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			620 lines
		
	
	
		
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			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
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|  | Network Working Group                                         P. Deutsch | |||
|  | Request for Comments: 1950                           Aladdin Enterprises | |||
|  | Category: Informational                                      J-L. Gailly | |||
|  |                                                                 Info-ZIP | |||
|  |                                                                 May 1996 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |          ZLIB Compressed Data Format Specification version 3.3 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | Status of This Memo | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    This memo provides information for the Internet community.  This memo | |||
|  |    does not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of | |||
|  |    this memo is unlimited. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | IESG Note: | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    The IESG takes no position on the validity of any Intellectual | |||
|  |    Property Rights statements contained in this document. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | Notices | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    Copyright (c) 1996 L. Peter Deutsch and Jean-Loup Gailly | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    Permission is granted to copy and distribute this document for any | |||
|  |    purpose and without charge, including translations into other | |||
|  |    languages and incorporation into compilations, provided that the | |||
|  |    copyright notice and this notice are preserved, and that any | |||
|  |    substantive changes or deletions from the original are clearly | |||
|  |    marked. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    A pointer to the latest version of this and related documentation in | |||
|  |    HTML format can be found at the URL | |||
|  |    <ftp://ftp.uu.net/graphics/png/documents/zlib/zdoc-index.html>. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | Abstract | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    This specification defines a lossless compressed data format.  The | |||
|  |    data can be produced or consumed, even for an arbitrarily long | |||
|  |    sequentially presented input data stream, using only an a priori | |||
|  |    bounded amount of intermediate storage.  The format presently uses | |||
|  |    the DEFLATE compression method but can be easily extended to use | |||
|  |    other compression methods.  It can be implemented readily in a manner | |||
|  |    not covered by patents.  This specification also defines the ADLER-32 | |||
|  |    checksum (an extension and improvement of the Fletcher checksum), | |||
|  |    used for detection of data corruption, and provides an algorithm for | |||
|  |    computing it. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | Deutsch & Gailly             Informational                      [Page 1] | |||
|  |  | |||
|  | RFC 1950       ZLIB Compressed Data Format Specification        May 1996 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | Table of Contents | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    1. Introduction ................................................... 2 | |||
|  |       1.1. Purpose ................................................... 2 | |||
|  |       1.2. Intended audience ......................................... 3 | |||
|  |       1.3. Scope ..................................................... 3 | |||
|  |       1.4. Compliance ................................................ 3 | |||
|  |       1.5.  Definitions of terms and conventions used ................ 3 | |||
|  |       1.6. Changes from previous versions ............................ 3 | |||
|  |    2. Detailed specification ......................................... 3 | |||
|  |       2.1. Overall conventions ....................................... 3 | |||
|  |       2.2. Data format ............................................... 4 | |||
|  |       2.3. Compliance ................................................ 7 | |||
|  |    3. References ..................................................... 7 | |||
|  |    4. Source code .................................................... 8 | |||
|  |    5. Security Considerations ........................................ 8 | |||
|  |    6. Acknowledgements ............................................... 8 | |||
|  |    7. Authors' Addresses ............................................. 8 | |||
|  |    8. Appendix: Rationale ............................................ 9 | |||
|  |    9. Appendix: Sample code ..........................................10 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 1. Introduction | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    1.1. Purpose | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       The purpose of this specification is to define a lossless | |||
|  |       compressed data format that: | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |           * Is independent of CPU type, operating system, file system, | |||
|  |             and character set, and hence can be used for interchange; | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |           * Can be produced or consumed, even for an arbitrarily long | |||
|  |             sequentially presented input data stream, using only an a | |||
|  |             priori bounded amount of intermediate storage, and hence can | |||
|  |             be used in data communications or similar structures such as | |||
|  |             Unix filters; | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |           * Can use a number of different compression methods; | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |           * Can be implemented readily in a manner not covered by | |||
|  |             patents, and hence can be practiced freely. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       The data format defined by this specification does not attempt to | |||
|  |       allow random access to compressed data. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
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|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | Deutsch & Gailly             Informational                      [Page 2] | |||
|  |  | |||
|  | RFC 1950       ZLIB Compressed Data Format Specification        May 1996 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    1.2. Intended audience | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       This specification is intended for use by implementors of software | |||
|  |       to compress data into zlib format and/or decompress data from zlib | |||
|  |       format. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       The text of the specification assumes a basic background in | |||
|  |       programming at the level of bits and other primitive data | |||
|  |       representations. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    1.3. Scope | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       The specification specifies a compressed data format that can be | |||
|  |       used for in-memory compression of a sequence of arbitrary bytes. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    1.4. Compliance | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       Unless otherwise indicated below, a compliant decompressor must be | |||
|  |       able to accept and decompress any data set that conforms to all | |||
|  |       the specifications presented here; a compliant compressor must | |||
|  |       produce data sets that conform to all the specifications presented | |||
|  |       here. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    1.5.  Definitions of terms and conventions used | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       byte: 8 bits stored or transmitted as a unit (same as an octet). | |||
|  |       (For this specification, a byte is exactly 8 bits, even on | |||
|  |       machines which store a character on a number of bits different | |||
|  |       from 8.) See below, for the numbering of bits within a byte. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    1.6. Changes from previous versions | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       Version 3.1 was the first public release of this specification. | |||
|  |       In version 3.2, some terminology was changed and the Adler-32 | |||
|  |       sample code was rewritten for clarity.  In version 3.3, the | |||
|  |       support for a preset dictionary was introduced, and the | |||
|  |       specification was converted to RFC style. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 2. Detailed specification | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    2.1. Overall conventions | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       In the diagrams below, a box like this: | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |          +---+ | |||
|  |          |   | <-- the vertical bars might be missing | |||
|  |          +---+ | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | Deutsch & Gailly             Informational                      [Page 3] | |||
|  |  | |||
|  | RFC 1950       ZLIB Compressed Data Format Specification        May 1996 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       represents one byte; a box like this: | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |          +==============+ | |||
|  |          |              | | |||
|  |          +==============+ | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       represents a variable number of bytes. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       Bytes stored within a computer do not have a "bit order", since | |||
|  |       they are always treated as a unit.  However, a byte considered as | |||
|  |       an integer between 0 and 255 does have a most- and least- | |||
|  |       significant bit, and since we write numbers with the most- | |||
|  |       significant digit on the left, we also write bytes with the most- | |||
|  |       significant bit on the left.  In the diagrams below, we number the | |||
|  |       bits of a byte so that bit 0 is the least-significant bit, i.e., | |||
|  |       the bits are numbered: | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |          +--------+ | |||
|  |          |76543210| | |||
|  |          +--------+ | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       Within a computer, a number may occupy multiple bytes.  All | |||
|  |       multi-byte numbers in the format described here are stored with | |||
|  |       the MOST-significant byte first (at the lower memory address). | |||
|  |       For example, the decimal number 520 is stored as: | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |              0     1 | |||
|  |          +--------+--------+ | |||
|  |          |00000010|00001000| | |||
|  |          +--------+--------+ | |||
|  |           ^        ^ | |||
|  |           |        | | |||
|  |           |        + less significant byte = 8 | |||
|  |           + more significant byte = 2 x 256 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    2.2. Data format | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       A zlib stream has the following structure: | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |            0   1 | |||
|  |          +---+---+ | |||
|  |          |CMF|FLG|   (more-->) | |||
|  |          +---+---+ | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
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 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
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 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | Deutsch & Gailly             Informational                      [Page 4] | |||
|  |  | |||
|  | RFC 1950       ZLIB Compressed Data Format Specification        May 1996 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       (if FLG.FDICT set) | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |            0   1   2   3 | |||
|  |          +---+---+---+---+ | |||
|  |          |     DICTID    |   (more-->) | |||
|  |          +---+---+---+---+ | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |          +=====================+---+---+---+---+ | |||
|  |          |...compressed data...|    ADLER32    | | |||
|  |          +=====================+---+---+---+---+ | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       Any data which may appear after ADLER32 are not part of the zlib | |||
|  |       stream. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       CMF (Compression Method and flags) | |||
|  |          This byte is divided into a 4-bit compression method and a 4- | |||
|  |          bit information field depending on the compression method. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |             bits 0 to 3  CM     Compression method | |||
|  |             bits 4 to 7  CINFO  Compression info | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       CM (Compression method) | |||
|  |          This identifies the compression method used in the file. CM = 8 | |||
|  |          denotes the "deflate" compression method with a window size up | |||
|  |          to 32K.  This is the method used by gzip and PNG (see | |||
|  |          references [1] and [2] in Chapter 3, below, for the reference | |||
|  |          documents).  CM = 15 is reserved.  It might be used in a future | |||
|  |          version of this specification to indicate the presence of an | |||
|  |          extra field before the compressed data. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       CINFO (Compression info) | |||
|  |          For CM = 8, CINFO is the base-2 logarithm of the LZ77 window | |||
|  |          size, minus eight (CINFO=7 indicates a 32K window size). Values | |||
|  |          of CINFO above 7 are not allowed in this version of the | |||
|  |          specification.  CINFO is not defined in this specification for | |||
|  |          CM not equal to 8. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       FLG (FLaGs) | |||
|  |          This flag byte is divided as follows: | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |             bits 0 to 4  FCHECK  (check bits for CMF and FLG) | |||
|  |             bit  5       FDICT   (preset dictionary) | |||
|  |             bits 6 to 7  FLEVEL  (compression level) | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |          The FCHECK value must be such that CMF and FLG, when viewed as | |||
|  |          a 16-bit unsigned integer stored in MSB order (CMF*256 + FLG), | |||
|  |          is a multiple of 31. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | Deutsch & Gailly             Informational                      [Page 5] | |||
|  |  | |||
|  | RFC 1950       ZLIB Compressed Data Format Specification        May 1996 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       FDICT (Preset dictionary) | |||
|  |          If FDICT is set, a DICT dictionary identifier is present | |||
|  |          immediately after the FLG byte. The dictionary is a sequence of | |||
|  |          bytes which are initially fed to the compressor without | |||
|  |          producing any compressed output. DICT is the Adler-32 checksum | |||
|  |          of this sequence of bytes (see the definition of ADLER32 | |||
|  |          below).  The decompressor can use this identifier to determine | |||
|  |          which dictionary has been used by the compressor. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       FLEVEL (Compression level) | |||
|  |          These flags are available for use by specific compression | |||
|  |          methods.  The "deflate" method (CM = 8) sets these flags as | |||
|  |          follows: | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |             0 - compressor used fastest algorithm | |||
|  |             1 - compressor used fast algorithm | |||
|  |             2 - compressor used default algorithm | |||
|  |             3 - compressor used maximum compression, slowest algorithm | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |          The information in FLEVEL is not needed for decompression; it | |||
|  |          is there to indicate if recompression might be worthwhile. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       compressed data | |||
|  |          For compression method 8, the compressed data is stored in the | |||
|  |          deflate compressed data format as described in the document | |||
|  |          "DEFLATE Compressed Data Format Specification" by L. Peter | |||
|  |          Deutsch. (See reference [3] in Chapter 3, below) | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |          Other compressed data formats are not specified in this version | |||
|  |          of the zlib specification. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       ADLER32 (Adler-32 checksum) | |||
|  |          This contains a checksum value of the uncompressed data | |||
|  |          (excluding any dictionary data) computed according to Adler-32 | |||
|  |          algorithm. This algorithm is a 32-bit extension and improvement | |||
|  |          of the Fletcher algorithm, used in the ITU-T X.224 / ISO 8073 | |||
|  |          standard. See references [4] and [5] in Chapter 3, below) | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |          Adler-32 is composed of two sums accumulated per byte: s1 is | |||
|  |          the sum of all bytes, s2 is the sum of all s1 values. Both sums | |||
|  |          are done modulo 65521. s1 is initialized to 1, s2 to zero.  The | |||
|  |          Adler-32 checksum is stored as s2*65536 + s1 in most- | |||
|  |          significant-byte first (network) order. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
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|  | 
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 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | Deutsch & Gailly             Informational                      [Page 6] | |||
|  |  | |||
|  | RFC 1950       ZLIB Compressed Data Format Specification        May 1996 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    2.3. Compliance | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       A compliant compressor must produce streams with correct CMF, FLG | |||
|  |       and ADLER32, but need not support preset dictionaries.  When the | |||
|  |       zlib data format is used as part of another standard data format, | |||
|  |       the compressor may use only preset dictionaries that are specified | |||
|  |       by this other data format.  If this other format does not use the | |||
|  |       preset dictionary feature, the compressor must not set the FDICT | |||
|  |       flag. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       A compliant decompressor must check CMF, FLG, and ADLER32, and | |||
|  |       provide an error indication if any of these have incorrect values. | |||
|  |       A compliant decompressor must give an error indication if CM is | |||
|  |       not one of the values defined in this specification (only the | |||
|  |       value 8 is permitted in this version), since another value could | |||
|  |       indicate the presence of new features that would cause subsequent | |||
|  |       data to be interpreted incorrectly.  A compliant decompressor must | |||
|  |       give an error indication if FDICT is set and DICTID is not the | |||
|  |       identifier of a known preset dictionary.  A decompressor may | |||
|  |       ignore FLEVEL and still be compliant.  When the zlib data format | |||
|  |       is being used as a part of another standard format, a compliant | |||
|  |       decompressor must support all the preset dictionaries specified by | |||
|  |       the other format. When the other format does not use the preset | |||
|  |       dictionary feature, a compliant decompressor must reject any | |||
|  |       stream in which the FDICT flag is set. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 3. References | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    [1] Deutsch, L.P.,"GZIP Compressed Data Format Specification", | |||
|  |        available in ftp://ftp.uu.net/pub/archiving/zip/doc/ | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    [2] Thomas Boutell, "PNG (Portable Network Graphics) specification", | |||
|  |        available in ftp://ftp.uu.net/graphics/png/documents/ | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    [3] Deutsch, L.P.,"DEFLATE Compressed Data Format Specification", | |||
|  |        available in ftp://ftp.uu.net/pub/archiving/zip/doc/ | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    [4] Fletcher, J. G., "An Arithmetic Checksum for Serial | |||
|  |        Transmissions," IEEE Transactions on Communications, Vol. COM-30, | |||
|  |        No. 1, January 1982, pp. 247-252. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    [5] ITU-T Recommendation X.224, Annex D, "Checksum Algorithms," | |||
|  |        November, 1993, pp. 144, 145. (Available from | |||
|  |        gopher://info.itu.ch). ITU-T X.244 is also the same as ISO 8073. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
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|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | Deutsch & Gailly             Informational                      [Page 7] | |||
|  |  | |||
|  | RFC 1950       ZLIB Compressed Data Format Specification        May 1996 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 4. Source code | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    Source code for a C language implementation of a "zlib" compliant | |||
|  |    library is available at ftp://ftp.uu.net/pub/archiving/zip/zlib/. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 5. Security Considerations | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    A decoder that fails to check the ADLER32 checksum value may be | |||
|  |    subject to undetected data corruption. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 6. Acknowledgements | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    Trademarks cited in this document are the property of their | |||
|  |    respective owners. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    Jean-Loup Gailly and Mark Adler designed the zlib format and wrote | |||
|  |    the related software described in this specification.  Glenn | |||
|  |    Randers-Pehrson converted this document to RFC and HTML format. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 7. Authors' Addresses | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    L. Peter Deutsch | |||
|  |    Aladdin Enterprises | |||
|  |    203 Santa Margarita Ave. | |||
|  |    Menlo Park, CA 94025 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    Phone: (415) 322-0103 (AM only) | |||
|  |    FAX:   (415) 322-1734 | |||
|  |    EMail: <ghost@aladdin.com> | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    Jean-Loup Gailly | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    EMail: <gzip@prep.ai.mit.edu> | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    Questions about the technical content of this specification can be | |||
|  |    sent by email to | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    Jean-Loup Gailly <gzip@prep.ai.mit.edu> and | |||
|  |    Mark Adler <madler@alumni.caltech.edu> | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    Editorial comments on this specification can be sent by email to | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    L. Peter Deutsch <ghost@aladdin.com> and | |||
|  |    Glenn Randers-Pehrson <randeg@alumni.rpi.edu> | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | Deutsch & Gailly             Informational                      [Page 8] | |||
|  |  | |||
|  | RFC 1950       ZLIB Compressed Data Format Specification        May 1996 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 8. Appendix: Rationale | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    8.1. Preset dictionaries | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       A preset dictionary is specially useful to compress short input | |||
|  |       sequences. The compressor can take advantage of the dictionary | |||
|  |       context to encode the input in a more compact manner. The | |||
|  |       decompressor can be initialized with the appropriate context by | |||
|  |       virtually decompressing a compressed version of the dictionary | |||
|  |       without producing any output. However for certain compression | |||
|  |       algorithms such as the deflate algorithm this operation can be | |||
|  |       achieved without actually performing any decompression. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       The compressor and the decompressor must use exactly the same | |||
|  |       dictionary. The dictionary may be fixed or may be chosen among a | |||
|  |       certain number of predefined dictionaries, according to the kind | |||
|  |       of input data. The decompressor can determine which dictionary has | |||
|  |       been chosen by the compressor by checking the dictionary | |||
|  |       identifier. This document does not specify the contents of | |||
|  |       predefined dictionaries, since the optimal dictionaries are | |||
|  |       application specific. Standard data formats using this feature of | |||
|  |       the zlib specification must precisely define the allowed | |||
|  |       dictionaries. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    8.2. The Adler-32 algorithm | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       The Adler-32 algorithm is much faster than the CRC32 algorithm yet | |||
|  |       still provides an extremely low probability of undetected errors. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       The modulo on unsigned long accumulators can be delayed for 5552 | |||
|  |       bytes, so the modulo operation time is negligible.  If the bytes | |||
|  |       are a, b, c, the second sum is 3a + 2b + c + 3, and so is position | |||
|  |       and order sensitive, unlike the first sum, which is just a | |||
|  |       checksum.  That 65521 is prime is important to avoid a possible | |||
|  |       large class of two-byte errors that leave the check unchanged. | |||
|  |       (The Fletcher checksum uses 255, which is not prime and which also | |||
|  |       makes the Fletcher check insensitive to single byte changes 0 <-> | |||
|  |       255.) | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       The sum s1 is initialized to 1 instead of zero to make the length | |||
|  |       of the sequence part of s2, so that the length does not have to be | |||
|  |       checked separately. (Any sequence of zeroes has a Fletcher | |||
|  |       checksum of zero.) | |||
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|  | Deutsch & Gailly             Informational                      [Page 9] | |||
|  |  | |||
|  | RFC 1950       ZLIB Compressed Data Format Specification        May 1996 | |||
|  | 
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|  | 
 | |||
|  | 9. Appendix: Sample code | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |    The following C code computes the Adler-32 checksum of a data buffer. | |||
|  |    It is written for clarity, not for speed.  The sample code is in the | |||
|  |    ANSI C programming language. Non C users may find it easier to read | |||
|  |    with these hints: | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       &      Bitwise AND operator. | |||
|  |       >>     Bitwise right shift operator. When applied to an | |||
|  |              unsigned quantity, as here, right shift inserts zero bit(s) | |||
|  |              at the left. | |||
|  |       <<     Bitwise left shift operator. Left shift inserts zero | |||
|  |              bit(s) at the right. | |||
|  |       ++     "n++" increments the variable n. | |||
|  |       %      modulo operator: a % b is the remainder of a divided by b. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       #define BASE 65521 /* largest prime smaller than 65536 */ | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       /* | |||
|  |          Update a running Adler-32 checksum with the bytes buf[0..len-1] | |||
|  |        and return the updated checksum. The Adler-32 checksum should be | |||
|  |        initialized to 1. | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |        Usage example: | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |          unsigned long adler = 1L; | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |          while (read_buffer(buffer, length) != EOF) { | |||
|  |            adler = update_adler32(adler, buffer, length); | |||
|  |          } | |||
|  |          if (adler != original_adler) error(); | |||
|  |       */ | |||
|  |       unsigned long update_adler32(unsigned long adler, | |||
|  |          unsigned char *buf, int len) | |||
|  |       { | |||
|  |         unsigned long s1 = adler & 0xffff; | |||
|  |         unsigned long s2 = (adler >> 16) & 0xffff; | |||
|  |         int n; | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |         for (n = 0; n < len; n++) { | |||
|  |           s1 = (s1 + buf[n]) % BASE; | |||
|  |           s2 = (s2 + s1)     % BASE; | |||
|  |         } | |||
|  |         return (s2 << 16) + s1; | |||
|  |       } | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       /* Return the adler32 of the bytes buf[0..len-1] */ | |||
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|  | Deutsch & Gailly             Informational                     [Page 10] | |||
|  |  | |||
|  | RFC 1950       ZLIB Compressed Data Format Specification        May 1996 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  | 
 | |||
|  |       unsigned long adler32(unsigned char *buf, int len) | |||
|  |       { | |||
|  |         return update_adler32(1L, buf, len); | |||
|  |       } | |||
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|  | Deutsch & Gailly             Informational                     [Page 11] | |||
|  |  |