I am looking for some recommendations about compressing data in .NET, aside from using the GZipStream
class.
I am looking for fast and high compression of byte arrays to be able to send them via TCP.
If you are compressing data, then you might look at high-density serialization, rather than compression. Something like protobuf. There are a few C# implementations here. For existing objects, protobuf-net is IMO the simplest to implement (disclosure: I'm the author - but it is free etc). You just serialize to the stream, or if you want a byte[]
, a separate MemoryStream
.
For continuous use over a socket (rather than the discreet request/response of HTTP), I would suggest looking at the Serializer.SerializeWithLengthPrefix
/ Serializer.DeserializeWithLengthPrefix
operations (protobuf doesn't itself include a terminator, so a length-prefix is necessary to handle separate messages).
<AccountId>123</AccountId>
, write 2 or 3 bytes instead. Not suitable for arbitrary byte[]
though.
Jun 15, 2010 at 15:34
DotNetZip offers native support and has a quite friendly API and is my opinion more flexible than SharpZipLib:
EDIT: Unfortunately, DotNetZip has some critical issues and the project seems no longer be actively be maintained. Therefore, this library can't really be recommended for use in production code.
Better alternatives would be to use SharpZipLib (if you comply with their GPL-based license), one of the .NET ports of zlib or the zip support of .NET 4.5 as shown in this answer.
SharpZipLib is an alternative. It's said that it's written more thoughtfully than the framework library GZipStream
.NET 3+ has built-in Zip support now, with the ZipPackage class.
LZMA is supposed to be among the best for compression. 7-Zip is a public domain SDK implementation of LZMA, freely downloadable here:
Wikipedia on compression algorithms:
7z's LZMA algorithm reaches a higher compression ratio than RAR, except for "multimedia" files like .wav and .bmp files where RAR uses specialized routines that outperform LZMA.[7] Other free compression software such as NanoZip and FreeArc usually outperform WinRAR.[8]
GZipStream
.