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Re: [tor-dev] Preferred compression type?



On Fri, Sep 13, 2019 at 2:05 PM Steve Snyder <swsnyder@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> Given the multiple compression types supported (none, lzma, zlib, zstd),
> what is the order of preference for runtime use?
>
> Put another way, which compression method(s) should be supported to get
> optimal runtime performance from a Tor node?

For big objects like consensuses or consensus diffs that are sent over
and over, relays prefer to use whichever compression method has the
highest compression -- that's lzma2, then zstd, then zlib, then none.
Lzma2 (aka xz) is more expensive to calculate, but the relays only
need to calculate it once per compressed object, and then they can
send it over and over.

For smaller objects that are compressed in a stream (descriptors and
microdescriptors), relays will not use xz, since it would be to
expensive to recompute it for every stream. They'll prefer zstd, then
zlib, then none.

So if you want to save bandwidth above all, you should enable all
compression algorithms.

If you want to save CPU above all, you should enable all compression
algorithms except xz.

If you want to save bandwidth and CPU, I _think_ that enabling all the
compression algorithms will result in Tor making good choices (as
described above).  But I'd appreciate benchmarks if anybody has tried
it both ways to find out.

cheers,
-- 
Nick
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