Binary delta compression

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Binary Delta Compression or BDC is a technology used in software update deployment.

Contents

[edit] Explanation

Downloading large amounts of data over the internet for software updates can induce high network traffic problems, especially when a network of computers is involved. Binary Delta Compression technology allows a major reduction of download size by only transferring the difference between the old and the new files during the update process.

[edit] Implementation

In real world implementations, it is common to also use standard compression techniques (such as Lempel-Ziv) while compressing. This makes sense because LZW already works by referring back to re-used strings. ZDelta is a good example of this, as it is built from ZLib. The algorithm works by referring to common patterns not only in the file to be compressed, but also in a source file. The benefits of this are that even if there are few similarilties between the original and the new file, a good compression ratio is attained.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links