1 |
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2 | Frequently Asked Questions about ZLIB1.DLL
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3 |
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4 |
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5 | This document describes the design, the rationale, and the usage
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6 | of the official DLL build of zlib, named ZLIB1.DLL. If you have
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7 | general questions about zlib, you should see the file "FAQ" found
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8 | in the zlib distribution, or at the following location:
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9 | http://www.gzip.org/zlib/zlib_faq.html
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10 |
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11 |
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12 | 1. What is ZLIB1.DLL, and how can I get it?
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13 |
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14 | - ZLIB1.DLL is the official build of zlib as a DLL.
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15 | (Please remark the symbol '1' in the name.)
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16 |
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17 | Pointers to a precompiled ZLIB1.DLL can be found in the zlib
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18 | web site at:
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19 | http://www.zlib.org/
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20 |
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21 | Applications that link to ZLIB1.DLL can rely on the following
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22 | specification:
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23 |
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24 | * The exported symbols are exclusively defined in the source
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25 | files "zlib.h" and "zlib.def", found in an official zlib
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26 | source distribution.
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27 | * The symbols are exported by name, not by ordinal.
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28 | * The exported names are undecorated.
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29 | * The calling convention of functions is "C" (CDECL).
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30 | * The ZLIB1.DLL binary is linked to MSVCRT.DLL.
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31 |
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32 | The archive in which ZLIB1.DLL is bundled contains compiled
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33 | test programs that must run with a valid build of ZLIB1.DLL.
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34 | It is recommended to download the prebuilt DLL from the zlib
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35 | web site, instead of building it yourself, to avoid potential
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36 | incompatibilities that could be introduced by your compiler
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37 | and build settings. If you do build the DLL yourself, please
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38 | make sure that it complies with all the above requirements,
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39 | and it runs with the precompiled test programs, bundled with
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40 | the original ZLIB1.DLL distribution and available at the zlib
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41 | web site.
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42 |
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43 | If, for any reason, you need to build an incompatible DLL,
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44 | please use a different name.
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45 |
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46 |
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47 | 2. Why did you change the name of the DLL to ZLIB1.DLL?
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48 | What happened to the old ZLIB.DLL?
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49 |
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50 | - The old ZLIB.DLL, built from zlib-1.1.x and earlier, required
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51 | compilation settings that were incompatible to those used by a
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52 | static build. The DLL settings were supposed to be enabled by
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53 | defining the macro ZLIB_DLL, before including "zlib.h".
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54 | Incorrect handling of this macro was silently accepted at
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55 | build time, resulting in two major problems:
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56 |
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57 | * ZLIB_DLL was missing from the old makefile. When building
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58 | the DLL, not all people added it to the build options. In
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59 | consequence, incompatible incarnations of ZLIB.DLL started
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60 | to circulate around the net.
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61 |
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62 | * When switching from using the static library to using the
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63 | DLL, applications had to define the ZLIB_DLL macro and
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64 | to recompile all the sources that contained calls to zlib
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65 | functions. Failure to do so resulted in creating binaries
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66 | that were unable to run with the official ZLIB.DLL build.
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67 |
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68 | The only possible solution that we could foresee was to make a
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69 | binary-incompatible change in the DLL interfacing, in order to
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70 | remove the dependency on the ZLIB_DLL macro, and to release
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71 | the new DLL under a different name.
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72 |
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73 | We chose the name ZLIB1.DLL, where '1' indicates the major
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74 | zlib version number. We hope that we will not have to break
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75 | the binary compatibility again, at least not as long as the
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76 | zlib-1.x series will last.
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77 |
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78 | There is still a ZLIB_DLL macro, that can trigger a more
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79 | efficient build and use of the DLL, but compatibility no
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80 | longer dependents on it.
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81 |
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82 |
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83 | 3. Can I build ZLIB.DLL from the new zlib sources, and replace
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84 | an old ZLIB.DLL, that was built from zlib-1.1.4 or earlier?
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85 |
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86 | - In principle, you can do it by assigning calling convention
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87 | keywords to the macros ZEXPORT and ZEXPORTVA. In practice,
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88 | it depends on what you mean by "an old ZLIB.DLL", because
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89 | the old DLL exists in several mutually-incompatible versions.
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90 |
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91 | If you have a compiled application that works with a certain
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92 | ZLIB.DLL without any known security issues, there is hardly
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93 | a need to rebuild the DLL from new sources only to link it to
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94 | the old app binary. But if you really want to do it, you have
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95 | to find out first what kind of calling convention uses your
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96 | particular ZLIB.DLL build, and to use the same one in the new
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97 | build. If you don't know what this is all about, you might be
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98 | better off if you would just forget it.
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99 |
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100 |
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101 | 4. Can I compile my application using the new zlib interface, and
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102 | link it to an old ZLIB.DLL, that was built from zlib-1.1.4 or
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103 | earlier?
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104 |
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105 | - The official answer is "no"; the real answer depends again on
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106 | what kind of ZLIB.DLL you have. Even if you are lucky, this
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107 | course of action is unreliable.
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108 |
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109 | If you rebuild your application and you intend to use a newer
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110 | version of zlib (post- 1.1.4), it is strongly recommended to
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111 | link it to the new ZLIB1.DLL.
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112 |
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113 |
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114 | 5. Why are the zlib symbols exported by name, and not by ordinal?
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115 |
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116 | - Although exporting symbols by ordinal is a little faster, it
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117 | is risky. Any single glitch in the maintenance or use of the
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118 | DEF file that contains the ordinals can result in incompatible
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119 | builds and frustrating crashes. Simply put, the benefits of
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120 | exporting symbols by ordinal do not justify the risks.
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121 |
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122 | Technically, it should be possible to maintain ordinals in
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123 | the DEF file, and still export the symbols by name. Ordinals
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124 | exist in every DLL, and even if the dynamic linking performed
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125 | at the DLL startup is searching for names, ordinals serve as
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126 | hints, for a faster name lookup. However, if the DEF file
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127 | contains ordinals, the Microsoft linker automatically builds
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128 | an implib that will cause the executables linked to it to use
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129 | those ordinals, and not the names. It is interesting to
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130 | notice that the GNU linker for Win32 does not suffer from this
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131 | problem.
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132 |
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133 | It is possible to avoid the DEF file if the exported symbols
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134 | are accompanied by a "__declspec(dllexport)" attribute in the
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135 | source files. You can do this in zlib by predefining the
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136 | ZLIB_DLL macro.
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137 |
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138 |
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139 | 6. I see that the ZLIB1.DLL functions use the "C" (CDECL) calling
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140 | convention. Why not use the STDCALL convention?
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141 | STDCALL is the standard convention in Win32, and I need it in
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142 | my Visual Basic project!
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143 |
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144 | (For readability, we use CDECL to refer to the convention
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145 | triggered by the "__cdecl" keyword, STDCALL to refer to
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146 | the convention triggered by "__stdcall", and FASTCALL to
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147 | refer to the convention triggered by "__fastcall".)
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148 |
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149 | - Most of the native Windows API functions (without varargs) use
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150 | indeed the WINAPI convention (which translates to STDCALL in
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151 | Win32), but the standard C functions use CDECL. If a user
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152 | application is intrinsically tied to the Windows API (e.g.
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153 | it calls native Windows API functions such as CreateFile()),
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154 | sometimes it makes sense to decorate its own functions with
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155 | WINAPI. But if ANSI C or POSIX portability is a goal (e.g.
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156 | it calls standard C functions such as fopen()), it is not a
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157 | sound decision to request the inclusion of <windows.h>, or to
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158 | use non-ANSI constructs, for the sole purpose to make the user
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159 | functions STDCALL-able.
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160 |
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161 | The functionality offered by zlib is not in the category of
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162 | "Windows functionality", but is more like "C functionality".
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163 |
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164 | Technically, STDCALL is not bad; in fact, it is slightly
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165 | faster than CDECL, and it works with variable-argument
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166 | functions, just like CDECL. It is unfortunate that, in spite
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167 | of using STDCALL in the Windows API, it is not the default
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168 | convention used by the C compilers that run under Windows.
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169 | The roots of the problem reside deep inside the unsafety of
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170 | the K&R-style function prototypes, where the argument types
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171 | are not specified; but that is another story for another day.
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172 |
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173 | The fact that remains is that CDECL is the default convention.
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174 | Even if an explicit convention (such as STDCALL or FASTCALL)
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175 | is hard-coded into the function prototypes inside C headers,
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176 | problems may appear. One problem, for example, deals with the
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177 | necessity to expose the convention in users' callbacks.
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178 |
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179 | The calling convention issues are also important when using
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180 | zlib in other programming languages. Some of them, like Ada
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181 | (GNAT) and Fortran (GNU G77), have C bindings implemented
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182 | initially on Unix, and relying on the C calling convention.
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183 | On the other hand, the pre- .NET versions of Microsoft Visual
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184 | Basic require STDCALL, while Borland Delphi prefers (although
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185 | it does not require) FASTCALL.
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186 |
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187 | In fairness to all possible uses of zlib outside the C
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188 | programming language, we choose the default "C" convention.
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189 | Anyone interested in different bindings or conventions is
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190 | encouraged to maintain specialized projects. The "contrib/"
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191 | directory from the zlib distribution already holds a couple
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192 | of foreign bindings, such as Ada, C++, and Delphi.
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193 |
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194 |
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195 | 7. I need a DLL for my Visual Basic project. What can I do?
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196 |
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197 | - Define the ZLIB_WINAPI macro before including "zlib.h", when
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198 | building both the DLL and the user application (except that
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199 | you don't need to define anything when using the DLL in Visual
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200 | Basic). The ZLIB_WINAPI macro will switch on the WINAPI
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201 | (STDCALL) convention. The name of this DLL must be different
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202 | than the official ZLIB1.DLL.
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203 |
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204 | Gilles Vollant has contributed a build named ZLIBWAPI.DLL,
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205 | with the ZLIB_WINAPI macro turned on, and with the minizip
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206 | functionality built in. For more information, please read
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207 | the notes inside "contrib/vstudio/readme.txt", found in the
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208 | zlib distribution.
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209 |
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210 |
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211 | 8. If my application uses ZLIB1.DLL, should I link it to
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212 | MSVCRT.DLL? Why?
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213 |
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214 | - It is not required, but it is recommended to link your
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215 | application to MSVCRT.DLL, if it uses ZLIB1.DLL.
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216 |
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217 | The executables (.EXE, .DLL, etc.) that are involved in the
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218 | same process and are using the C run-time library (i.e. they
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219 | are calling standard C functions), must link to the same
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220 | library. There are several libraries in the Win32 system:
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221 | CRTDLL.DLL, MSVCRT.DLL, the static C libraries, etc.
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222 | Since ZLIB1.DLL is linked to MSVCRT.DLL, the executables that
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223 | depend on it should also be linked to MSVCRT.DLL.
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224 |
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225 |
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226 | 9. Why are you saying that ZLIB1.DLL and my application must be
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227 | linked to the same C run-time (CRT) library? I linked my
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228 | application and my DLLs to different C libraries (e.g. my
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229 | application to a static library, and my DLLs to MSVCRT.DLL),
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230 | and everything works fine.
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231 |
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232 | - If a user library invokes only pure Win32 API (accessible via
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233 | <windows.h> and the related headers), its DLL build will work
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234 | in any context. But if this library invokes standard C API,
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235 | things get more complicated.
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236 |
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237 | There is a single Win32 library in a Win32 system. Every
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238 | function in this library resides in a single DLL module, that
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239 | is safe to call from anywhere. On the other hand, there are
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240 | multiple versions of the C library, and each of them has its
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241 | own separate internal state. Standalone executables and user
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242 | DLLs that call standard C functions must link to a C run-time
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243 | (CRT) library, be it static or shared (DLL). Intermixing
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244 | occurs when an executable (not necessarily standalone) and a
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245 | DLL are linked to different CRTs, and both are running in the
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246 | same process.
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247 |
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248 | Intermixing multiple CRTs is possible, as long as their
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249 | internal states are kept intact. The Microsoft Knowledge Base
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250 | articles KB94248 "HOWTO: Use the C Run-Time" and KB140584
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251 | "HOWTO: Link with the Correct C Run-Time (CRT) Library"
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252 | mention the potential problems raised by intermixing.
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253 |
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254 | If intermixing works for you, it's because your application
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255 | and DLLs are avoiding the corruption of each of the CRTs'
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256 | internal states, maybe by careful design, or maybe by fortune.
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257 |
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258 | Also note that linking ZLIB1.DLL to non-Microsoft CRTs (such
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259 | as those provided by Borland) raises similar problems.
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260 |
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261 |
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262 | 10. Why are you linking ZLIB1.DLL to MSVCRT.DLL?
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263 |
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264 | - MSVCRT.DLL exists on every Windows 95 with a new service pack
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265 | installed, or with Microsoft Internet Explorer 4 or later, and
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266 | on all other Windows 4.x or later (Windows 98, Windows NT 4,
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267 | or later). It is freely distributable; if not present in the
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268 | system, it can be downloaded from Microsoft or from other
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269 | software provider for free.
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270 |
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271 | The fact that MSVCRT.DLL does not exist on a virgin Windows 95
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272 | is not so problematic. The number of Windows 95 installations
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273 | is rapidly decreasing, Microsoft stopped supporting it a long
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274 | time ago, and many recent applications from various vendors,
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275 | including Microsoft, do not even run on it. Furthermore, no
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276 | serious user should run Windows 95 without a proper update
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277 | installed.
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278 |
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279 | There is also the fact that the mainstream C compilers for
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280 | Windows are Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0, and gcc/MinGW. Both
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281 | are producing executables that link to MSVCRT.DLL by default,
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282 | without offering other dynamic CRTs as alternatives easy to
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283 | select by users.
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284 |
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285 |
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286 | 11. Why are you not linking ZLIB1.DLL to
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287 | <<my favorite C run-time library>> ?
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288 |
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289 | - We considered and abandoned the following alternatives:
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290 |
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291 | * Linking ZLIB1.DLL to a static C library (LIBC.LIB, or
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292 | LIBCMT.LIB) is not a good option. People are using the DLL
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293 | mainly to save disk space. If you are linking your program
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294 | to a static C library, you may as well consider linking zlib
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295 | in statically, too.
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296 |
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297 | * Linking ZLIB1.DLL to CRTDLL.DLL looks very appealing,
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298 | because CRTDLL.DLL is present on every Win32 installation.
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299 | Unfortunately, it has a series of problems: it raises
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300 | difficulties when using it with C++ code, it does not work
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301 | with 64-bit file offsets, (and so on...), and Microsoft
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302 | discontinued its support a long time ago.
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303 |
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304 | * Linking ZLIB1.DLL to MSVCR70.DLL, supplied with the
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305 | Microsoft .NET platform and Visual C++ 7.0 or newer, is not
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306 | a good option. Although it is available for free download
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307 | and distribution, its presence is scarce on today's Win32
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308 | installations. If it will ever become more popular than
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309 | MSVCRT.DLL and will be pre-installed on the future Win32
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310 | systems, we will probably think again about it.
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311 |
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312 | * Linking ZLIB1.DLL to NTDLL.DLL is not possible.
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313 | NTDLL.DLL exports only a part of the C library, and only on
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314 | Windows NT systems.
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315 |
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316 |
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317 | 12. I need to link my own DLL build to a CRT different than
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318 | MSVCRT.DLL. What can I do?
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319 |
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320 | - Feel free to rebuild the DLL from the zlib sources, and link
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321 | it the way you want. You should, however, clearly state that
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322 | your build is unofficial. You should give it a different file
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323 | name, and/or install it in a private directory that can be
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324 | accessed by your application only, and is not visible to the
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325 | others (e.g. it's not in the SYSTEM or the SYSTEM32 directory,
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326 | and it's not in the PATH). Otherwise, your build may clash
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327 | with applications that link to the official build.
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328 |
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329 | For example, in Cygwin, zlib is linked to the Cygwin runtime
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330 | CYGWIN1.DLL, and it is distributed under the name CYGZ.DLL.
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331 |
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332 |
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333 | 13. May I include additional pieces of code that I find useful,
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334 | link them in ZLIB1.DLL, and export them?
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335 |
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336 | - No. A legitimate build of ZLIB1.DLL must not include code
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337 | that does not originate from the official zlib source code.
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338 | But you can make your own private DLL build, under a different
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339 | file name, as suggested in the previous answer.
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340 |
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341 | For example, in Borland Delphi and C++ Builder, zlib is a part
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342 | of the standard VCL library. If an application links to VCL
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343 | dynamically, the name of the distributable binary (VCLxx.DLL)
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344 | does not posess any danger of clashing with a legitimate but
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345 | incompatible ZLIB1.DLL.
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346 |
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347 |
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348 | 14. May I remove some functionality out of ZLIB1.DLL, by enabling
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349 | macros like NO_GZCOMPRESS or NO_GZIP at compile time?
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350 |
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351 | - No. A legitimate build of ZLIB1.DLL must provide the complete
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352 | zlib functionality, as implemented in the official zlib source
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353 | code. But you can make your own private DLL build, under a
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354 | different file name, as suggested in the previous answer.
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355 |
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356 |
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357 | 15. I made my own ZLIB1.DLL build. Can I test it for compliance?
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358 |
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359 | - We prefer that you download the official DLL from the zlib
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360 | web site. If you need something peculiar from this DLL, you
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361 | can send your suggestion to the zlib mailing list.
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362 |
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363 | However, in case you do rebuild the DLL yourself, you can run
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364 | it with the test programs found in the DLL distribution.
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365 | Running these test programs is not a guarantee of compliance,
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366 | but a failure can imply a detected problem.
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367 |
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368 | **
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369 |
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370 | This document is written and maintained by
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371 | Cosmin Truta <[email protected]>
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