I'd like to thank the PyTables community that have collaborated in the
exhaustive testing of Blosc. With an aggregate amount of more than
300 TB of different datasets compressed and decompressed
successfully, I can say that Blosc is pretty safe now and ready for
production purposes.
Other important contributions:
- Valentin Haenel did a terrific work implementing the support for the
Snappy compression, fixing typos and improving docs and the plotting
script.
- Thibault North, with ideas from Oscar Villellas, contributed a way
to call Blosc from different threads in a safe way. Christopher
Speller introduced contexts so that a global lock is not necessary
anymore.
- The CMake support was initially contributed by Thibault North, and
Antonio Valentino and Mark Wiebe made great enhancements to it.
- Christopher Speller also introduced the two new '_ctx' calls to
avoid the use of the blosc_init() and blosc_destroy().
- Jack Pappas contributed important portability enhancements,
specially runtime and cross-platform detection of SSE2/AVX2 as well
as high precision timers (HPET) for the benchmark program.
- @littlezhou implemented the AVX2 version of shuffle routines.
- Julian Taylor contributed a way to detect AVX2 in runtime and
calling the appropriate routines only if the undelying hardware
supports it.
- Kiyo Masui for relicensing his bitshuffle project for allowing the
inclusion of part of his code in Blosc.