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README.md

1Command Line Interface for Zstandard library
2============================================
3
4Command Line Interface (CLI) can be created using the `make` command without any additional parameters.
5There are however other Makefile targets that create different variations of CLI:
6- `zstd` : default CLI supporting gzip-like arguments; includes dictionary builder, benchmark, and support for decompression of legacy zstd formats
7- `zstd_nolegacy` : Same as `zstd` but without support for legacy zstd formats
8- `zstd-small` : CLI optimized for minimal size; no dictionary builder, no benchmark, and no support for legacy zstd formats
9- `zstd-compress` : version of CLI which can only compress into zstd format
10- `zstd-decompress` : version of CLI which can only decompress zstd format
11
12
13#### Compilation variables
14`zstd` scope can be altered by modifying the following `make` variables :
15
16- __HAVE_THREAD__ : multithreading is automatically enabled when `pthread` is detected.
17  It's possible to disable multithread support, by setting `HAVE_THREAD=0`.
18  Example : `make zstd HAVE_THREAD=0`
19  It's also possible to force multithread support, using `HAVE_THREAD=1`.
20  In which case, linking stage will fail if neither `pthread` nor `windows.h` library can be found.
21  This is useful to ensure this feature is not silently disabled.
22
23- __ZSTD_LEGACY_SUPPORT__ : `zstd` can decompress files compressed by older versions of `zstd`.
24  Starting v0.8.0, all versions of `zstd` produce frames compliant with the [specification](../doc/zstd_compression_format.md), and are therefore compatible.
25  But older versions (< v0.8.0) produced different, incompatible, frames.
26  By default, `zstd` supports decoding legacy formats >= v0.4.0 (`ZSTD_LEGACY_SUPPORT=4`).
27  This can be altered by modifying this compilation variable.
28  `ZSTD_LEGACY_SUPPORT=1` means "support all formats >= v0.1.0".
29  `ZSTD_LEGACY_SUPPORT=2` means "support all formats >= v0.2.0", and so on.
30  `ZSTD_LEGACY_SUPPORT=0` means _DO NOT_ support any legacy format.
31  if `ZSTD_LEGACY_SUPPORT >= 8`, it's the same as `0`, since there is no legacy format after `7`.
32  Note : `zstd` only supports decoding older formats, and cannot generate any legacy format.
33
34- __HAVE_ZLIB__ : `zstd` can compress and decompress files in `.gz` format.
35  This is ordered through command `--format=gzip`.
36  Alternatively, symlinks named `gzip` or `gunzip` will mimic intended behavior.
37  `.gz` support is automatically enabled when `zlib` library is detected at build time.
38  It's possible to disable `.gz` support, by setting `HAVE_ZLIB=0`.
39  Example : `make zstd HAVE_ZLIB=0`
40  It's also possible to force compilation with zlib support, using `HAVE_ZLIB=1`.
41  In which case, linking stage will fail if `zlib` library cannot be found.
42  This is useful to prevent silent feature disabling.
43
44- __HAVE_LZMA__ : `zstd` can compress and decompress files in `.xz` and `.lzma` formats.
45  This is ordered through commands `--format=xz` and `--format=lzma` respectively.
46  Alternatively, symlinks named `xz`, `unxz`, `lzma`, or `unlzma` will mimic intended behavior.
47  `.xz` and `.lzma` support is automatically enabled when `lzma` library is detected at build time.
48  It's possible to disable `.xz` and `.lzma` support, by setting `HAVE_LZMA=0`.
49  Example : `make zstd HAVE_LZMA=0`
50  It's also possible to force compilation with lzma support, using `HAVE_LZMA=1`.
51  In which case, linking stage will fail if `lzma` library cannot be found.
52  This is useful to prevent silent feature disabling.
53
54- __HAVE_LZ4__ : `zstd` can compress and decompress files in `.lz4` formats.
55  This is ordered through commands `--format=lz4`.
56  Alternatively, symlinks named `lz4`, or `unlz4` will mimic intended behavior.
57  `.lz4` support is automatically enabled when `lz4` library is detected at build time.
58  It's possible to disable `.lz4` support, by setting `HAVE_LZ4=0` .
59  Example : `make zstd HAVE_LZ4=0`
60  It's also possible to force compilation with lz4 support, using `HAVE_LZ4=1`.
61  In which case, linking stage will fail if `lz4` library cannot be found.
62  This is useful to prevent silent feature disabling.
63
64- __BACKTRACE__ : `zstd` can display a stack backtrace when execution
65  generates a runtime exception. By default, this feature may be
66  degraded/disabled on some platforms unless additional compiler directives are
67  applied. When triaging a runtime issue, enabling this feature can provide
68  more context to determine the location of the fault.
69  Example : `make zstd BACKTRACE=1`
70
71
72#### Aggregation of parameters
73CLI supports aggregation of parameters i.e. `-b1`, `-e18`, and `-i1` can be joined into `-b1e18i1`.
74
75
76#### Symlink shortcuts
77It's possible to invoke `zstd` through a symlink.
78When the name of the symlink has a specific value, it triggers an associated behavior.
79- `zstdmt` : compress using all cores available on local system.
80- `zcat` : will decompress and output target file using any of the supported formats. `gzcat` and `zstdcat` are also equivalent.
81- `gzip` : if zlib support is enabled, will mimic `gzip` by compressing file using `.gz` format, removing source file by default (use `--keep` to preserve). If zlib is not supported, triggers an error.
82- `xz` : if lzma support is enabled, will mimic `xz` by compressing file using `.xz` format, removing source file by default (use `--keep` to preserve). If xz is not supported, triggers an error.
83- `lzma` : if lzma support is enabled, will mimic `lzma` by compressing file using `.lzma` format, removing source file by default (use `--keep` to preserve). If lzma is not supported, triggers an error.
84- `lz4` : if lz4 support is enabled, will mimic `lz4` by compressing file using `.lz4` format. If lz4 is not supported, triggers an error.
85- `unzstd` and `unlz4` will decompress any of the supported format.
86- `ungz`, `unxz` and `unlzma` will do the same, and will also remove source file by default (use `--keep` to preserve).
87
88
89#### Dictionary builder in Command Line Interface
90Zstd offers a training mode, which can be used to tune the algorithm for a selected
91type of data, by providing it with a few samples. The result of the training is stored
92in a file selected with the `-o` option (default name is `dictionary`),
93which can be loaded before compression and decompression.
94
95Using a dictionary, the compression ratio achievable on small data improves dramatically.
96These compression gains are achieved while simultaneously providing faster compression and decompression speeds.
97Dictionary work if there is some correlation in a family of small data (there is no universal dictionary).
98Hence, deploying one dictionary per type of data will provide the greater benefits.
99Dictionary gains are mostly effective in the first few KB. Then, the compression algorithm
100will rely more and more on previously decoded content to compress the rest of the file.
101
102Usage of the dictionary builder and created dictionaries with CLI:
103
1041. Create the dictionary : `zstd --train PathToTrainingSet/* -o dictionaryName`
1052. Compress with the dictionary: `zstd FILE -D dictionaryName`
1063. Decompress with the dictionary: `zstd --decompress FILE.zst -D dictionaryName`
107
108
109#### Benchmark in Command Line Interface
110CLI includes in-memory compression benchmark module for zstd.
111The benchmark is conducted using given filenames. The files are read into memory and joined together.
112It makes benchmark more precise as it eliminates I/O overhead.
113Multiple filenames can be supplied, as multiple parameters, with wildcards,
114or names of directories can be used as parameters with `-r` option.
115
116The benchmark measures ratio, compressed size, compression and decompression speed.
117One can select compression levels starting from `-b` and ending with `-e`.
118The `-i` parameter selects minimal time used for each of tested levels.
119
120
121#### Usage of Command Line Interface
122The full list of options can be obtained with `-h` or `-H` parameter:
123```
124Usage :
125      zstd [args] [FILE(s)] [-o file]
126
127FILE    : a filename
128          with no FILE, or when FILE is - , read standard input
129Arguments :
130 -#     : # compression level (1-19, default: 3)
131 -d     : decompression
132 -D file: use `file` as Dictionary
133 -o file: result stored into `file` (only if 1 input file)
134 -f     : overwrite output without prompting and (de)compress links
135--rm    : remove source file(s) after successful de/compression
136 -k     : preserve source file(s) (default)
137 -h/-H  : display help/long help and exit
138
139Advanced arguments :
140 -V     : display Version number and exit
141 -v     : verbose mode; specify multiple times to increase verbosity
142 -q     : suppress warnings; specify twice to suppress errors too
143 -c     : force write to standard output, even if it is the console
144 -l     : print information about zstd compressed files
145--ultra : enable levels beyond 19, up to 22 (requires more memory)
146--long  : enable long distance matching (requires more memory)
147--no-dictID : don't write dictID into header (dictionary compression)
148--[no-]check : integrity check (default: enabled)
149 -r     : operate recursively on directories
150--format=gzip : compress files to the .gz format
151--format=xz : compress files to the .xz format
152--format=lzma : compress files to the .lzma format
153--test  : test compressed file integrity
154--[no-]sparse : sparse mode (default: disabled)
155 -M#    : Set a memory usage limit for decompression
156--      : All arguments after "--" are treated as files
157
158Dictionary builder :
159--train ## : create a dictionary from a training set of files
160--train-cover[=k=#,d=#,steps=#,split=#,shrink[=#]] : use the cover algorithm with optional args
161--train-fastcover[=k=#,d=#,f=#,steps=#,split=#,shrink[=#],accel=#] : use the fastcover algorithm with optional args
162--train-legacy[=s=#] : use the legacy algorithm with selectivity (default: 9)
163 -o file : `file` is dictionary name (default: dictionary)
164--maxdict=# : limit dictionary to specified size (default: 112640)
165--dictID=# : force dictionary ID to specified value (default: random)
166
167Benchmark arguments :
168 -b#    : benchmark file(s), using # compression level (default: 3)
169 -e#    : test all compression levels from -bX to # (default: 1)
170 -i#    : minimum evaluation time in seconds (default: 3s)
171 -B#    : cut file into independent blocks of size # (default: no block)
172--priority=rt : set process priority to real-time
173```
174
175#### Restricted usage of Environment Variables
176Using environment variables to set parameters has security implications.
177Therefore, this avenue is intentionally restricted.
178Only `ZSTD_CLEVEL` is supported currently, for setting compression level.
179`ZSTD_CLEVEL` can be used to set the level between 1 and 19 (the "normal" range).
180If the value of `ZSTD_CLEVEL` is not a valid integer, it will be ignored with a warning message.
181`ZSTD_CLEVEL` just replaces the default compression level (`3`).
182It can be overridden by corresponding command line arguments.
183
184#### Long distance matching mode
185The long distance matching mode, enabled with `--long`, is designed to improve
186the compression ratio for files with long matches at a large distance (up to the
187maximum window size, `128 MiB`) while still maintaining compression speed.
188
189Enabling this mode sets the window size to `128 MiB` and thus increases the memory
190usage for both the compressor and decompressor. Performance in terms of speed is
191dependent on long matches being found. Compression speed may degrade if few long
192matches are found. Decompression speed usually improves when there are many long
193distance matches.
194
195Below are graphs comparing the compression speed, compression ratio, and
196decompression speed with and without long distance matching on an ideal use
197case: a tar of four versions of clang (versions `3.4.1`, `3.4.2`, `3.5.0`,
198`3.5.1`) with a total size of `244889600 B`. This is an ideal use case as there
199are many long distance matches within the maximum window size of `128 MiB` (each
200version is less than `128 MiB`).
201
202Compression Speed vs Ratio | Decompression Speed
203---------------------------|---------------------
204![Compression Speed vs Ratio](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/facebook/zstd/v1.3.3/doc/images/ldmCspeed.png "Compression Speed vs Ratio") | ![Decompression Speed](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/facebook/zstd/v1.3.3/doc/images/ldmDspeed.png "Decompression Speed")
205
206| Method | Compression ratio | Compression speed | Decompression speed  |
207|:-------|------------------:|-------------------------:|---------------------------:|
208| `zstd -1`   | `5.065`   | `284.8 MB/s`  | `759.3 MB/s`  |
209| `zstd -5`  | `5.826`    | `124.9 MB/s`  | `674.0 MB/s`  |
210| `zstd -10` | `6.504`    | `29.5 MB/s`   | `771.3 MB/s`  |
211| `zstd -1 --long` | `17.426` | `220.6 MB/s` | `1638.4 MB/s` |
212| `zstd -5 --long` | `19.661` | `165.5 MB/s` | `1530.6 MB/s`|
213| `zstd -10 --long`| `21.949` | `75.6 MB/s` | `1632.6 MB/s`|
214
215On this file, the compression ratio improves significantly with minimal impact
216on compression speed, and the decompression speed doubles.
217
218On the other extreme, compressing a file with few long distance matches (such as
219the [Silesia compression corpus]) will likely lead to a deterioration in
220compression speed (for lower levels) with minimal change in compression ratio.
221
222The below table illustrates this on the [Silesia compression corpus].
223
224[Silesia compression corpus]: http://sun.aei.polsl.pl/~sdeor/index.php?page=silesia
225
226| Method | Compression ratio | Compression speed | Decompression speed  |
227|:-------|------------------:|------------------:|---------------------:|
228| `zstd -1`        | `2.878` | `231.7 MB/s`      | `594.4 MB/s`   |
229| `zstd -1 --long` | `2.929` | `106.5 MB/s`      | `517.9 MB/s`   |
230| `zstd -5`        | `3.274` | `77.1 MB/s`       | `464.2 MB/s`   |
231| `zstd -5 --long` | `3.319` | `51.7 MB/s`       | `371.9 MB/s`   |
232| `zstd -10`       | `3.523` | `16.4 MB/s`       | `489.2 MB/s`   |
233| `zstd -10 --long`| `3.566` | `16.2 MB/s`       | `415.7 MB/s`   |
234
235
236#### zstdgrep
237
238`zstdgrep` is a utility which makes it possible to `grep` directly a `.zst` compressed file.
239It's used the same way as normal `grep`, for example :
240`zstdgrep pattern file.zst`
241
242`zstdgrep` is _not_ compatible with dictionary compression.
243
244To search into a file compressed with a dictionary,
245it's necessary to decompress it using `zstd` or `zstdcat`,
246and then pipe the result to `grep`. For example  :
247`zstdcat -D dictionary -qc -- file.zst | grep pattern`
248