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xz man page updates.

- Concatenating .xz files and padding
- List mode
- Robot mode
- A few examples (but many more are needed)
This commit is contained in:
Lasse Collin 2010-06-01 16:02:30 +03:00
parent ce6dc3c0a8
commit e243145c84

View file

@ -5,7 +5,7 @@
.\" This file has been put into the public domain.
.\" You can do whatever you want with this file.
.\"
.TH XZ 1 "2010-03-07" "Tukaani" "XZ Utils"
.TH XZ 1 "2010-06-01" "Tukaani" "XZ Utils"
.SH NAME
xz, unxz, xzcat, lzma, unlzma, lzcat \- Compress or decompress .xz and .lzma files
.SH SYNOPSIS
@ -232,6 +232,24 @@ or near the bottom of the output of
.BR \-\-long\-help .
The default limit can be overridden with
\fB\-\-memory=\fIlimit\fR.
.SS Concatenation and padding with .xz files
It is possible to concatenate
.B .xz
files as is.
.B xz
will decompress such files as if they were a single
.B .xz
file.
.PP
It is possible to insert padding between the concenated parts
or after the last part. The padding must be null bytes and the size
of the padding must be a multiple of four bytes. This can be useful
if the .xz file is stored on a medium that stores file sizes
e.g. as 512-byte blocks.
.PP
Concatenation and padding are not allowed with
.B .lzma
files or raw streams.
.SH OPTIONS
.SS "Integer suffixes and special values"
In most places where an integer argument is expected, an optional suffix
@ -295,12 +313,29 @@ except that the decompressed data is discarded instead of being
written to standard output.
.TP
.BR \-l ", " \-\-list
View information about the compressed files. No uncompressed output is
produced, and no files are created or removed. In list mode, the program
cannot read the compressed data from standard input or from other
unseekable sources.
List information about compressed
.IR files .
No uncompressed output is produced, and no files are created or removed.
In list mode, the program cannot read the compressed data from standard
input or from other unseekable sources.
.IP
.B "This feature has not been implemented yet."
The default listing shows basic information about
.IR files ,
one file per line. To get more detailed information, use also the
.B \-\-verbose
option. For even more information, use
.B \-\-verbose
twice, but note that it may be slow, because getting all the extra
information requires many seeks. The width of verbose output exceeds
80 characters, so piping the output to e.g.
.B "less\ \-S"
may be convenient if the terminal isn't wide enough.
.IP
The exact output may vary between
.B xz
versions and different locales. To get machine-readable output,
.B \-\-robot \-\-list
should be used.
.SS "Operation modifiers"
.TP
.BR \-k ", " \-\-keep
@ -1085,14 +1120,9 @@ writing frontends that want to use
instead of liblzma, which may be the case with various scripts. The output
with this option enabled is meant to be stable across
.B xz
releases. Currently
.B \-\-robot
is implemented only for
.B \-\-info\-memory
and
.BR \-\-version ,
but the idea is to make it usable for actual compression
and decompression too.
releases. See the section
.B "ROBOT MODE"
for details.
.TP
.BR \-\-info-memory
Display the current memory usage limit in human-readable format on
@ -1100,11 +1130,6 @@ a single line, and exit successfully. To see how much RAM
.B xz
thinks your system has, use
.BR "\-\-memory=100% \-\-info\-memory" .
To get machine-parsable output
(memory usage limit as bytes without thousand separators), specify
.B \-\-robot
before
.BR \-\-info-memory .
.TP
.BR \-h ", " \-\-help
Display a help message describing the most commonly used options,
@ -1122,6 +1147,291 @@ and liblzma in human readable format. To get machine-parsable output, specify
.B \-\-robot
before
.BR \-\-version .
.SH ROBOT MODE
The robot mode is activated with the
.B \-\-robot
option. It makes the output of
.B xz
easier to parse by other programs. Currently
.B \-\-robot
is supported only together with
.BR \-\-version ,
.BR \-\-info-memory ,
and
.BR \-\-list .
It will be supported for normal compression and decompression in the future.
.PP
.SS Version
.B "xz \-\-robot \-\-version"
will print the version number of
.B xz
and liblzma in the following format:
.PP
.BI XZ_VERSION= XYYYZZZS
.br
.BI LIBLZMA_VERSION= XYYYZZZS
.TP
.I X
Major version.
.TP
.I YYY
Minor version. Even numbers are stable.
Odd numbers are alpha or beta versions.
.TP
.I ZZZ
Patch level for stable releases or just a counter for development releases.
.TP
.I S
Stability.
.B 0
is alpha,
.B 1
is beta, and
.B 2
is stable.
.I S
should be always
.B 2
when
.I YYY
is even.
.PP
.I XYYYZZZS
are the same on both lines if
.B xz
and liblzma are from the same XZ Utils release.
.PP
Examples: 4.999.9beta is
.B 49990091
and
5.0.0 is
.BR 50000002 .
.SS Memory limit information
.B "xz \-\-robot \-\-info-memory"
prints the current memory usage limit as bytes on a single line.
To get the total amount of installed RAM, use
.BR "xz \-\-robot \-\-memory=100% \-\-info-memory" .
.SS List mode
.B "xz \-\-robot \-\-list"
uses tab-separated output. The first column of every line has a string
that indicates the type of the information found on that line:
.TP
.B name
This is always the first line when starting to list a file. The second
column on the line is the filename.
.TP
.B file
This line contains overall information about the
.B .xz
file. This line is always printed after the
.B name
line.
.TP
.B stream
This line type is used only when
.B \-\-verbose
was specified. There are as many
.B stream
lines as there are streams in the
.B .xz
file.
.TP
.B block
This line type is used only when
.B \-\-verbose
was specified. There are as many
.B block
lines as there are blocks in the
.B .xz
file. The
.B block
lines are shown after all the
.B stream
lines; different line types are not interleaved.
.TP
.B summary
This line type is used only when
.B \-\-verbose
was specified twice. This line is printed after all
.B block
lines. Like the
.B file
line, the
.B summary
line contains overall information about the
.B .xz
file.
.TP
.B totals
This line is always the very last line of the list output. It shows
the total counts and sizes.
.PP
The columns of the
.B file
lines:
.RS
.IP 2. 4
Number of streams in the file
.IP 3. 4
Total number of blocks in the stream(s)
.IP 4. 4
Compressed size of the file
.IP 5. 4
Uncompressed size of the file
.IP 6. 4
Compression ratio, for example
.BR 0.123.
If ratio is over 9.999, three dashes
.RB ( \-\-\- )
are displayed instead of the ratio.
.IP 7. 4
Comma-separated list of integrity check names. The following strings are
used for the known check types:
.BR None ,
.BR CRC32 ,
.BR CRC64 ,
and
.BR SHA\-256 .
For unknown check types,
.BI Unknown\- N
is used, where
.I N
is the Check ID as a decimal number (one or two digits).
.IP 8. 4
Total size of stream padding in the file
.RE
.PP
The columns of the
.B stream
lines:
.RS
.IP 2. 4
Stream number (the first stream is 1)
.IP 3. 4
Number of blocks in the stream
.IP 4. 4
Compressed start offset
.IP 5. 4
Uncompressed start offset
.IP 6. 4
Compressed size (does not include stream padding)
.IP 7. 4
Uncompressed size
.IP 8. 4
Compression ratio
.IP 9. 4
Name of the integrity check
.IP 10. 4
Size of stream padding
.RE
.PP
The columns of the
.B block
lines:
.RS
.IP 2. 4
Number of the stream containing this block
.IP 3. 4
Block number relative to the beginning of the stream (the first block is 1)
.IP 4. 4
Block number relative to the beginning of the file
.IP 5. 4
Compressed start offset relative to the beginning of the file
.IP 6. 4
Uncompressed start offset relative to the beginning of the file
.IP 7. 4
Total compressed size of the block (includes headers)
.IP 8. 4
Uncompressed size
.IP 9. 4
Compression ratio
.IP 10. 4
Name of the integrity check
.RE
.PP
If
.B \-\-verbose
was specified twice, additional columns are included on the
.B block
lines. These are not displayed with a single
.BR \-\-verbose ,
because getting this information requires many seeks and can thus be slow:
.RS
.IP 11. 4
Value of the integrity check in hexadecimal
.IP 12. 4
Block header size
.IP 13. 4
Block flags:
.B c
indicates that compressed size is present, and
.B u
indicates that uncompressed size is present.
If the flag is not set, a dash
.RB ( \- )
is shown instead to keep the string length fixed. New flags may be added
to the end of the string in the future.
.IP 14. 4
Size of the actual compressed data in the block (this excludes
the block header, block padding, and check fields)
.IP 15. 4
Amount of memory (as bytes) required to decompress this block with this
.B xz
version
.IP 16. 4
Filter chain. Note that most of the options used at compression time cannot
be known, because only the options that are needed for decompression are
stored in the
.B .xz
headers.
.RE
.PP
The columns of the
.B totals
line:
.RS
.IP 2. 4
Number of streams
.IP 3. 4
Number of blocks
.IP 4. 4
Compressed size
.IP 5. 4
Uncompressed size
.IP 6. 4
Average compression ratio
.IP 7. 4
Comma-separated list of integrity check names that were present in the files
.IP 8. 4
Stream padding size
.IP 9. 4
Number of files. This is here to keep the order of the earlier columns
the same as on
.B file
lines.
.RE
.PP
If
.B \-\-verbose
was specified twice, additional columns are included on the
.B totals
line:
.RS
.IP 10. 4
Maximum amount of memory (as bytes) required to decompress the files
with this
.B xz
version
.IP 11. 4
.B yes
or
.B no
indicating if all block headers have both compressed size and
uncompressed size stored in them
.RE
.PP
Future versions may add new line types and new columns can be added to
the existing line types, but the existing columns won't be changed.
.SH "EXIT STATUS"
.TP
.B 0
@ -1339,6 +1649,43 @@ integrity check if the particular
is not supported.
.PP
XZ Embedded supports BCJ filters, but only with the default start offset.
.SH EXAMPLES
.SS Basics
A mix of compressed and uncompressed files can be decompressed
to standard output with a single command:
.IP
.B "xz -dcf a.txt b.txt.xz c.txt d.txt.xz > abcd.txt"
.SS Parallel compression of many files
On GNU and *BSD,
.BR find (1)
and
.BR xargs (1)
can be used to parallellize compression of many files:
.PP
.IP
.B "find . \-type f \e! \-name '*.xz' \-print0 | xargs \-0r \-P4 \-n16 xz"
.PP
The
.B \-P
option sets the number of parallel
.B xz
processes. The best value for the
.B \-n
option depends on how many files there are to be compressed.
If there are only a couple of files, the value should probably be
.BR 1 ;
with tens of thousands of files,
.B 100
or even more may be appropriate to reduce the number of
.B xz
processes that
.BR xargs (1)
will eventually create.
.SS Robot mode examples
Calculating how many bytes have been saved in total after compressing
multiple files:
.IP
.B "xz --robot --list *.xz | awk '/^totals/{print $5\-$4}'"
.SH "SEE ALSO"
.BR xzdec (1),
.BR gzip (1),