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-rw-r--r--intl/localcharset.c558
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 558 deletions
diff --git a/intl/localcharset.c b/intl/localcharset.c
deleted file mode 100644
index 670b8e6..0000000
--- a/intl/localcharset.c
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,558 +0,0 @@
-/* Determine a canonical name for the current locale's character encoding.
-
- Copyright (C) 2000-2006, 2008-2012 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
-
- This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
- it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by
- the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of the License, or
- (at your option) any later version.
-
- This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
- but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
- MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
- GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.
-
- You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License
- along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
-
-/* Written by Bruno Haible <bruno@clisp.org>. */
-
-#include <config.h>
-
-/* Specification. */
-#include "localcharset.h"
-
-#include <fcntl.h>
-#include <stddef.h>
-#include <stdio.h>
-#include <string.h>
-#include <stdlib.h>
-
-#if defined __APPLE__ && defined __MACH__ && HAVE_LANGINFO_CODESET
-# define DARWIN7 /* Darwin 7 or newer, i.e. Mac OS X 10.3 or newer */
-#endif
-
-#if defined _WIN32 || defined __WIN32__
-# define WINDOWS_NATIVE
-#endif
-
-#if defined __EMX__
-/* Assume EMX program runs on OS/2, even if compiled under DOS. */
-# ifndef OS2
-# define OS2
-# endif
-#endif
-
-#if !defined WINDOWS_NATIVE
-# include <unistd.h>
-# if HAVE_LANGINFO_CODESET
-# include <langinfo.h>
-# else
-# if 0 /* see comment below */
-# include <locale.h>
-# endif
-# endif
-# ifdef __CYGWIN__
-# define WIN32_LEAN_AND_MEAN
-# include <windows.h>
-# endif
-#elif defined WINDOWS_NATIVE
-# define WIN32_LEAN_AND_MEAN
-# include <windows.h>
-#endif
-#if defined OS2
-# define INCL_DOS
-# include <os2.h>
-#endif
-
-/* For MB_CUR_MAX_L */
-#if defined DARWIN7
-# include <xlocale.h>
-#endif
-
-#if ENABLE_RELOCATABLE
-# include "relocatable.h"
-#else
-# define relocate(pathname) (pathname)
-#endif
-
-/* Get LIBDIR. */
-#ifndef LIBDIR
-# include "configmake.h"
-#endif
-
-/* Define O_NOFOLLOW to 0 on platforms where it does not exist. */
-#ifndef O_NOFOLLOW
-# define O_NOFOLLOW 0
-#endif
-
-#if defined _WIN32 || defined __WIN32__ || defined __CYGWIN__ || defined __EMX__ || defined __DJGPP__
- /* Native Windows, Cygwin, OS/2, DOS */
-# define ISSLASH(C) ((C) == '/' || (C) == '\\')
-#endif
-
-#ifndef DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR
-# define DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR '/'
-#endif
-
-#ifndef ISSLASH
-# define ISSLASH(C) ((C) == DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR)
-#endif
-
-#if HAVE_DECL_GETC_UNLOCKED
-# undef getc
-# define getc getc_unlocked
-#endif
-
-/* The following static variable is declared 'volatile' to avoid a
- possible multithread problem in the function get_charset_aliases. If we
- are running in a threaded environment, and if two threads initialize
- 'charset_aliases' simultaneously, both will produce the same value,
- and everything will be ok if the two assignments to 'charset_aliases'
- are atomic. But I don't know what will happen if the two assignments mix. */
-#if __STDC__ != 1
-# define volatile /* empty */
-#endif
-/* Pointer to the contents of the charset.alias file, if it has already been
- read, else NULL. Its format is:
- ALIAS_1 '\0' CANONICAL_1 '\0' ... ALIAS_n '\0' CANONICAL_n '\0' '\0' */
-static const char * volatile charset_aliases;
-
-/* Return a pointer to the contents of the charset.alias file. */
-static const char *
-get_charset_aliases (void)
-{
- const char *cp;
-
- cp = charset_aliases;
- if (cp == NULL)
- {
-#if !(defined DARWIN7 || defined VMS || defined WINDOWS_NATIVE || defined __CYGWIN__)
- const char *dir;
- const char *base = "charset.alias";
- char *file_name;
-
- /* Make it possible to override the charset.alias location. This is
- necessary for running the testsuite before "make install". */
- dir = getenv ("CHARSETALIASDIR");
- if (dir == NULL || dir[0] == '\0')
- dir = relocate (LIBDIR);
-
- /* Concatenate dir and base into freshly allocated file_name. */
- {
- size_t dir_len = strlen (dir);
- size_t base_len = strlen (base);
- int add_slash = (dir_len > 0 && !ISSLASH (dir[dir_len - 1]));
- file_name = (char *) malloc (dir_len + add_slash + base_len + 1);
- if (file_name != NULL)
- {
- memcpy (file_name, dir, dir_len);
- if (add_slash)
- file_name[dir_len] = DIRECTORY_SEPARATOR;
- memcpy (file_name + dir_len + add_slash, base, base_len + 1);
- }
- }
-
- if (file_name == NULL)
- /* Out of memory. Treat the file as empty. */
- cp = "";
- else
- {
- int fd;
-
- /* Open the file. Reject symbolic links on platforms that support
- O_NOFOLLOW. This is a security feature. Without it, an attacker
- could retrieve parts of the contents (namely, the tail of the
- first line that starts with "* ") of an arbitrary file by placing
- a symbolic link to that file under the name "charset.alias" in
- some writable directory and defining the environment variable
- CHARSETALIASDIR to point to that directory. */
- fd = open (file_name,
- O_RDONLY | (HAVE_WORKING_O_NOFOLLOW ? O_NOFOLLOW : 0));
- if (fd < 0)
- /* File not found. Treat it as empty. */
- cp = "";
- else
- {
- FILE *fp;
-
- fp = fdopen (fd, "r");
- if (fp == NULL)
- {
- /* Out of memory. Treat the file as empty. */
- close (fd);
- cp = "";
- }
- else
- {
- /* Parse the file's contents. */
- char *res_ptr = NULL;
- size_t res_size = 0;
-
- for (;;)
- {
- int c;
- char buf1[50+1];
- char buf2[50+1];
- size_t l1, l2;
- char *old_res_ptr;
-
- c = getc (fp);
- if (c == EOF)
- break;
- if (c == '\n' || c == ' ' || c == '\t')
- continue;
- if (c == '#')
- {
- /* Skip comment, to end of line. */
- do
- c = getc (fp);
- while (!(c == EOF || c == '\n'));
- if (c == EOF)
- break;
- continue;
- }
- ungetc (c, fp);
- if (fscanf (fp, "%50s %50s", buf1, buf2) < 2)
- break;
- l1 = strlen (buf1);
- l2 = strlen (buf2);
- old_res_ptr = res_ptr;
- if (res_size == 0)
- {
- res_size = l1 + 1 + l2 + 1;
- res_ptr = (char *) malloc (res_size + 1);
- }
- else
- {
- res_size += l1 + 1 + l2 + 1;
- res_ptr = (char *) realloc (res_ptr, res_size + 1);
- }
- if (res_ptr == NULL)
- {
- /* Out of memory. */
- res_size = 0;
- free (old_res_ptr);
- break;
- }
- strcpy (res_ptr + res_size - (l2 + 1) - (l1 + 1), buf1);
- strcpy (res_ptr + res_size - (l2 + 1), buf2);
- }
- fclose (fp);
- if (res_size == 0)
- cp = "";
- else
- {
- *(res_ptr + res_size) = '\0';
- cp = res_ptr;
- }
- }
- }
-
- free (file_name);
- }
-
-#else
-
-# if defined DARWIN7
- /* To avoid the trouble of installing a file that is shared by many
- GNU packages -- many packaging systems have problems with this --,
- simply inline the aliases here. */
- cp = "ISO8859-1" "\0" "ISO-8859-1" "\0"
- "ISO8859-2" "\0" "ISO-8859-2" "\0"
- "ISO8859-4" "\0" "ISO-8859-4" "\0"
- "ISO8859-5" "\0" "ISO-8859-5" "\0"
- "ISO8859-7" "\0" "ISO-8859-7" "\0"
- "ISO8859-9" "\0" "ISO-8859-9" "\0"
- "ISO8859-13" "\0" "ISO-8859-13" "\0"
- "ISO8859-15" "\0" "ISO-8859-15" "\0"
- "KOI8-R" "\0" "KOI8-R" "\0"
- "KOI8-U" "\0" "KOI8-U" "\0"
- "CP866" "\0" "CP866" "\0"
- "CP949" "\0" "CP949" "\0"
- "CP1131" "\0" "CP1131" "\0"
- "CP1251" "\0" "CP1251" "\0"
- "eucCN" "\0" "GB2312" "\0"
- "GB2312" "\0" "GB2312" "\0"
- "eucJP" "\0" "EUC-JP" "\0"
- "eucKR" "\0" "EUC-KR" "\0"
- "Big5" "\0" "BIG5" "\0"
- "Big5HKSCS" "\0" "BIG5-HKSCS" "\0"
- "GBK" "\0" "GBK" "\0"
- "GB18030" "\0" "GB18030" "\0"
- "SJIS" "\0" "SHIFT_JIS" "\0"
- "ARMSCII-8" "\0" "ARMSCII-8" "\0"
- "PT154" "\0" "PT154" "\0"
- /*"ISCII-DEV" "\0" "?" "\0"*/
- "*" "\0" "UTF-8" "\0";
-# endif
-
-# if defined VMS
- /* To avoid the troubles of an extra file charset.alias_vms in the
- sources of many GNU packages, simply inline the aliases here. */
- /* The list of encodings is taken from the OpenVMS 7.3-1 documentation
- "Compaq C Run-Time Library Reference Manual for OpenVMS systems"
- section 10.7 "Handling Different Character Sets". */
- cp = "ISO8859-1" "\0" "ISO-8859-1" "\0"
- "ISO8859-2" "\0" "ISO-8859-2" "\0"
- "ISO8859-5" "\0" "ISO-8859-5" "\0"
- "ISO8859-7" "\0" "ISO-8859-7" "\0"
- "ISO8859-8" "\0" "ISO-8859-8" "\0"
- "ISO8859-9" "\0" "ISO-8859-9" "\0"
- /* Japanese */
- "eucJP" "\0" "EUC-JP" "\0"
- "SJIS" "\0" "SHIFT_JIS" "\0"
- "DECKANJI" "\0" "DEC-KANJI" "\0"
- "SDECKANJI" "\0" "EUC-JP" "\0"
- /* Chinese */
- "eucTW" "\0" "EUC-TW" "\0"
- "DECHANYU" "\0" "DEC-HANYU" "\0"
- "DECHANZI" "\0" "GB2312" "\0"
- /* Korean */
- "DECKOREAN" "\0" "EUC-KR" "\0";
-# endif
-
-# if defined WINDOWS_NATIVE || defined __CYGWIN__
- /* To avoid the troubles of installing a separate file in the same
- directory as the DLL and of retrieving the DLL's directory at
- runtime, simply inline the aliases here. */
-
- cp = "CP936" "\0" "GBK" "\0"
- "CP1361" "\0" "JOHAB" "\0"
- "CP20127" "\0" "ASCII" "\0"
- "CP20866" "\0" "KOI8-R" "\0"
- "CP20936" "\0" "GB2312" "\0"
- "CP21866" "\0" "KOI8-RU" "\0"
- "CP28591" "\0" "ISO-8859-1" "\0"
- "CP28592" "\0" "ISO-8859-2" "\0"
- "CP28593" "\0" "ISO-8859-3" "\0"
- "CP28594" "\0" "ISO-8859-4" "\0"
- "CP28595" "\0" "ISO-8859-5" "\0"
- "CP28596" "\0" "ISO-8859-6" "\0"
- "CP28597" "\0" "ISO-8859-7" "\0"
- "CP28598" "\0" "ISO-8859-8" "\0"
- "CP28599" "\0" "ISO-8859-9" "\0"
- "CP28605" "\0" "ISO-8859-15" "\0"
- "CP38598" "\0" "ISO-8859-8" "\0"
- "CP51932" "\0" "EUC-JP" "\0"
- "CP51936" "\0" "GB2312" "\0"
- "CP51949" "\0" "EUC-KR" "\0"
- "CP51950" "\0" "EUC-TW" "\0"
- "CP54936" "\0" "GB18030" "\0"
- "CP65001" "\0" "UTF-8" "\0";
-# endif
-#endif
-
- charset_aliases = cp;
- }
-
- return cp;
-}
-
-/* Determine the current locale's character encoding, and canonicalize it
- into one of the canonical names listed in config.charset.
- The result must not be freed; it is statically allocated.
- If the canonical name cannot be determined, the result is a non-canonical
- name. */
-
-#ifdef STATIC
-STATIC
-#endif
-const char *
-locale_charset (void)
-{
- const char *codeset;
- const char *aliases;
-
-#if !(defined WINDOWS_NATIVE || defined OS2)
-
-# if HAVE_LANGINFO_CODESET
-
- /* Most systems support nl_langinfo (CODESET) nowadays. */
- codeset = nl_langinfo (CODESET);
-
-# ifdef __CYGWIN__
- /* Cygwin < 1.7 does not have locales. nl_langinfo (CODESET) always
- returns "US-ASCII". Return the suffix of the locale name from the
- environment variables (if present) or the codepage as a number. */
- if (codeset != NULL && strcmp (codeset, "US-ASCII") == 0)
- {
- const char *locale;
- static char buf[2 + 10 + 1];
-
- locale = getenv ("LC_ALL");
- if (locale == NULL || locale[0] == '\0')
- {
- locale = getenv ("LC_CTYPE");
- if (locale == NULL || locale[0] == '\0')
- locale = getenv ("LANG");
- }
- if (locale != NULL && locale[0] != '\0')
- {
- /* If the locale name contains an encoding after the dot, return
- it. */
- const char *dot = strchr (locale, '.');
-
- if (dot != NULL)
- {
- const char *modifier;
-
- dot++;
- /* Look for the possible @... trailer and remove it, if any. */
- modifier = strchr (dot, '@');
- if (modifier == NULL)
- return dot;
- if (modifier - dot < sizeof (buf))
- {
- memcpy (buf, dot, modifier - dot);
- buf [modifier - dot] = '\0';
- return buf;
- }
- }
- }
-
- /* The Windows API has a function returning the locale's codepage as a
- number: GetACP(). This encoding is used by Cygwin, unless the user
- has set the environment variable CYGWIN=codepage:oem (which very few
- people do).
- Output directed to console windows needs to be converted (to
- GetOEMCP() if the console is using a raster font, or to
- GetConsoleOutputCP() if it is using a TrueType font). Cygwin does
- this conversion transparently (see winsup/cygwin/fhandler_console.cc),
- converting to GetConsoleOutputCP(). This leads to correct results,
- except when SetConsoleOutputCP has been called and a raster font is
- in use. */
- sprintf (buf, "CP%u", GetACP ());
- codeset = buf;
- }
-# endif
-
-# else
-
- /* On old systems which lack it, use setlocale or getenv. */
- const char *locale = NULL;
-
- /* But most old systems don't have a complete set of locales. Some
- (like SunOS 4 or DJGPP) have only the C locale. Therefore we don't
- use setlocale here; it would return "C" when it doesn't support the
- locale name the user has set. */
-# if 0
- locale = setlocale (LC_CTYPE, NULL);
-# endif
- if (locale == NULL || locale[0] == '\0')
- {
- locale = getenv ("LC_ALL");
- if (locale == NULL || locale[0] == '\0')
- {
- locale = getenv ("LC_CTYPE");
- if (locale == NULL || locale[0] == '\0')
- locale = getenv ("LANG");
- }
- }
-
- /* On some old systems, one used to set locale = "iso8859_1". On others,
- you set it to "language_COUNTRY.charset". In any case, we resolve it
- through the charset.alias file. */
- codeset = locale;
-
-# endif
-
-#elif defined WINDOWS_NATIVE
-
- static char buf[2 + 10 + 1];
-
- /* The Windows API has a function returning the locale's codepage as a
- number: GetACP().
- When the output goes to a console window, it needs to be provided in
- GetOEMCP() encoding if the console is using a raster font, or in
- GetConsoleOutputCP() encoding if it is using a TrueType font.
- But in GUI programs and for output sent to files and pipes, GetACP()
- encoding is the best bet. */
- sprintf (buf, "CP%u", GetACP ());
- codeset = buf;
-
-#elif defined OS2
-
- const char *locale;
- static char buf[2 + 10 + 1];
- ULONG cp[3];
- ULONG cplen;
-
- /* Allow user to override the codeset, as set in the operating system,
- with standard language environment variables. */
- locale = getenv ("LC_ALL");
- if (locale == NULL || locale[0] == '\0')
- {
- locale = getenv ("LC_CTYPE");
- if (locale == NULL || locale[0] == '\0')
- locale = getenv ("LANG");
- }
- if (locale != NULL && locale[0] != '\0')
- {
- /* If the locale name contains an encoding after the dot, return it. */
- const char *dot = strchr (locale, '.');
-
- if (dot != NULL)
- {
- const char *modifier;
-
- dot++;
- /* Look for the possible @... trailer and remove it, if any. */
- modifier = strchr (dot, '@');
- if (modifier == NULL)
- return dot;
- if (modifier - dot < sizeof (buf))
- {
- memcpy (buf, dot, modifier - dot);
- buf [modifier - dot] = '\0';
- return buf;
- }
- }
-
- /* Resolve through the charset.alias file. */
- codeset = locale;
- }
- else
- {
- /* OS/2 has a function returning the locale's codepage as a number. */
- if (DosQueryCp (sizeof (cp), cp, &cplen))
- codeset = "";
- else
- {
- sprintf (buf, "CP%u", cp[0]);
- codeset = buf;
- }
- }
-
-#endif
-
- if (codeset == NULL)
- /* The canonical name cannot be determined. */
- codeset = "";
-
- /* Resolve alias. */
- for (aliases = get_charset_aliases ();
- *aliases != '\0';
- aliases += strlen (aliases) + 1, aliases += strlen (aliases) + 1)
- if (strcmp (codeset, aliases) == 0
- || (aliases[0] == '*' && aliases[1] == '\0'))
- {
- codeset = aliases + strlen (aliases) + 1;
- break;
- }
-
- /* Don't return an empty string. GNU libc and GNU libiconv interpret
- the empty string as denoting "the locale's character encoding",
- thus GNU libiconv would call this function a second time. */
- if (codeset[0] == '\0')
- codeset = "ASCII";
-
-#ifdef DARWIN7
- /* Mac OS X sets MB_CUR_MAX to 1 when LC_ALL=C, and "UTF-8"
- (the default codeset) does not work when MB_CUR_MAX is 1. */
- if (strcmp (codeset, "UTF-8") == 0 && MB_CUR_MAX_L (uselocale (NULL)) <= 1)
- codeset = "ASCII";
-#endif
-
- return codeset;
-}