| /* GLIB - Library of useful routines for C programming |
| * |
| * gconvert.c: Convert between character sets using iconv |
| * Copyright Red Hat Inc., 2000 |
| * Authors: Havoc Pennington <hp@redhat.com>, Owen Taylor <otaylor@redhat.com> |
| * |
| * This library 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 library 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 library; if not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. |
| */ |
| |
| #include "config.h" |
| #include "glibconfig.h" |
| |
| #ifndef G_OS_WIN32 |
| #include <iconv.h> |
| #endif |
| #include <errno.h> |
| #include <stdio.h> |
| #include <string.h> |
| #include <stdlib.h> |
| |
| #ifdef G_OS_WIN32 |
| #include "win_iconv.c" |
| #endif |
| |
| #ifdef G_PLATFORM_WIN32 |
| #define STRICT |
| #include <windows.h> |
| #undef STRICT |
| #endif |
| |
| #include "gconvert.h" |
| |
| #include "gcharsetprivate.h" |
| #include "gslist.h" |
| #include "gstrfuncs.h" |
| #include "gtestutils.h" |
| #include "gthread.h" |
| #include "gunicode.h" |
| #include "gfileutils.h" |
| |
| #include "glibintl.h" |
| |
| #if defined(USE_LIBICONV_GNU) && !defined (_LIBICONV_H) |
| #error GNU libiconv in use but included iconv.h not from libiconv |
| #endif |
| #if !defined(USE_LIBICONV_GNU) && defined (_LIBICONV_H) \ |
| && !defined (__APPLE_CC__) && !defined (__LP_64__) |
| #error GNU libiconv not in use but included iconv.h is from libiconv |
| #endif |
| |
| |
| /** |
| * SECTION:conversions |
| * @title: Character Set Conversion |
| * @short_description: convert strings between different character sets |
| * |
| * The g_convert() family of function wraps the functionality of iconv(). |
| * In addition to pure character set conversions, GLib has functions to |
| * deal with the extra complications of encodings for file names. |
| * |
| * ## File Name Encodings |
| * |
| * Historically, UNIX has not had a defined encoding for file names: |
| * a file name is valid as long as it does not have path separators |
| * in it ("/"). However, displaying file names may require conversion: |
| * from the character set in which they were created, to the character |
| * set in which the application operates. Consider the Spanish file name |
| * "Presentación.sxi". If the application which created it uses |
| * ISO-8859-1 for its encoding, |
| * |[ |
| * Character: P r e s e n t a c i ó n . s x i |
| * Hex code: 50 72 65 73 65 6e 74 61 63 69 f3 6e 2e 73 78 69 |
| * ]| |
| * However, if the application use UTF-8, the actual file name on |
| * disk would look like this: |
| * |[ |
| * Character: P r e s e n t a c i ó n . s x i |
| * Hex code: 50 72 65 73 65 6e 74 61 63 69 c3 b3 6e 2e 73 78 69 |
| * ]| |
| * Glib uses UTF-8 for its strings, and GUI toolkits like GTK+ that use |
| * GLib do the same thing. If you get a file name from the file system, |
| * for example, from readdir() or from g_dir_read_name(), and you wish |
| * to display the file name to the user, you will need to convert it |
| * into UTF-8. The opposite case is when the user types the name of a |
| * file they wish to save: the toolkit will give you that string in |
| * UTF-8 encoding, and you will need to convert it to the character |
| * set used for file names before you can create the file with open() |
| * or fopen(). |
| * |
| * By default, GLib assumes that file names on disk are in UTF-8 |
| * encoding. This is a valid assumption for file systems which |
| * were created relatively recently: most applications use UTF-8 |
| * encoding for their strings, and that is also what they use for |
| * the file names they create. However, older file systems may |
| * still contain file names created in "older" encodings, such as |
| * ISO-8859-1. In this case, for compatibility reasons, you may want |
| * to instruct GLib to use that particular encoding for file names |
| * rather than UTF-8. You can do this by specifying the encoding for |
| * file names in the [`G_FILENAME_ENCODING`][G_FILENAME_ENCODING] |
| * environment variable. For example, if your installation uses |
| * ISO-8859-1 for file names, you can put this in your `~/.profile`: |
| * |[ |
| * export G_FILENAME_ENCODING=ISO-8859-1 |
| * ]| |
| * GLib provides the functions g_filename_to_utf8() and |
| * g_filename_from_utf8() to perform the necessary conversions. |
| * These functions convert file names from the encoding specified |
| * in `G_FILENAME_ENCODING` to UTF-8 and vice-versa. This |
| * [diagram][file-name-encodings-diagram] illustrates how |
| * these functions are used to convert between UTF-8 and the |
| * encoding for file names in the file system. |
| * |
| * ## Conversion between file name encodings # {#file-name-encodings-diagram) |
| * |
| * ![](file-name-encodings.png) |
| * |
| * ## Checklist for Application Writers |
| * |
| * This section is a practical summary of the detailed |
| * things to do to make sure your applications process file |
| * name encodings correctly. |
| * |
| * 1. If you get a file name from the file system from a function |
| * such as readdir() or gtk_file_chooser_get_filename(), you do |
| * not need to do any conversion to pass that file name to |
| * functions like open(), rename(), or fopen() -- those are "raw" |
| * file names which the file system understands. |
| * |
| * 2. If you need to display a file name, convert it to UTF-8 first |
| * by using g_filename_to_utf8(). If conversion fails, display a |
| * string like "Unknown file name". Do not convert this string back |
| * into the encoding used for file names if you wish to pass it to |
| * the file system; use the original file name instead. |
| * |
| * For example, the document window of a word processor could display |
| * "Unknown file name" in its title bar but still let the user save |
| * the file, as it would keep the raw file name internally. This |
| * can happen if the user has not set the `G_FILENAME_ENCODING` |
| * environment variable even though he has files whose names are |
| * not encoded in UTF-8. |
| * |
| * 3. If your user interface lets the user type a file name for saving |
| * or renaming, convert it to the encoding used for file names in |
| * the file system by using g_filename_from_utf8(). Pass the converted |
| * file name to functions like fopen(). If conversion fails, ask the |
| * user to enter a different file name. This can happen if the user |
| * types Japanese characters when `G_FILENAME_ENCODING` is set to |
| * `ISO-8859-1`, for example. |
| */ |
| |
| /* We try to terminate strings in unknown charsets with this many zero bytes |
| * to ensure that multibyte strings really are nul-terminated when we return |
| * them from g_convert() and friends. |
| */ |
| #define NUL_TERMINATOR_LENGTH 4 |
| |
| G_DEFINE_QUARK (g_convert_error, g_convert_error) |
| |
| static gboolean |
| try_conversion (const char *to_codeset, |
| const char *from_codeset, |
| iconv_t *cd) |
| { |
| *cd = iconv_open (to_codeset, from_codeset); |
| |
| if (*cd == (iconv_t)-1 && errno == EINVAL) |
| return FALSE; |
| else |
| return TRUE; |
| } |
| |
| static gboolean |
| try_to_aliases (const char **to_aliases, |
| const char *from_codeset, |
| iconv_t *cd) |
| { |
| if (to_aliases) |
| { |
| const char **p = to_aliases; |
| while (*p) |
| { |
| if (try_conversion (*p, from_codeset, cd)) |
| return TRUE; |
| |
| p++; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| return FALSE; |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * g_iconv_open: (skip) |
| * @to_codeset: destination codeset |
| * @from_codeset: source codeset |
| * |
| * Same as the standard UNIX routine iconv_open(), but |
| * may be implemented via libiconv on UNIX flavors that lack |
| * a native implementation. |
| * |
| * GLib provides g_convert() and g_locale_to_utf8() which are likely |
| * more convenient than the raw iconv wrappers. |
| * |
| * Returns: a "conversion descriptor", or (GIConv)-1 if |
| * opening the converter failed. |
| **/ |
| GIConv |
| g_iconv_open (const gchar *to_codeset, |
| const gchar *from_codeset) |
| { |
| iconv_t cd; |
| |
| if (!try_conversion (to_codeset, from_codeset, &cd)) |
| { |
| const char **to_aliases = _g_charset_get_aliases (to_codeset); |
| const char **from_aliases = _g_charset_get_aliases (from_codeset); |
| |
| if (from_aliases) |
| { |
| const char **p = from_aliases; |
| while (*p) |
| { |
| if (try_conversion (to_codeset, *p, &cd)) |
| goto out; |
| |
| if (try_to_aliases (to_aliases, *p, &cd)) |
| goto out; |
| |
| p++; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| if (try_to_aliases (to_aliases, from_codeset, &cd)) |
| goto out; |
| } |
| |
| out: |
| return (cd == (iconv_t)-1) ? (GIConv)-1 : (GIConv)cd; |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * g_iconv: (skip) |
| * @converter: conversion descriptor from g_iconv_open() |
| * @inbuf: bytes to convert |
| * @inbytes_left: inout parameter, bytes remaining to convert in @inbuf |
| * @outbuf: converted output bytes |
| * @outbytes_left: inout parameter, bytes available to fill in @outbuf |
| * |
| * Same as the standard UNIX routine iconv(), but |
| * may be implemented via libiconv on UNIX flavors that lack |
| * a native implementation. |
| * |
| * GLib provides g_convert() and g_locale_to_utf8() which are likely |
| * more convenient than the raw iconv wrappers. |
| * |
| * Note that the behaviour of iconv() for characters which are valid in the |
| * input character set, but which have no representation in the output character |
| * set, is implementation defined. This function may return success (with a |
| * positive number of non-reversible conversions as replacement characters were |
| * used), or it may return -1 and set an error such as %EILSEQ, in such a |
| * situation. |
| * |
| * Returns: count of non-reversible conversions, or -1 on error |
| **/ |
| gsize |
| g_iconv (GIConv converter, |
| gchar **inbuf, |
| gsize *inbytes_left, |
| gchar **outbuf, |
| gsize *outbytes_left) |
| { |
| iconv_t cd = (iconv_t)converter; |
| |
| return iconv (cd, inbuf, inbytes_left, outbuf, outbytes_left); |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * g_iconv_close: (skip) |
| * @converter: a conversion descriptor from g_iconv_open() |
| * |
| * Same as the standard UNIX routine iconv_close(), but |
| * may be implemented via libiconv on UNIX flavors that lack |
| * a native implementation. Should be called to clean up |
| * the conversion descriptor from g_iconv_open() when |
| * you are done converting things. |
| * |
| * GLib provides g_convert() and g_locale_to_utf8() which are likely |
| * more convenient than the raw iconv wrappers. |
| * |
| * Returns: -1 on error, 0 on success |
| **/ |
| gint |
| g_iconv_close (GIConv converter) |
| { |
| iconv_t cd = (iconv_t)converter; |
| |
| return iconv_close (cd); |
| } |
| |
| static GIConv |
| open_converter (const gchar *to_codeset, |
| const gchar *from_codeset, |
| GError **error) |
| { |
| GIConv cd; |
| |
| cd = g_iconv_open (to_codeset, from_codeset); |
| |
| if (cd == (GIConv) -1) |
| { |
| /* Something went wrong. */ |
| if (error) |
| { |
| if (errno == EINVAL) |
| g_set_error (error, G_CONVERT_ERROR, G_CONVERT_ERROR_NO_CONVERSION, |
| _("Conversion from character set “%s” to “%s” is not supported"), |
| from_codeset, to_codeset); |
| else |
| g_set_error (error, G_CONVERT_ERROR, G_CONVERT_ERROR_FAILED, |
| _("Could not open converter from “%s” to “%s”"), |
| from_codeset, to_codeset); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| return cd; |
| } |
| |
| static int |
| close_converter (GIConv cd) |
| { |
| if (cd == (GIConv) -1) |
| return 0; |
| |
| return g_iconv_close (cd); |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * g_convert_with_iconv: (skip) |
| * @str: (array length=len) (element-type guint8): |
| * the string to convert. |
| * @len: the length of the string in bytes, or -1 if the string is |
| * nul-terminated (Note that some encodings may allow nul |
| * bytes to occur inside strings. In that case, using -1 |
| * for the @len parameter is unsafe) |
| * @converter: conversion descriptor from g_iconv_open() |
| * @bytes_read: (out) (optional): location to store the number of bytes in |
| * the input string that were successfully converted, or %NULL. |
| * Even if the conversion was successful, this may be |
| * less than @len if there were partial characters |
| * at the end of the input. If the error |
| * #G_CONVERT_ERROR_ILLEGAL_SEQUENCE occurs, the value |
| * stored will be the byte offset after the last valid |
| * input sequence. |
| * @bytes_written: (out) (optional): the number of bytes stored in |
| * the output buffer (not including the terminating nul). |
| * @error: location to store the error occurring, or %NULL to ignore |
| * errors. Any of the errors in #GConvertError may occur. |
| * |
| * Converts a string from one character set to another. |
| * |
| * Note that you should use g_iconv() for streaming conversions. |
| * Despite the fact that @bytes_read can return information about partial |
| * characters, the g_convert_... functions are not generally suitable |
| * for streaming. If the underlying converter maintains internal state, |
| * then this won't be preserved across successive calls to g_convert(), |
| * g_convert_with_iconv() or g_convert_with_fallback(). (An example of |
| * this is the GNU C converter for CP1255 which does not emit a base |
| * character until it knows that the next character is not a mark that |
| * could combine with the base character.) |
| * |
| * Characters which are valid in the input character set, but which have no |
| * representation in the output character set will result in a |
| * %G_CONVERT_ERROR_ILLEGAL_SEQUENCE error. This is in contrast to the iconv() |
| * specification, which leaves this behaviour implementation defined. Note that |
| * this is the same error code as is returned for an invalid byte sequence in |
| * the input character set. To get defined behaviour for conversion of |
| * unrepresentable characters, use g_convert_with_fallback(). |
| * |
| * Returns: (array length=bytes_written) (element-type guint8) (transfer full): |
| * If the conversion was successful, a newly allocated buffer |
| * containing the converted string, which must be freed with |
| * g_free(). Otherwise %NULL and @error will be set. |
| **/ |
| gchar* |
| g_convert_with_iconv (const gchar *str, |
| gssize len, |
| GIConv converter, |
| gsize *bytes_read, |
| gsize *bytes_written, |
| GError **error) |
| { |
| gchar *dest; |
| gchar *outp; |
| const gchar *p; |
| gsize inbytes_remaining; |
| gsize outbytes_remaining; |
| gsize err; |
| gsize outbuf_size; |
| gboolean have_error = FALSE; |
| gboolean done = FALSE; |
| gboolean reset = FALSE; |
| |
| g_return_val_if_fail (converter != (GIConv) -1, NULL); |
| |
| if (len < 0) |
| len = strlen (str); |
| |
| p = str; |
| inbytes_remaining = len; |
| outbuf_size = len + NUL_TERMINATOR_LENGTH; |
| |
| outbytes_remaining = outbuf_size - NUL_TERMINATOR_LENGTH; |
| outp = dest = g_malloc (outbuf_size); |
| |
| while (!done && !have_error) |
| { |
| if (reset) |
| err = g_iconv (converter, NULL, &inbytes_remaining, &outp, &outbytes_remaining); |
| else |
| err = g_iconv (converter, (char **)&p, &inbytes_remaining, &outp, &outbytes_remaining); |
| |
| if (err == (gsize) -1) |
| { |
| switch (errno) |
| { |
| case EINVAL: |
| /* Incomplete text, do not report an error */ |
| done = TRUE; |
| break; |
| case E2BIG: |
| { |
| gsize used = outp - dest; |
| |
| outbuf_size *= 2; |
| dest = g_realloc (dest, outbuf_size); |
| |
| outp = dest + used; |
| outbytes_remaining = outbuf_size - used - NUL_TERMINATOR_LENGTH; |
| } |
| break; |
| case EILSEQ: |
| g_set_error_literal (error, G_CONVERT_ERROR, G_CONVERT_ERROR_ILLEGAL_SEQUENCE, |
| _("Invalid byte sequence in conversion input")); |
| have_error = TRUE; |
| break; |
| default: |
| { |
| int errsv = errno; |
| |
| g_set_error (error, G_CONVERT_ERROR, G_CONVERT_ERROR_FAILED, |
| _("Error during conversion: %s"), |
| g_strerror (errsv)); |
| } |
| have_error = TRUE; |
| break; |
| } |
| } |
| else if (err > 0) |
| { |
| /* @err gives the number of replacement characters used. */ |
| g_set_error_literal (error, G_CONVERT_ERROR, G_CONVERT_ERROR_ILLEGAL_SEQUENCE, |
| _("Unrepresentable character in conversion input")); |
| have_error = TRUE; |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| if (!reset) |
| { |
| /* call g_iconv with NULL inbuf to cleanup shift state */ |
| reset = TRUE; |
| inbytes_remaining = 0; |
| } |
| else |
| done = TRUE; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| memset (outp, 0, NUL_TERMINATOR_LENGTH); |
| |
| if (bytes_read) |
| *bytes_read = p - str; |
| else |
| { |
| if ((p - str) != len) |
| { |
| if (!have_error) |
| { |
| g_set_error_literal (error, G_CONVERT_ERROR, G_CONVERT_ERROR_PARTIAL_INPUT, |
| _("Partial character sequence at end of input")); |
| have_error = TRUE; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| if (bytes_written) |
| *bytes_written = outp - dest; /* Doesn't include '\0' */ |
| |
| if (have_error) |
| { |
| g_free (dest); |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| else |
| return dest; |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * g_convert: |
| * @str: (array length=len) (element-type guint8): |
| * the string to convert. |
| * @len: the length of the string in bytes, or -1 if the string is |
| * nul-terminated (Note that some encodings may allow nul |
| * bytes to occur inside strings. In that case, using -1 |
| * for the @len parameter is unsafe) |
| * @to_codeset: name of character set into which to convert @str |
| * @from_codeset: character set of @str. |
| * @bytes_read: (out) (optional): location to store the number of bytes in |
| * the input string that were successfully converted, or %NULL. |
| * Even if the conversion was successful, this may be |
| * less than @len if there were partial characters |
| * at the end of the input. If the error |
| * #G_CONVERT_ERROR_ILLEGAL_SEQUENCE occurs, the value |
| * stored will be the byte offset after the last valid |
| * input sequence. |
| * @bytes_written: (out) (optional): the number of bytes stored in |
| * the output buffer (not including the terminating nul). |
| * @error: location to store the error occurring, or %NULL to ignore |
| * errors. Any of the errors in #GConvertError may occur. |
| * |
| * Converts a string from one character set to another. |
| * |
| * Note that you should use g_iconv() for streaming conversions. |
| * Despite the fact that @bytes_read can return information about partial |
| * characters, the g_convert_... functions are not generally suitable |
| * for streaming. If the underlying converter maintains internal state, |
| * then this won't be preserved across successive calls to g_convert(), |
| * g_convert_with_iconv() or g_convert_with_fallback(). (An example of |
| * this is the GNU C converter for CP1255 which does not emit a base |
| * character until it knows that the next character is not a mark that |
| * could combine with the base character.) |
| * |
| * Using extensions such as "//TRANSLIT" may not work (or may not work |
| * well) on many platforms. Consider using g_str_to_ascii() instead. |
| * |
| * Returns: (array length=bytes_written) (element-type guint8) (transfer full): |
| * If the conversion was successful, a newly allocated buffer |
| * containing the converted string, which must be freed with g_free(). |
| * Otherwise %NULL and @error will be set. |
| **/ |
| gchar* |
| g_convert (const gchar *str, |
| gssize len, |
| const gchar *to_codeset, |
| const gchar *from_codeset, |
| gsize *bytes_read, |
| gsize *bytes_written, |
| GError **error) |
| { |
| gchar *res; |
| GIConv cd; |
| |
| g_return_val_if_fail (str != NULL, NULL); |
| g_return_val_if_fail (to_codeset != NULL, NULL); |
| g_return_val_if_fail (from_codeset != NULL, NULL); |
| |
| cd = open_converter (to_codeset, from_codeset, error); |
| |
| if (cd == (GIConv) -1) |
| { |
| if (bytes_read) |
| *bytes_read = 0; |
| |
| if (bytes_written) |
| *bytes_written = 0; |
| |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| |
| res = g_convert_with_iconv (str, len, cd, |
| bytes_read, bytes_written, |
| error); |
| |
| close_converter (cd); |
| |
| return res; |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * g_convert_with_fallback: |
| * @str: (array length=len) (element-type guint8): |
| * the string to convert. |
| * @len: the length of the string in bytes, or -1 if the string is |
| * nul-terminated (Note that some encodings may allow nul |
| * bytes to occur inside strings. In that case, using -1 |
| * for the @len parameter is unsafe) |
| * @to_codeset: name of character set into which to convert @str |
| * @from_codeset: character set of @str. |
| * @fallback: UTF-8 string to use in place of characters not |
| * present in the target encoding. (The string must be |
| * representable in the target encoding). |
| * If %NULL, characters not in the target encoding will |
| * be represented as Unicode escapes \uxxxx or \Uxxxxyyyy. |
| * @bytes_read: (out) (optional): location to store the number of bytes in |
| * the input string that were successfully converted, or %NULL. |
| * Even if the conversion was successful, this may be |
| * less than @len if there were partial characters |
| * at the end of the input. |
| * @bytes_written: (out) (optional): the number of bytes stored in |
| * the output buffer (not including the terminating nul). |
| * @error: location to store the error occurring, or %NULL to ignore |
| * errors. Any of the errors in #GConvertError may occur. |
| * |
| * Converts a string from one character set to another, possibly |
| * including fallback sequences for characters not representable |
| * in the output. Note that it is not guaranteed that the specification |
| * for the fallback sequences in @fallback will be honored. Some |
| * systems may do an approximate conversion from @from_codeset |
| * to @to_codeset in their iconv() functions, |
| * in which case GLib will simply return that approximate conversion. |
| * |
| * Note that you should use g_iconv() for streaming conversions. |
| * Despite the fact that @bytes_read can return information about partial |
| * characters, the g_convert_... functions are not generally suitable |
| * for streaming. If the underlying converter maintains internal state, |
| * then this won't be preserved across successive calls to g_convert(), |
| * g_convert_with_iconv() or g_convert_with_fallback(). (An example of |
| * this is the GNU C converter for CP1255 which does not emit a base |
| * character until it knows that the next character is not a mark that |
| * could combine with the base character.) |
| * |
| * Returns: (array length=bytes_written) (element-type guint8) (transfer full): |
| * If the conversion was successful, a newly allocated buffer |
| * containing the converted string, which must be freed with g_free(). |
| * Otherwise %NULL and @error will be set. |
| **/ |
| gchar* |
| g_convert_with_fallback (const gchar *str, |
| gssize len, |
| const gchar *to_codeset, |
| const gchar *from_codeset, |
| const gchar *fallback, |
| gsize *bytes_read, |
| gsize *bytes_written, |
| GError **error) |
| { |
| gchar *utf8; |
| gchar *dest; |
| gchar *outp; |
| const gchar *insert_str = NULL; |
| const gchar *p; |
| gsize inbytes_remaining; |
| const gchar *save_p = NULL; |
| gsize save_inbytes = 0; |
| gsize outbytes_remaining; |
| gsize err; |
| GIConv cd; |
| gsize outbuf_size; |
| gboolean have_error = FALSE; |
| gboolean done = FALSE; |
| |
| GError *local_error = NULL; |
| |
| g_return_val_if_fail (str != NULL, NULL); |
| g_return_val_if_fail (to_codeset != NULL, NULL); |
| g_return_val_if_fail (from_codeset != NULL, NULL); |
| |
| if (len < 0) |
| len = strlen (str); |
| |
| /* Try an exact conversion; we only proceed if this fails |
| * due to an illegal sequence in the input string. |
| */ |
| dest = g_convert (str, len, to_codeset, from_codeset, |
| bytes_read, bytes_written, &local_error); |
| if (!local_error) |
| return dest; |
| |
| if (!g_error_matches (local_error, G_CONVERT_ERROR, G_CONVERT_ERROR_ILLEGAL_SEQUENCE)) |
| { |
| g_propagate_error (error, local_error); |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| else |
| g_error_free (local_error); |
| |
| local_error = NULL; |
| |
| /* No go; to proceed, we need a converter from "UTF-8" to |
| * to_codeset, and the string as UTF-8. |
| */ |
| cd = open_converter (to_codeset, "UTF-8", error); |
| if (cd == (GIConv) -1) |
| { |
| if (bytes_read) |
| *bytes_read = 0; |
| |
| if (bytes_written) |
| *bytes_written = 0; |
| |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| |
| utf8 = g_convert (str, len, "UTF-8", from_codeset, |
| bytes_read, &inbytes_remaining, error); |
| if (!utf8) |
| { |
| close_converter (cd); |
| if (bytes_written) |
| *bytes_written = 0; |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| |
| /* Now the heart of the code. We loop through the UTF-8 string, and |
| * whenever we hit an offending character, we form fallback, convert |
| * the fallback to the target codeset, and then go back to |
| * converting the original string after finishing with the fallback. |
| * |
| * The variables save_p and save_inbytes store the input state |
| * for the original string while we are converting the fallback |
| */ |
| p = utf8; |
| |
| outbuf_size = len + NUL_TERMINATOR_LENGTH; |
| outbytes_remaining = outbuf_size - NUL_TERMINATOR_LENGTH; |
| outp = dest = g_malloc (outbuf_size); |
| |
| while (!done && !have_error) |
| { |
| gsize inbytes_tmp = inbytes_remaining; |
| err = g_iconv (cd, (char **)&p, &inbytes_tmp, &outp, &outbytes_remaining); |
| inbytes_remaining = inbytes_tmp; |
| |
| if (err == (gsize) -1) |
| { |
| switch (errno) |
| { |
| case EINVAL: |
| g_assert_not_reached(); |
| break; |
| case E2BIG: |
| { |
| gsize used = outp - dest; |
| |
| outbuf_size *= 2; |
| dest = g_realloc (dest, outbuf_size); |
| |
| outp = dest + used; |
| outbytes_remaining = outbuf_size - used - NUL_TERMINATOR_LENGTH; |
| |
| break; |
| } |
| case EILSEQ: |
| if (save_p) |
| { |
| /* Error converting fallback string - fatal |
| */ |
| g_set_error (error, G_CONVERT_ERROR, G_CONVERT_ERROR_ILLEGAL_SEQUENCE, |
| _("Cannot convert fallback “%s” to codeset “%s”"), |
| insert_str, to_codeset); |
| have_error = TRUE; |
| break; |
| } |
| else if (p) |
| { |
| if (!fallback) |
| { |
| gunichar ch = g_utf8_get_char (p); |
| insert_str = g_strdup_printf (ch < 0x10000 ? "\\u%04x" : "\\U%08x", |
| ch); |
| } |
| else |
| insert_str = fallback; |
| |
| save_p = g_utf8_next_char (p); |
| save_inbytes = inbytes_remaining - (save_p - p); |
| p = insert_str; |
| inbytes_remaining = strlen (p); |
| break; |
| } |
| /* fall thru if p is NULL */ |
| default: |
| { |
| int errsv = errno; |
| |
| g_set_error (error, G_CONVERT_ERROR, G_CONVERT_ERROR_FAILED, |
| _("Error during conversion: %s"), |
| g_strerror (errsv)); |
| } |
| |
| have_error = TRUE; |
| break; |
| } |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| if (save_p) |
| { |
| if (!fallback) |
| g_free ((gchar *)insert_str); |
| p = save_p; |
| inbytes_remaining = save_inbytes; |
| save_p = NULL; |
| } |
| else if (p) |
| { |
| /* call g_iconv with NULL inbuf to cleanup shift state */ |
| p = NULL; |
| inbytes_remaining = 0; |
| } |
| else |
| done = TRUE; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* Cleanup |
| */ |
| memset (outp, 0, NUL_TERMINATOR_LENGTH); |
| |
| close_converter (cd); |
| |
| if (bytes_written) |
| *bytes_written = outp - dest; /* Doesn't include '\0' */ |
| |
| g_free (utf8); |
| |
| if (have_error) |
| { |
| if (save_p && !fallback) |
| g_free ((gchar *)insert_str); |
| g_free (dest); |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| else |
| return dest; |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| * g_locale_to_utf8 |
| * |
| * |
| */ |
| |
| /* |
| * Validate @string as UTF-8. @len can be negative if @string is |
| * nul-terminated, or a non-negative value in bytes. If @string ends in an |
| * incomplete sequence, or contains any illegal sequences or nul codepoints, |
| * %NULL will be returned and the error set to |
| * %G_CONVERT_ERROR_ILLEGAL_SEQUENCE. |
| * On success, @bytes_read and @bytes_written, if provided, will be set to |
| * the number of bytes in @string up to @len or the terminating nul byte. |
| * On error, @bytes_read will be set to the byte offset after the last valid |
| * and non-nul UTF-8 sequence in @string, and @bytes_written will be set to 0. |
| */ |
| static gchar * |
| strdup_len (const gchar *string, |
| gssize len, |
| gsize *bytes_read, |
| gsize *bytes_written, |
| GError **error) |
| { |
| gsize real_len; |
| const gchar *end_valid; |
| |
| if (!g_utf8_validate (string, len, &end_valid)) |
| { |
| if (bytes_read) |
| *bytes_read = end_valid - string; |
| if (bytes_written) |
| *bytes_written = 0; |
| |
| g_set_error_literal (error, G_CONVERT_ERROR, G_CONVERT_ERROR_ILLEGAL_SEQUENCE, |
| _("Invalid byte sequence in conversion input")); |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| |
| real_len = end_valid - string; |
| |
| if (bytes_read) |
| *bytes_read = real_len; |
| if (bytes_written) |
| *bytes_written = real_len; |
| |
| return g_strndup (string, real_len); |
| } |
| |
| typedef enum |
| { |
| CONVERT_CHECK_NO_NULS_IN_INPUT = 1 << 0, |
| CONVERT_CHECK_NO_NULS_IN_OUTPUT = 1 << 1 |
| } ConvertCheckFlags; |
| |
| /* |
| * Convert from @string in the encoding identified by @from_codeset, |
| * returning a string in the encoding identifed by @to_codeset. |
| * @len can be negative if @string is nul-terminated, or a non-negative |
| * value in bytes. Flags defined in #ConvertCheckFlags can be set in @flags |
| * to check the input, the output, or both, for embedded nul bytes. |
| * On success, @bytes_read, if provided, will be set to the number of bytes |
| * in @string up to @len or the terminating nul byte, and @bytes_written, if |
| * provided, will be set to the number of output bytes written into the |
| * returned buffer, excluding the terminating nul sequence. |
| * On error, @bytes_read will be set to the byte offset after the last valid |
| * sequence in @string, and @bytes_written will be set to 0. |
| */ |
| static gchar * |
| convert_checked (const gchar *string, |
| gssize len, |
| const gchar *to_codeset, |
| const gchar *from_codeset, |
| ConvertCheckFlags flags, |
| gsize *bytes_read, |
| gsize *bytes_written, |
| GError **error) |
| { |
| gchar *out; |
| gsize outbytes; |
| |
| if ((flags & CONVERT_CHECK_NO_NULS_IN_INPUT) && len > 0) |
| { |
| const gchar *early_nul = memchr (string, '\0', len); |
| if (early_nul != NULL) |
| { |
| if (bytes_read) |
| *bytes_read = early_nul - string; |
| if (bytes_written) |
| *bytes_written = 0; |
| |
| g_set_error_literal (error, G_CONVERT_ERROR, G_CONVERT_ERROR_ILLEGAL_SEQUENCE, |
| _("Embedded NUL byte in conversion input")); |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| out = g_convert (string, len, to_codeset, from_codeset, |
| bytes_read, &outbytes, error); |
| if (out == NULL) |
| { |
| if (bytes_written) |
| *bytes_written = 0; |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| |
| if ((flags & CONVERT_CHECK_NO_NULS_IN_OUTPUT) |
| && memchr (out, '\0', outbytes) != NULL) |
| { |
| g_free (out); |
| if (bytes_written) |
| *bytes_written = 0; |
| g_set_error_literal (error, G_CONVERT_ERROR, G_CONVERT_ERROR_EMBEDDED_NUL, |
| _("Embedded NUL byte in conversion output")); |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| |
| if (bytes_written) |
| *bytes_written = outbytes; |
| return out; |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * g_locale_to_utf8: |
| * @opsysstring: (array length=len) (element-type guint8): a string in the |
| * encoding of the current locale. On Windows |
| * this means the system codepage. |
| * @len: the length of the string, or -1 if the string is |
| * nul-terminated (Note that some encodings may allow nul |
| * bytes to occur inside strings. In that case, using -1 |
| * for the @len parameter is unsafe) |
| * @bytes_read: (out) (optional): location to store the number of bytes in the |
| * input string that were successfully converted, or %NULL. |
| * Even if the conversion was successful, this may be |
| * less than @len if there were partial characters |
| * at the end of the input. If the error |
| * %G_CONVERT_ERROR_ILLEGAL_SEQUENCE occurs, the value |
| * stored will be the byte offset after the last valid |
| * input sequence. |
| * @bytes_written: (out) (optional): the number of bytes stored in the output |
| * buffer (not including the terminating nul). |
| * @error: location to store the error occurring, or %NULL to ignore |
| * errors. Any of the errors in #GConvertError may occur. |
| * |
| * Converts a string which is in the encoding used for strings by |
| * the C runtime (usually the same as that used by the operating |
| * system) in the [current locale][setlocale] into a UTF-8 string. |
| * |
| * If the source encoding is not UTF-8 and the conversion output contains a |
| * nul character, the error %G_CONVERT_ERROR_EMBEDDED_NUL is set and the |
| * function returns %NULL. |
| * If the source encoding is UTF-8, an embedded nul character is treated with |
| * the %G_CONVERT_ERROR_ILLEGAL_SEQUENCE error for backward compatibility with |
| * earlier versions of this library. Use g_convert() to produce output that |
| * may contain embedded nul characters. |
| * |
| * Returns: (type utf8): The converted string, or %NULL on an error. |
| **/ |
| gchar * |
| g_locale_to_utf8 (const gchar *opsysstring, |
| gssize len, |
| gsize *bytes_read, |
| gsize *bytes_written, |
| GError **error) |
| { |
| const char *charset; |
| |
| if (g_get_charset (&charset)) |
| return strdup_len (opsysstring, len, bytes_read, bytes_written, error); |
| else |
| return convert_checked (opsysstring, len, "UTF-8", charset, |
| CONVERT_CHECK_NO_NULS_IN_OUTPUT, |
| bytes_read, bytes_written, error); |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * g_locale_from_utf8: |
| * @utf8string: a UTF-8 encoded string |
| * @len: the length of the string, or -1 if the string is |
| * nul-terminated. |
| * @bytes_read: (out) (optional): location to store the number of bytes in the |
| * input string that were successfully converted, or %NULL. |
| * Even if the conversion was successful, this may be |
| * less than @len if there were partial characters |
| * at the end of the input. If the error |
| * %G_CONVERT_ERROR_ILLEGAL_SEQUENCE occurs, the value |
| * stored will be the byte offset after the last valid |
| * input sequence. |
| * @bytes_written: (out) (optional): the number of bytes stored in the output |
| * buffer (not including the terminating nul). |
| * @error: location to store the error occurring, or %NULL to ignore |
| * errors. Any of the errors in #GConvertError may occur. |
| * |
| * Converts a string from UTF-8 to the encoding used for strings by |
| * the C runtime (usually the same as that used by the operating |
| * system) in the [current locale][setlocale]. On Windows this means |
| * the system codepage. |
| * |
| * The input string shall not contain nul characters even if the @len |
| * argument is positive. A nul character found inside the string will result |
| * in error %G_CONVERT_ERROR_ILLEGAL_SEQUENCE. Use g_convert() to convert |
| * input that may contain embedded nul characters. |
| * |
| * Returns: (array length=bytes_written) (element-type guint8) (transfer full): |
| * A newly-allocated buffer containing the converted string, |
| * or %NULL on an error, and error will be set. |
| **/ |
| gchar * |
| g_locale_from_utf8 (const gchar *utf8string, |
| gssize len, |
| gsize *bytes_read, |
| gsize *bytes_written, |
| GError **error) |
| { |
| const gchar *charset; |
| |
| if (g_get_charset (&charset)) |
| return strdup_len (utf8string, len, bytes_read, bytes_written, error); |
| else |
| return convert_checked (utf8string, len, charset, "UTF-8", |
| CONVERT_CHECK_NO_NULS_IN_INPUT, |
| bytes_read, bytes_written, error); |
| } |
| |
| #ifndef G_PLATFORM_WIN32 |
| |
| typedef struct _GFilenameCharsetCache GFilenameCharsetCache; |
| |
| struct _GFilenameCharsetCache { |
| gboolean is_utf8; |
| gchar *charset; |
| gchar **filename_charsets; |
| }; |
| |
| static void |
| filename_charset_cache_free (gpointer data) |
| { |
| GFilenameCharsetCache *cache = data; |
| g_free (cache->charset); |
| g_strfreev (cache->filename_charsets); |
| g_free (cache); |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * g_get_filename_charsets: |
| * @filename_charsets: (out) (transfer none) (array zero-terminated=1): |
| * return location for the %NULL-terminated list of encoding names |
| * |
| * Determines the preferred character sets used for filenames. |
| * The first character set from the @charsets is the filename encoding, the |
| * subsequent character sets are used when trying to generate a displayable |
| * representation of a filename, see g_filename_display_name(). |
| * |
| * On Unix, the character sets are determined by consulting the |
| * environment variables `G_FILENAME_ENCODING` and `G_BROKEN_FILENAMES`. |
| * On Windows, the character set used in the GLib API is always UTF-8 |
| * and said environment variables have no effect. |
| * |
| * `G_FILENAME_ENCODING` may be set to a comma-separated list of |
| * character set names. The special token "\@locale" is taken |
| * to mean the character set for the [current locale][setlocale]. |
| * If `G_FILENAME_ENCODING` is not set, but `G_BROKEN_FILENAMES` is, |
| * the character set of the current locale is taken as the filename |
| * encoding. If neither environment variable is set, UTF-8 is taken |
| * as the filename encoding, but the character set of the current locale |
| * is also put in the list of encodings. |
| * |
| * The returned @charsets belong to GLib and must not be freed. |
| * |
| * Note that on Unix, regardless of the locale character set or |
| * `G_FILENAME_ENCODING` value, the actual file names present |
| * on a system might be in any random encoding or just gibberish. |
| * |
| * Returns: %TRUE if the filename encoding is UTF-8. |
| * |
| * Since: 2.6 |
| */ |
| gboolean |
| g_get_filename_charsets (const gchar ***filename_charsets) |
| { |
| static GPrivate cache_private = G_PRIVATE_INIT (filename_charset_cache_free); |
| GFilenameCharsetCache *cache = g_private_get (&cache_private); |
| const gchar *charset; |
| |
| if (!cache) |
| { |
| cache = g_new0 (GFilenameCharsetCache, 1); |
| g_private_set (&cache_private, cache); |
| } |
| |
| g_get_charset (&charset); |
| |
| if (!(cache->charset && strcmp (cache->charset, charset) == 0)) |
| { |
| const gchar *new_charset; |
| gchar *p; |
| gint i; |
| |
| g_free (cache->charset); |
| g_strfreev (cache->filename_charsets); |
| cache->charset = g_strdup (charset); |
| |
| p = getenv ("G_FILENAME_ENCODING"); |
| if (p != NULL && p[0] != '\0') |
| { |
| cache->filename_charsets = g_strsplit (p, ",", 0); |
| cache->is_utf8 = (strcmp (cache->filename_charsets[0], "UTF-8") == 0); |
| |
| for (i = 0; cache->filename_charsets[i]; i++) |
| { |
| if (strcmp ("@locale", cache->filename_charsets[i]) == 0) |
| { |
| g_get_charset (&new_charset); |
| g_free (cache->filename_charsets[i]); |
| cache->filename_charsets[i] = g_strdup (new_charset); |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| else if (getenv ("G_BROKEN_FILENAMES") != NULL) |
| { |
| cache->filename_charsets = g_new0 (gchar *, 2); |
| cache->is_utf8 = g_get_charset (&new_charset); |
| cache->filename_charsets[0] = g_strdup (new_charset); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| cache->filename_charsets = g_new0 (gchar *, 3); |
| cache->is_utf8 = TRUE; |
| cache->filename_charsets[0] = g_strdup ("UTF-8"); |
| if (!g_get_charset (&new_charset)) |
| cache->filename_charsets[1] = g_strdup (new_charset); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| if (filename_charsets) |
| *filename_charsets = (const gchar **)cache->filename_charsets; |
| |
| return cache->is_utf8; |
| } |
| |
| #else /* G_PLATFORM_WIN32 */ |
| |
| gboolean |
| g_get_filename_charsets (const gchar ***filename_charsets) |
| { |
| static const gchar *charsets[] = { |
| "UTF-8", |
| NULL |
| }; |
| |
| #ifdef G_OS_WIN32 |
| /* On Windows GLib pretends that the filename charset is UTF-8 */ |
| if (filename_charsets) |
| *filename_charsets = charsets; |
| |
| return TRUE; |
| #else |
| gboolean result; |
| |
| /* Cygwin works like before */ |
| result = g_get_charset (&(charsets[0])); |
| |
| if (filename_charsets) |
| *filename_charsets = charsets; |
| |
| return result; |
| #endif |
| } |
| |
| #endif /* G_PLATFORM_WIN32 */ |
| |
| static gboolean |
| get_filename_charset (const gchar **filename_charset) |
| { |
| const gchar **charsets; |
| gboolean is_utf8; |
| |
| is_utf8 = g_get_filename_charsets (&charsets); |
| |
| if (filename_charset) |
| *filename_charset = charsets[0]; |
| |
| return is_utf8; |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * g_filename_to_utf8: |
| * @opsysstring: (type filename): a string in the encoding for filenames |
| * @len: the length of the string, or -1 if the string is |
| * nul-terminated (Note that some encodings may allow nul |
| * bytes to occur inside strings. In that case, using -1 |
| * for the @len parameter is unsafe) |
| * @bytes_read: (out) (optional): location to store the number of bytes in the |
| * input string that were successfully converted, or %NULL. |
| * Even if the conversion was successful, this may be |
| * less than @len if there were partial characters |
| * at the end of the input. If the error |
| * %G_CONVERT_ERROR_ILLEGAL_SEQUENCE occurs, the value |
| * stored will be the byte offset after the last valid |
| * input sequence. |
| * @bytes_written: (out) (optional): the number of bytes stored in the output |
| * buffer (not including the terminating nul). |
| * @error: location to store the error occurring, or %NULL to ignore |
| * errors. Any of the errors in #GConvertError may occur. |
| * |
| * Converts a string which is in the encoding used by GLib for |
| * filenames into a UTF-8 string. Note that on Windows GLib uses UTF-8 |
| * for filenames; on other platforms, this function indirectly depends on |
| * the [current locale][setlocale]. |
| * |
| * The input string shall not contain nul characters even if the @len |
| * argument is positive. A nul character found inside the string will result |
| * in error %G_CONVERT_ERROR_ILLEGAL_SEQUENCE. |
| * If the source encoding is not UTF-8 and the conversion output contains a |
| * nul character, the error %G_CONVERT_ERROR_EMBEDDED_NUL is set and the |
| * function returns %NULL. Use g_convert() to produce output that |
| * may contain embedded nul characters. |
| * |
| * Returns: (type utf8): The converted string, or %NULL on an error. |
| **/ |
| gchar* |
| g_filename_to_utf8 (const gchar *opsysstring, |
| gssize len, |
| gsize *bytes_read, |
| gsize *bytes_written, |
| GError **error) |
| { |
| const gchar *charset; |
| |
| g_return_val_if_fail (opsysstring != NULL, NULL); |
| |
| if (get_filename_charset (&charset)) |
| return strdup_len (opsysstring, len, bytes_read, bytes_written, error); |
| else |
| return convert_checked (opsysstring, len, "UTF-8", charset, |
| CONVERT_CHECK_NO_NULS_IN_INPUT | |
| CONVERT_CHECK_NO_NULS_IN_OUTPUT, |
| bytes_read, bytes_written, error); |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * g_filename_from_utf8: |
| * @utf8string: (type utf8): a UTF-8 encoded string. |
| * @len: the length of the string, or -1 if the string is |
| * nul-terminated. |
| * @bytes_read: (out) (optional): location to store the number of bytes in |
| * the input string that were successfully converted, or %NULL. |
| * Even if the conversion was successful, this may be |
| * less than @len if there were partial characters |
| * at the end of the input. If the error |
| * %G_CONVERT_ERROR_ILLEGAL_SEQUENCE occurs, the value |
| * stored will be the byte offset after the last valid |
| * input sequence. |
| * @bytes_written: (out) (optional): the number of bytes stored in |
| * the output buffer (not including the terminating nul). |
| * @error: location to store the error occurring, or %NULL to ignore |
| * errors. Any of the errors in #GConvertError may occur. |
| * |
| * Converts a string from UTF-8 to the encoding GLib uses for |
| * filenames. Note that on Windows GLib uses UTF-8 for filenames; |
| * on other platforms, this function indirectly depends on the |
| * [current locale][setlocale]. |
| * |
| * The input string shall not contain nul characters even if the @len |
| * argument is positive. A nul character found inside the string will result |
| * in error %G_CONVERT_ERROR_ILLEGAL_SEQUENCE. If the filename encoding is |
| * not UTF-8 and the conversion output contains a nul character, the error |
| * %G_CONVERT_ERROR_EMBEDDED_NUL is set and the function returns %NULL. |
| * |
| * Returns: (type filename): |
| * The converted string, or %NULL on an error. |
| **/ |
| gchar* |
| g_filename_from_utf8 (const gchar *utf8string, |
| gssize len, |
| gsize *bytes_read, |
| gsize *bytes_written, |
| GError **error) |
| { |
| const gchar *charset; |
| |
| if (get_filename_charset (&charset)) |
| return strdup_len (utf8string, len, bytes_read, bytes_written, error); |
| else |
| return convert_checked (utf8string, len, charset, "UTF-8", |
| CONVERT_CHECK_NO_NULS_IN_INPUT | |
| CONVERT_CHECK_NO_NULS_IN_OUTPUT, |
| bytes_read, bytes_written, error); |
| } |
| |
| /* Test of haystack has the needle prefix, comparing case |
| * insensitive. haystack may be UTF-8, but needle must |
| * contain only ascii. */ |
| static gboolean |
| has_case_prefix (const gchar *haystack, const gchar *needle) |
| { |
| const gchar *h, *n; |
| |
| /* Eat one character at a time. */ |
| h = haystack; |
| n = needle; |
| |
| while (*n && *h && |
| g_ascii_tolower (*n) == g_ascii_tolower (*h)) |
| { |
| n++; |
| h++; |
| } |
| |
| return *n == '\0'; |
| } |
| |
| typedef enum { |
| UNSAFE_ALL = 0x1, /* Escape all unsafe characters */ |
| UNSAFE_ALLOW_PLUS = 0x2, /* Allows '+' */ |
| UNSAFE_PATH = 0x8, /* Allows '/', '&', '=', ':', '@', '+', '$' and ',' */ |
| UNSAFE_HOST = 0x10, /* Allows '/' and ':' and '@' */ |
| UNSAFE_SLASHES = 0x20 /* Allows all characters except for '/' and '%' */ |
| } UnsafeCharacterSet; |
| |
| static const guchar acceptable[96] = { |
| /* A table of the ASCII chars from space (32) to DEL (127) */ |
| /* ! " # $ % & ' ( ) * + , - . / */ |
| 0x00,0x3F,0x20,0x20,0x28,0x00,0x2C,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x2A,0x28,0x3F,0x3F,0x1C, |
| /* 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 : ; < = > ? */ |
| 0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x38,0x20,0x20,0x2C,0x20,0x20, |
| /* @ A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O */ |
| 0x38,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F, |
| /* P Q R S T U V W X Y Z [ \ ] ^ _ */ |
| 0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x20,0x20,0x20,0x20,0x3F, |
| /* ` a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o */ |
| 0x20,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F, |
| /* p q r s t u v w x y z { | } ~ DEL */ |
| 0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x3F,0x20,0x20,0x20,0x3F,0x20 |
| }; |
| |
| static const gchar hex[16] = "0123456789ABCDEF"; |
| |
| /* Note: This escape function works on file: URIs, but if you want to |
| * escape something else, please read RFC-2396 */ |
| static gchar * |
| g_escape_uri_string (const gchar *string, |
| UnsafeCharacterSet mask) |
| { |
| #define ACCEPTABLE(a) ((a)>=32 && (a)<128 && (acceptable[(a)-32] & use_mask)) |
| |
| const gchar *p; |
| gchar *q; |
| gchar *result; |
| int c; |
| gint unacceptable; |
| UnsafeCharacterSet use_mask; |
| |
| g_return_val_if_fail (mask == UNSAFE_ALL |
| || mask == UNSAFE_ALLOW_PLUS |
| || mask == UNSAFE_PATH |
| || mask == UNSAFE_HOST |
| || mask == UNSAFE_SLASHES, NULL); |
| |
| unacceptable = 0; |
| use_mask = mask; |
| for (p = string; *p != '\0'; p++) |
| { |
| c = (guchar) *p; |
| if (!ACCEPTABLE (c)) |
| unacceptable++; |
| } |
| |
| result = g_malloc (p - string + unacceptable * 2 + 1); |
| |
| use_mask = mask; |
| for (q = result, p = string; *p != '\0'; p++) |
| { |
| c = (guchar) *p; |
| |
| if (!ACCEPTABLE (c)) |
| { |
| *q++ = '%'; /* means hex coming */ |
| *q++ = hex[c >> 4]; |
| *q++ = hex[c & 15]; |
| } |
| else |
| *q++ = *p; |
| } |
| |
| *q = '\0'; |
| |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| |
| static gchar * |
| g_escape_file_uri (const gchar *hostname, |
| const gchar *pathname) |
| { |
| char *escaped_hostname = NULL; |
| char *escaped_path; |
| char *res; |
| |
| #ifdef G_OS_WIN32 |
| char *p, *backslash; |
| |
| /* Turn backslashes into forward slashes. That's what Netscape |
| * does, and they are actually more or less equivalent in Windows. |
| */ |
| |
| pathname = g_strdup (pathname); |
| p = (char *) pathname; |
| |
| while ((backslash = strchr (p, '\\')) != NULL) |
| { |
| *backslash = '/'; |
| p = backslash + 1; |
| } |
| #endif |
| |
| if (hostname && *hostname != '\0') |
| { |
| escaped_hostname = g_escape_uri_string (hostname, UNSAFE_HOST); |
| } |
| |
| escaped_path = g_escape_uri_string (pathname, UNSAFE_PATH); |
| |
| res = g_strconcat ("file://", |
| (escaped_hostname) ? escaped_hostname : "", |
| (*escaped_path != '/') ? "/" : "", |
| escaped_path, |
| NULL); |
| |
| #ifdef G_OS_WIN32 |
| g_free ((char *) pathname); |
| #endif |
| |
| g_free (escaped_hostname); |
| g_free (escaped_path); |
| |
| return res; |
| } |
| |
| static int |
| unescape_character (const char *scanner) |
| { |
| int first_digit; |
| int second_digit; |
| |
| first_digit = g_ascii_xdigit_value (scanner[0]); |
| if (first_digit < 0) |
| return -1; |
| |
| second_digit = g_ascii_xdigit_value (scanner[1]); |
| if (second_digit < 0) |
| return -1; |
| |
| return (first_digit << 4) | second_digit; |
| } |
| |
| static gchar * |
| g_unescape_uri_string (const char *escaped, |
| int len, |
| const char *illegal_escaped_characters, |
| gboolean ascii_must_not_be_escaped) |
| { |
| const gchar *in, *in_end; |
| gchar *out, *result; |
| int c; |
| |
| if (escaped == NULL) |
| return NULL; |
| |
| if (len < 0) |
| len = strlen (escaped); |
| |
| result = g_malloc (len + 1); |
| |
| out = result; |
| for (in = escaped, in_end = escaped + len; in < in_end; in++) |
| { |
| c = *in; |
| |
| if (c == '%') |
| { |
| /* catch partial escape sequences past the end of the substring */ |
| if (in + 3 > in_end) |
| break; |
| |
| c = unescape_character (in + 1); |
| |
| /* catch bad escape sequences and NUL characters */ |
| if (c <= 0) |
| break; |
| |
| /* catch escaped ASCII */ |
| if (ascii_must_not_be_escaped && c <= 0x7F) |
| break; |
| |
| /* catch other illegal escaped characters */ |
| if (strchr (illegal_escaped_characters, c) != NULL) |
| break; |
| |
| in += 2; |
| } |
| |
| *out++ = c; |
| } |
| |
| g_assert (out - result <= len); |
| *out = '\0'; |
| |
| if (in != in_end) |
| { |
| g_free (result); |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| static gboolean |
| is_asciialphanum (gunichar c) |
| { |
| return c <= 0x7F && g_ascii_isalnum (c); |
| } |
| |
| static gboolean |
| is_asciialpha (gunichar c) |
| { |
| return c <= 0x7F && g_ascii_isalpha (c); |
| } |
| |
| /* allows an empty string */ |
| static gboolean |
| hostname_validate (const char *hostname) |
| { |
| const char *p; |
| gunichar c, first_char, last_char; |
| |
| p = hostname; |
| if (*p == '\0') |
| return TRUE; |
| do |
| { |
| /* read in a label */ |
| c = g_utf8_get_char (p); |
| p = g_utf8_next_char (p); |
| if (!is_asciialphanum (c)) |
| return FALSE; |
| first_char = c; |
| do |
| { |
| last_char = c; |
| c = g_utf8_get_char (p); |
| p = g_utf8_next_char (p); |
| } |
| while (is_asciialphanum (c) || c == '-'); |
| if (last_char == '-') |
| return FALSE; |
| |
| /* if that was the last label, check that it was a toplabel */ |
| if (c == '\0' || (c == '.' && *p == '\0')) |
| return is_asciialpha (first_char); |
| } |
| while (c == '.'); |
| return FALSE; |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * g_filename_from_uri: |
| * @uri: a uri describing a filename (escaped, encoded in ASCII). |
| * @hostname: (out) (optional) (nullable): Location to store hostname for the URI. |
| * If there is no hostname in the URI, %NULL will be |
| * stored in this location. |
| * @error: location to store the error occurring, or %NULL to ignore |
| * errors. Any of the errors in #GConvertError may occur. |
| * |
| * Converts an escaped ASCII-encoded URI to a local filename in the |
| * encoding used for filenames. |
| * |
| * Returns: (type filename): a newly-allocated string holding |
| * the resulting filename, or %NULL on an error. |
| **/ |
| gchar * |
| g_filename_from_uri (const gchar *uri, |
| gchar **hostname, |
| GError **error) |
| { |
| const char *path_part; |
| const char *host_part; |
| char *unescaped_hostname; |
| char *result; |
| char *filename; |
| int offs; |
| #ifdef G_OS_WIN32 |
| char *p, *slash; |
| #endif |
| |
| if (hostname) |
| *hostname = NULL; |
| |
| if (!has_case_prefix (uri, "file:/")) |
| { |
| g_set_error (error, G_CONVERT_ERROR, G_CONVERT_ERROR_BAD_URI, |
| _("The URI “%s” is not an absolute URI using the “file” scheme"), |
| uri); |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| |
| path_part = uri + strlen ("file:"); |
| |
| if (strchr (path_part, '#') != NULL) |
| { |
| g_set_error (error, G_CONVERT_ERROR, G_CONVERT_ERROR_BAD_URI, |
| _("The local file URI “%s” may not include a “#”"), |
| uri); |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| |
| if (has_case_prefix (path_part, "///")) |
| path_part += 2; |
| else if (has_case_prefix (path_part, "//")) |
| { |
| path_part += 2; |
| host_part = path_part; |
| |
| path_part = strchr (path_part, '/'); |
| |
| if (path_part == NULL) |
| { |
| g_set_error (error, G_CONVERT_ERROR, G_CONVERT_ERROR_BAD_URI, |
| _("The URI “%s” is invalid"), |
| uri); |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| |
| unescaped_hostname = g_unescape_uri_string (host_part, path_part - host_part, "", TRUE); |
| |
| if (unescaped_hostname == NULL || |
| !hostname_validate (unescaped_hostname)) |
| { |
| g_free (unescaped_hostname); |
| g_set_error (error, G_CONVERT_ERROR, G_CONVERT_ERROR_BAD_URI, |
| _("The hostname of the URI “%s” is invalid"), |
| uri); |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| |
| if (hostname) |
| *hostname = unescaped_hostname; |
| else |
| g_free (unescaped_hostname); |
| } |
| |
| filename = g_unescape_uri_string (path_part, -1, "/", FALSE); |
| |
| if (filename == NULL) |
| { |
| g_set_error (error, G_CONVERT_ERROR, G_CONVERT_ERROR_BAD_URI, |
| _("The URI “%s” contains invalidly escaped characters"), |
| uri); |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| |
| offs = 0; |
| #ifdef G_OS_WIN32 |
| /* Drop localhost */ |
| if (hostname && *hostname != NULL && |
| g_ascii_strcasecmp (*hostname, "localhost") == 0) |
| { |
| g_free (*hostname); |
| *hostname = NULL; |
| } |
| |
| /* Turn slashes into backslashes, because that's the canonical spelling */ |
| p = filename; |
| while ((slash = strchr (p, '/')) != NULL) |
| { |
| *slash = '\\'; |
| p = slash + 1; |
| } |
| |
| /* Windows URIs with a drive letter can be like "file://host/c:/foo" |
| * or "file://host/c|/foo" (some Netscape versions). In those cases, start |
| * the filename from the drive letter. |
| */ |
| if (g_ascii_isalpha (filename[1])) |
| { |
| if (filename[2] == ':') |
| offs = 1; |
| else if (filename[2] == '|') |
| { |
| filename[2] = ':'; |
| offs = 1; |
| } |
| } |
| #endif |
| |
| result = g_strdup (filename + offs); |
| g_free (filename); |
| |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * g_filename_to_uri: |
| * @filename: (type filename): an absolute filename specified in the GLib file |
| * name encoding, which is the on-disk file name bytes on Unix, and UTF-8 |
| * on Windows |
| * @hostname: (nullable): A UTF-8 encoded hostname, or %NULL for none. |
| * @error: location to store the error occurring, or %NULL to ignore |
| * errors. Any of the errors in #GConvertError may occur. |
| * |
| * Converts an absolute filename to an escaped ASCII-encoded URI, with the path |
| * component following Section 3.3. of RFC 2396. |
| * |
| * Returns: a newly-allocated string holding the resulting |
| * URI, or %NULL on an error. |
| **/ |
| gchar * |
| g_filename_to_uri (const gchar *filename, |
| const gchar *hostname, |
| GError **error) |
| { |
| char *escaped_uri; |
| |
| g_return_val_if_fail (filename != NULL, NULL); |
| |
| if (!g_path_is_absolute (filename)) |
| { |
| g_set_error (error, G_CONVERT_ERROR, G_CONVERT_ERROR_NOT_ABSOLUTE_PATH, |
| _("The pathname “%s” is not an absolute path"), |
| filename); |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| |
| if (hostname && |
| !(g_utf8_validate (hostname, -1, NULL) |
| && hostname_validate (hostname))) |
| { |
| g_set_error_literal (error, G_CONVERT_ERROR, G_CONVERT_ERROR_ILLEGAL_SEQUENCE, |
| _("Invalid hostname")); |
| return NULL; |
| } |
| |
| #ifdef G_OS_WIN32 |
| /* Don't use localhost unnecessarily */ |
| if (hostname && g_ascii_strcasecmp (hostname, "localhost") == 0) |
| hostname = NULL; |
| #endif |
| |
| escaped_uri = g_escape_file_uri (hostname, filename); |
| |
| return escaped_uri; |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * g_uri_list_extract_uris: |
| * @uri_list: an URI list |
| * |
| * Splits an URI list conforming to the text/uri-list |
| * mime type defined in RFC 2483 into individual URIs, |
| * discarding any comments. The URIs are not validated. |
| * |
| * Returns: (transfer full): a newly allocated %NULL-terminated list |
| * of strings holding the individual URIs. The array should be freed |
| * with g_strfreev(). |
| * |
| * Since: 2.6 |
| */ |
| gchar ** |
| g_uri_list_extract_uris (const gchar *uri_list) |
| { |
| GSList *uris, *u; |
| const gchar *p, *q; |
| gchar **result; |
| gint n_uris = 0; |
| |
| uris = NULL; |
| |
| p = uri_list; |
| |
| /* We don't actually try to validate the URI according to RFC |
| * 2396, or even check for allowed characters - we just ignore |
| * comments and trim whitespace off the ends. We also |
| * allow LF delimination as well as the specified CRLF. |
| * |
| * We do allow comments like specified in RFC 2483. |
| */ |
| while (p) |
| { |
| if (*p != '#') |
| { |
| while (g_ascii_isspace (*p)) |
| p++; |
| |
| q = p; |
| while (*q && (*q != '\n') && (*q != '\r')) |
| q++; |
| |
| if (q > p) |
| { |
| q--; |
| while (q > p && g_ascii_isspace (*q)) |
| q--; |
| |
| if (q > p) |
| { |
| uris = g_slist_prepend (uris, g_strndup (p, q - p + 1)); |
| n_uris++; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| p = strchr (p, '\n'); |
| if (p) |
| p++; |
| } |
| |
| result = g_new (gchar *, n_uris + 1); |
| |
| result[n_uris--] = NULL; |
| for (u = uris; u; u = u->next) |
| result[n_uris--] = u->data; |
| |
| g_slist_free (uris); |
| |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * g_filename_display_basename: |
| * @filename: (type filename): an absolute pathname in the |
| * GLib file name encoding |
| * |
| * Returns the display basename for the particular filename, guaranteed |
| * to be valid UTF-8. The display name might not be identical to the filename, |
| * for instance there might be problems converting it to UTF-8, and some files |
| * can be translated in the display. |
| * |
| * If GLib cannot make sense of the encoding of @filename, as a last resort it |
| * replaces unknown characters with U+FFFD, the Unicode replacement character. |
| * You can search the result for the UTF-8 encoding of this character (which is |
| * "\357\277\275" in octal notation) to find out if @filename was in an invalid |
| * encoding. |
| * |
| * You must pass the whole absolute pathname to this functions so that |
| * translation of well known locations can be done. |
| * |
| * This function is preferred over g_filename_display_name() if you know the |
| * whole path, as it allows translation. |
| * |
| * Returns: a newly allocated string containing |
| * a rendition of the basename of the filename in valid UTF-8 |
| * |
| * Since: 2.6 |
| **/ |
| gchar * |
| g_filename_display_basename (const gchar *filename) |
| { |
| char *basename; |
| char *display_name; |
| |
| g_return_val_if_fail (filename != NULL, NULL); |
| |
| basename = g_path_get_basename (filename); |
| display_name = g_filename_display_name (basename); |
| g_free (basename); |
| return display_name; |
| } |
| |
| /** |
| * g_filename_display_name: |
| * @filename: (type filename): a pathname hopefully in the |
| * GLib file name encoding |
| * |
| * Converts a filename into a valid UTF-8 string. The conversion is |
| * not necessarily reversible, so you should keep the original around |
| * and use the return value of this function only for display purposes. |
| * Unlike g_filename_to_utf8(), the result is guaranteed to be non-%NULL |
| * even if the filename actually isn't in the GLib file name encoding. |
| * |
| * If GLib cannot make sense of the encoding of @filename, as a last resort it |
| * replaces unknown characters with U+FFFD, the Unicode replacement character. |
| * You can search the result for the UTF-8 encoding of this character (which is |
| * "\357\277\275" in octal notation) to find out if @filename was in an invalid |
| * encoding. |
| * |
| * If you know the whole pathname of the file you should use |
| * g_filename_display_basename(), since that allows location-based |
| * translation of filenames. |
| * |
| * Returns: a newly allocated string containing |
| * a rendition of the filename in valid UTF-8 |
| * |
| * Since: 2.6 |
| **/ |
| gchar * |
| g_filename_display_name (const gchar *filename) |
| { |
| gint i; |
| const gchar **charsets; |
| gchar *display_name = NULL; |
| gboolean is_utf8; |
| |
| is_utf8 = g_get_filename_charsets (&charsets); |
| |
| if (is_utf8) |
| { |
| if (g_utf8_validate (filename, -1, NULL)) |
| display_name = g_strdup (filename); |
| } |
| |
| if (!display_name) |
| { |
| /* Try to convert from the filename charsets to UTF-8. |
| * Skip the first charset if it is UTF-8. |
| */ |
| for (i = is_utf8 ? 1 : 0; charsets[i]; i++) |
| { |
| display_name = g_convert (filename, -1, "UTF-8", charsets[i], |
| NULL, NULL, NULL); |
| |
| if (display_name) |
| break; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* if all conversions failed, we replace invalid UTF-8 |
| * by a question mark |
| */ |
| if (!display_name) |
| display_name = g_utf8_make_valid (filename, -1); |
| |
| return display_name; |
| } |
| |
| #ifdef G_OS_WIN32 |
| |
| /* Binary compatibility versions. Not for newly compiled code. */ |
| |
| _GLIB_EXTERN gchar *g_filename_to_utf8_utf8 (const gchar *opsysstring, |
| gssize len, |
| gsize *bytes_read, |
| gsize *bytes_written, |
| GError **error) G_GNUC_MALLOC; |
| _GLIB_EXTERN gchar *g_filename_from_utf8_utf8 (const gchar *utf8string, |
| gssize len, |
| gsize *bytes_read, |
| gsize *bytes_written, |
| GError **error) G_GNUC_MALLOC; |
| _GLIB_EXTERN gchar *g_filename_from_uri_utf8 (const gchar *uri, |
| gchar **hostname, |
| GError **error) G_GNUC_MALLOC; |
| _GLIB_EXTERN gchar *g_filename_to_uri_utf8 (const gchar *filename, |
| const gchar *hostname, |
| GError **error) G_GNUC_MALLOC; |
| |
| gchar * |
| g_filename_to_utf8_utf8 (const gchar *opsysstring, |
| gssize len, |
| gsize *bytes_read, |
| gsize *bytes_written, |
| GError **error) |
| { |
| return g_filename_to_utf8 (opsysstring, len, bytes_read, bytes_written, error); |
| } |
| |
| gchar * |
| g_filename_from_utf8_utf8 (const gchar *utf8string, |
| gssize len, |
| gsize *bytes_read, |
| gsize *bytes_written, |
| GError **error) |
| { |
| return g_filename_from_utf8 (utf8string, len, bytes_read, bytes_written, error); |
| } |
| |
| gchar * |
| g_filename_from_uri_utf8 (const gchar *uri, |
| gchar **hostname, |
| GError **error) |
| { |
| return g_filename_from_uri (uri, hostname, error); |
| } |
| |
| gchar * |
| g_filename_to_uri_utf8 (const gchar *filename, |
| const gchar *hostname, |
| GError **error) |
| { |
| return g_filename_to_uri (filename, hostname, error); |
| } |
| |
| #endif |