xref: /freebsd/sys/contrib/xz-embedded/README (revision 4d846d26)
1
2XZ Embedded
3===========
4
5    XZ Embedded is a relatively small, limited implementation of the .xz
6    file format. Currently only decoding is implemented.
7
8    XZ Embedded was written for use in the Linux kernel, but the code can
9    be easily used in other environments too, including regular userspace
10    applications. See userspace/xzminidec.c for an example program.
11
12    This README contains information that is useful only when the copy
13    of XZ Embedded isn't part of the Linux kernel tree. You should also
14    read linux/Documentation/xz.txt even if you aren't using XZ Embedded
15    as part of Linux; information in that file is not repeated in this
16    README.
17
18Compiling the Linux kernel module
19
20    The xz_dec module depends on crc32 module, so make sure that you have
21    it enabled (CONFIG_CRC32).
22
23    Building the xz_dec and xz_dec_test modules without support for BCJ
24    filters:
25
26        cd linux/lib/xz
27        make -C /path/to/kernel/source \
28                KCPPFLAGS=-I"$(pwd)/../../include" M="$(pwd)" \
29                CONFIG_XZ_DEC=m CONFIG_XZ_DEC_TEST=m
30
31    Building the xz_dec and xz_dec_test modules with support for BCJ
32    filters:
33
34        cd linux/lib/xz
35        make -C /path/to/kernel/source \
36                KCPPFLAGS=-I"$(pwd)/../../include" M="$(pwd)" \
37                CONFIG_XZ_DEC=m CONFIG_XZ_DEC_TEST=m CONFIG_XZ_DEC_BCJ=y \
38                CONFIG_XZ_DEC_X86=y CONFIG_XZ_DEC_POWERPC=y \
39                CONFIG_XZ_DEC_IA64=y CONFIG_XZ_DEC_ARM=y \
40                CONFIG_XZ_DEC_ARMTHUMB=y CONFIG_XZ_DEC_SPARC=y
41
42    If you want only one or a few of the BCJ filters, omit the appropriate
43    variables. CONFIG_XZ_DEC_BCJ=y is always required to build the support
44    code shared between all BCJ filters.
45
46    Most people don't need the xz_dec_test module. You can skip building
47    it by omitting CONFIG_XZ_DEC_TEST=m from the make command line.
48
49Compiler requirements
50
51    XZ Embedded should compile as either GNU-C89 (used in the Linux
52    kernel) or with any C99 compiler. Getting the code to compile with
53    non-GNU C89 compiler or a C++ compiler should be quite easy as
54    long as there is a data type for unsigned 64-bit integer (or the
55    code is modified not to support large files, which needs some more
56    care than just using 32-bit integer instead of 64-bit).
57
58    If you use GCC, try to use a recent version. For example, on x86-32,
59    xz_dec_lzma2.c compiled with GCC 3.3.6 is 15-25 % slower than when
60    compiled with GCC 4.3.3.
61
62Embedding into userspace applications
63
64    To embed the XZ decoder, copy the following files into a single
65    directory in your source code tree:
66
67        linux/include/linux/xz.h
68        linux/lib/xz/xz_crc32.c
69        linux/lib/xz/xz_dec_lzma2.c
70        linux/lib/xz/xz_dec_stream.c
71        linux/lib/xz/xz_lzma2.h
72        linux/lib/xz/xz_private.h
73        linux/lib/xz/xz_stream.h
74        userspace/xz_config.h
75
76    Alternatively, xz.h may be placed into a different directory but then
77    that directory must be in the compiler include path when compiling
78    the .c files.
79
80    Your code should use only the functions declared in xz.h. The rest of
81    the .h files are meant only for internal use in XZ Embedded.
82
83    You may want to modify xz_config.h to be more suitable for your build
84    environment. Probably you should at least skim through it even if the
85    default file works as is.
86
87Supporting concatenated .xz files
88
89    Regular .xz files can be concatenated as is and the xz command line
90    tool will decompress all streams from a concatenated file (a few
91    other popular formats and tools support this too). This kind of .xz
92    files aren't as uncommon as one might think because pxz, an early
93    threaded XZ compressor, created this kind of .xz files.
94
95    The xz_dec_run() function will stop after decompressing one stream.
96    This is good when XZ data is stored inside some other file format.
97    However, if one is decompressing regular standalone .xz files, one
98    will want to decompress all streams in the file. This is easy with
99    xz_dec_catrun(). To include support for xz_dec_catrun(), you need
100    to #define XZ_DEC_CONCATENATED in xz_config.h or in compiler flags.
101
102Integrity check support
103
104    XZ Embedded always supports the integrity check types None and
105    CRC32. Support for CRC64 is optional. SHA-256 is currently not
106    supported in XZ Embedded although the .xz format does support it.
107    The xz tool from XZ Utils uses CRC64 by default, but CRC32 is usually
108    enough in embedded systems to keep the code size smaller.
109
110    If you want support for CRC64, you need to copy linux/lib/xz/xz_crc64.c
111    into your application, and #define XZ_USE_CRC64 in xz_config.h or in
112    compiler flags.
113
114    When using the internal CRC32 or CRC64, their lookup tables need to be
115    initialized with xz_crc32_init() and xz_crc64_init(), respectively.
116    See xz.h for details.
117
118    To use external CRC32 or CRC64 code instead of the code from
119    xz_crc32.c or xz_crc64.c, the following #defines may be used
120    in xz_config.h or in compiler flags:
121
122        #define XZ_INTERNAL_CRC32 0
123        #define XZ_INTERNAL_CRC64 0
124
125    Then it is up to you to provide compatible xz_crc32() or xz_crc64()
126    functions.
127
128    If the .xz file being decompressed uses an integrity check type that
129    isn't supported by XZ Embedded, it is treated as an error and the
130    file cannot be decompressed. For multi-call mode, this can be modified
131    by #defining XZ_DEC_ANY_CHECK. Then xz_dec_run() will return
132    XZ_UNSUPPORTED_CHECK when unsupported check type is detected. After
133    that decompression can be continued normally except that the
134    integrity check won't be verified. In single-call mode there's
135    no way to continue decoding, so XZ_DEC_ANY_CHECK is almost useless
136    in single-call mode.
137
138BCJ filter support
139
140    If you want support for one or more BCJ filters, you need to copy also
141    linux/lib/xz/xz_dec_bcj.c into your application, and use appropriate
142    #defines in xz_config.h or in compiler flags. You don't need these
143    #defines in the code that just uses XZ Embedded via xz.h, but having
144    them always #defined doesn't hurt either.
145
146        #define             Instruction set     BCJ filter endianness
147        XZ_DEC_X86          x86-32 or x86-64    Little endian only
148        XZ_DEC_POWERPC      PowerPC             Big endian only
149        XZ_DEC_IA64         Itanium (IA-64)     Big or little endian
150        XZ_DEC_ARM          ARM                 Little endian only
151        XZ_DEC_ARMTHUMB     ARM-Thumb           Little endian only
152        XZ_DEC_SPARC        SPARC               Big or little endian
153
154    While some architectures are (partially) bi-endian, the endianness
155    setting doesn't change the endianness of the instructions on all
156    architectures. That's why Itanium and SPARC filters work for both big
157    and little endian executables (Itanium has little endian instructions
158    and SPARC has big endian instructions).
159
160    There currently is no filter for little endian PowerPC or big endian
161    ARM or ARM-Thumb. Implementing filters for them can be considered if
162    there is a need for such filters in real-world applications.
163
164Notes about shared libraries
165
166    If you are including XZ Embedded into a shared library, you very
167    probably should rename the xz_* functions to prevent symbol
168    conflicts in case your library is linked against some other library
169    or application that also has XZ Embedded in it (which may even be
170    a different version of XZ Embedded). TODO: Provide an easy way
171    to do this.
172
173    Please don't create a shared library of XZ Embedded itself unless
174    it is fine to rebuild everything depending on that shared library
175    everytime you upgrade to a newer version of XZ Embedded. There are
176    no API or ABI stability guarantees between different versions of
177    XZ Embedded.
178
179