Breaking/important changes from 0.8 to 0.9
- Feature
safe
added and enabled by default, see Safety below - Feature
const_panic
removed, it's now always enabled - Rename generic's de-/compress to de-/compress_stack
lzss
is a lossless data compression algorithm in pure Rust.
This crate is built for embedded systems:
- Small code size
- Uses little RAM and CPU
no_std
feature- All parameters can be compile-time only
This crate comes in two flavors: generic (Lzss
) and dynamic (LzssDyn
).
The dynamic one has one compress function and all parameters are passed to it at runtime, making it very adaptive.
The generic one has compile-time parameters will produce a function for each different sets of parameters. This function will be more optimized by the compiler than the dynamic one, the downside is that multiple functions are generated when multiple parameter sets are used.
(The same applies for decompress and other functions, only used function will be in the generated program.)
This algorithm has by design no header at all. Please be aware that it is not possible to check if the contents is correct, or even the length matches. It is recommended to add a header based on the requirements.
This code is based on the LZSS encoder-decoder by Haruhiko Okumura, public domain.
In order to create an encoder-decoder which is compatible to the program above
the following is required: C = 0x20
in this library and P = (1+EI+EJ) / 9
in Okumuras program.
alloc
- Allows de-/compression with buffer on the heap and theVecWriter
.safe
- Only use safe code (see Safety below).std
- Enablesalloc
and additionalIOSimpleReader
,IOSimpleWriter
, and theError
instance forLzssError
andLzssDynError
.
std
and safe
are enabled by default.
With defaults (std
and safe
):
[dependencies]
lzss = "0.9"
With no_std
(and without safe
):
[dependencies]
lzss = { version = "0.9", default-features = false }
type MyLzss = Lzss<10, 4, 0x20, { 1 << 10 }, { 2 << 10 }>;
let input = b"Example Data";
let mut output = [0; 30];
let result = MyLzss::compress(
SliceReader::new(input),
SliceWriter::new(&mut output),
);
assert_eq!(result, Ok(14)); // there was no overflow and the output is 14 bytes long
With the safe
feature the code is not using any unsafe code (forbid(unsafe_code)
), but at
the cost of performance and size - though on modern systems that is not to mention.
But on smaller systems (like microcontrollers, where no_std
is needed) it may be noticeable.
Which is the reason wht it can be switched on/off.
In oder to de-/compress files in the cli, install lzss-cli:
cargo install lzss-cli
Example:
lzss e 10,4,0x20 <input >outout