zlib.h 93 KB

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  1. #ifndef ZLIB_H_
  2. #define ZLIB_H_
  3. /* zlib.h -- interface of the 'zlib-ng' compression library
  4. Forked from and compatible with zlib 1.3.1
  5. Copyright (C) 1995-2024 Jean-loup Gailly and Mark Adler
  6. This software is provided 'as-is', without any express or implied
  7. warranty. In no event will the authors be held liable for any damages
  8. arising from the use of this software.
  9. Permission is granted to anyone to use this software for any purpose,
  10. including commercial applications, and to alter it and redistribute it
  11. freely, subject to the following restrictions:
  12. 1. The origin of this software must not be misrepresented; you must not
  13. claim that you wrote the original software. If you use this software
  14. in a product, an acknowledgment in the product documentation would be
  15. appreciated but is not required.
  16. 2. Altered source versions must be plainly marked as such, and must not be
  17. misrepresented as being the original software.
  18. 3. This notice may not be removed or altered from any source distribution.
  19. Jean-loup Gailly Mark Adler
  20. jloup@gzip.org madler@alumni.caltech.edu
  21. The data format used by the zlib library is described by RFCs (Request for
  22. Comments) 1950 to 1952 in the files https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1950
  23. (zlib format), rfc1951 (deflate format) and rfc1952 (gzip format).
  24. */
  25. #ifdef ZNGLIB_H_
  26. # error Include zlib-ng.h for zlib-ng API or zlib.h for zlib-compat API but not both
  27. #endif
  28. #ifndef RC_INVOKED
  29. #include <stdint.h>
  30. #include <stdarg.h>
  31. #include "zconf.h"
  32. #ifndef ZCONF_H
  33. # error Missing zconf.h add binary output directory to include directories
  34. #endif
  35. #endif /* RC_INVOKED */
  36. #ifdef __cplusplus
  37. extern "C" {
  38. #endif
  39. #define ZLIBNG_VERSION "2.2.2"
  40. #define ZLIBNG_VERNUM 0x020202F0L /* MMNNRRSM: major minor revision status modified */
  41. #define ZLIBNG_VER_MAJOR 2
  42. #define ZLIBNG_VER_MINOR 2
  43. #define ZLIBNG_VER_REVISION 2
  44. #define ZLIBNG_VER_STATUS F /* 0=devel, 1-E=beta, F=Release (DEPRECATED) */
  45. #define ZLIBNG_VER_STATUSH 0xF /* Hex values: 0=devel, 1-E=beta, F=Release */
  46. #define ZLIBNG_VER_MODIFIED 0 /* non-zero if modified externally from zlib-ng */
  47. #define ZLIB_VERSION "1.3.1.zlib-ng"
  48. #define ZLIB_VERNUM 0x131f
  49. #define ZLIB_VER_MAJOR 1
  50. #define ZLIB_VER_MINOR 3
  51. #define ZLIB_VER_REVISION 1
  52. #define ZLIB_VER_SUBREVISION 15 /* 15=fork (0xf) */
  53. /*
  54. The 'zlib' compression library provides in-memory compression and
  55. decompression functions, including integrity checks of the uncompressed data.
  56. This version of the library supports only one compression method (deflation)
  57. but other algorithms will be added later and will have the same stream
  58. interface.
  59. Compression can be done in a single step if the buffers are large enough,
  60. or can be done by repeated calls of the compression function. In the latter
  61. case, the application must provide more input and/or consume the output
  62. (providing more output space) before each call.
  63. The compressed data format used by default by the in-memory functions is
  64. the zlib format, which is a zlib wrapper documented in RFC 1950, wrapped
  65. around a deflate stream, which is itself documented in RFC 1951.
  66. The library also supports reading and writing files in gzip (.gz) format
  67. with an interface similar to that of stdio using the functions that start
  68. with "gz". The gzip format is different from the zlib format. gzip is a
  69. gzip wrapper, documented in RFC 1952, wrapped around a deflate stream.
  70. This library can optionally read and write gzip and raw deflate streams in
  71. memory as well.
  72. The zlib format was designed to be compact and fast for use in memory
  73. and on communications channels. The gzip format was designed for single-
  74. file compression on file systems, has a larger header than zlib to maintain
  75. directory information, and uses a different, slower check method than zlib.
  76. The library does not install any signal handler. The decoder checks
  77. the consistency of the compressed data, so the library should never crash
  78. even in the case of corrupted input.
  79. */
  80. typedef void *(*alloc_func) (void *opaque, unsigned int items, unsigned int size);
  81. typedef void (*free_func) (void *opaque, void *address);
  82. struct internal_state;
  83. typedef struct z_stream_s {
  84. z_const unsigned char *next_in; /* next input byte */
  85. uint32_t avail_in; /* number of bytes available at next_in */
  86. unsigned long total_in; /* total number of input bytes read so far */
  87. unsigned char *next_out; /* next output byte will go here */
  88. uint32_t avail_out; /* remaining free space at next_out */
  89. unsigned long total_out; /* total number of bytes output so far */
  90. z_const char *msg; /* last error message, NULL if no error */
  91. struct internal_state *state; /* not visible by applications */
  92. alloc_func zalloc; /* used to allocate the internal state */
  93. free_func zfree; /* used to free the internal state */
  94. void *opaque; /* private data object passed to zalloc and zfree */
  95. int data_type; /* best guess about the data type: binary or text
  96. for deflate, or the decoding state for inflate */
  97. unsigned long adler; /* Adler-32 or CRC-32 value of the uncompressed data */
  98. unsigned long reserved; /* reserved for future use */
  99. } z_stream;
  100. typedef z_stream *z_streamp; /* Obsolete type, retained for compatibility only */
  101. /*
  102. gzip header information passed to and from zlib routines. See RFC 1952
  103. for more details on the meanings of these fields.
  104. */
  105. typedef struct gz_header_s {
  106. int text; /* true if compressed data believed to be text */
  107. unsigned long time; /* modification time */
  108. int xflags; /* extra flags (not used when writing a gzip file) */
  109. int os; /* operating system */
  110. unsigned char *extra; /* pointer to extra field or NULL if none */
  111. unsigned int extra_len; /* extra field length (valid if extra != NULL) */
  112. unsigned int extra_max; /* space at extra (only when reading header) */
  113. unsigned char *name; /* pointer to zero-terminated file name or NULL */
  114. unsigned int name_max; /* space at name (only when reading header) */
  115. unsigned char *comment; /* pointer to zero-terminated comment or NULL */
  116. unsigned int comm_max; /* space at comment (only when reading header) */
  117. int hcrc; /* true if there was or will be a header crc */
  118. int done; /* true when done reading gzip header (not used when writing a gzip file) */
  119. } gz_header;
  120. typedef gz_header *gz_headerp;
  121. /*
  122. The application must update next_in and avail_in when avail_in has dropped
  123. to zero. It must update next_out and avail_out when avail_out has dropped
  124. to zero. The application must initialize zalloc, zfree and opaque before
  125. calling the init function. All other fields are set by the compression
  126. library and must not be updated by the application.
  127. The opaque value provided by the application will be passed as the first
  128. parameter for calls of zalloc and zfree. This can be useful for custom
  129. memory management. The compression library attaches no meaning to the
  130. opaque value.
  131. zalloc must return NULL if there is not enough memory for the object.
  132. If zlib is used in a multi-threaded application, zalloc and zfree must be
  133. thread safe. In that case, zlib is thread-safe. When zalloc and zfree are
  134. Z_NULL on entry to the initialization function, they are set to internal
  135. routines that use the standard library functions malloc() and free().
  136. The fields total_in and total_out can be used for statistics or progress
  137. reports. After compression, total_in holds the total size of the
  138. uncompressed data and may be saved for use by the decompressor (particularly
  139. if the decompressor wants to decompress everything in a single step).
  140. */
  141. /* constants */
  142. #define Z_NO_FLUSH 0
  143. #define Z_PARTIAL_FLUSH 1
  144. #define Z_SYNC_FLUSH 2
  145. #define Z_FULL_FLUSH 3
  146. #define Z_FINISH 4
  147. #define Z_BLOCK 5
  148. #define Z_TREES 6
  149. /* Allowed flush values; see deflate() and inflate() below for details */
  150. #define Z_OK 0
  151. #define Z_STREAM_END 1
  152. #define Z_NEED_DICT 2
  153. #define Z_ERRNO (-1)
  154. #define Z_STREAM_ERROR (-2)
  155. #define Z_DATA_ERROR (-3)
  156. #define Z_MEM_ERROR (-4)
  157. #define Z_BUF_ERROR (-5)
  158. #define Z_VERSION_ERROR (-6)
  159. /* Return codes for the compression/decompression functions. Negative values
  160. * are errors, positive values are used for special but normal events.
  161. */
  162. #define Z_NO_COMPRESSION 0
  163. #define Z_BEST_SPEED 1
  164. #define Z_BEST_COMPRESSION 9
  165. #define Z_DEFAULT_COMPRESSION (-1)
  166. /* compression levels */
  167. #define Z_FILTERED 1
  168. #define Z_HUFFMAN_ONLY 2
  169. #define Z_RLE 3
  170. #define Z_FIXED 4
  171. #define Z_DEFAULT_STRATEGY 0
  172. /* compression strategy; see deflateInit2() below for details */
  173. #define Z_BINARY 0
  174. #define Z_TEXT 1
  175. #define Z_ASCII Z_TEXT /* for compatibility with 1.2.2 and earlier */
  176. #define Z_UNKNOWN 2
  177. /* Possible values of the data_type field for deflate() */
  178. #define Z_DEFLATED 8
  179. /* The deflate compression method (the only one supported in this version) */
  180. #define Z_NULL 0 /* for compatibility with zlib, was for initializing zalloc, zfree, opaque */
  181. #define zlib_version zlibVersion()
  182. /* for compatibility with versions < 1.0.2 */
  183. /* basic functions */
  184. Z_EXTERN const char * Z_EXPORT zlibVersion(void);
  185. /* The application can compare zlibVersion and ZLIB_VERSION for consistency.
  186. If the first character differs, the library code actually used is not
  187. compatible with the zlib.h header file used by the application. This check
  188. is automatically made by deflateInit and inflateInit.
  189. */
  190. /*
  191. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT deflateInit (z_stream *strm, int level);
  192. Initializes the internal stream state for compression. The fields
  193. zalloc, zfree and opaque must be initialized before by the caller. If
  194. zalloc and zfree are set to Z_NULL, deflateInit updates them to use default
  195. allocation functions. total_in, total_out, adler, and msg are initialized.
  196. The compression level must be Z_DEFAULT_COMPRESSION, or between 0 and 9:
  197. 1 gives best speed, 9 gives best compression, 0 gives no compression at all
  198. (the input data is simply copied a block at a time). Z_DEFAULT_COMPRESSION
  199. requests a default compromise between speed and compression (currently
  200. equivalent to level 6).
  201. deflateInit returns Z_OK if success, Z_MEM_ERROR if there was not enough
  202. memory, Z_STREAM_ERROR if level is not a valid compression level, or
  203. Z_VERSION_ERROR if the zlib library version (zlib_version) is incompatible
  204. with the version assumed by the caller (ZLIB_VERSION). msg is set to null
  205. if there is no error message. deflateInit does not perform any compression:
  206. this will be done by deflate().
  207. */
  208. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT deflate(z_stream *strm, int flush);
  209. /*
  210. deflate compresses as much data as possible, and stops when the input
  211. buffer becomes empty or the output buffer becomes full. It may introduce
  212. some output latency (reading input without producing any output) except when
  213. forced to flush.
  214. The detailed semantics are as follows. deflate performs one or both of the
  215. following actions:
  216. - Compress more input starting at next_in and update next_in and avail_in
  217. accordingly. If not all input can be processed (because there is not
  218. enough room in the output buffer), next_in and avail_in are updated and
  219. processing will resume at this point for the next call of deflate().
  220. - Generate more output starting at next_out and update next_out and avail_out
  221. accordingly. This action is forced if the parameter flush is non zero.
  222. Forcing flush frequently degrades the compression ratio, so this parameter
  223. should be set only when necessary. Some output may be provided even if
  224. flush is zero.
  225. Before the call of deflate(), the application should ensure that at least
  226. one of the actions is possible, by providing more input and/or consuming more
  227. output, and updating avail_in or avail_out accordingly; avail_out should
  228. never be zero before the call. The application can consume the compressed
  229. output when it wants, for example when the output buffer is full (avail_out
  230. == 0), or after each call of deflate(). If deflate returns Z_OK and with
  231. zero avail_out, it must be called again after making room in the output
  232. buffer because there might be more output pending. See deflatePending(),
  233. which can be used if desired to determine whether or not there is more output
  234. in that case.
  235. Normally the parameter flush is set to Z_NO_FLUSH, which allows deflate to
  236. decide how much data to accumulate before producing output, in order to
  237. maximize compression.
  238. If the parameter flush is set to Z_SYNC_FLUSH, all pending output is
  239. flushed to the output buffer and the output is aligned on a byte boundary, so
  240. that the decompressor can get all input data available so far. (In
  241. particular avail_in is zero after the call if enough output space has been
  242. provided before the call.) Flushing may degrade compression for some
  243. compression algorithms and so it should be used only when necessary. This
  244. completes the current deflate block and follows it with an empty stored block
  245. that is three bits plus filler bits to the next byte, followed by four bytes
  246. (00 00 ff ff).
  247. If flush is set to Z_PARTIAL_FLUSH, all pending output is flushed to the
  248. output buffer, but the output is not aligned to a byte boundary. All of the
  249. input data so far will be available to the decompressor, as for Z_SYNC_FLUSH.
  250. This completes the current deflate block and follows it with an empty fixed
  251. codes block that is 10 bits long. This assures that enough bytes are output
  252. in order for the decompressor to finish the block before the empty fixed
  253. codes block.
  254. If flush is set to Z_BLOCK, a deflate block is completed and emitted, as
  255. for Z_SYNC_FLUSH, but the output is not aligned on a byte boundary, and up to
  256. seven bits of the current block are held to be written as the next byte after
  257. the next deflate block is completed. In this case, the decompressor may not
  258. be provided enough bits at this point in order to complete decompression of
  259. the data provided so far to the compressor. It may need to wait for the next
  260. block to be emitted. This is for advanced applications that need to control
  261. the emission of deflate blocks.
  262. If flush is set to Z_FULL_FLUSH, all output is flushed as with
  263. Z_SYNC_FLUSH, and the compression state is reset so that decompression can
  264. restart from this point if previous compressed data has been damaged or if
  265. random access is desired. Using Z_FULL_FLUSH too often can seriously degrade
  266. compression.
  267. If deflate returns with avail_out == 0, this function must be called again
  268. with the same value of the flush parameter and more output space (updated
  269. avail_out), until the flush is complete (deflate returns with non-zero
  270. avail_out). In the case of a Z_FULL_FLUSH or Z_SYNC_FLUSH, make sure that
  271. avail_out is greater than six when the flush marker begins, in order to avoid
  272. repeated flush markers upon calling deflate() again when avail_out == 0.
  273. If the parameter flush is set to Z_FINISH, pending input is processed,
  274. pending output is flushed and deflate returns with Z_STREAM_END if there was
  275. enough output space. If deflate returns with Z_OK or Z_BUF_ERROR, this
  276. function must be called again with Z_FINISH and more output space (updated
  277. avail_out) but no more input data, until it returns with Z_STREAM_END or an
  278. error. After deflate has returned Z_STREAM_END, the only possible operations
  279. on the stream are deflateReset or deflateEnd.
  280. Z_FINISH can be used in the first deflate call after deflateInit if all the
  281. compression is to be done in a single step. In order to complete in one
  282. call, avail_out must be at least the value returned by deflateBound (see
  283. below). Then deflate is guaranteed to return Z_STREAM_END. If not enough
  284. output space is provided, deflate will not return Z_STREAM_END, and it must
  285. be called again as described above.
  286. deflate() sets strm->adler to the Adler-32 checksum of all input read
  287. so far (that is, total_in bytes). If a gzip stream is being generated, then
  288. strm->adler will be the CRC-32 checksum of the input read so far. (See
  289. deflateInit2 below.)
  290. deflate() may update strm->data_type if it can make a good guess about
  291. the input data type (Z_BINARY or Z_TEXT). If in doubt, the data is
  292. considered binary. This field is only for information purposes and does not
  293. affect the compression algorithm in any manner.
  294. deflate() returns Z_OK if some progress has been made (more input
  295. processed or more output produced), Z_STREAM_END if all input has been
  296. consumed and all output has been produced (only when flush is set to
  297. Z_FINISH), Z_STREAM_ERROR if the stream state was inconsistent (for example
  298. if next_in or next_out was NULL) or the state was inadvertently written over
  299. by the application), or Z_BUF_ERROR if no progress is possible (for example
  300. avail_in or avail_out was zero). Note that Z_BUF_ERROR is not fatal, and
  301. deflate() can be called again with more input and more output space to
  302. continue compressing.
  303. */
  304. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT deflateEnd(z_stream *strm);
  305. /*
  306. All dynamically allocated data structures for this stream are freed.
  307. This function discards any unprocessed input and does not flush any pending
  308. output.
  309. deflateEnd returns Z_OK if success, Z_STREAM_ERROR if the
  310. stream state was inconsistent, Z_DATA_ERROR if the stream was freed
  311. prematurely (some input or output was discarded). In the error case, msg
  312. may be set but then points to a static string (which must not be
  313. deallocated).
  314. */
  315. /*
  316. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT inflateInit (z_stream *strm);
  317. Initializes the internal stream state for decompression. The fields
  318. next_in, avail_in, zalloc, zfree and opaque must be initialized before by
  319. the caller. In the current version of inflate, the provided input is not
  320. read or consumed. The allocation of a sliding window will be deferred to
  321. the first call of inflate (if the decompression does not complete on the
  322. first call). If zalloc and zfree are set to Z_NULL, inflateInit updates
  323. them to use default allocation functions. total_in, total_out, adler, and
  324. msg are initialized.
  325. inflateInit returns Z_OK if success, Z_MEM_ERROR if there was not enough
  326. memory, Z_VERSION_ERROR if the zlib library version is incompatible with the
  327. version assumed by the caller, or Z_STREAM_ERROR if the parameters are
  328. invalid, such as a null pointer to the structure. msg is set to null if
  329. there is no error message. inflateInit does not perform any decompression.
  330. Actual decompression will be done by inflate(). So next_in, and avail_in,
  331. next_out, and avail_out are unused and unchanged. The current
  332. implementation of inflateInit() does not process any header information --
  333. that is deferred until inflate() is called.
  334. */
  335. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT inflate(z_stream *strm, int flush);
  336. /*
  337. inflate decompresses as much data as possible, and stops when the input
  338. buffer becomes empty or the output buffer becomes full. It may introduce
  339. some output latency (reading input without producing any output) except when
  340. forced to flush.
  341. The detailed semantics are as follows. inflate performs one or both of the
  342. following actions:
  343. - Decompress more input starting at next_in and update next_in and avail_in
  344. accordingly. If not all input can be processed (because there is not
  345. enough room in the output buffer), then next_in and avail_in are updated
  346. accordingly, and processing will resume at this point for the next call of
  347. inflate().
  348. - Generate more output starting at next_out and update next_out and avail_out
  349. accordingly. inflate() provides as much output as possible, until there is
  350. no more input data or no more space in the output buffer (see below about
  351. the flush parameter).
  352. Before the call of inflate(), the application should ensure that at least
  353. one of the actions is possible, by providing more input and/or consuming more
  354. output, and updating the next_* and avail_* values accordingly. If the
  355. caller of inflate() does not provide both available input and available
  356. output space, it is possible that there will be no progress made. The
  357. application can consume the uncompressed output when it wants, for example
  358. when the output buffer is full (avail_out == 0), or after each call of
  359. inflate(). If inflate returns Z_OK and with zero avail_out, it must be
  360. called again after making room in the output buffer because there might be
  361. more output pending.
  362. The flush parameter of inflate() can be Z_NO_FLUSH, Z_SYNC_FLUSH, Z_FINISH,
  363. Z_BLOCK, or Z_TREES. Z_SYNC_FLUSH requests that inflate() flush as much
  364. output as possible to the output buffer. Z_BLOCK requests that inflate()
  365. stop if and when it gets to the next deflate block boundary. When decoding
  366. the zlib or gzip format, this will cause inflate() to return immediately
  367. after the header and before the first block. When doing a raw inflate,
  368. inflate() will go ahead and process the first block, and will return when it
  369. gets to the end of that block, or when it runs out of data.
  370. The Z_BLOCK option assists in appending to or combining deflate streams.
  371. To assist in this, on return inflate() always sets strm->data_type to the
  372. number of unused bits in the last byte taken from strm->next_in, plus 64 if
  373. inflate() is currently decoding the last block in the deflate stream, plus
  374. 128 if inflate() returned immediately after decoding an end-of-block code or
  375. decoding the complete header up to just before the first byte of the deflate
  376. stream. The end-of-block will not be indicated until all of the uncompressed
  377. data from that block has been written to strm->next_out. The number of
  378. unused bits may in general be greater than seven, except when bit 7 of
  379. data_type is set, in which case the number of unused bits will be less than
  380. eight. data_type is set as noted here every time inflate() returns for all
  381. flush options, and so can be used to determine the amount of currently
  382. consumed input in bits.
  383. The Z_TREES option behaves as Z_BLOCK does, but it also returns when the
  384. end of each deflate block header is reached, before any actual data in that
  385. block is decoded. This allows the caller to determine the length of the
  386. deflate block header for later use in random access within a deflate block.
  387. 256 is added to the value of strm->data_type when inflate() returns
  388. immediately after reaching the end of the deflate block header.
  389. inflate() should normally be called until it returns Z_STREAM_END or an
  390. error. However if all decompression is to be performed in a single step (a
  391. single call of inflate), the parameter flush should be set to Z_FINISH. In
  392. this case all pending input is processed and all pending output is flushed;
  393. avail_out must be large enough to hold all of the uncompressed data for the
  394. operation to complete. (The size of the uncompressed data may have been
  395. saved by the compressor for this purpose.) The use of Z_FINISH is not
  396. required to perform an inflation in one step. However it may be used to
  397. inform inflate that a faster approach can be used for the single inflate()
  398. call. Z_FINISH also informs inflate to not maintain a sliding window if the
  399. stream completes, which reduces inflate's memory footprint. If the stream
  400. does not complete, either because not all of the stream is provided or not
  401. enough output space is provided, then a sliding window will be allocated and
  402. inflate() can be called again to continue the operation as if Z_NO_FLUSH had
  403. been used.
  404. In this implementation, inflate() always flushes as much output as
  405. possible to the output buffer, and always uses the faster approach on the
  406. first call. So the effects of the flush parameter in this implementation are
  407. on the return value of inflate() as noted below, when inflate() returns early
  408. when Z_BLOCK or Z_TREES is used, and when inflate() avoids the allocation of
  409. memory for a sliding window when Z_FINISH is used.
  410. If a preset dictionary is needed after this call (see inflateSetDictionary
  411. below), inflate sets strm->adler to the Adler-32 checksum of the dictionary
  412. chosen by the compressor and returns Z_NEED_DICT; otherwise it sets
  413. strm->adler to the Adler-32 checksum of all output produced so far (that is,
  414. total_out bytes) and returns Z_OK, Z_STREAM_END or an error code as described
  415. below. At the end of the stream, inflate() checks that its computed Adler-32
  416. checksum is equal to that saved by the compressor and returns Z_STREAM_END
  417. only if the checksum is correct.
  418. inflate() can decompress and check either zlib-wrapped or gzip-wrapped
  419. deflate data. The header type is detected automatically, if requested when
  420. initializing with inflateInit2(). Any information contained in the gzip
  421. header is not retained unless inflateGetHeader() is used. When processing
  422. gzip-wrapped deflate data, strm->adler32 is set to the CRC-32 of the output
  423. produced so far. The CRC-32 is checked against the gzip trailer, as is the
  424. uncompressed length, modulo 2^32.
  425. inflate() returns Z_OK if some progress has been made (more input processed
  426. or more output produced), Z_STREAM_END if the end of the compressed data has
  427. been reached and all uncompressed output has been produced, Z_NEED_DICT if a
  428. preset dictionary is needed at this point, Z_DATA_ERROR if the input data was
  429. corrupted (input stream not conforming to the zlib format or incorrect check
  430. value, in which case strm->msg points to a string with a more specific
  431. error), Z_STREAM_ERROR if the stream structure was inconsistent (for example
  432. next_in or next_out was NULL, or the state was inadvertently written over
  433. by the application), Z_MEM_ERROR if there was not enough memory, Z_BUF_ERROR
  434. if no progress is possible or if there was not enough room in the output
  435. buffer when Z_FINISH is used. Note that Z_BUF_ERROR is not fatal, and
  436. inflate() can be called again with more input and more output space to
  437. continue decompressing. If Z_DATA_ERROR is returned, the application may
  438. then call inflateSync() to look for a good compression block if a partial
  439. recovery of the data is to be attempted.
  440. */
  441. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT inflateEnd(z_stream *strm);
  442. /*
  443. All dynamically allocated data structures for this stream are freed.
  444. This function discards any unprocessed input and does not flush any pending
  445. output.
  446. inflateEnd returns Z_OK if success, or Z_STREAM_ERROR if the stream state
  447. was inconsistent.
  448. */
  449. /* Advanced functions */
  450. /*
  451. The following functions are needed only in some special applications.
  452. */
  453. /*
  454. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT deflateInit2 (z_stream *strm,
  455. int level,
  456. int method,
  457. int windowBits,
  458. int memLevel,
  459. int strategy);
  460. This is another version of deflateInit with more compression options. The
  461. fields zalloc, zfree and opaque must be initialized before by the caller.
  462. The method parameter is the compression method. It must be Z_DEFLATED in
  463. this version of the library.
  464. The windowBits parameter is the base two logarithm of the window size
  465. (the size of the history buffer). It should be in the range 8..15 for this
  466. version of the library. Larger values of this parameter result in better
  467. compression at the expense of memory usage. The default value is 15 if
  468. deflateInit is used instead.
  469. For the current implementation of deflate(), a windowBits value of 8 (a
  470. window size of 256 bytes) is not supported. As a result, a request for 8
  471. will result in 9 (a 512-byte window). In that case, providing 8 to
  472. inflateInit2() will result in an error when the zlib header with 9 is
  473. checked against the initialization of inflate(). The remedy is to not use 8
  474. with deflateInit2() with this initialization, or at least in that case use 9
  475. with inflateInit2().
  476. windowBits can also be -8..-15 for raw deflate. In this case, -windowBits
  477. determines the window size. deflate() will then generate raw deflate data
  478. with no zlib header or trailer, and will not compute a check value.
  479. windowBits can also be greater than 15 for optional gzip encoding. Add
  480. 16 to windowBits to write a simple gzip header and trailer around the
  481. compressed data instead of a zlib wrapper. The gzip header will have no
  482. file name, no extra data, no comment, no modification time (set to zero), no
  483. header crc, and the operating system will be set to the appropriate value,
  484. if the operating system was determined at compile time. If a gzip stream is
  485. being written, strm->adler is a CRC-32 instead of an Adler-32.
  486. For raw deflate or gzip encoding, a request for a 256-byte window is
  487. rejected as invalid, since only the zlib header provides a means of
  488. transmitting the window size to the decompressor.
  489. The memLevel parameter specifies how much memory should be allocated
  490. for the internal compression state. memLevel=1 uses minimum memory but is
  491. slow and reduces compression ratio; memLevel=9 uses maximum memory for
  492. optimal speed. The default value is 8. See zconf.h for total memory usage
  493. as a function of windowBits and memLevel.
  494. The strategy parameter is used to tune the compression algorithm. Use the
  495. value Z_DEFAULT_STRATEGY for normal data, Z_FILTERED for data produced by a
  496. filter (or predictor), Z_HUFFMAN_ONLY to force Huffman encoding only (no
  497. string match), or Z_RLE to limit match distances to one (run-length
  498. encoding). Filtered data consists mostly of small values with a somewhat
  499. random distribution. In this case, the compression algorithm is tuned to
  500. compress them better. The effect of Z_FILTERED is to force more Huffman
  501. coding and less string matching; it is somewhat intermediate between
  502. Z_DEFAULT_STRATEGY and Z_HUFFMAN_ONLY. Z_RLE is designed to be almost as
  503. fast as Z_HUFFMAN_ONLY, but give better compression for PNG image data. The
  504. strategy parameter only affects the compression ratio but not the
  505. correctness of the compressed output even if it is not set appropriately.
  506. Z_FIXED prevents the use of dynamic Huffman codes, allowing for a simpler
  507. decoder for special applications.
  508. deflateInit2 returns Z_OK if success, Z_MEM_ERROR if there was not enough
  509. memory, Z_STREAM_ERROR if any parameter is invalid (such as an invalid
  510. method), or Z_VERSION_ERROR if the zlib library version (zlib_version) is
  511. incompatible with the version assumed by the caller (ZLIB_VERSION). msg is
  512. set to null if there is no error message. deflateInit2 does not perform any
  513. compression: this will be done by deflate().
  514. */
  515. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT deflateSetDictionary(z_stream *strm,
  516. const unsigned char *dictionary,
  517. unsigned int dictLength);
  518. /*
  519. Initializes the compression dictionary from the given byte sequence
  520. without producing any compressed output. When using the zlib format, this
  521. function must be called immediately after deflateInit, deflateInit2 or
  522. deflateReset, and before any call of deflate. When doing raw deflate, this
  523. function must be called either before any call of deflate, or immediately
  524. after the completion of a deflate block, i.e. after all input has been
  525. consumed and all output has been delivered when using any of the flush
  526. options Z_BLOCK, Z_PARTIAL_FLUSH, Z_SYNC_FLUSH, or Z_FULL_FLUSH. The
  527. compressor and decompressor must use exactly the same dictionary (see
  528. inflateSetDictionary).
  529. The dictionary should consist of strings (byte sequences) that are likely
  530. to be encountered later in the data to be compressed, with the most commonly
  531. used strings preferably put towards the end of the dictionary. Using a
  532. dictionary is most useful when the data to be compressed is short and can be
  533. predicted with good accuracy; the data can then be compressed better than
  534. with the default empty dictionary.
  535. Depending on the size of the compression data structures selected by
  536. deflateInit or deflateInit2, a part of the dictionary may in effect be
  537. discarded, for example if the dictionary is larger than the window size
  538. provided in deflateInit or deflateInit2. Thus the strings most likely to be
  539. useful should be put at the end of the dictionary, not at the front. In
  540. addition, the current implementation of deflate will use at most the window
  541. size minus 262 bytes of the provided dictionary.
  542. Upon return of this function, strm->adler is set to the Adler-32 value
  543. of the dictionary; the decompressor may later use this value to determine
  544. which dictionary has been used by the compressor. (The Adler-32 value
  545. applies to the whole dictionary even if only a subset of the dictionary is
  546. actually used by the compressor.) If a raw deflate was requested, then the
  547. Adler-32 value is not computed and strm->adler is not set.
  548. deflateSetDictionary returns Z_OK if success, or Z_STREAM_ERROR if a
  549. parameter is invalid (e.g. dictionary being NULL) or the stream state is
  550. inconsistent (for example if deflate has already been called for this stream
  551. or if not at a block boundary for raw deflate). deflateSetDictionary does
  552. not perform any compression: this will be done by deflate().
  553. */
  554. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT deflateGetDictionary (z_stream *strm, unsigned char *dictionary, unsigned int *dictLength);
  555. /*
  556. Returns the sliding dictionary being maintained by deflate. dictLength is
  557. set to the number of bytes in the dictionary, and that many bytes are copied
  558. to dictionary. dictionary must have enough space, where 32768 bytes is
  559. always enough. If deflateGetDictionary() is called with dictionary equal to
  560. Z_NULL, then only the dictionary length is returned, and nothing is copied.
  561. Similarly, if dictLength is Z_NULL, then it is not set.
  562. deflateGetDictionary() may return a length less than the window size, even
  563. when more than the window size in input has been provided. It may return up
  564. to 258 bytes less in that case, due to how zlib's implementation of deflate
  565. manages the sliding window and lookahead for matches, where matches can be
  566. up to 258 bytes long. If the application needs the last window-size bytes of
  567. input, then that would need to be saved by the application outside of zlib.
  568. deflateGetDictionary returns Z_OK on success, or Z_STREAM_ERROR if the
  569. stream state is inconsistent.
  570. */
  571. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT deflateCopy(z_stream *dest, z_stream *source);
  572. /*
  573. Sets the destination stream as a complete copy of the source stream.
  574. This function can be useful when several compression strategies will be
  575. tried, for example when there are several ways of pre-processing the input
  576. data with a filter. The streams that will be discarded should then be freed
  577. by calling deflateEnd. Note that deflateCopy duplicates the internal
  578. compression state which can be quite large, so this strategy is slow and can
  579. consume lots of memory.
  580. deflateCopy returns Z_OK if success, Z_MEM_ERROR if there was not
  581. enough memory, Z_STREAM_ERROR if the source stream state was inconsistent
  582. (such as zalloc being NULL). msg is left unchanged in both source and
  583. destination.
  584. */
  585. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT deflateReset(z_stream *strm);
  586. /*
  587. This function is equivalent to deflateEnd followed by deflateInit, but
  588. does not free and reallocate the internal compression state. The stream
  589. will leave the compression level and any other attributes that may have been
  590. set unchanged. total_in, total_out, adler, and msg are initialized.
  591. deflateReset returns Z_OK if success, or Z_STREAM_ERROR if the source
  592. stream state was inconsistent (such as zalloc or state being NULL).
  593. */
  594. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT deflateParams(z_stream *strm, int level, int strategy);
  595. /*
  596. Dynamically update the compression level and compression strategy. The
  597. interpretation of level and strategy is as in deflateInit2(). This can be
  598. used to switch between compression and straight copy of the input data, or
  599. to switch to a different kind of input data requiring a different strategy.
  600. If the compression approach (which is a function of the level) or the
  601. strategy is changed, and if there have been any deflate() calls since the
  602. state was initialized or reset, then the input available so far is
  603. compressed with the old level and strategy using deflate(strm, Z_BLOCK).
  604. There are three approaches for the compression levels 0, 1..3, and 4..9
  605. respectively. The new level and strategy will take effect at the next call
  606. of deflate().
  607. If a deflate(strm, Z_BLOCK) is performed by deflateParams(), and it does
  608. not have enough output space to complete, then the parameter change will not
  609. take effect. In this case, deflateParams() can be called again with the
  610. same parameters and more output space to try again.
  611. In order to assure a change in the parameters on the first try, the
  612. deflate stream should be flushed using deflate() with Z_BLOCK or other flush
  613. request until strm.avail_out is not zero, before calling deflateParams().
  614. Then no more input data should be provided before the deflateParams() call.
  615. If this is done, the old level and strategy will be applied to the data
  616. compressed before deflateParams(), and the new level and strategy will be
  617. applied to the data compressed after deflateParams().
  618. deflateParams returns Z_OK on success, Z_STREAM_ERROR if the source stream
  619. state was inconsistent or if a parameter was invalid, or Z_BUF_ERROR if
  620. there was not enough output space to complete the compression of the
  621. available input data before a change in the strategy or approach. Note that
  622. in the case of a Z_BUF_ERROR, the parameters are not changed. A return
  623. value of Z_BUF_ERROR is not fatal, in which case deflateParams() can be
  624. retried with more output space.
  625. */
  626. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT deflateTune(z_stream *strm, int good_length, int max_lazy, int nice_length, int max_chain);
  627. /*
  628. Fine tune deflate's internal compression parameters. This should only be
  629. used by someone who understands the algorithm used by zlib's deflate for
  630. searching for the best matching string, and even then only by the most
  631. fanatic optimizer trying to squeeze out the last compressed bit for their
  632. specific input data. Read the deflate.c source code for the meaning of the
  633. max_lazy, good_length, nice_length, and max_chain parameters.
  634. deflateTune() can be called after deflateInit() or deflateInit2(), and
  635. returns Z_OK on success, or Z_STREAM_ERROR for an invalid deflate stream.
  636. */
  637. Z_EXTERN unsigned long Z_EXPORT deflateBound(z_stream *strm, unsigned long sourceLen);
  638. /*
  639. deflateBound() returns an upper bound on the compressed size after
  640. deflation of sourceLen bytes. It must be called after deflateInit() or
  641. deflateInit2(), and after deflateSetHeader(), if used. This would be used
  642. to allocate an output buffer for deflation in a single pass, and so would be
  643. called before deflate(). If that first deflate() call is provided the
  644. sourceLen input bytes, an output buffer allocated to the size returned by
  645. deflateBound(), and the flush value Z_FINISH, then deflate() is guaranteed
  646. to return Z_STREAM_END. Note that it is possible for the compressed size to
  647. be larger than the value returned by deflateBound() if flush options other
  648. than Z_FINISH or Z_NO_FLUSH are used.
  649. */
  650. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT deflatePending(z_stream *strm, uint32_t *pending, int *bits);
  651. /*
  652. deflatePending() returns the number of bytes and bits of output that have
  653. been generated, but not yet provided in the available output. The bytes not
  654. provided would be due to the available output space having being consumed.
  655. The number of bits of output not provided are between 0 and 7, where they
  656. await more bits to join them in order to fill out a full byte. If pending
  657. or bits are NULL, then those values are not set.
  658. deflatePending returns Z_OK if success, or Z_STREAM_ERROR if the source
  659. stream state was inconsistent.
  660. */
  661. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT deflatePrime(z_stream *strm, int bits, int value);
  662. /*
  663. deflatePrime() inserts bits in the deflate output stream. The intent
  664. is that this function is used to start off the deflate output with the bits
  665. leftover from a previous deflate stream when appending to it. As such, this
  666. function can only be used for raw deflate, and must be used before the first
  667. deflate() call after a deflateInit2() or deflateReset(). bits must be less
  668. than or equal to 16, and that many of the least significant bits of value
  669. will be inserted in the output.
  670. deflatePrime returns Z_OK if success, Z_BUF_ERROR if there was not enough
  671. room in the internal buffer to insert the bits, or Z_STREAM_ERROR if the
  672. source stream state was inconsistent.
  673. */
  674. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT deflateSetHeader(z_stream *strm, gz_headerp head);
  675. /*
  676. deflateSetHeader() provides gzip header information for when a gzip
  677. stream is requested by deflateInit2(). deflateSetHeader() may be called
  678. after deflateInit2() or deflateReset() and before the first call of
  679. deflate(). The text, time, os, extra field, name, and comment information
  680. in the provided gz_header structure are written to the gzip header (xflag is
  681. ignored -- the extra flags are set according to the compression level). The
  682. caller must assure that, if not NULL, name and comment are terminated with
  683. a zero byte, and that if extra is not NULL, that extra_len bytes are
  684. available there. If hcrc is true, a gzip header crc is included. Note that
  685. the current versions of the command-line version of gzip (up through version
  686. 1.3.x) do not support header crc's, and will report that it is a "multi-part
  687. gzip file" and give up.
  688. If deflateSetHeader is not used, the default gzip header has text false,
  689. the time set to zero, and os set to the current operating system, with no
  690. extra, name, or comment fields. The gzip header is returned to the default
  691. state by deflateReset().
  692. deflateSetHeader returns Z_OK if success, or Z_STREAM_ERROR if the source
  693. stream state was inconsistent.
  694. */
  695. /*
  696. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT inflateInit2(z_stream *strm, int windowBits);
  697. This is another version of inflateInit with an extra parameter. The
  698. fields next_in, avail_in, zalloc, zfree and opaque must be initialized
  699. before by the caller.
  700. The windowBits parameter is the base two logarithm of the maximum window
  701. size (the size of the history buffer). It should be in the range 8..15 for
  702. this version of the library. The default value is 15 if inflateInit is used
  703. instead. windowBits must be greater than or equal to the windowBits value
  704. provided to deflateInit2() while compressing, or it must be equal to 15 if
  705. deflateInit2() was not used. If a compressed stream with a larger window
  706. size is given as input, inflate() will return with the error code
  707. Z_DATA_ERROR instead of trying to allocate a larger window.
  708. windowBits can also be zero to request that inflate use the window size in
  709. the zlib header of the compressed stream.
  710. windowBits can also be -8..-15 for raw inflate. In this case, -windowBits
  711. determines the window size. inflate() will then process raw deflate data,
  712. not looking for a zlib or gzip header, not generating a check value, and not
  713. looking for any check values for comparison at the end of the stream. This
  714. is for use with other formats that use the deflate compressed data format
  715. such as zip. Those formats provide their own check values. If a custom
  716. format is developed using the raw deflate format for compressed data, it is
  717. recommended that a check value such as an Adler-32 or a CRC-32 be applied to
  718. the uncompressed data as is done in the zlib, gzip, and zip formats. For
  719. most applications, the zlib format should be used as is. Note that comments
  720. above on the use in deflateInit2() applies to the magnitude of windowBits.
  721. windowBits can also be greater than 15 for optional gzip decoding. Add
  722. 32 to windowBits to enable zlib and gzip decoding with automatic header
  723. detection, or add 16 to decode only the gzip format (the zlib format will
  724. return a Z_DATA_ERROR). If a gzip stream is being decoded, strm->adler is a
  725. CRC-32 instead of an Adler-32. Unlike the gunzip utility and gzread() (see
  726. below), inflate() will *not* automatically decode concatenated gzip members.
  727. inflate() will return Z_STREAM_END at the end of the gzip member. The state
  728. would need to be reset to continue decoding a subsequent gzip member. This
  729. *must* be done if there is more data after a gzip member, in order for the
  730. decompression to be compliant with the gzip standard (RFC 1952).
  731. inflateInit2 returns Z_OK if success, Z_MEM_ERROR if there was not enough
  732. memory, Z_VERSION_ERROR if the zlib library version is incompatible with the
  733. version assumed by the caller, or Z_STREAM_ERROR if the parameters are
  734. invalid, such as a null pointer to the structure. msg is set to null if
  735. there is no error message. inflateInit2 does not perform any decompression
  736. apart from possibly reading the zlib header if present: actual decompression
  737. will be done by inflate(). (So next_in and avail_in may be modified, but
  738. next_out and avail_out are unused and unchanged.) The current implementation
  739. of inflateInit2() does not process any header information -- that is
  740. deferred until inflate() is called.
  741. */
  742. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT inflateSetDictionary(z_stream *strm, const unsigned char *dictionary, unsigned int dictLength);
  743. /*
  744. Initializes the decompression dictionary from the given uncompressed byte
  745. sequence. This function must be called immediately after a call of inflate,
  746. if that call returned Z_NEED_DICT. The dictionary chosen by the compressor
  747. can be determined from the Adler-32 value returned by that call of inflate.
  748. The compressor and decompressor must use exactly the same dictionary (see
  749. deflateSetDictionary). For raw inflate, this function can be called at any
  750. time to set the dictionary. If the provided dictionary is smaller than the
  751. window and there is already data in the window, then the provided dictionary
  752. will amend what's there. The application must insure that the dictionary
  753. that was used for compression is provided.
  754. inflateSetDictionary returns Z_OK if success, Z_STREAM_ERROR if a
  755. parameter is invalid (e.g. dictionary being NULL) or the stream state is
  756. inconsistent, Z_DATA_ERROR if the given dictionary doesn't match the
  757. expected one (incorrect Adler-32 value). inflateSetDictionary does not
  758. perform any decompression: this will be done by subsequent calls of
  759. inflate().
  760. */
  761. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT inflateGetDictionary(z_stream *strm, unsigned char *dictionary, unsigned int *dictLength);
  762. /*
  763. Returns the sliding dictionary being maintained by inflate. dictLength is
  764. set to the number of bytes in the dictionary, and that many bytes are copied
  765. to dictionary. dictionary must have enough space, where 32768 bytes is
  766. always enough. If inflateGetDictionary() is called with dictionary equal to
  767. NULL, then only the dictionary length is returned, and nothing is copied.
  768. Similarly, if dictLength is NULL, then it is not set.
  769. inflateGetDictionary returns Z_OK on success, or Z_STREAM_ERROR if the
  770. stream state is inconsistent.
  771. */
  772. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT inflateSync(z_stream *strm);
  773. /*
  774. Skips invalid compressed data until a possible full flush point (see above
  775. for the description of deflate with Z_FULL_FLUSH) can be found, or until all
  776. available input is skipped. No output is provided.
  777. inflateSync searches for a 00 00 FF FF pattern in the compressed data.
  778. All full flush points have this pattern, but not all occurrences of this
  779. pattern are full flush points.
  780. inflateSync returns Z_OK if a possible full flush point has been found,
  781. Z_BUF_ERROR if no more input was provided, Z_DATA_ERROR if no flush point
  782. has been found, or Z_STREAM_ERROR if the stream structure was inconsistent.
  783. In the success case, the application may save the current value of
  784. total_in which indicates where valid compressed data was found. In the
  785. error case, the application may repeatedly call inflateSync, providing more
  786. input each time, until success or end of the input data.
  787. */
  788. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT inflateCopy(z_stream *dest, z_stream *source);
  789. /*
  790. Sets the destination stream as a complete copy of the source stream.
  791. This function can be useful when randomly accessing a large stream. The
  792. first pass through the stream can periodically record the inflate state,
  793. allowing restarting inflate at those points when randomly accessing the
  794. stream.
  795. inflateCopy returns Z_OK if success, Z_MEM_ERROR if there was not
  796. enough memory, Z_STREAM_ERROR if the source stream state was inconsistent
  797. (such as zalloc being NULL). msg is left unchanged in both source and
  798. destination.
  799. */
  800. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT inflateReset(z_stream *strm);
  801. /*
  802. This function is equivalent to inflateEnd followed by inflateInit,
  803. but does not free and reallocate the internal decompression state. The
  804. stream will keep attributes that may have been set by inflateInit2.
  805. total_in, total_out, adler, and msg are initialized.
  806. inflateReset returns Z_OK if success, or Z_STREAM_ERROR if the source
  807. stream state was inconsistent (such as zalloc or state being NULL).
  808. */
  809. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT inflateReset2(z_stream *strm, int windowBits);
  810. /*
  811. This function is the same as inflateReset, but it also permits changing
  812. the wrap and window size requests. The windowBits parameter is interpreted
  813. the same as it is for inflateInit2. If the window size is changed, then the
  814. memory allocated for the window is freed, and the window will be reallocated
  815. by inflate() if needed.
  816. inflateReset2 returns Z_OK if success, or Z_STREAM_ERROR if the source
  817. stream state was inconsistent (such as zalloc or state being NULL), or if
  818. the windowBits parameter is invalid.
  819. */
  820. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT inflatePrime(z_stream *strm, int bits, int value);
  821. /*
  822. This function inserts bits in the inflate input stream. The intent is
  823. that this function is used to start inflating at a bit position in the
  824. middle of a byte. The provided bits will be used before any bytes are used
  825. from next_in. This function should only be used with raw inflate, and
  826. should be used before the first inflate() call after inflateInit2() or
  827. inflateReset(). bits must be less than or equal to 16, and that many of the
  828. least significant bits of value will be inserted in the input.
  829. If bits is negative, then the input stream bit buffer is emptied. Then
  830. inflatePrime() can be called again to put bits in the buffer. This is used
  831. to clear out bits leftover after feeding inflate a block description prior
  832. to feeding inflate codes.
  833. inflatePrime returns Z_OK if success, or Z_STREAM_ERROR if the source
  834. stream state was inconsistent.
  835. */
  836. Z_EXTERN long Z_EXPORT inflateMark(z_stream *strm);
  837. /*
  838. This function returns two values, one in the lower 16 bits of the return
  839. value, and the other in the remaining upper bits, obtained by shifting the
  840. return value down 16 bits. If the upper value is -1 and the lower value is
  841. zero, then inflate() is currently decoding information outside of a block.
  842. If the upper value is -1 and the lower value is non-zero, then inflate is in
  843. the middle of a stored block, with the lower value equaling the number of
  844. bytes from the input remaining to copy. If the upper value is not -1, then
  845. it is the number of bits back from the current bit position in the input of
  846. the code (literal or length/distance pair) currently being processed. In
  847. that case the lower value is the number of bytes already emitted for that
  848. code.
  849. A code is being processed if inflate is waiting for more input to complete
  850. decoding of the code, or if it has completed decoding but is waiting for
  851. more output space to write the literal or match data.
  852. inflateMark() is used to mark locations in the input data for random
  853. access, which may be at bit positions, and to note those cases where the
  854. output of a code may span boundaries of random access blocks. The current
  855. location in the input stream can be determined from avail_in and data_type
  856. as noted in the description for the Z_BLOCK flush parameter for inflate.
  857. inflateMark returns the value noted above, or -65536 if the provided
  858. source stream state was inconsistent.
  859. */
  860. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT inflateGetHeader(z_stream *strm, gz_headerp head);
  861. /*
  862. inflateGetHeader() requests that gzip header information be stored in the
  863. provided gz_header structure. inflateGetHeader() may be called after
  864. inflateInit2() or inflateReset(), and before the first call of inflate().
  865. As inflate() processes the gzip stream, head->done is zero until the header
  866. is completed, at which time head->done is set to one. If a zlib stream is
  867. being decoded, then head->done is set to -1 to indicate that there will be
  868. no gzip header information forthcoming. Note that Z_BLOCK or Z_TREES can be
  869. used to force inflate() to return immediately after header processing is
  870. complete and before any actual data is decompressed.
  871. The text, time, xflags, and os fields are filled in with the gzip header
  872. contents. hcrc is set to true if there is a header CRC. (The header CRC
  873. was valid if done is set to one.) If extra is not NULL, then extra_max
  874. contains the maximum number of bytes to write to extra. Once done is true,
  875. extra_len contains the actual extra field length, and extra contains the
  876. extra field, or that field truncated if extra_max is less than extra_len.
  877. If name is not NULL, then up to name_max characters are written there,
  878. terminated with a zero unless the length is greater than name_max. If
  879. comment is not NULL, then up to comm_max characters are written there,
  880. terminated with a zero unless the length is greater than comm_max. When any
  881. of extra, name, or comment are not NULL and the respective field is not
  882. present in the header, then that field is set to NULL to signal its
  883. absence. This allows the use of deflateSetHeader() with the returned
  884. structure to duplicate the header. However if those fields are set to
  885. allocated memory, then the application will need to save those pointers
  886. elsewhere so that they can be eventually freed.
  887. If inflateGetHeader is not used, then the header information is simply
  888. discarded. The header is always checked for validity, including the header
  889. CRC if present. inflateReset() will reset the process to discard the header
  890. information. The application would need to call inflateGetHeader() again to
  891. retrieve the header from the next gzip stream.
  892. inflateGetHeader returns Z_OK if success, or Z_STREAM_ERROR if the source
  893. stream state was inconsistent.
  894. */
  895. /*
  896. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT inflateBackInit (z_stream *strm, int windowBits, unsigned char *window);
  897. Initialize the internal stream state for decompression using inflateBack()
  898. calls. The fields zalloc, zfree and opaque in strm must be initialized
  899. before the call. If zalloc and zfree are NULL, then the default library-
  900. derived memory allocation routines are used. windowBits is the base two
  901. logarithm of the window size, in the range 8..15. window is a caller
  902. supplied buffer of that size. Except for special applications where it is
  903. assured that deflate was used with small window sizes, windowBits must be 15
  904. and a 32K byte window must be supplied to be able to decompress general
  905. deflate streams.
  906. See inflateBack() for the usage of these routines.
  907. inflateBackInit will return Z_OK on success, Z_STREAM_ERROR if any of
  908. the parameters are invalid, Z_MEM_ERROR if the internal state could not be
  909. allocated, or Z_VERSION_ERROR if the version of the library does not match
  910. the version of the header file.
  911. */
  912. typedef uint32_t (*in_func) (void *, z_const unsigned char * *);
  913. typedef int (*out_func) (void *, unsigned char *, uint32_t);
  914. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT inflateBack(z_stream *strm, in_func in, void *in_desc, out_func out, void *out_desc);
  915. /*
  916. inflateBack() does a raw inflate with a single call using a call-back
  917. interface for input and output. This is potentially more efficient than
  918. inflate() for file i/o applications, in that it avoids copying between the
  919. output and the sliding window by simply making the window itself the output
  920. buffer. inflate() can be faster on modern CPUs when used with large
  921. buffers. inflateBack() trusts the application to not change the output
  922. buffer passed by the output function, at least until inflateBack() returns.
  923. inflateBackInit() must be called first to allocate the internal state
  924. and to initialize the state with the user-provided window buffer.
  925. inflateBack() may then be used multiple times to inflate a complete, raw
  926. deflate stream with each call. inflateBackEnd() is then called to free the
  927. allocated state.
  928. A raw deflate stream is one with no zlib or gzip header or trailer.
  929. This routine would normally be used in a utility that reads zip or gzip
  930. files and writes out uncompressed files. The utility would decode the
  931. header and process the trailer on its own, hence this routine expects only
  932. the raw deflate stream to decompress. This is different from the default
  933. behavior of inflate(), which expects a zlib header and trailer around the
  934. deflate stream.
  935. inflateBack() uses two subroutines supplied by the caller that are then
  936. called by inflateBack() for input and output. inflateBack() calls those
  937. routines until it reads a complete deflate stream and writes out all of the
  938. uncompressed data, or until it encounters an error. The function's
  939. parameters and return types are defined above in the in_func and out_func
  940. typedefs. inflateBack() will call in(in_desc, &buf) which should return the
  941. number of bytes of provided input, and a pointer to that input in buf. If
  942. there is no input available, in() must return zero -- buf is ignored in that
  943. case -- and inflateBack() will return a buffer error. inflateBack() will
  944. call out(out_desc, buf, len) to write the uncompressed data buf[0..len-1].
  945. out() should return zero on success, or non-zero on failure. If out()
  946. returns non-zero, inflateBack() will return with an error. Neither in() nor
  947. out() are permitted to change the contents of the window provided to
  948. inflateBackInit(), which is also the buffer that out() uses to write from.
  949. The length written by out() will be at most the window size. Any non-zero
  950. amount of input may be provided by in().
  951. For convenience, inflateBack() can be provided input on the first call by
  952. setting strm->next_in and strm->avail_in. If that input is exhausted, then
  953. in() will be called. Therefore strm->next_in must be initialized before
  954. calling inflateBack(). If strm->next_in is NULL, then in() will be called
  955. immediately for input. If strm->next_in is not NULL, then strm->avail_in
  956. must also be initialized, and then if strm->avail_in is not zero, input will
  957. initially be taken from strm->next_in[0 .. strm->avail_in - 1].
  958. The in_desc and out_desc parameters of inflateBack() is passed as the
  959. first parameter of in() and out() respectively when they are called. These
  960. descriptors can be optionally used to pass any information that the caller-
  961. supplied in() and out() functions need to do their job.
  962. On return, inflateBack() will set strm->next_in and strm->avail_in to
  963. pass back any unused input that was provided by the last in() call. The
  964. return values of inflateBack() can be Z_STREAM_END on success, Z_BUF_ERROR
  965. if in() or out() returned an error, Z_DATA_ERROR if there was a format error
  966. in the deflate stream (in which case strm->msg is set to indicate the nature
  967. of the error), or Z_STREAM_ERROR if the stream was not properly initialized.
  968. In the case of Z_BUF_ERROR, an input or output error can be distinguished
  969. using strm->next_in which will be NULL only if in() returned an error. If
  970. strm->next_in is not NULL, then the Z_BUF_ERROR was due to out() returning
  971. non-zero. (in() will always be called before out(), so strm->next_in is
  972. assured to be defined if out() returns non-zero.) Note that inflateBack()
  973. cannot return Z_OK.
  974. */
  975. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT inflateBackEnd(z_stream *strm);
  976. /*
  977. All memory allocated by inflateBackInit() is freed.
  978. inflateBackEnd() returns Z_OK on success, or Z_STREAM_ERROR if the stream
  979. state was inconsistent.
  980. */
  981. Z_EXTERN unsigned long Z_EXPORT zlibCompileFlags(void);
  982. /* Return flags indicating compile-time options.
  983. Type sizes, two bits each, 00 = 16 bits, 01 = 32, 10 = 64, 11 = other:
  984. 1.0: size of unsigned int
  985. 3.2: size of unsigned long
  986. 5.4: size of void * (pointer)
  987. 7.6: size of z_off_t
  988. Compiler, assembler, and debug options:
  989. 8: ZLIB_DEBUG
  990. 9: ASMV or ASMINF -- use ASM code
  991. 10: ZLIB_WINAPI -- exported functions use the WINAPI calling convention
  992. 11: 0 (reserved)
  993. One-time table building (smaller code, but not thread-safe if true):
  994. 12: BUILDFIXED -- build static block decoding tables when needed (not supported by zlib-ng)
  995. 13: DYNAMIC_CRC_TABLE -- build CRC calculation tables when needed
  996. 14,15: 0 (reserved)
  997. Library content (indicates missing functionality):
  998. 16: NO_GZCOMPRESS -- gz* functions cannot compress (to avoid linking
  999. deflate code when not needed)
  1000. 17: NO_GZIP -- deflate can't write gzip streams, and inflate can't detect
  1001. and decode gzip streams (to avoid linking crc code)
  1002. 18-19: 0 (reserved)
  1003. Operation variations (changes in library functionality):
  1004. 20: PKZIP_BUG_WORKAROUND -- slightly more permissive inflate
  1005. 21: FASTEST -- deflate algorithm with only one, lowest compression level
  1006. 22,23: 0 (reserved)
  1007. The sprintf variant used by gzprintf (zero is best):
  1008. 24: 0 = vs*, 1 = s* -- 1 means limited to 20 arguments after the format
  1009. 25: 0 = *nprintf, 1 = *printf -- 1 means gzprintf() not secure!
  1010. 26: 0 = returns value, 1 = void -- 1 means inferred string length returned
  1011. Remainder:
  1012. 27-31: 0 (reserved)
  1013. */
  1014. #ifndef Z_SOLO
  1015. /* utility functions */
  1016. /*
  1017. The following utility functions are implemented on top of the basic
  1018. stream-oriented functions. To simplify the interface, some default options
  1019. are assumed (compression level and memory usage, standard memory allocation
  1020. functions). The source code of these utility functions can be modified if
  1021. you need special options.
  1022. */
  1023. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT compress(unsigned char *dest, unsigned long *destLen, const unsigned char *source, unsigned long sourceLen);
  1024. /*
  1025. Compresses the source buffer into the destination buffer. sourceLen is
  1026. the byte length of the source buffer. Upon entry, destLen is the total size
  1027. of the destination buffer, which must be at least the value returned by
  1028. compressBound(sourceLen). Upon exit, destLen is the actual size of the
  1029. compressed data. compress() is equivalent to compress2() with a level
  1030. parameter of Z_DEFAULT_COMPRESSION.
  1031. compress returns Z_OK if success, Z_MEM_ERROR if there was not
  1032. enough memory, Z_BUF_ERROR if there was not enough room in the output
  1033. buffer.
  1034. */
  1035. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT compress2(unsigned char *dest, unsigned long *destLen, const unsigned char *source,
  1036. unsigned long sourceLen, int level);
  1037. /*
  1038. Compresses the source buffer into the destination buffer. The level
  1039. parameter has the same meaning as in deflateInit. sourceLen is the byte
  1040. length of the source buffer. Upon entry, destLen is the total size of the
  1041. destination buffer, which must be at least the value returned by
  1042. compressBound(sourceLen). Upon exit, destLen is the actual size of the
  1043. compressed data.
  1044. compress2 returns Z_OK if success, Z_MEM_ERROR if there was not enough
  1045. memory, Z_BUF_ERROR if there was not enough room in the output buffer,
  1046. Z_STREAM_ERROR if the level parameter is invalid.
  1047. */
  1048. Z_EXTERN unsigned long Z_EXPORT compressBound(unsigned long sourceLen);
  1049. /*
  1050. compressBound() returns an upper bound on the compressed size after
  1051. compress() or compress2() on sourceLen bytes. It would be used before a
  1052. compress() or compress2() call to allocate the destination buffer.
  1053. */
  1054. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT uncompress(unsigned char *dest, unsigned long *destLen, const unsigned char *source, unsigned long sourceLen);
  1055. /*
  1056. Decompresses the source buffer into the destination buffer. sourceLen is
  1057. the byte length of the source buffer. Upon entry, destLen is the total size
  1058. of the destination buffer, which must be large enough to hold the entire
  1059. uncompressed data. (The size of the uncompressed data must have been saved
  1060. previously by the compressor and transmitted to the decompressor by some
  1061. mechanism outside the scope of this compression library.) Upon exit, destLen
  1062. is the actual size of the uncompressed data.
  1063. uncompress returns Z_OK if success, Z_MEM_ERROR if there was not
  1064. enough memory, Z_BUF_ERROR if there was not enough room in the output
  1065. buffer, or Z_DATA_ERROR if the input data was corrupted or incomplete. In
  1066. the case where there is not enough room, uncompress() will fill the output
  1067. buffer with the uncompressed data up to that point.
  1068. */
  1069. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT uncompress2 (unsigned char *dest, unsigned long *destLen,
  1070. const unsigned char *source, unsigned long *sourceLen);
  1071. /*
  1072. Same as uncompress, except that sourceLen is a pointer, where the
  1073. length of the source is *sourceLen. On return, *sourceLen is the number of
  1074. source bytes consumed.
  1075. */
  1076. /* gzip file access functions */
  1077. /*
  1078. This library supports reading and writing files in gzip (.gz) format with
  1079. an interface similar to that of stdio, using the functions that start with
  1080. "gz". The gzip format is different from the zlib format. gzip is a gzip
  1081. wrapper, documented in RFC 1952, wrapped around a deflate stream.
  1082. */
  1083. typedef struct gzFile_s *gzFile; /* semi-opaque gzip file descriptor */
  1084. /*
  1085. Z_EXTERN gzFile Z_EXPORT gzopen(const char *path, const char *mode);
  1086. Open the gzip (.gz) file at path for reading and decompressing, or
  1087. compressing and writing. The mode parameter is as in fopen ("rb" or "wb")
  1088. but can also include a compression level ("wb9") or a strategy: 'f' for
  1089. filtered data as in "wb6f", 'h' for Huffman-only compression as in "wb1h",
  1090. 'R' for run-length encoding as in "wb1R", or 'F' for fixed code compression
  1091. as in "wb9F". (See the description of deflateInit2 for more information
  1092. about the strategy parameter.) 'T' will request transparent writing or
  1093. appending with no compression and not using the gzip format.
  1094. "a" can be used instead of "w" to request that the gzip stream that will
  1095. be written be appended to the file. "+" will result in an error, since
  1096. reading and writing to the same gzip file is not supported. The addition of
  1097. "x" when writing will create the file exclusively, which fails if the file
  1098. already exists. On systems that support it, the addition of "e" when
  1099. reading or writing will set the flag to close the file on an execve() call.
  1100. These functions, as well as gzip, will read and decode a sequence of gzip
  1101. streams in a file. The append function of gzopen() can be used to create
  1102. such a file. (Also see gzflush() for another way to do this.) When
  1103. appending, gzopen does not test whether the file begins with a gzip stream,
  1104. nor does it look for the end of the gzip streams to begin appending. gzopen
  1105. will simply append a gzip stream to the existing file.
  1106. gzopen can be used to read a file which is not in gzip format; in this
  1107. case gzread will directly read from the file without decompression. When
  1108. reading, this will be detected automatically by looking for the magic two-
  1109. byte gzip header.
  1110. gzopen returns NULL if the file could not be opened, if there was
  1111. insufficient memory to allocate the gzFile state, or if an invalid mode was
  1112. specified (an 'r', 'w', or 'a' was not provided, or '+' was provided).
  1113. errno can be checked to determine if the reason gzopen failed was that the
  1114. file could not be opened.
  1115. */
  1116. Z_EXTERN gzFile Z_EXPORT gzdopen(int fd, const char *mode);
  1117. /*
  1118. Associate a gzFile with the file descriptor fd. File descriptors are
  1119. obtained from calls like open, dup, creat, pipe or fileno (if the file has
  1120. been previously opened with fopen). The mode parameter is as in gzopen.
  1121. The next call of gzclose on the returned gzFile will also close the file
  1122. descriptor fd, just like fclose(fdopen(fd, mode)) closes the file descriptor
  1123. fd. If you want to keep fd open, use fd = dup(fd_keep); gz = gzdopen(fd,
  1124. mode);. The duplicated descriptor should be saved to avoid a leak, since
  1125. gzdopen does not close fd if it fails. If you are using fileno() to get the
  1126. file descriptor from a FILE *, then you will have to use dup() to avoid
  1127. double-close()ing the file descriptor. Both gzclose() and fclose() will
  1128. close the associated file descriptor, so they need to have different file
  1129. descriptors.
  1130. gzdopen returns NULL if there was insufficient memory to allocate the
  1131. gzFile state, if an invalid mode was specified (an 'r', 'w', or 'a' was not
  1132. provided, or '+' was provided), or if fd is -1. The file descriptor is not
  1133. used until the next gz* read, write, seek, or close operation, so gzdopen
  1134. will not detect if fd is invalid (unless fd is -1).
  1135. */
  1136. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT gzbuffer(gzFile file, unsigned size);
  1137. /*
  1138. Set the internal buffer size used by this library's functions for file to
  1139. size. The default buffer size is 8192 bytes. This function must be called
  1140. after gzopen() or gzdopen(), and before any other calls that read or write
  1141. the file. The buffer memory allocation is always deferred to the first read
  1142. or write. Three times that size in buffer space is allocated. A larger
  1143. buffer size of, for example, 64K or 128K bytes will noticeably increase the
  1144. speed of decompression (reading).
  1145. The new buffer size also affects the maximum length for gzprintf().
  1146. gzbuffer() returns 0 on success, or -1 on failure, such as being called
  1147. too late.
  1148. */
  1149. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT gzsetparams(gzFile file, int level, int strategy);
  1150. /*
  1151. Dynamically update the compression level and strategy for file. See the
  1152. description of deflateInit2 for the meaning of these parameters. Previously
  1153. provided data is flushed before applying the parameter changes.
  1154. gzsetparams returns Z_OK if success, Z_STREAM_ERROR if the file was not
  1155. opened for writing, Z_ERRNO if there is an error writing the flushed data,
  1156. or Z_MEM_ERROR if there is a memory allocation error.
  1157. */
  1158. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT gzread(gzFile file, void *buf, unsigned len);
  1159. /*
  1160. Read and decompress up to len uncompressed bytes from file into buf. If
  1161. the input file is not in gzip format, gzread copies the given number of
  1162. bytes into the buffer directly from the file.
  1163. After reaching the end of a gzip stream in the input, gzread will continue
  1164. to read, looking for another gzip stream. Any number of gzip streams may be
  1165. concatenated in the input file, and will all be decompressed by gzread().
  1166. If something other than a gzip stream is encountered after a gzip stream,
  1167. that remaining trailing garbage is ignored (and no error is returned).
  1168. gzread can be used to read a gzip file that is being concurrently written.
  1169. Upon reaching the end of the input, gzread will return with the available
  1170. data. If the error code returned by gzerror is Z_OK or Z_BUF_ERROR, then
  1171. gzclearerr can be used to clear the end of file indicator in order to permit
  1172. gzread to be tried again. Z_OK indicates that a gzip stream was completed
  1173. on the last gzread. Z_BUF_ERROR indicates that the input file ended in the
  1174. middle of a gzip stream. Note that gzread does not return -1 in the event
  1175. of an incomplete gzip stream. This error is deferred until gzclose(), which
  1176. will return Z_BUF_ERROR if the last gzread ended in the middle of a gzip
  1177. stream. Alternatively, gzerror can be used before gzclose to detect this
  1178. case.
  1179. gzread returns the number of uncompressed bytes actually read, less than
  1180. len for end of file, or -1 for error. If len is too large to fit in an int,
  1181. then nothing is read, -1 is returned, and the error state is set to
  1182. Z_STREAM_ERROR.
  1183. */
  1184. Z_EXTERN size_t Z_EXPORT gzfread (void *buf, size_t size, size_t nitems, gzFile file);
  1185. /*
  1186. Read and decompress up to nitems items of size size from file into buf,
  1187. otherwise operating as gzread() does. This duplicates the interface of
  1188. stdio's fread(), with size_t request and return types. If the library
  1189. defines size_t, then z_size_t is identical to size_t. If not, then z_size_t
  1190. is an unsigned integer type that can contain a pointer.
  1191. gzfread() returns the number of full items read of size size, or zero if
  1192. the end of the file was reached and a full item could not be read, or if
  1193. there was an error. gzerror() must be consulted if zero is returned in
  1194. order to determine if there was an error. If the multiplication of size and
  1195. nitems overflows, i.e. the product does not fit in a size_t, then nothing
  1196. is read, zero is returned, and the error state is set to Z_STREAM_ERROR.
  1197. In the event that the end of file is reached and only a partial item is
  1198. available at the end, i.e. the remaining uncompressed data length is not a
  1199. multiple of size, then the final partial item is nevertheless read into buf
  1200. and the end-of-file flag is set. The length of the partial item read is not
  1201. provided, but could be inferred from the result of gztell(). This behavior
  1202. is the same as the behavior of fread() implementations in common libraries,
  1203. but it prevents the direct use of gzfread() to read a concurrently written
  1204. file, resetting and retrying on end-of-file, when size is not 1.
  1205. */
  1206. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT gzwrite(gzFile file, void const *buf, unsigned len);
  1207. /*
  1208. Compress and write the len uncompressed bytes at buf to file. gzwrite
  1209. returns the number of uncompressed bytes written or 0 in case of error.
  1210. */
  1211. Z_EXTERN size_t Z_EXPORT gzfwrite(void const *buf, size_t size, size_t nitems, gzFile file);
  1212. /*
  1213. Compress and write nitems items of size size from buf to file, duplicating
  1214. the interface of stdio's fwrite(), with size_t request and return types.
  1215. gzfwrite() returns the number of full items written of size size, or zero
  1216. if there was an error. If the multiplication of size and nitems overflows,
  1217. i.e. the product does not fit in a size_t, then nothing is written, zero
  1218. is returned, and the error state is set to Z_STREAM_ERROR.
  1219. */
  1220. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORTVA gzprintf(gzFile file, const char *format, ...);
  1221. /*
  1222. Convert, format, compress, and write the arguments (...) to file under
  1223. control of the string format, as in fprintf. gzprintf returns the number of
  1224. uncompressed bytes actually written, or a negative zlib error code in case
  1225. of error. The number of uncompressed bytes written is limited to 8191, or
  1226. one less than the buffer size given to gzbuffer(). The caller should assure
  1227. that this limit is not exceeded. If it is exceeded, then gzprintf() will
  1228. return an error (0) with nothing written. In this case, there may also be a
  1229. buffer overflow with unpredictable consequences, which is possible only if
  1230. zlib was compiled with the insecure functions sprintf() or vsprintf(),
  1231. because the secure snprintf() or vsnprintf() functions were not available.
  1232. This can be determined using zlibCompileFlags().
  1233. */
  1234. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT gzputs(gzFile file, const char *s);
  1235. /*
  1236. Compress and write the given null-terminated string s to file, excluding
  1237. the terminating null character.
  1238. gzputs returns the number of characters written, or -1 in case of error.
  1239. */
  1240. Z_EXTERN char * Z_EXPORT gzgets(gzFile file, char *buf, int len);
  1241. /*
  1242. Read and decompress bytes from file into buf, until len-1 characters are
  1243. read, or until a newline character is read and transferred to buf, or an
  1244. end-of-file condition is encountered. If any characters are read or if len
  1245. is one, the string is terminated with a null character. If no characters
  1246. are read due to an end-of-file or len is less than one, then the buffer is
  1247. left untouched.
  1248. gzgets returns buf which is a null-terminated string, or it returns NULL
  1249. for end-of-file or in case of error. If there was an error, the contents at
  1250. buf are indeterminate.
  1251. */
  1252. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT gzputc(gzFile file, int c);
  1253. /*
  1254. Compress and write c, converted to an unsigned char, into file. gzputc
  1255. returns the value that was written, or -1 in case of error.
  1256. */
  1257. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT gzgetc(gzFile file);
  1258. /*
  1259. Read and decompress one byte from file. gzgetc returns this byte or -1
  1260. in case of end of file or error. This is implemented as a macro for speed.
  1261. As such, it does not do all of the checking the other functions do. I.e.
  1262. it does not check to see if file is NULL, nor whether the structure file
  1263. points to has been clobbered or not.
  1264. */
  1265. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT gzungetc(int c, gzFile file);
  1266. /*
  1267. Push c back onto the stream for file to be read as the first character on
  1268. the next read. At least one character of push-back is always allowed.
  1269. gzungetc() returns the character pushed, or -1 on failure. gzungetc() will
  1270. fail if c is -1, and may fail if a character has been pushed but not read
  1271. yet. If gzungetc is used immediately after gzopen or gzdopen, at least the
  1272. output buffer size of pushed characters is allowed. (See gzbuffer above.)
  1273. The pushed character will be discarded if the stream is repositioned with
  1274. gzseek() or gzrewind().
  1275. */
  1276. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT gzflush(gzFile file, int flush);
  1277. /*
  1278. Flush all pending output to file. The parameter flush is as in the
  1279. deflate() function. The return value is the zlib error number (see function
  1280. gzerror below). gzflush is only permitted when writing.
  1281. If the flush parameter is Z_FINISH, the remaining data is written and the
  1282. gzip stream is completed in the output. If gzwrite() is called again, a new
  1283. gzip stream will be started in the output. gzread() is able to read such
  1284. concatenated gzip streams.
  1285. gzflush should be called only when strictly necessary because it will
  1286. degrade compression if called too often.
  1287. */
  1288. /*
  1289. Z_EXTERN z_off_t Z_EXPORT gzseek (gzFile file, z_off_t offset, int whence);
  1290. Set the starting position to offset relative to whence for the next gzread
  1291. or gzwrite on file. The offset represents a number of bytes in the
  1292. uncompressed data stream. The whence parameter is defined as in lseek(2);
  1293. the value SEEK_END is not supported.
  1294. If the file is opened for reading, this function is emulated but can be
  1295. extremely slow. If the file is opened for writing, only forward seeks are
  1296. supported; gzseek then compresses a sequence of zeroes up to the new
  1297. starting position.
  1298. gzseek returns the resulting offset location as measured in bytes from
  1299. the beginning of the uncompressed stream, or -1 in case of error, in
  1300. particular if the file is opened for writing and the new starting position
  1301. would be before the current position.
  1302. */
  1303. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT gzrewind(gzFile file);
  1304. /*
  1305. Rewind file. This function is supported only for reading.
  1306. gzrewind(file) is equivalent to (int)gzseek(file, 0L, SEEK_SET).
  1307. */
  1308. /*
  1309. Z_EXTERN z_off_t Z_EXPORT gztell(gzFile file);
  1310. Return the starting position for the next gzread or gzwrite on file.
  1311. This position represents a number of bytes in the uncompressed data stream,
  1312. and is zero when starting, even if appending or reading a gzip stream from
  1313. the middle of a file using gzdopen().
  1314. gztell(file) is equivalent to gzseek(file, 0L, SEEK_CUR)
  1315. */
  1316. /*
  1317. Z_EXTERN z_off_t Z_EXPORT gzoffset(gzFile file);
  1318. Return the current compressed (actual) read or write offset of file. This
  1319. offset includes the count of bytes that precede the gzip stream, for example
  1320. when appending or when using gzdopen() for reading. When reading, the
  1321. offset does not include as yet unused buffered input. This information can
  1322. be used for a progress indicator. On error, gzoffset() returns -1.
  1323. */
  1324. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT gzeof(gzFile file);
  1325. /*
  1326. Return true (1) if the end-of-file indicator for file has been set while
  1327. reading, false (0) otherwise. Note that the end-of-file indicator is set
  1328. only if the read tried to go past the end of the input, but came up short.
  1329. Therefore, just like feof(), gzeof() may return false even if there is no
  1330. more data to read, in the event that the last read request was for the exact
  1331. number of bytes remaining in the input file. This will happen if the input
  1332. file size is an exact multiple of the buffer size.
  1333. If gzeof() returns true, then the read functions will return no more data,
  1334. unless the end-of-file indicator is reset by gzclearerr() and the input file
  1335. has grown since the previous end of file was detected.
  1336. */
  1337. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT gzdirect(gzFile file);
  1338. /*
  1339. Return true (1) if file is being copied directly while reading, or false
  1340. (0) if file is a gzip stream being decompressed.
  1341. If the input file is empty, gzdirect() will return true, since the input
  1342. does not contain a gzip stream.
  1343. If gzdirect() is used immediately after gzopen() or gzdopen() it will
  1344. cause buffers to be allocated to allow reading the file to determine if it
  1345. is a gzip file. Therefore if gzbuffer() is used, it should be called before
  1346. gzdirect().
  1347. When writing, gzdirect() returns true (1) if transparent writing was
  1348. requested ("wT" for the gzopen() mode), or false (0) otherwise. (Note:
  1349. gzdirect() is not needed when writing. Transparent writing must be
  1350. explicitly requested, so the application already knows the answer. When
  1351. linking statically, using gzdirect() will include all of the zlib code for
  1352. gzip file reading and decompression, which may not be desired.)
  1353. */
  1354. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT gzclose(gzFile file);
  1355. /*
  1356. Flush all pending output for file, if necessary, close file and
  1357. deallocate the (de)compression state. Note that once file is closed, you
  1358. cannot call gzerror with file, since its structures have been deallocated.
  1359. gzclose must not be called more than once on the same file, just as free
  1360. must not be called more than once on the same allocation.
  1361. gzclose will return Z_STREAM_ERROR if file is not valid, Z_ERRNO on a
  1362. file operation error, Z_MEM_ERROR if out of memory, Z_BUF_ERROR if the
  1363. last read ended in the middle of a gzip stream, or Z_OK on success.
  1364. */
  1365. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT gzclose_r(gzFile file);
  1366. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT gzclose_w(gzFile file);
  1367. /*
  1368. Same as gzclose(), but gzclose_r() is only for use when reading, and
  1369. gzclose_w() is only for use when writing or appending. The advantage to
  1370. using these instead of gzclose() is that they avoid linking in zlib
  1371. compression or decompression code that is not used when only reading or only
  1372. writing respectively. If gzclose() is used, then both compression and
  1373. decompression code will be included the application when linking to a static
  1374. zlib library.
  1375. */
  1376. Z_EXTERN const char * Z_EXPORT gzerror(gzFile file, int *errnum);
  1377. /*
  1378. Return the error message for the last error which occurred on file.
  1379. errnum is set to zlib error number. If an error occurred in the file system
  1380. and not in the compression library, errnum is set to Z_ERRNO and the
  1381. application may consult errno to get the exact error code.
  1382. The application must not modify the returned string. Future calls to
  1383. this function may invalidate the previously returned string. If file is
  1384. closed, then the string previously returned by gzerror will no longer be
  1385. available.
  1386. gzerror() should be used to distinguish errors from end-of-file for those
  1387. functions above that do not distinguish those cases in their return values.
  1388. */
  1389. Z_EXTERN void Z_EXPORT gzclearerr(gzFile file);
  1390. /*
  1391. Clear the error and end-of-file flags for file. This is analogous to the
  1392. clearerr() function in stdio. This is useful for continuing to read a gzip
  1393. file that is being written concurrently.
  1394. */
  1395. #endif
  1396. /* checksum functions */
  1397. /*
  1398. These functions are not related to compression but are exported
  1399. anyway because they might be useful in applications using the compression
  1400. library.
  1401. */
  1402. Z_EXTERN unsigned long Z_EXPORT adler32(unsigned long adler, const unsigned char *buf, unsigned int len);
  1403. /*
  1404. Update a running Adler-32 checksum with the bytes buf[0..len-1] and
  1405. return the updated checksum. An Adler-32 value is in the range of a 32-bit
  1406. unsigned integer. If buf is Z_NULL, this function returns the required
  1407. initial value for the checksum.
  1408. An Adler-32 checksum is almost as reliable as a CRC-32 but can be computed
  1409. much faster.
  1410. Usage example:
  1411. uint32_t adler = adler32(0L, NULL, 0);
  1412. while (read_buffer(buffer, length) != EOF) {
  1413. adler = adler32(adler, buffer, length);
  1414. }
  1415. if (adler != original_adler) error();
  1416. */
  1417. Z_EXTERN unsigned long Z_EXPORT adler32_z(unsigned long adler, const unsigned char *buf, size_t len);
  1418. /*
  1419. Same as adler32(), but with a size_t length.
  1420. */
  1421. /*
  1422. Z_EXTERN unsigned long Z_EXPORT adler32_combine(unsigned long adler1, unsigned long adler2, z_off_t len2);
  1423. Combine two Adler-32 checksums into one. For two sequences of bytes, seq1
  1424. and seq2 with lengths len1 and len2, Adler-32 checksums were calculated for
  1425. each, adler1 and adler2. adler32_combine() returns the Adler-32 checksum of
  1426. seq1 and seq2 concatenated, requiring only adler1, adler2, and len2. Note
  1427. that the z_off_t type (like off_t) is a signed integer. If len2 is
  1428. negative, the result has no meaning or utility.
  1429. */
  1430. Z_EXTERN unsigned long Z_EXPORT crc32(unsigned long crc, const unsigned char *buf, unsigned int len);
  1431. /*
  1432. Update a running CRC-32 with the bytes buf[0..len-1] and return the
  1433. updated CRC-32. A CRC-32 value is in the range of a 32-bit unsigned integer.
  1434. If buf is Z_NULL, this function returns the required initial value for the
  1435. crc. Pre- and post-conditioning (one's complement) is performed within this
  1436. function so it shouldn't be done by the application.
  1437. Usage example:
  1438. uint32_t crc = crc32(0L, NULL, 0);
  1439. while (read_buffer(buffer, length) != EOF) {
  1440. crc = crc32(crc, buffer, length);
  1441. }
  1442. if (crc != original_crc) error();
  1443. */
  1444. Z_EXTERN unsigned long Z_EXPORT crc32_z(unsigned long crc, const unsigned char *buf, size_t len);
  1445. /*
  1446. Same as crc32(), but with a size_t length.
  1447. */
  1448. /*
  1449. Z_EXTERN unsigned long Z_EXPORT crc32_combine(unsigned long crc1, unsigned long crc2, z_off64_t len2);
  1450. Combine two CRC-32 check values into one. For two sequences of bytes,
  1451. seq1 and seq2 with lengths len1 and len2, CRC-32 check values were
  1452. calculated for each, crc1 and crc2. crc32_combine() returns the CRC-32
  1453. check value of seq1 and seq2 concatenated, requiring only crc1, crc2, and
  1454. len2. len2 must be non-negative.
  1455. */
  1456. /*
  1457. Z_EXTERN unsigned long Z_EXPORT crc32_combine_gen(z_off_t len2);
  1458. Return the operator corresponding to length len2, to be used with
  1459. crc32_combine_op(). len2 must be non-negative.
  1460. */
  1461. Z_EXTERN unsigned long Z_EXPORT crc32_combine_op(unsigned long crc1, unsigned long crc2,
  1462. const unsigned long op);
  1463. /*
  1464. Give the same result as crc32_combine(), using op in place of len2. op is
  1465. is generated from len2 by crc32_combine_gen(). This will be faster than
  1466. crc32_combine() if the generated op is used more than once.
  1467. */
  1468. /* various hacks, don't look :) */
  1469. /* deflateInit and inflateInit are macros to allow checking the zlib version
  1470. * and the compiler's view of z_stream:
  1471. */
  1472. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT deflateInit_(z_stream *strm, int level, const char *version, int stream_size);
  1473. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT inflateInit_(z_stream *strm, const char *version, int stream_size);
  1474. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT deflateInit2_(z_stream *strm, int level, int method, int windowBits, int memLevel,
  1475. int strategy, const char *version, int stream_size);
  1476. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT inflateInit2_(z_stream *strm, int windowBits, const char *version, int stream_size);
  1477. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT inflateBackInit_(z_stream *strm, int windowBits, unsigned char *window,
  1478. const char *version, int stream_size);
  1479. #define deflateInit(strm, level) deflateInit_((strm), (level), ZLIB_VERSION, (int)sizeof(z_stream))
  1480. #define inflateInit(strm) inflateInit_((strm), ZLIB_VERSION, (int)sizeof(z_stream))
  1481. #define deflateInit2(strm, level, method, windowBits, memLevel, strategy) \
  1482. deflateInit2_((strm), (level), (method), (windowBits), (memLevel), \
  1483. (strategy), ZLIB_VERSION, (int)sizeof(z_stream))
  1484. #define inflateInit2(strm, windowBits) inflateInit2_((strm), (windowBits), ZLIB_VERSION, (int)sizeof(z_stream))
  1485. #define inflateBackInit(strm, windowBits, window) \
  1486. inflateBackInit_((strm), (windowBits), (window), ZLIB_VERSION, (int)sizeof(z_stream))
  1487. #ifndef Z_SOLO
  1488. /* gzgetc() macro and its supporting function and exposed data structure. Note
  1489. * that the real internal state is much larger than the exposed structure.
  1490. * This abbreviated structure exposes just enough for the gzgetc() macro. The
  1491. * user should not mess with these exposed elements, since their names or
  1492. * behavior could change in the future, perhaps even capriciously. They can
  1493. * only be used by the gzgetc() macro. You have been warned.
  1494. */
  1495. struct gzFile_s {
  1496. unsigned have;
  1497. unsigned char *next;
  1498. z_off64_t pos;
  1499. };
  1500. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT gzgetc_(gzFile file); /* backward compatibility */
  1501. # define gzgetc(g) ((g)->have ? ((g)->have--, (g)->pos++, *((g)->next)++) : (gzgetc)(g))
  1502. /* provide 64-bit offset functions if _LARGEFILE64_SOURCE defined, and/or
  1503. * change the regular functions to 64 bits if _FILE_OFFSET_BITS is 64 (if
  1504. * both are true, the application gets the *64 functions, and the regular
  1505. * functions are changed to 64 bits) -- in case these are set on systems
  1506. * without large file support, _LFS64_LARGEFILE must also be true
  1507. */
  1508. #ifdef Z_LARGE64
  1509. Z_EXTERN gzFile Z_EXPORT gzopen64(const char *, const char *);
  1510. Z_EXTERN z_off64_t Z_EXPORT gzseek64(gzFile, z_off64_t, int);
  1511. Z_EXTERN z_off64_t Z_EXPORT gztell64(gzFile);
  1512. Z_EXTERN z_off64_t Z_EXPORT gzoffset64(gzFile);
  1513. Z_EXTERN unsigned long Z_EXPORT adler32_combine64(unsigned long, unsigned long, z_off64_t);
  1514. Z_EXTERN unsigned long Z_EXPORT crc32_combine64(unsigned long, unsigned long, z_off64_t);
  1515. Z_EXTERN unsigned long Z_EXPORT crc32_combine_gen64(z_off64_t);
  1516. #endif
  1517. #endif
  1518. #if !defined(Z_SOLO) && !defined(Z_INTERNAL) && defined(Z_WANT64)
  1519. # define gzopen gzopen64
  1520. # define gzseek gzseek64
  1521. # define gztell gztell64
  1522. # define gzoffset gzoffset64
  1523. # define adler32_combine adler32_combine64
  1524. # define crc32_combine crc32_combine64
  1525. # define crc32_combine_gen crc32_combine_gen64
  1526. # ifndef Z_LARGE64
  1527. Z_EXTERN gzFile Z_EXPORT gzopen64(const char *, const char *);
  1528. Z_EXTERN z_off_t Z_EXPORT gzseek64(gzFile, z_off_t, int);
  1529. Z_EXTERN z_off_t Z_EXPORT gztell64(gzFile);
  1530. Z_EXTERN z_off_t Z_EXPORT gzoffset64(gzFile);
  1531. Z_EXTERN unsigned long Z_EXPORT adler32_combine64(unsigned long, unsigned long, z_off_t);
  1532. Z_EXTERN unsigned long Z_EXPORT crc32_combine64(unsigned long, unsigned long, z_off_t);
  1533. Z_EXTERN unsigned long Z_EXPORT crc32_combine_gen64(z_off64_t);
  1534. # endif
  1535. #else
  1536. # ifndef Z_SOLO
  1537. Z_EXTERN gzFile Z_EXPORT gzopen(const char *, const char *);
  1538. Z_EXTERN z_off_t Z_EXPORT gzseek(gzFile, z_off_t, int);
  1539. Z_EXTERN z_off_t Z_EXPORT gztell(gzFile);
  1540. Z_EXTERN z_off_t Z_EXPORT gzoffset(gzFile);
  1541. # endif
  1542. Z_EXTERN unsigned long Z_EXPORT adler32_combine(unsigned long, unsigned long, z_off_t);
  1543. Z_EXTERN unsigned long Z_EXPORT crc32_combine(unsigned long, unsigned long, z_off_t);
  1544. Z_EXTERN unsigned long Z_EXPORT crc32_combine_gen(z_off_t);
  1545. #endif
  1546. /* undocumented functions */
  1547. Z_EXTERN const char * Z_EXPORT zError (int);
  1548. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT inflateSyncPoint (z_stream *);
  1549. Z_EXTERN const uint32_t * Z_EXPORT get_crc_table (void);
  1550. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT inflateUndermine (z_stream *, int);
  1551. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT inflateValidate (z_stream *, int);
  1552. Z_EXTERN unsigned long Z_EXPORT inflateCodesUsed (z_stream *);
  1553. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT inflateResetKeep (z_stream *);
  1554. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORT deflateResetKeep (z_stream *);
  1555. #ifndef Z_SOLO
  1556. #if defined(_WIN32)
  1557. Z_EXTERN gzFile Z_EXPORT gzopen_w(const wchar_t *path, const char *mode);
  1558. #endif
  1559. Z_EXTERN int Z_EXPORTVA gzvprintf(gzFile file, const char *format, va_list va);
  1560. #endif
  1561. #ifdef __cplusplus
  1562. }
  1563. #endif
  1564. #endif /* ZLIB_H_ */