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authorLudovic Courtès <ludo@gnu.org>2020-12-27 12:10:15 +0100
committerLudovic Courtès <ludo@gnu.org>2021-01-13 22:24:19 +0100
commitd288a4de7df90bcd7288f779883279c1202fbe23 (patch)
tree61c801b64cd63ab6a4bce2e688da4eff5b1b7fb9 /doc
parentdb0cecdf6b2f2b8f9c5a3cebe8fc60e79a692be0 (diff)
downloadguix-d288a4de7df90bcd7288f779883279c1202fbe23.tar
guix-d288a4de7df90bcd7288f779883279c1202fbe23.tar.gz
publish: Add support for zstd compression.
* guix/scripts/publish.scm (compress-nar)[write-compressed-file]: New procedure. Use it for 'gzip' and 'lzip'. Add 'zstd. (nar-response-port, string->compression-type): Add case for 'zstd'. * tests/publish.scm (zstd-supported?): New procedure. ("/nar/zstd/*"): New test. * doc/guix.texi (Invoking guix publish): Document zstd compression. (Base Services): Add cross-reference to the above node.
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r--doc/guix.texi22
1 files changed, 15 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/doc/guix.texi b/doc/guix.texi
index f38e018dff..92ea87d6b7 100644
--- a/doc/guix.texi
+++ b/doc/guix.texi
@@ -12348,17 +12348,23 @@ server socket is open and the signing key has been read.
@item --compression[=@var{method}[:@var{level}]]
@itemx -C [@var{method}[:@var{level}]]
Compress data using the given @var{method} and @var{level}. @var{method} is
-one of @code{lzip} and @code{gzip}; when @var{method} is omitted, @code{gzip}
-is used.
+one of @code{lzip}, @code{zstd}, and @code{gzip}; when @var{method} is
+omitted, @code{gzip} is used.
When @var{level} is zero, disable compression. The range 1 to 9 corresponds
to different compression levels: 1 is the fastest, and 9 is the best
(CPU-intensive). The default is 3.
-Usually, @code{lzip} compresses noticeably better than @code{gzip} for a small
-increase in CPU usage; see
-@uref{https://nongnu.org/lzip/lzip_benchmark.html,benchmarks on the lzip Web
-page}.
+Usually, @code{lzip} compresses noticeably better than @code{gzip} for a
+small increase in CPU usage; see
+@uref{https://nongnu.org/lzip/lzip_benchmark.html,benchmarks on the lzip
+Web page}. However, @code{lzip} achieves low decompression throughput
+(on the order of 50@tie{}MiB/s on modern hardware), which can be a
+bottleneck for someone who downloads over a fast network connection.
+
+The compression ratio of @code{zstd} is between that of @code{lzip} and
+that of @code{gzip}; its main advantage is a
+@uref{https://facebook.github.io/zstd/,high decompression speed}.
Unless @option{--cache} is used, compression occurs on the fly and
the compressed streams are not
@@ -15400,7 +15406,9 @@ at level 7 and gzip at level 9, write:
@end lisp
Level 9 achieves the best compression ratio at the expense of increased CPU
-usage, whereas level 1 achieves fast compression.
+usage, whereas level 1 achieves fast compression. @xref{Invoking guix
+publish}, for more information on the available compression methods and
+the tradeoffs involved.
An empty list disables compression altogether.