The nbSeq "short" format (1-byte)
is compatible with any value < 128.
However, the code would cautiously only accept values < 127.
This is not an error, because the general 2-bytes format
is compatible with small values < 128.
Hence the inefficiency never triggered any warning.
Spotted by Intel's Smita Kumar.
to produce same content on both 32 and 64-bit platforms
by removing floating from literal table determination.
also : added checksum trace in compression control test,
so that it's easier to determine if test fails
as a consequence of compressing a different sample.
The match length and literal length extra bytes could either
by 2 bytes or 3 bytes in version 0.5. All earlier verions were
always 3 bytes, and later version didn't have dumps.
The bug, introduced by commit 0fd322f812,
was triggered when the last dump was a 2-byte dump, because we didn't
separate that case from a 3-byte dump, and thought we were over-reading.
I've tested this fix with every zstd version < 1.0.0 on the buggy file,
and we are now always successfully decompressing with the right
checksum.
Fixes#1693.
Compiling with clang-8 fails with the following errors:
largeNbDicts.c:562:37: error: implicit conversion turns floating-point
number into integer: 'const double' to 'U64' (aka 'unsigned long')
[-Werror,-Wfloat-conversion]
U64 const dTime_ns = result.nanoSecPerRun;
~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~
zstdcli.c:300:5: error: '@return' command used in a comment that is
not attached to a function or method declaration
[-Werror,-Wdocumentation]
* @return 1 means that cover parameters were correct
~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
zstdcli.c:301:5: error: '@return' command used in a comment that is
not attached to a function or method declaration
[-Werror,-Wdocumentation]
* @return 0 in case of malformed parameters
~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This changes the size limit on compressed blocks to match those of the other
block types: they may not be larger than the `Block_Maximum_Decompressed_Size`,
which is the smaller of the `Window_Size` and 128 KB, removing the additional
restriction that had been placed on `Compressed_Block`s, that they be smaller
than the decompressed content they represent.
Several things motivate removing this restriction. On the one hand, this
restriction is not useful for decoders: the decoder must nonetheless be
prepared to accept compressed blocks that are the full
`Block_Maximum_Decompressed_Size`. And on the other, this bound is actually
artificially limiting. If block representations were entirely independent,
a compressed representation of a block that is larger than the contents of the
block would be ipso facto useless, and it would be strictly better to send it
as an `Raw_Block`. However, blocks are not entirely independent, and it can
make sense to pay the cost of encoding custom entropy tables in a block, even
if that pushes that block size over the size of the data it represents,
because those tables can be re-used by subsequent blocks.
Finally, as far as I can tell, this restriction in the spec is not currently
enforced in any Zstandard implementation, nor has it ever been. This change
should therefore be safe to make.