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A JavaScript implementation of the Lempel-Ziv-Markov chain (LZMA) compression algorithm

Package Exports

  • lzma/src/lzma-c
  • lzma/src/lzma-d
  • lzma/src/lzma-d-min
  • lzma/src/lzma_worker
  • lzma/src/lzma_worker-min

This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (lzma) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.

Readme

LZMA in a Browser

LZMA-JS is a JavaScript implementation of the Lempel-Ziv-Markov chain (LZMA) compression algorithm.

What's New in 2.0

Two things: speed & size.

LZMA-JS 2.0 now minifies to almost half of 1.x and in some cases is 1,000x faster (particularly with high compression).

It is also more modular. The compression and decompression algorithms can be optionally separated to shrink the file size even more.

Here are some file size stats:

Filename Method(s) Minified Gzipped
lzma_worker.js both 29.3 KB 11.2 KB
lzma-c.js compression 22.7 KB 9.0 KB
lzma-d.js decompression 10.5 KB 4.3 KB

Demos

Live demos can be found here.

How to Use

First, load the bootstrapping code.

/// In a browser:
<script src="../src/lzma.js"></script>

Create the LZMA object.

/// LZMA([optional path])
/// If lzma_worker.js is in the same directory, you don't need to set the path.
var my_lzma = new LZMA("../src/lzma_worker.js");

(De)Compress stuff.

/// To compress:
///NOTE: mode can be 1-9 (1 is fast and pretty good; 9 is very slow and probably a bit better).
///      I suggest keeping mode low, like 1-3.
///      And by the way, 9 is not always the smallest.
my_lzma.compress(string, mode, on_finish(result) {}, on_progress(percent) {});

/// To decompress:
my_lzma.decompress(byte_array, on_finish(result) {}, on_progress(percent) {});

Node.js

LZMA-JS is available in the npm repository.

$ npm install lzma

It can be loaded with the following code:

var my_lzma = require("lzma");

Notes

The calls to compress() and decompress() are asynchronous, so you need to supply a callback function if you want to use the (de)compressed data.

If the decompression progress is unable to be calculated, the on_progress() function will be triggered once with the value -1.

LZMA-JS will try to use Web Workers if they are available. If the environment does not support Web Workers, it will just do something else, and it won't pollute the global scope.

LZMA-JS was originally based on gwt-lzma, which is a port of the LZMA SDK from Java into JavaScript.

But I don't want to use Web Workers

If you'd prefer not to bother with Web Workers, you can just include lzma_worker.js directly. For example:

<script src="../src/lzma_worker.js"></script>

That will create a global LZMA object that you can use directly. Like this:

LZMA.compress(string, mode, on_finish(result) {}, on_progress(percent) {});

LZMA.decompress(byte_array, on_finish(result) {}, on_progress(percent) {});

Note that this LZMA variable is an object, not a function.

In Node.js, the Web Worker code is already skipped, so there's no need to do this.

And if you only need to compress or decompress and you're looking to save some bytes, instead of loading lzma_worker.js, you can simply load lzma-c.js (for compression) or lzma-d.js (for decompression).

Of course, you'll want to load the minified versions if you're sending data over the wire.

License

MIT