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CommitLineData
f535537f 1.
2.TH "ZSTD" "1" "March 2024" "zstd 1.5.6" "User Commands"
3.
648db22b 4.SH "NAME"
5\fBzstd\fR \- zstd, zstdmt, unzstd, zstdcat \- Compress or decompress \.zst files
f535537f 6.
648db22b 7.SH "SYNOPSIS"
f535537f 8\fBzstd\fR [\fIOPTIONS\fR] [\-|\fIINPUT\-FILE\fR] [\-o \fIOUTPUT\-FILE\fR]
9.
648db22b 10.P
11\fBzstdmt\fR is equivalent to \fBzstd \-T0\fR
f535537f 12.
648db22b 13.P
14\fBunzstd\fR is equivalent to \fBzstd \-d\fR
f535537f 15.
648db22b 16.P
17\fBzstdcat\fR is equivalent to \fBzstd \-dcf\fR
f535537f 18.
648db22b 19.SH "DESCRIPTION"
f535537f 20\fBzstd\fR is a fast lossless compression algorithm and data compression tool, with command line syntax similar to \fBgzip\fR(1) and \fBxz\fR(1)\. It is based on the \fBLZ77\fR family, with further FSE & huff0 entropy stages\. \fBzstd\fR offers highly configurable compression speed, from fast modes at > 200 MB/s per core, to strong modes with excellent compression ratios\. It also features a very fast decoder, with speeds > 500 MB/s per core, which remains roughly stable at all compression settings\.
21.
648db22b 22.P
f535537f 23\fBzstd\fR command line syntax is generally similar to gzip, but features the following few differences:
24.
25.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 26Source files are preserved by default\. It\'s possible to remove them automatically by using the \fB\-\-rm\fR command\.
f535537f 27.
28.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 29When compressing a single file, \fBzstd\fR displays progress notifications and result summary by default\. Use \fB\-q\fR to turn them off\.
f535537f 30.
31.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 32\fBzstd\fR displays a short help page when command line is an error\. Use \fB\-q\fR to turn it off\.
f535537f 33.
34.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 35\fBzstd\fR does not accept input from console, though it does accept \fBstdin\fR when it\'s not the console\.
f535537f 36.
37.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 38\fBzstd\fR does not store the input\'s filename or attributes, only its contents\.
f535537f 39.
648db22b 40.IP "" 0
f535537f 41.
648db22b 42.P
43\fBzstd\fR processes each \fIfile\fR according to the selected operation mode\. If no \fIfiles\fR are given or \fIfile\fR is \fB\-\fR, \fBzstd\fR reads from standard input and writes the processed data to standard output\. \fBzstd\fR will refuse to write compressed data to standard output if it is a terminal: it will display an error message and skip the file\. Similarly, \fBzstd\fR will refuse to read compressed data from standard input if it is a terminal\.
f535537f 44.
648db22b 45.P
46Unless \fB\-\-stdout\fR or \fB\-o\fR is specified, \fIfiles\fR are written to a new file whose name is derived from the source \fIfile\fR name:
f535537f 47.
48.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 49When compressing, the suffix \fB\.zst\fR is appended to the source filename to get the target filename\.
f535537f 50.
51.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 52When decompressing, the \fB\.zst\fR suffix is removed from the source filename to get the target filename
f535537f 53.
648db22b 54.IP "" 0
f535537f 55.
648db22b 56.SS "Concatenation with \.zst Files"
57It is possible to concatenate multiple \fB\.zst\fR files\. \fBzstd\fR will decompress such agglomerated file as if it was a single \fB\.zst\fR file\.
f535537f 58.
648db22b 59.SH "OPTIONS"
f535537f 60.
648db22b 61.SS "Integer Suffixes and Special Values"
62In most places where an integer argument is expected, an optional suffix is supported to easily indicate large integers\. There must be no space between the integer and the suffix\.
f535537f 63.
648db22b 64.TP
65\fBKiB\fR
f535537f 66Multiply the integer by 1,024 (2^10)\. \fBKi\fR, \fBK\fR, and \fBKB\fR are accepted as synonyms for \fBKiB\fR\.
67.
648db22b 68.TP
69\fBMiB\fR
f535537f 70Multiply the integer by 1,048,576 (2^20)\. \fBMi\fR, \fBM\fR, and \fBMB\fR are accepted as synonyms for \fBMiB\fR\.
71.
648db22b 72.SS "Operation Mode"
73If multiple operation mode options are given, the last one takes effect\.
f535537f 74.
648db22b 75.TP
76\fB\-z\fR, \fB\-\-compress\fR
77Compress\. This is the default operation mode when no operation mode option is specified and no other operation mode is implied from the command name (for example, \fBunzstd\fR implies \fB\-\-decompress\fR)\.
f535537f 78.
648db22b 79.TP
80\fB\-d\fR, \fB\-\-decompress\fR, \fB\-\-uncompress\fR
81Decompress\.
f535537f 82.
648db22b 83.TP
84\fB\-t\fR, \fB\-\-test\fR
85Test the integrity of compressed \fIfiles\fR\. This option is equivalent to \fB\-\-decompress \-\-stdout > /dev/null\fR, decompressed data is discarded and checksummed for errors\. No files are created or removed\.
f535537f 86.
648db22b 87.TP
88\fB\-b#\fR
89Benchmark file(s) using compression level \fI#\fR\. See \fIBENCHMARK\fR below for a description of this operation\.
f535537f 90.
648db22b 91.TP
92\fB\-\-train FILES\fR
93Use \fIFILES\fR as a training set to create a dictionary\. The training set should contain a lot of small files (> 100)\. See \fIDICTIONARY BUILDER\fR below for a description of this operation\.
f535537f 94.
648db22b 95.TP
96\fB\-l\fR, \fB\-\-list\fR
97Display information related to a zstd compressed file, such as size, ratio, and checksum\. Some of these fields may not be available\. This command\'s output can be augmented with the \fB\-v\fR modifier\.
f535537f 98.
648db22b 99.SS "Operation Modifiers"
f535537f 100.
101.IP "\(bu" 4
102\fB\-#\fR: selects \fB#\fR compression level [1\-19] (default: 3)\. Higher compression levels \fIgenerally\fR produce higher compression ratio at the expense of speed and memory\. A rough rule of thumb is that compression speed is expected to be divided by 2 every 2 levels\. Technically, each level is mapped to a set of advanced parameters (that can also be modified individually, see below)\. Because the compressor\'s behavior highly depends on the content to compress, there\'s no guarantee of a smooth progression from one level to another\.
103.
104.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 105\fB\-\-ultra\fR: unlocks high compression levels 20+ (maximum 22), using a lot more memory\. Note that decompression will also require more memory when using these levels\.
f535537f 106.
107.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 108\fB\-\-fast[=#]\fR: switch to ultra\-fast compression levels\. If \fB=#\fR is not present, it defaults to \fB1\fR\. The higher the value, the faster the compression speed, at the cost of some compression ratio\. This setting overwrites compression level if one was set previously\. Similarly, if a compression level is set after \fB\-\-fast\fR, it overrides it\.
f535537f 109.
110.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 111\fB\-T#\fR, \fB\-\-threads=#\fR: Compress using \fB#\fR working threads (default: 1)\. If \fB#\fR is 0, attempt to detect and use the number of physical CPU cores\. In all cases, the nb of threads is capped to \fBZSTDMT_NBWORKERS_MAX\fR, which is either 64 in 32\-bit mode, or 256 for 64\-bit environments\. This modifier does nothing if \fBzstd\fR is compiled without multithread support\.
f535537f 112.
113.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 114\fB\-\-single\-thread\fR: Use a single thread for both I/O and compression\. As compression is serialized with I/O, this can be slightly slower\. Single\-thread mode features significantly lower memory usage, which can be useful for systems with limited amount of memory, such as 32\-bit systems\.
f535537f 115.
648db22b 116.IP
117Note 1: this mode is the only available one when multithread support is disabled\.
f535537f 118.
648db22b 119.IP
120Note 2: this mode is different from \fB\-T1\fR, which spawns 1 compression thread in parallel with I/O\. Final compressed result is also slightly different from \fB\-T1\fR\.
f535537f 121.
122.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 123\fB\-\-auto\-threads={physical,logical} (default: physical)\fR: When using a default amount of threads via \fB\-T0\fR, choose the default based on the number of detected physical or logical cores\.
f535537f 124.
125.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 126\fB\-\-adapt[=min=#,max=#]\fR: \fBzstd\fR will dynamically adapt compression level to perceived I/O conditions\. Compression level adaptation can be observed live by using command \fB\-v\fR\. Adaptation can be constrained between supplied \fBmin\fR and \fBmax\fR levels\. The feature works when combined with multi\-threading and \fB\-\-long\fR mode\. It does not work with \fB\-\-single\-thread\fR\. It sets window size to 8 MiB by default (can be changed manually, see \fBwlog\fR)\. Due to the chaotic nature of dynamic adaptation, compressed result is not reproducible\.
f535537f 127.
648db22b 128.IP
129\fINote\fR: at the time of this writing, \fB\-\-adapt\fR can remain stuck at low speed when combined with multiple worker threads (>=2)\.
f535537f 130.
131.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 132\fB\-\-long[=#]\fR: enables long distance matching with \fB#\fR \fBwindowLog\fR, if \fB#\fR is not present it defaults to \fB27\fR\. This increases the window size (\fBwindowLog\fR) and memory usage for both the compressor and decompressor\. This setting is designed to improve the compression ratio for files with long matches at a large distance\.
f535537f 133.
648db22b 134.IP
135Note: If \fBwindowLog\fR is set to larger than 27, \fB\-\-long=windowLog\fR or \fB\-\-memory=windowSize\fR needs to be passed to the decompressor\.
f535537f 136.
137.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 138\fB\-D DICT\fR: use \fBDICT\fR as Dictionary to compress or decompress FILE(s)
f535537f 139.
140.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 141\fB\-\-patch\-from FILE\fR: Specify the file to be used as a reference point for zstd\'s diff engine\. This is effectively dictionary compression with some convenient parameter selection, namely that \fIwindowSize\fR > \fIsrcSize\fR\.
f535537f 142.
648db22b 143.IP
144Note: cannot use both this and \fB\-D\fR together\.
f535537f 145.
648db22b 146.IP
147Note: \fB\-\-long\fR mode will be automatically activated if \fIchainLog\fR < \fIfileLog\fR (\fIfileLog\fR being the \fIwindowLog\fR required to cover the whole file)\. You can also manually force it\.
f535537f 148.
648db22b 149.IP
150Note: for all levels, you can use \fB\-\-patch\-from\fR in \fB\-\-single\-thread\fR mode to improve compression ratio at the cost of speed\.
f535537f 151.
648db22b 152.IP
153Note: for level 19, you can get increased compression ratio at the cost of speed by specifying \fB\-\-zstd=targetLength=\fR to be something large (i\.e\. 4096), and by setting a large \fB\-\-zstd=chainLog=\fR\.
f535537f 154.
155.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 156\fB\-\-rsyncable\fR: \fBzstd\fR will periodically synchronize the compression state to make the compressed file more rsync\-friendly\. There is a negligible impact to compression ratio, and a potential impact to compression speed, perceptible at higher speeds, for example when combining \fB\-\-rsyncable\fR with many parallel worker threads\. This feature does not work with \fB\-\-single\-thread\fR\. You probably don\'t want to use it with long range mode, since it will decrease the effectiveness of the synchronization points, but your mileage may vary\.
f535537f 157.
158.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 159\fB\-C\fR, \fB\-\-[no\-]check\fR: add integrity check computed from uncompressed data (default: enabled)
f535537f 160.
161.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 162\fB\-\-[no\-]content\-size\fR: enable / disable whether or not the original size of the file is placed in the header of the compressed file\. The default option is \fB\-\-content\-size\fR (meaning that the original size will be placed in the header)\.
f535537f 163.
164.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 165\fB\-\-no\-dictID\fR: do not store dictionary ID within frame header (dictionary compression)\. The decoder will have to rely on implicit knowledge about which dictionary to use, it won\'t be able to check if it\'s correct\.
f535537f 166.
167.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 168\fB\-M#\fR, \fB\-\-memory=#\fR: Set a memory usage limit\. By default, \fBzstd\fR uses 128 MiB for decompression as the maximum amount of memory the decompressor is allowed to use, but you can override this manually if need be in either direction (i\.e\. you can increase or decrease it)\.
f535537f 169.
648db22b 170.IP
171This is also used during compression when using with \fB\-\-patch\-from=\fR\. In this case, this parameter overrides that maximum size allowed for a dictionary\. (128 MiB)\.
f535537f 172.
648db22b 173.IP
174Additionally, this can be used to limit memory for dictionary training\. This parameter overrides the default limit of 2 GiB\. zstd will load training samples up to the memory limit and ignore the rest\.
f535537f 175.
176.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 177\fB\-\-stream\-size=#\fR: Sets the pledged source size of input coming from a stream\. This value must be exact, as it will be included in the produced frame header\. Incorrect stream sizes will cause an error\. This information will be used to better optimize compression parameters, resulting in better and potentially faster compression, especially for smaller source sizes\.
f535537f 178.
179.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 180\fB\-\-size\-hint=#\fR: When handling input from a stream, \fBzstd\fR must guess how large the source size will be when optimizing compression parameters\. If the stream size is relatively small, this guess may be a poor one, resulting in a higher compression ratio than expected\. This feature allows for controlling the guess when needed\. Exact guesses result in better compression ratios\. Overestimates result in slightly degraded compression ratios, while underestimates may result in significant degradation\.
f535537f 181.
182.IP "\(bu" 4
183\fB\-\-target\-compressed\-block\-size=#\fR: Attempt to produce compressed blocks of approximately this size\. This will split larger blocks in order to approach this target\. This feature is notably useful for improved latency, when the receiver can leverage receiving early incomplete data\. This parameter defines a loose target: compressed blocks will target this size "on average", but individual blocks can still be larger or smaller\. Enabling this feature can decrease compression speed by up to ~10% at level 1\. Higher levels will see smaller relative speed regression, becoming invisible at higher settings\.
184.
185.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 186\fB\-f\fR, \fB\-\-force\fR: disable input and output checks\. Allows overwriting existing files, input from console, output to stdout, operating on links, block devices, etc\. During decompression and when the output destination is stdout, pass\-through unrecognized formats as\-is\.
f535537f 187.
188.IP "\(bu" 4
189\fB\-c\fR, \fB\-\-stdout\fR: write to standard output (even if it is the console); keep original files (disable \fB\-\-rm\fR)\.
190.
191.IP "\(bu" 4
192\fB\-o FILE\fR: save result into \fBFILE\fR\. Note that this operation is in conflict with \fB\-c\fR\. If both operations are present on the command line, the last expressed one wins\.
193.
194.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 195\fB\-\-[no\-]sparse\fR: enable / disable sparse FS support, to make files with many zeroes smaller on disk\. Creating sparse files may save disk space and speed up decompression by reducing the amount of disk I/O\. default: enabled when output is into a file, and disabled when output is stdout\. This setting overrides default and can force sparse mode over stdout\.
f535537f 196.
197.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 198\fB\-\-[no\-]pass\-through\fR enable / disable passing through uncompressed files as\-is\. During decompression when pass\-through is enabled, unrecognized formats will be copied as\-is from the input to the output\. By default, pass\-through will occur when the output destination is stdout and the force (\fB\-f\fR) option is set\.
f535537f 199.
200.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 201\fB\-\-rm\fR: remove source file(s) after successful compression or decompression\. This command is silently ignored if output is \fBstdout\fR\. If used in combination with \fB\-o\fR, triggers a confirmation prompt (which can be silenced with \fB\-f\fR), as this is a destructive operation\.
f535537f 202.
203.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 204\fB\-k\fR, \fB\-\-keep\fR: keep source file(s) after successful compression or decompression\. This is the default behavior\.
f535537f 205.
206.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 207\fB\-r\fR: operate recursively on directories\. It selects all files in the named directory and all its subdirectories\. This can be useful both to reduce command line typing, and to circumvent shell expansion limitations, when there are a lot of files and naming breaks the maximum size of a command line\.
f535537f 208.
209.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 210\fB\-\-filelist FILE\fR read a list of files to process as content from \fBFILE\fR\. Format is compatible with \fBls\fR output, with one file per line\.
f535537f 211.
212.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 213\fB\-\-output\-dir\-flat DIR\fR: resulting files are stored into target \fBDIR\fR directory, instead of same directory as origin file\. Be aware that this command can introduce name collision issues, if multiple files, from different directories, end up having the same name\. Collision resolution ensures first file with a given name will be present in \fBDIR\fR, while in combination with \fB\-f\fR, the last file will be present instead\.
f535537f 214.
215.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 216\fB\-\-output\-dir\-mirror DIR\fR: similar to \fB\-\-output\-dir\-flat\fR, the output files are stored underneath target \fBDIR\fR directory, but this option will replicate input directory hierarchy into output \fBDIR\fR\.
f535537f 217.
648db22b 218.IP
219If input directory contains "\.\.", the files in this directory will be ignored\. If input directory is an absolute directory (i\.e\. "/var/tmp/abc"), it will be stored into the "output\-dir/var/tmp/abc"\. If there are multiple input files or directories, name collision resolution will follow the same rules as \fB\-\-output\-dir\-flat\fR\.
f535537f 220.
221.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 222\fB\-\-format=FORMAT\fR: compress and decompress in other formats\. If compiled with support, zstd can compress to or decompress from other compression algorithm formats\. Possibly available options are \fBzstd\fR, \fBgzip\fR, \fBxz\fR, \fBlzma\fR, and \fBlz4\fR\. If no such format is provided, \fBzstd\fR is the default\.
f535537f 223.
224.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 225\fB\-h\fR/\fB\-H\fR, \fB\-\-help\fR: display help/long help and exit
f535537f 226.
227.IP "\(bu" 4
228\fB\-V\fR, \fB\-\-version\fR: display version number and immediately exit\. note that, since it exits, flags specified after \fB\-V\fR are effectively ignored\. Advanced: \fB\-vV\fR also displays supported formats\. \fB\-vvV\fR also displays POSIX support\. \fB\-qV\fR will only display the version number, suitable for machine reading\.
229.
230.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 231\fB\-v\fR, \fB\-\-verbose\fR: verbose mode, display more information
f535537f 232.
233.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 234\fB\-q\fR, \fB\-\-quiet\fR: suppress warnings, interactivity, and notifications\. specify twice to suppress errors too\.
f535537f 235.
236.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 237\fB\-\-no\-progress\fR: do not display the progress bar, but keep all other messages\.
f535537f 238.
239.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 240\fB\-\-show\-default\-cparams\fR: shows the default compression parameters that will be used for a particular input file, based on the provided compression level and the input size\. If the provided file is not a regular file (e\.g\. a pipe), this flag will output the parameters used for inputs of unknown size\.
f535537f 241.
242.IP "\(bu" 4
243\fB\-\-exclude\-compressed\fR: only compress files that are not already compressed\.
244.
245.IP "\(bu" 4
648db22b 246\fB\-\-\fR: All arguments after \fB\-\-\fR are treated as files
f535537f 247.
648db22b 248.IP "" 0
f535537f 249.
648db22b 250.SS "gzip Operation Modifiers"
251When invoked via a \fBgzip\fR symlink, \fBzstd\fR will support further options that intend to mimic the \fBgzip\fR behavior:
f535537f 252.
648db22b 253.TP
254\fB\-n\fR, \fB\-\-no\-name\fR
255do not store the original filename and timestamps when compressing a file\. This is the default behavior and hence a no\-op\.
f535537f 256.
648db22b 257.TP
258\fB\-\-best\fR
259alias to the option \fB\-9\fR\.
f535537f 260.
648db22b 261.SS "Environment Variables"
f535537f 262Employing environment variables to set parameters has security implications\. Therefore, this avenue is intentionally limited\. Only \fBZSTD_CLEVEL\fR and \fBZSTD_NBTHREADS\fR are currently supported\. They set the default compression level and number of threads to use during compression, respectively\.
263.
648db22b 264.P
265\fBZSTD_CLEVEL\fR can be used to set the level between 1 and 19 (the "normal" range)\. If the value of \fBZSTD_CLEVEL\fR is not a valid integer, it will be ignored with a warning message\. \fBZSTD_CLEVEL\fR just replaces the default compression level (\fB3\fR)\.
f535537f 266.
648db22b 267.P
f535537f 268\fBZSTD_NBTHREADS\fR can be used to set the number of threads \fBzstd\fR will attempt to use during compression\. If the value of \fBZSTD_NBTHREADS\fR is not a valid unsigned integer, it will be ignored with a warning message\. \fBZSTD_NBTHREADS\fR has a default value of (\fB1\fR), and is capped at ZSTDMT_NBWORKERS_MAX==200\. \fBzstd\fR must be compiled with multithread support for this variable to have any effect\.
269.
648db22b 270.P
271They can both be overridden by corresponding command line arguments: \fB\-#\fR for compression level and \fB\-T#\fR for number of compression threads\.
f535537f 272.
648db22b 273.SH "ADVANCED COMPRESSION OPTIONS"
f535537f 274\fBzstd\fR provides 22 predefined regular compression levels plus the fast levels\. A compression level is translated internally into multiple advanced parameters that control the behavior of the compressor (one can observe the result of this translation with \fB\-\-show\-default\-cparams\fR)\. These advanced parameters can be overridden using advanced compression options\.
275.
648db22b 276.SS "\-\-zstd[=options]:"
f535537f 277The \fIoptions\fR are provided as a comma\-separated list\. You may specify only the options you want to change and the rest will be taken from the selected or default compression level\. The list of available \fIoptions\fR:
278.
648db22b 279.TP
280\fBstrategy\fR=\fIstrat\fR, \fBstrat\fR=\fIstrat\fR
281Specify a strategy used by a match finder\.
f535537f 282.
648db22b 283.IP
284There are 9 strategies numbered from 1 to 9, from fastest to strongest: 1=\fBZSTD_fast\fR, 2=\fBZSTD_dfast\fR, 3=\fBZSTD_greedy\fR, 4=\fBZSTD_lazy\fR, 5=\fBZSTD_lazy2\fR, 6=\fBZSTD_btlazy2\fR, 7=\fBZSTD_btopt\fR, 8=\fBZSTD_btultra\fR, 9=\fBZSTD_btultra2\fR\.
f535537f 285.
648db22b 286.TP
287\fBwindowLog\fR=\fIwlog\fR, \fBwlog\fR=\fIwlog\fR
288Specify the maximum number of bits for a match distance\.
f535537f 289.
648db22b 290.IP
291The higher number of increases the chance to find a match which usually improves compression ratio\. It also increases memory requirements for the compressor and decompressor\. The minimum \fIwlog\fR is 10 (1 KiB) and the maximum is 30 (1 GiB) on 32\-bit platforms and 31 (2 GiB) on 64\-bit platforms\.
f535537f 292.
648db22b 293.IP
294Note: If \fBwindowLog\fR is set to larger than 27, \fB\-\-long=windowLog\fR or \fB\-\-memory=windowSize\fR needs to be passed to the decompressor\.
f535537f 295.
648db22b 296.TP
297\fBhashLog\fR=\fIhlog\fR, \fBhlog\fR=\fIhlog\fR
298Specify the maximum number of bits for a hash table\.
f535537f 299.
648db22b 300.IP
301Bigger hash tables cause fewer collisions which usually makes compression faster, but requires more memory during compression\.
f535537f 302.
648db22b 303.IP
304The minimum \fIhlog\fR is 6 (64 entries / 256 B) and the maximum is 30 (1B entries / 4 GiB)\.
f535537f 305.
648db22b 306.TP
307\fBchainLog\fR=\fIclog\fR, \fBclog\fR=\fIclog\fR
308Specify the maximum number of bits for the secondary search structure, whose form depends on the selected \fBstrategy\fR\.
f535537f 309.
648db22b 310.IP
311Higher numbers of bits increases the chance to find a match which usually improves compression ratio\. It also slows down compression speed and increases memory requirements for compression\. This option is ignored for the \fBZSTD_fast\fR \fBstrategy\fR, which only has the primary hash table\.
f535537f 312.
648db22b 313.IP
314The minimum \fIclog\fR is 6 (64 entries / 256 B) and the maximum is 29 (512M entries / 2 GiB) on 32\-bit platforms and 30 (1B entries / 4 GiB) on 64\-bit platforms\.
f535537f 315.
648db22b 316.TP
317\fBsearchLog\fR=\fIslog\fR, \fBslog\fR=\fIslog\fR
318Specify the maximum number of searches in a hash chain or a binary tree using logarithmic scale\.
f535537f 319.
648db22b 320.IP
321More searches increases the chance to find a match which usually increases compression ratio but decreases compression speed\.
f535537f 322.
648db22b 323.IP
324The minimum \fIslog\fR is 1 and the maximum is \'windowLog\' \- 1\.
f535537f 325.
648db22b 326.TP
327\fBminMatch\fR=\fImml\fR, \fBmml\fR=\fImml\fR
328Specify the minimum searched length of a match in a hash table\.
f535537f 329.
648db22b 330.IP
331Larger search lengths usually decrease compression ratio but improve decompression speed\.
f535537f 332.
648db22b 333.IP
334The minimum \fImml\fR is 3 and the maximum is 7\.
f535537f 335.
648db22b 336.TP
337\fBtargetLength\fR=\fItlen\fR, \fBtlen\fR=\fItlen\fR
338The impact of this field vary depending on selected strategy\.
f535537f 339.
648db22b 340.IP
341For \fBZSTD_btopt\fR, \fBZSTD_btultra\fR and \fBZSTD_btultra2\fR, it specifies the minimum match length that causes match finder to stop searching\. A larger \fBtargetLength\fR usually improves compression ratio but decreases compression speed\.
f535537f 342.
648db22b 343.IP
344For \fBZSTD_fast\fR, it triggers ultra\-fast mode when > 0\. The value represents the amount of data skipped between match sampling\. Impact is reversed: a larger \fBtargetLength\fR increases compression speed but decreases compression ratio\.
f535537f 345.
648db22b 346.IP
347For all other strategies, this field has no impact\.
f535537f 348.
648db22b 349.IP
350The minimum \fItlen\fR is 0 and the maximum is 128 KiB\.
f535537f 351.
648db22b 352.TP
353\fBoverlapLog\fR=\fIovlog\fR, \fBovlog\fR=\fIovlog\fR
354Determine \fBoverlapSize\fR, amount of data reloaded from previous job\. This parameter is only available when multithreading is enabled\. Reloading more data improves compression ratio, but decreases speed\.
f535537f 355.
648db22b 356.IP
357The minimum \fIovlog\fR is 0, and the maximum is 9\. 1 means "no overlap", hence completely independent jobs\. 9 means "full overlap", meaning up to \fBwindowSize\fR is reloaded from previous job\. Reducing \fIovlog\fR by 1 reduces the reloaded amount by a factor 2\. For example, 8 means "windowSize/2", and 6 means "windowSize/8"\. Value 0 is special and means "default": \fIovlog\fR is automatically determined by \fBzstd\fR\. In which case, \fIovlog\fR will range from 6 to 9, depending on selected \fIstrat\fR\.
f535537f 358.
648db22b 359.TP
360\fBldmHashLog\fR=\fIlhlog\fR, \fBlhlog\fR=\fIlhlog\fR
361Specify the maximum size for a hash table used for long distance matching\.
f535537f 362.
648db22b 363.IP
364This option is ignored unless long distance matching is enabled\.
f535537f 365.
648db22b 366.IP
367Bigger hash tables usually improve compression ratio at the expense of more memory during compression and a decrease in compression speed\.
f535537f 368.
648db22b 369.IP
370The minimum \fIlhlog\fR is 6 and the maximum is 30 (default: 20)\.
f535537f 371.
648db22b 372.TP
373\fBldmMinMatch\fR=\fIlmml\fR, \fBlmml\fR=\fIlmml\fR
374Specify the minimum searched length of a match for long distance matching\.
f535537f 375.
648db22b 376.IP
377This option is ignored unless long distance matching is enabled\.
f535537f 378.
648db22b 379.IP
380Larger/very small values usually decrease compression ratio\.
f535537f 381.
648db22b 382.IP
383The minimum \fIlmml\fR is 4 and the maximum is 4096 (default: 64)\.
f535537f 384.
648db22b 385.TP
386\fBldmBucketSizeLog\fR=\fIlblog\fR, \fBlblog\fR=\fIlblog\fR
387Specify the size of each bucket for the hash table used for long distance matching\.
f535537f 388.
648db22b 389.IP
390This option is ignored unless long distance matching is enabled\.
f535537f 391.
648db22b 392.IP
393Larger bucket sizes improve collision resolution but decrease compression speed\.
f535537f 394.
648db22b 395.IP
396The minimum \fIlblog\fR is 1 and the maximum is 8 (default: 3)\.
f535537f 397.
648db22b 398.TP
399\fBldmHashRateLog\fR=\fIlhrlog\fR, \fBlhrlog\fR=\fIlhrlog\fR
400Specify the frequency of inserting entries into the long distance matching hash table\.
f535537f 401.
648db22b 402.IP
403This option is ignored unless long distance matching is enabled\.
f535537f 404.
648db22b 405.IP
406Larger values will improve compression speed\. Deviating far from the default value will likely result in a decrease in compression ratio\.
f535537f 407.
648db22b 408.IP
409The default value is \fBwlog \- lhlog\fR\.
f535537f 410.
648db22b 411.SS "Example"
412The following parameters sets advanced compression options to something similar to predefined level 19 for files bigger than 256 KB:
f535537f 413.
648db22b 414.P
415\fB\-\-zstd\fR=wlog=23,clog=23,hlog=22,slog=6,mml=3,tlen=48,strat=6
f535537f 416.
417.SS "\-B#:"
418Specify the size of each compression job\. This parameter is only available when multi\-threading is enabled\. Each compression job is run in parallel, so this value indirectly impacts the nb of active threads\. Default job size varies depending on compression level (generally \fB4 * windowSize\fR)\. \fB\-B#\fR makes it possible to manually select a custom size\. Note that job size must respect a minimum value which is enforced transparently\. This minimum is either 512 KB, or \fBoverlapSize\fR, whichever is largest\. Different job sizes will lead to non\-identical compressed frames\.
419.
420.SH "DICTIONARY BUILDER"
421\fBzstd\fR offers \fIdictionary\fR compression, which greatly improves efficiency on small files and messages\. It\'s possible to train \fBzstd\fR with a set of samples, the result of which is saved into a file called a \fBdictionary\fR\. Then, during compression and decompression, reference the same dictionary, using command \fB\-D dictionaryFileName\fR\. Compression of small files similar to the sample set will be greatly improved\.
422.
423.TP
424\fB\-\-train FILEs\fR
425Use FILEs as training set to create a dictionary\. The training set should ideally contain a lot of samples (> 100), and weight typically 100x the target dictionary size (for example, ~10 MB for a 100 KB dictionary)\. \fB\-\-train\fR can be combined with \fB\-r\fR to indicate a directory rather than listing all the files, which can be useful to circumvent shell expansion limits\.
426.
427.IP
428Since dictionary compression is mostly effective for small files, the expectation is that the training set will only contain small files\. In the case where some samples happen to be large, only the first 128 KiB of these samples will be used for training\.
429.
430.IP
431\fB\-\-train\fR supports multithreading if \fBzstd\fR is compiled with threading support (default)\. Additional advanced parameters can be specified with \fB\-\-train\-fastcover\fR\. The legacy dictionary builder can be accessed with \fB\-\-train\-legacy\fR\. The slower cover dictionary builder can be accessed with \fB\-\-train\-cover\fR\. Default \fB\-\-train\fR is equivalent to \fB\-\-train\-fastcover=d=8,steps=4\fR\.
432.
433.TP
434\fB\-o FILE\fR
435Dictionary saved into \fBFILE\fR (default name: dictionary)\.
436.
437.TP
438\fB\-\-maxdict=#\fR
439Limit dictionary to specified size (default: 112640 bytes)\. As usual, quantities are expressed in bytes by default, and it\'s possible to employ suffixes (like \fBKB\fR or \fBMB\fR) to specify larger values\.
440.
441.TP
442\fB\-#\fR
443Use \fB#\fR compression level during training (optional)\. Will generate statistics more tuned for selected compression level, resulting in a \fIsmall\fR compression ratio improvement for this level\.
444.
445.TP
446\fB\-B#\fR
447Split input files into blocks of size # (default: no split)
448.
449.TP
450\fB\-M#\fR, \fB\-\-memory=#\fR
451Limit the amount of sample data loaded for training (default: 2 GB)\. Note that the default (2 GB) is also the maximum\. This parameter can be useful in situations where the training set size is not well controlled and could be potentially very large\. Since speed of the training process is directly correlated to the size of the training sample set, a smaller sample set leads to faster training\.
452.
453.IP
454In situations where the training set is larger than maximum memory, the CLI will randomly select samples among the available ones, up to the maximum allowed memory budget\. This is meant to improve dictionary relevance by mitigating the potential impact of clustering, such as selecting only files from the beginning of a list sorted by modification date, or sorted by alphabetical order\. The randomization process is deterministic, so training of the same list of files with the same parameters will lead to the creation of the same dictionary\.
455.
456.TP
457\fB\-\-dictID=#\fR
458A dictionary ID is a locally unique ID\. The decoder will use this value to verify it is using the right dictionary\. By default, zstd will create a 4\-bytes random number ID\. It\'s possible to provide an explicit number ID instead\. It\'s up to the dictionary manager to not assign twice the same ID to 2 different dictionaries\. Note that short numbers have an advantage: an ID < 256 will only need 1 byte in the compressed frame header, and an ID < 65536 will only need 2 bytes\. This compares favorably to 4 bytes default\.
459.
460.IP
461Note that RFC8878 reserves IDs less than 32768 and greater than or equal to 2^31, so they should not be used in public\.
462.
463.TP
464\fB\-\-train\-cover[=k#,d=#,steps=#,split=#,shrink[=#]]\fR
465Select parameters for the default dictionary builder algorithm named cover\. If \fId\fR is not specified, then it tries \fId\fR = 6 and \fId\fR = 8\. If \fIk\fR is not specified, then it tries \fIsteps\fR values in the range [50, 2000]\. If \fIsteps\fR is not specified, then the default value of 40 is used\. If \fIsplit\fR is not specified or split <= 0, then the default value of 100 is used\. Requires that \fId\fR <= \fIk\fR\. If \fIshrink\fR flag is not used, then the default value for \fIshrinkDict\fR of 0 is used\. If \fIshrink\fR is not specified, then the default value for \fIshrinkDictMaxRegression\fR of 1 is used\.
466.
467.IP
468Selects segments of size \fIk\fR with highest score to put in the dictionary\. The score of a segment is computed by the sum of the frequencies of all the subsegments of size \fId\fR\. Generally \fId\fR should be in the range [6, 8], occasionally up to 16, but the algorithm will run faster with d <= \fI8\fR\. Good values for \fIk\fR vary widely based on the input data, but a safe range is [2 * \fId\fR, 2000]\. If \fIsplit\fR is 100, all input samples are used for both training and testing to find optimal \fId\fR and \fIk\fR to build dictionary\. Supports multithreading if \fBzstd\fR is compiled with threading support\. Having \fIshrink\fR enabled takes a truncated dictionary of minimum size and doubles in size until compression ratio of the truncated dictionary is at most \fIshrinkDictMaxRegression%\fR worse than the compression ratio of the largest dictionary\.
469.
470.IP
471Examples:
472.
473.IP
474\fBzstd \-\-train\-cover FILEs\fR
475.
476.IP
477\fBzstd \-\-train\-cover=k=50,d=8 FILEs\fR
478.
479.IP
480\fBzstd \-\-train\-cover=d=8,steps=500 FILEs\fR
481.
482.IP
483\fBzstd \-\-train\-cover=k=50 FILEs\fR
484.
485.IP
486\fBzstd \-\-train\-cover=k=50,split=60 FILEs\fR
487.
488.IP
489\fBzstd \-\-train\-cover=shrink FILEs\fR
490.
491.IP
492\fBzstd \-\-train\-cover=shrink=2 FILEs\fR
493.
494.TP
495\fB\-\-train\-fastcover[=k#,d=#,f=#,steps=#,split=#,accel=#]\fR
496Same as cover but with extra parameters \fIf\fR and \fIaccel\fR and different default value of split If \fIsplit\fR is not specified, then it tries \fIsplit\fR = 75\. If \fIf\fR is not specified, then it tries \fIf\fR = 20\. Requires that 0 < \fIf\fR < 32\. If \fIaccel\fR is not specified, then it tries \fIaccel\fR = 1\. Requires that 0 < \fIaccel\fR <= 10\. Requires that \fId\fR = 6 or \fId\fR = 8\.
497.
498.IP
499\fIf\fR is log of size of array that keeps track of frequency of subsegments of size \fId\fR\. The subsegment is hashed to an index in the range [0,2^\fIf\fR \- 1]\. It is possible that 2 different subsegments are hashed to the same index, and they are considered as the same subsegment when computing frequency\. Using a higher \fIf\fR reduces collision but takes longer\.
500.
501.IP
502Examples:
503.
504.IP
505\fBzstd \-\-train\-fastcover FILEs\fR
506.
507.IP
508\fBzstd \-\-train\-fastcover=d=8,f=15,accel=2 FILEs\fR
509.
510.TP
511\fB\-\-train\-legacy[=selectivity=#]\fR
512Use legacy dictionary builder algorithm with the given dictionary \fIselectivity\fR (default: 9)\. The smaller the \fIselectivity\fR value, the denser the dictionary, improving its efficiency but reducing its achievable maximum size\. \fB\-\-train\-legacy=s=#\fR is also accepted\.
513.
514.IP
515Examples:
516.
517.IP
518\fBzstd \-\-train\-legacy FILEs\fR
519.
520.IP
521\fBzstd \-\-train\-legacy=selectivity=8 FILEs\fR
522.
523.SH "BENCHMARK"
524The \fBzstd\fR CLI provides a benchmarking mode that can be used to easily find suitable compression parameters, or alternatively to benchmark a computer\'s performance\. Note that the results are highly dependent on the content being compressed\.
525.
526.TP
527\fB\-b#\fR
528benchmark file(s) using compression level #
529.
530.TP
531\fB\-e#\fR
532benchmark file(s) using multiple compression levels, from \fB\-b#\fR to \fB\-e#\fR (inclusive)
533.
534.TP
535\fB\-d\fR
536benchmark decompression speed only (requires providing an already zstd\-compressed content)
537.
538.TP
539\fB\-i#\fR
540minimum evaluation time, in seconds (default: 3s), benchmark mode only
541.
542.TP
543\fB\-B#\fR, \fB\-\-block\-size=#\fR
544cut file(s) into independent chunks of size # (default: no chunking)
545.
546.TP
547\fB\-\-priority=rt\fR
548set process priority to real\-time (Windows)
549.
550.P
551\fBOutput Format:\fR CompressionLevel#Filename: InputSize \-> OutputSize (CompressionRatio), CompressionSpeed, DecompressionSpeed
552.
553.P
554\fBMethodology:\fR For both compression and decompression speed, the entire input is compressed/decompressed in\-memory to measure speed\. A run lasts at least 1 sec, so when files are small, they are compressed/decompressed several times per run, in order to improve measurement accuracy\.
555.
648db22b 556.SH "SEE ALSO"
557\fBzstdgrep\fR(1), \fBzstdless\fR(1), \fBgzip\fR(1), \fBxz\fR(1)
f535537f 558.
648db22b 559.P
560The \fIzstandard\fR format is specified in Y\. Collet, "Zstandard Compression and the \'application/zstd\' Media Type", https://www\.ietf\.org/rfc/rfc8878\.txt, Internet RFC 8878 (February 2021)\.
f535537f 561.
648db22b 562.SH "BUGS"
563Report bugs at: https://github\.com/facebook/zstd/issues
f535537f 564.
648db22b 565.SH "AUTHOR"
566Yann Collet