compression.zstd — Compression compatible with the Zstandard format¶Added in version 3.14.
Source code: Lib/compression/zstd/__init__.py
This module provides classes and functions for compressing and decompressing
data using the Zstandard (or zstd) compression algorithm. The
zstd manual
describes Zstandard as “a fast lossless compression algorithm, targeting
real-time compression scenarios at zlib-level and better compression ratios.”
Also included is a file interface that supports reading and writing the
contents of .zst files created by the zstd utility, as well as
raw zstd compressed streams.
The compression.zstd module contains:
The open() function and ZstdFile class for reading and
writing compressed files.
The ZstdCompressor and ZstdDecompressor classes for
incremental (de)compression.
The compress() and decompress() functions for one-shot
(de)compression.
The train_dict() and finalize_dict() functions and the
ZstdDict class to train and manage Zstandard dictionaries.
The CompressionParameter, DecompressionParameter, and
Strategy classes for setting advanced (de)compression parameters.
This is an optional module. If it is missing from your copy of CPython, look for documentation from your distributor (that is, whoever provided Python to you). If you are the distributor, see Requirements for optional modules.
This exception is raised when an error occurs during compression or decompression, or while initializing the (de)compressor state.
Open a Zstandard-compressed file in binary or text mode, returning a file object.
The file argument can be either a file name (given as a
str, bytes or path-like
object), in which case the named file is opened, or it can be an existing
file object to read from or write to.
The mode argument can be either 'rb' for reading (default), 'wb' for
overwriting, 'ab' for appending, or 'xb' for exclusive creation.
These can equivalently be given as 'r', 'w', 'a', and 'x'
respectively. You may also open in text mode with 'rt', 'wt',
'at', and 'xt' respectively.
When reading, the options argument can be a dictionary providing advanced
decompression parameters; see DecompressionParameter for detailed
information about supported
parameters. The zstd_dict argument is a ZstdDict instance to be
used during decompression. When reading, if the level
argument is not None, a TypeError will be raised.
When writing, the options argument can be a dictionary
providing advanced compression parameters; see
CompressionParameter for detailed information about supported
parameters. The level argument is the compression level to use when
writing compressed data. Only one of level or options may be non-None.
The zstd_dict argument is a ZstdDict instance to be used during
compression.
In binary mode, this function is equivalent to the ZstdFile
constructor: ZstdFile(file, mode, ...). In this case, the
encoding, errors, and newline parameters must not be provided.
In text mode, a ZstdFile object is created, and wrapped in an
io.TextIOWrapper instance with the specified encoding, error
handling behavior, and line endings.
Open a Zstandard-compressed file in binary mode.
A ZstdFile can wrap an already-open file object, or operate
directly on a named file. The file argument specifies either the file
object to wrap, or the name of the file to open (as a str,
bytes or path-like object). If
wrapping an existing file object, the wrapped file will not be closed when
the ZstdFile is closed.
The mode argument can be either 'rb' for reading (default), 'wb'
for overwriting, 'xb' for exclusive creation, or 'ab' for appending.
These can equivalently be given as 'r', 'w', 'x' and 'a'
respectively.
If file is a file object (rather than an actual file name), a mode of
'w' does not truncate the file, and is instead equivalent to 'a'.
When reading, the options argument can be a dictionary
providing advanced decompression parameters; see
DecompressionParameter for detailed information about supported
parameters. The zstd_dict argument is a ZstdDict instance to be
used during decompression. When reading, if the level
argument is not None, a TypeError will be raised.
When writing, the options argument can be a dictionary
providing advanced compression parameters; see
CompressionParameter for detailed information about supported
parameters. The level argument is the compression level to use when
writing compressed data. Only one of level or options may be passed. The
zstd_dict argument is a ZstdDict instance to be used during
compression.
ZstdFile supports all the members specified by
io.BufferedIOBase, except for detach()
and truncate().
Iteration and the with statement are supported.
The following method and attributes are also provided:
Return buffered data without advancing the file position. At least one byte of data will be returned, unless EOF has been reached. The exact number of bytes returned is unspecified (the size argument is ignored).
'rb' for reading and 'wb' for writing.
The name of the Zstandard file. Equivalent to the name
attribute of the underlying file object.
Compress data (a bytes-like object), returning the compressed
data as a bytes object.
The level argument is an integer controlling the level of
compression. level is an alternative to setting
CompressionParameter.compression_level in options. Use
bounds() on
compression_level to get the values that can
be passed for level. If advanced compression options are needed, the
level argument must be omitted and in the options dictionary the
CompressionParameter.compression_level parameter should be set.
The options argument is a Python dictionary containing advanced
compression parameters. The valid keys and values for compression parameters
are documented as part of the CompressionParameter documentation.
The zstd_dict argument is an instance of ZstdDict
containing trained data to improve compression efficiency. The
function train_dict() can be used to generate a Zstandard dictionary.
Decompress data (a bytes-like object), returning the uncompressed
data as a bytes object.
The options argument is a Python dictionary containing advanced
decompression parameters. The valid keys and values for compression
parameters are documented as part of the DecompressionParameter
documentation.
The zstd_dict argument is an instance of ZstdDict
containing trained data used during compression. This must be
the same Zstandard dictionary used during compression.
If data is the concatenation of multiple distinct compressed frames, decompress all of these frames, and return the concatenation of the results.
Create a compressor object, which can be used to compress data incrementally.
For a more convenient way of compressing a single chunk of data, see the
module-level function compress().
The level argument is an integer controlling the level of
compression. level is an alternative to setting
CompressionParameter.compression_level in options. Use
bounds() on
compression_level to get the values that can
be passed for level. If advanced compression options are needed, the
level argument must be omitted and in the options dictionary the
CompressionParameter.compression_level parameter should be set.
The options argument is a Python dictionary containing advanced
compression parameters. The valid keys and values for compression parameters
are documented as part of the CompressionParameter documentation.
The zstd_dict argument is an optional instance of ZstdDict
containing trained data to improve compression efficiency. The
function train_dict() can be used to generate a Zstandard dictionary.
Compress data (a bytes-like object), returning a bytes
object with compressed data if possible, or otherwise an empty
bytes object. Some of data may be buffered internally, for
use in later calls to compress() and flush(). The returned
data should be concatenated with the output of any previous calls to
compress().
The mode argument is a ZstdCompressor attribute, either
CONTINUE, FLUSH_BLOCK,
or FLUSH_FRAME.
When all data has been provided to the compressor, call the
flush() method to finish the compression process. If
compress() is called with mode set to FLUSH_FRAME,
flush() should not be called, as it would write out a new empty
frame.
Finish the compression process, returning a bytes object
containing any data stored in the compressor’s internal buffers.
The mode argument is a ZstdCompressor attribute, either
FLUSH_BLOCK, or FLUSH_FRAME.
Specify the amount of uncompressed data size that will be provided for
the next frame. size will be written into the frame header of the next
frame unless CompressionParameter.content_size_flag is False
or 0. A size of 0 means that the frame is empty. If size is
None, the frame header will omit the frame size. Frames that include
the uncompressed data size require less memory to decompress, especially
at higher compression levels.
If last_mode is not FLUSH_FRAME, a
ValueError is raised as the compressor is not at the start of
a frame. If the pledged size does not match the actual size of data
provided to compress(), future calls to compress() or
flush() may raise ZstdError and the last chunk of data may
be lost.
After flush() or compress() are called with mode
FLUSH_FRAME, the next frame will not include the frame size into
the header unless set_pledged_input_size() is called again.
Collect more data for compression, which may or may not generate output immediately. This mode optimizes the compression ratio by maximizing the amount of data per block and frame.
Complete and write a block to the data stream. The data returned so far
can be immediately decompressed. Past data can still be referenced in
future blocks generated by calls to compress(),
improving compression.
Complete and write out a frame. Future data provided to
compress() will be written into a new frame and
cannot reference past data.
The last mode passed to either compress() or flush().
The value can be one of CONTINUE, FLUSH_BLOCK, or
FLUSH_FRAME. The initial value is FLUSH_FRAME,
signifying that the compressor is at the start of a new frame.
Create a decompressor object, which can be used to decompress data incrementally.
For a more convenient way of decompressing an entire compressed stream at
once, see the module-level function decompress().
The options argument is a Python dictionary containing advanced
decompression parameters. The valid keys and values for compression
parameters are documented as part of the DecompressionParameter
documentation.
The zstd_dict argument is an instance of ZstdDict
containing trained data used during compression. This must be
the same Zstandard dictionary used during compression.
Note
This class does not transparently handle inputs containing multiple
compressed frames, unlike the decompress() function and
ZstdFile class. To decompress a multi-frame input, you should
use decompress(), ZstdFile if working with a
file object, or multiple ZstdDecompressor instances.
Decompress data (a bytes-like object), returning
uncompressed data as bytes. Some of data may be buffered
internally, for use in later calls to decompress().
The returned data should be concatenated with the output of any previous
calls to decompress().
If max_length is non-negative, the method returns at most max_length
bytes of decompressed data. If this limit is reached and further
output can be produced, the needs_input attribute will
be set to False. In this case, the next call to
decompress() may provide data as b'' to obtain
more of the output.
If all of the input data was decompressed and returned (either
because this was less than max_length bytes, or because
max_length was negative), the needs_input attribute
will be set to True.
Attempting to decompress data after the end of a frame will raise a
ZstdError. Any data found after the end of the frame is ignored
and saved in the unused_data attribute.
True if the end-of-stream marker has been reached.
Data found after the end of the compressed stream.
Before the end of the stream is reached, this will be b''.
False if the decompress() method can provide more
decompressed data before requiring new compressed input.
Train a Zstandard dictionary, returning a ZstdDict instance.
Zstandard dictionaries enable more efficient compression of smaller sizes
of data, which is traditionally difficult to compress due to less
repetition. If you are compressing multiple similar groups of data (such as
similar files), Zstandard dictionaries can improve compression ratios and
speed significantly.
The samples argument (an iterable of bytes objects), is the
population of samples used to train the Zstandard dictionary.
The dict_size argument, an integer, is the maximum size (in bytes) the Zstandard dictionary should be. The Zstandard documentation suggests an absolute maximum of no more than 100 KB, but the maximum can often be smaller depending on the data. Larger dictionaries generally slow down compression, but improve compression ratios. Smaller dictionaries lead to faster compression, but reduce the compression ratio.
An advanced function for converting a “raw content” Zstandard dictionary into a regular Zstandard dictionary. “Raw content” dictionaries are a sequence of bytes that do not need to follow the structure of a normal Zstandard dictionary.
The zstd_dict argument is a ZstdDict instance with
the dict_content containing the raw dictionary contents.
The samples argument (an iterable of bytes objects), contains
sample data for generating the Zstandard dictionary.
The dict_size argument, an integer, is the maximum size (in bytes) the
Zstandard dictionary should be. See train_dict() for
suggestions on the maximum dictionary size.
The level argument (an integer) is the compression level expected to be passed to the compressors using this dictionary. The dictionary information varies for each compression level, so tuning for the proper compression level can make compression more efficient.
A wrapper around Zstandard dictionaries. Dictionaries can be used to improve
the compression of many small chunks of data. Use train_dict() if you
need to train a new dictionary from sample data.
The dict_content argument (a bytes-like object), is the already trained dictionary information.
The is_raw argument, a boolean, is an advanced parameter controlling the
meaning of dict_content. True means dict_content is a “raw content”
dictionary, without any format restrictions. False means dict_content
is an ordinary Zstandard dictionary, created from Zstandard functions,
for example, train_dict() or the external zstd CLI.
When passing a ZstdDict to a function, the
as_digested_dict and as_undigested_dict attributes can
control how the dictionary is loaded by passing them as the zstd_dict
argument, for example, compress(data, zstd_dict=zd.as_digested_dict).
Digesting a dictionary is a costly operation that occurs when loading a
Zstandard dictionary. When making multiple calls to compression or
decompression, passing a digested dictionary will reduce the overhead of
loading the dictionary.
Difference for compression¶ Digested dictionary
Undigested dictionary
Advanced parameters of the compressor which may be overridden by the dictionary’s parameters
window_log,hash_log,chain_log,search_log,min_match,target_length,strategy,enable_long_distance_matching,ldm_hash_log,ldm_min_match,ldm_bucket_size_log,ldm_hash_rate_log, and some non-public parameters.None
ZstdDictinternally caches the dictionaryYes. It’s faster when loading a digested dictionary again with the same compression level.
No. If you wish to load an undigested dictionary multiple times, consider reusing a compressor object.
If passing a ZstdDict without any attribute, an undigested
dictionary is passed by default when compressing and a digested dictionary
is generated if necessary and passed by default when decompressing.
- dict_content¶
The content of the Zstandard dictionary, a
bytesobject. It’s the same as the dict_content argument in the__init__method. It can be used with other programs, such as thezstdCLI program.
- dict_id¶
Identifier of the Zstandard dictionary, a non-negative int value.
Non-zero means the dictionary is ordinary, created by Zstandard functions and following the Zstandard format.
0means a “raw content” dictionary, free of any format restriction, used for advanced users.Note
The meaning of
0forZstdDict.dict_idis different from thedictionary_idattribute to theget_frame_info()function.
- as_digested_dict¶
Load as a digested dictionary.
- as_undigested_dict¶
Load as an undigested dictionary.
An IntEnum containing the advanced compression parameter
keys that can be used when compressing data.
The bounds() method can be used on any attribute to get the valid
values for that parameter.
Parameters are optional; any omitted parameter will have it’s value selected automatically.
Example getting the lower and upper bound of compression_level:
lower, upper = CompressionParameter.compression_level.bounds()
Example setting the window_log to the maximum size:
_lower, upper = CompressionParameter.window_log.bounds()
options = {CompressionParameter.window_log: upper}
compress(b'venezuelan beaver cheese', options=options)
Return the tuple of int bounds, (lower, upper), of a compression
parameter. This method should be called on the attribute you wish to
retrieve the bounds of. For example, to get the valid values for
compression_level, one may check the result of
CompressionParameter.compression_level.bounds().
Both the lower and upper bounds are inclusive.
A high-level means of setting other compression parameters that affect the speed and ratio of compressing data.
Regular compression levels are greater than 0. Values greater than
20 are considered “ultra” compression and require more memory than
other levels. Negative values can be used to trade off faster compression
for worse compression ratios.
Setting the level to zero uses COMPRESSION_LEVEL_DEFAULT.
Maximum allowed back-reference distance the compressor can use when
compressing data, expressed as power of two, 1 << window_log bytes.
This parameter greatly influences the memory usage of compression. Higher
values require more memory but gain better compression values.
A value of zero causes the value to be selected automatically.
Size of the initial probe table, as a power of two. The resulting memory
usage is 1 << (hash_log+2) bytes. Larger tables improve compression
ratio of strategies <= dfast, and improve compression
speed of strategies > dfast.
A value of zero causes the value to be selected automatically.
Size of the multi-probe search table, as a power of two. The resulting
memory usage is 1 << (chain_log+2) bytes. Larger tables result in
better and slower compression. This parameter has no effect for the
fast strategy. It’s still useful when using
dfast strategy, in which case it defines a secondary
probe table.
A value of zero causes the value to be selected automatically.
Number of search attempts, as a power of two. More attempts result in
better and slower compression. This parameter is useless for
fast and dfast strategies.
A value of zero causes the value to be selected automatically.
Minimum size of searched matches. Larger values increase compression and
decompression speed, but decrease ratio. Note that Zstandard can still
find matches of smaller size, it just tweaks its search algorithm to look
for this size and larger. For all strategies < btopt,
the effective minimum is 4; for all strategies
> fast, the effective maximum is 6.
A value of zero causes the value to be selected automatically.
The impact of this field depends on the selected Strategy.
For strategies btopt, btultra and
btultra2, the value is the length of a match
considered “good enough” to stop searching. Larger values make
compression ratios better, but compresses slower.
For strategy fast, it is the distance between match
sampling. Larger values make compression faster, but with a worse
compression ratio.
A value of zero causes the value to be selected automatically.
The higher the value of selected strategy, the more complex the compression technique used by zstd, resulting in higher compression ratios but slower compression.
See also
Long distance matching can be used to improve compression for large inputs by finding large matches at greater distances. It increases memory usage and window size.
True or 1 enable long distance matching while False or 0
disable it.
Enabling this parameter increases default
window_log to 128 MiB except when expressly
set to a different value. This setting is enabled by default if
window_log >= 128 MiB and the compression
strategy >= btopt (compression level 16+).
Size of the table for long distance matching, as a power of two. Larger values increase memory usage and compression ratio, but decrease compression speed.
A value of zero causes the value to be selected automatically.
Minimum match size for long distance matcher. Larger or too small values can often decrease the compression ratio.
A value of zero causes the value to be selected automatically.
Log size of each bucket in the long distance matcher hash table for collision resolution. Larger values improve collision resolution but decrease compression speed.
A value of zero causes the value to be selected automatically.
Frequency of inserting/looking up entries into the long distance matcher hash table. Larger values improve compression speed. Deviating far from the default value will likely result in a compression ratio decrease.
A value of zero causes the value to be selected automatically.
Write the size of the data to be compressed into the Zstandard frame header when known prior to compressing.
This flag only takes effect under the following scenarios:
Calling compress() for one-shot compression
Providing all of the data to be compressed in the frame in a single
ZstdCompressor.compress() call, with the
ZstdCompressor.FLUSH_FRAME mode.
Calling ZstdCompressor.set_pledged_input_size() with the exact
amount of data that will be provided to the compressor prior to any
calls to ZstdCompressor.compress() for the current frame.
ZstdCompressor.set_pledged_input_size() must be called for each
new frame.
All other compression calls may not write the size information into the frame header.
True or 1 enable the content size flag while False or 0
disable it.
A four-byte checksum using XXHash64 of the uncompressed content is
written at the end of each frame. Zstandard’s decompression code verifies
the checksum. If there is a mismatch a ZstdError exception is
raised.
True or 1 enable checksum generation while False or 0
disable it.
When compressing with a ZstdDict, the dictionary’s ID is written
into the frame header.
True or 1 enable storing the dictionary ID while False or
0 disable it.
Select how many threads will be spawned to compress in parallel. When
nb_workers > 0, enables multi-threaded compression, a value of
1 means “one-thread multi-threaded mode”. More workers improve speed,
but also increase memory usage and slightly reduce compression ratio.
A value of zero disables multi-threading.
Size of a compression job, in bytes. This value is enforced only when
nb_workers >= 1. Each compression job is
completed in parallel, so this value can indirectly impact the number of
active threads.
A value of zero causes the value to be selected automatically.
Sets how much data is reloaded from previous jobs (threads) for new jobs
to be used by the look behind window during compression. This value is
only used when nb_workers >= 1. Acceptable
values vary from 0 to 9.
0 means dynamically set the overlap amount
1 means no overlap
9 means use a full window size from the previous job
Each increment halves/doubles the overlap size. “8” means an overlap of
window_size/2, “7” means an overlap of window_size/4, etc.
An IntEnum containing the advanced decompression parameter
keys that can be used when decompressing data. Parameters are optional; any
omitted parameter will have it’s value selected automatically.
The bounds() method can be used on any attribute to get the valid
values for that parameter.
Example setting the window_log_max to the maximum size:
data = compress(b'Some very long buffer of bytes...')
_lower, upper = DecompressionParameter.window_log_max.bounds()
options = {DecompressionParameter.window_log_max: upper}
decompress(data, options=options)
Return the tuple of int bounds, (lower, upper), of a decompression
parameter. This method should be called on the attribute you wish to
retrieve the bounds of.
Both the lower and upper bounds are inclusive.
The base-two logarithm of the maximum size of the window used during decompression. This can be useful to limit the amount of memory used when decompressing data. A larger maximum window size leads to faster decompression.
A value of zero causes the value to be selected automatically.
An IntEnum containing strategies for compression.
Higher-numbered strategies correspond to more complex and slower
compression.
Note
The values of attributes of Strategy are not necessarily stable
across zstd versions. Only the ordering of the attributes may be relied
upon. The attributes are listed below in order.
The following strategies are available:
Retrieve a FrameInfo object containing metadata about a Zstandard
frame. Frames contain metadata related to the compressed data they hold.
Metadata related to a Zstandard frame.
The size of the decompressed contents of the frame.
An integer representing the Zstandard dictionary ID needed for
decompressing the frame. 0 means the dictionary ID was not
recorded in the frame header. This may mean that a Zstandard dictionary
is not needed, or that the ID of a required dictionary was not recorded.
The default compression level for Zstandard: 3.
Version number of the runtime zstd library as a tuple of integers (major, minor, release).
Reading in a compressed file:
from compression import zstd
with zstd.open("file.zst") as f:
file_content = f.read()
Creating a compressed file:
from compression import zstd
data = b"Insert Data Here"
with zstd.open("file.zst", "w") as f:
f.write(data)
Compressing data in memory:
from compression import zstd
data_in = b"Insert Data Here"
data_out = zstd.compress(data_in)
Incremental compression:
from compression import zstd
comp = zstd.ZstdCompressor()
out1 = comp.compress(b"Some data\n")
out2 = comp.compress(b"Another piece of data\n")
out3 = comp.compress(b"Even more data\n")
out4 = comp.flush()
# Concatenate all the partial results:
result = b"".join([out1, out2, out3, out4])
Writing compressed data to an already-open file:
from compression import zstd
with open("myfile", "wb") as f:
f.write(b"This data will not be compressed\n")
with zstd.open(f, "w") as zstf:
zstf.write(b"This *will* be compressed\n")
f.write(b"Not compressed\n")
Creating a compressed file using compression parameters:
from compression import zstd
options = {
zstd.CompressionParameter.checksum_flag: 1
}
with zstd.open("file.zst", "w", options=options) as f:
f.write(b"Mind if I squeeze in?")