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.zst Archive

Zstandard (zstd) Compressed

Zstandard (zstd) is a modern compression algorithm that provides an excellent balance of speed and compression ratio. It compresses and decompresses significantly faster than gzip at similar or better ratios, and it supports dictionary compression for small data.

MIME Type

application/zstd

Type

Binary

Compression

Lossless

Advantages

  • + 2-5x faster than gzip at comparable compression ratios
  • + Wide compression level range (1-22) from real-time to archival
  • + Dictionary mode excels at compressing small, similar payloads
  • + Supported in HTTP content encoding and modern Linux distributions

Disadvantages

  • Newer format with less universal tool support than gzip
  • Not natively supported by older operating systems
  • Maximum compression levels are slower than xz for marginal gains

When to Use .ZST

Use Zstandard as a modern replacement for gzip — web content delivery, log compression, package archives, and any workload needing fast compression with good ratios.

Technical Details

Zstandard combines LZ77 matching with a tANS (finite state entropy) encoder and supports 22 compression levels. Dictionary mode pre-trains on sample data for superior compression of small, similar payloads.

History

Yann Collet (also the creator of LZ4) developed Zstandard at Facebook in 2015. It was released as open source in 2016 and standardized as RFC 8478. Adoption has grown rapidly in Linux packages, HTTP, and databases.

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