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zlib/contrib/puff/puff.c  view on Meta::CPAN

        s->in[s->incnt++] != ((~len >> 8) & 0xff))
        return -2;                              /* didn't match complement! */

    /* copy len bytes from in to out */
    if (s->incnt + len > s->inlen)
        return 2;                               /* not enough input */
    if (s->out != NIL) {
        if (s->outcnt + len > s->outlen)
            return 1;                           /* not enough output space */
        while (len--)
            s->out[s->outcnt++] = s->in[s->incnt++];
    }
    else {                                      /* just scanning */
        s->outcnt += len;
        s->incnt += len;
    }

    /* done with a valid stored block */
    return 0;
}

/*
 * Huffman code decoding tables.  count[1..MAXBITS] is the number of symbols of
 * each length, which for a canonical code are stepped through in order.
 * symbol[] are the symbol values in canonical order, where the number of
 * entries is the sum of the counts in count[].  The decoding process can be
 * seen in the function decode() below.
 */
struct huffman {
    short *count;       /* number of symbols of each length */
    short *symbol;      /* canonically ordered symbols */
};

/*
 * Decode a code from the stream s using huffman table h.  Return the symbol or
 * a negative value if there is an error.  If all of the lengths are zero, i.e.
 * an empty code, or if the code is incomplete and an invalid code is received,
 * then -10 is returned after reading MAXBITS bits.
 *
 * Format notes:
 *
 * - The codes as stored in the compressed data are bit-reversed relative to
 *   a simple integer ordering of codes of the same lengths.  Hence below the
 *   bits are pulled from the compressed data one at a time and used to
 *   build the code value reversed from what is in the stream in order to
 *   permit simple integer comparisons for decoding.  A table-based decoding
 *   scheme (as used in zlib) does not need to do this reversal.
 *
 * - The first code for the shortest length is all zeros.  Subsequent codes of
 *   the same length are simply integer increments of the previous code.  When
 *   moving up a length, a zero bit is appended to the code.  For a complete
 *   code, the last code of the longest length will be all ones.
 *
 * - Incomplete codes are handled by this decoder, since they are permitted
 *   in the deflate format.  See the format notes for fixed() and dynamic().
 */
#ifdef SLOW
local int decode(struct state *s, const struct huffman *h)
{
    int len;            /* current number of bits in code */
    int code;           /* len bits being decoded */
    int first;          /* first code of length len */
    int count;          /* number of codes of length len */
    int index;          /* index of first code of length len in symbol table */

    code = first = index = 0;
    for (len = 1; len <= MAXBITS; len++) {
        code |= bits(s, 1);             /* get next bit */
        count = h->count[len];
        if (code - count < first)       /* if length len, return symbol */
            return h->symbol[index + (code - first)];
        index += count;                 /* else update for next length */
        first += count;
        first <<= 1;
        code <<= 1;
    }
    return -10;                         /* ran out of codes */
}

/*
 * A faster version of decode() for real applications of this code.   It's not
 * as readable, but it makes puff() twice as fast.  And it only makes the code
 * a few percent larger.
 */
#else /* !SLOW */
local int decode(struct state *s, const struct huffman *h)
{
    int len;            /* current number of bits in code */
    int code;           /* len bits being decoded */
    int first;          /* first code of length len */
    int count;          /* number of codes of length len */
    int index;          /* index of first code of length len in symbol table */
    int bitbuf;         /* bits from stream */
    int left;           /* bits left in next or left to process */
    short *next;        /* next number of codes */

    bitbuf = s->bitbuf;
    left = s->bitcnt;
    code = first = index = 0;
    len = 1;
    next = h->count + 1;
    while (1) {
        while (left--) {
            code |= bitbuf & 1;
            bitbuf >>= 1;
            count = *next++;
            if (code - count < first) { /* if length len, return symbol */
                s->bitbuf = bitbuf;
                s->bitcnt = (s->bitcnt - len) & 7;
                return h->symbol[index + (code - first)];
            }
            index += count;             /* else update for next length */
            first += count;
            first <<= 1;
            code <<= 1;
            len++;
        }
        left = (MAXBITS+1) - len;
        if (left == 0)
            break;
        if (s->incnt == s->inlen)
            longjmp(s->env, 1);         /* out of input */
        bitbuf = s->in[s->incnt++];
        if (left > 8)
            left = 8;
    }
    return -10;                         /* ran out of codes */
}
#endif /* SLOW */

/*
 * Given the list of code lengths length[0..n-1] representing a canonical
 * Huffman code for n symbols, construct the tables required to decode those
 * codes.  Those tables are the number of codes of each length, and the symbols
 * sorted by length, retaining their original order within each length.  The
 * return value is zero for a complete code set, negative for an over-
 * subscribed code set, and positive for an incomplete code set.  The tables
 * can be used if the return value is zero or positive, but they cannot be used
 * if the return value is negative.  If the return value is zero, it is not
 * possible for decode() using that table to return an error--any stream of
 * enough bits will resolve to a symbol.  If the return value is positive, then
 * it is possible for decode() using that table to return an error for received
 * codes past the end of the incomplete lengths.
 *
 * Not used by decode(), but used for error checking, h->count[0] is the number
 * of the n symbols not in the code.  So n - h->count[0] is the number of
 * codes.  This is useful for checking for incomplete codes that have more than
 * one symbol, which is an error in a dynamic block.
 *

zlib/contrib/puff/puff.c  view on Meta::CPAN

    for (len = 0; len <= MAXBITS; len++)
        h->count[len] = 0;
    for (symbol = 0; symbol < n; symbol++)
        (h->count[length[symbol]])++;   /* assumes lengths are within bounds */
    if (h->count[0] == n)               /* no codes! */
        return 0;                       /* complete, but decode() will fail */

    /* check for an over-subscribed or incomplete set of lengths */
    left = 1;                           /* one possible code of zero length */
    for (len = 1; len <= MAXBITS; len++) {
        left <<= 1;                     /* one more bit, double codes left */
        left -= h->count[len];          /* deduct count from possible codes */
        if (left < 0)
            return left;                /* over-subscribed--return negative */
    }                                   /* left > 0 means incomplete */

    /* generate offsets into symbol table for each length for sorting */
    offs[1] = 0;
    for (len = 1; len < MAXBITS; len++)
        offs[len + 1] = offs[len] + h->count[len];

    /*
     * put symbols in table sorted by length, by symbol order within each
     * length
     */
    for (symbol = 0; symbol < n; symbol++)
        if (length[symbol] != 0)
            h->symbol[offs[length[symbol]]++] = symbol;

    /* return zero for complete set, positive for incomplete set */
    return left;
}

/*
 * Decode literal/length and distance codes until an end-of-block code.
 *
 * Format notes:
 *
 * - Compressed data that is after the block type if fixed or after the code
 *   description if dynamic is a combination of literals and length/distance
 *   pairs terminated by and end-of-block code.  Literals are simply Huffman
 *   coded bytes.  A length/distance pair is a coded length followed by a
 *   coded distance to represent a string that occurs earlier in the
 *   uncompressed data that occurs again at the current location.
 *
 * - Literals, lengths, and the end-of-block code are combined into a single
 *   code of up to 286 symbols.  They are 256 literals (0..255), 29 length
 *   symbols (257..285), and the end-of-block symbol (256).
 *
 * - There are 256 possible lengths (3..258), and so 29 symbols are not enough
 *   to represent all of those.  Lengths 3..10 and 258 are in fact represented
 *   by just a length symbol.  Lengths 11..257 are represented as a symbol and
 *   some number of extra bits that are added as an integer to the base length
 *   of the length symbol.  The number of extra bits is determined by the base
 *   length symbol.  These are in the static arrays below, lens[] for the base
 *   lengths and lext[] for the corresponding number of extra bits.
 *
 * - The reason that 258 gets its own symbol is that the longest length is used
 *   often in highly redundant files.  Note that 258 can also be coded as the
 *   base value 227 plus the maximum extra value of 31.  While a good deflate
 *   should never do this, it is not an error, and should be decoded properly.
 *
 * - If a length is decoded, including its extra bits if any, then it is
 *   followed a distance code.  There are up to 30 distance symbols.  Again
 *   there are many more possible distances (1..32768), so extra bits are added
 *   to a base value represented by the symbol.  The distances 1..4 get their
 *   own symbol, but the rest require extra bits.  The base distances and
 *   corresponding number of extra bits are below in the static arrays dist[]
 *   and dext[].
 *
 * - Literal bytes are simply written to the output.  A length/distance pair is
 *   an instruction to copy previously uncompressed bytes to the output.  The
 *   copy is from distance bytes back in the output stream, copying for length
 *   bytes.
 *
 * - Distances pointing before the beginning of the output data are not
 *   permitted.
 *
 * - Overlapped copies, where the length is greater than the distance, are
 *   allowed and common.  For example, a distance of one and a length of 258
 *   simply copies the last byte 258 times.  A distance of four and a length of
 *   twelve copies the last four bytes three times.  A simple forward copy
 *   ignoring whether the length is greater than the distance or not implements
 *   this correctly.  You should not use memcpy() since its behavior is not
 *   defined for overlapped arrays.  You should not use memmove() or bcopy()
 *   since though their behavior -is- defined for overlapping arrays, it is
 *   defined to do the wrong thing in this case.
 */
local int codes(struct state *s,
                const struct huffman *lencode,
                const struct huffman *distcode)
{
    int symbol;         /* decoded symbol */
    int len;            /* length for copy */
    unsigned dist;      /* distance for copy */
    static const short lens[29] = { /* Size base for length codes 257..285 */
        3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 13, 15, 17, 19, 23, 27, 31,
        35, 43, 51, 59, 67, 83, 99, 115, 131, 163, 195, 227, 258};
    static const short lext[29] = { /* Extra bits for length codes 257..285 */
        0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1, 1, 2, 2, 2, 2,
        3, 3, 3, 3, 4, 4, 4, 4, 5, 5, 5, 5, 0};
    static const short dists[30] = { /* Offset base for distance codes 0..29 */
        1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 9, 13, 17, 25, 33, 49, 65, 97, 129, 193,
        257, 385, 513, 769, 1025, 1537, 2049, 3073, 4097, 6145,
        8193, 12289, 16385, 24577};
    static const short dext[30] = { /* Extra bits for distance codes 0..29 */
        0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 3, 4, 4, 5, 5, 6, 6,
        7, 7, 8, 8, 9, 9, 10, 10, 11, 11,
        12, 12, 13, 13};

    /* decode literals and length/distance pairs */
    do {
        symbol = decode(s, lencode);
        if (symbol < 0)
            return symbol;              /* invalid symbol */
        if (symbol < 256) {             /* literal: symbol is the byte */
            /* write out the literal */
            if (s->out != NIL) {
                if (s->outcnt == s->outlen)
                    return 1;
                s->out[s->outcnt] = symbol;
            }
            s->outcnt++;
        }
        else if (symbol > 256) {        /* length */
            /* get and compute length */
            symbol -= 257;
            if (symbol >= 29)
                return -10;             /* invalid fixed code */
            len = lens[symbol] + bits(s, lext[symbol]);

            /* get and check distance */
            symbol = decode(s, distcode);
            if (symbol < 0)
                return symbol;          /* invalid symbol */
            dist = dists[symbol] + bits(s, dext[symbol]);
#ifndef INFLATE_ALLOW_INVALID_DISTANCE_TOOFAR_ARRR
            if (dist > s->outcnt)
                return -11;     /* distance too far back */
#endif

            /* copy length bytes from distance bytes back */
            if (s->out != NIL) {
                if (s->outcnt + len > s->outlen)
                    return 1;
                while (len--) {
                    s->out[s->outcnt] =
#ifdef INFLATE_ALLOW_INVALID_DISTANCE_TOOFAR_ARRR
                        dist > s->outcnt ?
                            0 :
#endif
                            s->out[s->outcnt - dist];
                    s->outcnt++;

zlib/contrib/puff/puff.c  view on Meta::CPAN

 *   to be seen in a dynamic code description, hence what may appear initially
 *   to be a peculiar ordering.
 *
 * - Given the number of literal/length code lengths (nlen) and distance code
 *   lengths (ndist), then they are treated as one long list of nlen + ndist
 *   code lengths.  Therefore run-length coding can and often does cross the
 *   boundary between the two sets of lengths.
 *
 * - So to summarize, the code description at the start of a dynamic block is
 *   three counts for the number of code lengths for the literal/length codes,
 *   the distance codes, and the code length codes.  This is followed by the
 *   code length code lengths, three bits each.  This is used to construct the
 *   code length code which is used to read the remainder of the lengths.  Then
 *   the literal/length code lengths and distance lengths are read as a single
 *   set of lengths using the code length codes.  Codes are constructed from
 *   the resulting two sets of lengths, and then finally you can start
 *   decoding actual compressed data in the block.
 *
 * - For reference, a "typical" size for the code description in a dynamic
 *   block is around 80 bytes.
 */
local int dynamic(struct state *s)
{
    int nlen, ndist, ncode;             /* number of lengths in descriptor */
    int index;                          /* index of lengths[] */
    int err;                            /* construct() return value */
    short lengths[MAXCODES];            /* descriptor code lengths */
    short lencnt[MAXBITS+1], lensym[MAXLCODES];         /* lencode memory */
    short distcnt[MAXBITS+1], distsym[MAXDCODES];       /* distcode memory */
    struct huffman lencode, distcode;   /* length and distance codes */
    static const short order[19] =      /* permutation of code length codes */
        {16, 17, 18, 0, 8, 7, 9, 6, 10, 5, 11, 4, 12, 3, 13, 2, 14, 1, 15};

    /* construct lencode and distcode */
    lencode.count = lencnt;
    lencode.symbol = lensym;
    distcode.count = distcnt;
    distcode.symbol = distsym;

    /* get number of lengths in each table, check lengths */
    nlen = bits(s, 5) + 257;
    ndist = bits(s, 5) + 1;
    ncode = bits(s, 4) + 4;
    if (nlen > MAXLCODES || ndist > MAXDCODES)
        return -3;                      /* bad counts */

    /* read code length code lengths (really), missing lengths are zero */
    for (index = 0; index < ncode; index++)
        lengths[order[index]] = bits(s, 3);
    for (; index < 19; index++)
        lengths[order[index]] = 0;

    /* build huffman table for code lengths codes (use lencode temporarily) */
    err = construct(&lencode, lengths, 19);
    if (err != 0)               /* require complete code set here */
        return -4;

    /* read length/literal and distance code length tables */
    index = 0;
    while (index < nlen + ndist) {
        int symbol;             /* decoded value */
        int len;                /* last length to repeat */

        symbol = decode(s, &lencode);
        if (symbol < 0)
            return symbol;          /* invalid symbol */
        if (symbol < 16)                /* length in 0..15 */
            lengths[index++] = symbol;
        else {                          /* repeat instruction */
            len = 0;                    /* assume repeating zeros */
            if (symbol == 16) {         /* repeat last length 3..6 times */
                if (index == 0)
                    return -5;          /* no last length! */
                len = lengths[index - 1];       /* last length */
                symbol = 3 + bits(s, 2);
            }
            else if (symbol == 17)      /* repeat zero 3..10 times */
                symbol = 3 + bits(s, 3);
            else                        /* == 18, repeat zero 11..138 times */
                symbol = 11 + bits(s, 7);
            if (index + symbol > nlen + ndist)
                return -6;              /* too many lengths! */
            while (symbol--)            /* repeat last or zero symbol times */
                lengths[index++] = len;
        }
    }

    /* check for end-of-block code -- there better be one! */
    if (lengths[256] == 0)
        return -9;

    /* build huffman table for literal/length codes */
    err = construct(&lencode, lengths, nlen);
    if (err && (err < 0 || nlen != lencode.count[0] + lencode.count[1]))
        return -7;      /* incomplete code ok only for single length 1 code */

    /* build huffman table for distance codes */
    err = construct(&distcode, lengths + nlen, ndist);
    if (err && (err < 0 || ndist != distcode.count[0] + distcode.count[1]))
        return -8;      /* incomplete code ok only for single length 1 code */

    /* decode data until end-of-block code */
    return codes(s, &lencode, &distcode);
}

/*
 * Inflate source to dest.  On return, destlen and sourcelen are updated to the
 * size of the uncompressed data and the size of the deflate data respectively.
 * On success, the return value of puff() is zero.  If there is an error in the
 * source data, i.e. it is not in the deflate format, then a negative value is
 * returned.  If there is not enough input available or there is not enough
 * output space, then a positive error is returned.  In that case, destlen and
 * sourcelen are not updated to facilitate retrying from the beginning with the
 * provision of more input data or more output space.  In the case of invalid
 * inflate data (a negative error), the dest and source pointers are updated to
 * facilitate the debugging of deflators.
 *
 * puff() also has a mode to determine the size of the uncompressed output with
 * no output written.  For this dest must be (unsigned char *)0.  In this case,
 * the input value of *destlen is ignored, and on return *destlen is set to the
 * size of the uncompressed output.
 *
 * The return codes are:
 *
 *   2:  available inflate data did not terminate
 *   1:  output space exhausted before completing inflate
 *   0:  successful inflate
 *  -1:  invalid block type (type == 3)
 *  -2:  stored block length did not match one's complement
 *  -3:  dynamic block code description: too many length or distance codes
 *  -4:  dynamic block code description: code lengths codes incomplete
 *  -5:  dynamic block code description: repeat lengths with no first length
 *  -6:  dynamic block code description: repeat more than specified lengths
 *  -7:  dynamic block code description: invalid literal/length code lengths
 *  -8:  dynamic block code description: invalid distance code lengths
 *  -9:  dynamic block code description: missing end-of-block code
 * -10:  invalid literal/length or distance code in fixed or dynamic block
 * -11:  distance is too far back in fixed or dynamic block
 *
 * Format notes:
 *
 * - Three bits are read for each block to determine the kind of block and
 *   whether or not it is the last block.  Then the block is decoded and the
 *   process repeated if it was not the last block.
 *
 * - The leftover bits in the last byte of the deflate data after the last
 *   block (if it was a fixed or dynamic block) are undefined and have no
 *   expected values to check.
 */
int puff(unsigned char *dest,           /* pointer to destination pointer */
         unsigned long *destlen,        /* amount of output space */
         const unsigned char *source,   /* pointer to source data pointer */
         unsigned long *sourcelen)      /* amount of input available */
{
    struct state s;             /* input/output state */
    int last, type;             /* block information */
    int err;                    /* return value */

    /* initialize output state */
    s.out = dest;
    s.outlen = *destlen;                /* ignored if dest is NIL */
    s.outcnt = 0;

    /* initialize input state */
    s.in = source;
    s.inlen = *sourcelen;
    s.incnt = 0;
    s.bitbuf = 0;
    s.bitcnt = 0;

    /* return if bits() or decode() tries to read past available input */
    if (setjmp(s.env) != 0)             /* if came back here via longjmp() */
        err = 2;                        /* then skip do-loop, return error */
    else {
        /* process blocks until last block or error */
        do {
            last = bits(&s, 1);         /* one if last block */
            type = bits(&s, 2);         /* block type 0..3 */
            err = type == 0 ?
                    stored(&s) :
                    (type == 1 ?
                        fixed(&s) :
                        (type == 2 ?
                            dynamic(&s) :
                            -1));       /* type == 3, invalid */
            if (err != 0)
                break;                  /* return with error */
        } while (!last);
    }

    /* update the lengths and return */
    if (err <= 0) {
        *destlen = s.outcnt;
        *sourcelen = s.incnt;
    }
    return err;
}



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