4 * XPRESS decompression routines.
9 * Copyright (C) 2012, 2013 Eric Biggers
11 * This file is part of wimlib, a library for working with WIM files.
13 * wimlib is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the
14 * terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free
15 * Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your option)
18 * wimlib is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
19 * WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR
20 * A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more
23 * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
24 * along with wimlib; if not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.
29 * The XPRESS compression format is an LZ77 and Huffman-code based algorithm.
30 * That means it is fairly similar to LZX compression, but XPRESS is simpler, so
31 * it is a little faster to compress and decompress.
33 * The XPRESS compression format is mostly documented in a file called "[MS-XCA]
34 * Xpress Compression Algorithm". In the MSDN library, it can currently be
35 * found under Open Specifications => Protocols => Windows Protocols => Windows
36 * Server Protocols => [MS-XCA] Xpress Compression Algorithm". The format in
37 * WIMs is specifically the algorithm labeled as the "LZ77+Huffman Algorithm"
38 * (there apparently are some other versions of XPRESS as well).
40 * If you are already familiar with the LZ77 algorithm and Huffman coding, the
41 * XPRESS format is fairly simple. The compressed data begins with 256 bytes
42 * that contain 512 4-bit integers that are the lengths of the symbols in the
43 * Huffman code used for match/literal headers. In contrast with more
44 * complicated formats such as DEFLATE and LZX, this is the only Huffman code
45 * that is used for the entirety of the XPRESS compressed data, and the codeword
46 * lengths are not encoded with a pretree.
48 * The rest of the compressed data is Huffman-encoded symbols. Values 0 through
49 * 255 represent the corresponding literal bytes. Values 256 through 511
50 * represent matches and may require extra bits or bytes to be read to get the
51 * match offset and match length.
53 * The trickiest part is probably the way in which literal bytes for match
54 * lengths are interleaved in the bitstream.
56 * Also, a caveat--- according to Microsoft's documentation for XPRESS,
58 * "Some implementation of the decompression algorithm expect an extra
59 * symbol to mark the end of the data. Specifically, some implementations
60 * fail during decompression if the Huffman symbol 256 is not found after
63 * This is the case for the implementation in WIMGAPI. However, wimlib's
64 * decompressor in this file currently does not care if this extra symbol is
73 #include "wimlib/decompressor_ops.h"
74 #include "wimlib/decompress_common.h"
75 #include "wimlib/xpress.h"
78 * Decodes a symbol @sym that begins an XPRESS match.
80 * The low 8 bits of the symbol are divided into:
82 * bits 0-3: length header
83 * bits 4-7: index of high-order bit of match offset
85 * Returns the match length, or -1 if the data is invalid.
88 xpress_decode_match(unsigned sym, input_idx_t window_pos,
89 input_idx_t window_len, u8 window[restrict],
90 struct input_bitstream * restrict istream)
99 unsigned match_offset;
101 sym -= XPRESS_NUM_CHARS;
103 offset_bsr = sym >> 4;
105 bitstream_ensure_bits(istream, 16);
107 match_offset = (1U << offset_bsr) | bitstream_pop_bits(istream, offset_bsr);
109 if (len_hdr == 0xf) {
110 match_len = bitstream_read_byte(istream);
111 if (unlikely(match_len == 0xff)) {
112 match_len = bitstream_read_byte(istream);
113 match_len |= (unsigned)bitstream_read_byte(istream) << 8;
120 match_len += XPRESS_MIN_MATCH_LEN;
123 /* Verify the match is in bounds, then copy its data to the current
126 if (window_pos + match_len > window_len)
129 if (match_offset > window_pos)
132 match_dest = window + window_pos;
133 match_src = match_dest - match_offset;
135 for (i = 0; i < match_len; i++)
136 match_dest[i] = match_src[i];
141 /* Decodes the Huffman-encoded matches and literal bytes in a region of
142 * XPRESS-encoded data. */
144 xpress_lz_decode(struct input_bitstream * restrict istream,
145 u8 uncompressed_data[restrict],
146 unsigned uncompressed_len,
147 const u16 decode_table[restrict])
152 for (curpos = 0; curpos < uncompressed_len; curpos += match_len) {
156 bitstream_ensure_bits(istream, 16);
158 sym = read_huffsym(istream, decode_table,
159 XPRESS_TABLEBITS, XPRESS_MAX_CODEWORD_LEN);
160 if (sym < XPRESS_NUM_CHARS) {
162 uncompressed_data[curpos] = sym;
166 ret = xpress_decode_match(sym,
171 if (unlikely(ret < 0))
181 xpress_decompress(const void *compressed_data, size_t compressed_size,
182 void *uncompressed_data, size_t uncompressed_size, void *_ctx)
184 const u8 *cdata = compressed_data;
185 u8 lens[XPRESS_NUM_SYMBOLS];
187 u16 decode_table[(1 << XPRESS_TABLEBITS) + 2 * XPRESS_NUM_SYMBOLS]
188 _aligned_attribute(DECODE_TABLE_ALIGNMENT);
189 struct input_bitstream istream;
191 /* XPRESS uses only one Huffman code. It contains 512 symbols, and the
192 * code lengths of these symbols are given literally as 4-bit integers
193 * in the first 256 bytes of the compressed data. */
194 if (compressed_size < XPRESS_NUM_SYMBOLS / 2)
198 for (unsigned i = 0; i < XPRESS_NUM_SYMBOLS / 2; i++) {
199 *lens_p++ = cdata[i] & 0xf;
200 *lens_p++ = cdata[i] >> 4;
203 if (make_huffman_decode_table(decode_table, XPRESS_NUM_SYMBOLS,
204 XPRESS_TABLEBITS, lens,
205 XPRESS_MAX_CODEWORD_LEN))
208 init_input_bitstream(&istream, cdata + XPRESS_NUM_SYMBOLS / 2,
209 compressed_size - XPRESS_NUM_SYMBOLS / 2);
211 return xpress_lz_decode(&istream, uncompressed_data,
212 uncompressed_size, decode_table);
215 const struct decompressor_ops xpress_decompressor_ops = {
216 .decompress = xpress_decompress,