A streaming compression/decompression library DEFLATE-based streams in Rust.
This crate by default uses the miniz_oxide
crate, a port of miniz.c
to pure
Rust. This crate also supports other backends, such as the widely
available zlib library or the high-performance zlib-ng library.
Supported formats:
- deflate
- zlib
- gzip
# Cargo.toml
[dependencies]
flate2 = "1.0"
This crate supports the current and previous stable versions of the Rust compiler. For example, if the current stable is 1.80, this crate supports 1.80 and 1.79.
Other compiler versions may work, but failures may not be treated as a flate2
bug.
The Cargo.toml
file specifies a rust-version
for which builds of the current version
passed at some point. This value is indicative only, and may change at any time.
The rust-version
is a best-effort measured value and is different to the MSRV. The
rust-version
can be incremented by a PR in order to pass tests, as long as the MSRV
continues to hold. When the rust-version
increases, the next release should be a minor
version, to allow any affected users to pin to a previous minor version.
use std::io::prelude::*;
use flate2::Compression;
use flate2::write::ZlibEncoder;
fn main() {
let mut e = ZlibEncoder::new(Vec::new(), Compression::default());
e.write_all(b"foo");
e.write_all(b"bar");
let compressed_bytes = e.finish();
}
use std::io::prelude::*;
use flate2::read::GzDecoder;
fn main() {
let mut d = GzDecoder::new("...".as_bytes());
let mut s = String::new();
d.read_to_string(&mut s).unwrap();
println!("{}", s);
}
The default miniz_oxide
backend has the advantage of being pure Rust. If you
want maximum performance, you can use the zlib-ng C library:
[dependencies]
flate2 = { version = "1.0.17", features = ["zlib-ng"], default-features = false }
Note that the "zlib-ng"
feature works even if some other part of your crate
graph depends on zlib.
However, if you're already using another C or Rust library that depends on zlib, and you want to avoid including both zlib and zlib-ng, you can use that for Rust code as well:
[dependencies]
flate2 = { version = "1.0.17", features = ["zlib"], default-features = false }
Or, if you have C or Rust code that depends on zlib and you want to use zlib-ng via libz-sys in zlib-compat mode, use:
[dependencies]
flate2 = { version = "1.0.17", features = ["zlib-ng-compat"], default-features = false }
Note that when using the "zlib-ng-compat"
feature, if any crate in your
dependency graph explicitly requests stock zlib, or uses libz-sys directly
without default-features = false
, you'll get stock zlib rather than zlib-ng.
See the libz-sys
README for details.
To avoid that, use the "zlib-ng"
feature instead.
For compatibility with previous versions of flate2
, the Cloudflare optimized
version of zlib is available, via the cloudflare_zlib
feature. It's not as
fast as zlib-ng, but it's faster than stock zlib. It requires an x86-64 CPU with
SSE 4.2 or ARM64 with NEON & CRC. It does not support 32-bit CPUs at all and is
incompatible with mingw. For more information check the crate
documentation. Note that
cloudflare_zlib
will cause breakage if any other crate in your crate graph
uses another version of zlib/libz.
This project is licensed under either of
- Apache License, Version 2.0, (LICENSE-APACHE or https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)
- MIT license (LICENSE-MIT or https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)
at your option.
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in this project by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.