109 lines
4.3 KiB
Plaintext
109 lines
4.3 KiB
Plaintext
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.lzma Test Files
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----------------
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0. Introduction
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This directory contains bunch of files to test handling of .lzma files
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in .lzma decoder implementations. Many of the files have been created
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by hand with a hex editor, thus there is no better "source code" than
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the files themselves. All the test files (*.lzma) and this README have
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been put into the public domain.
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1. File Types
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Good files (good-*.lzma) must decode successfully without requiring
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a lot of CPU time or RAM. If the decoder supports only Single-Block
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Streams, then good-multi-*.lzma won't decode, of course.
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Bad files (bad-*.lzma) must cause the decoder to give an error. Like
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with the good files, these files must not require a lot of CPU time
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or RAM before they get detected to be broken.
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Malicious files (malicious-*.lzma) are good in terms of the file format
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specification, but try to trigger excessive CPU, RAM or disk usage in
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the decoder. To prevent malicious files from putting the decoder in
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inifinite loop (*), eating all available RAM or disk space, decoders
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should have internal limitters that catch these situations.
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(*) Strictly speaking not infinite, but if decoding of a small file
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would take a few weeks or even years, it's an infinite loop in
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practice.
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2. Descriptions of Individual Files
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2.1. Good Files
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good-single-none.lzma uses implicit Copy filter with known Uncompressed
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Size.
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good-single-none-pad.lzma is good-single-none.lzma with Footer Padding.
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good-cat-single-none-pad.lzma is two good-single-none-pad.lzma files
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concatenated as is. Fully decoding this file requires that the decoder
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supports decoding concatenated files.
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good-single-lzma.lzma is LZMA compressed file with EOPM.
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good-single-subblock-lzma.lzma has basic combination of Subblock and
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LZMA filters.
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good-single-subblock_rle.lzma takes advantage of Subblock filter's
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run-length encoding.
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good-single-delta-lzma.tiff.lzma is an image file that compresses
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better with Delta+LZMA than with plain LZMA.
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2.2. Bad Files
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bad-single-data_after_eopm.lzma has LZMA+Subblock, where the Subblock
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filter gives one byte of data to LZMA after LZMA has detected EOPM.
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bad-single-data_after_eopm_2.lzma is like
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bad-single-data_after_eopm.lzma but Subblock gives 256 MiB of data to
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LZMA after LZMA has detected EOPM.
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bad-single-subblock_subblock.lzma has Subblock+Subblock, where the
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Subblock decoder is given End of Input in the middle of a Subblock.
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bad-single-subblock-padding_loop.lzma contains huge amount of
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consecutive Padding bytes, which isn't allowed by the Subblock filter
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format. If it were allowed, this file would hang the decoder for very
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long time (weeks to years).
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bad-single-subblock1023-slow.lzma is similar to
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malicious-single-subblock31-slow.lzma except that this uses 1023 bytes
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of Padding in every place instead of 31 bytes. The Subblock filter
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format specification allows only 31-byte Padings, thus this file must
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get detected as bad without producing any output. Allowing larger
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Padding than 31 bytes was considered (so this test file was created),
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but it seemed to be a bad idea since it would increase worst-case CPU
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usage.
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2.3. Malicious Files
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malicious-single-subblock31-slow.lzma requires quite a bit of CPU time
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per decoded byte. It contains LZMA compressed Subblock filter data that
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has as much Padding as the specification allows. LZMA is also used as
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a Subfilter, to further slowdown the decoder. Every Subfilter instance
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produces only one byte of output. If you can create a file that wastes
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notably more CPU cycles than this file, please contact Lasse Collin.
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malicious-single-subblock-256MiB.lzma is a tiny file that produces
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256 MiB of output. It uses Subblock filter's run-length encoding
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to achieve this.
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malicious-single-subblock-64PiB.lzma is a tiny file that produces
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64 PiB of output (if you have patience to wait). This is done by
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chaining two Subblock filters and using their run-length encoders.
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malicious-multi-metadata-64PiB.lzma is like
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malicious-single-subblock-64PiB.lzma but the huge amount of output
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is in a Metadata Block. Trying to decode this file may take years
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unless the decoder catches that the Metadata has unreasonable size.
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