Provided by: lbzip2_2.3-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       lbzip2 - parallel bzip2 utility

SYNOPSIS

       lbzip2|bzip2 [-n WTHRS] [-k|-c|-t] [-d] [-1 .. -9] [-f] [-v] [-S] [ FILE ... ]

       lbunzip2|bunzip2 [-n WTHRS] [-k|-c|-t] [-z] [-f] [-v] [-S] [ FILE ... ]

       lbzcat|bzcat [-n WTHRS] [-z] [-f] [-v] [-S] [ FILE ... ]

       lbzip2|bzip2|lbunzip2|bunzip2|lbzcat|bzcat -h

DESCRIPTION

       Compress  or  decompress  FILE  operands  or standard input to regular files or standard output using the
       Burrows-Wheeler block-sorting text compression algorithm. The lbzip2 utility employs multiple threads and
       an input-bound splitter even when decompressing .bz2 files created by standard bzip2.

       Compression  is  generally  considerably  better  than that achieved by more conventional LZ77/LZ78-based
       compressors, and competitive with all but the best of the PPM family of statistical compressors.

       Compression is always performed, even if the compressed file is slightly larger than  the  original.  The
       worst  case expansion is for files of zero length, which expand to fourteen bytes. Random data (including
       the output of most file compressors) is coded with asymptotic expansion of around 0.5%.

       The command-line options are deliberately very similar to those of bzip2  and  gzip,  but  they  are  not
       identical.

INVOCATION

       The  default mode of operation is compression. If the utility is invoked as lbunzip2 or bunzip2, the mode
       is switched to decompression. Calling the utility as lbzcat or  bzcat  selects  decompression,  with  the
       decompressed byte-stream written to standard output.

OPTIONS

       -n WTHRS
              Set  the number of (de)compressor threads to WTHRS.  If this option is not specified, lbzip2 tries
              to query the system for the number of online processors (if both the compilation  environment  and
              the  execution  environment support that), or exits with an error (if it's unable to determine the
              number of processors online).

       -k, --keep
              Don't remove FILE operands after successful (de)compression. Open regular input  files  with  more
              than one link.

       -c, --stdout
              Write output to standard output, even when FILE operands are present. Implies -k and excludes -t.

       -t, --test
              Test  decompression;  discard output instead of writing it to files or standard output. Implies -k
              and excludes -c.  Roughly equivalent to passing -c and redirecting  standard  output  to  the  bit
              bucket.

       -d, --decompress
              Force decompression over the mode of operation selected by the invocation name.

       -z, --compress
              Force compression over the mode of operation selected by the invocation name.

       -1 .. -9
              Set the compression block size to 100K .. 900K, in 100K increments.  Ignored during decompression.
              See also the BLOCK SIZE section below.

       --fast Alias for -1.

       --best Alias for -9.  This is the default.

       -f, --force
              Open non-regular input files. Open input files with more than one link,  breaking  links  when  -k
              isn't  specified in addition. Try to remove each output file before opening it.  By default lbzip2
              will not overwrite existing files; if you want this to happen, you should specify -f.  If  -c  and
              -d  are  also given don't reject files not in bzip2 format, just copy them without change; without
              -f lbzip2 would stop after reaching a file that is not in bzip2 format.

       -v, --verbose
              Be more verbose. Print more detailed information about (de)compression progress to standard error:
              before  processing  each file, print a message stating the names of input and output files; during
              (de)compression, print a rough percentage of completeness and estimated time of arrival  (only  if
              standard  error  is  connected  to a terminal); after processing each file print a message showing
              compression ratio, space savings, total compression time (wall time) and  average  (de)compression
              speed (bytes of plain data processed per second).

       -S     Print  condition  variable  statistics  to  standard  error  for  each  completed  (de)compression
              operation. Useful in profiling.

       -s, --small, -q, --quiet, --repetitive-fast, --repetitive-best, --exponential
              Accepted for compatibility with bzip2, otherwise ignored.

       -h, --help
              Print help on command-line usage on standard output and exit successfully.

       -L, --license, -V, --version
              Print license and version information on standard output and exit successfully.

ENVIRONMENT

       LBZIP2, BZIP2, BZIP
              Before parsing the command line, lbzip2 inserts the contents of  these  variables,  in  the  order
              specified,  between  the invocation name and the rest of the command line. Tokens are separated by
              spaces and tabs, which cannot be escaped.

OPERANDS

       FILE   Specify files to compress or decompress.

              FILEs with .bz2, .tbz, .tbz2 and .tz2  name  suffixes  will  be  skipped  when  compressing.  When
              decompressing,  .bz2  suffixes  will be removed in output filenames; .tbz, .tbz2 and .tz2 suffixes
              will be replaced by .tar; other filenames will be suffixed with .out. If an INT or TERM signal  is
              delivered to lbzip2, then it removes the regular output file currently open before exiting.

              If  no  FILE  is given, lbzip2 works as a filter, processing standard input to standard output. In
              this case, lbzip2 will decline to write compressed output to a terminal (or read compressed  input
              from a terminal), as this would be entirely incomprehensible and therefore pointless.

EXIT STATUS

       0      if lbzip2 finishes successfully. This presumes that whenever it tries, lbzip2 never fails to write
              to standard error.

       1      if lbzip2 encounters a fatal error.

       4      if lbzip2 issues warnings without encountering a fatal  error.  This  presumes  that  whenever  it
              tries, lbzip2 never fails to write to standard error.

       SIGPIPE, SIGXFSZ
              if lbzip2 intends to exit with status 1 due to any fatal error, but any such signal with inherited
              SIG_DFL action was generated for lbzip2 previously, then lbzip2 terminates by way of one  of  said
              signals, after cleaning up any interrupted output file.

       SIGABRT
              if  a  runtime  assertion fails (i.e.  lbzip2 detects a bug in itself). Hopefully whoever compiled
              your binary wasn't bold enough to #define NDEBUG.

       SIGINT, SIGTERM
              lbzip2 catches these signals so that it can remove an interrupted  output  file.  In  such  cases,
              lbzip2 exits by re-raising (one of) the received signal(s).

BLOCK SIZE

       lbzip2 compresses large files in blocks. It can operate at various block sizes, ranging from 100k to 900k
       in 100k steps, and it allocates only as much memory as it needs to.  The  block  size  affects  both  the
       compression  ratio  achieved,  and  the  amount  of memory needed both for compression and decompression.
       Compression and decompression speed is virtually unaffected by block size, provided that the  file  being
       processed is large enough to be split among all worker threads.

       The  flags  -1  through -9 specify the block size to be 100,000 bytes through 900,000 bytes (the default)
       respectively. At decompression-time, the block size used for compression is read from the compressed file
       -- the flags -1 to -9 are irrelevant to and so ignored during decompression.

       Larger  block  sizes  give  rapidly  diminishing marginal returns; most of the compression comes from the
       first two or three hundred k of block size, a fact worth bearing in  mind  when  using  lbzip2  on  small
       machines.  It  is  also  important  to  appreciate  that  the  decompression memory requirement is set at
       compression-time by the choice of block size. In general you should try and use the  largest  block  size
       memory constraints allow.

       Another significant point applies to small files. By design, only one of lbzip2's worker threads can work
       on a single block. This means that if the number of blocks in the compressed file is less than the number
       of processors online, then some of worker threads will remain idle for the entire time. Compressing small
       files with smaller block sizes can therefore significantly increase both  compression  and  decompression
       speed. The speed difference is more noticeable as the number of CPU cores grows.

ERROR HANDLING

       Dealing with error conditions is the least satisfactory aspect of lbzip2.  The policy is to try and leave
       the filesystem in a consistent state, then quit, even if it  means  not  processing  some  of  the  files
       mentioned in the command line.

       `A  consistent  state'  means  that  a file exists either in its compressed or uncompressed form, but not
       both. This boils down to the rule `delete the output file if an error condition occurs, leaving the input
       intact'.  Input  files  are  only deleted when we can be pretty sure the output file has been written and
       closed successfully.

RESOURCE ALLOCATION

       lbzip2 needs various kinds of system resources to operate. Those include  memory,  threads,  mutexes  and
       condition variables. The policy is to simply give up if a resource allocation failure occurs.

       Resource  consumption  grows  linearly  with number of worker threads. If lbzip2 fails because of lack of
       some resources, decreasing number of worker threads may help. It would be possible for lbzip2 to  try  to
       reduce  number  of worker threads (and hence the resource consumption), or to move on to subsequent files
       in the hope that some might need less resources, but the complications for doing this seem  more  trouble
       than they are worth.

DAMAGED FILES

       lbzip2  attempts  to  compress  data  by  performing  several  non-trivial  transformations  on it. Every
       compression of a file implies an assumption that the compressed file can be decompressed to reproduce the
       original.  Great  efforts  in design, coding and testing have been made to ensure that this program works
       correctly.  However, the complexity of the algorithms,  and,  in  particular,  the  presence  of  various
       special  cases  in  the code which occur with very low but non-zero probability make it very difficult to
       rule out the possibility of bugs remaining in the program. That is not to say this program is  inherently
       unreliable.  Indeed,  I  very much hope the opposite is true -- lbzip2 has been carefully constructed and
       extensively tested.

       As a self-check for your protection, lbzip2 uses 32-bit CRCs to make sure that the  decompressed  version
       of  a  file  is  identical  to  the  original. This guards against corruption of the compressed data, and
       against undiscovered bugs in lbzip2 (hopefully unlikely). The chances of data corruption going undetected
       is  microscopic,  about  one  chance  in four billion for each file processed. Be aware, though, that the
       check occurs upon decompression, so it can only tell you that that something is wrong.

       CRCs can only detect corrupted files, they can't  help  you  recover  the  original,  uncompressed  data.
       However,  because  of  the  block nature of the compression algorithm, it may be possible to recover some
       parts of the damaged file, even if some blocks are destroyed.

BUGS

       Separate input files don't share worker threads; at most one input file is worked on at any moment.

AUTHORS

       lbzip2 was originally written by Laszlo Ersek <lacos@caesar.elte.hu>, http://lacos.hu/. Versions 2.0  and
       later were written by Mikolaj Izdebski.

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (C) 2011, 2012, 2013 Mikolaj Izdebski
       Copyright (C) 2008, 2009, 2010 Laszlo Ersek
       Copyright (C) 1996 Julian Seward

       This  manual page is part of lbzip2, version 2.3. lbzip2 is free software: you can redistribute it and/or
       modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation,
       either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

       lbzip2  is  distributed  in  the  hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the
       implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR  PURPOSE.  See  the  GNU  General  Public
       License for more details.

       You  should  have  received  a  copy  of  the  GNU  General Public License along with lbzip2. If not, see
       <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.

THANKS

       Adam Maulis at ELTE IIG; Julian Seward; Paul Sladen; Michael Thomas from Caltech  HEP;  Bryan  Stillwell;
       Zsolt Bartos-Elekes; Imre Csatlos; Gabor Kovesdan; Paul Wise; Paolo Bonzini; Department of Electrical and
       Information Engineering at the University of Oulu; Yuta Mori.

SEE ALSO

       lbzip2 home page
              http://lbzip2.org/

       bzip2(1)
              http://www.bzip.org/

       pbzip2(1)
              http://compression.ca/pbzip2/

       bzip2smp(1)
              http://bzip2smp.sourceforge.net/

       smpbzip2(1)
              http://home.student.utwente.nl/n.werensteijn/smpbzip2/

       dbzip2(1)
              http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Dbzip2

       p7zip(1)
              http://p7zip.sourceforge.net/