gzip command in Linux

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The gzip and bzip2 commands are functionally similar, as they compress and decompress files, using different algorithms. The gzip command uses the Lempel-Ziv algorithm, found in some Microsoft compression algorithms. The bzip2 command uses the Burrows-Wheeler block sorting algorithm . While they both work well, the bzip2 command makes a big file a bit smaller.


For example, either of the two following commands could be used to compress a big picture file named big.jpg.


# gzip big.jpg
# bzip2 big.jpg

It adds .gz or a .bz2 suffix to the file, compressed to the associated algorithms. With the -d switch, you can use the same commands to reverse the process.

# gzip -d big.jpg.gz
# bzip2 -d big.jpg.bz2


If the compressed file name is too long for its file system, gzip truncates it. gzip attempts to truncate only the parts of the file name longer than 3 characters. (A part is delimited by dots.) If the name consists of small parts only, the longest parts are truncated. 

For example, if file names are limited to 14 characters, gzip.msdos.exe is compressed to gzi.msd.exe.gz. Names are not truncated on systems which do not have a limit on file name length.

By default, gzip keeps the original file name and time-stamp in the compressed file. These are used when decompressing the file with the -N option. This is useful when the compressed file name was truncated or when the time stamp was not preserved after a file transfer.

Compressed files can be restored to their original form using gzip -d or gunzip or zcat. If the original name saved in the compressed file is not suitable for its file system, a new name is constructed from the original one to make it legal.

gunzip takes a list of files on its command line and replaces each file whose name ends with .gz, -gz, .z, -z, _z or .Z and which begins with the correct magic number with an uncompressed file without the original extension. gunzip also recognizes the special extensions .tgz and .taz as short-hands for .tar.gz and .tar.Z respectively. When compressing, gzip uses the .tgz extension if necessary instead of truncating a file with a .tar extension.

gunzip can currently decompress files created by gzip, zip, compress, compress -H or pack. The detection of the input format is automatic. When using the first two formats, gunzip checks a 32 bit CRC. For pack, gunzip checks the uncompressed length. The standard compress format was not designed to allow consistency checks. 

However gunzip is sometimes able to detect a bad .Z file. If you get an error when un-compressing a .Z file, do not assume that the .Z file is correct simply because the standard uncompress does not complain. This generally means that the standard uncompress does not check its input, and happily generates garbage output. The SCO compress -H format (lzh compression method) does not include a CRC but also allows some consistency checks.

Files created by zip can be uncompressed by gzip only if they have a single member compressed with the 'deflation' method. This feature is only intended to help conversion of tar.zip files to the tar.gz format. To extract zip files with several members, use unzip instead of gunzip.