Hi.
On Tue, 2006-08-29 at 15:38 +0400, Edward Shishkin wrote:
> Nigel Cunningham wrote:
> > Hi.
> >
> > On Tue, 2006-08-29 at 03:23 -0500, David Masover wrote:
> >
> >>Nigel Cunningham wrote:
> >>
> >>>Hi.
> >>>
> >>>On Tue, 2006-08-29 at 06:05 +0200, Jan Engelhardt wrote:
> >>>
> >>>>>>>>Hmm. LZO is the best compression algorithm for the task as measured by
> >>>>>>>>the objectives of good compression effectiveness while still having very
> >>>>>>>>low CPU usage (the best of those written and GPL'd, there is a slightly
> >>>>>>>>better one which is proprietary and uses more CPU, LZRW if I remember
> >>>>>>>>right. The gzip code base uses too much CPU, though I think Edward made
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>I don't think that LZO beats LZF in both speed and compression ratio.
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>LZF is also available under GPL (dual-licensed BSD) and was choosen in favor
> >>>>>>>of LZO for the next generation suspend-to-disk code of the Linux kernel.
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>see: http://www.goof.com/pcg/marc/liblzf.html
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>thanks for the info, we will compare them
> >>>>>
> >>>>>For Suspend2, we ended up converting the LZF support to a cryptoapi
> >>>>>plugin. Is there any chance that you could use cryptoapi modules? We
> >>>>>could then have a hope of sharing the support.
> >>>>
> >>>>I am throwing in gzip: would it be meaningful to use that instead? The
> >>>>decoder (inflate.c) is already there.
> >>>>
> >>>>06:04 shanghai:~/liblzf-1.6 > l configure*
> >>>>-rwxr-xr-x 1 jengelh users 154894 Mar 3 2005 configure
> >>>>-rwxr-xr-x 1 jengelh users 26810 Mar 3 2005 configure.bz2
> >>>>-rw-r--r-- 1 jengelh users 30611 Aug 28 20:32 configure.gz-z9
> >>>>-rw-r--r-- 1 jengelh users 30693 Aug 28 20:32 configure.gz-z6
> >>>>-rw-r--r-- 1 jengelh users 53077 Aug 28 20:32 configure.lzf
> >>>
> >>>We used gzip when we first implemented compression support, and found it
> >>>to be far too slow. Even with the fastest compression options, we were
> >>>only getting a few megabytes per second. Perhaps I did something wrong
> >>>in configuring it, but there's not that many things to get wrong!
> >>
> >>All that comes to mind is the speed/quality setting -- the number from 1
> >>to 9. Recently, I backed up someone's hard drive using -1, and I
> >>believe I was still able to saturate... the _network_. Definitely try
> >>again if you haven't changed this, but I can't imagine I'm the first
> >>persson to think of it.
> >>
> >> From what I remember, gzip -1 wasn't faster than the disk. But at
> >>least for (very) repetitive data, I was wrong:
> >>
> >>eve:~ sanity$ time bash -c 'dd if=/dev/zero of=test bs=10m count=10; sync'
> >>10+0 records in
> >>10+0 records out
> >>104857600 bytes transferred in 3.261990 secs (32145287 bytes/sec)
> >>
> >>real 0m3.746s
> >>user 0m0.005s
> >>sys 0m0.627s
> >>eve:~ sanity$ time bash -c 'dd if=/dev/zero bs=10m count=10 | gzip -v1 >
> >>test; sync'
> >>10+0 records in
> >>10+0 records out
> >>104857600 bytes transferred in 2.404093 secs (43616282 bytes/sec)
> >> 99.5%
> >>
> >>real 0m2.558s
> >>user 0m1.554s
> >>sys 0m0.680s
> >>eve:~ sanity$
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>This was on OS X, but I think it's still valid -- this is a slightly
> >>older Powerbook, with a 5400 RPM drive, 1.6 ghz G4.
> >>
> >>-1 is still worlds better than nothing. The backup was over 15 gigs,
> >>down to about 6 -- loads of repetitive data, I'm sure, but that's where
> >>you win with compression anyway.
> >
> >
> > Wow. That's a lot better; I guess I did get something wrong in trying to
> > tune deflate. That was pre-cryptoapi though; looking at
> > cryptoapi/deflate.c, I don't see any way of controlling the compression
> > level. Am I missing anything?
> >
>
> zlib is tunable, not cryptoapi's deflate.
> look at zlib_deflateInit2()
Ok; thanks. I wasn't mistaken then :)
Regards,
Nigel
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