Hello:

I have some free time and want to do an memory pool. The idea is to have a memory zone of N KB (or several MB) compressed in memory. I have fast compression algorithms now that can release under BSD licence that are faster than hd i/o, so it take less compress/decompress a memory zone than read/write it to disk. I don't know if it already exist for FreeBSD, so if it's already done i'll try to improve it.
- Each memory chunk is compressed separately, so i can decompress and 
use one without decompress anyother one.
- In 4KB chunks of text i get 50-60 % compression (avg 2 - 1.6 KB result)
- In 4KB chunks of binary (application code) i get 30-40 % compression (avg 2.8 - 2.4 KB result) - In both cases, results may vary depending on data type and chunk size, greater implies better compression
- Speed once implemented will be very fast. Current speed hogs a PATA 133 disk.

For what can be used?

- Memory pools in applications (like malloc)
- Ram disks
- Disk Cache (permit bigger disk cache)
- 'On the fly' filesystem compression (and it takes less read/write compressed data than non-compressed)
- Perhaps add it as Virtual Memory swap cache?
- Other

Don't point me to zlib or libbzip2, they are on another league and are much slower than my code.
Thanks

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