XZ
From Just Solve the File Format Problem
(Difference between revisions)
(→Software) |
|||
Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
|mimetypes={{mimetype|application/x-xz}} | |mimetypes={{mimetype|application/x-xz}} | ||
}} | }} | ||
− | + | '''XZ''' is a stream compression format with built-in integrity checks. It uses [[LZMA2]] compression. Compressed streams are able to be concatenated and still be decompressible like a single-stream file. | |
− | '''XZ''' is a stream compression format with built-in integrity checks. Compressed streams are able to be concatenated and still be decompressible like a single-stream file. | + | |
XZ files always have lengths that are multiples of 4 bytes, and they begin with a 6-byte "magic" sequence of (hex) FD 37 7A 58 5A 00 and end with footer "magic bytes" of 59 5A. (The ending bytes can be verified as a sign that the file has not been truncated in transmission.) | XZ files always have lengths that are multiples of 4 bytes, and they begin with a 6-byte "magic" sequence of (hex) FD 37 7A 58 5A 00 and end with footer "magic bytes" of 59 5A. (The ending bytes can be verified as a sign that the file has not been truncated in transmission.) |
Revision as of 00:48, 24 July 2013
XZ is a stream compression format with built-in integrity checks. It uses LZMA2 compression. Compressed streams are able to be concatenated and still be decompressible like a single-stream file.
XZ files always have lengths that are multiples of 4 bytes, and they begin with a 6-byte "magic" sequence of (hex) FD 37 7A 58 5A 00 and end with footer "magic bytes" of 59 5A. (The ending bytes can be verified as a sign that the file has not been truncated in transmission.)
Software
References
- Current spec
- Official site (has historical specs with other info)
- Wikipedia article