This allows deflate to generate the same output when continuing after
a Z_SYNC_FLUSH vs. using deflateSetDictionary() after a Z_FULL_FLUSH
or a deflateReset(). It also slightly improves compression when
flushing by providing two more strings to possibly match at the start
of the new block.
Previously, the bit buffer would hold 1 to 16 bits after "all" of the
output is provided after a Z_BLOCK deflate() call. Now at most seven
bits remain in the output buffer after Z_BLOCK. flush_pending() now
flushes the bit buffer before copying out the byte buffer, in order
for it to really flush as much as possible.
Previously when doing an empty flush, a extra static or stored block
could be emitted before the requested empty static or stored block.
This patch prevents the emission of empty blocks by the deflate_*
functions.
The incorporation of the Z_BLOCK flush did not update the rejection
of lower ranked flushes immediately after higher ranked flushes with
no more input data. This prevented an empty Z_SYNC_FLUSH right after
a Z_BLOCK flush, which would be desired to bring the deflate stream
to a byte boundary conditionally on whether or not it was already at
a byte boundary. This patch re-ranks Z_BLOCK above Z_NO_FLUSH but
below Z_PARTIAL_FLUSH, allowing stronger empty flushes to follow a
Z_BLOCK flush.
This patch adds the deflateResetKeep() function to retain the sliding
window for the next deflate operation, and fixes an inflateResetKeep()
problem that came from inflate() not updating the window when the
stream completed. This enables constructing and decompressing a series
of concatenated deflate streams where each can depend on the history of
uncompressed data that precedes it.
This generalizes deflateSetDictionary() and inflateSetDictionary() to
permit setting the dictionary in the middle of a stream for raw deflate
and inflate. This in combination with the Keep functions enables a
scheme for updating files block by block with the transmission of
compressed data, where blocks are sent with deflateResetKeep() to
retain history for better compression, and deflateSetDictionary() is
used for blocks already present at the receiver to skip compression but
insert that data in the history, again for better compression. The
corresponding inflate calls are done on the receiver side.
A common request has been the ability to compile zlib to require no
other libraries. This --solo option provides that ability. The price
is that the gz*, compress*, and uncompress functions are eliminated,
and that the user must provide memory allocation and free routines to
deflate and inflate when initializing.
Without this, Z_RLE could under some circumstances read one byte past
the end of the allocated sliding window. This would normally not be a
problem unless the window is right at the end of an allocated page, or
if a bounds checker is being used.
Also added "-motley" to ZLIB_VERSION in zlib.h, so that versions
in-between 1.2.5.1 and 1.2.5.2 that are pulled down from github
can be identified as such if bugs are reported on them.