> On May 5, 2016, at 2:01 PM, Martin Wierschin <mar...@nisus.com> wrote:
> 
>> Those files are compressed by the filesystem. In HFS+/MacOS Extended that
>> means that the data fork is empty and the file contents are stored in the
>> resource fork or extended attributes structure.
>> 
>> http://wiki.sleuthkit.org/index.php?title=HFS#HFS.2B_File_Compression 
>> <http://wiki.sleuthkit.org/index.php?title=HFS#HFS.2B_File_Compression>
> 
> Huh, that's interesting and surprising, thanks for the link. Is this method 
> of stashing compressed data in the xattrs something that's currently commonly 
> used by OSX? Or is it just some weird infrequently used trick? I see this on 
> the linked page:
> 
>> Compression is most often used for files installed as part of Mac OS X; user 
>> files are typically not compressed (but certainly can be!)
> 
> Are a lot of system files compressed like this? Is there any way a user file 
> might be compressed in such a way through normal user actions?
> 
> ~Martin Wierschin

It’s normally only done for files preinstalled by the operating system.

Charles
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