/gzp

Multi-threaded Compression

Primary LanguageRustThe UnlicenseUnlicense

⛓️gzp

Build Status license Version info

Multi-threaded encoding and decoding.

Why?

This crate provides a near drop in replacement for Write that has will compress chunks of data in parallel and write to an underlying writer in the same order that the bytes were handed to the writer. This allows for much faster compression of data.

Additionally, this provides multi-threaded decompressors for Mgzip and BGZF formats.

Supported Encodings:

Usage / Features

By default gzp has the deflate_default and libdeflate features enabled which brings in the best performing zlib implementation as the backend for flate2 as well as libdeflater for the block gzip formats.

Examples

  • Deflate default
[dependencies]
gzp = { version = "*" }
  • Rust backend, this means that the Zlib format will not be available.
[dependencies]
gzp = { version = "*", default-features = false, features = ["deflate_rust"] }
  • Snap only
[dependencies]
gzp = { version = "*", default-features = false, features = ["snap_default"] }

Note: if you are running into compilation issues with libdeflate and the i686-pc-windows-msvc target, please see this issue for workarounds.

Examples

Simple example

use std::{env, fs::File, io::Write};

use gzp::{deflate::Gzip, ZBuilder, ZWriter};

fn main() {
    let mut writer = vec![];
    // ZBuilder will return a trait object that transparent over `ParZ` or `SyncZ`
    let mut parz = ZBuilder::<Gzip, _>::new()
        .num_threads(0)
        .from_writer(writer);
    parz.write_all(b"This is a first test line\n").unwrap();
    parz.write_all(b"This is a second test line\n").unwrap();
    parz.finish().unwrap();
}

An updated version of pgz.

use gzp::{
    ZWriter,
    deflate::Mgzip,
    par::{compress::{ParCompress, ParCompressBuilder}}
};
use std::io::{Read, Write};

fn main() {
    let chunksize = 64 * (1 << 10) * 2;

    let stdout = std::io::stdout();
    let mut writer: ParCompress<Mgzip> = ParCompressBuilder::new().from_writer(stdout);

    let stdin = std::io::stdin();
    let mut stdin = stdin.lock();

    let mut buffer = Vec::with_capacity(chunksize);
    loop {
        let mut limit = (&mut stdin).take(chunksize as u64);
        limit.read_to_end(&mut buffer).unwrap();
        if buffer.is_empty() {
            break;
        }
        writer.write_all(&buffer).unwrap();
        buffer.clear();
    }
    writer.finish().unwrap();
}

Same thing but using Snappy instead.

use gzp::{parz::{ParZ, ParZBuilder}, snap::Snap};
use std::io::{Read, Write};

fn main() {
    let chunksize = 64 * (1 << 10) * 2;

    let stdout = std::io::stdout();
    let mut writer: ParZ<Snap> = ParZBuilder::new().from_writer(stdout);

    let stdin = std::io::stdin();
    let mut stdin = stdin.lock();

    let mut buffer = Vec::with_capacity(chunksize);
    loop {
        let mut limit = (&mut stdin).take(chunksize as u64);
        limit.read_to_end(&mut buffer).unwrap();
        if buffer.is_empty() {
            break;
        }
        writer.write_all(&buffer).unwrap();
        buffer.clear();
    }
    writer.finish().unwrap();
}

Acknowledgements

  • Many of the ideas for this crate were directly inspired by pigz, including implementation details for some functions.

Contributing

PRs are very welcome! Please run tests locally and ensure they are passing. May tests are ignored in CI because the CI instances don't have enough threads to test them / are too slow.

cargo test --all-features && cargo test --all-features -- --ignored

Note that tests will take 30-60s.

Future todos

Benchmarks

All benchmarks were run on the file in ./bench-data/shakespeare.txt catted together 100 times which creates a rough 550Mb file.

The primary benchmark takeaway is that compression time decreases proportionately to the number of threads used.

benchmarks