I have a large zip file (let's say 10 GB), to which I want to add a single small file (let's say 50 KB). I'm using the following code:
using System.IO.Compression;
using (var targetZip = ZipFile.Open(largeZipFilePath), ZipArchiveMode.Update)
{
targetZip.CreateEntryFromFile(smallFilePath, "foobar");
}
While this works (eventually), it takes a very long time and consumes a ludicrous amount of memory. It seems to extract and recompress the whole archive.
How can I improve this in .Net 4.7? Solution without external dependencies is preferred, but not required if impossible.
use visual studio nuget package manager and install that
Install-Package DotNetZip -Version 1.11.0
using (ZipFile zip = new ZipFile())
{
zip.AddFile("ReadMe.txt"); // no password for this one
zip.Password= "123456!";
zip.AddFile("7440-N49th.png");
zip.Password= "!Secret1";
zip.AddFile("2005_Annual_Report.pdf");
zip.Save("Backup.zip");
}
https://www.nuget.org/packages/DotNetZip/
Since you are in above .NET 4.5, you can use the ZipArchive (System.IO.Compression) class to achieve this. Here is the MSDN documentation: (MSDN).
Here is their example, it just writes text, but you could read in a .csv file and write it out to your new file. To just copy the file in, you would use CreateFileFromEntry, which is an extension method for ZipArchive.
using (FileStream zipToOpen = new FileStream(@"c:\users\exampleuser\release.zip", FileMode.Open))
{
using (ZipArchive archive = new ZipArchive(zipToOpen, ZipArchiveMode.Update))
{
ZipArchiveEntry readmeEntry = archive.CreateEntry("Readme.txt");
using (StreamWriter writer = new StreamWriter(readmeEntry.Open()))
{
writer.WriteLine("Information about this package.");
writer.WriteLine("========================");
}
}
}
Check this:- https://stackoverflow.com/a/22339337/9912441
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/standard/io/how-to-compress-and-extract-files
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