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retrocompressor

unit tests

The starting motivation for this project is to provide a library that aids in the handling of TD0 files (Teledisk-compatible disk images). It is envisioned that the scope will expand over time.

  • direct_ports::lzhuf - nearly a direct port of the classic LZHUF of Okumura et al.
  • lzss_huff - signficant rewrite of LZHUF with flexible parameters
  • lzw - LZW with fixed code width, other parameters flexible
  • td0 - convert normal Teledisk to advanced Teledisk, or vice-versa

Size Limits

This is not optimized for large files. Some 32-bit integers used to describe file sizes have been retained since they are part of the format. The maximum size, beyond which an error is returned, defaults to 3 MB for TD0 files, 1 GB otherwise.

Executable

The executable can be used to compress or expand files from the command line. For example, to compress or expand a file using LZSS with adaptive Huffman coding:

retrocompressor compress -m lzss_huff -i <big.txt> -o <small.lzh>

retrocompressor expand -m lzss_huff -i <small.lzh> -o <big.txt>

To get the general help

retrocompressor --help

Library

This crate can be used as a library. For an example of how to use the library see main.rs (which calls into lib.rs per the usual rust arrangement). Also see the crate documentation.

Teledisk

Teledisk images come in an "advanced" variety that uses LZW (v1.x) or LZSS/Huffman (v2.x) compression. Module lzw handles the former case, while module lzss_huff handles the latter. However, options need to be set correctly, and the Teledisk header needs to be modified whenever advanced compression is added or subtracted. As a convenience there is a module td0 that handles all known cases transparently. This can also be accessed from the command line:

retrocompressor compress -m td0 -i <normal.td0> -o <advanced.td0>

retrocompressor expand -m td0 -i <advanced.td0> -o <normal.td0>

Important

Advanced TD0 images in v2.x do not record the length of the expanded data. As a result, some decoders have trouble decoding the last symbol. The workaround is to pad the expanded TD0 with several disparate-valued bytes before compression. Teledisk evidently did this, so normally there is no problem, but if you are a creator of TD0 images, it is a good idea to include the padding.