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Full Discussion: Tar gzip compression rate
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Tar gzip compression rate Post 303038988 by gull04 on Thursday 19th of September 2019 02:47:08 AM
Old 09-19-2019
Hi,

The compression efficiency really depends on what is being compressed, in general high compression ratios of 90% plus seem to be available on large text files. But most compression utilities tend to give only a few percent when compressing binaries or populated database tables.

I dont think I've seen the 99.9% that you've achieved here, but I have seen 90% regularly on text files and I'm sure that on one occasion a few years ago an Oracle Database that I was migrating reduced by a huge amount just can't rmember by how much.

From the example above, I'm not sure how you compressed the file, are you sure that everything is there?

Regards

Gull04

Last edited by gull04; 09-19-2019 at 05:07 AM.. Reason: Correct Typo's
This User Gave Thanks to gull04 For This Post:
 

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compact(1)						      General Commands Manual							compact(1)

Name
       compact, uncompact, ccat - compress and uncompress files, and cat them

Syntax
       compact [name...]
       uncompact [name...]
       ccat [file...]

Description
       The  command compresses the named files using an adaptive Huffman code.	If no file names are given, the standard input is compacted to the
       standard output.  The command operates as an on-line algorithm.	Each time a byte is read, it is encoded immediately according to the  cur-
       rent  prefix  code.   This code is an optimal Huffman code for the set of frequencies seen so far.  It is unnecessary to prepend a decoding
       tree to the compressed file since the encoder and the decoder start in the same state and stay synchronized.  Furthermore, and can  operate
       as filters.  In particular,
	    ... | compact | uncompact | ...
       operates as a (very slow) no-op.

       When  an  argument file is given, it is compacted and the resulting file is placed in file.C; file is unlinked.	The first two bytes of the
       compacted file code the fact that the file is compacted.  This code is used to prohibit recompaction.

       The amount of compression to be expected depends on the type of file being compressed.  Typical values of compression are: Text (38%), Pas-
       cal Source (43%), C Source (36%) and Binary (19%).  These values are the percentages of file bytes reduced.

       The command restores the original file from a file compressed by If no file names are given, the standard input is uncompacted to the stan-
       dard output.

       The command cats the original file from a file compressed by without uncompressing the file.

       The command is present only for compatibility.  In general, the command runs faster and gives better compression.

Restrictions
       The last segment of the file name must contain fewer than thirteen characters to allow space for the appended '.C'.

Files
       compacted file created by compact, removed by uncompact

See Also
       compress(1)

																	compact(1)
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