- Documentation
- Reference manual
- Packages
- Google's Protocol Buffers Library
- SWI-Prolog SSL Interface
- SWI-Prolog HTTP support
- Paxos -- a SWI-Prolog replicating key-value store
- SWI-Prolog Semantic Web Library 3.0
- SWI-Prolog Source Documentation Version 2
- SWI-Prolog Regular Expression library
- SWI-Prolog YAML library
- Managing external tables for SWI-Prolog
- SWI-Prolog ODBC Interface
- A C++ interface to SWI-Prolog
- SWI-Prolog RDF parser
- SWI-Prolog binding to BSD libedit
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- Redis -- a SWI-Prolog client for redis
- SWI-Prolog Natural Language Processing Primitives
- SWI-Prolog binding to GNU readline
- SWI-Prolog binding to zlib
- SWI-Prolog binding to libarchive
- Transparent Inter-Process Communications (TIPC) libraries
- Constraint Query Language A high level interface to SQL databases
- Pengines: Web Logic Programming Made Easy
- SWI-Prolog SGML/XML parser
- Prolog Unit Tests
- SWI-Prolog Unicode library
University of Amsterdam
VU University Amsterdam
The Netherlands
E-mail: J.Wielemaker@vu.nl
library(zlib)
provides a binding to the
zlib general purpose
compression library. The prolog library aims as seamlessly reading and
writing files compatible to the gzip program as well as
compressed (network) communication.Table of Contents
1 Zlib and compression
Zlib is a widespread library implementing the RFC1950 (zlib wrapper), RFC1951 (deflate stream) and RFC1952 (gzip wrapper) compression standards. The SWI-Prolog binding is a foreign library that creates a compressed stream as a wrapper around a normal stream. Implemented this way, it can perform a wide variety of tasks:
- Read/write gzip compatible files
- Setup standard compressed stream communication
- Realise in-memory compression or decompression
- Deal with streams holding embedded compressed objects
The core predicate of the library is zopen/3.
The remainder of the functionality of library(zlib)
is
defined in Prolog and can be used as a starting point for other
high-level primitives. See also ztest.pl
providing test and
demo code. This file is part of the source distribution.
Part of the functionality of this library can also be realised using the pipe interface and the gzip program. For example, a gziped file can also be opened in Prolog using the code below.
... open(pipe('gunzip < file.gz'), read, In), ...
The advantage of this library over using an external program for such tasks is enhanced platform independence and reduced time to open a file. Platform independence is improved as we do not have to worry about availability of the gunzip utility and we do not have to worry about shell and filename quoting issues. While the above replacement code works well on most modern Unix systems, it only works with special precautions on Windows.1Install gunzip, deal with Windows path-names, the windows shell and quoting.
The library becomes unavoidable if we consider compressed network communication. Here we get the stream from tcp_open_socket/3. The library provides efficient creation of a compressed stream, as well as support for flushing output through the standard Prolog flush_output/1 call.
2 Predicate reference
- zopen(+Stream, -ZStream, +Options)
- Creates ZStream, providing compressed access to Stream.
If an input stream is wrapped, it recognises a gzip or deflate header.
If an output stream is wrapped, Options define the desired
wrapper and compression level. The new ZStream inherits its
encoding from Stream. In other words, if Stream
is a text-stream, so is ZStream. The original Stream
is switched to binary mode while it is wrapped. The original encoding of
Stream is restored if ZStream is closed. Note that zopen/3
does not actually process any data and therefore succeeds on input
streams that do not contain valid data. Errors may be generated by read
operations performed on the stream.
Defined options on output streams are:
- format(+Format)
- Either
deflate
(default),raw_deflate
orgzip
. Thedeflate
envelope is simple and short and is typically used for compressed (network) communication. Theraw_deflate
does not include an envelope and is often used as a step in crypographic encodings. Thegzip
envelope is compatible to the gzip program and intended to read/write compressed files. - level(+Level)
- Number between 0 and 9, specifying the compression level, Higher levels use more resources. Default is 6, generally believed to be a good compromise between speed, memory requirement and compression.
- multi_part(+Boolean)
- If
true
, restart reading if the input is not at end-of-file. The default istrue
for gzip streams.
Generic options are:
- close_parent(Bool)
- If
true
(default), closing the compressed stream also closes (and thus invalidates) the wrapped stream. Iffalse
, the wrapped stream is not closed. This can be used to read/write a compressed data block as partial input/output on a stream.
- gzopen(+File, +Mode, -Stream)
- Same as
gzopen(File, Mode, Stream,[])
. - gzopen(+File, +Mode, -Stream, +Options)
- Open gzip compatible File for reading or writing. If a
file is opened in =append= mode, a new gzip image will be added to the
end of the file. The gzip standard defines that a file can hold multiple
gzip images and inflating the file results in a concatenated stream of
all inflated images. Options are passed to open/4
and zopen/3.
Default format is
gzip
.
3 Interaction with Prolog stream predicates
Using flush_output/1
on a compressed stream causes a
Z_SYNC_FLUSH
on the stream. Using close/1
on a compressed stream causes a Z_FINISH
on the stream. If
the stream uses the gzip
format, a gzip compatible
footer is written to the stream. If close_parent
is set
(default) the underlying stream is closed too. Otherwise it remains open
and the user can continue communication in non-compressed format or
reopen the stream for compression using zopen/3.