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NAME |
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Compress::LZF - extremely light-weight Lempel-Ziv-Free compression |
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SYNOPSIS |
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# import compress/decompress functions |
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use Compress::LZF; |
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# the same as above |
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use Compress::LZF ':compress'; |
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$compressed = compress $uncompressed_data; |
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$original_data = decompress $compressed; |
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# import sfreeze, sfreeze_cref and sfreeze_c |
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use Compress::LZF ':freeze'; |
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$serialized = sfreeze_c [4,5,6]; |
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$original_data = sthaw $serialized; |
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DESCRIPTION |
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LZF is an extremely fast (not that much slower than a pure memcpy) |
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compression algorithm. It is ideal for applications where you want to |
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save *some* space but not at the cost of speed. It is ideal for |
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repetitive data as well. The module is self-contained and very small (no |
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large library to be pulled in). It is also free, so there should be no |
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problems incorporating this module into commercial programs. |
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I have no idea wether any patents in any countries apply to this |
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algorithm, but at the moment it is believed that it is free from any |
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patents. |
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FUNCTIONS |
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$compressed = compress $uncompressed |
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Try to compress the given string as quickly and as much as possible. In |
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the worst case, the string can enlarge by 1 byte, but that should be the |
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absolute exception. You can expect a 45% compression ratio on large, |
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binary strings. |
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$decompressed = decompress $compressed |
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Uncompress the string (compressed by "compress") and return the original |
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data. Decompression errors can result in either broken data (there is no |
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checksum kept) or a runtime error. |
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$serialized = sfreeze $value (simplified freeze) |
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Often there is the need to serialize data into a string. This function |
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does that, by using the Storable module. It does the following |
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transforms: |
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undef (the perl undefined value) |
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=> a special cookie (undef'ness is being preserved) |
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IV, NV, PV (i.e. a _plain_ perl scalar): |
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=> stays as is when it contains normal text/numbers |
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=> gets serialized into a string |
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RV, undef, other funny objects (magical ones for example): |
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=> data structure is freeze'd into a string. |
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That is, it tries to leave "normal", human-readable data untouched but |
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still serializes complex data structures into strings. The idea is to |
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keep readability as high as possible, and in cases readability can't be |
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helped anyways, it tries to compress the string. |
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The "sfreeze" functions will enlarge the original data one byte at most |
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and will only load the Storable method when neccessary. |
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$serialized = sfreeze_c $value (sfreeze and compress) |
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Similar to "sfreeze", but always tries to "c"ompress the resulting |
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string. This still leaves most small objects (most numbers) untouched. |
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$serialized = sfreeze_cr $value (sfreeze and compress references) |
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Similar to "sfreeze", but tries to "c"ompress the resulting string |
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unless it's a "simple" string. References for example are not "simple" |
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and as such are being compressed. |
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$original_data = sthaw $serialized |
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Recreate the original object from it's serialized representation. This |
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function automatically detects all the different sfreeze formats. |
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Compress::LZF::set_serializer $package, $freeze, $thaw |
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Set the serialize module and functions to use. The default is |
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"Storable", "Storable::net_mstore" and "Storable::mretrieve", which |
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should be fine for most purposes. |
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SEE ALSO |
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Other Compress::* modules, especially Compress::LZV1 (an older, less |
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speedy module that guarentees only 1 byte overhead worst case) and |
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Compress::Zlib. |
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http://liblzf.plan9.de/ |
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AUTHOR |
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This perl extension and the underlying liblzf were written by Marc |
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Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de> (See also http://liblzf.plan9.de/). |
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BUGS |