Version: 2019.4
Using AssetBundles Natively
Patching with AssetBundles

AssetBundle compression

AssetBundle compression formats

By default, Unity creates AssetBundles with LZMA compressionA method of storing data that reduces the amount of storage space it requires. See Texture Compression, Animation Compression, Audio Compression, Build Compression.
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, and caches them with LZ4 compression. This section describes both compression formats.

Unity’s AssetBundle build pipeline creates AssetBundles with LZMA compression. This compression format is a stream of data representing the entire AssetBundle, which means that if you need to read an Asset from these archives, you must decompress the entire stream. This is the preferred format for AssetBundles downloaded from a Content Delivery Network (CDN), because the file sizes are smaller than those with LZ4 compression.

LZ4 compression, on the other hand, is a chunk-based compression algorithm. If Unity needs to access an Asset from an LZ4 archive, it only needs to decompress and read the chunks that contain bytes of the requested Asset. This is the compression method that Unity uses in both of its AssetBundle caches. Use the BuildAssetBundleOptions.ChunkBasedCompression value when building AssetBundles to force LZ4(HC) compression.

Uncompressed AssetBundles that Unity builds when you use BuildAssetBundleOptions.UncompressedAssetBundle require no decompression, but occupy more disk space.

AssetBundle cache

To optimize the fetching, recompressing, and versioning of LZMA AssetBundles using WWW or UnityWebRequest (UWR), Unity maintains two caches:

  • The Memory Cache stores AssetBundles in UncompressedRuntime format in RAM.

  • The Disk Cache stores fetched AssetBundles on writable media in the compression format described later.

AssetBundles loaded into the Memory Cache consume a large amount of memory. Unless you specifically want to frequently and rapidly access the contents of an AssetBundle, the Memory Cache is likely not worth the Memory cost. Instead, you should use the Disk Cache.

If you provide a version parameter to the UWR API, Unity stores your AssetBundle data in the Disk Cache. If you do not provide a version parameter, Unity uses the Memory Cache. The version parameter can be either a version number or a hash. If Caching.compressionEnabled is set to true, Unity applies LZ4 compression when it writes AssetBundles to disk for all subsequent downloads. It does not compress existing uncompressed data in the cache. If Caching.compressionEnabled is false, Unity applies no compression when it writes AssetBundles to disk.

It takes longer to initially load cached LZMA AssetBundles, because Unity must recompress the archive to the destination format. Subsequent loads use the cached version.

AssetBundle.LoadFromFile or AssetBundle.LoadFromFileAsync always use the Memory Cache for LZMA AssetBundles, so you should use the UWR API. If it is not possible to use the UWR API, you can use AssetBundle.RecompressAssetBundleAsync to rewrite an LZMA AssetBundle on disk.

Note: WebGLA JavaScript API that renders 2D and 3D graphics in a web browser. The Unity WebGL build option allows Unity to publish content as JavaScript programs which use HTML5 technologies and the WebGL rendering API to run Unity content in a web browser. More info
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doesn’t support LZMA compression for AssetBundles. Use LZ4 compression with AssetBundles on WebGL platforms. For more information, see Building and running a WebGL project.

Internal testing shows that there is at least an order of magnitude difference in RAM usage between using the Disk Cache instead of the Memory Cache. You must weigh the trade-off between memory impact versus added disk space requirements and Asset instantiation time for your application.

Using AssetBundles Natively
Patching with AssetBundles
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