diff options
author | Lasse Collin <lasse.collin@tukaani.org> | 2010-08-07 20:45:18 +0300 |
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committer | Lasse Collin <lasse.collin@tukaani.org> | 2010-08-07 20:45:18 +0300 |
commit | 792331bdee706aa852a78b171040ebf814c6f3ae (patch) | |
tree | 255e92da193003ad47eb29ccf47ab353d93cafa5 /src/xz/xz.1 | |
parent | Add missing const to a global constant in xz. (diff) | |
download | xz-792331bdee706aa852a78b171040ebf814c6f3ae.tar.xz |
Disable the memory usage limiter by default.
For several people, the limiter causes bigger problems that
it solves, so it is better to have it disabled by default.
Those who want to have a limiter by default need to enable
it via the environment variable XZ_DEFAULTS.
Support for environment variable XZ_DEFAULTS was added. It is
parsed before XZ_OPT and technically identical with it. The
intended uses differ quite a bit though; see the man page.
The memory usage limit can now be set separately for
compression and decompression using --memlimit-compress and
--memlimit-decompress. To set both at once, -M or --memlimit
can be used. --memory was retained as a legacy alias for
--memlimit for backwards compatibility.
The semantics of --info-memory were changed in backwards
incompatible way. Compatibility wasn't meaningful due to
changes in the memory usage limiter functionality.
The memory usage limiter info is no longer shown at the
bottom of xz --long -help.
The memory usage limiter support for removed completely from xzdec.
xz's man page was updated to match the above changes. Various
unrelated fixes were also made to the man page.
Diffstat (limited to 'src/xz/xz.1')
-rw-r--r-- | src/xz/xz.1 | 341 |
1 files changed, 215 insertions, 126 deletions
diff --git a/src/xz/xz.1 b/src/xz/xz.1 index 644822ac..a2eabd72 100644 --- a/src/xz/xz.1 +++ b/src/xz/xz.1 @@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ .\" This file has been put into the public domain. .\" You can do whatever you want with this file. .\" -.TH XZ 1 "2010-07-28" "Tukaani" "XZ Utils" +.TH XZ 1 "2010-08-07" "Tukaani" "XZ Utils" .SH NAME xz, unxz, xzcat, lzma, unlzma, lzcat \- Compress or decompress .xz and .lzma files .SH SYNOPSIS @@ -188,52 +188,56 @@ The memory usage of .B xz varies from a few hundred kilobytes to several gigabytes depending on the compression settings. The settings used when compressing a file -affect also the memory usage of the decompressor. Typically the decompressor -needs only 5\ % to 20\ % of the amount of RAM that the compressor needed when -creating the file. Still, the worst-case memory usage of the decompressor -is several gigabytes. +determine the memory requirements of the decompressor. Typically the +decompressor needs only 5\ % to 20\ % of the amount of memory that the +compressor needed when creating the file. For example, decompressing a +file created with +.B xz \-9 +currently requires 65 MiB of memory. Still, it is possible to have +.B .xz +files that need several gigabytes of memory to decompress. .PP -To prevent uncomfortable surprises caused by huge memory usage, +Especially users of older systems may find the possibility of very large +memory usage annoying. To prevent uncomfortable surprises, .B xz -has a built-in memory usage limiter. While some operating systems provide -ways to limit the memory usage of processes, relying on it wasn't deemed -to be flexible enough. The default limit depends on the total amount of -physical RAM: -.IP \(bu 3 -If 40\ % of RAM is at least 80 MiB, 40\ % of RAM is used as the limit. -.IP \(bu 3 -If 80\ % of RAM is less than 80 MiB, 80\ % of RAM is used as the limit. -.IP \(bu 3 -Otherwise 80 MiB is used as the limit. +has a built-in memory usage limiter, which is disabled by default. +While some operating systems provide ways to limit the memory usage of +processes, relying on it wasn't deemed to be flexible enough (e.g. using +.BR ulimit (1) +to limit virtual memory tends to cripple +.BR mmap (2)). .PP -When compressing, if the selected compression settings exceed the memory -usage limit, the settings are automatically adjusted downwards and a notice -about this is displayed. As an exception, if the memory usage limit is -exceeded when compressing with -.B \-\-format=raw -or -.BR \-\-no\-adjust , -an error is displayed and +The memory usage limiter can be enabled with the command line option +\fB\-\-memlimit=\fIlimit\fR, but often it is more convenient to enable +the limiter by default by setting the environment variable +.BR XZ_DEFAULTS , +e.g. +.BR XZ_DEFAULTS=\-\-memlimit=150MiB . +It is possible to set the limits separately for compression and decompression +by using \fB\-\-memlimit\-compress=\fIlimit\fR and +\fB\-\-memlimit\-decompress=\fIlimit\fR, respectively. +Using these two options outside +.B XZ_DEFAULTS +is rarely useful, because a single run of .B xz -will exit with exit status -.BR 1 . +cannot do both compression and decompression and +.BI \-\-memlimit= limit +(or \fB\-M\fR \fIlimit\fR) +is shorter to type on the command line. .PP -If source -.I file -cannot be decompressed without exceeding the memory usage limit, an error -message is displayed and the file is skipped. Note that compressed files -may contain many blocks, which may have been compressed with different -settings. Typically all blocks will have roughly the same memory requirements, -but it is possible that a block later in the file will exceed the memory usage -limit, and an error about too low memory usage limit gets displayed after some -data has already been decompressed. -.PP -The absolute value of the active memory usage limit can be seen with -.B \-\-info-memory -or near the bottom of the output of -.BR \-\-long\-help . -The default limit can be overridden with -\fB\-\-memory=\fIlimit\fR. +If the specified memory usage limit is exceeded when decompressing, +.B xz +will display an error and decompressing the file will fail. +If the limit is exceeded when compressing, +.B xz +will try to scale the settings down so that the limit is no longer exceeded +(except when using \fB\-\-format=raw\fR or \fB\-\-no\-adjust\fR). +This way the operation won't fail unless the limit is very small. The scaling +of the settings is done in steps that don't match the compression level +presets, e.g. if the limit is only slightly less than the amount required for +.BR "xz \-9" , +the settings will be scaled down only a little, not all the way down to +.BR "xz \-8" . .SS Concatenation and padding with .xz files It is possible to concatenate .B .xz @@ -363,7 +367,7 @@ doesn't recognize the type of the source file, .B xz will copy the source file as is to standard output. This allows using .B xzcat -.B \--force +.B \-\-force like .BR cat (1) for files that have not been compressed with @@ -380,7 +384,7 @@ can be used to restrict to decompress only a single file format. .RE .TP -.BR \-c ", " \-\-stdout ", " \-\-to-stdout +.BR \-c ", " \-\-stdout ", " \-\-to\-stdout Write the compressed or decompressed data to standard output instead of a file. This implies .BR \-\-keep . @@ -559,12 +563,8 @@ due to speed and memory usage. The exact compression settings (filter chain) used by each preset may vary between .B xz -versions. The settings may also vary between files being compressed, if -.B xz -determines that modified settings will probably give better compression -ratio without significantly affecting compression time or memory usage. -.IP -Because the settings may vary, the memory usage may vary too. The following +versions. Because the settings may vary, the memory usage may vary +slightly too. FIXME The following table lists the maximum memory usage of each preset level, which won't be exceeded even in future versions of .BR xz . @@ -590,12 +590,6 @@ Preset;Compression;Decompression .TE .RE .RE -.IP -When compressing, -.B xz -automatically adjusts the compression settings downwards if -the memory usage limit would be exceeded, so it is safe to specify -a high preset level even on systems that don't have lots of RAM. .TP .BR \-\-fast " and " \-\-best These are somewhat misleading aliases for @@ -619,16 +613,25 @@ of the compressor or decompressor (exception: compressor memory usage may increase a little with presets \fB\-0\fR ... \fB\-2\fR). The downside is that the compression time will increase dramatically (it can easily double). .TP +.BI \-\-memlimit\-compress= limit +Set a memory usage limit for compression. If this option is specified +multiple times, the last one takes effect. +.IP +If the compression settings exceed the +.IR limit , +.B xz +will adjust the settings downwards so that the limit is no longer exceeded +and display a notice that automatic adjustment was done. Adjustment is never +done when compressing with +.B \-\-format=raw +or if .B \-\-no\-adjust -Display an error and exit if the compression settings exceed the -the memory usage limit. The default is to adjust the settings downwards so -that the memory usage limit is not exceeded. Automatic adjusting is -always disabled when creating raw streams -.RB ( \-\-format=raw ). -.TP -\fB\-M\fR \fIlimit\fR, \fB\-\-memory=\fIlimit -Set the memory usage limit. If this option is specified multiple times, -the last one takes effect. The +has been specified. In those cases, an error is displayed and +.B xz +will exit with exit status +.BR 1 . +.IP +The .I limit can be specified in multiple ways: .RS @@ -638,52 +641,80 @@ The can be an absolute value in bytes. Using an integer suffix like .B MiB can be useful. Example: -.B "\-\-memory=80MiB" +.B "\-\-memlimit\-compress=80MiB" .IP \(bu 3 The .I limit -can be specified as a percentage of physical RAM. Example: -.B "\-\-memory=70%" +can be specified as a percentage of total physical memory (RAM). +This can be useful especially when setting the +.B XZ_DEFAULTS +environment variable in a shell initialization script that is shared +between different computers. That way the limit is automatically bigger +on systems with more memory. Example: +.B "\-\-memlimit\-compress=70%" .IP \(bu 3 The .I limit can be reset back to its default value by setting it to .BR 0 . -See the section -.B "Memory usage" -for how the default limit is defined. -.IP \(bu 3 -The memory usage limiting can be effectively disabled by setting +This is currently equivalent to setting the .I limit to -.BR max . -This isn't recommended. It's usually better to use, for example, -.BR \-\-memory=90% . +.B max +i.e. no memory usage limit. Once multithreading support has been implemented, +there may be a difference between +.B 0 +and +.B max +for the multithreaded case, so it is recommended to use +.B 0 +instead of +.B max +at least until the details have been decided. .RE .IP -The current -.I limit -can be seen near the bottom of the output of the -.B \-\-long-help -option. +See also the section +.BR "Memory usage" . +.TP +.BI \-\-memlimit\-decompress= limit +Set a memory usage limit for decompression. This affects also the +.B \-\-list +mode. If the operation is not possible without exceeding the +.IR limit , +.B xz +will display an error and decompressing the file will fail. See +.BI \-\-memlimit\-compress= limit +for possible ways to specify the +.IR limit . +.TP +\fB\-M\fR \fIlimit\fR, \fB\-\-memlimit=\fIlimit\fR, \fB\-\-memory=\fIlimit +This is equivalent to specifying \fB\-\-memlimit\-compress=\fIlimit +\fB\-\-memlimit\-decompress=\fIlimit\fR. +.TP +.B \-\-no\-adjust +Display an error and exit if the compression settings exceed the +the memory usage limit. The default is to adjust the settings downwards so +that the memory usage limit is not exceeded. Automatic adjusting is +always disabled when creating raw streams +.RB ( \-\-format=raw ). .TP \fB\-T\fR \fIthreads\fR, \fB\-\-threads=\fIthreads -Specify the maximum number of worker threads to use. The default is -the number of available CPU cores. You can see the current value of -.I threads -near the end of the output of the -.B \-\-long\-help -option. -.IP -The actual number of worker threads can be less than +Specify the number of worker threads to use. The actual number of threads +can be less than .I threads if using more threads would exceed the memory usage limit. -In addition to CPU-intensive worker threads, -.B xz -may use a few auxiliary threads, which don't use a lot of CPU time. .IP .B "Multithreaded compression and decompression are not implemented yet," .B "so this option has no effect for now." +.IP +.B "As of writing (2010-08-07), it hasn't been decided if threads will be" +.B "used by default on multicore systems once support for threading has" +.B "been implemented. Comments are welcome." +The complicating factor is that using many threads will increase the memory +usage dramatically. Note that if multithreading will be the default, +it will be done so that single-threaded and multithreaded modes produce +the same output, so compression ratio won't be significantly affected if +threading will be enabled by default. .SS Custom compressor filter chains A custom filter chain allows specifying the compression settings in detail instead of relying on the settings associated to the preset levels. @@ -1037,7 +1068,8 @@ Currently only simple byte-wise delta calculation is supported. It can be useful when compressing e.g. uncompressed bitmap images or uncompressed PCM audio. However, special purpose algorithms may give significantly better results than Delta + LZMA2. This is true especially with audio, which -compresses faster and better e.g. with FLAC. +compresses faster and better e.g. with +.BR flac (1). .IP Supported .IR options : @@ -1087,18 +1119,17 @@ processed so far. .IP \(bu 3 Compression or decompression speed. This is measured as the amount of uncompressed data consumed (compression) or produced (decompression) -per second. It is shown once a few seconds have passed since +per second. It is shown after a few seconds have passed since .B xz started processing the file. .IP \(bu 3 -Elapsed time or estimated time remaining. -Elapsed time is displayed in the format M:SS or H:MM:SS. -The estimated remaining time is displayed in a less precise format -which never has colons, for example, 2 min 30 s. The estimate can -be shown only when the size of the input file is known and a couple of -seconds have already passed since +Elapsed time in the format M:SS or H:MM:SS. +.IP \(bu 3 +Estimated remaining time is shown only when the size of the input file is +known and a couple of seconds have already passed since .B xz -started processing the file. +started processing the file. The time is shown in a less precise format which +never has any colons, e.g. 2 min 30 s. .RE .IP When standard error is not a terminal, @@ -1106,11 +1137,11 @@ When standard error is not a terminal, will make .B xz print the filename, compressed size, uncompressed size, compression ratio, -speed, and elapsed time on a single line to standard error after -compressing or decompressing the file. If operating took at least a few -seconds, also the speed and elapsed time are printed. If the operation -didn't finish, for example due to user interruption, also the completion -percentage is printed if the size of the input file is known. +and possibly also the speed and elapsed time on a single line to standard +error after compressing or decompressing the file. The speed and elapsed +time are included only when the operation took at least a few seconds. +If the operation didn't finish, for example due to user interruption, also +the completion percentage is printed if the size of the input file is known. .TP .BR \-Q ", " \-\-no\-warn Don't set the exit status to @@ -1133,12 +1164,11 @@ releases. See the section .B "ROBOT MODE" for details. .TP -.BR \-\-info-memory -Display the current memory usage limit in human-readable format on -a single line, and exit successfully. To see how much RAM +.BR \-\-info\-memory +Display, in human-readable format, how much physical memory (RAM) .B xz -thinks your system has, use -.BR "\-\-memory=100% \-\-info\-memory" . +thinks the system has and the memory usage limits for compression +and decompression, and exit successfully. .TP .BR \-h ", " \-\-help Display a help message describing the most commonly used options, @@ -1165,7 +1195,7 @@ easier to parse by other programs. Currently .B \-\-robot is supported only together with .BR \-\-version , -.BR \-\-info-memory , +.BR \-\-info\-memory , and .BR \-\-list . It will be supported for normal compression and decompression in the future. @@ -1216,10 +1246,24 @@ and 5.0.0 is .BR 50000002 . .SS Memory limit information -.B "xz \-\-robot \-\-info-memory" -prints the current memory usage limit as bytes on a single line. -To get the total amount of installed RAM, use -.BR "xz \-\-robot \-\-memory=100% \-\-info-memory" . +.B "xz \-\-robot \-\-info\-memory" +prints a single line with three tab-separated columns: +.RS +.IP 1. 4 +Total amount of physical memory (RAM) as bytes +.IP 2. 4 +Memory usage limit for compression as bytes. +A special value of zero indicates the default setting, +which for single-threaded mode is the same as no limit. +.IP 3. 4 +Memory usage limit for decompression as bytes. +A special value of zero indicates the default setting, +which for single-threaded mode is the same as no limit. +.RE +.PP +In the future, the output of +.B "xz \-\-robot \-\-info\-memory" +may have more columns, but never more than a single line. .SS List mode .B "xz \-\-robot \-\-list" uses tab-separated output. The first column of every line has a string @@ -1455,16 +1499,52 @@ Something worth a warning occurred, but no actual errors occurred. Notices (not warnings or errors) printed on standard error don't affect the exit status. .SH ENVIRONMENT +.B xz +parses space-separated lists of options from the environment variables +.B XZ_DEFAULTS +and +.BR XZ_OPT , +in this order, before parsing the options from the command line. Note that +only options are parsed from the environment variables; all non-options +are silently ignored. Parsing is done with +.BR getopt_long (3) +which is used also for the command line arguments. +.TP +.B XZ_DEFAULTS +User-specific or system-wide default options. +Typically this is set in a shell initialization script to enable +.BR xz 's +memory usage limiter by default. Excluding shell initialization scripts +and similar special cases, scripts must never set or unset +.BR XZ_DEFAULTS . .TP .B XZ_OPT -A space-separated list of options is parsed from +This is for passing options to +.B xz +when it is not possible to set the options directly on the +.B xz +command line. This is the case e.g. when +.B xz +is run by a script or tool, e.g. GNU +.BR tar (1): +.RS +.IP +\fBXZ_OPT=\-2v tar caf foo.tar.xz foo +.RE +.IP +Scripts may use .B XZ_OPT -before parsing the options given on the command line. Note that only -options are parsed from -.BR XZ_OPT ; -all non-options are silently ignored. Parsing is done with -.BR getopt_long (3) -which is used also for the command line arguments. +e.g. to set script-specific default compression options. +It is still recommended to allow users to override +.B XZ_OPT +if that is reasonable, e.g. in +.BR sh (1) +scripts one may use something like this: +.RS +.IP +\fBXZ_OPT=${XZ_OPT\-"\-7e"}; export XZ_OPT +.RE +.IP .SH "LZMA UTILS COMPATIBILITY" The command line syntax of .B xz @@ -1663,7 +1743,7 @@ XZ Embedded supports BCJ filters, but only with the default start offset. A mix of compressed and uncompressed files can be decompressed to standard output with a single command: .IP -.B "xz -dcf a.txt b.txt.xz c.txt d.txt.xz > abcd.txt" +.B "xz \-dcf a.txt b.txt.xz c.txt d.txt.xz > abcd.txt" .SS Parallel compression of many files On GNU and *BSD, .BR find (1) @@ -1672,7 +1752,8 @@ and can be used to parallelize compression of many files: .PP .IP -.B "find . \-type f \e! \-name '*.xz' \-print0 | xargs \-0r \-P4 \-n16 xz" +.B "find . \-type f \e! \-name '*.xz' \-print0 |" +.B "xargs \-0r \-P4 \-n16 xz \-T1" .PP The .B \-P @@ -1690,11 +1771,19 @@ or even more may be appropriate to reduce the number of processes that .BR xargs (1) will eventually create. +.PP +The option +.B \-T1 +for +.B xz +is there to force it to single-threaded mode, because +.BR xargs (1) +is used to control the amount of parallelization. .SS Robot mode examples Calculating how many bytes have been saved in total after compressing multiple files: .IP -.B "xz --robot --list *.xz | awk '/^totals/{print $5\-$4}'" +.B "xz \-\-robot \-\-list *.xz | awk '/^totals/{print $5\-$4}'" .SH "SEE ALSO" .BR xzdec (1), .BR gzip (1), |