:''LZX is also the name of the programming language used in the
OpenLaszlo platform
'LZX' is the name of an
LZ77 family
compression algorithm. It is also the name of a
file archiver with the same name. Both were invented by
Jonathan Forbes and
Tomi Poutanen.
Instances of use of the LZX algorithm
Amiga LZX
LZX was publicly released as an
Amiga file archiver in 1995, while the authors were studying at the
University of Waterloo in
Canada. The software was
shareware, which was common for compression software at the time. The registered version contained fixes and improvements not available in the evaluation version. In
1997, the authors gave away a free keyfile, which allowed anyone to use the registered version, as they had stopped work on the archiver and stopped accepting registrations.
===
Microsoft Cabinet files===
In 1997, Jonathan went to work for
Microsoft, and Microsoft's
cabinet archiver was enhanced to include the LZX compression method. Improvements included a variable search window size; Amiga LZX was fixed to 64
kibibytes, Microsoft LZX could range on powers of two between 32 and 2048 kibibytes. A special
preprocessor was added to detect Intel
80x86 "CALL" instructions, converting their
operands from relative addressing to absolute addressing, thus calls to the same location resulted in repeated strings that the compressor could match, improving compression of 80x86 binary code.
===
Microsoft Compressed HTML Help (CHM) files
When Microsoft introduced the replacement to their classic Help file format, they chose to compress all of the HTML data with the LZX algorithm. However, in order to improve random access speed, the compressor was altered to reset itself after every 64 kibibyte interval and re-align to a 16-bit boundary after every 32 kibibyte interval. Thus, the HTMLHelp software could immediately seek to the nearest 64 kibibyte interval and start decoding from there, rather than decoding from the beginning of the compressed datastream at all times.
Microsoft EBook Reader (LIT) files
Microsoft LIT files are simply an extension of the CHM file format, and thus also use LZX compression.
Windows Imaging Format (WIM) files===
Windows Imaging Format, the installation/drive image file format of
Windows Vista, uses LZX as one of the compression methods
[1].
Decompressing LZX files
The 'unlzx' program can unpack Amiga LZX archives. The 'cabextract' program can unpack Microsoft cabinet files using the LZX method. There are a multitude of cross-platform tools for decompiling or viewing CHM files, as stated in the
CHM article. LIT files can be unpacked using the 'Convert LIT' software.
See also
★
List of archive formats
★
List of file archivers
★
Comparison of file archivers
External links
★
The LZX page, including many versions of the Amiga LZX archiver
★
unlzx source code
★
cabextract (includes source code)
★
Convert LIT (includes source code)