Squeeze

From Just Solve the File Format Problem
(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
(Disambiguation)
Line 99: Line 99:
 
** The original tools were SQ/USQ. See for instance the [http://www.classiccmp.org/cpmarchives/cpm/mirrors/oak.oakland.edu/pub/cpm/squsq/ SQUSQ] directory of the Oakland CP/M archive.
 
** The original tools were SQ/USQ. See for instance the [http://www.classiccmp.org/cpmarchives/cpm/mirrors/oak.oakland.edu/pub/cpm/squsq/ SQUSQ] directory of the Oakland CP/M archive.
 
** The later LT31 deals with extracting from all of [[Squeeze]], [[Crunch]], [[CrLZH]] and [[LBR]] formats. Widely available in CP/M archives, e.g. [http://www.classiccmp.org/cpmarchives/cpm/mirrors/oak.oakland.edu/pub/cpm/arc-lbr/lt31.lbr LT31.LBR]
 
** The later LT31 deals with extracting from all of [[Squeeze]], [[Crunch]], [[CrLZH]] and [[LBR]] formats. Widely available in CP/M archives, e.g. [http://www.classiccmp.org/cpmarchives/cpm/mirrors/oak.oakland.edu/pub/cpm/arc-lbr/lt31.lbr LT31.LBR]
 +
* {{CdTextfiles|carousel/013B/NSQUSQ.ZIP|NSQUSQ.ZIP}} - Contains NUSQ v1.10 (1984-10-21; By Dave Rand, Paul Homchick and Cliff Sharp) and NSQ v2.01 (1984-10-20; "Originally by Richard Greenlaw") (DOS Software)
 +
* {{CdTextfiles|simtel/simtel20/MSDOS/COMPRESS/SQPC131.ZIP|SQPC131.ZIP}} - SQPC v1.31 (1986-03-02) and UNSQPC v1.36, by Vernon D. Buerg (DOS Software)
 +
* [[The Unarchiver]]
 +
 +
== Sample files ==
 +
* [http://www.classiccmp.org/cpmarchives/ftp.php?b=cpm/mirrors/oak.oakland.edu/pub/cpm/ OAK CP/M archive] → .../*.?q?
 +
* Found in many [[LBR#Sample files|LBR]] files. Note that you may have to tell your LBR utility not to decompress them (e.g. <code>lbrate -n</code>).
  
 
== References ==
 
== References ==

Revision as of 15:24, 8 August 2020

File Format
Name Squeeze
Ontology
Extension(s) .?q?, .qqq
Wikidata ID Q34745668
Released ca. 1981
Distinct from Squeeze It (SQZ). See the disambiguation section for more similarly-named formats.

Squeeze was a method of compressing single files popular on CP/M, devised by Richard Greenlaw circa 1981. It was superseded by Crunch and later CrLZH. Squeezed files were common in LBR archives. It uses Huffman coding combined with run-length encoding.

Squeezed files were signified in CP/M's 8.3 filename format by replacing the middle letter of the extension with Q (.?Q? -- so FOO.TXT became FOO.TQT), with the extension .QQQ used for corner cases such as a blank extension.

The /usr/share/misc/magic file on Linux systems suggests that it was perhaps also in use on the Apple ][ platform, and in fact Binary II files are often found squeezed (as .bqy instead of .bny). Versions for PC/MS-DOS were also in use in the early 1980s before ARC caught on as the dominant archiver.

Contents

Disambiguation

Not to be confused with:

  • Squeeze It (SQZ) - A compression-and-archival format for DOS released around 1992.
  • SQUEEZE (AJP Systems) - A Windows 3.x file compression program and format.
  • Squeez [1] - A compression/archiving application for 32-bit Windows, with internal support for several standard formats.
  • SQWEZ - Compressed archive format and software for DOS, with an emphasis on self-extracting archives.
  • Vidfern Squeezer - Executable compression software for 32-bit Windows. (Maybe also transparent file compression for Mac?)
  • ARC "squeezed" compression - Related, but distinct
  • SQ2 - Related, but distinct
  • ZSQ (LZW compression)‎

Format details

Multi-byte integers are little-endian.

Field Size in bytes Description
signature 2 0x76 0xff
checksum 2 Low 16 bits of the sum of the decompressed byte values.
original filename variable Terminated by a NUL byte.
compressed data variable See below.
timestamp extension 8 Optional timestamp. See below.

Compressed data section

The "compressed data" section. This part is equivalent to ARC compression method 4.

Field Size in bytes Description
node_count 2 Number of nodes in the table. Valid values are 0 through 256, inclusive.
node table 4 × node_count The encoded Huffman tree. See below.
data variable Huffman-encoded data. Least-significant bit first. After Huffman decoding, the data is RLE90-compressed. The data should end with a special "stop" code. However, this compression format could be used in situations where it could also be terminated by other means.

A table node contains two encoded values. Each is a signed 16-bit integer interpreted as follows:

Encoded value Meaning
−257 Stop
−256 ... −1 Byte value 255 ... 0
0 ... 255 Pointer to a child node

Some Squeeze software limits the length of a Huffman code to at most 16 bits.

Timestamp extension

Format of timestamp extension, taken from SQDATE.DOC (see below). It starts at the first byte boundary after the Stop code. It is present if the signature and checksum are correct.

Field Size in bytes Description
signature 2 0xff77 (0x77 0xff)
date 2 MS-DOS date/time format
time 2
checksum 2 Low 16 bits of the sum of the first three fields, interpreted as little-endian integers.

Identification

Files begin with bytes 76 ff.

Specifications

  • See the SQUSQ directory on CP/M archives for various source code and documentation (much of it, unfortunately, itself squeezed/crunched).
  • The file header follows a similar/compatible structure to Crunch and CrLZH.
  • SQDATE.DOC - Information about the timestamp extension

Tools

  • CFX (DOS/Unix)
  • lbrate by Russell Marks, c. 2001 (Unix, GPL2)
  • On CP/M (or emulators):
    • The original tools were SQ/USQ. See for instance the SQUSQ directory of the Oakland CP/M archive.
    • The later LT31 deals with extracting from all of Squeeze, Crunch, CrLZH and LBR formats. Widely available in CP/M archives, e.g. LT31.LBR
  • NSQUSQ.ZIP - Contains NUSQ v1.10 (1984-10-21; By Dave Rand, Paul Homchick and Cliff Sharp) and NSQ v2.01 (1984-10-20; "Originally by Richard Greenlaw") (DOS Software)
  • SQPC131.ZIP - SQPC v1.31 (1986-03-02) and UNSQPC v1.36, by Vernon D. Buerg (DOS Software)
  • The Unarchiver

Sample files

  • OAK CP/M archive → .../*.?q?
  • Found in many LBR files. Note that you may have to tell your LBR utility not to decompress them (e.g. lbrate -n).

References

Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
Toolbox