1 1.1 christos 2 1.1 christos Frequently Asked Questions about ZLIB1.DLL 3 1.1 christos 4 1.1 christos 5 1.1 christos This document describes the design, the rationale, and the usage 6 1.1 christos of the official DLL build of zlib, named ZLIB1.DLL. If you have 7 1.1 christos general questions about zlib, you should see the file "FAQ" found 8 1.1 christos in the zlib distribution, or at the following location: 9 1.1 christos http://www.gzip.org/zlib/zlib_faq.html 10 1.1 christos 11 1.1 christos 12 1.1 christos 1. What is ZLIB1.DLL, and how can I get it? 13 1.1 christos 14 1.1 christos - ZLIB1.DLL is the official build of zlib as a DLL. 15 1.1 christos (Please remark the character '1' in the name.) 16 1.1 christos 17 1.1 christos Pointers to a precompiled ZLIB1.DLL can be found in the zlib 18 1.1 christos web site at: 19 1.1 christos http://www.zlib.net/ 20 1.1 christos 21 1.1 christos Applications that link to ZLIB1.DLL can rely on the following 22 1.1 christos specification: 23 1.1 christos 24 1.1 christos * The exported symbols are exclusively defined in the source 25 1.1 christos files "zlib.h" and "zlib.def", found in an official zlib 26 1.1 christos source distribution. 27 1.1 christos * The symbols are exported by name, not by ordinal. 28 1.1 christos * The exported names are undecorated. 29 1.1 christos * The calling convention of functions is "C" (CDECL). 30 1.1 christos * The ZLIB1.DLL binary is linked to MSVCRT.DLL. 31 1.1 christos 32 1.1 christos The archive in which ZLIB1.DLL is bundled contains compiled 33 1.1 christos test programs that must run with a valid build of ZLIB1.DLL. 34 1.1 christos It is recommended to download the prebuilt DLL from the zlib 35 1.1 christos web site, instead of building it yourself, to avoid potential 36 1.1 christos incompatibilities that could be introduced by your compiler 37 1.1 christos and build settings. If you do build the DLL yourself, please 38 1.1 christos make sure that it complies with all the above requirements, 39 1.1 christos and it runs with the precompiled test programs, bundled with 40 1.1 christos the original ZLIB1.DLL distribution. 41 1.1 christos 42 1.1 christos If, for any reason, you need to build an incompatible DLL, 43 1.1 christos please use a different file name. 44 1.1 christos 45 1.1 christos 46 1.1 christos 2. Why did you change the name of the DLL to ZLIB1.DLL? 47 1.1 christos What happened to the old ZLIB.DLL? 48 1.1 christos 49 1.1 christos - The old ZLIB.DLL, built from zlib-1.1.4 or earlier, required 50 1.1 christos compilation settings that were incompatible to those used by 51 1.1 christos a static build. The DLL settings were supposed to be enabled 52 1.1 christos by defining the macro ZLIB_DLL, before including "zlib.h". 53 1.1 christos Incorrect handling of this macro was silently accepted at 54 1.1 christos build time, resulting in two major problems: 55 1.1 christos 56 1.1 christos * ZLIB_DLL was missing from the old makefile. When building 57 1.1 christos the DLL, not all people added it to the build options. In 58 1.1 christos consequence, incompatible incarnations of ZLIB.DLL started 59 1.1 christos to circulate around the net. 60 1.1 christos 61 1.1 christos * When switching from using the static library to using the 62 1.1 christos DLL, applications had to define the ZLIB_DLL macro and 63 1.1 christos to recompile all the sources that contained calls to zlib 64 1.1 christos functions. Failure to do so resulted in creating binaries 65 1.1 christos that were unable to run with the official ZLIB.DLL build. 66 1.1 christos 67 1.1 christos The only possible solution that we could foresee was to make 68 1.1 christos a binary-incompatible change in the DLL interface, in order to 69 1.1 christos remove the dependency on the ZLIB_DLL macro, and to release 70 1.1 christos the new DLL under a different name. 71 1.1 christos 72 1.1 christos We chose the name ZLIB1.DLL, where '1' indicates the major 73 1.1 christos zlib version number. We hope that we will not have to break 74 1.1 christos the binary compatibility again, at least not as long as the 75 1.1 christos zlib-1.x series will last. 76 1.1 christos 77 1.1 christos There is still a ZLIB_DLL macro, that can trigger a more 78 1.1 christos efficient build and use of the DLL, but compatibility no 79 1.1 christos longer dependents on it. 80 1.1 christos 81 1.1 christos 82 1.1 christos 3. Can I build ZLIB.DLL from the new zlib sources, and replace 83 1.1 christos an old ZLIB.DLL, that was built from zlib-1.1.4 or earlier? 84 1.1 christos 85 1.1 christos - In principle, you can do it by assigning calling convention 86 1.1 christos keywords to the macros ZEXPORT and ZEXPORTVA. In practice, 87 1.1 christos it depends on what you mean by "an old ZLIB.DLL", because the 88 1.1 christos old DLL exists in several mutually-incompatible versions. 89 1.1 christos You have to find out first what kind of calling convention is 90 1.1 christos being used in your particular ZLIB.DLL build, and to use the 91 1.1 christos same one in the new build. If you don't know what this is all 92 1.1 christos about, you might be better off if you would just leave the old 93 1.1 christos DLL intact. 94 1.1 christos 95 1.1 christos 96 1.1 christos 4. Can I compile my application using the new zlib interface, and 97 1.1 christos link it to an old ZLIB.DLL, that was built from zlib-1.1.4 or 98 1.1 christos earlier? 99 1.1 christos 100 1.1 christos - The official answer is "no"; the real answer depends again on 101 1.1 christos what kind of ZLIB.DLL you have. Even if you are lucky, this 102 1.1 christos course of action is unreliable. 103 1.1 christos 104 1.1 christos If you rebuild your application and you intend to use a newer 105 1.1 christos version of zlib (post- 1.1.4), it is strongly recommended to 106 1.1 christos link it to the new ZLIB1.DLL. 107 1.1 christos 108 1.1 christos 109 1.1 christos 5. Why are the zlib symbols exported by name, and not by ordinal? 110 1.1 christos 111 1.1 christos - Although exporting symbols by ordinal is a little faster, it 112 1.1 christos is risky. Any single glitch in the maintenance or use of the 113 1.1 christos DEF file that contains the ordinals can result in incompatible 114 1.1 christos builds and frustrating crashes. Simply put, the benefits of 115 1.1 christos exporting symbols by ordinal do not justify the risks. 116 1.1 christos 117 1.1 christos Technically, it should be possible to maintain ordinals in 118 1.1 christos the DEF file, and still export the symbols by name. Ordinals 119 1.1 christos exist in every DLL, and even if the dynamic linking performed 120 1.1 christos at the DLL startup is searching for names, ordinals serve as 121 1.1 christos hints, for a faster name lookup. However, if the DEF file 122 1.1 christos contains ordinals, the Microsoft linker automatically builds 123 1.1 christos an implib that will cause the executables linked to it to use 124 1.1 christos those ordinals, and not the names. It is interesting to 125 1.1 christos notice that the GNU linker for Win32 does not suffer from this 126 1.1 christos problem. 127 1.1 christos 128 1.1 christos It is possible to avoid the DEF file if the exported symbols 129 1.1 christos are accompanied by a "__declspec(dllexport)" attribute in the 130 1.1 christos source files. You can do this in zlib by predefining the 131 1.1 christos ZLIB_DLL macro. 132 1.1 christos 133 1.1 christos 134 1.1 christos 6. I see that the ZLIB1.DLL functions use the "C" (CDECL) calling 135 1.1 christos convention. Why not use the STDCALL convention? 136 1.1 christos STDCALL is the standard convention in Win32, and I need it in 137 1.1 christos my Visual Basic project! 138 1.1 christos 139 1.1 christos (For readability, we use CDECL to refer to the convention 140 1.1 christos triggered by the "__cdecl" keyword, STDCALL to refer to 141 1.1 christos the convention triggered by "__stdcall", and FASTCALL to 142 1.1 christos refer to the convention triggered by "__fastcall".) 143 1.1 christos 144 1.1 christos - Most of the native Windows API functions (without varargs) use 145 1.1 christos indeed the WINAPI convention (which translates to STDCALL in 146 1.1 christos Win32), but the standard C functions use CDECL. If a user 147 1.1 christos application is intrinsically tied to the Windows API (e.g. 148 1.1 christos it calls native Windows API functions such as CreateFile()), 149 1.1 christos sometimes it makes sense to decorate its own functions with 150 1.1 christos WINAPI. But if ANSI C or POSIX portability is a goal (e.g. 151 1.1 christos it calls standard C functions such as fopen()), it is not a 152 1.1 christos sound decision to request the inclusion of <windows.h>, or to 153 1.1 christos use non-ANSI constructs, for the sole purpose to make the user 154 1.1 christos functions STDCALL-able. 155 1.1 christos 156 1.1 christos The functionality offered by zlib is not in the category of 157 1.1 christos "Windows functionality", but is more like "C functionality". 158 1.1 christos 159 1.1 christos Technically, STDCALL is not bad; in fact, it is slightly 160 1.1 christos faster than CDECL, and it works with variable-argument 161 1.1 christos functions, just like CDECL. It is unfortunate that, in spite 162 1.1 christos of using STDCALL in the Windows API, it is not the default 163 1.1 christos convention used by the C compilers that run under Windows. 164 1.1 christos The roots of the problem reside deep inside the unsafety of 165 1.1 christos the K&R-style function prototypes, where the argument types 166 1.1 christos are not specified; but that is another story for another day. 167 1.1 christos 168 1.1 christos The remaining fact is that CDECL is the default convention. 169 1.1 christos Even if an explicit convention is hard-coded into the function 170 1.1 christos prototypes inside C headers, problems may appear. The 171 1.1 christos necessity to expose the convention in users' callbacks is one 172 1.1 christos of these problems. 173 1.1 christos 174 1.1 christos The calling convention issues are also important when using 175 1.1 christos zlib in other programming languages. Some of them, like Ada 176 1.1 christos (GNAT) and Fortran (GNU G77), have C bindings implemented 177 1.1 christos initially on Unix, and relying on the C calling convention. 178 1.1 christos On the other hand, the pre- .NET versions of Microsoft Visual 179 1.1 christos Basic require STDCALL, while Borland Delphi prefers, although 180 1.1 christos it does not require, FASTCALL. 181 1.1 christos 182 1.1 christos In fairness to all possible uses of zlib outside the C 183 1.1 christos programming language, we choose the default "C" convention. 184 1.1 christos Anyone interested in different bindings or conventions is 185 1.1 christos encouraged to maintain specialized projects. The "contrib/" 186 1.1 christos directory from the zlib distribution already holds a couple 187 1.1 christos of foreign bindings, such as Ada, C++, and Delphi. 188 1.1 christos 189 1.1 christos 190 1.1 christos 7. I need a DLL for my Visual Basic project. What can I do? 191 1.1 christos 192 1.1 christos - Define the ZLIB_WINAPI macro before including "zlib.h", when 193 1.1 christos building both the DLL and the user application (except that 194 1.1 christos you don't need to define anything when using the DLL in Visual 195 1.1 christos Basic). The ZLIB_WINAPI macro will switch on the WINAPI 196 1.1 christos (STDCALL) convention. The name of this DLL must be different 197 1.1 christos than the official ZLIB1.DLL. 198 1.1 christos 199 1.1 christos Gilles Vollant has contributed a build named ZLIBWAPI.DLL, 200 1.1 christos with the ZLIB_WINAPI macro turned on, and with the minizip 201 1.1 christos functionality built in. For more information, please read 202 1.1 christos the notes inside "contrib/vstudio/readme.txt", found in the 203 1.1 christos zlib distribution. 204 1.1 christos 205 1.1 christos 206 1.1 christos 8. I need to use zlib in my Microsoft .NET project. What can I 207 1.1 christos do? 208 1.1 christos 209 1.1 christos - Henrik Ravn has contributed a .NET wrapper around zlib. Look 210 1.1 christos into contrib/dotzlib/, inside the zlib distribution. 211 1.1 christos 212 1.1 christos 213 1.1 christos 9. If my application uses ZLIB1.DLL, should I link it to 214 1.1 christos MSVCRT.DLL? Why? 215 1.1 christos 216 1.1 christos - It is not required, but it is recommended to link your 217 1.1 christos application to MSVCRT.DLL, if it uses ZLIB1.DLL. 218 1.1 christos 219 1.1 christos The executables (.EXE, .DLL, etc.) that are involved in the 220 1.1 christos same process and are using the C run-time library (i.e. they 221 1.1 christos are calling standard C functions), must link to the same 222 1.1 christos library. There are several libraries in the Win32 system: 223 1.1 christos CRTDLL.DLL, MSVCRT.DLL, the static C libraries, etc. 224 1.1 christos Since ZLIB1.DLL is linked to MSVCRT.DLL, the executables that 225 1.1 christos depend on it should also be linked to MSVCRT.DLL. 226 1.1 christos 227 1.1 christos 228 1.1 christos 10. Why are you saying that ZLIB1.DLL and my application should 229 1.1 christos be linked to the same C run-time (CRT) library? I linked my 230 1.1 christos application and my DLLs to different C libraries (e.g. my 231 1.1 christos application to a static library, and my DLLs to MSVCRT.DLL), 232 1.1 christos and everything works fine. 233 1.1 christos 234 1.1 christos - If a user library invokes only pure Win32 API (accessible via 235 1.1 christos <windows.h> and the related headers), its DLL build will work 236 1.1 christos in any context. But if this library invokes standard C API, 237 1.1 christos things get more complicated. 238 1.1 christos 239 1.1 christos There is a single Win32 library in a Win32 system. Every 240 1.1 christos function in this library resides in a single DLL module, that 241 1.1 christos is safe to call from anywhere. On the other hand, there are 242 1.1 christos multiple versions of the C library, and each of them has its 243 1.1 christos own separate internal state. Standalone executables and user 244 1.1 christos DLLs that call standard C functions must link to a C run-time 245 1.1 christos (CRT) library, be it static or shared (DLL). Intermixing 246 1.1 christos occurs when an executable (not necessarily standalone) and a 247 1.1 christos DLL are linked to different CRTs, and both are running in the 248 1.1 christos same process. 249 1.1 christos 250 1.1 christos Intermixing multiple CRTs is possible, as long as their 251 1.1 christos internal states are kept intact. The Microsoft Knowledge Base 252 1.1 christos articles KB94248 "HOWTO: Use the C Run-Time" and KB140584 253 1.1 christos "HOWTO: Link with the Correct C Run-Time (CRT) Library" 254 1.1 christos mention the potential problems raised by intermixing. 255 1.1 christos 256 1.1 christos If intermixing works for you, it's because your application 257 1.1 christos and DLLs are avoiding the corruption of each of the CRTs' 258 1.1 christos internal states, maybe by careful design, or maybe by fortune. 259 1.1 christos 260 1.1 christos Also note that linking ZLIB1.DLL to non-Microsoft CRTs, such 261 1.1 christos as those provided by Borland, raises similar problems. 262 1.1 christos 263 1.1 christos 264 1.1 christos 11. Why are you linking ZLIB1.DLL to MSVCRT.DLL? 265 1.1 christos 266 1.1 christos - MSVCRT.DLL exists on every Windows 95 with a new service pack 267 1.1 christos installed, or with Microsoft Internet Explorer 4 or later, and 268 1.1 christos on all other Windows 4.x or later (Windows 98, Windows NT 4, 269 1.1 christos or later). It is freely distributable; if not present in the 270 1.1 christos system, it can be downloaded from Microsoft or from other 271 1.1 christos software provider for free. 272 1.1 christos 273 1.1 christos The fact that MSVCRT.DLL does not exist on a virgin Windows 95 274 1.1 christos is not so problematic. Windows 95 is scarcely found nowadays, 275 1.1 christos Microsoft ended its support a long time ago, and many recent 276 1.1 christos applications from various vendors, including Microsoft, do not 277 1.1 christos even run on it. Furthermore, no serious user should run 278 1.1 christos Windows 95 without a proper update installed. 279 1.1 christos 280 1.1 christos 281 1.1 christos 12. Why are you not linking ZLIB1.DLL to 282 1.1 christos <<my favorite C run-time library>> ? 283 1.1 christos 284 1.1 christos - We considered and abandoned the following alternatives: 285 1.1 christos 286 1.1 christos * Linking ZLIB1.DLL to a static C library (LIBC.LIB, or 287 1.1 christos LIBCMT.LIB) is not a good option. People are using the DLL 288 1.1 christos mainly to save disk space. If you are linking your program 289 1.1 christos to a static C library, you may as well consider linking zlib 290 1.1 christos in statically, too. 291 1.1 christos 292 1.1 christos * Linking ZLIB1.DLL to CRTDLL.DLL looks appealing, because 293 1.1 christos CRTDLL.DLL is present on every Win32 installation. 294 1.1 christos Unfortunately, it has a series of problems: it does not 295 1.1 christos work properly with Microsoft's C++ libraries, it does not 296 1.1 christos provide support for 64-bit file offsets, (and so on...), 297 1.1 christos and Microsoft discontinued its support a long time ago. 298 1.1 christos 299 1.1 christos * Linking ZLIB1.DLL to MSVCR70.DLL or MSVCR71.DLL, supplied 300 1.1 christos with the Microsoft .NET platform, and Visual C++ 7.0/7.1, 301 1.1 christos raises problems related to the status of ZLIB1.DLL as a 302 1.1 christos system component. According to the Microsoft Knowledge Base 303 1.1 christos article KB326922 "INFO: Redistribution of the Shared C 304 1.1 christos Runtime Component in Visual C++ .NET", MSVCR70.DLL and 305 1.1 christos MSVCR71.DLL are not supposed to function as system DLLs, 306 1.1 christos because they may clash with MSVCRT.DLL. Instead, the 307 1.1 christos application's installer is supposed to put these DLLs 308 1.1 christos (if needed) in the application's private directory. 309 1.1 christos If ZLIB1.DLL depends on a non-system runtime, it cannot 310 1.1 christos function as a redistributable system component. 311 1.1 christos 312 1.1 christos * Linking ZLIB1.DLL to non-Microsoft runtimes, such as 313 1.1 christos Borland's, or Cygwin's, raises problems related to the 314 1.1 christos reliable presence of these runtimes on Win32 systems. 315 1.1 christos It's easier to let the DLL build of zlib up to the people 316 1.1 christos who distribute these runtimes, and who may proceed as 317 1.1 christos explained in the answer to Question 14. 318 1.1 christos 319 1.1 christos 320 1.1 christos 13. If ZLIB1.DLL cannot be linked to MSVCR70.DLL or MSVCR71.DLL, 321 1.1 christos how can I build/use ZLIB1.DLL in Microsoft Visual C++ 7.0 322 1.1 christos (Visual Studio .NET) or newer? 323 1.1 christos 324 1.1 christos - Due to the problems explained in the Microsoft Knowledge Base 325 1.1 christos article KB326922 (see the previous answer), the C runtime that 326 1.1 christos comes with the VC7 environment is no longer considered a 327 1.1 christos system component. That is, it should not be assumed that this 328 1.1 christos runtime exists, or may be installed in a system directory. 329 1.1 christos Since ZLIB1.DLL is supposed to be a system component, it may 330 1.1 christos not depend on a non-system component. 331 1.1 christos 332 1.1 christos In order to link ZLIB1.DLL and your application to MSVCRT.DLL 333 1.1 christos in VC7, you need the library of Visual C++ 6.0 or older. If 334 1.1 christos you don't have this library at hand, it's probably best not to 335 1.1 christos use ZLIB1.DLL. 336 1.1 christos 337 1.1 christos We are hoping that, in the future, Microsoft will provide a 338 1.1 christos way to build applications linked to a proper system runtime, 339 1.1 christos from the Visual C++ environment. Until then, you have a 340 1.1 christos couple of alternatives, such as linking zlib in statically. 341 1.1 christos If your application requires dynamic linking, you may proceed 342 1.1 christos as explained in the answer to Question 14. 343 1.1 christos 344 1.1 christos 345 1.1 christos 14. I need to link my own DLL build to a CRT different than 346 1.1 christos MSVCRT.DLL. What can I do? 347 1.1 christos 348 1.1 christos - Feel free to rebuild the DLL from the zlib sources, and link 349 1.1 christos it the way you want. You should, however, clearly state that 350 1.1 christos your build is unofficial. You should give it a different file 351 1.1 christos name, and/or install it in a private directory that can be 352 1.1 christos accessed by your application only, and is not visible to the 353 1.1 christos others (i.e. it's neither in the PATH, nor in the SYSTEM or 354 1.1 christos SYSTEM32 directories). Otherwise, your build may clash with 355 1.1 christos applications that link to the official build. 356 1.1 christos 357 1.1 christos For example, in Cygwin, zlib is linked to the Cygwin runtime 358 1.1 christos CYGWIN1.DLL, and it is distributed under the name CYGZ.DLL. 359 1.1 christos 360 1.1 christos 361 1.1 christos 15. May I include additional pieces of code that I find useful, 362 1.1 christos link them in ZLIB1.DLL, and export them? 363 1.1 christos 364 1.1 christos - No. A legitimate build of ZLIB1.DLL must not include code 365 1.1 christos that does not originate from the official zlib source code. 366 1.1 christos But you can make your own private DLL build, under a different 367 1.1 christos file name, as suggested in the previous answer. 368 1.1 christos 369 1.1 christos For example, zlib is a part of the VCL library, distributed 370 1.1 christos with Borland Delphi and C++ Builder. The DLL build of VCL 371 1.1 christos is a redistributable file, named VCLxx.DLL. 372 1.1 christos 373 1.1 christos 374 1.1 christos 16. May I remove some functionality out of ZLIB1.DLL, by enabling 375 1.1 christos macros like NO_GZCOMPRESS or NO_GZIP at compile time? 376 1.1 christos 377 1.1 christos - No. A legitimate build of ZLIB1.DLL must provide the complete 378 1.1 christos zlib functionality, as implemented in the official zlib source 379 1.1 christos code. But you can make your own private DLL build, under a 380 1.1 christos different file name, as suggested in the previous answer. 381 1.1 christos 382 1.1 christos 383 1.1 christos 17. I made my own ZLIB1.DLL build. Can I test it for compliance? 384 1.1 christos 385 1.1 christos - We prefer that you download the official DLL from the zlib 386 1.1 christos web site. If you need something peculiar from this DLL, you 387 1.1 christos can send your suggestion to the zlib mailing list. 388 1.1 christos 389 1.1 christos However, in case you do rebuild the DLL yourself, you can run 390 1.1 christos it with the test programs found in the DLL distribution. 391 1.1 christos Running these test programs is not a guarantee of compliance, 392 1.1 christos but a failure can imply a detected problem. 393 1.1 christos 394 1.1 christos ** 395 1.1 christos 396 1.1 christos This document is written and maintained by 397 1.1 christos Cosmin Truta <cosmint (a] cs.ubbcluj.ro> 398