hane 1.1.1 → 1.2.0

This diff represents the content of publicly available package versions that have been released to one of the supported registries. The information contained in this diff is provided for informational purposes only and reflects changes between package versions as they appear in their respective public registries.
Files changed (379) hide show
  1. package/README.md +32 -32
  2. package/binding.gyp +50 -50
  3. package/deps/win-nodeapi/node_api.def +158 -158
  4. package/package.json +34 -34
  5. package/src/native/addon.cc +183 -183
  6. package/src/native/zsign_driver.cc +86 -86
  7. package/src/native/zsign_driver.h +38 -38
  8. package/vendor/zlib/.cmake-format.yaml +245 -245
  9. package/vendor/zlib/.github/workflows/c-std.yml +230 -230
  10. package/vendor/zlib/.github/workflows/cmake.yml +112 -112
  11. package/vendor/zlib/.github/workflows/configure.yml +136 -136
  12. package/vendor/zlib/.github/workflows/fuzz.yml +25 -25
  13. package/vendor/zlib/.github/workflows/msys-cygwin.yml +77 -77
  14. package/vendor/zlib/BUILD.bazel +134 -134
  15. package/vendor/zlib/CMakeLists.txt +330 -330
  16. package/vendor/zlib/ChangeLog +1621 -1621
  17. package/vendor/zlib/FAQ +367 -367
  18. package/vendor/zlib/INDEX +68 -68
  19. package/vendor/zlib/LICENSE +22 -22
  20. package/vendor/zlib/MODULE.bazel +9 -9
  21. package/vendor/zlib/Makefile.in +419 -419
  22. package/vendor/zlib/README +115 -115
  23. package/vendor/zlib/README-cmake.md +83 -83
  24. package/vendor/zlib/adler32.c +164 -164
  25. package/vendor/zlib/amiga/Makefile.pup +69 -69
  26. package/vendor/zlib/amiga/Makefile.sas +68 -68
  27. package/vendor/zlib/compress.c +75 -75
  28. package/vendor/zlib/configure +966 -966
  29. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/README.contrib +57 -57
  30. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/ada/buffer_demo.adb +106 -106
  31. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/ada/mtest.adb +156 -156
  32. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/ada/read.adb +156 -156
  33. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/ada/readme.txt +65 -65
  34. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/ada/test.adb +463 -463
  35. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/ada/zlib-streams.adb +225 -225
  36. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/ada/zlib-streams.ads +114 -114
  37. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/ada/zlib-thin.adb +142 -142
  38. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/ada/zlib-thin.ads +450 -450
  39. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/ada/zlib.adb +701 -701
  40. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/ada/zlib.ads +328 -328
  41. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/ada/zlib.gpr +20 -20
  42. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/blast/Makefile +8 -8
  43. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/blast/README +4 -4
  44. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/blast/blast.c +466 -466
  45. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/blast/blast.h +83 -83
  46. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/delphi/ZLib.pas +557 -557
  47. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/delphi/ZLibConst.pas +11 -11
  48. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/delphi/readme.txt +76 -76
  49. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/delphi/zlibd32.mak +99 -99
  50. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/gcc_gvmat64/gvmat64.S +574 -574
  51. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/infback9/README +1 -1
  52. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/infback9/infback9.c +603 -603
  53. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/infback9/infback9.h +37 -37
  54. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/infback9/inffix9.h +107 -107
  55. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/infback9/inflate9.h +47 -47
  56. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/infback9/inftree9.c +319 -319
  57. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/infback9/inftree9.h +61 -61
  58. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/iostream/test.cpp +24 -24
  59. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/iostream/zfstream.cpp +329 -329
  60. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/iostream/zfstream.h +128 -128
  61. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/iostream2/zstream.h +307 -307
  62. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/iostream2/zstream_test.cpp +25 -25
  63. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/iostream3/README +35 -35
  64. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/iostream3/TODO +17 -17
  65. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/iostream3/test.cc +50 -50
  66. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/iostream3/zfstream.cc +479 -479
  67. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/iostream3/zfstream.h +466 -466
  68. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/CMakeLists.txt +380 -380
  69. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/Makefile +37 -37
  70. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/Makefile.am +45 -45
  71. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/MiniZip64_Changes.txt +6 -6
  72. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/MiniZip64_info.txt +74 -74
  73. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/configure.ac +32 -32
  74. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/crypt.h +128 -128
  75. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/ints.h +57 -57
  76. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/ioapi.c +231 -231
  77. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/ioapi.h +183 -183
  78. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/iowin32.c +448 -448
  79. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/iowin32.h +28 -28
  80. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/make_vms.com +25 -25
  81. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/miniunz.c +647 -647
  82. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/miniunzip.1 +63 -63
  83. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/minizip.1 +46 -46
  84. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/minizip.c +512 -512
  85. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/minizip.pc.in +12 -12
  86. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/minizip.pc.txt +13 -13
  87. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/minizipConfig.cmake.in +35 -35
  88. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/mztools.c +288 -288
  89. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/mztools.h +37 -37
  90. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/skipset.h +361 -361
  91. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/test/CMakeLists.txt +121 -121
  92. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/test/add_subdirectory_exclude_test.cmake.in +29 -29
  93. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/test/add_subdirectory_test.cmake.in +28 -28
  94. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/test/find_package_test.cmake.in +25 -25
  95. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/test/test_helper.cm +32 -32
  96. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/unzip.c +1981 -1981
  97. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/unzip.h +441 -441
  98. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/zip.c +2199 -2199
  99. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/minizip/zip.h +370 -370
  100. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/nuget/nuget.csproj +43 -43
  101. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/nuget/nuget.sln +22 -22
  102. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/pascal/example.pas +599 -599
  103. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/pascal/readme.txt +76 -76
  104. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/pascal/zlibd32.mak +99 -99
  105. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/pascal/zlibpas.pas +276 -276
  106. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/puff/Makefile +42 -42
  107. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/puff/README +63 -63
  108. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/puff/puff.c +840 -840
  109. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/puff/puff.h +35 -35
  110. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/puff/pufftest.c +169 -169
  111. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/untgz/Makefile +14 -14
  112. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/untgz/Makefile.msc +17 -17
  113. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/untgz/untgz.c +667 -667
  114. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/vstudio/readme.txt +81 -81
  115. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/vstudio/vc12/miniunz.vcxproj +315 -315
  116. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/vstudio/vc12/minizip.vcxproj +312 -312
  117. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/vstudio/vc12/testzlib.vcxproj +421 -421
  118. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/vstudio/vc12/testzlibdll.vcxproj +315 -315
  119. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/vstudio/vc12/zlib.rc +32 -32
  120. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/vstudio/vc12/zlibstat.vcxproj +458 -458
  121. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/vstudio/vc12/zlibvc.sln +119 -119
  122. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/vstudio/vc12/zlibvc.vcxproj +667 -667
  123. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/vstudio/vc14/miniunz.vcxproj +315 -315
  124. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/vstudio/vc14/minizip.vcxproj +312 -312
  125. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/vstudio/vc14/testzlib.vcxproj +421 -421
  126. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/vstudio/vc14/testzlibdll.vcxproj +315 -315
  127. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/vstudio/vc14/zlib.rc +32 -32
  128. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/vstudio/vc14/zlibstat.vcxproj +458 -458
  129. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/vstudio/vc14/zlibvc.sln +119 -119
  130. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/vstudio/vc14/zlibvc.vcxproj +667 -667
  131. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/vstudio/vc17/miniunz.vcxproj +408 -408
  132. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/vstudio/vc17/minizip.vcxproj +404 -404
  133. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/vstudio/vc17/testzlib.vcxproj +472 -472
  134. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/vstudio/vc17/testzlibdll.vcxproj +408 -408
  135. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/vstudio/vc17/zlib.rc +32 -32
  136. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/vstudio/vc17/zlibstat.vcxproj +601 -601
  137. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/vstudio/vc17/zlibvc.sln +179 -179
  138. package/vendor/zlib/contrib/vstudio/vc17/zlibvc.vcxproj +874 -874
  139. package/vendor/zlib/crc32.c +1049 -1049
  140. package/vendor/zlib/crc32.h +9446 -9446
  141. package/vendor/zlib/deflate.c +2152 -2152
  142. package/vendor/zlib/deflate.h +380 -380
  143. package/vendor/zlib/doc/algorithm.txt +209 -209
  144. package/vendor/zlib/doc/rfc1950.txt +619 -619
  145. package/vendor/zlib/doc/rfc1951.txt +955 -955
  146. package/vendor/zlib/doc/rfc1952.txt +675 -675
  147. package/vendor/zlib/doc/txtvsbin.txt +107 -107
  148. package/vendor/zlib/examples/README.examples +54 -54
  149. package/vendor/zlib/examples/enough.c +597 -597
  150. package/vendor/zlib/examples/fitblk.c +233 -233
  151. package/vendor/zlib/examples/gun.c +702 -702
  152. package/vendor/zlib/examples/gzappend.c +504 -504
  153. package/vendor/zlib/examples/gzjoin.c +449 -449
  154. package/vendor/zlib/examples/gzlog.c +1061 -1061
  155. package/vendor/zlib/examples/gzlog.h +91 -91
  156. package/vendor/zlib/examples/gznorm.c +474 -474
  157. package/vendor/zlib/examples/zlib_how.html +549 -549
  158. package/vendor/zlib/examples/zpipe.c +209 -209
  159. package/vendor/zlib/examples/zran.c +550 -550
  160. package/vendor/zlib/examples/zran.h +53 -53
  161. package/vendor/zlib/gzclose.c +23 -23
  162. package/vendor/zlib/gzguts.h +215 -215
  163. package/vendor/zlib/gzlib.c +585 -585
  164. package/vendor/zlib/gzread.c +603 -603
  165. package/vendor/zlib/gzwrite.c +631 -631
  166. package/vendor/zlib/infback.c +628 -628
  167. package/vendor/zlib/inffast.c +320 -320
  168. package/vendor/zlib/inffast.h +11 -11
  169. package/vendor/zlib/inffixed.h +94 -94
  170. package/vendor/zlib/inflate.c +1526 -1526
  171. package/vendor/zlib/inflate.h +126 -126
  172. package/vendor/zlib/inftrees.c +299 -299
  173. package/vendor/zlib/inftrees.h +62 -62
  174. package/vendor/zlib/make_vms.com +867 -867
  175. package/vendor/zlib/msdos/Makefile.bor +115 -115
  176. package/vendor/zlib/msdos/Makefile.dj2 +104 -104
  177. package/vendor/zlib/msdos/Makefile.emx +69 -69
  178. package/vendor/zlib/msdos/Makefile.msc +112 -112
  179. package/vendor/zlib/msdos/Makefile.tc +100 -100
  180. package/vendor/zlib/nintendods/Makefile +126 -126
  181. package/vendor/zlib/nintendods/README +5 -5
  182. package/vendor/zlib/old/Makefile.emx +69 -69
  183. package/vendor/zlib/old/Makefile.riscos +151 -151
  184. package/vendor/zlib/old/README +3 -3
  185. package/vendor/zlib/old/descrip.mms +48 -48
  186. package/vendor/zlib/old/os2/Makefile.os2 +136 -136
  187. package/vendor/zlib/old/os2/zlib.def +51 -51
  188. package/vendor/zlib/old/visual-basic.txt +160 -160
  189. package/vendor/zlib/os400/README400 +48 -48
  190. package/vendor/zlib/os400/bndsrc +133 -133
  191. package/vendor/zlib/os400/make.sh +366 -366
  192. package/vendor/zlib/os400/zlib.inc +531 -531
  193. package/vendor/zlib/qnx/package.qpg +141 -141
  194. package/vendor/zlib/test/CMakeLists.txt +265 -265
  195. package/vendor/zlib/test/add_subdirectory_exclude_test.cmake.in +29 -29
  196. package/vendor/zlib/test/add_subdirectory_test.cmake.in +28 -28
  197. package/vendor/zlib/test/example.c +552 -552
  198. package/vendor/zlib/test/find_package_test.cmake.in +26 -26
  199. package/vendor/zlib/test/infcover.c +672 -672
  200. package/vendor/zlib/test/minigzip.c +590 -590
  201. package/vendor/zlib/treebuild.xml +116 -116
  202. package/vendor/zlib/trees.c +1119 -1119
  203. package/vendor/zlib/trees.h +128 -128
  204. package/vendor/zlib/uncompr.c +85 -85
  205. package/vendor/zlib/watcom/watcom_f.mak +43 -43
  206. package/vendor/zlib/watcom/watcom_l.mak +43 -43
  207. package/vendor/zlib/win32/DLL_FAQ.txt +381 -381
  208. package/vendor/zlib/win32/Makefile.bor +109 -109
  209. package/vendor/zlib/win32/Makefile.gcc +177 -177
  210. package/vendor/zlib/win32/Makefile.msc +159 -159
  211. package/vendor/zlib/win32/README-WIN32.txt +103 -103
  212. package/vendor/zlib/win32/VisualC.txt +3 -3
  213. package/vendor/zlib/win32/zlib1.rc +37 -37
  214. package/vendor/zlib/zconf.h.in +544 -544
  215. package/vendor/zlib/zlib.3 +149 -149
  216. package/vendor/zlib/zlib.h +1957 -1957
  217. package/vendor/zlib/zlib.map +103 -103
  218. package/vendor/zlib/zlib.pc.cmakein +13 -13
  219. package/vendor/zlib/zlib.pc.in +13 -13
  220. package/vendor/zlib/zlibConfig.cmake.in +26 -26
  221. package/vendor/zlib/zutil.c +299 -299
  222. package/vendor/zlib/zutil.h +257 -257
  223. package/vendor/zsign/.gitattributes +3 -3
  224. package/vendor/zsign/LICENSE +20 -20
  225. package/vendor/zsign/README.md +142 -142
  226. package/vendor/zsign/build/linux/Makefile +43 -43
  227. package/vendor/zsign/build/macos/Makefile +43 -43
  228. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/minizip/crypt.h +128 -128
  229. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/minizip/ioapi.h +216 -216
  230. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/minizip/iowin32.h +28 -28
  231. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/minizip/mztools.h +37 -37
  232. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/minizip/unzip.h +437 -437
  233. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/minizip/zip.h +364 -364
  234. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/__DECC_INCLUDE_EPILOGUE.H +22 -22
  235. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/__DECC_INCLUDE_PROLOGUE.H +26 -26
  236. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/aes.h +111 -111
  237. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/applink.c +153 -153
  238. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/asn1_mac.h +10 -10
  239. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/asn1err.h +142 -142
  240. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/async.h +104 -104
  241. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/asyncerr.h +29 -29
  242. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/bioerr.h +72 -72
  243. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/blowfish.h +78 -78
  244. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/bn.h +590 -590
  245. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/bnerr.h +47 -47
  246. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/buffer.h +62 -62
  247. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/buffererr.h +25 -25
  248. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/camellia.h +117 -117
  249. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/cast.h +71 -71
  250. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/cmac.h +52 -52
  251. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/cmp_util.h +56 -56
  252. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/cmperr.h +131 -131
  253. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/cmserr.h +125 -125
  254. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/comperr.h +38 -38
  255. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/conf_api.h +46 -46
  256. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/conferr.h +52 -52
  257. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/conftypes.h +44 -44
  258. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/core.h +236 -236
  259. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/core_dispatch.h +1022 -1022
  260. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/core_object.h +41 -41
  261. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/crmferr.h +50 -50
  262. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/cryptoerr.h +56 -56
  263. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/cryptoerr_legacy.h +1466 -1466
  264. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/cterr.h +45 -45
  265. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/decoder.h +133 -133
  266. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/decodererr.h +28 -28
  267. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/des.h +211 -211
  268. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/dh.h +339 -339
  269. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/dherr.h +59 -59
  270. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/dsa.h +280 -280
  271. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/dsaerr.h +44 -44
  272. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/dtls1.h +57 -57
  273. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/e_os2.h +310 -310
  274. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/e_ostime.h +38 -38
  275. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/ebcdic.h +39 -39
  276. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/ec.h +1588 -1588
  277. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/ecdh.h +10 -10
  278. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/ecdsa.h +10 -10
  279. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/ecerr.h +104 -104
  280. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/encoder.h +124 -124
  281. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/encodererr.h +28 -28
  282. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/engine.h +833 -833
  283. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/engineerr.h +63 -63
  284. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/esserr.h +32 -32
  285. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/evp.h +2231 -2231
  286. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/evperr.h +140 -140
  287. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/fips_names.h +50 -50
  288. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/hmac.h +62 -62
  289. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/hpke.h +169 -169
  290. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/http.h +118 -118
  291. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/httperr.h +56 -56
  292. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/idea.h +82 -82
  293. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/indicator.h +31 -31
  294. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/kdf.h +138 -138
  295. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/kdferr.h +16 -16
  296. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/macros.h +338 -338
  297. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/md2.h +56 -56
  298. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/md4.h +63 -63
  299. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/md5.h +62 -62
  300. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/mdc2.h +55 -55
  301. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/modes.h +219 -219
  302. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/obj_mac.h +5820 -5820
  303. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/objects.h +184 -184
  304. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/objectserr.h +28 -28
  305. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/ocsperr.h +53 -53
  306. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/opensslconf.h +17 -17
  307. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/ossl_typ.h +16 -16
  308. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/param_build.h +63 -63
  309. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/params.h +160 -160
  310. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/pem.h +543 -543
  311. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/pem2.h +19 -19
  312. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/pemerr.h +58 -58
  313. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/pkcs12err.h +46 -46
  314. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/pkcs7err.h +63 -63
  315. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/prov_ssl.h +38 -38
  316. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/proverr.h +162 -162
  317. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/provider.h +66 -66
  318. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/quic.h +70 -70
  319. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/rand.h +125 -125
  320. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/randerr.h +69 -69
  321. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/rc2.h +68 -68
  322. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/rc4.h +47 -47
  323. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/rc5.h +79 -79
  324. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/ripemd.h +59 -59
  325. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/rsa.h +615 -615
  326. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/rsaerr.h +107 -107
  327. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/seed.h +113 -113
  328. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/self_test.h +98 -98
  329. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/sha.h +139 -139
  330. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/srtp.h +68 -68
  331. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/ssl2.h +30 -30
  332. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/ssl3.h +357 -357
  333. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/sslerr.h +379 -379
  334. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/sslerr_legacy.h +467 -467
  335. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/stack.h +90 -90
  336. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/store.h +377 -377
  337. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/storeerr.h +49 -49
  338. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/symhacks.h +39 -39
  339. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/thread.h +31 -31
  340. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/tls1.h +1220 -1220
  341. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/trace.h +320 -320
  342. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/ts.h +522 -522
  343. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/tserr.h +67 -67
  344. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/txt_db.h +63 -63
  345. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/types.h +245 -245
  346. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/uierr.h +38 -38
  347. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/whrlpool.h +62 -62
  348. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/x509err.h +70 -70
  349. package/vendor/zsign/build/windows/vs2022/include/openssl/x509v3err.h +96 -96
  350. package/vendor/zsign/src/archo.cpp +742 -742
  351. package/vendor/zsign/src/archo.h +61 -61
  352. package/vendor/zsign/src/bundle.cpp +589 -589
  353. package/vendor/zsign/src/bundle.h +46 -46
  354. package/vendor/zsign/src/common/archive.cpp +246 -246
  355. package/vendor/zsign/src/common/archive.h +22 -22
  356. package/vendor/zsign/src/common/common.h +56 -56
  357. package/vendor/zsign/src/common/fs.cpp +573 -573
  358. package/vendor/zsign/src/common/fs.h +50 -50
  359. package/vendor/zsign/src/common/log.cpp +145 -145
  360. package/vendor/zsign/src/common/log.h +37 -37
  361. package/vendor/zsign/src/common/mach-o.h +585 -585
  362. package/vendor/zsign/src/common/sha.cpp +133 -133
  363. package/vendor/zsign/src/common/sha.h +24 -24
  364. package/vendor/zsign/src/common/timer.cpp +28 -28
  365. package/vendor/zsign/src/common/timer.h +17 -17
  366. package/vendor/zsign/src/common/util.cpp +185 -185
  367. package/vendor/zsign/src/common/util.h +25 -25
  368. package/vendor/zsign/src/macho.cpp +273 -273
  369. package/vendor/zsign/src/macho.h +38 -38
  370. package/vendor/zsign/src/openssl.cpp +698 -698
  371. package/vendor/zsign/src/openssl.h +71 -71
  372. package/vendor/zsign/src/signing.cpp +745 -745
  373. package/vendor/zsign/src/signing.h +59 -59
  374. package/vendor/zsign/src/zsign.cpp +317 -317
  375. package/vendor/zsign/test/dylib/demo/Makefile +12 -12
  376. package/vendor/zsign/test/dylib/demo/control +9 -9
  377. package/vendor/zsign/test/dylib/demo/demo.m +21 -21
  378. package/vendor/zsign/test/linux/test.sh +19 -19
  379. package/vendor/zsign/test/macos/test.sh +19 -19
@@ -1,209 +1,209 @@
1
- 1. Compression algorithm (deflate)
2
-
3
- The deflation algorithm used by gzip (also zip and zlib) is a variation of
4
- LZ77 (Lempel-Ziv 1977, see reference below). It finds duplicated strings in
5
- the input data. The second occurrence of a string is replaced by a
6
- pointer to the previous string, in the form of a pair (distance,
7
- length). Distances are limited to 32K bytes, and lengths are limited
8
- to 258 bytes. When a string does not occur anywhere in the previous
9
- 32K bytes, it is emitted as a sequence of literal bytes. (In this
10
- description, `string' must be taken as an arbitrary sequence of bytes,
11
- and is not restricted to printable characters.)
12
-
13
- Literals or match lengths are compressed with one Huffman tree, and
14
- match distances are compressed with another tree. The trees are stored
15
- in a compact form at the start of each block. The blocks can have any
16
- size (except that the compressed data for one block must fit in
17
- available memory). A block is terminated when deflate() determines that
18
- it would be useful to start another block with fresh trees. (This is
19
- somewhat similar to the behavior of LZW-based _compress_.)
20
-
21
- Duplicated strings are found using a hash table. All input strings of
22
- length 3 are inserted in the hash table. A hash index is computed for
23
- the next 3 bytes. If the hash chain for this index is not empty, all
24
- strings in the chain are compared with the current input string, and
25
- the longest match is selected.
26
-
27
- The hash chains are searched starting with the most recent strings, to
28
- favor small distances and thus take advantage of the Huffman encoding.
29
- The hash chains are singly linked. There are no deletions from the
30
- hash chains, the algorithm simply discards matches that are too old.
31
-
32
- To avoid a worst-case situation, very long hash chains are arbitrarily
33
- truncated at a certain length, determined by a runtime option (level
34
- parameter of deflateInit). So deflate() does not always find the longest
35
- possible match but generally finds a match which is long enough.
36
-
37
- deflate() also defers the selection of matches with a lazy evaluation
38
- mechanism. After a match of length N has been found, deflate() searches for
39
- a longer match at the next input byte. If a longer match is found, the
40
- previous match is truncated to a length of one (thus producing a single
41
- literal byte) and the process of lazy evaluation begins again. Otherwise,
42
- the original match is kept, and the next match search is attempted only N
43
- steps later.
44
-
45
- The lazy match evaluation is also subject to a runtime parameter. If
46
- the current match is long enough, deflate() reduces the search for a longer
47
- match, thus speeding up the whole process. If compression ratio is more
48
- important than speed, deflate() attempts a complete second search even if
49
- the first match is already long enough.
50
-
51
- The lazy match evaluation is not performed for the fastest compression
52
- modes (level parameter 1 to 3). For these fast modes, new strings
53
- are inserted in the hash table only when no match was found, or
54
- when the match is not too long. This degrades the compression ratio
55
- but saves time since there are both fewer insertions and fewer searches.
56
-
57
-
58
- 2. Decompression algorithm (inflate)
59
-
60
- 2.1 Introduction
61
-
62
- The key question is how to represent a Huffman code (or any prefix code) so
63
- that you can decode fast. The most important characteristic is that shorter
64
- codes are much more common than longer codes, so pay attention to decoding the
65
- short codes fast, and let the long codes take longer to decode.
66
-
67
- inflate() sets up a first level table that covers some number of bits of
68
- input less than the length of longest code. It gets that many bits from the
69
- stream, and looks it up in the table. The table will tell if the next
70
- code is that many bits or less and how many, and if it is, it will tell
71
- the value, else it will point to the next level table for which inflate()
72
- grabs more bits and tries to decode a longer code.
73
-
74
- How many bits to make the first lookup is a tradeoff between the time it
75
- takes to decode and the time it takes to build the table. If building the
76
- table took no time (and if you had infinite memory), then there would only
77
- be a first level table to cover all the way to the longest code. However,
78
- building the table ends up taking a lot longer for more bits since short
79
- codes are replicated many times in such a table. What inflate() does is
80
- simply to make the number of bits in the first table a variable, and then
81
- to set that variable for the maximum speed.
82
-
83
- For inflate, which has 286 possible codes for the literal/length tree, the size
84
- of the first table is nine bits. Also the distance trees have 30 possible
85
- values, and the size of the first table is six bits. Note that for each of
86
- those cases, the table ended up one bit longer than the ``average'' code
87
- length, i.e. the code length of an approximately flat code which would be a
88
- little more than eight bits for 286 symbols and a little less than five bits
89
- for 30 symbols.
90
-
91
-
92
- 2.2 More details on the inflate table lookup
93
-
94
- Ok, you want to know what this cleverly obfuscated inflate tree actually
95
- looks like. You are correct that it's not a Huffman tree. It is simply a
96
- lookup table for the first, let's say, nine bits of a Huffman symbol. The
97
- symbol could be as short as one bit or as long as 15 bits. If a particular
98
- symbol is shorter than nine bits, then that symbol's translation is duplicated
99
- in all those entries that start with that symbol's bits. For example, if the
100
- symbol is four bits, then it's duplicated 32 times in a nine-bit table. If a
101
- symbol is nine bits long, it appears in the table once.
102
-
103
- If the symbol is longer than nine bits, then that entry in the table points
104
- to another similar table for the remaining bits. Again, there are duplicated
105
- entries as needed. The idea is that most of the time the symbol will be short
106
- and there will only be one table look up. (That's whole idea behind data
107
- compression in the first place.) For the less frequent long symbols, there
108
- will be two lookups. If you had a compression method with really long
109
- symbols, you could have as many levels of lookups as is efficient. For
110
- inflate, two is enough.
111
-
112
- So a table entry either points to another table (in which case nine bits in
113
- the above example are gobbled), or it contains the translation for the symbol
114
- and the number of bits to gobble. Then you start again with the next
115
- ungobbled bit.
116
-
117
- You may wonder: why not just have one lookup table for how ever many bits the
118
- longest symbol is? The reason is that if you do that, you end up spending
119
- more time filling in duplicate symbol entries than you do actually decoding.
120
- At least for deflate's output that generates new trees every several 10's of
121
- kbytes. You can imagine that filling in a 2^15 entry table for a 15-bit code
122
- would take too long if you're only decoding several thousand symbols. At the
123
- other extreme, you could make a new table for every bit in the code. In fact,
124
- that's essentially a Huffman tree. But then you spend too much time
125
- traversing the tree while decoding, even for short symbols.
126
-
127
- So the number of bits for the first lookup table is a trade of the time to
128
- fill out the table vs. the time spent looking at the second level and above of
129
- the table.
130
-
131
- Here is an example, scaled down:
132
-
133
- The code being decoded, with 10 symbols, from 1 to 6 bits long:
134
-
135
- A: 0
136
- B: 10
137
- C: 1100
138
- D: 11010
139
- E: 11011
140
- F: 11100
141
- G: 11101
142
- H: 11110
143
- I: 111110
144
- J: 111111
145
-
146
- Let's make the first table three bits long (eight entries):
147
-
148
- 000: A,1
149
- 001: A,1
150
- 010: A,1
151
- 011: A,1
152
- 100: B,2
153
- 101: B,2
154
- 110: -> table X (gobble 3 bits)
155
- 111: -> table Y (gobble 3 bits)
156
-
157
- Each entry is what the bits decode as and how many bits that is, i.e. how
158
- many bits to gobble. Or the entry points to another table, with the number of
159
- bits to gobble implicit in the size of the table.
160
-
161
- Table X is two bits long since the longest code starting with 110 is five bits
162
- long:
163
-
164
- 00: C,1
165
- 01: C,1
166
- 10: D,2
167
- 11: E,2
168
-
169
- Table Y is three bits long since the longest code starting with 111 is six
170
- bits long:
171
-
172
- 000: F,2
173
- 001: F,2
174
- 010: G,2
175
- 011: G,2
176
- 100: H,2
177
- 101: H,2
178
- 110: I,3
179
- 111: J,3
180
-
181
- So what we have here are three tables with a total of 20 entries that had to
182
- be constructed. That's compared to 64 entries for a single table. Or
183
- compared to 16 entries for a Huffman tree (six two entry tables and one four
184
- entry table). Assuming that the code ideally represents the probability of
185
- the symbols, it takes on the average 1.25 lookups per symbol. That's compared
186
- to one lookup for the single table, or 1.66 lookups per symbol for the
187
- Huffman tree.
188
-
189
- There, I think that gives you a picture of what's going on. For inflate, the
190
- meaning of a particular symbol is often more than just a letter. It can be a
191
- byte (a "literal"), or it can be either a length or a distance which
192
- indicates a base value and a number of bits to fetch after the code that is
193
- added to the base value. Or it might be the special end-of-block code. The
194
- data structures created in inftrees.c try to encode all that information
195
- compactly in the tables.
196
-
197
-
198
- Jean-loup Gailly Mark Adler
199
- jloup@gzip.org madler@alumni.caltech.edu
200
-
201
-
202
- References:
203
-
204
- [LZ77] Ziv J., Lempel A., ``A Universal Algorithm for Sequential Data
205
- Compression,'' IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, Vol. 23, No. 3,
206
- pp. 337-343.
207
-
208
- ``DEFLATE Compressed Data Format Specification'' available in
209
- http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1951
1
+ 1. Compression algorithm (deflate)
2
+
3
+ The deflation algorithm used by gzip (also zip and zlib) is a variation of
4
+ LZ77 (Lempel-Ziv 1977, see reference below). It finds duplicated strings in
5
+ the input data. The second occurrence of a string is replaced by a
6
+ pointer to the previous string, in the form of a pair (distance,
7
+ length). Distances are limited to 32K bytes, and lengths are limited
8
+ to 258 bytes. When a string does not occur anywhere in the previous
9
+ 32K bytes, it is emitted as a sequence of literal bytes. (In this
10
+ description, `string' must be taken as an arbitrary sequence of bytes,
11
+ and is not restricted to printable characters.)
12
+
13
+ Literals or match lengths are compressed with one Huffman tree, and
14
+ match distances are compressed with another tree. The trees are stored
15
+ in a compact form at the start of each block. The blocks can have any
16
+ size (except that the compressed data for one block must fit in
17
+ available memory). A block is terminated when deflate() determines that
18
+ it would be useful to start another block with fresh trees. (This is
19
+ somewhat similar to the behavior of LZW-based _compress_.)
20
+
21
+ Duplicated strings are found using a hash table. All input strings of
22
+ length 3 are inserted in the hash table. A hash index is computed for
23
+ the next 3 bytes. If the hash chain for this index is not empty, all
24
+ strings in the chain are compared with the current input string, and
25
+ the longest match is selected.
26
+
27
+ The hash chains are searched starting with the most recent strings, to
28
+ favor small distances and thus take advantage of the Huffman encoding.
29
+ The hash chains are singly linked. There are no deletions from the
30
+ hash chains, the algorithm simply discards matches that are too old.
31
+
32
+ To avoid a worst-case situation, very long hash chains are arbitrarily
33
+ truncated at a certain length, determined by a runtime option (level
34
+ parameter of deflateInit). So deflate() does not always find the longest
35
+ possible match but generally finds a match which is long enough.
36
+
37
+ deflate() also defers the selection of matches with a lazy evaluation
38
+ mechanism. After a match of length N has been found, deflate() searches for
39
+ a longer match at the next input byte. If a longer match is found, the
40
+ previous match is truncated to a length of one (thus producing a single
41
+ literal byte) and the process of lazy evaluation begins again. Otherwise,
42
+ the original match is kept, and the next match search is attempted only N
43
+ steps later.
44
+
45
+ The lazy match evaluation is also subject to a runtime parameter. If
46
+ the current match is long enough, deflate() reduces the search for a longer
47
+ match, thus speeding up the whole process. If compression ratio is more
48
+ important than speed, deflate() attempts a complete second search even if
49
+ the first match is already long enough.
50
+
51
+ The lazy match evaluation is not performed for the fastest compression
52
+ modes (level parameter 1 to 3). For these fast modes, new strings
53
+ are inserted in the hash table only when no match was found, or
54
+ when the match is not too long. This degrades the compression ratio
55
+ but saves time since there are both fewer insertions and fewer searches.
56
+
57
+
58
+ 2. Decompression algorithm (inflate)
59
+
60
+ 2.1 Introduction
61
+
62
+ The key question is how to represent a Huffman code (or any prefix code) so
63
+ that you can decode fast. The most important characteristic is that shorter
64
+ codes are much more common than longer codes, so pay attention to decoding the
65
+ short codes fast, and let the long codes take longer to decode.
66
+
67
+ inflate() sets up a first level table that covers some number of bits of
68
+ input less than the length of longest code. It gets that many bits from the
69
+ stream, and looks it up in the table. The table will tell if the next
70
+ code is that many bits or less and how many, and if it is, it will tell
71
+ the value, else it will point to the next level table for which inflate()
72
+ grabs more bits and tries to decode a longer code.
73
+
74
+ How many bits to make the first lookup is a tradeoff between the time it
75
+ takes to decode and the time it takes to build the table. If building the
76
+ table took no time (and if you had infinite memory), then there would only
77
+ be a first level table to cover all the way to the longest code. However,
78
+ building the table ends up taking a lot longer for more bits since short
79
+ codes are replicated many times in such a table. What inflate() does is
80
+ simply to make the number of bits in the first table a variable, and then
81
+ to set that variable for the maximum speed.
82
+
83
+ For inflate, which has 286 possible codes for the literal/length tree, the size
84
+ of the first table is nine bits. Also the distance trees have 30 possible
85
+ values, and the size of the first table is six bits. Note that for each of
86
+ those cases, the table ended up one bit longer than the ``average'' code
87
+ length, i.e. the code length of an approximately flat code which would be a
88
+ little more than eight bits for 286 symbols and a little less than five bits
89
+ for 30 symbols.
90
+
91
+
92
+ 2.2 More details on the inflate table lookup
93
+
94
+ Ok, you want to know what this cleverly obfuscated inflate tree actually
95
+ looks like. You are correct that it's not a Huffman tree. It is simply a
96
+ lookup table for the first, let's say, nine bits of a Huffman symbol. The
97
+ symbol could be as short as one bit or as long as 15 bits. If a particular
98
+ symbol is shorter than nine bits, then that symbol's translation is duplicated
99
+ in all those entries that start with that symbol's bits. For example, if the
100
+ symbol is four bits, then it's duplicated 32 times in a nine-bit table. If a
101
+ symbol is nine bits long, it appears in the table once.
102
+
103
+ If the symbol is longer than nine bits, then that entry in the table points
104
+ to another similar table for the remaining bits. Again, there are duplicated
105
+ entries as needed. The idea is that most of the time the symbol will be short
106
+ and there will only be one table look up. (That's whole idea behind data
107
+ compression in the first place.) For the less frequent long symbols, there
108
+ will be two lookups. If you had a compression method with really long
109
+ symbols, you could have as many levels of lookups as is efficient. For
110
+ inflate, two is enough.
111
+
112
+ So a table entry either points to another table (in which case nine bits in
113
+ the above example are gobbled), or it contains the translation for the symbol
114
+ and the number of bits to gobble. Then you start again with the next
115
+ ungobbled bit.
116
+
117
+ You may wonder: why not just have one lookup table for how ever many bits the
118
+ longest symbol is? The reason is that if you do that, you end up spending
119
+ more time filling in duplicate symbol entries than you do actually decoding.
120
+ At least for deflate's output that generates new trees every several 10's of
121
+ kbytes. You can imagine that filling in a 2^15 entry table for a 15-bit code
122
+ would take too long if you're only decoding several thousand symbols. At the
123
+ other extreme, you could make a new table for every bit in the code. In fact,
124
+ that's essentially a Huffman tree. But then you spend too much time
125
+ traversing the tree while decoding, even for short symbols.
126
+
127
+ So the number of bits for the first lookup table is a trade of the time to
128
+ fill out the table vs. the time spent looking at the second level and above of
129
+ the table.
130
+
131
+ Here is an example, scaled down:
132
+
133
+ The code being decoded, with 10 symbols, from 1 to 6 bits long:
134
+
135
+ A: 0
136
+ B: 10
137
+ C: 1100
138
+ D: 11010
139
+ E: 11011
140
+ F: 11100
141
+ G: 11101
142
+ H: 11110
143
+ I: 111110
144
+ J: 111111
145
+
146
+ Let's make the first table three bits long (eight entries):
147
+
148
+ 000: A,1
149
+ 001: A,1
150
+ 010: A,1
151
+ 011: A,1
152
+ 100: B,2
153
+ 101: B,2
154
+ 110: -> table X (gobble 3 bits)
155
+ 111: -> table Y (gobble 3 bits)
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+
157
+ Each entry is what the bits decode as and how many bits that is, i.e. how
158
+ many bits to gobble. Or the entry points to another table, with the number of
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+ bits to gobble implicit in the size of the table.
160
+
161
+ Table X is two bits long since the longest code starting with 110 is five bits
162
+ long:
163
+
164
+ 00: C,1
165
+ 01: C,1
166
+ 10: D,2
167
+ 11: E,2
168
+
169
+ Table Y is three bits long since the longest code starting with 111 is six
170
+ bits long:
171
+
172
+ 000: F,2
173
+ 001: F,2
174
+ 010: G,2
175
+ 011: G,2
176
+ 100: H,2
177
+ 101: H,2
178
+ 110: I,3
179
+ 111: J,3
180
+
181
+ So what we have here are three tables with a total of 20 entries that had to
182
+ be constructed. That's compared to 64 entries for a single table. Or
183
+ compared to 16 entries for a Huffman tree (six two entry tables and one four
184
+ entry table). Assuming that the code ideally represents the probability of
185
+ the symbols, it takes on the average 1.25 lookups per symbol. That's compared
186
+ to one lookup for the single table, or 1.66 lookups per symbol for the
187
+ Huffman tree.
188
+
189
+ There, I think that gives you a picture of what's going on. For inflate, the
190
+ meaning of a particular symbol is often more than just a letter. It can be a
191
+ byte (a "literal"), or it can be either a length or a distance which
192
+ indicates a base value and a number of bits to fetch after the code that is
193
+ added to the base value. Or it might be the special end-of-block code. The
194
+ data structures created in inftrees.c try to encode all that information
195
+ compactly in the tables.
196
+
197
+
198
+ Jean-loup Gailly Mark Adler
199
+ jloup@gzip.org madler@alumni.caltech.edu
200
+
201
+
202
+ References:
203
+
204
+ [LZ77] Ziv J., Lempel A., ``A Universal Algorithm for Sequential Data
205
+ Compression,'' IEEE Transactions on Information Theory, Vol. 23, No. 3,
206
+ pp. 337-343.
207
+
208
+ ``DEFLATE Compressed Data Format Specification'' available in
209
+ http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1951