pbzip2 man page on Cygwin

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pbzip2(1)							     pbzip2(1)

NAME
       pbzip2  -  parallel bzip2 file compressor, v1.1.5

SYNOPSIS
       pbzip2 [ -123456789 ] [ -b#cdfhklm#p#qrS#tvVz ] [ filenames ...	]

DESCRIPTION
       pbzip2  is  a  parallel	implementation of the bzip2 block-sorting file
       compressor that uses pthreads and achieves near-linear speedup  on  SMP
       machines.  The  output  of  this version is fully compatible with bzip2
       v1.0.2 or newer (ie: anything compressed	 with  pbzip2  can  be	decom‐
       pressed with bzip2).

       pbzip2  should  work  on	 any system that has a pthreads compatible C++
       compiler (such as gcc). It has been tested on: Linux, Windows (cygwin),
       Solaris, Tru64/OSF1, HP-UX, and Irix.

       The  default settings for pbzip2 will work well in most cases. The only
       switch you will likely need to use is -d to decompress files and -p  to
       set  the	 #  of	processors for pbzip2 to use if autodetect is not sup‐
       ported on your system, or you want to use a specific # of CPUs.

OPTIONS
       -b#    Where # is block size in 100k steps (default 9 = 900k)

       -c, --stdout
	      Output to standard out (stdout)

       -d,--decompress
	      Decompress file

       -f,--force
	      Force, overwrite existing output file

       -h,--help
	      Print this help message

       -k,--keep
	      Keep input file, do not delete

       -l,--loadavg
	      Load average determines max number processors to use

       -m#    Where # is max memory usage in 1MB steps (default 100 = 100MB)

       -p#    Where # is the number of processors (default: autodetect)

       -q,--quiet
	      Quiet mode (default)

       -r,--read
	      Read entire input file into RAM and split between processors

       -S#    Child thread stack size in 1KB  steps  (default  stack  size  if
	      unspecified)

       -t,--test
	      Test compressed file integrity

       -v,--verbose
	      Verbose mode

       -V     Display version info for pbzip2 then exit

       -z,--compress
	      Compress file (default)

       -1,--fast ... -9,--best
	      Set BWT block size to 100k .. 900k (default 900k).

       --ignore-trailing-garbage=#
	      Ignore trailing garbage flag (1 - ignored; 0 - forbidden)

FILE SIZES
       You should be able to compress files larger than 4GB with pbzip2.

       Files  that  are	 compressed  with pbzip2 are broken up into pieces and
       each individual piece is compressed.  This is how pbzip2 runs faster on
       multiple	 CPUs  since the pieces can be compressed simultaneously.  The
       final .bz2 file may be slightly larger than if it was  compressed  with
       the regular bzip2 program due to this file splitting (usually less than
       0.2% larger).  Files that are compressed with  pbzip2  will  also  gain
       considerable speedup when decompressed using pbzip2.

       Files that were compressed using bzip2 will not see speedup since bzip2
       packages the data into a single chunk that cannot be split between pro‐
       cessors.

EXAMPLES
       Example 1: pbzip2 myfile.tar

       This  example  will  compress the file "myfile.tar" into the compressed
       file "myfile.tar.bz2". It will use the autodetected # of processors (or
       2  processors  if autodetect not supported) with the default file block
       size of 900k and default BWT block size of 900k.

       Example 2: pbzip2 -b15k myfile.tar

       This example will compress the file "myfile.tar"	 into  the  compressed
       file "myfile.tar.bz2". It will use the autodetected # of processors (or
       2 processors if autodetect not supported) with a	 file  block  size  of
       1500k  and  a BWT block size of 900k. The file "myfile.tar" will not be
       deleted after compression is finished.

       Example 3: pbzip2 -p4 -r -5 myfile.tar second*.txt

       This example will compress the file "myfile.tar"	 into  the  compressed
       file  "myfile.tar.bz2".	It will use 4 processors with a BWT block size
       of 500k.	 The file block size will be the size of "myfile.tar"  divided
       by 4 (# of processors) so that the data will be split evenly among each
       processor.  This requires you have enough RAM for pbzip2	 to  read  the
       entire  file into memory for compression. Pbzip2 will then use the same
       options to compress all other  files  that  match  the  wildcard	 "sec‐
       ond*.txt" in that directory.

       Example 4: tar cf myfile.tar.bz2 --use-compress-prog=pbzip2 dir_to_com‐
       press/
       Example 4: tar -c directory_to_compress/ | pbzip2 -c > myfile.tar.bz2

       These examples will compress the data being given to  pbzip2  via  pipe
       from  TAR  into	the compressed file "myfile.tar.bz2".  It will use the
       autodetected # of processors (or 2 processors if	 autodetect  not  sup‐
       ported)	with the default file block size of 900k and default BWT block
       size of 900k.  TAR is collecting all of	the  files  from  the  "direc‐
       tory_to_compress/"  directory  and  passing  the	 data  to pbzip2 as it
       works.

       Example 5: pbzip2 -d -m500 myfile.tar.bz2

       This example will decompress the file "myfile.tar.bz2" into the	decom‐
       pressed file "myfile.tar". It will use the autodetected # of processors
       (or 2 processors if autodetect not supported). It will use a maximum of
       500MB of memory for decompression.  The switches -b, -r, and -1..-9 are
       not valid for decompression.

       Example 6: pbzip2 -dc myfile.tar.bz2 | tar x

       This example will decompress and untar the file "myfile.tar.bz2" piping
       the output of the decompressing pbzip2 to tar.

SEE ALSO
       bzip2(1) gzip(1) lzip(1) rzip(1) zip(1)

AUTHOR
       Jeff Gilchrist

       http://compression.ca

								     pbzip2(1)
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