Gzip

gzip is short for GNU ZIP, a GNU free software replacement for the Unix compress program. Gzip was created by Jean-loup Gailly and Mark Adler, and first publicly released October 31, 1992 (version 0.1). Version 1.0 followed in February 1993. Gzip is based on the deflate algorithm, which is a combination of LZ77 and Huffman coding. "Deflate" was developed in response to patents that covered LZW and other compression algorithms and limited the usability of 'compress' and other popular archivers. Gzip should not be confused with ZIP, with which it is not compatible. Gzip does not archive files, it only compresses them, which is why it is often seen in conjunction with a separate archiving tool (most popularly tar). In order to make it easier to develop software that uses compression, the zlib library was created. It supports the gzip file format and "deflate" compression. The library is widely used, because of its small size, efficiency and versatility. Both gzip and zlib were written by Jean-Loup Gailly and Mark Adler. Since the late-1990s there has been some movement from gzip to bzip2 which produces considerably smaller files under many circumstances but is also considerably slower. The zlib compressed data format, the "deflate" algorithm and the Gzip file format were standardized respectively as RFC 1950, RFC 1951 and RFC 1952. The usual file extension for gzipped files is .gz. Unix software is often distributed as files ending with .tar.gz or .tgz, called tarballs. They are files first packaged with tar and then compressed with gzip. They can be decompressed with gzip -d file.tar.gz or unpacked with tar xzf file.tar.gz. Nowadays more and more software is also distributed as .tar.bz2 archives because of the advantages of bzip2 compression. AdvanceCOMP implements a deflate implementation which allows to recompress .gz files to make them even smaller than gzip is capable of.

See also

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
original proof of gdel's completeness theorem
grits
general electric
george harrison
gas giant
goddess
list of german language poets
gunpowder
grampus
gary kildall
gesta danorum
gerald ford
garrison keillor
galatia
generalization
gia carangi
giacomo puccini
godesberg
george cukor
gas mask
gender and sexuality studies
george frideric handel
giovanni pierluigi da palestrina
group velocity
glitnir
group action
general anaesthetic
geoffrey chaucer
gerald gardner
goto
gavin macleod
gopher protocol
general election
genotype
gerard hengeveld
georg wilhelm
graphic design
great rift valley
grigori rasputin
gemstone
gerard david
global system for mobile communications
garry kasparov
flag of greenland