Provided by: lzop_1.04-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       lzop - compress or expand files

ABSTRACT

       lzop is a file compressor very similar to gzip.  lzop favors speed over compression ratio.

SYNOPSIS

       lzop [ command ] [ options ] [ filename ...  ]

       lzop [-dxlthIVL19] [-qvcfFnNPkU] [-o file] [-p[path]] [-S suffix] [filename ...]

DESCRIPTION

       lzop reduces the size of the named files. Whenever possible, each file is compressed into one with the
       extension .lzo, while keeping the same ownership modes, access and modification times. If no files are
       specified, or if a file name is "-", lzop tries to compress the standard input to the standard output.
       lzop will only attempt to compress regular files or symbolic links to regular files.  In particular, it
       will ignore directories.

       If the compressed file name is too long for its file system, lzop truncates it.

       Compressed files can be restored to their original form using lzop -d.  lzop -d takes a list of files on
       its command line and decompresses each file whose name ends with .lzo and which begins with the correct
       magic number to an uncompressed file without the original extension. lzop -d also recognizes the special
       extension .tzo as shorthand for .tar.lzo.  When compressing, lzop uses the .tzo extension if necessary
       instead of truncating a file with a .tar extension.

       lzop stores the original file name, mode and time stamp in the compressed file. These can be used when
       decompressing the file with the -d option. This is useful when the compressed file name was truncated or
       when the time stamp was not preserved after a file transfer.

       lzop preserves the ownership, mode and time stamp of files when compressing. When decompressing lzop
       restores the mode and time stamp if present in the compressed files.  See the options -n, -N, --no-mode
       and --no-time for more information.

       lzop always keeps original files unchanged unless you use the option -U.

       lzop uses the LZO data compression library for compression services. The amount of compression obtained
       depends on the size of the input and the distribution of common substrings.  Typically, text such as
       source code or English is compressed into 40-50% of the original size, and large files usually compress
       much better than small ones. Compression and decompression speed is generally much faster than that
       achieved by gzip, but compression ratio is worse.

   COMPRESSION LEVELS
       lzop offers the following compression levels of the LZO1X algorithm:

       -3  the default level offers pretty fast compression.  -2, -3, -4, -5 and -6 are currently all equivalent
           - this may change in a future release.

       -1, --fast
           can be even a little bit faster in some cases - but most times you won't notice the difference

       -7, -8, -9, --best
           these compression levels are mainly intended for generating pre-compressed data - especially -9 can
           be somewhat slow

       Decompression is very fast for all compression levels, and decompression speed is not affected by the
       compression level.

MAIN COMMAND

       If no other command is given then lzop defaults to compression (using compression level -3).

       -#, --fast, --best
           Regulate the speed of compression using the specified digit #, where -1 or --fast indicates the
           fastest compression method (less compression) and -9 or --best indicates the slowest compression
           method (best compression). The default compression level is -3.

       -d, --decompress, --uncompress
           Decompress. Each file will be placed into same the directory as the compressed file.

       -x, --extract
           Extract compressed files to the current working directory. This is the same as '-dPp'.

       -t, --test
           Test. Check the compressed file integrity.

       -l, --list
           For each compressed file, list the following fields:

             method: compression method
             compressed: size of the compressed file
             uncompr.: size of the uncompressed file
             ratio: compression ratio
             uncompressed_name: name of the uncompressed file

           In combination with the --verbose option, the following fields are also displayed:

             date & time: time stamp for the uncompressed file

           With --name, the uncompressed name, date and time are those stored within the compress file if
           present.

           With --verbose, the size totals and compression ratio for all files is also displayed. With --quiet,
           the title and totals lines are not displayed.

           Note that lzop defines compression ratio as compressed_size / uncompressed_size.

       --ls, --ls=FLAGS
           List each compressed file in a format similar to ls -ln.

           The following flags are currently honoured:
             F  Append a '*' for executable files.
             G  Inhibit display of group information.
             Q  Enclose file names in double quotes.

       --info
           For each compressed file, list the internal header fields.

       -I, --sysinfo
           Display information about the system and quit.

       -L, --license
           Display the lzop license and quit.

       -h, -H, --help
           Display a help screen and quit.

       -V  Version. Display the version number and compilation options and quit.

       --version
           Version. Display the version number and quit.

OPTIONS

       -c, --stdout, --to-stdout
           Write output on standard output. If there are several input files, the output consists of a sequence
           of independently (de)compressed members. To obtain better compression, concatenate all input files
           before compressing them.

       -o FILE, --output=FILE
           Write output to the file FILE. If there are several input files, the output consists of a sequence of
           independently (de)compressed members.

       -p, -pDIR, --path=DIR
           Write output files into the directory DIR instead of the directory determined by the input file. If
           DIR is omitted, then write to the current working directory.

       -f, --force
           Force lzop to

            - overwrite existing files
            - (de-)compress from stdin even if it seems a terminal
            - (de-)compress to stdout even if it seems a terminal
            - allow option -c in combination with -U

           Using -f two or more times forces things like

            - compress files that already have a .lzo suffix
            - try to decompress files that do not have a valid suffix
            - try to handle compressed files with unknown header flags

           Use with care.

       -F, --no-checksum
           Do not store or verify a checksum of the uncompressed file when compressing or decompressing.  This
           speeds up the operation of lzop a little bit (especially when decompressing), but as unnoticed data
           corruption can happen in case of damaged compressed files the usage of this option is not generally
           recommended.  Also, a checksum is always stored when compressing with one of the slow compression
           levels (-7, -8 or -9), regardless of this option.

       -n, --no-name
           When decompressing, do not restore the original file name if present (remove only the lzop suffix
           from the compressed file name). This option is the default under UNIX.

       -N, --name
           When decompressing, restore the original file name if present. This option is useful on systems which
           have a limit on file name length. If the original name saved in the compressed file is not suitable
           for its file system, a new name is constructed from the original one to make it legal.  This option
           is the default under DOS, Windows and OS/2.

       -P  When decompressing, restore the original path and file name if present.  When compressing, store the
           relative (and cleaned) path name.  This option is mainly useful when using archive mode - see usage
           examples below.

       --no-mode
           When decompressing, do not restore the original mode (permissions) saved in the compressed file.

       --no-time
           When decompressing, do not restore the original time stamp saved in the compressed file.

       -S .suf, --suffix=.suf
           Use suffix .suf instead of .lzo. The suffix must not contain multiple dots and special characters
           like '+' or '*', and suffixes other than .lzo should be avoided to avoid confusion when files are
           transferred to other systems.

       -k, --keep
           Do not delete input files. This is the default.

       -U, --unlink, --delete
           Delete input files after successful compression or decompression. Use this option to make lzop behave
           like gzip and bzip2.  Note that explicitly giving -k overrides -U.

       --crc32
           Use a crc32 checksum instead of an adler32 checksum.

       --no-warn
           Suppress all warnings.

       --ignore-warn
           Suppress all warnings, and never exit with exit status 2.

       -q, --quiet, --silent
           Suppress all warnings and decrease the verbosity of some commands like --list or --test.

       -v, --verbose
           Verbose. Display the name for each file compressed or decompressed. Multiple -v can be used to
           increase the verbosity of some commands like --list or --test.

       --  Specifies that this is the end of the options. Any file name after -- will not be interpreted as an
           option even if it starts with a hyphen.

OTHER OPTIONS

       --no-stdin
           Do not try to read standard input (but a file name "-" will still override this option).  In old
           versions of lzop, this option was necessary when used in cron jobs (which do not have a controlling
           terminal).

       --filter=NUMBER
           Rarely useful.  Preprocess data with a special "multimedia" filter before compressing in order to
           improve compression ratio.  NUMBER must be a decimal number from 1 to 16, inclusive.  Using a filter
           slows down both compression and decompression quite a bit, and the compression ratio usually doesn't
           improve much either...  More effective filters may be added in the future, though.

           You can try --filter=1 with data like 8-bit sound samples, --filter=2 with 16-bit samples or depth-16
           images, etc.

           Un-filtering during decompression is handled automatically.

       -C, --checksum
           Deprecated. Only for compatibility with very old versions as lzop now uses a checksum by default.
           This option will get removed in a future release.

       --no-color
           Do not use any color escape sequences.

       --mono
           Assume a mono ANSI terminal. This is the default under UNIX (if console support is compiled in).

       --color
           Assume a color ANSI terminal or try full-screen access. This is the default under DOS and in a Linux
           virtual console (if console support is compiled in).

ADVANCED USAGE

       lzop allows you to deal with your files in many flexible ways. Here are some usage examples:

       backup mode
          tar --use-compress-program=lzop -cf archive.tar.lzo files..

          This is the recommended mode for creating backups.
          Requires GNU tar or a compatible version which accepts the
          '--use-compress-program=XXX' option.

       single file mode: individually (de)compress each file
         create
           lzop a.c             -> create a.c.lzo
           lzop a.c b.c         -> create a.c.lzo & b.c.lzo
           lzop -U a.c b.c      -> create a.c.lzo & b.c.lzo and delete a.c & b.c
           lzop *.c

         extract
           lzop -d a.c.lzo      -> restore a.c
           lzop -df a.c.lzo     -> restore a.c, overwrite if already exists
           lzop -d *.lzo

         list
           lzop -l a.c.lzo
           lzop -l *.lzo
           lzop -lv *.lzo       -> be verbose

         test
           lzop -t a.c.lzo
           lzop -tq *.lzo       -> be quiet

       pipe mode: (de)compress from stdin to stdout
         create
           lzop < a.c > y.lzo
           cat a.c | lzop > y.lzo
           tar -cf - *.c | lzop > y.tar.lzo     -> create a compressed tar file

         extract
           lzop -d < y.lzo > a.c
           lzop -d < y.tar.lzo | tar -xvf -     -> extract a tar file

         list
           lzop -l < y.lzo
           cat y.lzo | lzop -l
           lzop -d < y.tar.lzo | tar -tvf -     -> list a tar file

         test
           lzop -t < y.lzo
           cat y.lzo | lzop -t

       stdout mode: (de)compress to stdout
         create
           lzop -c a.c > y.lzo

         extract
           lzop -dc y.lzo > a.c
           lzop -dc y.tar.lzo | tar -xvf -      -> extract a tar file

         list
           lzop -dc y.tar.lzo | tar -tvf -      -> list a tar file

       archive mode: compress/extract multiple files into a single archive file
         create
           lzop a.c b.c -o sources.lzo          -> create an archive
           lzop -P src/*.c -o sources.lzo       -> create an archive, store path name
           lzop -c *.c > sources.lzo            -> another way to create an archive
           lzop -c *.h >> sources.lzo           -> add files to archive

         extract
           lzop -dN sources.lzo
           lzop -x ../src/sources.lzo           -> extract to current directory
           lzop -x -p/tmp < ../src/sources.lzo  -> extract to /tmp directory

         list
           lzop -lNv sources.lzo

         test
           lzop -t sources.lzo
           lzop -tvv sources.lzo                -> be very verbose

       If you wish to create a single archive file with multiple members so that members can later be extracted
       independently, you should prefer a full-featured archiver such as tar. The latest version of GNU tar
       supports the --use-compress-program=lzop option to invoke lzop transparently.  lzop is designed as a
       complement to tar, not as a replacement.

ENVIRONMENT

       The environment variable LZOP can hold a set of default options for lzop. These options are interpreted
       first and can be overwritten by explicit command line parameters.  For example:

           for sh/ksh/zsh:    LZOP="-1v --name"; export LZOP
           for csh/tcsh:      setenv LZOP "-1v --name"
           for DOS/Windows:   set LZOP=-1v --name

       On Vax/VMS, the name of the environment variable is LZOP_OPT, to avoid a conflict with the symbol set for
       invocation of the program.

       Not all of the options are valid in the environment variable - lzop will tell you.

SEE ALSO

       bzip2(1), gzip(1), tar(1), xz(1)

       Precompiled binaries for some platforms are available from the lzop home page.

           see http://www.oberhumer.com/opensource/lzop/

       lzop uses the LZO data compression library for compression services.

           see http://www.oberhumer.com/opensource/lzo/

DIAGNOSTICS

       Exit status is normally 0; if an error occurs, exit status is 1. If a warning occurs, exit status is 2
       (unless option --ignore-warn is in effect).

       lzop's diagnostics are intended to be self-explanatory.

BUGS

       No bugs are known. Please report all problems immediately to the author.

AUTHOR

       Markus Franz Xaver Johannes Oberhumer <markus@oberhumer.com> http://www.oberhumer.com/opensource/lzop/

COPYRIGHT

       lzop and the LZO library are Copyright (C) 1996-2017 Markus Franz Xaver Oberhumer <markus@oberhumer.com>.
       All Rights Reserved.

       lzop and the LZO library are distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL).

       Legal info: If want to integrate lzop into your commercial (backup-)system please carefully read the GNU
       GPL FAQ at http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-faq.html about possible implications.