--- /dev/null
+# Zstandard Seekable Format
+
+The seekable format splits compressed data into a series of independent "frames",
+each compressed individually,
+so that decompression of a section in the middle of an archive
+only requires zstd to decompress at most a frame's worth of extra data,
+instead of the entire archive.
+
+The frames are appended, so that the decompression of the entire payload
+still regenerates the original content, using any compliant zstd decoder.
+
+On top of that, the seekable format generates a jump table,
+which makes it possible to jump directly to the position of the relevant frame
+when requesting only a segment of the data.
+The jump table is simply ignored by zstd decoders unaware of the seekable format.
+
+The format is delivered with an API to create seekable archives
+and to retrieve arbitrary segments inside the archive.
+
+### Maximum Frame Size parameter
+
+When creating a seekable archive, the main parameter is the maximum frame size.
+
+At compression time, user can manually select the boundaries between segments,
+but they don't have to: long segments will be automatically split
+when larger than selected maximum frame size.
+
+Small frame sizes reduce decompression cost when requesting small segments,
+because the decoder will nonetheless have to decompress an entire frame
+to recover just a single byte from it.
+
+A good rule of thumb is to select a maximum frame size roughly equivalent
+to the access pattern when it's known.
+For example, if the application tends to request 4KB blocks,
+then it's a good idea to set a maximum frame size in the vicinity of 4 KB.
+
+But small frame sizes also reduce compression ratio,
+and increase the cost for the jump table,
+so there is a balance to find.
+
+In general, try to avoid really tiny frame sizes (<1 KB),
+which would have a large negative impact on compression ratio.
*
* Use ZSTD_seekable_initCStream() to initialize a ZSTD_seekable_CStream object
* for a new compression operation.
-* `maxFrameSize` indicates the size at which to automatically start a new
-* seekable frame. `maxFrameSize == 0` implies the default maximum size.
-* `checksumFlag` indicates whether or not the seek table should include frame
-* checksums on the uncompressed data for verification.
+* - `maxFrameSize` indicates the size at which to automatically start a new
+* seekable frame.
+* `maxFrameSize == 0` implies the default maximum size.
+* Smaller frame sizes allow faster decompression of small segments,
+* since retrieving a single byte requires decompression of
+* the full frame where the byte belongs.
+* In general, size the frames to roughly correspond to
+* the access granularity (when it's known).
+* But small sizes also reduce compression ratio.
+* Avoid really tiny frame sizes (< 1 KB),
+* that would hurt compression ratio considerably.
+* - `checksumFlag` indicates whether or not the seek table should include frame
+* checksums on the uncompressed data for verification.
* @return : a size hint for input to provide for compression, or an error code
* checkable with ZSTD_isError()
*