Ruby bindings for brotli library
Github actions | Codecov | Gem |
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See brotli library.
Other bindings: lzw, zstd, bzip2.
Installation
Operating systems: GNU/Linux, FreeBSD, OSX.
Dependencies: brotli 1.0.0+ version.
Popular OS | Dependencies |
---|---|
Ubuntu | libbrotli-dev |
CentOS | brotli-devel |
ArchLinux | brotli |
OSX | brotli |
gem install ruby-brs
You can build it from source.
rake gem
gem install pkg/ruby-brs-*.gem
You can also use overlay for gentoo.
Installation in macOS on Apple Silicon
On M1 Macs, Homebrew installs to /opt/homebrew, so you'll need to specify its include and lib paths when building the native extension for brotli.
brew install brotli
gem install ruby-brs -- --with-opt-include=/opt/homebrew/include --with-opt-lib=/opt/homebrew/lib
You can also configure Bundler to use those options when installing:
bundle config set build.ruby-brs "--with-opt-include=/opt/homebrew/include --with-opt-lib=/opt/homebrew/lib"
Usage
There are simple APIs: String
and File
. Also you can use generic streaming API: Stream::Writer
and Stream::Reader
.
require "brs"
data = BRS::String.compress "sample string"
puts BRS::String.decompress(data)
BRS::File.compress "file.txt", "file.txt.br"
BRS::File.decompress "file.txt.br", "file.txt"
BRS::Stream::Writer.open("file.txt.br") { |writer| writer << "sample string" }
puts BRS::Stream::Reader.open("file.txt.br") { |reader| reader.read }
writer = BRS::Stream::Writer.new output_socket
begin
bytes_written = writer.write_nonblock "sample string"
# handle "bytes_written"
rescue IO::WaitWritable
# handle wait
ensure
writer.close
end
reader = BRS::Stream::Reader.new input_socket
begin
puts reader.read_nonblock(512)
rescue IO::WaitReadable
# handle wait
rescue ::EOFError
# handle eof
ensure
reader.close
end
You can create and read tar.br
archives with minitar.
require "brs"
require "minitar"
BRS::Stream::Writer.open "file.tar.br" do |writer|
Minitar::Writer.open writer do |tar|
tar.add_file_simple "file", :data => "sample string"
end
end
BRS::Stream::Reader.open "file.tar.br" do |reader|
Minitar::Reader.open reader do |tar|
tar.each_entry do |entry|
puts entry.name
puts entry.read
end
end
end
You can also use Content-Encoding: br
with sinatra:
require "brs"
require "sinatra"
get "/" do
headers["Content-Encoding"] = "br"
BRS::String.compress "sample string"
end
All functionality (including streaming) can be used inside multiple threads with parallel. This code will provide heavy load for your CPU.
require "brs"
require "parallel"
Parallel.each large_datas do |large_data|
BRS::String.compress large_data
end
Docs
Please review rdoc generated docs.
Options
Option | Values | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
source_buffer_length |
0 - inf | 0 (auto) | internal buffer length for source data |
destination_buffer_length |
0 - inf | 0 (auto) | internal buffer length for description data |
gvl |
true/false | false | enables global VM lock where possible |
mode |
MODES |
:generic |
compressor mode |
quality |
0 - 11 | 11 | compression level |
lgwin |
10 - 24 | 22 | compressor window size |
lgblock |
16 - 24 | nil (auto) | compressor input block size |
npostfix |
0 - 3 | nil (auto) | recommended number of postfix bits |
ndirect |
0 - 120 | nil (auto) | recommended number of direct distance codes (step 1 << npostfix, max 15 << npostfix) |
disable_literal_context_modeling |
true/false | false | disables literal context modeling format |
disable_ring_buffer_reallocation |
true/false | false | disables ring buffer reallocation |
size_hint |
0 - inf | 0 (auto) | size of input (if known) |
large_window |
true/false | false | enables large window |
There are internal buffers for compressed and decompressed data.
For example you want to use 1 KB as source_buffer_length
for compressor - please use 256 B as destination_buffer_length
.
You want to use 256 B as source_buffer_length
for decompressor - please use 1 KB as destination_buffer_length
.
gvl
is disabled by default, this mode allows running multiple compressors/decompressors in different threads simultaneously.
Please consider enabling gvl
if you don't want to launch processors in separate threads.
If gvl
is enabled ruby won't waste time on acquiring/releasing VM lock.
String
and File
will set :size_hint
automaticaly.
You can also read brotli docs for more info about options.
Option | Related constants |
---|---|
mode |
BRS::Option::MODES = %i[text font generic]
|
quality |
BRS::Option::MIN_QUALITY = 0, BRS::Option::MAX_QUALITY = 11 |
lgwin |
BRS::Option::MIN_LGWIN = 10, BRS::Option::MAX_LGWIN = 24 |
lgblock |
BRS::Option::MIN_LGBLOCK = 16, BRS::Option::MAX_LGBLOCK = 24 |
npostfix |
BRS::Option::MIN_NPOSTFIX = 0, BRS::Option::MAX_NPOSTFIX = 3 |
ndirect |
BRS::Option::MIN_NDIRECT = 0, BRS::Option::MAX_NDIRECT = 120, BRS::Option::NDIRECT_NPOSTFIX_STEP_BASE = 1, BRS::Option::NDIRECT_NPOSTFIX_MAX_BASE = 15 |
Possible compressor options:
:source_buffer_length
:destination_buffer_length
:gvl
:mode
:quality
:lgwin
:lgblock
:npostfix
:ndirect
:disable_literal_context_modeling
:size_hint
:large_window
Possible decompressor options:
:source_buffer_length
:destination_buffer_length
:gvl
:disable_ring_buffer_reallocation
:large_window
Example:
require "brs"
data = BRS::String.compress "sample string", :quality => 5
puts BRS::String.decompress(data, :disable_ring_buffer_reallocation => true)
String
String maintains destination buffer only, so it accepts destination_buffer_length
option only.
::compress(source, options = {})
::decompress(source, options = {})
source
is a source string.
File
File maintains both source and destination buffers, it accepts both source_buffer_length
and destination_buffer_length
options.
::compress(source, destination, options = {})
::decompress(source, destination, options = {})
source
and destination
are file pathes.
Stream::Writer
Its behaviour is similar to builtin Zlib::GzipWriter
.
Writer maintains destination buffer only, so it accepts destination_buffer_length
option only.
::open(file_path, options = {}, :external_encoding => nil, :transcode_options => {}, &block)
Open file path and create stream writer associated with opened file.
Data will be transcoded to :external_encoding
using :transcode_options
before compressing.
It may be tricky to use both :size_hint
and :transcode_options
. You have to provide size of transcoded input.
::new(destination_io, options = {}, :external_encoding => nil, :transcode_options => {})
Create stream writer associated with destination io.
Data will be transcoded to :external_encoding
using :transcode_options
before compressing.
It may be tricky to use both :size_hint
and :transcode_options
. You have to provide size of transcoded input.
#set_encoding(external_encoding, nil, transcode_options)
Set another encodings, nil
is just for compatibility with IO
.
#io
#to_io
#stat
#external_encoding
#transcode_options
#pos
#tell
See IO
docs.
#write(*objects)
#flush
#rewind
#close
#closed?
See Zlib::GzipWriter
docs.
#write_nonblock(object, *options)
#flush_nonblock(*options)
#rewind_nonblock(*options)
#close_nonblock(*options)
Special asynchronous methods missing in Zlib::GzipWriter
.
rewind
wants to close
, close
wants to write
something and flush
, flush
want to write
something.
So it is possible to have asynchronous variants for these synchronous methods.
Behaviour is the same as IO#write_nonblock
method.
#<<(object)
#print(*objects)
#printf(*args)
#putc(object, :encoding => 'ASCII-8BIT')
#puts(*objects)
Typical helpers, see Zlib::GzipWriter
docs.
Stream::Reader
Its behaviour is similar to builtin Zlib::GzipReader
.
Reader maintains both source and destination buffers, it accepts both source_buffer_length
and destination_buffer_length
options.
::open(file_path, options = {}, :external_encoding => nil, :internal_encoding => nil, :transcode_options => {}, &block)
Open file path and create stream reader associated with opened file.
Data will be force encoded to :external_encoding
and transcoded to :internal_encoding
using :transcode_options
after decompressing.
::new(source_io, options = {}, :external_encoding => nil, :internal_encoding => nil, :transcode_options => {})
Create stream reader associated with source io.
Data will be force encoded to :external_encoding
and transcoded to :internal_encoding
using :transcode_options
after decompressing.
#set_encoding(external_encoding, internal_encoding, transcode_options)
Set another encodings.
#io
#to_io
#stat
#external_encoding
#internal_encoding
#transcode_options
#pos
#tell
See IO
docs.
#read(bytes_to_read = nil, out_buffer = nil)
#eof?
#rewind
#close
#closed?
See Zlib::GzipReader
docs.
#readpartial(bytes_to_read = nil, out_buffer = nil)
#read_nonblock(bytes_to_read, out_buffer = nil, *options)
See IO
docs.
#getbyte
#each_byte(&block)
#readbyte
#ungetbyte(byte)
#getc
#readchar
#each_char(&block)
#ungetc(char)
#lineno
#lineno=
#gets(separator = $OUTPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR, limit = nil)
#readline
#readlines
#each(&block)
#each_line(&block)
#ungetline(line)
Typical helpers, see Zlib::GzipReader
docs.
Thread safety
:gvl
option is disabled by default, you can use bindings effectively in multiple threads.
Please be careful: bindings are not thread safe.
You should lock all shared data between threads.
For example: you should not use same compressor/decompressor inside multiple threads. Please verify that you are using each processor inside single thread at the same time.
CI
Please visit scripts/test-images. See universal test script scripts/ci_test.sh for CI.