1 /* 2 * XZ decompressor 3 * 4 * Authors: Lasse Collin <lasse.collin@tukaani.org> 5 * Igor Pavlov <http://7-zip.org/> 6 * 7 * This file has been put into the public domain. 8 * You can do whatever you want with this file. 9 */ 10 11 #ifndef XZ_H 12 #define XZ_H 13 14 #ifdef __KERNEL__ 15 # include <linux/stddef.h> 16 # include <linux/types.h> 17 #else 18 # include <stddef.h> 19 # include <stdint.h> 20 #endif 21 22 #ifdef __cplusplus 23 extern "C" { 24 #endif 25 26 /* In Linux, this is used to make extern functions static when needed. */ 27 #ifndef XZ_EXTERN 28 # define XZ_EXTERN extern 29 #endif 30 31 /* In Linux, this is used to mark the functions with __init when needed. */ 32 #ifndef XZ_FUNC 33 # define XZ_FUNC 34 #endif 35 36 /** 37 * enum xz_mode - Operation mode 38 * 39 * @XZ_SINGLE: Single-call mode. This uses less RAM than 40 * than multi-call modes, because the LZMA2 41 * dictionary doesn't need to be allocated as 42 * part of the decoder state. All required data 43 * structures are allocated at initialization, 44 * so xz_dec_run() cannot return XZ_MEM_ERROR. 45 * @XZ_PREALLOC: Multi-call mode with preallocated LZMA2 46 * dictionary buffer. All data structures are 47 * allocated at initialization, so xz_dec_run() 48 * cannot return XZ_MEM_ERROR. 49 * @XZ_DYNALLOC: Multi-call mode. The LZMA2 dictionary is 50 * allocated once the required size has been 51 * parsed from the stream headers. If the 52 * allocation fails, xz_dec_run() will return 53 * XZ_MEM_ERROR. 54 * 55 * It is possible to enable support only for a subset of the above 56 * modes at compile time by defining XZ_DEC_SINGLE, XZ_DEC_PREALLOC, 57 * or XZ_DEC_DYNALLOC. The xz_dec kernel module is always compiled 58 * with support for all operation modes, but the preboot code may 59 * be built with fewer features to minimize code size. 60 */ 61 enum xz_mode { 62 XZ_SINGLE, 63 XZ_PREALLOC, 64 XZ_DYNALLOC 65 }; 66 67 /** 68 * enum xz_ret - Return codes 69 * @XZ_OK: Everything is OK so far. More input or more 70 * output space is required to continue. This 71 * return code is possible only in multi-call mode 72 * (XZ_PREALLOC or XZ_DYNALLOC). 73 * @XZ_STREAM_END: Operation finished successfully. 74 * @XZ_UNSUPPORTED_CHECK: Integrity check type is not supported. Decoding 75 * is still possible in multi-call mode by simply 76 * calling xz_dec_run() again. 77 * Note that this return value is used only if 78 * XZ_DEC_ANY_CHECK was defined at build time, 79 * which is not used in the kernel. Unsupported 80 * check types return XZ_OPTIONS_ERROR if 81 * XZ_DEC_ANY_CHECK was not defined at build time. 82 * @XZ_MEM_ERROR: Allocating memory failed. This return code is 83 * possible only if the decoder was initialized 84 * with XZ_DYNALLOC. The amount of memory that was 85 * tried to be allocated was no more than the 86 * dict_max argument given to xz_dec_init(). 87 * @XZ_MEMLIMIT_ERROR: A bigger LZMA2 dictionary would be needed than 88 * allowed by the dict_max argument given to 89 * xz_dec_init(). This return value is possible 90 * only in multi-call mode (XZ_PREALLOC or 91 * XZ_DYNALLOC); the single-call mode (XZ_SINGLE) 92 * ignores the dict_max argument. 93 * @XZ_FORMAT_ERROR: File format was not recognized (wrong magic 94 * bytes). 95 * @XZ_OPTIONS_ERROR: This implementation doesn't support the requested 96 * compression options. In the decoder this means 97 * that the header CRC32 matches, but the header 98 * itself specifies something that we don't support. 99 * @XZ_DATA_ERROR: Compressed data is corrupt. 100 * @XZ_BUF_ERROR: Cannot make any progress. Details are slightly 101 * different between multi-call and single-call 102 * mode; more information below. 103 * 104 * In multi-call mode, XZ_BUF_ERROR is returned when two consecutive calls 105 * to XZ code cannot consume any input and cannot produce any new output. 106 * This happens when there is no new input available, or the output buffer 107 * is full while at least one output byte is still pending. Assuming your 108 * code is not buggy, you can get this error only when decoding a compressed 109 * stream that is truncated or otherwise corrupt. 110 * 111 * In single-call mode, XZ_BUF_ERROR is returned only when the output buffer 112 * is too small or the compressed input is corrupt in a way that makes the 113 * decoder produce more output than the caller expected. When it is 114 * (relatively) clear that the compressed input is truncated, XZ_DATA_ERROR 115 * is used instead of XZ_BUF_ERROR. 116 */ 117 enum xz_ret { 118 XZ_OK, 119 XZ_STREAM_END, 120 XZ_UNSUPPORTED_CHECK, 121 XZ_MEM_ERROR, 122 XZ_MEMLIMIT_ERROR, 123 XZ_FORMAT_ERROR, 124 XZ_OPTIONS_ERROR, 125 XZ_DATA_ERROR, 126 XZ_BUF_ERROR 127 }; 128 129 /** 130 * struct xz_buf - Passing input and output buffers to XZ code 131 * @in: Beginning of the input buffer. This may be NULL if and only 132 * if in_pos is equal to in_size. 133 * @in_pos: Current position in the input buffer. This must not exceed 134 * in_size. 135 * @in_size: Size of the input buffer 136 * @out: Beginning of the output buffer. This may be NULL if and only 137 * if out_pos is equal to out_size. 138 * @out_pos: Current position in the output buffer. This must not exceed 139 * out_size. 140 * @out_size: Size of the output buffer 141 * 142 * Only the contents of the output buffer from out[out_pos] onward, and 143 * the variables in_pos and out_pos are modified by the XZ code. 144 */ 145 struct xz_buf { 146 const uint8_t *in; 147 size_t in_pos; 148 size_t in_size; 149 150 uint8_t *out; 151 size_t out_pos; 152 size_t out_size; 153 }; 154 155 /** 156 * struct xz_dec - Opaque type to hold the XZ decoder state 157 */ 158 struct xz_dec; 159 160 /** 161 * xz_dec_init() - Allocate and initialize a XZ decoder state 162 * @mode: Operation mode 163 * @dict_max: Maximum size of the LZMA2 dictionary (history buffer) for 164 * multi-call decoding. This is ignored in single-call mode 165 * (mode == XZ_SINGLE). LZMA2 dictionary is always 2^n bytes 166 * or 2^n + 2^(n-1) bytes (the latter sizes are less common 167 * in practice), so other values for dict_max don't make sense. 168 * In the kernel, dictionary sizes of 64 KiB, 128 KiB, 256 KiB, 169 * 512 KiB, and 1 MiB are probably the only reasonable values, 170 * except for kernel and initramfs images where a bigger 171 * dictionary can be fine and useful. 172 * 173 * Single-call mode (XZ_SINGLE): xz_dec_run() decodes the whole stream at 174 * once. The caller must provide enough output space or the decoding will 175 * fail. The output space is used as the dictionary buffer, which is why 176 * there is no need to allocate the dictionary as part of the decoder's 177 * internal state. 178 * 179 * Because the output buffer is used as the workspace, streams encoded using 180 * a big dictionary are not a problem in single-call mode. It is enough that 181 * the output buffer is big enough to hold the actual uncompressed data; it 182 * can be smaller than the dictionary size stored in the stream headers. 183 * 184 * Multi-call mode with preallocated dictionary (XZ_PREALLOC): dict_max bytes 185 * of memory is preallocated for the LZMA2 dictionary. This way there is no 186 * risk that xz_dec_run() could run out of memory, since xz_dec_run() will 187 * never allocate any memory. Instead, if the preallocated dictionary is too 188 * small for decoding the given input stream, xz_dec_run() will return 189 * XZ_MEMLIMIT_ERROR. Thus, it is important to know what kind of data will be 190 * decoded to avoid allocating excessive amount of memory for the dictionary. 191 * 192 * Multi-call mode with dynamically allocated dictionary (XZ_DYNALLOC): 193 * dict_max specifies the maximum allowed dictionary size that xz_dec_run() 194 * may allocate once it has parsed the dictionary size from the stream 195 * headers. This way excessive allocations can be avoided while still 196 * limiting the maximum memory usage to a sane value to prevent running the 197 * system out of memory when decompressing streams from untrusted sources. 198 * 199 * On success, xz_dec_init() returns a pointer to struct xz_dec, which is 200 * ready to be used with xz_dec_run(). If memory allocation fails, 201 * xz_dec_init() returns NULL. 202 */ 203 XZ_EXTERN struct xz_dec * XZ_FUNC xz_dec_init( 204 enum xz_mode mode, uint32_t dict_max); 205 206 /** 207 * xz_dec_run() - Run the XZ decoder 208 * @s: Decoder state allocated using xz_dec_init() 209 * @b: Input and output buffers 210 * 211 * The possible return values depend on build options and operation mode. 212 * See enum xz_ret for details. 213 * 214 * Note that if an error occurs in single-call mode (return value is not 215 * XZ_STREAM_END), b->in_pos and b->out_pos are not modified and the 216 * contents of the output buffer from b->out[b->out_pos] onward are 217 * undefined. This is true even after XZ_BUF_ERROR, because with some filter 218 * chains, there may be a second pass over the output buffer, and this pass 219 * cannot be properly done if the output buffer is truncated. Thus, you 220 * cannot give the single-call decoder a too small buffer and then expect to 221 * get that amount valid data from the beginning of the stream. You must use 222 * the multi-call decoder if you don't want to uncompress the whole stream. 223 */ 224 XZ_EXTERN enum xz_ret XZ_FUNC xz_dec_run(struct xz_dec *s, struct xz_buf *b); 225 226 /** 227 * xz_dec_reset() - Reset an already allocated decoder state 228 * @s: Decoder state allocated using xz_dec_init() 229 * 230 * This function can be used to reset the multi-call decoder state without 231 * freeing and reallocating memory with xz_dec_end() and xz_dec_init(). 232 * 233 * In single-call mode, xz_dec_reset() is always called in the beginning of 234 * xz_dec_run(). Thus, explicit call to xz_dec_reset() is useful only in 235 * multi-call mode. 236 */ 237 XZ_EXTERN void XZ_FUNC xz_dec_reset(struct xz_dec *s); 238 239 /** 240 * xz_dec_end() - Free the memory allocated for the decoder state 241 * @s: Decoder state allocated using xz_dec_init(). If s is NULL, 242 * this function does nothing. 243 */ 244 XZ_EXTERN void XZ_FUNC xz_dec_end(struct xz_dec *s); 245 246 /* 247 * Standalone build (userspace build or in-kernel build for boot time use) 248 * needs a CRC32 implementation. For normal in-kernel use, kernel's own 249 * CRC32 module is used instead, and users of this module don't need to 250 * care about the functions below. 251 */ 252 #ifndef XZ_INTERNAL_CRC32 253 # ifdef __KERNEL__ 254 # define XZ_INTERNAL_CRC32 0 255 # else 256 # define XZ_INTERNAL_CRC32 1 257 # endif 258 #endif 259 260 #if XZ_INTERNAL_CRC32 261 /* 262 * This must be called before any other xz_* function to initialize 263 * the CRC32 lookup table. 264 */ 265 XZ_EXTERN void XZ_FUNC xz_crc32_init(void); 266 267 /* 268 * Update CRC32 value using the polynomial from IEEE-802.3. To start a new 269 * calculation, the third argument must be zero. To continue the calculation, 270 * the previously returned value is passed as the third argument. 271 */ 272 XZ_EXTERN uint32_t XZ_FUNC xz_crc32( 273 const uint8_t *buf, size_t size, uint32_t crc); 274 #endif 275 276 #ifdef __cplusplus 277 } 278 #endif 279 280 #endif 281