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Google Snappy, available at https://google.github.io/snappy/ is a compression library designed for speed rather than compression ratios. It is not a new concept by far. The Linux kernel currently uses LZO as the default fast compressor. Snappy works faster, though achieves less compression. Google's code is written in C with a lot of C++. Some of the more interesting features that rely on C++ appear to have been elided from the open source version of Snappy. Goals: To get the codebase into a shape that can be accepted into the mainline Linux kernel and used with zram (http://code.google.com/p/compcache/). Being able to compress vmlinux and initrd with Snappy is a secondary goal. Same for support in Squashfs and other parts of the kernel that currently support LZO. Results: I cut out or ported to plain ANSI C the necessary code and headers. To cause less confusion, I call this project (and files) csnappy. The API looks right, but I welcome comments. The code *has* been tested in kernel-space using a patched zram and it works. The code has been tested in a qemu emulating a PowerPC Mac and ARMv5TE running Debian Wheezy. I also use an ARMv6 Android phone for testing. Testing on other hardware or platforms is welcome. Note: The userspace tester is a hack, as is the shared library. Someone wrote a perl wrapper for csnappy: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Compress-Snappy/ https://github.com/gray/compress-snappy Patch for upstream snappy tester is available: snappy_tester.patch Patch for linux kernel is available: kernel_3_2_10.patch Benchmark in userspace: userspace_benchmark.txt Benchmark in kernel space with zram: zram_benchmark.txt
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Google snappy in C for Linux Kernel
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