The filename of the data. If the gunzip
command is used to decompress the data, it will output a file with this name instead of the name of the compressed file.
The level of compression to use, ranging from 0-9.
0 will store the data without compression. 1 is fastest but compresses the worst, 9 is slowest but compresses the best. The default level is 6.
Typically, binary data benefits much more from higher values than text data. In both cases, higher values usually take disproportionately longer than the reduction in final size that results.
For example, a 1 MB text file could:
The memory level to use, ranging from 0-12. Increasing this increases speed and compression ratio at the cost of memory.
Note that this is exponential: while level 0 uses 4 kB, level 4 uses 64 kB, level 8 uses 1 MB, and level 12 uses 16 MB. It is recommended not to lower the value below 4, since that tends to hurt performance. In addition, values above 8 tend to help very little on most data and can even hurt performance.
The default value is automatically determined based on the size of the input data.
When the file was last modified. Defaults to the current time. Set this to 0 to avoid revealing a modification date entirely.
Generated using TypeDoc
Options for compressing data into a GZIP format