DataCompression

master

Swift libcompression wrapper as an extension for the Data type (GZIP, ZLIB, LZFSE, LZMA, LZ4, deflate, RFC-1950, RFC-1951, RFC-1952)
SmartJSONEditor/DataCompression

DataCompression

A libcompression wrapper extension for the Data type

Supported compression algorithms are:

Requirements

  • iOS deployment target >= 9.0
  • macOS deployment target >= 10.11
  • tvOS deployment target >= 9.0
  • watchOS deployment target >= 2.0

Swift version support

Library Version Swift Version
3.7.0 5.1 (Xcode 11)
3.5.0 5.0
3.1.0 4.2
3.0.0 3.0 -> 4.1
2.0.1 < 3.0

Usage example

Try all algorithms and compare the compression ratio

let raw: Data! = String(repeating: "There is no place like 127.0.0.1", count: 25).data(using: .utf8)

print("raw   =>   \(raw.count) bytes")

for algo: Data.CompressionAlgorithm in [.zlib, .lzfse, .lz4, .lzma] {
    let compressedData: Data! = raw.compress(withAlgorithm: algo)

    let ratio = Double(raw.count) / Double(compressedData.count)
    print("\(algo)   =>   \(compressedData.count) bytes, ratio: \(ratio)")
    
    assert(compressedData.decompress(withAlgorithm: algo)! == raw)
}

Will print something like:

raw    =>   800 bytes
zlib   =>    40 bytes, ratio:  20.00
lzfse  =>    69 bytes, ratio:  11.59
lz4    =>   181 bytes, ratio:   4.42
lzma   =>   100 bytes, ratio:   8.00

Container formats

The famous zlib deflate algorithm (RFC-1951) can also be used with the shortcuts .deflate() and .inflate()
let data: Data! = "https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc1951.txt".data(using: .utf8)
let deflated: Data! = data.deflate()
let inflated: Data? = deflated?.inflate()
assert(data == inflated)
Data in gzip format (RFC-1952) can be handled with .gzip() and .gunzip()
let data: Data! = "https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc1952.txt".data(using: .utf8)
let gzipped: Data! = data.gzip()
let gunzipped: Data? = gzipped.gunzip()
assert(data == gunzipped)

Note: Compressed data in gzip format will always be 18 bytes larger than raw deflated data and will append/perform a crc32 checksum based data integrity test .

Data in zip format (RFC-1950) can be handled with .zip() and .unzip()
let data: Data! = "https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc1950.txt".data(using: .utf8)
let zipped: Data! = data.zip()
let unzipped: Data? = zipped.unzip()
assert(data == unzipped)

Note: Compressed data in zip format will always be 6 bytes larger than raw deflated data and will append/perform a adler32 checksum based data integrity test .

Compress a file on the command line and decompress it in Swift

The easiest way is using the already installed gzip command line tool. Assuming you have a file called file.txt, after calling

gzip -9 file.txt

the file should have been compressed to file.txt.gz. You can now load and uncompress the contents of your file with:

let compressedData = try? Data(contentsOf: URL(fileURLWithPath: "/path/to/your/file.txt.gz"))

if let uncompressedData = compressedData?.gunzip() {
    print(String(data: uncompressedData, encoding: .utf8) ?? "Can't decode UTF-8")
}

Checksum extensions

Unrelated to compression but for convenience Crc32 and Adler32 methods are also exposed on the Data type which may come in handy.

let classicExample = "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog".data(using: .utf8)!
let crc32    = classicExample.crc32()
let adler32  = classicExample.adler32()
print("crc32: \(crc32), adler32: \(adler32)")

Will print:

crc32: 414fa339, adler32: 5bdc0fda

Install

Cocoa Pods

To integrate DataCompression into your Xcode project using CocoaPods, add it to your Podfile:

target '<your_target_name>' do
    pod 'DataCompression'
end

Then, run the following command:

$ pod install

You then will need to add import DataCompression at the top of your swift source files to use the extension.

Carthage

Note: DataCompression versions < 3.3.0 are not compatible with carthage. That means Swift 5 only.

To integrate DataCompression into your Xcode project using Carthage, add it as a dependency to your Cartfile. Just add:

github "mw99/DataCompression"

You will then have to add the framework paths in the carthage copy-frameworks run script phase of your Xcode project. The paths may differ depending on you have setup your project in relation to Carthage.

Input:
$(SRCROOT)/Carthage/Build/iOS/DataCompression.framework
Output:
$(BUILT_PRODUCTS_DIR)/$(FRAMEWORKS_FOLDER_PATH)/DataCompression.framework

You then will need to add import DataCompression at the top of your swift source files to use the extension.

Swift Package Manager

To integrate DataCompression into your Xcode project using the swift package manager, add it as a dependency to your Package.swift file:

import PackageDescription

let package = Package(
    name: "<your_package_name>",
    dependencies: [
        .Package(url: "https://github.com/mw99/DataCompression.git", majorVersion: 3)
    ]
)

You then will need to add import DataCompression at the top of your swift source files to use the extension.

The next time you run swift build, the new dependencies will be resolved.

$ swift build

Or just copy the file into your project

You only need one file located at Sources/DataCompression.swift. Drag and drop it into the Xcode project navigator.

Change log / Upgrading guide

Version 3.5.0 to 3.6.0
  • Target platforms finally added to the SPM Package file
  • Carthage support improved
  • Support for Xcode 11 SPM integration
Version 3.4.0 to 3.5.0
  • Fix that prevents a bug in Apples lzfse compressor when working with large chunks of data.
Version 3.3.0 to 3.4.0
  • Swift 5 release had further deprecation warnings than in the Swift 5 beta. Fixed.
Version 3.2.0 to 3.3.0
  • Added support for Carthage
Version 3.1.0 to 3.2.0
  • Podspec swift version set to 5.0
  • Library file structure updated to fit the new swift package manager layout
Version 3.0.0 to 3.1.0
  • Podspec swift version set to 4.2
Version 2.0.X to 3.0.0
  • The encoded data in zip format is not copied anymore, which should improve performance.
  • Checksum validation is now always performed with libz and way faster.
  • The skipCheckSumValidation: parameter of .unzip() was removed.
  • Items of the algorithm enum type are now Swift like lowercase, e.g. .LZMA.lzma

License

Apache License, Version 2.0
Copyright 2016, Markus Wanke

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at

http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.

Description

  • Swift Tools 5.0.0
View More Packages from this Author

Dependencies

  • None
Last updated: Fri Nov 01 2024 12:48:31 GMT-0900 (Hawaii-Aleutian Daylight Time)