I'd like to be able to inflate/deflate Swift3 Data structs. I found GzipSwift, but it's not clear how I make that available to my iOS app. The naive things I've tried include:
Copying the
Data+Gzip.swift
file into my own project. This then complains about theimport zlib
at the top of said file. I think that has something to do the with the modulemap files in the zlib directory of the same sources. But I'm not sure what or how to recreate those in my own project.Cloned the repository from github, opened XCode and built in (pressed the run button basically). Then tried to add that as a linked library or framework to my own project. I'm pretty sure just selecting the top level directory of the repository is not what I want to do, but I didn't know what else to try.
I've found some other code out there, but it seems dated and relative to Swift2.
I just recently had to add that exact library and file to my project, and after a lot of troubleshooting finally got it working, so let me walk you through the steps!
Okay
1) Go to the top level directory of your project in finder, and create a new folder called
Swiftzlib
or whatever you want the name of the module that you will be importing to be. (What we will do is add the zlib library as a module, so think of it as importing Foundation or some such other module). To clarify, thisSwiftzlib
directory will end up as a child directory of the same directory that contains your*.xcodeproj
and*.xcworkspace
files.2) Inside the folder you created, make two files.
3) In your
include.h
file, enter the following:4) In your
module.modulemap
file, enter the following:Where Swiftzlib is the same as the name of the folder that you created.
5) Open your Xcode project, and select your target
libz.tbd
$(PROJECT_DIR)/Swiftzlib
non-recursively to the import paths-lz
as a flag6) Select your project in Xcode (may not be necessary, but I've done it in my project and it works)
$(PROJECT_DIR)/Swiftzlib
non-recursively to the import paths7) In
Data+Gzip.swfit
, addimport Swiftzlib
to the top of the file8) Clean, Build, and Run!
Swift 5 implementation using Compression.
Took me a few days to realise I had to drop the first 2 bytes of the compressed data. Hope it can help somebody else.
I maintain a small Swift 3+ wrapper around Apples native libcompression framework at:
https://github.com/mw99/DataCompression
Usage example for gzip:
But if you are only interested in classic inflate and deflate you may use the
.inflate()
and.deflate()
methods instead. That will save 18 bytes because the gzip header won't be added.