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Lzbench Alternatives
Similar projects and alternatives to lzbench
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ASP.NET Core
ASP.NET Core is a cross-platform .NET framework for building modern cloud-based web applications on Windows, Mac, or Linux.
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InfluxDB
Power Real-Time Data Analytics at Scale. Get real-time insights from all types of time series data with InfluxDB. Ingest, query, and analyze billions of data points in real-time with unbounded cardinality.
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CompactGUI
Discontinued Transparently compress active games and programs using Windows 10/11 APIs [Moved to: https://github.com/IridiumIO/CompactGUI] (by ImminentFate)
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WorkOS
The modern identity platform for B2B SaaS. The APIs are flexible and easy-to-use, supporting authentication, user identity, and complex enterprise features like SSO and SCIM provisioning.
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zip-ada
Zip-Ada: a standalone, portable Ada library for .zip archives. Includes LZMA byte stream encoder & decoder pair.
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lizard
Lizard (formerly LZ5) is an efficient compressor with very fast decompression. It achieves compression ratio that is comparable to zip/zlib and zstd/brotli (at low and medium compression levels) at decompression speed of 1000 MB/s and faster. (by inikep)
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ffi-overhead
comparing the c ffi (foreign function interface) overhead on various programming languages
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SIMDCompressionAndIntersection
A C++ library to compress and intersect sorted lists of integers using SIMD instructions
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p7zip
A new p7zip fork with additional codecs and improvements (forked from https://sourceforge.net/projects/sevenzip/ AND https://sourceforge.net/projects/p7zip/).
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SaaSHub
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lzbench reviews and mentions
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Chrome Feature: ZSTD Content-Encoding
For a benchmark on a standard set: https://github.com/inikep/lzbench/blob/master/lzbench18_sort...
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My experience with btrfs so far
Do not re-compress your file into level 3. The decompression speed is largely the same between level 3 and 8, so you just wasting CPU doing nothing and making your files larger. See the bottom of the README: https://github.com/inikep/lzbench
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Rsyncing 20TB locally
You can crunch the numbers yourself with this: https://github.com/inikep/lzbench
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Lizard – efficient compression with fast decompression
Note that a benchmark in the README refers to zstd 1.1.1 and brotli 0.5.2, which are very old (the current versions are zstd 1.5.2 and brotli 1.0.9). The same author maintains lzbench [1], which is more or less up-to-date.
[1] https://github.com/inikep/lzbench
- What scientists must know about hardware to write fast code
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Zip-Ada development on LZMA compression
u/zertillon, maybe you could use lzbench, so you could compare it with a lot of other compression libraries. The problem is that it requires including the library in a single executable, so it might be more difficult to integrate than a C library (the benchmark is in C++).
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Is there any site that lists the current SOTA for lossless compression?
Still updated: https://github.com/inikep/lzbench
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will ZSTD impact L2ARC performance?
If you want to know the size a VM will compress to,. Zstd can be installed on any machine, so you can experiment easily. You can even run the benchmark https://github.com/inikep/lzbench
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Save disk space for your games: BTRFS filesystem compression as alternative to CompactGUI on Linux
Are you sure about that? That's not what I see on https://github.com/inikep/lzbench and I tried to run that myself, although I have no idea which lzo to try so I went with what seemed the fastest...
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A note from our sponsor - SaaSHub
www.saashub.com | 25 Apr 2024
Stats
The primary programming language of lzbench is C.
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