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Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +00001
2:mod:`zlib` --- Compression compatible with :program:`gzip`
3===========================================================
4
5.. module:: zlib
6 :synopsis: Low-level interface to compression and decompression routines compatible with
7 gzip.
8
9
10For applications that require data compression, the functions in this module
11allow compression and decompression, using the zlib library. The zlib library
12has its own home page at http://www.zlib.net. There are known
13incompatibilities between the Python module and versions of the zlib library
14earlier than 1.1.3; 1.1.3 has a security vulnerability, so we recommend using
151.1.4 or later.
16
17zlib's functions have many options and often need to be used in a particular
18order. This documentation doesn't attempt to cover all of the permutations;
19consult the zlib manual at http://www.zlib.net/manual.html for authoritative
20information.
21
Éric Araujoc3cc2ac2012-02-26 01:10:14 +010022For reading and writing ``.gz`` files see the :mod:`gzip` module.
Mark Summerfieldaea6e592007-11-05 09:22:48 +000023
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +000024The available exception and functions in this module are:
25
26
27.. exception:: error
28
29 Exception raised on compression and decompression errors.
30
31
Gregory P. Smith987735c2009-01-11 17:57:54 +000032.. function:: adler32(data[, value])
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +000033
Gregory P. Smith987735c2009-01-11 17:57:54 +000034 Computes a Adler-32 checksum of *data*. (An Adler-32 checksum is almost as
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +000035 reliable as a CRC32 but can be computed much more quickly.) If *value* is
36 present, it is used as the starting value of the checksum; otherwise, a fixed
37 default value is used. This allows computing a running checksum over the
Gregory P. Smith987735c2009-01-11 17:57:54 +000038 concatenation of several inputs. The algorithm is not cryptographically
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +000039 strong, and should not be used for authentication or digital signatures. Since
40 the algorithm is designed for use as a checksum algorithm, it is not suitable
41 for use as a general hash algorithm.
42
Gregory P. Smithf48f9d32008-03-17 18:48:05 +000043 This function always returns an integer object.
44
Gregory P. Smith987735c2009-01-11 17:57:54 +000045.. note::
46 To generate the same numeric value across all Python versions and
47 platforms use adler32(data) & 0xffffffff. If you are only using
48 the checksum in packed binary format this is not necessary as the
Gregory P. Smith86cc5022009-02-01 00:24:21 +000049 return value is the correct 32bit binary representation
Gregory P. Smith987735c2009-01-11 17:57:54 +000050 regardless of sign.
51
52.. versionchanged:: 2.6
Gregory P. Smith86cc5022009-02-01 00:24:21 +000053 The return value is in the range [-2**31, 2**31-1]
54 regardless of platform. In older versions the value is
Gregory P. Smith987735c2009-01-11 17:57:54 +000055 signed on some platforms and unsigned on others.
56
57.. versionchanged:: 3.0
Gregory P. Smith86cc5022009-02-01 00:24:21 +000058 The return value is unsigned and in the range [0, 2**32-1]
Gregory P. Smith987735c2009-01-11 17:57:54 +000059 regardless of platform.
Gregory P. Smithf48f9d32008-03-17 18:48:05 +000060
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +000061
62.. function:: compress(string[, level])
63
64 Compresses the data in *string*, returning a string contained compressed data.
Nadeem Vawda04050b82012-11-11 13:52:10 +010065 *level* is an integer from ``0`` to ``9`` controlling the level of compression;
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +000066 ``1`` is fastest and produces the least compression, ``9`` is slowest and
Nadeem Vawda04050b82012-11-11 13:52:10 +010067 produces the most. ``0`` is no compression. The default value is ``6``.
68 Raises the :exc:`error` exception if any error occurs.
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +000069
70
71.. function:: compressobj([level])
72
73 Returns a compression object, to be used for compressing data streams that won't
Nadeem Vawda04050b82012-11-11 13:52:10 +010074 fit into memory at once. *level* is an integer from ``0`` to ``9`` controlling
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +000075 the level of compression; ``1`` is fastest and produces the least compression,
Nadeem Vawda04050b82012-11-11 13:52:10 +010076 ``9`` is slowest and produces the most. ``0`` is no compression. The default
77 value is ``6``.
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +000078
79
Gregory P. Smith987735c2009-01-11 17:57:54 +000080.. function:: crc32(data[, value])
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +000081
82 .. index::
83 single: Cyclic Redundancy Check
84 single: checksum; Cyclic Redundancy Check
85
Gregory P. Smith987735c2009-01-11 17:57:54 +000086 Computes a CRC (Cyclic Redundancy Check) checksum of *data*. If *value* is
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +000087 present, it is used as the starting value of the checksum; otherwise, a fixed
88 default value is used. This allows computing a running checksum over the
Gregory P. Smith987735c2009-01-11 17:57:54 +000089 concatenation of several inputs. The algorithm is not cryptographically
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +000090 strong, and should not be used for authentication or digital signatures. Since
91 the algorithm is designed for use as a checksum algorithm, it is not suitable
92 for use as a general hash algorithm.
93
Gregory P. Smithf48f9d32008-03-17 18:48:05 +000094 This function always returns an integer object.
95
Gregory P. Smith987735c2009-01-11 17:57:54 +000096.. note::
97 To generate the same numeric value across all Python versions and
98 platforms use crc32(data) & 0xffffffff. If you are only using
99 the checksum in packed binary format this is not necessary as the
Gregory P. Smith86cc5022009-02-01 00:24:21 +0000100 return value is the correct 32bit binary representation
Gregory P. Smith987735c2009-01-11 17:57:54 +0000101 regardless of sign.
102
103.. versionchanged:: 2.6
Gregory P. Smith86cc5022009-02-01 00:24:21 +0000104 The return value is in the range [-2**31, 2**31-1]
Gregory P. Smith987735c2009-01-11 17:57:54 +0000105 regardless of platform. In older versions the value would be
106 signed on some platforms and unsigned on others.
107
108.. versionchanged:: 3.0
Gregory P. Smith86cc5022009-02-01 00:24:21 +0000109 The return value is unsigned and in the range [0, 2**32-1]
Gregory P. Smith987735c2009-01-11 17:57:54 +0000110 regardless of platform.
Gregory P. Smithf48f9d32008-03-17 18:48:05 +0000111
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +0000112
113.. function:: decompress(string[, wbits[, bufsize]])
114
115 Decompresses the data in *string*, returning a string containing the
116 uncompressed data. The *wbits* parameter controls the size of the window
Andrew M. Kuchling66dab172010-03-01 19:51:43 +0000117 buffer, and is discussed further below.
118 If *bufsize* is given, it is used as the initial size of the output
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +0000119 buffer. Raises the :exc:`error` exception if any error occurs.
120
121 The absolute value of *wbits* is the base two logarithm of the size of the
122 history buffer (the "window size") used when compressing data. Its absolute
123 value should be between 8 and 15 for the most recent versions of the zlib
124 library, larger values resulting in better compression at the expense of greater
Andrew M. Kuchling66dab172010-03-01 19:51:43 +0000125 memory usage. When decompressing a stream, *wbits* must not be smaller
126 than the size originally used to compress the stream; using a too-small
127 value will result in an exception. The default value is therefore the
128 highest value, 15. When *wbits* is negative, the standard
Jesus Ceac3ce9e32010-05-03 16:09:21 +0000129 :program:`gzip` header is suppressed.
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +0000130
131 *bufsize* is the initial size of the buffer used to hold decompressed data. If
132 more space is required, the buffer size will be increased as needed, so you
133 don't have to get this value exactly right; tuning it will only save a few calls
Sandro Tosi98ed08f2012-01-14 16:42:02 +0100134 to :c:func:`malloc`. The default size is 16384.
Georg Brandl8ec7f652007-08-15 14:28:01 +0000135
136
137.. function:: decompressobj([wbits])
138
139 Returns a decompression object, to be used for decompressing data streams that
140 won't fit into memory at once. The *wbits* parameter controls the size of the
141 window buffer.
142
143Compression objects support the following methods:
144
145
146.. method:: Compress.compress(string)
147
148 Compress *string*, returning a string containing compressed data for at least
149 part of the data in *string*. This data should be concatenated to the output
150 produced by any preceding calls to the :meth:`compress` method. Some input may
151 be kept in internal buffers for later processing.
152
153
154.. method:: Compress.flush([mode])
155
156 All pending input is processed, and a string containing the remaining compressed
157 output is returned. *mode* can be selected from the constants
158 :const:`Z_SYNC_FLUSH`, :const:`Z_FULL_FLUSH`, or :const:`Z_FINISH`,
159 defaulting to :const:`Z_FINISH`. :const:`Z_SYNC_FLUSH` and
160 :const:`Z_FULL_FLUSH` allow compressing further strings of data, while
161 :const:`Z_FINISH` finishes the compressed stream and prevents compressing any
162 more data. After calling :meth:`flush` with *mode* set to :const:`Z_FINISH`,
163 the :meth:`compress` method cannot be called again; the only realistic action is
164 to delete the object.
165
166
167.. method:: Compress.copy()
168
169 Returns a copy of the compression object. This can be used to efficiently
170 compress a set of data that share a common initial prefix.
171
172 .. versionadded:: 2.5
173
174Decompression objects support the following methods, and two attributes:
175
176
177.. attribute:: Decompress.unused_data
178
179 A string which contains any bytes past the end of the compressed data. That is,
180 this remains ``""`` until the last byte that contains compression data is
181 available. If the whole string turned out to contain compressed data, this is
182 ``""``, the empty string.
183
184 The only way to determine where a string of compressed data ends is by actually
185 decompressing it. This means that when compressed data is contained part of a
186 larger file, you can only find the end of it by reading data and feeding it
187 followed by some non-empty string into a decompression object's
188 :meth:`decompress` method until the :attr:`unused_data` attribute is no longer
189 the empty string.
190
191
192.. attribute:: Decompress.unconsumed_tail
193
194 A string that contains any data that was not consumed by the last
195 :meth:`decompress` call because it exceeded the limit for the uncompressed data
196 buffer. This data has not yet been seen by the zlib machinery, so you must feed
197 it (possibly with further data concatenated to it) back to a subsequent
198 :meth:`decompress` method call in order to get correct output.
199
200
201.. method:: Decompress.decompress(string[, max_length])
202
203 Decompress *string*, returning a string containing the uncompressed data
204 corresponding to at least part of the data in *string*. This data should be
205 concatenated to the output produced by any preceding calls to the
206 :meth:`decompress` method. Some of the input data may be preserved in internal
207 buffers for later processing.
208
209 If the optional parameter *max_length* is supplied then the return value will be
210 no longer than *max_length*. This may mean that not all of the compressed input
211 can be processed; and unconsumed data will be stored in the attribute
212 :attr:`unconsumed_tail`. This string must be passed to a subsequent call to
213 :meth:`decompress` if decompression is to continue. If *max_length* is not
214 supplied then the whole input is decompressed, and :attr:`unconsumed_tail` is an
215 empty string.
216
217
218.. method:: Decompress.flush([length])
219
220 All pending input is processed, and a string containing the remaining
221 uncompressed output is returned. After calling :meth:`flush`, the
222 :meth:`decompress` method cannot be called again; the only realistic action is
223 to delete the object.
224
225 The optional parameter *length* sets the initial size of the output buffer.
226
227
228.. method:: Decompress.copy()
229
230 Returns a copy of the decompression object. This can be used to save the state
231 of the decompressor midway through the data stream in order to speed up random
232 seeks into the stream at a future point.
233
234 .. versionadded:: 2.5
235
236
237.. seealso::
238
239 Module :mod:`gzip`
240 Reading and writing :program:`gzip`\ -format files.
241
242 http://www.zlib.net
243 The zlib library home page.
244
245 http://www.zlib.net/manual.html
246 The zlib manual explains the semantics and usage of the library's many
247 functions.
248