diff --git a/README b/README index 276a6977..1b02f05e 100644 --- a/README +++ b/README @@ -109,8 +109,8 @@ XZ Utils written yet. For now, if you have never used liblzma, libbzip2, or zlib, I - recommend learning the *basics* of the zlib API. Once you know that, it - should be easier to learn liblzma. + recommend learning the *basics* of the zlib API. Once you know that, + it should be easier to learn liblzma. http://zlib.net/manual.html http://zlib.net/zlib_how.html @@ -124,10 +124,10 @@ XZ Utils - X is the major version. When this is incremented, the library API and ABI break. - - Y is the minor version. It is incremented when new features are - added without breaking the existing API or ABI. An even Y indicates - a stable release and an odd Y indicates unstable (alpha or beta - version). + - Y is the minor version. It is incremented when new features + are added without breaking the existing API or ABI. An even Y + indicates a stable release and an odd Y indicates unstable + (alpha or beta version). - Z is the revision. This has a different meaning for stable and unstable releases: diff --git a/doc/history.txt b/doc/history.txt index 9d3c6032..8545e232 100644 --- a/doc/history.txt +++ b/doc/history.txt @@ -4,12 +4,12 @@ History of LZMA Utils and XZ Utils Tukaani distribution - In 2005, there was a small group working on the Tukaani distribution, which - was a Slackware fork. One of the project's goals was to fit the distro on - a single 700 MiB ISO-9660 image. Using LZMA instead of gzip helped a - lot. Roughly speaking, one could fit data that took 1000 MiB in gzipped - form into 700 MiB with LZMA. Naturally, the compression ratio varied across - packages, but this was what we got on average. + In 2005, there was a small group working on the Tukaani distribution, + which was a Slackware fork. One of the project's goals was to fit the + distro on a single 700 MiB ISO-9660 image. Using LZMA instead of gzip + helped a lot. Roughly speaking, one could fit data that took 1000 MiB + in gzipped form into 700 MiB with LZMA. Naturally, the compression + ratio varied across packages, but this was what we got on average. Slackware packages have traditionally had .tgz as the filename suffix, which is an abbreviation of .tar.gz. A logical naming for LZMA @@ -50,9 +50,9 @@ Second generation LZMA Utils 4.32.0beta1 introduced a new lzma command-line tool written by Ville Koskinen. It was written in C++, and used the encoder and - decoder from C++ LZMA SDK with some little modifications. This tool replaced - both the lzmash script and the LZMA_Alone command-line tool in LZMA - Utils. + decoder from C++ LZMA SDK with some little modifications. This tool + replaced both the lzmash script and the LZMA_Alone command-line tool + in LZMA Utils. Introducing this new tool caused some temporary incompatibilities, because the LZMA_Alone executable was simply named lzma like the new @@ -60,21 +60,22 @@ Second generation interface. The file format was still the same. Lasse wrote liblzmadec, which was a small decoder-only library based - on the C code found from LZMA SDK. liblzmadec had an API similar to zlib, - although there were some significant differences, which made it + on the C code found from LZMA SDK. liblzmadec had an API similar to + zlib, although there were some significant differences, which made it non-trivial to use it in some applications designed for zlib and libbzip2. The lzmadec command-line tool was converted to use liblzmadec. - Alexandre Sauvé helped converting the build system to use GNU Autotools. - This made it easier to test for certain less portable features needed - by the new command-line tool. + Alexandre Sauvé helped converting the build system to use GNU + Autotools. This made it easier to test for certain less portable + features needed by the new command-line tool. Since the new command-line tool never got completely finished (for - example, it didn't support the LZMA_OPT environment variable), the intent - was to not call 4.32.x stable. Similarly, liblzmadec wasn't polished, - but appeared to work well enough, so some people started using it too. + example, it didn't support the LZMA_OPT environment variable), the + intent was to not call 4.32.x stable. Similarly, liblzmadec wasn't + polished, but appeared to work well enough, so some people started + using it too. Because the development of the third generation of LZMA Utils was delayed considerably (3-4 years), the 4.32.x branch had to be kept @@ -87,8 +88,8 @@ File format problems The file format used by LZMA_Alone was primitive. It was designed with embedded systems in mind, and thus provided only a minimal set of - features. The two biggest problems for non-embedded use were the lack of - magic bytes and an integrity check. + features. The two biggest problems for non-embedded use were the lack + of magic bytes and an integrity check. Igor and Lasse started developing a new file format with some help from Ville Koskinen. Also Mark Adler, Mikko Pouru, H. Peter Anvin, @@ -125,13 +126,13 @@ Transition to XZ Utils The early versions of XZ Utils were called LZMA Utils. The first releases were 4.42.0alphas. They dropped the rest of the C++ LZMA SDK. The code was still directly based on LZMA SDK but ported to C and - converted from a callback API to a stateful API. Later, Igor Pavlov made - a C version of the LZMA encoder too; these ports from C++ to C were - independent in LZMA SDK and LZMA Utils. + converted from a callback API to a stateful API. Later, Igor Pavlov + made a C version of the LZMA encoder too; these ports from C++ to C + were independent in LZMA SDK and LZMA Utils. The core of the new LZMA Utils was liblzma, a compression library with - a zlib-like API. liblzma supported both the old and new file format. The - gzip-like lzma command-line tool was rewritten to use liblzma. + a zlib-like API. liblzma supported both the old and new file format. + The gzip-like lzma command-line tool was rewritten to use liblzma. The new LZMA Utils code base was renamed to XZ Utils when the name of the new file format had been decided. The liblzma compression