LogFold: Compressing Logs with Structured Tokens and Hybrid Encoding
Abstract
Logs are essential for diagnosing failures and conducting retrospective studies, leading many software organizations to retain log messages for a long time. Nevertheless, the volume of generated log data grows rapidly as software systems grow, necessitating an effective compression method. Apart from general-purpose compressors (e.g., Gzip, Bzip2), many recent studies developed log-specific compression algorithms, but they offer suboptimal performance because of (1) overlooking redundancies within certain complex tokens, and (2) lacking a fine-grained encoding strategy for diverse token types. This work uncovers a new redundancy pattern in structured tokens and proposes a new type-aware encoding strategy to improve log compression. Building on this insight, we introduce LogFold, a novel log compression method consisting of four components: a token analyzer to classifies tokens as structured, unstructured, or static types; a processor that mines recurring patterns within structured tokens based on their delimiter skeletons; a hybrid encoder that tailors data representation according to token types; and a packer that compresses the output into an archive file. Extensive experiments on 16 public log datasets demonstrate that LogFold surpasses state-of-the-art baselines, achieving average compression ratio improvements by 11.11%, with a compression speed of 9.842 MB/s. Ablation studies further indicate the importance of each component. We also conduct sensitivity analyses to verify LogFold's robustness and stability across various internal settings.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2603.20618,
title = {LogFold: Compressing Logs with Structured Tokens and Hybrid Encoding},
author = {Shiwen Shan and Yintong Huo and Hongzhan Zhong and Zhining Wang and Yuxin Su and Zibin Zheng},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2603.20618},
year = {2026}
}
Comments
13 pages, 14 figures, accepted by ICSE '26 (The 48th IEEE/ACM International Conference on Software Engineering)