freebsd-nq/usr.bin/localedef/wide.c
Enji Cooper ead8d64aed Mark errf _Noreturn, and mark errf and warn __printflike
The _Noreturn attribute was added to placate Coverity and other static
analysis tools. The __printflike attribute was added to catch issues
with the calls related to printf(3) abuse.

- Modify the code to facilitate the __printflike attribute addition.
- Convert errf calls in to_mb(..) and to_mb_string(..) to warn(..) so
  the calls will return instead of exiting, as the code suggests it
  should.

Differential Revision:	D10704
MFC after:	1 month
Reviewed by:	pfg
Sponsored by:	Dell EMC Isilon
2017-05-14 18:47:09 +00:00

667 lines
15 KiB
C

/*-
* Copyright 2011 Nexenta Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
* Copyright 2012 Garrett D'Amore <garrett@damore.org> All rights reserved.
* Copyright 2015 John Marino <draco@marino.st>
*
* This source code is derived from the illumos localedef command, and
* provided under BSD-style license terms by Nexenta Systems, Inc.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
* are met:
*
* 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
* notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
* documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS"
* AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
* IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
* ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE
* LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR
* CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF
* SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS
* INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN
* CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE)
* ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
* POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
*/
/*
* The functions in this file convert from the standard multibyte forms
* to the wide character forms used internally by libc. Unfortunately,
* this approach means that we need a method for each and every encoding.
*/
#include <sys/cdefs.h>
__FBSDID("$FreeBSD$");
#include <ctype.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <wchar.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <sys/types.h>
#include "localedef.h"
static int towide_none(wchar_t *, const char *, unsigned);
static int towide_utf8(wchar_t *, const char *, unsigned);
static int towide_big5(wchar_t *, const char *, unsigned);
static int towide_gbk(wchar_t *, const char *, unsigned);
static int towide_gb2312(wchar_t *, const char *, unsigned);
static int towide_gb18030(wchar_t *, const char *, unsigned);
static int towide_mskanji(wchar_t *, const char *, unsigned);
static int towide_euccn(wchar_t *, const char *, unsigned);
static int towide_eucjp(wchar_t *, const char *, unsigned);
static int towide_euckr(wchar_t *, const char *, unsigned);
static int towide_euctw(wchar_t *, const char *, unsigned);
static int tomb_none(char *, wchar_t);
static int tomb_utf8(char *, wchar_t);
static int tomb_mbs(char *, wchar_t);
static int (*_towide)(wchar_t *, const char *, unsigned) = towide_none;
static int (*_tomb)(char *, wchar_t) = tomb_none;
static char _encoding_buffer[20] = {'N','O','N','E'};
static const char *_encoding = _encoding_buffer;
static int _nbits = 7;
/*
* Table of supported encodings. We only bother to list the multibyte
* encodings here, because single byte locales are handed by "NONE".
*/
static struct {
const char *name;
/* the name that the underlying libc implemenation uses */
const char *cname;
/* the maximum number of bits required for priorities */
int nbits;
int (*towide)(wchar_t *, const char *, unsigned);
int (*tomb)(char *, wchar_t);
} mb_encodings[] = {
/*
* UTF8 values max out at 0x1fffff (although in theory there could
* be later extensions, but it won't happen.) This means we only need
* 21 bits to be able to encode the entire range of priorities.
*/
{ "UTF-8", "UTF-8", 21, towide_utf8, tomb_utf8 },
{ "UTF8", "UTF-8", 21, towide_utf8, tomb_utf8 },
{ "utf8", "UTF-8", 21, towide_utf8, tomb_utf8 },
{ "utf-8", "UTF-8", 21, towide_utf8, tomb_utf8 },
{ "EUC-CN", "EUC-CN", 16, towide_euccn, tomb_mbs },
{ "eucCN", "EUC-CN", 16, towide_euccn, tomb_mbs },
/*
* Because the 3-byte form of EUC-JP use the same leading byte,
* only 17 bits required to provide unique priorities. (The low
* bit of that first byte is set.) By setting this value low,
* we can get by with only 3 bytes in the strxfrm expansion.
*/
{ "EUC-JP", "EUC-JP", 17, towide_eucjp, tomb_mbs },
{ "eucJP", "EUC-JP", 17, towide_eucjp, tomb_mbs },
{ "EUC-KR", "EUC-KR", 16, towide_euckr, tomb_mbs },
{ "eucKR", "EUC-KR", 16, towide_euckr, tomb_mbs },
/*
* EUC-TW uses 2 bytes most of the time, but 4 bytes if the
* high order byte is 0x8E. However, with 4 byte encodings,
* the third byte will be A0-B0. So we only need to consider
* the lower order 24 bits for collation.
*/
{ "EUC-TW", "EUC-TW", 24, towide_euctw, tomb_mbs },
{ "eucTW", "EUC-TW", 24, towide_euctw, tomb_mbs },
{ "MS_Kanji", "MSKanji", 16, towide_mskanji, tomb_mbs },
{ "MSKanji", "MSKanji", 16, towide_mskanji, tomb_mbs },
{ "PCK", "MSKanji", 16, towide_mskanji, tomb_mbs },
{ "SJIS", "MSKanji", 16, towide_mskanji, tomb_mbs },
{ "Shift_JIS", "MSKanji", 16, towide_mskanji, tomb_mbs },
{ "BIG5", "BIG5", 16, towide_big5, tomb_mbs },
{ "big5", "BIG5", 16, towide_big5, tomb_mbs },
{ "Big5", "BIG5", 16, towide_big5, tomb_mbs },
{ "GBK", "GBK", 16, towide_gbk, tomb_mbs },
/*
* GB18030 can get away with just 31 bits. This is because the
* high order bit is always set for 4 byte values, and the
* at least one of the other bits in that 4 byte value will
* be non-zero.
*/
{ "GB18030", "GB18030", 31, towide_gb18030, tomb_mbs },
/*
* This should probably be an aliase for euc-cn, or vice versa.
*/
{ "GB2312", "GB2312", 16, towide_gb2312, tomb_mbs },
{ NULL, NULL, 0, 0, 0 },
};
static char *
show_mb(const char *mb)
{
static char buf[64];
/* ASCII stuff we just print */
if (isascii(*mb) && isgraph(*mb)) {
buf[0] = *mb;
buf[1] = 0;
return (buf);
}
buf[0] = 0;
while (*mb != 0) {
char scr[8];
(void) snprintf(scr, sizeof (scr), "\\x%02x", *mb);
(void) strlcat(buf, scr, sizeof (buf));
mb++;
}
return (buf);
}
static char *widemsg;
void
werr(const char *fmt, ...)
{
char *msg;
va_list va;
va_start(va, fmt);
(void) vasprintf(&msg, fmt, va);
va_end(va);
free(widemsg);
widemsg = msg;
}
/*
* This is used for 8-bit encodings.
*/
int
towide_none(wchar_t *c, const char *mb, unsigned n __unused)
{
if (mb_cur_max != 1) {
werr("invalid or unsupported multibyte locale");
return (-1);
}
*c = (uint8_t)*mb;
return (1);
}
int
tomb_none(char *mb, wchar_t wc)
{
if (mb_cur_max != 1) {
werr("invalid or unsupported multibyte locale");
return (-1);
}
*(uint8_t *)mb = (wc & 0xff);
mb[1] = 0;
return (1);
}
/*
* UTF-8 stores wide characters in UTF-32 form.
*/
int
towide_utf8(wchar_t *wc, const char *mb, unsigned n)
{
wchar_t c;
int nb;
wchar_t lv; /* lowest legal value */
int i;
const uint8_t *s = (const uint8_t *)mb;
c = *s;
if ((c & 0x80) == 0) {
/* 7-bit ASCII */
*wc = c;
return (1);
} else if ((c & 0xe0) == 0xc0) {
/* u80-u7ff - two bytes encoded */
nb = 2;
lv = 0x80;
c &= ~0xe0;
} else if ((c & 0xf0) == 0xe0) {
/* u800-uffff - three bytes encoded */
nb = 3;
lv = 0x800;
c &= ~0xf0;
} else if ((c & 0xf8) == 0xf0) {
/* u1000-u1fffff - four bytes encoded */
nb = 4;
lv = 0x1000;
c &= ~0xf8;
} else {
/* 5 and 6 byte encodings are not legal unicode */
werr("utf8 encoding too large (%s)", show_mb(mb));
return (-1);
}
if (nb > (int)n) {
werr("incomplete utf8 sequence (%s)", show_mb(mb));
return (-1);
}
for (i = 1; i < nb; i++) {
if (((s[i]) & 0xc0) != 0x80) {
werr("illegal utf8 byte (%x)", s[i]);
return (-1);
}
c <<= 6;
c |= (s[i] & 0x3f);
}
if (c < lv) {
werr("illegal redundant utf8 encoding (%s)", show_mb(mb));
return (-1);
}
*wc = c;
return (nb);
}
int
tomb_utf8(char *mb, wchar_t wc)
{
uint8_t *s = (uint8_t *)mb;
uint8_t msk;
int cnt;
int i;
if (wc <= 0x7f) {
s[0] = wc & 0x7f;
s[1] = 0;
return (1);
}
if (wc <= 0x7ff) {
cnt = 2;
msk = 0xc0;
} else if (wc <= 0xffff) {
cnt = 3;
msk = 0xe0;
} else if (wc <= 0x1fffff) {
cnt = 4;
msk = 0xf0;
} else {
werr("illegal uf8 char (%x)", wc);
return (-1);
}
for (i = cnt - 1; i; i--) {
s[i] = (wc & 0x3f) | 0x80;
wc >>= 6;
}
s[0] = (msk) | wc;
s[cnt] = 0;
return (cnt);
}
/*
* Several encodings share a simplistic dual byte encoding. In these
* forms, they all indicate that a two byte sequence is to be used if
* the first byte has its high bit set. They all store this simple
* encoding as a 16-bit value, although a great many of the possible
* code points are not used in most character sets. This gives a possible
* set of just over 32,000 valid code points.
*
* 0x00 - 0x7f - 1 byte encoding
* 0x80 - 0x7fff - illegal
* 0x8000 - 0xffff - 2 byte encoding
*/
static int
towide_dbcs(wchar_t *wc, const char *mb, unsigned n)
{
wchar_t c;
c = *(const uint8_t *)mb;
if ((c & 0x80) == 0) {
/* 7-bit */
*wc = c;
return (1);
}
if (n < 2) {
werr("incomplete character sequence (%s)", show_mb(mb));
return (-1);
}
/* Store both bytes as a single 16-bit wide. */
c <<= 8;
c |= (uint8_t)(mb[1]);
*wc = c;
return (2);
}
/*
* Most multibyte locales just convert the wide character to the multibyte
* form by stripping leading null bytes, and writing the 32-bit quantity
* in big-endian order.
*/
int
tomb_mbs(char *mb, wchar_t wc)
{
uint8_t *s = (uint8_t *)mb;
int n = 0, c;
if ((wc & 0xff000000U) != 0) {
n = 4;
} else if ((wc & 0x00ff0000U) != 0) {
n = 3;
} else if ((wc & 0x0000ff00U) != 0) {
n = 2;
} else {
n = 1;
}
c = n;
while (n) {
n--;
s[n] = wc & 0xff;
wc >>= 8;
}
/* ensure null termination */
s[c] = 0;
return (c);
}
/*
* big5 is a simple dual byte character set.
*/
int
towide_big5(wchar_t *wc, const char *mb, unsigned n)
{
return (towide_dbcs(wc, mb, n));
}
/*
* GBK encodes wides in the same way that big5 does, the high order
* bit of the first byte indicates a double byte character.
*/
int
towide_gbk(wchar_t *wc, const char *mb, unsigned n)
{
return (towide_dbcs(wc, mb, n));
}
/*
* GB2312 is another DBCS. Its cleaner than others in that the second
* byte does not encode ASCII, but it supports characters.
*/
int
towide_gb2312(wchar_t *wc, const char *mb, unsigned n)
{
return (towide_dbcs(wc, mb, n));
}
/*
* GB18030. This encodes as 8, 16, or 32-bits.
* 7-bit values are in 1 byte, 4 byte sequences are used when
* the second byte encodes 0x30-39 and all other sequences are 2 bytes.
*/
int
towide_gb18030(wchar_t *wc, const char *mb, unsigned n)
{
wchar_t c;
c = *(const uint8_t *)mb;
if ((c & 0x80) == 0) {
/* 7-bit */
*wc = c;
return (1);
}
if (n < 2) {
werr("incomplete character sequence (%s)", show_mb(mb));
return (-1);
}
/* pull in the second byte */
c <<= 8;
c |= (uint8_t)(mb[1]);
if (((c & 0xff) >= 0x30) && ((c & 0xff) <= 0x39)) {
if (n < 4) {
werr("incomplete 4-byte character sequence (%s)",
show_mb(mb));
return (-1);
}
c <<= 8;
c |= (uint8_t)(mb[2]);
c <<= 8;
c |= (uint8_t)(mb[3]);
*wc = c;
return (4);
}
*wc = c;
return (2);
}
/*
* MS-Kanji (aka SJIS) is almost a clean DBCS like the others, but it
* also has a range of single byte characters above 0x80. (0xa1-0xdf).
*/
int
towide_mskanji(wchar_t *wc, const char *mb, unsigned n)
{
wchar_t c;
c = *(const uint8_t *)mb;
if ((c < 0x80) || ((c > 0xa0) && (c < 0xe0))) {
/* 7-bit */
*wc = c;
return (1);
}
if (n < 2) {
werr("incomplete character sequence (%s)", show_mb(mb));
return (-1);
}
/* Store both bytes as a single 16-bit wide. */
c <<= 8;
c |= (uint8_t)(mb[1]);
*wc = c;
return (2);
}
/*
* EUC forms. EUC encodings are "variable". FreeBSD carries some additional
* variable data to encode these, but we're going to treat each as independent
* instead. Its the only way we can sensibly move forward.
*
* Note that the way in which the different EUC forms vary is how wide
* CS2 and CS3 are and what the first byte of them is.
*/
static int
towide_euc_impl(wchar_t *wc, const char *mb, unsigned n,
uint8_t cs2, uint8_t cs2width, uint8_t cs3, uint8_t cs3width)
{
int i;
int width = 2;
wchar_t c;
c = *(const uint8_t *)mb;
/*
* All variations of EUC encode 7-bit ASCII as one byte, and use
* additional bytes for more than that.
*/
if ((c & 0x80) == 0) {
/* 7-bit */
*wc = c;
return (1);
}
/*
* All EUC variants reserve 0xa1-0xff to identify CS1, which
* is always two bytes wide. Note that unused CS will be zero,
* and that cannot be true because we know that the high order
* bit must be set.
*/
if (c >= 0xa1) {
width = 2;
} else if (c == cs2) {
width = cs2width;
} else if (c == cs3) {
width = cs3width;
}
if ((int)n < width) {
werr("incomplete character sequence (%s)", show_mb(mb));
return (-1);
}
for (i = 1; i < width; i++) {
/* pull in the next byte */
c <<= 8;
c |= (uint8_t)(mb[i]);
}
*wc = c;
return (width);
}
/*
* EUC-CN encodes as follows:
*
* Code set 0 (ASCII): 0x21-0x7E
* Code set 1 (CNS 11643-1992 Plane 1): 0xA1A1-0xFEFE
* Code set 2: unused
* Code set 3: unused
*/
int
towide_euccn(wchar_t *wc, const char *mb, unsigned n)
{
return (towide_euc_impl(wc, mb, n, 0x8e, 4, 0, 0));
}
/*
* EUC-JP encodes as follows:
*
* Code set 0 (ASCII or JIS X 0201-1976 Roman): 0x21-0x7E
* Code set 1 (JIS X 0208): 0xA1A1-0xFEFE
* Code set 2 (half-width katakana): 0x8EA1-0x8EDF
* Code set 3 (JIS X 0212-1990): 0x8FA1A1-0x8FFEFE
*/
int
towide_eucjp(wchar_t *wc, const char *mb, unsigned n)
{
return (towide_euc_impl(wc, mb, n, 0x8e, 2, 0x8f, 3));
}
/*
* EUC-KR encodes as follows:
*
* Code set 0 (ASCII or KS C 5636-1993): 0x21-0x7E
* Code set 1 (KS C 5601-1992): 0xA1A1-0xFEFE
* Code set 2: unused
* Code set 3: unused
*/
int
towide_euckr(wchar_t *wc, const char *mb, unsigned n)
{
return (towide_euc_impl(wc, mb, n, 0, 0, 0, 0));
}
/*
* EUC-TW encodes as follows:
*
* Code set 0 (ASCII): 0x21-0x7E
* Code set 1 (CNS 11643-1992 Plane 1): 0xA1A1-0xFEFE
* Code set 2 (CNS 11643-1992 Planes 1-16): 0x8EA1A1A1-0x8EB0FEFE
* Code set 3: unused
*/
int
towide_euctw(wchar_t *wc, const char *mb, unsigned n)
{
return (towide_euc_impl(wc, mb, n, 0x8e, 4, 0, 0));
}
/*
* Public entry points.
*/
int
to_wide(wchar_t *wc, const char *mb)
{
/* this won't fail hard */
return (_towide(wc, mb, strlen(mb)));
}
int
to_mb(char *mb, wchar_t wc)
{
int rv;
if ((rv = _tomb(mb, wc)) < 0) {
warn("%s", widemsg);
free(widemsg);
widemsg = NULL;
}
return (rv);
}
char *
to_mb_string(const wchar_t *wcs)
{
char *mbs;
char *ptr;
int len;
mbs = malloc((wcslen(wcs) * mb_cur_max) + 1);
if (mbs == NULL) {
warn("out of memory");
return (NULL);
}
ptr = mbs;
while (*wcs) {
if ((len = to_mb(ptr, *wcs)) < 0) {
INTERR;
free(mbs);
return (NULL);
}
wcs++;
ptr += len;
}
*ptr = 0;
return (mbs);
}
void
set_wide_encoding(const char *encoding)
{
int i;
_towide = towide_none;
_tomb = tomb_none;
_nbits = 8;
snprintf(_encoding_buffer, sizeof(_encoding_buffer), "NONE:%s",
encoding);
for (i = 0; mb_encodings[i].name; i++) {
if (strcasecmp(encoding, mb_encodings[i].name) == 0) {
_towide = mb_encodings[i].towide;
_tomb = mb_encodings[i].tomb;
_encoding = mb_encodings[i].cname;
_nbits = mb_encodings[i].nbits;
break;
}
}
}
const char *
get_wide_encoding(void)
{
return (_encoding);
}
int
max_wide(void)
{
return ((int)((1U << _nbits) - 1));
}