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- This is the file README for the gzip distribution, version 1.2.4.
-
- gzip (GNU zip) is a compression utility designed to be a replacement
- for 'compress'. Its main advantages over compress are much better
- compression and freedom from patented algorithms. The GNU Project
- uses it as the standard compression program for its system.
-
- gzip currently uses by default the LZ77 algorithm used in zip 1.9 (the
- portable pkzip compatible archiver). The gzip format was however
- designed to accommodate several compression algorithms. See below
- for a comparison of zip and gzip.
-
- gunzip can currently decompress files created by gzip, compress or
- pack. The detection of the input format is automatic. For the
- gzip format, gunzip checks a 32 bit CRC. For pack, gunzip checks the
- uncompressed length. The 'compress' format was not designed to allow
- consistency checks. However gunzip is sometimes able to detect a bad
- .Z file because there is some redundancy in the .Z compression format.
- If you get an error when uncompressing a .Z file, do not assume that
- the .Z file is correct simply because the standard uncompress does not
- complain. This generally means that the standard uncompress does not
- check its input, and happily generates garbage output.
-
- gzip produces files with a .gz extension. Previous versions of gzip
- used the .z extension, which was already used by the 'pack'
- Huffman encoder. gunzip is able to decompress .z files (packed
- or gzip'ed).
-
- Several planned features are not yet supported (see the file TODO).
- See the file NEWS for a summary of changes since 0.5. See the file
- INSTALL for installation instructions. Some answers to frequently
- asked questions are given in the file INSTALL, please read it. (In
- particular, please don't ask me once more for an /etc/magic entry.)
-
- WARNING: on several systems, compiler bugs cause gzip to fail, in
- particular when optimization options are on. See the section "Special
- targets" at the end of the INSTALL file for a list of known problems.
- For all machines, use "make check" to check that gzip was compiled
- correctly. Try compiling gzip without any optimization if you have a
- problem.
-
- Please send all comments and bug reports by electronic mail to:
- Jean-loup Gailly <jloup@chorus.fr>
-
- or, if this fails, to bug-gnu-utils@prep.ai.mit.edu.
- Bug reports should ideally include:
-
- * The complete output of "gzip -V" (or the contents of revision.h
- if you can't get gzip to compile)
- * The hardware and operating system (try "uname -a")
- * The compiler used to compile (if it is gcc, use "gcc -v")
- * A description of the bug behavior
- * The input to gzip, that triggered the bug
-
- If you send me patches for machines I don't have access to, please test them
- very carefully. gzip is used for backups, it must be extremely reliable.
-
- The package crypt++.el is highly recommended to manipulate gzip'ed
- file from emacs. It recognizes automatically encrypted and compressed
- files when they are first visited or written. It is available via
- anonymous ftp to roebling.poly.edu [128.238.5.31] in /pub/crypt++.el.
- The same directory contains also patches to dired, ange-ftp and info.
- GNU tar 1.11.2 has a -z option to invoke directly gzip, so you don't have to
- patch it. The package ftp.uu.net:/languages/emacs-lisp/misc/jka-compr19.el.Z
- also supports gzip'ed files.
-
- The znew and gzexe shell scripts provided with gzip benefit from
- (but do not require) the cpmod utility to transfer file attributes.
- It is available by anonymous ftp on gatekeeper.dec.com in
- /.0/usenet/comp.sources.unix/volume11/cpmod.Z.
-
- The sample programs zread.c, sub.c and add.c in subdirectory sample
- are provided as examples of useful complements to gzip. Read the
- comments inside each source file. The perl script ztouch is also
- provided as example (not installed by default since it relies on perl).
-
-
- gzip is free software, you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
- the terms of the GNU General Public License, a copy of which is
- provided under the name COPYING. The latest version of gzip are always
- available by ftp in prep.ai.mit.edu:/pub/gnu, or in any of the prep
- mirror sites:
-
- - sources in gzip-*.tar (or .shar or .tar.gz).
- - Solaris 2 executables in sparc-sun-solaris2/gzip-binaries-*.tar
- - MSDOS lha self-extracting exe in gzip-msdos-*.exe. Once extracted,
- copy gzip.exe to gunzip.exe and zcat.exe, or use "gzip -d" to decompress.
- gzip386.exe runs much faster but only on 386 and above; it is compiled with
- djgpp 1.10 available in directory omnigate.clarkson.edu:/pub/msdos/djgpp.
-
- A VMS executable is available in ftp.spc.edu:[.macro32.savesets]gzip-1-*.zip
- (use [.macro32]unzip.exe to extract). A PRIMOS executable is available
- in ftp.lysator.liu.se:/pub/primos/run/gzip.run.
- OS/2 executables (16 and 32 bits versions) are available in
- ftp.tu-muenchen.de:/pub/comp/os/os2/archiver/gz*-[16,32].zip
-
- Some ftp servers can automatically make a tar.Z from a tar file. If
- you are getting gzip for the first time, you can ask for a tar.Z file
- instead of the much larger tar file.
-
- Many thanks to those who provided me with bug reports and feedback.
- See the files THANKS and ChangeLog for more details.
-
-
- Note about zip vs. gzip:
-
- The name 'gzip' was a very unfortunate choice, because zip and gzip
- are two really different programs, although the actual compression and
- decompression sources were written by the same persons. A different
- name should have been used for gzip, but it is too late to change now.
-
- zip is an archiver: it compresses several files into a single archive
- file. gzip is a simple compressor: each file is compressed separately.
- Both share the same compression and decompression code for the
- 'deflate' method. unzip can also decompress old zip archives
- (implode, shrink and reduce methods). gunzip can also decompress files
- created by compress and pack. zip 1.9 and gzip do not support
- compression methods other than deflation. (zip 1.0 supports shrink and
- implode). Better compression methods may be added in future versions
- of gzip. zip will always stick to absolute compatibility with pkzip,
- it is thus constrained by PKWare, which is a commercial company. The
- gzip header format is deliberately different from that of pkzip to
- avoid such a constraint.
-
- On Unix, gzip is mostly useful in combination with tar. GNU tar
- 1.11.2 has a -z option to invoke gzip automatically. "tar -z"
- compresses better than zip, since gzip can then take advantage of
- redundancy between distinct files. The drawback is that you must
- scan the whole tar.gz file in order to extract a single file near
- the end; unzip can directly seek to the end of the zip file. There
- is no overhead when you extract the whole archive anyway.
- If a member of a .zip archive is damaged, other files can still
- be recovered. If a .tar.gz file is damaged, files beyond the failure
- point cannot be recovered. (Future versions of gzip will have
- error recovery features.)
-
- gzip and gunzip are distributed as a single program. zip and unzip
- are, for historical reasons, two separate programs, although the
- authors of these two programs work closely together in the info-zip
- team. zip and unzip are not associated with the GNU project.
- The sources are available by ftp in
-
- oak.oakland.edu:/pub/misc/unix/zip19p1.zip
- oak.oakland.edu:/pub/misc/unix/unz50p1.tar-z
-