The non-potential magnetic field parameters serve as vital indicators in solar active regions, profoundly intertwined with solar flares. In this study, extrapolation techniques are employed to reconstruct the three-dimensional magnetic field configuration from vector magnetic field on the photosphere of the active region NOAA 9077 with super strong X5.7 solar flare event (SOL2000-07-14T10:24), which observed by the Solar Magnetic Field Telescope (SMFT) at Huairou Solar Observing Station (HSOS). Then, various magnetic field parameters such as current density, shear angle, quasi-separatrix layers, twist, and field line helicity are calculated. With the aim to understand the relations between magnetic field properties and solar flares, the fine distributions of these non-potential magnetic field parameters are analysed, and their changes before and after solar flares are investigated with the greatest attention. Overall, helicity and free energy decrease after super flares, while free energy peaks ∼1.5 days before flare. The distributions of quasi-separatrix layers and twist have high degree of complexity before flare. Multi patterns of high current density regions probably suggest unstable magnetic structures prone to flaring, aligning with shear angle distributions. Relative field line helicity patterns differ from current density, but concentrate before flares and diverge afterward. Overall, current density patterns contrast relative field line helicity.