Brotli is a generic-purpose lossless compression algorithm that compresses data using a combination of a modern variant of the LZ77 algorithm, Huffman coding and 2nd order context modeling, with a compression ratio comparable to the best currently available general-purpose compression methods. It is similar in speed with deflate but offers more dense compression.
The specification of the Brotli Compressed Data Format is defined in RFC 7932.
Brotli is open-sourced under the MIT License, see the LICENSE file.
Brotli mailing list: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/brotli
configure-cmake is an autotools-style configure script for CMake-based projects (not supported on Windows).
The basic commands to build, test and install brotli are:
$ mkdir out && cd out $ ../configure-cmake $ make $ make test $ make install
By default, debug binaries are built. To generate “release” Makefile
specify --disable-debug
option to configure-cmake
.
See Bazel
The basic commands to build and install brotli are:
$ mkdir out && cd out $ cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=./installed .. $ cmake --build . --config Release --target install
You can use other CMake configuration.
See Premake5
To install the latest release of the Python module, run the following:
$ pip install brotli
To install the tip-of-the-tree version, run:
$ pip install --upgrade git+https://github.com/google/brotli
See the Python readme for more details on installing from source, development, and testing.
Disclaimer: Brotli authors take no responsibility for the third party projects mentioned in this section.
Independent decoder implementation by Mark Adler, based entirely on format specification.
JavaScript port of brotli decoder. Could be used directly via npm install brotli
Hand ported decoder / encoder in haxe by Dominik Homberger. Output source code: JavaScript, PHP, Python, Java and C#
7Zip plugin