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authorxtraeme <xtraeme@pkgsrc.org>2007-02-20 23:00:08 +0000
committerxtraeme <xtraeme@pkgsrc.org>2007-02-20 23:00:08 +0000
commited4a41d92611986177ea0a7cf10e3915511a4a03 (patch)
tree0f7d2beffaf101c07db95f4f8160e60a9f5441e8 /filesystems/fuse-curlftpfs
parenta5525dbe3cd93491412d4f8127e5379a2f32340e (diff)
downloadpkgsrc-ed4a41d92611986177ea0a7cf10e3915511a4a03.tar.gz
Initial import of fuse-lzofs-20060306.
LZOlayer Filesystem is a filesystem which allows you to use transparently compressed files, just as they would be normal files. Both read and write operations are possible, along with other most common system calls. It consumes little memory in my opinion, because files are divided into blocks, which can be decompressed separetly. In other words, if you (or an application) would like to read byte 4,500,000 in a file sized 5,000,000 bytes, it only decompresses a block which constain wanted data. Write operation is based on a packet gathering and after reaching its limit it 'syncs' the data. It allows it's user to write/modify files pretty fast, despite the fact it's block divided. LZOlayer FileSystem was meant to support only LZO compression algorythm, because it has extremely low compression/decompression time. However, currently it supports LZO and ZLIB (but only one at the run-time!) compression algorythms.
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