1*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 2*4a5d661aSToomas Soome Frequently Asked Questions about zlib 3*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 4*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 5*4a5d661aSToomas SoomeIf your question is not there, please check the zlib home page 6*4a5d661aSToomas Soomehttp://zlib.net/ which may have more recent information. 7*4a5d661aSToomas SoomeThe lastest zlib FAQ is at http://zlib.net/zlib_faq.html 8*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 9*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 10*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 1. Is zlib Y2K-compliant? 11*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 12*4a5d661aSToomas Soome Yes. zlib doesn't handle dates. 13*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 14*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 2. Where can I get a Windows DLL version? 15*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 16*4a5d661aSToomas Soome The zlib sources can be compiled without change to produce a DLL. See the 17*4a5d661aSToomas Soome file win32/DLL_FAQ.txt in the zlib distribution. Pointers to the 18*4a5d661aSToomas Soome precompiled DLL are found in the zlib web site at http://zlib.net/ . 19*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 20*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 3. Where can I get a Visual Basic interface to zlib? 21*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 22*4a5d661aSToomas Soome See 23*4a5d661aSToomas Soome * http://marknelson.us/1997/01/01/zlib-engine/ 24*4a5d661aSToomas Soome * win32/DLL_FAQ.txt in the zlib distribution 25*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 26*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 4. compress() returns Z_BUF_ERROR. 27*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 28*4a5d661aSToomas Soome Make sure that before the call of compress(), the length of the compressed 29*4a5d661aSToomas Soome buffer is equal to the available size of the compressed buffer and not 30*4a5d661aSToomas Soome zero. For Visual Basic, check that this parameter is passed by reference 31*4a5d661aSToomas Soome ("as any"), not by value ("as long"). 32*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 33*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 5. deflate() or inflate() returns Z_BUF_ERROR. 34*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 35*4a5d661aSToomas Soome Before making the call, make sure that avail_in and avail_out are not zero. 36*4a5d661aSToomas Soome When setting the parameter flush equal to Z_FINISH, also make sure that 37*4a5d661aSToomas Soome avail_out is big enough to allow processing all pending input. Note that a 38*4a5d661aSToomas Soome Z_BUF_ERROR is not fatal--another call to deflate() or inflate() can be 39*4a5d661aSToomas Soome made with more input or output space. A Z_BUF_ERROR may in fact be 40*4a5d661aSToomas Soome unavoidable depending on how the functions are used, since it is not 41*4a5d661aSToomas Soome possible to tell whether or not there is more output pending when 42*4a5d661aSToomas Soome strm.avail_out returns with zero. See http://zlib.net/zlib_how.html for a 43*4a5d661aSToomas Soome heavily annotated example. 44*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 45*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 6. Where's the zlib documentation (man pages, etc.)? 46*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 47*4a5d661aSToomas Soome It's in zlib.h . Examples of zlib usage are in the files test/example.c 48*4a5d661aSToomas Soome and test/minigzip.c, with more in examples/ . 49*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 50*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 7. Why don't you use GNU autoconf or libtool or ...? 51*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 52*4a5d661aSToomas Soome Because we would like to keep zlib as a very small and simple package. 53*4a5d661aSToomas Soome zlib is rather portable and doesn't need much configuration. 54*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 55*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 8. I found a bug in zlib. 56*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 57*4a5d661aSToomas Soome Most of the time, such problems are due to an incorrect usage of zlib. 58*4a5d661aSToomas Soome Please try to reproduce the problem with a small program and send the 59*4a5d661aSToomas Soome corresponding source to us at zlib@gzip.org . Do not send multi-megabyte 60*4a5d661aSToomas Soome data files without prior agreement. 61*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 62*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 9. Why do I get "undefined reference to gzputc"? 63*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 64*4a5d661aSToomas Soome If "make test" produces something like 65*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 66*4a5d661aSToomas Soome example.o(.text+0x154): undefined reference to `gzputc' 67*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 68*4a5d661aSToomas Soome check that you don't have old files libz.* in /usr/lib, /usr/local/lib or 69*4a5d661aSToomas Soome /usr/X11R6/lib. Remove any old versions, then do "make install". 70*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 71*4a5d661aSToomas Soome10. I need a Delphi interface to zlib. 72*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 73*4a5d661aSToomas Soome See the contrib/delphi directory in the zlib distribution. 74*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 75*4a5d661aSToomas Soome11. Can zlib handle .zip archives? 76*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 77*4a5d661aSToomas Soome Not by itself, no. See the directory contrib/minizip in the zlib 78*4a5d661aSToomas Soome distribution. 79*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 80*4a5d661aSToomas Soome12. Can zlib handle .Z files? 81*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 82*4a5d661aSToomas Soome No, sorry. You have to spawn an uncompress or gunzip subprocess, or adapt 83*4a5d661aSToomas Soome the code of uncompress on your own. 84*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 85*4a5d661aSToomas Soome13. How can I make a Unix shared library? 86*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 87*4a5d661aSToomas Soome By default a shared (and a static) library is built for Unix. So: 88*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 89*4a5d661aSToomas Soome make distclean 90*4a5d661aSToomas Soome ./configure 91*4a5d661aSToomas Soome make 92*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 93*4a5d661aSToomas Soome14. How do I install a shared zlib library on Unix? 94*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 95*4a5d661aSToomas Soome After the above, then: 96*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 97*4a5d661aSToomas Soome make install 98*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 99*4a5d661aSToomas Soome However, many flavors of Unix come with a shared zlib already installed. 100*4a5d661aSToomas Soome Before going to the trouble of compiling a shared version of zlib and 101*4a5d661aSToomas Soome trying to install it, you may want to check if it's already there! If you 102*4a5d661aSToomas Soome can #include <zlib.h>, it's there. The -lz option will probably link to 103*4a5d661aSToomas Soome it. You can check the version at the top of zlib.h or with the 104*4a5d661aSToomas Soome ZLIB_VERSION symbol defined in zlib.h . 105*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 106*4a5d661aSToomas Soome15. I have a question about OttoPDF. 107*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 108*4a5d661aSToomas Soome We are not the authors of OttoPDF. The real author is on the OttoPDF web 109*4a5d661aSToomas Soome site: Joel Hainley, jhainley@myndkryme.com. 110*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 111*4a5d661aSToomas Soome16. Can zlib decode Flate data in an Adobe PDF file? 112*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 113*4a5d661aSToomas Soome Yes. See http://www.pdflib.com/ . To modify PDF forms, see 114*4a5d661aSToomas Soome http://sourceforge.net/projects/acroformtool/ . 115*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 116*4a5d661aSToomas Soome17. Why am I getting this "register_frame_info not found" error on Solaris? 117*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 118*4a5d661aSToomas Soome After installing zlib 1.1.4 on Solaris 2.6, running applications using zlib 119*4a5d661aSToomas Soome generates an error such as: 120*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 121*4a5d661aSToomas Soome ld.so.1: rpm: fatal: relocation error: file /usr/local/lib/libz.so: 122*4a5d661aSToomas Soome symbol __register_frame_info: referenced symbol not found 123*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 124*4a5d661aSToomas Soome The symbol __register_frame_info is not part of zlib, it is generated by 125*4a5d661aSToomas Soome the C compiler (cc or gcc). You must recompile applications using zlib 126*4a5d661aSToomas Soome which have this problem. This problem is specific to Solaris. See 127*4a5d661aSToomas Soome http://www.sunfreeware.com for Solaris versions of zlib and applications 128*4a5d661aSToomas Soome using zlib. 129*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 130*4a5d661aSToomas Soome18. Why does gzip give an error on a file I make with compress/deflate? 131*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 132*4a5d661aSToomas Soome The compress and deflate functions produce data in the zlib format, which 133*4a5d661aSToomas Soome is different and incompatible with the gzip format. The gz* functions in 134*4a5d661aSToomas Soome zlib on the other hand use the gzip format. Both the zlib and gzip formats 135*4a5d661aSToomas Soome use the same compressed data format internally, but have different headers 136*4a5d661aSToomas Soome and trailers around the compressed data. 137*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 138*4a5d661aSToomas Soome19. Ok, so why are there two different formats? 139*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 140*4a5d661aSToomas Soome The gzip format was designed to retain the directory information about a 141*4a5d661aSToomas Soome single file, such as the name and last modification date. The zlib format 142*4a5d661aSToomas Soome on the other hand was designed for in-memory and communication channel 143*4a5d661aSToomas Soome applications, and has a much more compact header and trailer and uses a 144*4a5d661aSToomas Soome faster integrity check than gzip. 145*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 146*4a5d661aSToomas Soome20. Well that's nice, but how do I make a gzip file in memory? 147*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 148*4a5d661aSToomas Soome You can request that deflate write the gzip format instead of the zlib 149*4a5d661aSToomas Soome format using deflateInit2(). You can also request that inflate decode the 150*4a5d661aSToomas Soome gzip format using inflateInit2(). Read zlib.h for more details. 151*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 152*4a5d661aSToomas Soome21. Is zlib thread-safe? 153*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 154*4a5d661aSToomas Soome Yes. However any library routines that zlib uses and any application- 155*4a5d661aSToomas Soome provided memory allocation routines must also be thread-safe. zlib's gz* 156*4a5d661aSToomas Soome functions use stdio library routines, and most of zlib's functions use the 157*4a5d661aSToomas Soome library memory allocation routines by default. zlib's *Init* functions 158*4a5d661aSToomas Soome allow for the application to provide custom memory allocation routines. 159*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 160*4a5d661aSToomas Soome Of course, you should only operate on any given zlib or gzip stream from a 161*4a5d661aSToomas Soome single thread at a time. 162*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 163*4a5d661aSToomas Soome22. Can I use zlib in my commercial application? 164*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 165*4a5d661aSToomas Soome Yes. Please read the license in zlib.h. 166*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 167*4a5d661aSToomas Soome23. Is zlib under the GNU license? 168*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 169*4a5d661aSToomas Soome No. Please read the license in zlib.h. 170*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 171*4a5d661aSToomas Soome24. The license says that altered source versions must be "plainly marked". So 172*4a5d661aSToomas Soome what exactly do I need to do to meet that requirement? 173*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 174*4a5d661aSToomas Soome You need to change the ZLIB_VERSION and ZLIB_VERNUM #defines in zlib.h. In 175*4a5d661aSToomas Soome particular, the final version number needs to be changed to "f", and an 176*4a5d661aSToomas Soome identification string should be appended to ZLIB_VERSION. Version numbers 177*4a5d661aSToomas Soome x.x.x.f are reserved for modifications to zlib by others than the zlib 178*4a5d661aSToomas Soome maintainers. For example, if the version of the base zlib you are altering 179*4a5d661aSToomas Soome is "1.2.3.4", then in zlib.h you should change ZLIB_VERNUM to 0x123f, and 180*4a5d661aSToomas Soome ZLIB_VERSION to something like "1.2.3.f-zachary-mods-v3". You can also 181*4a5d661aSToomas Soome update the version strings in deflate.c and inftrees.c. 182*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 183*4a5d661aSToomas Soome For altered source distributions, you should also note the origin and 184*4a5d661aSToomas Soome nature of the changes in zlib.h, as well as in ChangeLog and README, along 185*4a5d661aSToomas Soome with the dates of the alterations. The origin should include at least your 186*4a5d661aSToomas Soome name (or your company's name), and an email address to contact for help or 187*4a5d661aSToomas Soome issues with the library. 188*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 189*4a5d661aSToomas Soome Note that distributing a compiled zlib library along with zlib.h and 190*4a5d661aSToomas Soome zconf.h is also a source distribution, and so you should change 191*4a5d661aSToomas Soome ZLIB_VERSION and ZLIB_VERNUM and note the origin and nature of the changes 192*4a5d661aSToomas Soome in zlib.h as you would for a full source distribution. 193*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 194*4a5d661aSToomas Soome25. Will zlib work on a big-endian or little-endian architecture, and can I 195*4a5d661aSToomas Soome exchange compressed data between them? 196*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 197*4a5d661aSToomas Soome Yes and yes. 198*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 199*4a5d661aSToomas Soome26. Will zlib work on a 64-bit machine? 200*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 201*4a5d661aSToomas Soome Yes. It has been tested on 64-bit machines, and has no dependence on any 202*4a5d661aSToomas Soome data types being limited to 32-bits in length. If you have any 203*4a5d661aSToomas Soome difficulties, please provide a complete problem report to zlib@gzip.org 204*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 205*4a5d661aSToomas Soome27. Will zlib decompress data from the PKWare Data Compression Library? 206*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 207*4a5d661aSToomas Soome No. The PKWare DCL uses a completely different compressed data format than 208*4a5d661aSToomas Soome does PKZIP and zlib. However, you can look in zlib's contrib/blast 209*4a5d661aSToomas Soome directory for a possible solution to your problem. 210*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 211*4a5d661aSToomas Soome28. Can I access data randomly in a compressed stream? 212*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 213*4a5d661aSToomas Soome No, not without some preparation. If when compressing you periodically use 214*4a5d661aSToomas Soome Z_FULL_FLUSH, carefully write all the pending data at those points, and 215*4a5d661aSToomas Soome keep an index of those locations, then you can start decompression at those 216*4a5d661aSToomas Soome points. You have to be careful to not use Z_FULL_FLUSH too often, since it 217*4a5d661aSToomas Soome can significantly degrade compression. Alternatively, you can scan a 218*4a5d661aSToomas Soome deflate stream once to generate an index, and then use that index for 219*4a5d661aSToomas Soome random access. See examples/zran.c . 220*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 221*4a5d661aSToomas Soome29. Does zlib work on MVS, OS/390, CICS, etc.? 222*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 223*4a5d661aSToomas Soome It has in the past, but we have not heard of any recent evidence. There 224*4a5d661aSToomas Soome were working ports of zlib 1.1.4 to MVS, but those links no longer work. 225*4a5d661aSToomas Soome If you know of recent, successful applications of zlib on these operating 226*4a5d661aSToomas Soome systems, please let us know. Thanks. 227*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 228*4a5d661aSToomas Soome30. Is there some simpler, easier to read version of inflate I can look at to 229*4a5d661aSToomas Soome understand the deflate format? 230*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 231*4a5d661aSToomas Soome First off, you should read RFC 1951. Second, yes. Look in zlib's 232*4a5d661aSToomas Soome contrib/puff directory. 233*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 234*4a5d661aSToomas Soome31. Does zlib infringe on any patents? 235*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 236*4a5d661aSToomas Soome As far as we know, no. In fact, that was originally the whole point behind 237*4a5d661aSToomas Soome zlib. Look here for some more information: 238*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 239*4a5d661aSToomas Soome http://www.gzip.org/#faq11 240*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 241*4a5d661aSToomas Soome32. Can zlib work with greater than 4 GB of data? 242*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 243*4a5d661aSToomas Soome Yes. inflate() and deflate() will process any amount of data correctly. 244*4a5d661aSToomas Soome Each call of inflate() or deflate() is limited to input and output chunks 245*4a5d661aSToomas Soome of the maximum value that can be stored in the compiler's "unsigned int" 246*4a5d661aSToomas Soome type, but there is no limit to the number of chunks. Note however that the 247*4a5d661aSToomas Soome strm.total_in and strm_total_out counters may be limited to 4 GB. These 248*4a5d661aSToomas Soome counters are provided as a convenience and are not used internally by 249*4a5d661aSToomas Soome inflate() or deflate(). The application can easily set up its own counters 250*4a5d661aSToomas Soome updated after each call of inflate() or deflate() to count beyond 4 GB. 251*4a5d661aSToomas Soome compress() and uncompress() may be limited to 4 GB, since they operate in a 252*4a5d661aSToomas Soome single call. gzseek() and gztell() may be limited to 4 GB depending on how 253*4a5d661aSToomas Soome zlib is compiled. See the zlibCompileFlags() function in zlib.h. 254*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 255*4a5d661aSToomas Soome The word "may" appears several times above since there is a 4 GB limit only 256*4a5d661aSToomas Soome if the compiler's "long" type is 32 bits. If the compiler's "long" type is 257*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 64 bits, then the limit is 16 exabytes. 258*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 259*4a5d661aSToomas Soome33. Does zlib have any security vulnerabilities? 260*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 261*4a5d661aSToomas Soome The only one that we are aware of is potentially in gzprintf(). If zlib is 262*4a5d661aSToomas Soome compiled to use sprintf() or vsprintf(), then there is no protection 263*4a5d661aSToomas Soome against a buffer overflow of an 8K string space (or other value as set by 264*4a5d661aSToomas Soome gzbuffer()), other than the caller of gzprintf() assuring that the output 265*4a5d661aSToomas Soome will not exceed 8K. On the other hand, if zlib is compiled to use 266*4a5d661aSToomas Soome snprintf() or vsnprintf(), which should normally be the case, then there is 267*4a5d661aSToomas Soome no vulnerability. The ./configure script will display warnings if an 268*4a5d661aSToomas Soome insecure variation of sprintf() will be used by gzprintf(). Also the 269*4a5d661aSToomas Soome zlibCompileFlags() function will return information on what variant of 270*4a5d661aSToomas Soome sprintf() is used by gzprintf(). 271*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 272*4a5d661aSToomas Soome If you don't have snprintf() or vsnprintf() and would like one, you can 273*4a5d661aSToomas Soome find a portable implementation here: 274*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 275*4a5d661aSToomas Soome http://www.ijs.si/software/snprintf/ 276*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 277*4a5d661aSToomas Soome Note that you should be using the most recent version of zlib. Versions 278*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 1.1.3 and before were subject to a double-free vulnerability, and versions 279*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 1.2.1 and 1.2.2 were subject to an access exception when decompressing 280*4a5d661aSToomas Soome invalid compressed data. 281*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 282*4a5d661aSToomas Soome34. Is there a Java version of zlib? 283*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 284*4a5d661aSToomas Soome Probably what you want is to use zlib in Java. zlib is already included 285*4a5d661aSToomas Soome as part of the Java SDK in the java.util.zip package. If you really want 286*4a5d661aSToomas Soome a version of zlib written in the Java language, look on the zlib home 287*4a5d661aSToomas Soome page for links: http://zlib.net/ . 288*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 289*4a5d661aSToomas Soome35. I get this or that compiler or source-code scanner warning when I crank it 290*4a5d661aSToomas Soome up to maximally-pedantic. Can't you guys write proper code? 291*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 292*4a5d661aSToomas Soome Many years ago, we gave up attempting to avoid warnings on every compiler 293*4a5d661aSToomas Soome in the universe. It just got to be a waste of time, and some compilers 294*4a5d661aSToomas Soome were downright silly as well as contradicted each other. So now, we simply 295*4a5d661aSToomas Soome make sure that the code always works. 296*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 297*4a5d661aSToomas Soome36. Valgrind (or some similar memory access checker) says that deflate is 298*4a5d661aSToomas Soome performing a conditional jump that depends on an uninitialized value. 299*4a5d661aSToomas Soome Isn't that a bug? 300*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 301*4a5d661aSToomas Soome No. That is intentional for performance reasons, and the output of deflate 302*4a5d661aSToomas Soome is not affected. This only started showing up recently since zlib 1.2.x 303*4a5d661aSToomas Soome uses malloc() by default for allocations, whereas earlier versions used 304*4a5d661aSToomas Soome calloc(), which zeros out the allocated memory. Even though the code was 305*4a5d661aSToomas Soome correct, versions 1.2.4 and later was changed to not stimulate these 306*4a5d661aSToomas Soome checkers. 307*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 308*4a5d661aSToomas Soome37. Will zlib read the (insert any ancient or arcane format here) compressed 309*4a5d661aSToomas Soome data format? 310*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 311*4a5d661aSToomas Soome Probably not. Look in the comp.compression FAQ for pointers to various 312*4a5d661aSToomas Soome formats and associated software. 313*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 314*4a5d661aSToomas Soome38. How can I encrypt/decrypt zip files with zlib? 315*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 316*4a5d661aSToomas Soome zlib doesn't support encryption. The original PKZIP encryption is very 317*4a5d661aSToomas Soome weak and can be broken with freely available programs. To get strong 318*4a5d661aSToomas Soome encryption, use GnuPG, http://www.gnupg.org/ , which already includes zlib 319*4a5d661aSToomas Soome compression. For PKZIP compatible "encryption", look at 320*4a5d661aSToomas Soome http://www.info-zip.org/ 321*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 322*4a5d661aSToomas Soome39. What's the difference between the "gzip" and "deflate" HTTP 1.1 encodings? 323*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 324*4a5d661aSToomas Soome "gzip" is the gzip format, and "deflate" is the zlib format. They should 325*4a5d661aSToomas Soome probably have called the second one "zlib" instead to avoid confusion with 326*4a5d661aSToomas Soome the raw deflate compressed data format. While the HTTP 1.1 RFC 2616 327*4a5d661aSToomas Soome correctly points to the zlib specification in RFC 1950 for the "deflate" 328*4a5d661aSToomas Soome transfer encoding, there have been reports of servers and browsers that 329*4a5d661aSToomas Soome incorrectly produce or expect raw deflate data per the deflate 330*4a5d661aSToomas Soome specification in RFC 1951, most notably Microsoft. So even though the 331*4a5d661aSToomas Soome "deflate" transfer encoding using the zlib format would be the more 332*4a5d661aSToomas Soome efficient approach (and in fact exactly what the zlib format was designed 333*4a5d661aSToomas Soome for), using the "gzip" transfer encoding is probably more reliable due to 334*4a5d661aSToomas Soome an unfortunate choice of name on the part of the HTTP 1.1 authors. 335*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 336*4a5d661aSToomas Soome Bottom line: use the gzip format for HTTP 1.1 encoding. 337*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 338*4a5d661aSToomas Soome40. Does zlib support the new "Deflate64" format introduced by PKWare? 339*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 340*4a5d661aSToomas Soome No. PKWare has apparently decided to keep that format proprietary, since 341*4a5d661aSToomas Soome they have not documented it as they have previous compression formats. In 342*4a5d661aSToomas Soome any case, the compression improvements are so modest compared to other more 343*4a5d661aSToomas Soome modern approaches, that it's not worth the effort to implement. 344*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 345*4a5d661aSToomas Soome41. I'm having a problem with the zip functions in zlib, can you help? 346*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 347*4a5d661aSToomas Soome There are no zip functions in zlib. You are probably using minizip by 348*4a5d661aSToomas Soome Giles Vollant, which is found in the contrib directory of zlib. It is not 349*4a5d661aSToomas Soome part of zlib. In fact none of the stuff in contrib is part of zlib. The 350*4a5d661aSToomas Soome files in there are not supported by the zlib authors. You need to contact 351*4a5d661aSToomas Soome the authors of the respective contribution for help. 352*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 353*4a5d661aSToomas Soome42. The match.asm code in contrib is under the GNU General Public License. 354*4a5d661aSToomas Soome Since it's part of zlib, doesn't that mean that all of zlib falls under the 355*4a5d661aSToomas Soome GNU GPL? 356*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 357*4a5d661aSToomas Soome No. The files in contrib are not part of zlib. They were contributed by 358*4a5d661aSToomas Soome other authors and are provided as a convenience to the user within the zlib 359*4a5d661aSToomas Soome distribution. Each item in contrib has its own license. 360*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 361*4a5d661aSToomas Soome43. Is zlib subject to export controls? What is its ECCN? 362*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 363*4a5d661aSToomas Soome zlib is not subject to export controls, and so is classified as EAR99. 364*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 365*4a5d661aSToomas Soome44. Can you please sign these lengthy legal documents and fax them back to us 366*4a5d661aSToomas Soome so that we can use your software in our product? 367*4a5d661aSToomas Soome 368*4a5d661aSToomas Soome No. Go away. Shoo. 369