LZ4 vs RPM
A detailed comparison of LZ4 Compressed and RPM Package — file size, quality, compatibility, and which format to choose for your workflow.
LZ4 Compressed
Archives & CompressedLZ4 is an extremely fast lossless compression algorithm focused on speed over compression ratio. It can compress at over 500 MB/s per core and decompress at multiple GB/s, making it the standard choice for real-time and in-memory compression.
About LZ4 filesRPM Package
Archives & CompressedRPM (Red Hat Package Manager) is the package format used by Red Hat, Fedora, CentOS, SUSE, and related Linux distributions. It stores compiled software with metadata, dependency information, and installation scripts in a binary format.
About RPM filesStrengths Comparison
LZ4 Strengths
- Decompression speed — approaches memcpy throughput.
- Very fast compression — can keep up with SSD write speeds.
- Stable format — reference implementation unchanged for years.
- Widely deployed in databases, filesystems, and kernels.
- BSD-licensed library.
RPM Strengths
- Explicit dependency graphs like DEB.
- Cryptographic signing and verification.
- Mature tooling (rpm, dnf, yum, zypper).
- Every enterprise Linux distro runs on RPM.
- Self-describing metadata headers.
Limitations
LZ4 Limitations
- Compression ratio lags gzip by 20-30%.
- Not designed for long-term archival where ratio matters.
- Older than zstd, which beats LZ4 at comparable speed at slightly better ratio.
- Rare as a user-facing format — lives mostly inside databases and filesystems.
RPM Limitations
- Red Hat family only — incompatible with DEB.
- Cross-distro .rpms often fail due to library version mismatches.
- "RPM dependency hell" of the late 1990s was a real phenomenon before yum.
- Conversion to/from DEB is tricky (alien tool exists but fidelity varies).
Technical Specifications
| Specification | LZ4 | RPM |
|---|---|---|
| MIME type | application/x-lz4 | application/x-rpm |
| Extensions | .lz4 | — |
| Algorithm | LZ77 variant with fast byte-level parsing | — |
| License | BSD 2-Clause (library), GPL v2 (CLI) | — |
| Typical integrations | Linux kernel, ZFS, Kafka, RocksDB, Cassandra | — |
| Extension | — | .rpm |
| Container | — | Lead + signature + header + cpio archive |
| Compression | — | gzip, bzip2, xz, zstd |
| Managers | — | rpm, dnf, yum, zypper |
Typical File Sizes
LZ4
- Text file 40-60% of original
- Already-compressed data (JPEG, MP4) 99%+ (no gain)
- Database page (typical) 55-70% of original
RPM
- Small CLI tool 50 KB - 1 MB
- Desktop app (LibreOffice, Firefox) 100-250 MB
- Enterprise database server 500 MB - 5 GB
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Frequently Asked Questions
LZ4 (LZ4 Compressed) is an archive format used to bundle multiple files and folders into a single compressed file. The archive preserves the directory structure and typically reduces total size via compression. LZ4 sits in the archives & compressed family and has specific strengths around compression ratio, speed, or platform support.
RPM (RPM Package) is an archive format used to bundle multiple files and folders into a single compressed file. The archive preserves the directory structure and typically reduces total size via compression. RPM sits in the archives & compressed family and has specific strengths around compression ratio, speed, or platform support.
7-Zip, WinRAR, The Unarchiver (macOS), and the built-in archive utilities on Windows and macOS open most LZ4 files. For command-line extraction, 7z, unar, or the format-specific tool handles LZ4 cleanly. If your extractor does not recognise LZ4, convert to ZIP first — ZIP opens on every operating system without extra software.
7-Zip, WinRAR, The Unarchiver (macOS), and the built-in archive utilities on Windows and macOS open most RPM files. For command-line extraction, 7z, unar, or the format-specific tool handles RPM cleanly. If your extractor does not recognise RPM, convert to ZIP first — ZIP opens on every operating system without extra software.
Upload the LZ4 to KaijuConverter and pick ZIP, 7Z, TAR.GZ, or RAR as the target. Our pipeline extracts the original archive and re-compresses the contents into the target format. File permissions, timestamps, and directory structure are preserved where both formats support them.
Depends on the goal. ZIP is the universal baseline — every OS extracts it out of the box. Formats like 7Z or TAR.GZ compress better but require specific tools. LZ4 may win on compression ratio, password support, or OS integration for specific workflows; ZIP wins on raw compatibility.