Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Relying on the output of a compressor to exactely match an expected
output is already not really a great idea, but for gzip, xz and lzo
it has worked remarkably well so far. Perhaps because those are rather
old and don't have much active development going on besides bug fixing.
On the other hand, lz4 and zstd which are much younger seem to have
more development going on and keep breaking between versions.
This commit removes the zstd & lz4 corpus tests.
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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In the zstd compressor, the compression level from the configuration
structure wasn't used at all. Instead, the zstd compressor was told
to use level 0 and compressor options with that parameter were written
to disk.
This commit makes sure the level parameter is propperly initialized.
Reported-by: Sébastien Gross
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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Its purely informational, but make sure other programs don't print
out scary messages that imply the data has been ineficiently.
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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This test basically consists of the Canterbury Corpus which is turned
into a SquashFS image using every supported compressor, with every
supported block size, with and without tail end packing.
The results MUST have an exact, given sha512sum. If that changes, it
means either a regression in the output format, something broke or
non-deterministic packing behaviour.
Signed-off-by: David Oberhollenzer <david.oberhollenzer@sigma-star.at>
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