Tell me more ×
Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for professional and enthusiast programmers. It's 100% free, no registration required.


I am testing the feasibility of compressing some messaging between Java and C#.
The messaging used ranges from small strings (40bytes) to larger strings (4K).

I have found differences in the output of Java GZIP implementation to the dot Net GZIP implementation.

I'm guessing that dot Net has a larger header that is causing the large overhead. I prefer the Java implementation as it works better on small strings, and would like the dot Net to achieve similar results.

Output, Java version 1.6.0_10

Text:EncodeDecode
Bytes:(12 bytes)RW5jb2RlRGVjb2Rl  <- Base64
Compressed:(29)H4sIAAAAAAAAAHPNS85PSXVJBZEAd9jYdgwAAAA=
Decompressed:(12)RW5jb2RlRGVjb2Rl
Converted:EncodeDecode

Text:EncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecode
Bytes:(120)RW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2Rl
Compressed:(33)H4sIAAAAAAAAAHPNS85PSXVJBZGudGQDAOcKnrd4AAAA
Decompressed:(120)RW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2Rl
Converted:EncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecode

Output, dot Net 2.0.50727

Text:EncodeDecode
Bytes:(12)RW5jb2RlRGVjb2Rl
Compressed:(128)H4sIAAAAAAAEAO29B2AcSZYlJi9tynt/SvVK1+B0oQiAYBMk2JBAEOzBiM3mkuwdaUcjKasqgcplVmVdZhZAzO2dvPfee++999577733ujudTif33/8/XGZkAWz2zkrayZ4hgKrIHz9+fB8/Ik6X02qWP83x7/8Dd9jYdgwAAAA=
Decompressed:(12)RW5jb2RlRGVjb2Rl
Text:EncodeDecode

Text:EncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecode
Bytes:(120)RW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2Rl
Compressed:(131)H4sIAAAAAAAEAO29B2AcSZYlJi9tynt/SvVK1+B0oQiAYBMk2JBAEOzBiM3mkuwdaUcjKasqgcplVmVdZhZAzO2dvPfee++999577733ujudTif33/8/XGZkAWz2zkrayZ4hgKrIHz9+fB8/Ik6X02qWP83x7w/z9/8H5wqet3gAAAA=
Decompressed:(120)RW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2RlRW5jb2RlRGVjb2Rl
Text:EncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecodeEncodeDecode

How can I achieve the smaller sized encoding on the dot Net side?

Note,
Java implementation can decode dot Net implementation and
dot Net implementation can decode Java implementation.

Java Code

@Test
public void testEncodeDecode()
{
    final String strTitle = "EncodeDecode";
    try
    {
        debug( "Text:" + strTitle );

        byte[] ba = strTitle.getBytes( "UTF-8" );
        debug( "Bytes:" + toString( ba ) );

        byte[] eba = encode_GZIP( ba );
        debug( "Encoded:" + toString( eba ) );

        byte[] ba2 = decode_GZIP( eba );
        debug( "Decoded:" + toString( ba2 ) );

        debug( "Converted:" + new String( ba2, "UTF-8" ) );
    }
    catch( Exception ex ) { fail( ex ); }
}
@Test
public void testEncodeDecode2()
{
    final String strTitle = "EncodeDecode";
    try
    {
        StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
        for( int i = 0 ; i < 10 ; i++ ) sb.append( strTitle );

        debug( "Text:" + sb.toString() );

        byte[] ba = sb.toString().getBytes( ENCODING );
        debug( "Bytes:" + toString( ba ) );

        byte[] eba = encode_GZIP( ba );
        debug( "Encoded:" + toString( eba ) );

        byte[] ba2 = decode_GZIP( eba );
        debug( "Decoded:" + toString( ba2 ) );

        debug( "Converted:" + new String( ba2, ENCODING ) );
    }
    catch( Exception ex ) { fail( ex ); }
}
private String toString( byte[] ba )
{
    return "("+ba.length+")"+Base64.byteArrayToBase64( ba );
}
protected static byte[] encode_GZIP( byte[] baData ) throws IOException
{
    ByteArrayOutputStream baos = new ByteArrayOutputStream();

    ByteArrayInputStream bais = new ByteArrayInputStream( baData );
    GZIPOutputStream zos = new GZIPOutputStream( baos );

    byte[] baBuf = new byte[ 1024 ];
    int nSize;
    while( -1 != ( nSize = bais.read( baBuf ) ) )
    {
        zos.write( baBuf, 0, nSize );
        zos.flush();
    }
    Utilities.closeQuietly( zos );
    Utilities.closeQuietly( bais );
    return baos.toByteArray();
}
protected static byte[] decode_GZIP( byte[] baData ) throws IOException
{
    ByteArrayOutputStream baos = new ByteArrayOutputStream();

    ByteArrayInputStream bais = new ByteArrayInputStream( baData );
    GZIPInputStream zis = new GZIPInputStream( bais );

    byte[] baBuf = new byte[ 1024 ];
    int nSize;
    while( -1 != ( nSize = zis.read( baBuf ) ) )
    {
        baos.write( baBuf, 0, nSize );
        baos.flush();
    }
    Utilities.closeQuietly( zis );
    Utilities.closeQuietly( bais );

    return baos.toByteArray();
}


private void debug( Object o ) { System.out.println( o ); }
private void fail( Exception ex )
{
    ex.printStackTrace();
    Assert.fail( ex.getMessage() );
}

dot Net Code

    [Test]
    public void TestJava6()
    {
        string strData = "EncodeDecode";
        Console.WriteLine("Text:" + strData);

        byte[] baData = Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes(strData);
        Console.WriteLine("Bytes:" + toString(baData));

        byte[] ebaData2 = encode_GZIP(baData);
        Console.WriteLine("Encoded:" + toString(ebaData2));

        byte[] baData2 = decode_GZIP(ebaData2);
        Console.WriteLine("Decoded:" + toString(baData2));

        Console.WriteLine("Text:" + Encoding.UTF8.GetString(baData2));
    }
    [Test]
    public void TestJava7()
    {
        string strData = "EncodeDecode";

        StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
        for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++) sb.Append(strData);

        Console.WriteLine("Text:" + sb.ToString());

        byte[] baData = Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes(sb.ToString());
        Console.WriteLine("Bytes:" + toString(baData));

        byte[] ebaData2 = encode_GZIP(baData);
        Console.WriteLine("Encoded:" + toString(ebaData2));

        byte[] baData2 = decode_GZIP(ebaData2);
        Console.WriteLine("Decoded:" + toString(baData2));

        Console.WriteLine("Text:" + Encoding.UTF8.GetString(baData2));
    }
    public string toString(byte[] ba)
    {
        return "(" + ba.Length + ")" + Convert.ToBase64String(ba);
    }
    protected static byte[] decode_GZIP(byte[] ba)
    {
        MemoryStream writer = new MemoryStream();
        using (GZipStream zis = new GZipStream(new MemoryStream(ba), CompressionMode.Decompress))
        {
            Utilities.CopyStream(zis, writer);
        }
        return writer.ToArray();
    }
    protected static byte[] encode_GZIP(byte[] ba)
    {
        using (MemoryStream reader = new MemoryStream(ba))
        {
            MemoryStream writer = new MemoryStream();
            using (GZipStream zos = new GZipStream(writer, CompressionMode.Compress))
            {
                Utilities.CopyStream(reader, zos);
            }
            return writer.ToArray();
        }
    }
share|improve this question
Are you working on Strings or bytes? Show us the code! – Axel Nov 15 '12 at 22:14
Code added, thanks for taking the time to look. – bandanna2k Nov 15 '12 at 22:25
Hm... At first I thought the Strings might be encoded differently on both platforms (ie. not both UTF-8). But this doesn't seem to be the case. Have you tried the alternative constructor GZipStream(Stream, CompressionLevel, Boolean) with different compression levels yet? Perhaps the Java implementation just defaults to a better compression level. Sorry, I don't have dotnet installed, so I cannot experiment myself. – Axel Nov 15 '12 at 23:10
I am currently working with dot Net 2.0, compression level is non-configurable. I was wondering if updating to a later dot Net would provide help my cause, however I am not set up to try the later frameworks. – bandanna2k Nov 15 '12 at 23:22
I noticed you use this loop StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(); for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++) sb.Append(strData); and then encode that string. I do not see the same on teh java side. therefore the .net implementation would have a larger string and therefore a larger compressed size – Brad Semrad Nov 16 '12 at 0:18
show 2 more comments

1 Answer

up vote 2 down vote accepted

This is one of several bugs in the .NET gzip code. That code should be avoided. Use DotNetZip instead. See answer here: Why does my C# gzip produce a larger file than Fiddler or PHP .

share|improve this answer
That is ... astonishing. I knew that the GZip implementation was bad, but I thought it'd been fixed in 4.0. Thanks for the info. – Jim Mischel Nov 16 '12 at 2:59
Why is that astonishing? It was written by Microsoft. – Mark Adler Nov 16 '12 at 16:37

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.