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Change-Id: Iac136a5dfe76f21aa7c0d5ee4e974e50b955403b
Signed-off-by: Patrick Georgi <pgeorgi@chromium.org>
Found-by: scan-build 3.8
Reviewed-on: https://review.coreboot.org/18134
Tested-by: build bot (Jenkins)
Reviewed-by: Nico Huber <nico.h@gmx.de>
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If compression failed, just store the uncompressed data, which is what
cbfstool does as well.
Change-Id: I67f51982b332d6ec1bea7c9ba179024fc5344743
Signed-off-by: Patrick Georgi <pgeorgi@chromium.org>
Reviewed-on: https://review.coreboot.org/18201
Tested-by: build bot (Jenkins)
Reviewed-by: Paul Menzel <paulepanter@users.sourceforge.net>
Reviewed-by: Martin Roth <martinroth@google.com>
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cbfs-compression-tool provides a way to benchmark the compression
algorithms as used by cbfstool (and coreboot) and allows to
pre-compress data for later consumption by cbfstool (once it supports
the format).
For an impression, the benchmark's results on my machine:
measuring 'none'
compressing 10485760 bytes to 10485760 took 0 seconds
measuring 'LZMA'
compressing 10485760 bytes to 1736 took 2 seconds
measuring 'LZ4'
compressing 10485760 bytes to 41880 took 0 seconds
And a possible use for external compression, parallel and non-parallel
(60MB in 53 files compressed to 650KB on a machine with 40 threads):
$ time (ls -1 *.* |xargs -n 1 -P $(nproc) -I '{}' cbfs-compression-tool compress '{}' out/'{}' LZMA)
real 0m0.786s
user 0m11.440s
sys 0m0.044s
$ time (ls -1 *.* |xargs -n 1 -P 1 -I '{}' cbfs-compression-tool compress '{}' out/'{}' LZMA)
real 0m10.444s
user 0m10.280s
sys 0m0.064s
Change-Id: I40be087e85d09a895b1ed277270350ab65a4d6d4
Signed-off-by: Patrick Georgi <pgeorgi@chromium.org>
Reviewed-on: https://review.coreboot.org/18099
Tested-by: build bot (Jenkins)
Reviewed-by: Martin Roth <martinroth@google.com>
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