Instead, if compression is requested, we will always attempt to compress. Starting in Build 22449, we will no longer use this decision algorithm by default. This meant that very large files with compressible data – for instance, a multi-gigabyte virtual machine disk – were likely to compress but a relatively small file – even a very compressible one – would not compress. If at least 100 MiB compressed, SMB compression attempted to compress the rest of the file. If fewer than 100 MiB were compressible, SMB compression stopped trying to compress the rest of the file. Previously, the SMB compression decision algorithm would attempt to compress the first 524,288,000 bytes (500MiB) of a file during transfer and track that at least 104,857,600 bytes (100MiB) compressed within that 500-MB range. Based on testing and analysis, we have changed the default behavior of SMB compression.
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