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About

SquashFS is a highly compressed, read only file system often used as a root fs on embedded devices, live systems or simply as a compressed archive format.

Think of it as a .tar.gz that you can mount (or XZ, LZO, LZ4, ZSTD).

This project originally started out as a fork of squashfs-tools 4.3, after encountering some short comings and realizing that there have been no updates on the SourceForge site or mailing list for a long time. Even before the first public release, the fork was replaced with a complete re-write after growing frustrated with the existing code base. For lack of a better name, and because the original appeared to be unmaintained at the time, the name squashfs-tools-ng was kept, although the published code base technically never had any connection to squashfs-tools.

Maintenance of the original squashfs-tools has since resumed, squashfs-tools version 4.4 was released and continues to be maintained in parallel. The utilities provided by squashfs-tools-ng offer alternative tooling and are intentionally named differently, so both packages can be installed side by side.

The actual guts of squashfs-tools-ng are encapsulated in a library with a generic API designed to make SquashFS available to other applications as an embeddable, extensible archive format (or to simply read, write or manipulate SquashFS file systems).

The utility programs are largely command line wrappers around the library. The following tools are provided:

  • gensquashfs can be used to produce SquashFS images from gen_init_cpio like file listings or simply pack an input directory. Can use an SELinux contexts file (see selabel_file(5)) to generate SELinux labels.
  • rdsquashfs can be used to inspect and unpack SquashFS images.
  • sqfs2tar can turn a SquashFS image into a tarball, written to stdout.
  • tar2sqfs can turn a tarball (read from stdin) into a SquashFS image.
  • sqfsdiff can compare the contents of two SquashFS images.

The library and the tools that produce SquashFS images are designed to operate deterministically. Same input will produce byte-for-byte identical output. Failure to do so is treated as a critical bug.

Installing

A number of Linux distributions already offer squashfs-tools-ng through their package management system. Replogy maintains an up to date list:

Packaging status

Pre-built Windows binary Packages

Pre-compiled binary packages for Windows are available here:

https://infraroot.at/pub/squashfs/windows

Those packages contain the binaries for the tools, the SquashFS library and pre-compiled dependency libraries (zstd, lzo, lzma; others are built in).

The binary package does not contain any source code. See below on how to obtain and compile the source for squashfs-tools-ng. The corresponding source code from which the 3rd party libraries have been built is also available for download at the above location.

The headers and import libraries to build applications that use libsquashfs are included. For convenience, the pre-compiled, 3rd party dependency libraries also come with headers and import libraries.

Copyright & License

In short: libsquashfs is LGPLv3 licensed, the utility programs are GPLv3.

Some 3rd party source code is included with more permissive licenses, some of which is actually compiled into libsquashfs. Copyright notices for those must be included when distributing either source or binaries of squashfs-tools-ng.

See COPYING.md for more detailed information.

Getting and Building the Source Code

Official release tarballs can be obtained here:

https://infraroot.at/pub/squashfs

The official git tree is currently located here:

https://github.com/AgentD/squashfs-tools-ng

If you are working on an official release tarball, you can build the package like every autotools based package:

./configure
make
make install

If you work on the git tree, you need to bootstrap the build system first:

./autogen.sh

If Doxygen is available, a reference manual can be built as follows:

make doxygen-doc

The pre-compiled binary packages for Windows are built using a helper script that uses a MinGW cross toolchain to build squashfs-tools-ng and any of the required dependencies:

./mkwinbins.sh

Structure of the Source Code

The main functionality of the package is split up into a number libraries. The actual tools are mainly wrappers around the libraries that combine their functionality in a useful way.

The headers of all the libraries can be found in the include directory, whereas the source code is in a per-library sub-directory within lib.

The include directory has a sub-directory sqfs which contains the public headers of libsquashfs.so which are installed along with the library. All other headers are private to this package.

The following components exist: - libfstree.a built from files in lib/fstree contains functions for manipulating a file system tree. - libtar.a built from files in lib/tar contains data structures and functions for parsing and creating tar files. - libsquashfs.so built from files in lib/sqfs contains all kinds of data structures for reading and writing SquashFS archives. Abstractions for data compression and so on. It contains the actual brains of this package. - libcommon.a built from files in lib/common contains a bunch of commonly used code shared across the utilities. - libcompat.a built from files in lib/compat contains minimal implementations of POSIX or GNU functions that are not available on some platforms. - libutil.a contains common utilities that are used internally by both the programs and libsquashfs.so.

Optionally, libsquashfs can be compiled with builtin, custom versions of zlib and lz4. The configure options --with-builtin-zlib and --with-builtin-lz4 can be used. The respective library sources are in lib/sqfs/comp in the squashfs-tools-ng source tree.

The headers in include are stuffed with comments on functions an data structures.

The tests sub-directory contains unit tests for the libraries.

The extras sub-directory contains a few demo programs that use libsquashfs.

To allow 3rd party applications to use libsquashfs.so without restricting their choice of license, the code in the lib/sqfs and lib/util directories is licensed under the LGPLv3, in contrast to the rest of this package.

A Note on LZO Support

The SquashFS format supports compression using LZO. The liblzo2 library itself is released under the GNU GPL, version 2.

To make the libsquashfs library available as an LGPL library, it cannot be linked against liblzo2, neither statically nor dynamically.

This legal problem has been solved using the following technical measure:

  • libsquashfs, as of right now, does not support LZO compression.
  • The libcommon helper library has an implementation of an liblzo2 based compressor. This library and the tools that use it are released under the GPL.

This way, the tools themselves do support LZO compression seamlessly, while the libsquashfs library does not.

Automated Testing and Analysis

Build Status Coverity Status

The GitHub project for squashfs-tools-ng is registered with Travis-CI and Coverity Scan.

The Travis-CI page shows the current build status for various system configurations for the latest commit on master, as well as pull requests on the GitHub project page.

The Coverity Scan page shows details for static analysis runs on the code, which are triggered manually and thus run less frequently.

Further Information

A documentation of the SquashFS on-disk format in plain text format can be found in the documentation directory, which is based on an online version that can be found here:

https://dr-emann.github.io/squashfs/