view lib/bunzip.c @ 1078:7b6fbc0475d8 draft

It's not a problem to exactly fill up the buffer with a run if the next symbol is the terminating symbol. Fixes https://jira.cyanogenmod.org/browse/CYAN-1896
author Rob Landley <rob@landley.net>
date Sun, 06 Oct 2013 17:35:57 -0500
parents 2945e3cbebf2
children 12246ab3fd9c
line wrap: on
line source

/* micro-bunzip, a small, simple bzip2 decompression implementation.
 *
 * Copyright 2003, 2006 by Rob Landley (rob@landley.net).
 *
 * Based on a close reading (but not the actual code) of the original bzip2
 * decompression code by Julian R Seward (jseward@acm.org), which also
 * acknowledges contributions by Mike Burrows, David Wheeler, Peter Fenwick,
 * Alistair Moffat, Radford Neal, Ian H. Witten, Robert Sedgewick, and
 * Jon L. Bentley.
 */

#include "toys.h"

#define THREADS 1

// Constants for huffman coding
#define MAX_GROUPS               6
#define GROUP_SIZE               50     /* 64 would have been more efficient */
#define MAX_HUFCODE_BITS         20     /* Longest huffman code allowed */
#define MAX_SYMBOLS              258    /* 256 literals + RUNA + RUNB */
#define SYMBOL_RUNA              0
#define SYMBOL_RUNB              1

// Other housekeeping constants
#define IOBUF_SIZE               4096

// Status return values
#define RETVAL_LAST_BLOCK        (-100)
#define RETVAL_NOT_BZIP_DATA     (-1)
#define RETVAL_DATA_ERROR        (-2)
#define RETVAL_OBSOLETE_INPUT    (-3)

char *bunzip_errors[]={
  NULL,
  "Not bzip data",
  "Data error",
  "Obsolete (pre 0.9.5) bzip format not supported."
};

// This is what we know about each huffman coding group
struct group_data {
  int limit[MAX_HUFCODE_BITS+1], base[MAX_HUFCODE_BITS], permute[MAX_SYMBOLS];
  char minLen, maxLen;
};

// Data for burrows wheeler transform

struct bwdata {
  unsigned int origPtr;
  int byteCount[256];
  // State saved when interrupting output
  int writePos, writeRun, writeCount, writeCurrent;
  unsigned int dataCRC, headerCRC;
  unsigned int *dbuf;
};

// Structure holding all the housekeeping data, including IO buffers and
// memory that persists between calls to bunzip
struct bunzip_data {
  // Input stream, input buffer, input bit buffer
  int in_fd, inbufCount, inbufPos;
  char *inbuf;
  unsigned int inbufBitCount, inbufBits;

  // Output buffer
  char outbuf[IOBUF_SIZE];
  int outbufPos;

  unsigned int totalCRC;

  // First pass decompression data (Huffman and MTF decoding)
  char selectors[32768];                  // nSelectors=15 bits
  struct group_data groups[MAX_GROUPS];   // huffman coding tables
  int symTotal, groupCount, nSelectors;
  unsigned char symToByte[256], mtfSymbol[256];

  // The CRC values stored in the block header and calculated from the data
  unsigned int crc32Table[256];

  // Second pass decompression data (burrows-wheeler transform)
  unsigned int dbufSize;
  struct bwdata bwdata[THREADS];
};

// Return the next nnn bits of input.  All reads from the compressed input
// are done through this function.  All reads are big endian.
static unsigned int get_bits(struct bunzip_data *bd, char bits_wanted)
{
  unsigned int bits = 0;

  // If we need to get more data from the byte buffer, do so.  (Loop getting
  // one byte at a time to enforce endianness and avoid unaligned access.)
  while (bd->inbufBitCount < bits_wanted) {

    // If we need to read more data from file into byte buffer, do so
    if (bd->inbufPos == bd->inbufCount) {
      if (0 >= (bd->inbufCount = read(bd->in_fd, bd->inbuf, IOBUF_SIZE)))
        error_exit("input EOF");
      bd->inbufPos = 0;
    }

    // Avoid 32-bit overflow (dump bit buffer to top of output)
    if (bd->inbufBitCount>=24) {
      bits = bd->inbufBits&((1<<bd->inbufBitCount)-1);
      bits_wanted -= bd->inbufBitCount;
      bits <<= bits_wanted;
      bd->inbufBitCount = 0;
    }

    // Grab next 8 bits of input from buffer.
    bd->inbufBits = (bd->inbufBits<<8) | bd->inbuf[bd->inbufPos++];
    bd->inbufBitCount += 8;
  }

  // Calculate result
  bd->inbufBitCount -= bits_wanted;
  bits |= (bd->inbufBits>>bd->inbufBitCount) & ((1<<bits_wanted)-1);

  return bits;
}

/* Read block header at start of a new compressed data block.  Consists of:
 *
 * 48 bits : Block signature, either pi (data block) or e (EOF block).
 * 32 bits : bw->headerCRC
 * 1  bit  : obsolete feature flag.
 * 24 bits : origPtr (Burrows-wheeler unwind index, only 20 bits ever used)
 * 16 bits : Mapping table index.
 *[16 bits]: symToByte[symTotal] (Mapping table.  For each bit set in mapping
 *           table index above, read another 16 bits of mapping table data.
 *           If correspondig bit is unset, all bits in that mapping table
 *           section are 0.)
 *  3 bits : groupCount (how many huffman tables used to encode, anywhere
 *           from 2 to MAX_GROUPS)
 * variable: hufGroup[groupCount] (MTF encoded huffman table data.)
 */

static int read_block_header(struct bunzip_data *bd, struct bwdata *bw)
{
  struct group_data *hufGroup;
  int hh, ii, jj, kk, symCount, *base, *limit;
  unsigned char uc;

  // Read in header signature and CRC (which is stored big endian)
  ii = get_bits(bd, 24);
  jj = get_bits(bd, 24);
  bw->headerCRC = get_bits(bd,32);

  // Is this the EOF block with CRC for whole file?  (Constant is "e")
  if (ii==0x177245 && jj==0x385090) return RETVAL_LAST_BLOCK;

  // Is this a valid data block?  (Constant is "pi".)
  if (ii!=0x314159 || jj!=0x265359) return RETVAL_NOT_BZIP_DATA;

  // We can add support for blockRandomised if anybody complains.
  if (get_bits(bd,1)) return RETVAL_OBSOLETE_INPUT;
  if ((bw->origPtr = get_bits(bd,24)) > bd->dbufSize) return RETVAL_DATA_ERROR;

  // mapping table: if some byte values are never used (encoding things
  // like ascii text), the compression code removes the gaps to have fewer
  // symbols to deal with, and writes a sparse bitfield indicating which
  // values were present.  We make a translation table to convert the symbols
  // back to the corresponding bytes.
  hh = get_bits(bd, 16);
  bd->symTotal = 0;
  for (ii=0; ii<16; ii++) {
    if (hh & (1 << (15 - ii))) {
      kk = get_bits(bd, 16);
      for (jj=0; jj<16; jj++)
        if (kk & (1 << (15 - jj)))
          bd->symToByte[bd->symTotal++] = (16 * ii) + jj;
    }
  }

  // How many different huffman coding groups does this block use?
  bd->groupCount = get_bits(bd,3);
  if (bd->groupCount<2 || bd->groupCount>MAX_GROUPS) return RETVAL_DATA_ERROR;

  // nSelectors: Every GROUP_SIZE many symbols we switch huffman coding
  // tables.  Each group has a selector, which is an index into the huffman
  // coding table arrays.
  //
  // Read in the group selector array, which is stored as MTF encoded
  // bit runs.  (MTF = Move To Front.  Every time a symbol occurs it's moved
  // to the front of the table, so it has a shorter encoding next time.)
  if (!(bd->nSelectors = get_bits(bd, 15))) return RETVAL_DATA_ERROR;
  for (ii=0; ii<bd->groupCount; ii++) bd->mtfSymbol[ii] = ii;
  for (ii=0; ii<bd->nSelectors; ii++) {

    // Get next value
    for(jj=0;get_bits(bd,1);jj++)
      if (jj>=bd->groupCount) return RETVAL_DATA_ERROR;

    // Decode MTF to get the next selector, and move it to the front.
    uc = bd->mtfSymbol[jj];
    memmove(bd->mtfSymbol+1, bd->mtfSymbol, jj);
    bd->mtfSymbol[0] = bd->selectors[ii] = uc;
  }

  // Read the huffman coding tables for each group, which code for symTotal
  // literal symbols, plus two run symbols (RUNA, RUNB)
  symCount = bd->symTotal+2;
  for (jj=0; jj<bd->groupCount; jj++) {
    unsigned char length[MAX_SYMBOLS];
    unsigned temp[MAX_HUFCODE_BITS+1];
    int minLen, maxLen, pp;

    // Read lengths
    hh = get_bits(bd, 5);
    for (ii = 0; ii < symCount; ii++) {
      for(;;) {
        // !hh || hh > MAX_HUFCODE_BITS in one test.
        if (MAX_HUFCODE_BITS-1 < (unsigned)hh-1) return RETVAL_DATA_ERROR;
        // Grab 2 bits instead of 1 (slightly smaller/faster).  Stop if
        // first bit is 0, otherwise second bit says whether to
        // increment or decrement.
        kk = get_bits(bd, 2);
        if (kk & 2) hh += 1 - ((kk&1)<<1);
        else {
          bd->inbufBitCount++;
          break;
        }
      }
      length[ii] = hh;
    }

    // Find largest and smallest lengths in this group
    minLen = maxLen = length[0];
    for (ii = 1; ii < symCount; ii++) {
      if(length[ii] > maxLen) maxLen = length[ii];
      else if(length[ii] < minLen) minLen = length[ii];
    }

    /* Calculate permute[], base[], and limit[] tables from length[].
     *
     * permute[] is the lookup table for converting huffman coded symbols
     * into decoded symbols.  It contains symbol values sorted by length.
     *
     * base[] is the amount to subtract from the value of a huffman symbol
     * of a given length when using permute[].
     *
     * limit[] indicates the largest numerical value a symbol with a given
     * number of bits can have.  It lets us know when to stop reading.
     *
     * To use these, keep reading bits until value <= limit[bitcount] or
     * you've read over 20 bits (error).  Then the decoded symbol
     * equals permute[hufcode_value - base[hufcode_bitcount]].
     */
    hufGroup = bd->groups+jj;
    hufGroup->minLen = minLen;
    hufGroup->maxLen = maxLen;

    // Note that minLen can't be smaller than 1, so we adjust the base
    // and limit array pointers so we're not always wasting the first
    // entry.  We do this again when using them (during symbol decoding).
    base = hufGroup->base-1;
    limit = hufGroup->limit-1;

    // zero temp[] and limit[], and calculate permute[]
    pp = 0;
    for (ii = minLen; ii <= maxLen; ii++) {
      temp[ii] = limit[ii] = 0;
      for (hh = 0; hh < symCount; hh++)
        if (length[hh] == ii) hufGroup->permute[pp++] = hh;
    }

    // Count symbols coded for at each bit length
    for (ii = 0; ii < symCount; ii++) temp[length[ii]]++;

    /* Calculate limit[] (the largest symbol-coding value at each bit
     * length, which is (previous limit<<1)+symbols at this level), and
     * base[] (number of symbols to ignore at each bit length, which is
     * limit minus the cumulative count of symbols coded for already). */
    pp = hh = 0;
    for (ii = minLen; ii < maxLen; ii++) {
      pp += temp[ii];
      limit[ii] = pp-1;
      pp <<= 1;
      base[ii+1] = pp-(hh+=temp[ii]);
    }
    limit[maxLen] = pp+temp[maxLen]-1;
    limit[maxLen+1] = INT_MAX;
    base[minLen] = 0;
  }

  return 0;
}

/* First pass, read block's symbols into dbuf[dbufCount].
 *
 * This undoes three types of compression: huffman coding, run length encoding,
 * and move to front encoding.  We have to undo all those to know when we've
 * read enough input.
 */

static int read_huffman_data(struct bunzip_data *bd, struct bwdata *bw)
{
  struct group_data *hufGroup;
  int hh, ii, jj, kk, runPos, dbufCount, symCount, selector, nextSym,
    *byteCount, *base, *limit;
  unsigned int *dbuf = bw->dbuf;
  unsigned char uc;

  // We've finished reading and digesting the block header.  Now read this
  // block's huffman coded symbols from the file and undo the huffman coding
  // and run length encoding, saving the result into dbuf[dbufCount++] = uc

  // Initialize symbol occurrence counters and symbol mtf table
  byteCount = bw->byteCount;
  for(ii=0; ii<256; ii++) {
    byteCount[ii] = 0;
    bd->mtfSymbol[ii] = ii;
  }

  // Loop through compressed symbols.  This is the first "tight inner loop"
  // that needs to be micro-optimized for speed.  (This one fills out dbuf[]
  // linearly, staying in cache more, so isn't as limited by DRAM access.)
  runPos = dbufCount = symCount = selector = 0;
  // Some unnecessary initializations to shut gcc up.
  base = limit = 0;
  hufGroup = 0;
  hh = 0;

  for (;;) {
    // Have we reached the end of this huffman group?
    if (!(symCount--)) {
      // Determine which huffman coding group to use.
      symCount = GROUP_SIZE-1;
      if (selector >= bd->nSelectors) return RETVAL_DATA_ERROR;
      hufGroup = bd->groups + bd->selectors[selector++];
      base = hufGroup->base-1;
      limit = hufGroup->limit-1;
    }

    // Read next huffman-coded symbol (into jj).
    ii = hufGroup->minLen;
    jj = get_bits(bd, ii);
    while (jj > limit[ii]) {
      // if (ii > hufGroup->maxLen) return RETVAL_DATA_ERROR;
      ii++;

      // Unroll get_bits() to avoid a function call when the data's in
      // the buffer already.
      kk = bd->inbufBitCount
        ? (bd->inbufBits >> --(bd->inbufBitCount)) & 1 : get_bits(bd, 1);
      jj = (jj << 1) | kk;
    }
    // Huffman decode jj into nextSym (with bounds checking)
    jj-=base[ii];

    if (ii > hufGroup->maxLen || (unsigned)jj >= MAX_SYMBOLS)
      return RETVAL_DATA_ERROR;
    nextSym = hufGroup->permute[jj];

    // If this is a repeated run, loop collecting data
    if ((unsigned)nextSym <= SYMBOL_RUNB) {
      // If this is the start of a new run, zero out counter
      if(!runPos) {
        runPos = 1;
        hh = 0;
      }

      /* Neat trick that saves 1 symbol: instead of or-ing 0 or 1 at
         each bit position, add 1 or 2 instead. For example,
         1011 is 1<<0 + 1<<1 + 2<<2. 1010 is 2<<0 + 2<<1 + 1<<2.
         You can make any bit pattern that way using 1 less symbol than
         the basic or 0/1 method (except all bits 0, which would use no
         symbols, but a run of length 0 doesn't mean anything in this
         context). Thus space is saved. */
      hh += (runPos << nextSym); // +runPos if RUNA; +2*runPos if RUNB
      runPos <<= 1;
      continue;
    }

    /* When we hit the first non-run symbol after a run, we now know
       how many times to repeat the last literal, so append that many
       copies to our buffer of decoded symbols (dbuf) now. (The last
       literal used is the one at the head of the mtfSymbol array.) */
    if (runPos) {
      runPos = 0;
      if (dbufCount+hh > bd->dbufSize) return RETVAL_DATA_ERROR;

      uc = bd->symToByte[bd->mtfSymbol[0]];
      byteCount[uc] += hh;
      while (hh--) dbuf[dbufCount++] = uc;
    }

    // Is this the terminating symbol?
    if (nextSym>bd->symTotal) break;

    /* At this point, the symbol we just decoded indicates a new literal
       character. Subtract one to get the position in the MTF array
       at which this literal is currently to be found. (Note that the
       result can't be -1 or 0, because 0 and 1 are RUNA and RUNB.
       Another instance of the first symbol in the mtf array, position 0,
       would have been handled as part of a run.) */
    if (dbufCount>=bd->dbufSize) return RETVAL_DATA_ERROR;
    ii = nextSym - 1;
    uc = bd->mtfSymbol[ii];
    // On my laptop, unrolling this memmove() into a loop shaves 3.5% off
    // the total running time.
    while(ii--) bd->mtfSymbol[ii+1] = bd->mtfSymbol[ii];
    bd->mtfSymbol[0] = uc;
    uc = bd->symToByte[uc];

    // We have our literal byte.  Save it into dbuf.
    byteCount[uc]++;
    dbuf[dbufCount++] = (unsigned int)uc;
  }

  // Now we know what dbufCount is, do a better sanity check on origPtr.
  if (bw->origPtr >= (bw->writeCount = dbufCount)) return RETVAL_DATA_ERROR;

  return 0;
}

// Flush output buffer to disk
void flush_bunzip_outbuf(struct bunzip_data *bd, int out_fd)
{
  if (bd->outbufPos) {
    if (write(out_fd, bd->outbuf, bd->outbufPos) != bd->outbufPos)
      error_exit("output EOF");
    bd->outbufPos = 0;
  }
}

void burrows_wheeler_prep(struct bunzip_data *bd, struct bwdata *bw)
{
  int ii, jj;
  unsigned int *dbuf = bw->dbuf;
  int *byteCount = bw->byteCount;

  // Technically this part is preparation for the burrows-wheeler
  // transform, but it's quick and convenient to do here.

  // Turn byteCount into cumulative occurrence counts of 0 to n-1.
  jj = 0;
  for (ii=0; ii<256; ii++) {
    int kk = jj + byteCount[ii];
    byteCount[ii] = jj;
    jj = kk;
  }

  // Use occurrence counts to quickly figure out what order dbuf would be in
  // if we sorted it.
  for (ii=0; ii < bw->writeCount; ii++) {
    unsigned char uc = dbuf[ii];
    dbuf[byteCount[uc]] |= (ii << 8);
    byteCount[uc]++;
  }

  // blockRandomised support would go here.

  // Using ii as position, jj as previous character, hh as current character,
  // and uc as run count.
  bw->dataCRC = 0xffffffffL;

  /* Decode first byte by hand to initialize "previous" byte. Note that it
     doesn't get output, and if the first three characters are identical
     it doesn't qualify as a run (hence uc=255, which will either wrap
     to 1 or get reset). */
  if (bw->writeCount) {
    bw->writePos = dbuf[bw->origPtr];
    bw->writeCurrent = (unsigned char)bw->writePos;
    bw->writePos >>= 8;
    bw->writeRun = -1;
  }
}

// Decompress a block of text to intermediate buffer
int read_bunzip_data(struct bunzip_data *bd)
{
  int rc = read_block_header(bd, bd->bwdata);
  if (!rc) rc=read_huffman_data(bd, bd->bwdata);

  // First thing that can be done by a background thread.
  burrows_wheeler_prep(bd, bd->bwdata);

  return rc;
}

// Undo burrows-wheeler transform on intermediate buffer to produce output.
// If !len, write up to len bytes of data to buf.  Otherwise write to out_fd.
// Returns len ? bytes written : 0.  Notice all errors are negative #'s.
//
// Burrows-wheeler transform is described at:
// http://dogma.net/markn/articles/bwt/bwt.htm
// http://marknelson.us/1996/09/01/bwt/

int write_bunzip_data(struct bunzip_data *bd, struct bwdata *bw, int out_fd, char *outbuf, int len)
{
  unsigned int *dbuf = bw->dbuf;
  int count, pos, current, run, copies, outbyte, previous, gotcount = 0;

  for (;;) {
    // If last read was short due to end of file, return last block now
    if (bw->writeCount < 0) return bw->writeCount;

    // If we need to refill dbuf, do it.
    if (!bw->writeCount) {
      int i = read_bunzip_data(bd);
      if (i) {
        if (i == RETVAL_LAST_BLOCK) {
          bw->writeCount = i;
          return gotcount;
        } else return i;
      }
    }

    // loop generating output
    count = bw->writeCount;
    pos = bw->writePos;
    current = bw->writeCurrent;
    run = bw->writeRun;
    while (count) {

      // If somebody (like tar) wants a certain number of bytes of
      // data from memory instead of written to a file, humor them.
      if (len && bd->outbufPos>=len) goto dataus_interruptus;
      count--;

      // Follow sequence vector to undo Burrows-Wheeler transform.
      previous = current;
      pos = dbuf[pos];
      current = pos&0xff;
      pos >>= 8;

      // Whenever we see 3 consecutive copies of the same byte,
      // the 4th is a repeat count
      if (run++ == 3) {
        copies = current;
        outbyte = previous;
        current = -1;
      } else {
        copies = 1;
        outbyte = current;
      }

      // Output bytes to buffer, flushing to file if necessary
      while (copies--) {
        if (bd->outbufPos == IOBUF_SIZE) flush_bunzip_outbuf(bd,out_fd);
        bd->outbuf[bd->outbufPos++] = outbyte;
        bw->dataCRC = (bw->dataCRC << 8)
                ^ bd->crc32Table[(bw->dataCRC >> 24) ^ outbyte];
      }
      if (current!=previous) run=0;
    }

    // decompression of this block completed successfully
    bw->dataCRC = ~(bw->dataCRC);
    bd->totalCRC = ((bd->totalCRC << 1) | (bd->totalCRC >> 31)) ^ bw->dataCRC;

    // if this block had a crc error, force file level crc error.
    if (bw->dataCRC != bw->headerCRC) {
      bd->totalCRC = bw->headerCRC+1;

      return RETVAL_LAST_BLOCK;
    }
dataus_interruptus:
    bw->writeCount = count;
    if (len) {
      gotcount += bd->outbufPos;
      memcpy(outbuf, bd->outbuf, len);

      // If we got enough data, checkpoint loop state and return
      if ((len-=bd->outbufPos)<1) {
        bd->outbufPos -= len;
        if (bd->outbufPos) memmove(bd->outbuf, bd->outbuf+len, bd->outbufPos);
        bw->writePos = pos;
        bw->writeCurrent = current;
        bw->writeRun = run;

        return gotcount;
      }
    }
  }
}

// Allocate the structure, read file header. If !len, src_fd contains
// filehandle to read from. Else inbuf contains data.
int start_bunzip(struct bunzip_data **bdp, int src_fd, char *inbuf, int len)
{
  struct bunzip_data *bd;
  unsigned int i;

  // Figure out how much data to allocate.
  i = sizeof(struct bunzip_data);
  if (!len) i += IOBUF_SIZE;

  // Allocate bunzip_data. Most fields initialize to zero.
  bd = *bdp = xzalloc(i);
  if (len) {
    bd->inbuf = inbuf;
    bd->inbufCount = len;
    bd->in_fd = -1;
  } else {
    bd->inbuf = (char *)(bd+1);
    bd->in_fd = src_fd;
  }

  crc_init(bd->crc32Table, 0);

  // Ensure that file starts with "BZh".
  for (i=0;i<3;i++) if (get_bits(bd,8)!="BZh"[i]) return RETVAL_NOT_BZIP_DATA;

  // Next byte ascii '1'-'9', indicates block size in units of 100k of
  // uncompressed data. Allocate intermediate buffer for block.
  i = get_bits(bd, 8);
  if (i<'1' || i>'9') return RETVAL_NOT_BZIP_DATA;
  bd->dbufSize = 100000*(i-'0')*THREADS;
  for (i=0; i<THREADS; i++)
    bd->bwdata[i].dbuf = xmalloc(bd->dbufSize * sizeof(int));

  return 0;
}

// Example usage: decompress src_fd to dst_fd. (Stops at end of bzip data,
// not end of file.)
void bunzipStream(int src_fd, int dst_fd)
{
  struct bunzip_data *bd;
  char *bunzip_errors[]={NULL, "not bzip", "bad data", "old format"};
  int i, j;

  if (!(i = start_bunzip(&bd,src_fd,0,0))) {
    i = write_bunzip_data(bd,bd->bwdata,dst_fd,0,0);
    if (i==RETVAL_LAST_BLOCK && bd->bwdata[0].headerCRC==bd->totalCRC) i = 0;
  }
  flush_bunzip_outbuf(bd,dst_fd);
  for (j=0; j<THREADS; j++) free(bd->bwdata[j].dbuf);
  free(bd);
  if (i) error_exit(bunzip_errors[-i]);
}