compress provides the original compress and uncompress programs that used to be the de facto UNIX standard for compressing and uncompressing files. These programs implement a fast, simple Lempel-Ziv (LZW) file compression algorithm.
LZ4 is a lossless compression algorithm, providing compression speed at 400 MB/s per core (0.16 Bytes/cycle). It also features an extremely fast decoder, with speed in multiple GB/s per core (0.71 Bytes/cycle). A high compression derivative, called LZ4_HC, is also provided. It trades CPU time for compression ratio.
The purpose of libmspack is to provide both compression and decompression of some loosely related file formats used by Microsoft.