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 | 7 | Network Working Group                                         P. Deutsch | 
 | 8 | Request for Comments: 1952                           Aladdin Enterprises | 
 | 9 | Category: Informational                                         May 1996 | 
 | 10 |  | 
 | 11 |  | 
 | 12 |                GZIP file format specification version 4.3 | 
 | 13 |  | 
 | 14 | Status of This Memo | 
 | 15 |  | 
 | 16 |    This memo provides information for the Internet community.  This memo | 
 | 17 |    does not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of | 
 | 18 |    this memo is unlimited. | 
 | 19 |  | 
 | 20 | IESG Note: | 
 | 21 |  | 
 | 22 |    The IESG takes no position on the validity of any Intellectual | 
 | 23 |    Property Rights statements contained in this document. | 
 | 24 |  | 
 | 25 | Notices | 
 | 26 |  | 
 | 27 |    Copyright (c) 1996 L. Peter Deutsch | 
 | 28 |  | 
 | 29 |    Permission is granted to copy and distribute this document for any | 
 | 30 |    purpose and without charge, including translations into other | 
 | 31 |    languages and incorporation into compilations, provided that the | 
 | 32 |    copyright notice and this notice are preserved, and that any | 
 | 33 |    substantive changes or deletions from the original are clearly | 
 | 34 |    marked. | 
 | 35 |  | 
 | 36 |    A pointer to the latest version of this and related documentation in | 
 | 37 |    HTML format can be found at the URL | 
 | 38 |    <ftp://ftp.uu.net/graphics/png/documents/zlib/zdoc-index.html>. | 
 | 39 |  | 
 | 40 | Abstract | 
 | 41 |  | 
 | 42 |    This specification defines a lossless compressed data format that is | 
 | 43 |    compatible with the widely used GZIP utility.  The format includes a | 
 | 44 |    cyclic redundancy check value for detecting data corruption.  The | 
 | 45 |    format presently uses the DEFLATE method of compression but can be | 
 | 46 |    easily extended to use other compression methods.  The format can be | 
 | 47 |    implemented readily in a manner not covered by patents. | 
 | 48 |  | 
 | 49 |  | 
 | 50 |  | 
 | 51 |  | 
 | 52 |  | 
 | 53 |  | 
 | 54 |  | 
 | 55 |  | 
 | 56 |  | 
 | 57 |  | 
 | 58 | Deutsch                      Informational                      [Page 1] | 
 | 59 |  | 
 | 60 | RFC 1952             GZIP File Format Specification             May 1996 | 
 | 61 |  | 
 | 62 |  | 
 | 63 | Table of Contents | 
 | 64 |  | 
 | 65 |    1. Introduction ................................................... 2 | 
 | 66 |       1.1. Purpose ................................................... 2 | 
 | 67 |       1.2. Intended audience ......................................... 3 | 
 | 68 |       1.3. Scope ..................................................... 3 | 
 | 69 |       1.4. Compliance ................................................ 3 | 
 | 70 |       1.5. Definitions of terms and conventions used ................. 3 | 
 | 71 |       1.6. Changes from previous versions ............................ 3 | 
 | 72 |    2. Detailed specification ......................................... 4 | 
 | 73 |       2.1. Overall conventions ....................................... 4 | 
 | 74 |       2.2. File format ............................................... 5 | 
 | 75 |       2.3. Member format ............................................. 5 | 
 | 76 |           2.3.1. Member header and trailer ........................... 6 | 
 | 77 |               2.3.1.1. Extra field ................................... 8 | 
 | 78 |               2.3.1.2. Compliance .................................... 9 | 
 | 79 |       3. References .................................................. 9 | 
 | 80 |       4. Security Considerations .................................... 10 | 
 | 81 |       5. Acknowledgements ........................................... 10 | 
 | 82 |       6. Author's Address ........................................... 10 | 
 | 83 |       7. Appendix: Jean-Loup Gailly's gzip utility .................. 11 | 
 | 84 |       8. Appendix: Sample CRC Code .................................. 11 | 
 | 85 |  | 
 | 86 | 1. Introduction | 
 | 87 |  | 
 | 88 |    1.1. Purpose | 
 | 89 |  | 
 | 90 |       The purpose of this specification is to define a lossless | 
 | 91 |       compressed data format that: | 
 | 92 |  | 
 | 93 |           * Is independent of CPU type, operating system, file system, | 
 | 94 |             and character set, and hence can be used for interchange; | 
 | 95 |           * Can compress or decompress a data stream (as opposed to a | 
 | 96 |             randomly accessible file) to produce another data stream, | 
 | 97 |             using only an a priori bounded amount of intermediate | 
 | 98 |             storage, and hence can be used in data communications or | 
 | 99 |             similar structures such as Unix filters; | 
 | 100 |           * Compresses data with efficiency comparable to the best | 
 | 101 |             currently available general-purpose compression methods, | 
 | 102 |             and in particular considerably better than the "compress" | 
 | 103 |             program; | 
 | 104 |           * Can be implemented readily in a manner not covered by | 
 | 105 |             patents, and hence can be practiced freely; | 
 | 106 |           * Is compatible with the file format produced by the current | 
 | 107 |             widely used gzip utility, in that conforming decompressors | 
 | 108 |             will be able to read data produced by the existing gzip | 
 | 109 |             compressor. | 
 | 110 |  | 
 | 111 |  | 
 | 112 |  | 
 | 113 |  | 
 | 114 | Deutsch                      Informational                      [Page 2] | 
 | 115 |  | 
 | 116 | RFC 1952             GZIP File Format Specification             May 1996 | 
 | 117 |  | 
 | 118 |  | 
 | 119 |       The data format defined by this specification does not attempt to: | 
 | 120 |  | 
 | 121 |           * Provide random access to compressed data; | 
 | 122 |           * Compress specialized data (e.g., raster graphics) as well as | 
 | 123 |             the best currently available specialized algorithms. | 
 | 124 |  | 
 | 125 |    1.2. Intended audience | 
 | 126 |  | 
 | 127 |       This specification is intended for use by implementors of software | 
 | 128 |       to compress data into gzip format and/or decompress data from gzip | 
 | 129 |       format. | 
 | 130 |  | 
 | 131 |       The text of the specification assumes a basic background in | 
 | 132 |       programming at the level of bits and other primitive data | 
 | 133 |       representations. | 
 | 134 |  | 
 | 135 |    1.3. Scope | 
 | 136 |  | 
 | 137 |       The specification specifies a compression method and a file format | 
 | 138 |       (the latter assuming only that a file can store a sequence of | 
 | 139 |       arbitrary bytes).  It does not specify any particular interface to | 
 | 140 |       a file system or anything about character sets or encodings | 
 | 141 |       (except for file names and comments, which are optional). | 
 | 142 |  | 
 | 143 |    1.4. Compliance | 
 | 144 |  | 
 | 145 |       Unless otherwise indicated below, a compliant decompressor must be | 
 | 146 |       able to accept and decompress any file that conforms to all the | 
 | 147 |       specifications presented here; a compliant compressor must produce | 
 | 148 |       files that conform to all the specifications presented here.  The | 
 | 149 |       material in the appendices is not part of the specification per se | 
 | 150 |       and is not relevant to compliance. | 
 | 151 |  | 
 | 152 |    1.5. Definitions of terms and conventions used | 
 | 153 |  | 
 | 154 |       byte: 8 bits stored or transmitted as a unit (same as an octet). | 
 | 155 |       (For this specification, a byte is exactly 8 bits, even on | 
 | 156 |       machines which store a character on a number of bits different | 
 | 157 |       from 8.)  See below for the numbering of bits within a byte. | 
 | 158 |  | 
 | 159 |    1.6. Changes from previous versions | 
 | 160 |  | 
 | 161 |       There have been no technical changes to the gzip format since | 
 | 162 |       version 4.1 of this specification.  In version 4.2, some | 
 | 163 |       terminology was changed, and the sample CRC code was rewritten for | 
 | 164 |       clarity and to eliminate the requirement for the caller to do pre- | 
 | 165 |       and post-conditioning.  Version 4.3 is a conversion of the | 
 | 166 |       specification to RFC style. | 
 | 167 |  | 
 | 168 |  | 
 | 169 |  | 
 | 170 | Deutsch                      Informational                      [Page 3] | 
 | 171 |  | 
 | 172 | RFC 1952             GZIP File Format Specification             May 1996 | 
 | 173 |  | 
 | 174 |  | 
 | 175 | 2. Detailed specification | 
 | 176 |  | 
 | 177 |    2.1. Overall conventions | 
 | 178 |  | 
 | 179 |       In the diagrams below, a box like this: | 
 | 180 |  | 
 | 181 |          +---+ | 
 | 182 |          |   | <-- the vertical bars might be missing | 
 | 183 |          +---+ | 
 | 184 |  | 
 | 185 |       represents one byte; a box like this: | 
 | 186 |  | 
 | 187 |          +==============+ | 
 | 188 |          |              | | 
 | 189 |          +==============+ | 
 | 190 |  | 
 | 191 |       represents a variable number of bytes. | 
 | 192 |  | 
 | 193 |       Bytes stored within a computer do not have a "bit order", since | 
 | 194 |       they are always treated as a unit.  However, a byte considered as | 
 | 195 |       an integer between 0 and 255 does have a most- and least- | 
 | 196 |       significant bit, and since we write numbers with the most- | 
 | 197 |       significant digit on the left, we also write bytes with the most- | 
 | 198 |       significant bit on the left.  In the diagrams below, we number the | 
 | 199 |       bits of a byte so that bit 0 is the least-significant bit, i.e., | 
 | 200 |       the bits are numbered: | 
 | 201 |  | 
 | 202 |          +--------+ | 
 | 203 |          |76543210| | 
 | 204 |          +--------+ | 
 | 205 |  | 
 | 206 |       This document does not address the issue of the order in which | 
 | 207 |       bits of a byte are transmitted on a bit-sequential medium, since | 
 | 208 |       the data format described here is byte- rather than bit-oriented. | 
 | 209 |  | 
 | 210 |       Within a computer, a number may occupy multiple bytes.  All | 
 | 211 |       multi-byte numbers in the format described here are stored with | 
 | 212 |       the least-significant byte first (at the lower memory address). | 
 | 213 |       For example, the decimal number 520 is stored as: | 
 | 214 |  | 
 | 215 |              0        1 | 
 | 216 |          +--------+--------+ | 
 | 217 |          |00001000|00000010| | 
 | 218 |          +--------+--------+ | 
 | 219 |           ^        ^ | 
 | 220 |           |        | | 
 | 221 |           |        + more significant byte = 2 x 256 | 
 | 222 |           + less significant byte = 8 | 
 | 223 |  | 
 | 224 |  | 
 | 225 |  | 
 | 226 | Deutsch                      Informational                      [Page 4] | 
 | 227 |  | 
 | 228 | RFC 1952             GZIP File Format Specification             May 1996 | 
 | 229 |  | 
 | 230 |  | 
 | 231 |    2.2. File format | 
 | 232 |  | 
 | 233 |       A gzip file consists of a series of "members" (compressed data | 
 | 234 |       sets).  The format of each member is specified in the following | 
 | 235 |       section.  The members simply appear one after another in the file, | 
 | 236 |       with no additional information before, between, or after them. | 
 | 237 |  | 
 | 238 |    2.3. Member format | 
 | 239 |  | 
 | 240 |       Each member has the following structure: | 
 | 241 |  | 
 | 242 |          +---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+ | 
 | 243 |          |ID1|ID2|CM |FLG|     MTIME     |XFL|OS | (more-->) | 
 | 244 |          +---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+ | 
 | 245 |  | 
 | 246 |       (if FLG.FEXTRA set) | 
 | 247 |  | 
 | 248 |          +---+---+=================================+ | 
 | 249 |          | XLEN  |...XLEN bytes of "extra field"...| (more-->) | 
 | 250 |          +---+---+=================================+ | 
 | 251 |  | 
 | 252 |       (if FLG.FNAME set) | 
 | 253 |  | 
 | 254 |          +=========================================+ | 
 | 255 |          |...original file name, zero-terminated...| (more-->) | 
 | 256 |          +=========================================+ | 
 | 257 |  | 
 | 258 |       (if FLG.FCOMMENT set) | 
 | 259 |  | 
 | 260 |          +===================================+ | 
 | 261 |          |...file comment, zero-terminated...| (more-->) | 
 | 262 |          +===================================+ | 
 | 263 |  | 
 | 264 |       (if FLG.FHCRC set) | 
 | 265 |  | 
 | 266 |          +---+---+ | 
 | 267 |          | CRC16 | | 
 | 268 |          +---+---+ | 
 | 269 |  | 
 | 270 |          +=======================+ | 
 | 271 |          |...compressed blocks...| (more-->) | 
 | 272 |          +=======================+ | 
 | 273 |  | 
 | 274 |            0   1   2   3   4   5   6   7 | 
 | 275 |          +---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+ | 
 | 276 |          |     CRC32     |     ISIZE     | | 
 | 277 |          +---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+ | 
 | 278 |  | 
 | 279 |  | 
 | 280 |  | 
 | 281 |  | 
 | 282 | Deutsch                      Informational                      [Page 5] | 
 | 283 |  | 
 | 284 | RFC 1952             GZIP File Format Specification             May 1996 | 
 | 285 |  | 
 | 286 |  | 
 | 287 |       2.3.1. Member header and trailer | 
 | 288 |  | 
 | 289 |          ID1 (IDentification 1) | 
 | 290 |          ID2 (IDentification 2) | 
 | 291 |             These have the fixed values ID1 = 31 (0x1f, \037), ID2 = 139 | 
 | 292 |             (0x8b, \213), to identify the file as being in gzip format. | 
 | 293 |  | 
 | 294 |          CM (Compression Method) | 
 | 295 |             This identifies the compression method used in the file.  CM | 
 | 296 |             = 0-7 are reserved.  CM = 8 denotes the "deflate" | 
 | 297 |             compression method, which is the one customarily used by | 
 | 298 |             gzip and which is documented elsewhere. | 
 | 299 |  | 
 | 300 |          FLG (FLaGs) | 
 | 301 |             This flag byte is divided into individual bits as follows: | 
 | 302 |  | 
 | 303 |                bit 0   FTEXT | 
 | 304 |                bit 1   FHCRC | 
 | 305 |                bit 2   FEXTRA | 
 | 306 |                bit 3   FNAME | 
 | 307 |                bit 4   FCOMMENT | 
 | 308 |                bit 5   reserved | 
 | 309 |                bit 6   reserved | 
 | 310 |                bit 7   reserved | 
 | 311 |  | 
 | 312 |             If FTEXT is set, the file is probably ASCII text.  This is | 
 | 313 |             an optional indication, which the compressor may set by | 
 | 314 |             checking a small amount of the input data to see whether any | 
 | 315 |             non-ASCII characters are present.  In case of doubt, FTEXT | 
 | 316 |             is cleared, indicating binary data. For systems which have | 
 | 317 |             different file formats for ascii text and binary data, the | 
 | 318 |             decompressor can use FTEXT to choose the appropriate format. | 
 | 319 |             We deliberately do not specify the algorithm used to set | 
 | 320 |             this bit, since a compressor always has the option of | 
 | 321 |             leaving it cleared and a decompressor always has the option | 
 | 322 |             of ignoring it and letting some other program handle issues | 
 | 323 |             of data conversion. | 
 | 324 |  | 
 | 325 |             If FHCRC is set, a CRC16 for the gzip header is present, | 
 | 326 |             immediately before the compressed data. The CRC16 consists | 
 | 327 |             of the two least significant bytes of the CRC32 for all | 
 | 328 |             bytes of the gzip header up to and not including the CRC16. | 
 | 329 |             [The FHCRC bit was never set by versions of gzip up to | 
 | 330 |             1.2.4, even though it was documented with a different | 
 | 331 |             meaning in gzip 1.2.4.] | 
 | 332 |  | 
 | 333 |             If FEXTRA is set, optional extra fields are present, as | 
 | 334 |             described in a following section. | 
 | 335 |  | 
 | 336 |  | 
 | 337 |  | 
 | 338 | Deutsch                      Informational                      [Page 6] | 
 | 339 |  | 
 | 340 | RFC 1952             GZIP File Format Specification             May 1996 | 
 | 341 |  | 
 | 342 |  | 
 | 343 |             If FNAME is set, an original file name is present, | 
 | 344 |             terminated by a zero byte.  The name must consist of ISO | 
 | 345 |             8859-1 (LATIN-1) characters; on operating systems using | 
 | 346 |             EBCDIC or any other character set for file names, the name | 
 | 347 |             must be translated to the ISO LATIN-1 character set.  This | 
 | 348 |             is the original name of the file being compressed, with any | 
 | 349 |             directory components removed, and, if the file being | 
 | 350 |             compressed is on a file system with case insensitive names, | 
 | 351 |             forced to lower case. There is no original file name if the | 
 | 352 |             data was compressed from a source other than a named file; | 
 | 353 |             for example, if the source was stdin on a Unix system, there | 
 | 354 |             is no file name. | 
 | 355 |  | 
 | 356 |             If FCOMMENT is set, a zero-terminated file comment is | 
 | 357 |             present.  This comment is not interpreted; it is only | 
 | 358 |             intended for human consumption.  The comment must consist of | 
 | 359 |             ISO 8859-1 (LATIN-1) characters.  Line breaks should be | 
 | 360 |             denoted by a single line feed character (10 decimal). | 
 | 361 |  | 
 | 362 |             Reserved FLG bits must be zero. | 
 | 363 |  | 
 | 364 |          MTIME (Modification TIME) | 
 | 365 |             This gives the most recent modification time of the original | 
 | 366 |             file being compressed.  The time is in Unix format, i.e., | 
 | 367 |             seconds since 00:00:00 GMT, Jan.  1, 1970.  (Note that this | 
 | 368 |             may cause problems for MS-DOS and other systems that use | 
 | 369 |             local rather than Universal time.)  If the compressed data | 
 | 370 |             did not come from a file, MTIME is set to the time at which | 
 | 371 |             compression started.  MTIME = 0 means no time stamp is | 
 | 372 |             available. | 
 | 373 |  | 
 | 374 |          XFL (eXtra FLags) | 
 | 375 |             These flags are available for use by specific compression | 
 | 376 |             methods.  The "deflate" method (CM = 8) sets these flags as | 
 | 377 |             follows: | 
 | 378 |  | 
 | 379 |                XFL = 2 - compressor used maximum compression, | 
 | 380 |                          slowest algorithm | 
 | 381 |                XFL = 4 - compressor used fastest algorithm | 
 | 382 |  | 
 | 383 |          OS (Operating System) | 
 | 384 |             This identifies the type of file system on which compression | 
 | 385 |             took place.  This may be useful in determining end-of-line | 
 | 386 |             convention for text files.  The currently defined values are | 
 | 387 |             as follows: | 
 | 388 |  | 
 | 389 |  | 
 | 390 |  | 
 | 391 |  | 
 | 392 |  | 
 | 393 |  | 
 | 394 | Deutsch                      Informational                      [Page 7] | 
 | 395 |  | 
 | 396 | RFC 1952             GZIP File Format Specification             May 1996 | 
 | 397 |  | 
 | 398 |  | 
 | 399 |                  0 - FAT filesystem (MS-DOS, OS/2, NT/Win32) | 
 | 400 |                  1 - Amiga | 
 | 401 |                  2 - VMS (or OpenVMS) | 
 | 402 |                  3 - Unix | 
 | 403 |                  4 - VM/CMS | 
 | 404 |                  5 - Atari TOS | 
 | 405 |                  6 - HPFS filesystem (OS/2, NT) | 
 | 406 |                  7 - Macintosh | 
 | 407 |                  8 - Z-System | 
 | 408 |                  9 - CP/M | 
 | 409 |                 10 - TOPS-20 | 
 | 410 |                 11 - NTFS filesystem (NT) | 
 | 411 |                 12 - QDOS | 
 | 412 |                 13 - Acorn RISCOS | 
 | 413 |                255 - unknown | 
 | 414 |  | 
 | 415 |          XLEN (eXtra LENgth) | 
 | 416 |             If FLG.FEXTRA is set, this gives the length of the optional | 
 | 417 |             extra field.  See below for details. | 
 | 418 |  | 
 | 419 |          CRC32 (CRC-32) | 
 | 420 |             This contains a Cyclic Redundancy Check value of the | 
 | 421 |             uncompressed data computed according to CRC-32 algorithm | 
 | 422 |             used in the ISO 3309 standard and in section 8.1.1.6.2 of | 
 | 423 |             ITU-T recommendation V.42.  (See http://www.iso.ch for | 
 | 424 |             ordering ISO documents. See gopher://info.itu.ch for an | 
 | 425 |             online version of ITU-T V.42.) | 
 | 426 |  | 
 | 427 |          ISIZE (Input SIZE) | 
 | 428 |             This contains the size of the original (uncompressed) input | 
 | 429 |             data modulo 2^32. | 
 | 430 |  | 
 | 431 |       2.3.1.1. Extra field | 
 | 432 |  | 
 | 433 |          If the FLG.FEXTRA bit is set, an "extra field" is present in | 
 | 434 |          the header, with total length XLEN bytes.  It consists of a | 
 | 435 |          series of subfields, each of the form: | 
 | 436 |  | 
 | 437 |             +---+---+---+---+==================================+ | 
 | 438 |             |SI1|SI2|  LEN  |... LEN bytes of subfield data ...| | 
 | 439 |             +---+---+---+---+==================================+ | 
 | 440 |  | 
 | 441 |          SI1 and SI2 provide a subfield ID, typically two ASCII letters | 
 | 442 |          with some mnemonic value.  Jean-Loup Gailly | 
 | 443 |          <gzip@prep.ai.mit.edu> is maintaining a registry of subfield | 
 | 444 |          IDs; please send him any subfield ID you wish to use.  Subfield | 
 | 445 |          IDs with SI2 = 0 are reserved for future use.  The following | 
 | 446 |          IDs are currently defined: | 
 | 447 |  | 
 | 448 |  | 
 | 449 |  | 
 | 450 | Deutsch                      Informational                      [Page 8] | 
 | 451 |  | 
 | 452 | RFC 1952             GZIP File Format Specification             May 1996 | 
 | 453 |  | 
 | 454 |  | 
 | 455 |             SI1         SI2         Data | 
 | 456 |             ----------  ----------  ---- | 
 | 457 |             0x41 ('A')  0x70 ('P')  Apollo file type information | 
 | 458 |  | 
 | 459 |          LEN gives the length of the subfield data, excluding the 4 | 
 | 460 |          initial bytes. | 
 | 461 |  | 
 | 462 |       2.3.1.2. Compliance | 
 | 463 |  | 
 | 464 |          A compliant compressor must produce files with correct ID1, | 
 | 465 |          ID2, CM, CRC32, and ISIZE, but may set all the other fields in | 
 | 466 |          the fixed-length part of the header to default values (255 for | 
 | 467 |          OS, 0 for all others).  The compressor must set all reserved | 
 | 468 |          bits to zero. | 
 | 469 |  | 
 | 470 |          A compliant decompressor must check ID1, ID2, and CM, and | 
 | 471 |          provide an error indication if any of these have incorrect | 
 | 472 |          values.  It must examine FEXTRA/XLEN, FNAME, FCOMMENT and FHCRC | 
 | 473 |          at least so it can skip over the optional fields if they are | 
 | 474 |          present.  It need not examine any other part of the header or | 
 | 475 |          trailer; in particular, a decompressor may ignore FTEXT and OS | 
 | 476 |          and always produce binary output, and still be compliant.  A | 
 | 477 |          compliant decompressor must give an error indication if any | 
 | 478 |          reserved bit is non-zero, since such a bit could indicate the | 
 | 479 |          presence of a new field that would cause subsequent data to be | 
 | 480 |          interpreted incorrectly. | 
 | 481 |  | 
 | 482 | 3. References | 
 | 483 |  | 
 | 484 |    [1] "Information Processing - 8-bit single-byte coded graphic | 
 | 485 |        character sets - Part 1: Latin alphabet No.1" (ISO 8859-1:1987). | 
 | 486 |        The ISO 8859-1 (Latin-1) character set is a superset of 7-bit | 
 | 487 |        ASCII. Files defining this character set are available as | 
 | 488 |        iso_8859-1.* in ftp://ftp.uu.net/graphics/png/documents/ | 
 | 489 |  | 
 | 490 |    [2] ISO 3309 | 
 | 491 |  | 
 | 492 |    [3] ITU-T recommendation V.42 | 
 | 493 |  | 
 | 494 |    [4] Deutsch, L.P.,"DEFLATE Compressed Data Format Specification", | 
 | 495 |        available in ftp://ftp.uu.net/pub/archiving/zip/doc/ | 
 | 496 |  | 
 | 497 |    [5] Gailly, J.-L., GZIP documentation, available as gzip-*.tar in | 
 | 498 |        ftp://prep.ai.mit.edu/pub/gnu/ | 
 | 499 |  | 
 | 500 |    [6] Sarwate, D.V., "Computation of Cyclic Redundancy Checks via Table | 
 | 501 |        Look-Up", Communications of the ACM, 31(8), pp.1008-1013. | 
 | 502 |  | 
 | 503 |  | 
 | 504 |  | 
 | 505 |  | 
 | 506 | Deutsch                      Informational                      [Page 9] | 
 | 507 |  | 
 | 508 | RFC 1952             GZIP File Format Specification             May 1996 | 
 | 509 |  | 
 | 510 |  | 
 | 511 |    [7] Schwaderer, W.D., "CRC Calculation", April 85 PC Tech Journal, | 
 | 512 |        pp.118-133. | 
 | 513 |  | 
 | 514 |    [8] ftp://ftp.adelaide.edu.au/pub/rocksoft/papers/crc_v3.txt, | 
 | 515 |        describing the CRC concept. | 
 | 516 |  | 
 | 517 | 4. Security Considerations | 
 | 518 |  | 
 | 519 |    Any data compression method involves the reduction of redundancy in | 
 | 520 |    the data.  Consequently, any corruption of the data is likely to have | 
 | 521 |    severe effects and be difficult to correct.  Uncompressed text, on | 
 | 522 |    the other hand, will probably still be readable despite the presence | 
 | 523 |    of some corrupted bytes. | 
 | 524 |  | 
 | 525 |    It is recommended that systems using this data format provide some | 
 | 526 |    means of validating the integrity of the compressed data, such as by | 
 | 527 |    setting and checking the CRC-32 check value. | 
 | 528 |  | 
 | 529 | 5. Acknowledgements | 
 | 530 |  | 
 | 531 |    Trademarks cited in this document are the property of their | 
 | 532 |    respective owners. | 
 | 533 |  | 
 | 534 |    Jean-Loup Gailly designed the gzip format and wrote, with Mark Adler, | 
 | 535 |    the related software described in this specification.  Glenn | 
 | 536 |    Randers-Pehrson converted this document to RFC and HTML format. | 
 | 537 |  | 
 | 538 | 6. Author's Address | 
 | 539 |  | 
 | 540 |    L. Peter Deutsch | 
 | 541 |    Aladdin Enterprises | 
 | 542 |    203 Santa Margarita Ave. | 
 | 543 |    Menlo Park, CA 94025 | 
 | 544 |  | 
 | 545 |    Phone: (415) 322-0103 (AM only) | 
 | 546 |    FAX:   (415) 322-1734 | 
 | 547 |    EMail: <ghost@aladdin.com> | 
 | 548 |  | 
 | 549 |    Questions about the technical content of this specification can be | 
 | 550 |    sent by email to: | 
 | 551 |  | 
 | 552 |    Jean-Loup Gailly <gzip@prep.ai.mit.edu> and | 
 | 553 |    Mark Adler <madler@alumni.caltech.edu> | 
 | 554 |  | 
 | 555 |    Editorial comments on this specification can be sent by email to: | 
 | 556 |  | 
 | 557 |    L. Peter Deutsch <ghost@aladdin.com> and | 
 | 558 |    Glenn Randers-Pehrson <randeg@alumni.rpi.edu> | 
 | 559 |  | 
 | 560 |  | 
 | 561 |  | 
 | 562 | Deutsch                      Informational                     [Page 10] | 
 | 563 |  | 
 | 564 | RFC 1952             GZIP File Format Specification             May 1996 | 
 | 565 |  | 
 | 566 |  | 
 | 567 | 7. Appendix: Jean-Loup Gailly's gzip utility | 
 | 568 |  | 
 | 569 |    The most widely used implementation of gzip compression, and the | 
 | 570 |    original documentation on which this specification is based, were | 
 | 571 |    created by Jean-Loup Gailly <gzip@prep.ai.mit.edu>.  Since this | 
 | 572 |    implementation is a de facto standard, we mention some more of its | 
 | 573 |    features here.  Again, the material in this section is not part of | 
 | 574 |    the specification per se, and implementations need not follow it to | 
 | 575 |    be compliant. | 
 | 576 |  | 
 | 577 |    When compressing or decompressing a file, gzip preserves the | 
 | 578 |    protection, ownership, and modification time attributes on the local | 
 | 579 |    file system, since there is no provision for representing protection | 
 | 580 |    attributes in the gzip file format itself.  Since the file format | 
 | 581 |    includes a modification time, the gzip decompressor provides a | 
 | 582 |    command line switch that assigns the modification time from the file, | 
 | 583 |    rather than the local modification time of the compressed input, to | 
 | 584 |    the decompressed output. | 
 | 585 |  | 
 | 586 | 8. Appendix: Sample CRC Code | 
 | 587 |  | 
 | 588 |    The following sample code represents a practical implementation of | 
 | 589 |    the CRC (Cyclic Redundancy Check). (See also ISO 3309 and ITU-T V.42 | 
 | 590 |    for a formal specification.) | 
 | 591 |  | 
 | 592 |    The sample code is in the ANSI C programming language. Non C users | 
 | 593 |    may find it easier to read with these hints: | 
 | 594 |  | 
 | 595 |       &      Bitwise AND operator. | 
 | 596 |       ^      Bitwise exclusive-OR operator. | 
 | 597 |       >>     Bitwise right shift operator. When applied to an | 
 | 598 |              unsigned quantity, as here, right shift inserts zero | 
 | 599 |              bit(s) at the left. | 
 | 600 |       !      Logical NOT operator. | 
 | 601 |       ++     "n++" increments the variable n. | 
 | 602 |       0xNNN  0x introduces a hexadecimal (base 16) constant. | 
 | 603 |              Suffix L indicates a long value (at least 32 bits). | 
 | 604 |  | 
 | 605 |       /* Table of CRCs of all 8-bit messages. */ | 
 | 606 |       unsigned long crc_table[256]; | 
 | 607 |  | 
 | 608 |       /* Flag: has the table been computed? Initially false. */ | 
 | 609 |       int crc_table_computed = 0; | 
 | 610 |  | 
 | 611 |       /* Make the table for a fast CRC. */ | 
 | 612 |       void make_crc_table(void) | 
 | 613 |       { | 
 | 614 |         unsigned long c; | 
 | 615 |  | 
 | 616 |  | 
 | 617 |  | 
 | 618 | Deutsch                      Informational                     [Page 11] | 
 | 619 |  | 
 | 620 | RFC 1952             GZIP File Format Specification             May 1996 | 
 | 621 |  | 
 | 622 |  | 
 | 623 |         int n, k; | 
 | 624 |         for (n = 0; n < 256; n++) { | 
 | 625 |           c = (unsigned long) n; | 
 | 626 |           for (k = 0; k < 8; k++) { | 
 | 627 |             if (c & 1) { | 
 | 628 |               c = 0xedb88320L ^ (c >> 1); | 
 | 629 |             } else { | 
 | 630 |               c = c >> 1; | 
 | 631 |             } | 
 | 632 |           } | 
 | 633 |           crc_table[n] = c; | 
 | 634 |         } | 
 | 635 |         crc_table_computed = 1; | 
 | 636 |       } | 
 | 637 |  | 
 | 638 |       /* | 
 | 639 |          Update a running crc with the bytes buf[0..len-1] and return | 
 | 640 |        the updated crc. The crc should be initialized to zero. Pre- and | 
 | 641 |        post-conditioning (one's complement) is performed within this | 
 | 642 |        function so it shouldn't be done by the caller. Usage example: | 
 | 643 |  | 
 | 644 |          unsigned long crc = 0L; | 
 | 645 |  | 
 | 646 |          while (read_buffer(buffer, length) != EOF) { | 
 | 647 |            crc = update_crc(crc, buffer, length); | 
 | 648 |          } | 
 | 649 |          if (crc != original_crc) error(); | 
 | 650 |       */ | 
 | 651 |       unsigned long update_crc(unsigned long crc, | 
 | 652 |                       unsigned char *buf, int len) | 
 | 653 |       { | 
 | 654 |         unsigned long c = crc ^ 0xffffffffL; | 
 | 655 |         int n; | 
 | 656 |  | 
 | 657 |         if (!crc_table_computed) | 
 | 658 |           make_crc_table(); | 
 | 659 |         for (n = 0; n < len; n++) { | 
 | 660 |           c = crc_table[(c ^ buf[n]) & 0xff] ^ (c >> 8); | 
 | 661 |         } | 
 | 662 |         return c ^ 0xffffffffL; | 
 | 663 |       } | 
 | 664 |  | 
 | 665 |       /* Return the CRC of the bytes buf[0..len-1]. */ | 
 | 666 |       unsigned long crc(unsigned char *buf, int len) | 
 | 667 |       { | 
 | 668 |         return update_crc(0L, buf, len); | 
 | 669 |       } | 
 | 670 |  | 
 | 671 |  | 
 | 672 |  | 
 | 673 |  | 
 | 674 | Deutsch                      Informational                     [Page 12] | 
 | 675 |  |