1 /*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
2  *
3  * pg_wchar.h
4  *	  multibyte-character support
5  *
6  * Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2017, PostgreSQL Global Development Group
7  * Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California
8  *
9  * src/include/mb/pg_wchar.h
10  *
11  *	NOTES
12  *		This is used both by the backend and by libpq, but should not be
13  *		included by libpq client programs.  In particular, a libpq client
14  *		should not assume that the encoding IDs used by the version of libpq
15  *		it's linked to match up with the IDs declared here.
16  *
17  *-------------------------------------------------------------------------
18  */
19 #ifndef PG_WCHAR_H
20 #define PG_WCHAR_H
21 
22 /*
23  * The pg_wchar type
24  */
25 typedef unsigned int pg_wchar;
26 
27 /*
28  * Maximum byte length of multibyte characters in any backend encoding
29  */
30 #define MAX_MULTIBYTE_CHAR_LEN	4
31 
32 /*
33  * various definitions for EUC
34  */
35 #define SS2 0x8e				/* single shift 2 (JIS0201) */
36 #define SS3 0x8f				/* single shift 3 (JIS0212) */
37 
38 /*
39  * SJIS validation macros
40  */
41 #define ISSJISHEAD(c) (((c) >= 0x81 && (c) <= 0x9f) || ((c) >= 0xe0 && (c) <= 0xfc))
42 #define ISSJISTAIL(c) (((c) >= 0x40 && (c) <= 0x7e) || ((c) >= 0x80 && (c) <= 0xfc))
43 
44 /*----------------------------------------------------
45  * MULE Internal Encoding (MIC)
46  *
47  * This encoding follows the design used within XEmacs; it is meant to
48  * subsume many externally-defined character sets.  Each character includes
49  * identification of the character set it belongs to, so the encoding is
50  * general but somewhat bulky.
51  *
52  * Currently PostgreSQL supports 5 types of MULE character sets:
53  *
54  * 1) 1-byte ASCII characters.  Each byte is below 0x80.
55  *
56  * 2) "Official" single byte charsets such as ISO-8859-1 (Latin1).
57  *	  Each MULE character consists of 2 bytes: LC1 + C1, where LC1 is
58  *	  an identifier for the charset (in the range 0x81 to 0x8d) and C1
59  *	  is the character code (in the range 0xa0 to 0xff).
60  *
61  * 3) "Private" single byte charsets such as SISHENG.  Each MULE
62  *	  character consists of 3 bytes: LCPRV1 + LC12 + C1, where LCPRV1
63  *	  is a private-charset flag, LC12 is an identifier for the charset,
64  *	  and C1 is the character code (in the range 0xa0 to 0xff).
65  *	  LCPRV1 is either 0x9a (if LC12 is in the range 0xa0 to 0xdf)
66  *	  or 0x9b (if LC12 is in the range 0xe0 to 0xef).
67  *
68  * 4) "Official" multibyte charsets such as JIS X0208.  Each MULE
69  *	  character consists of 3 bytes: LC2 + C1 + C2, where LC2 is
70  *	  an identifier for the charset (in the range 0x90 to 0x99) and C1
71  *	  and C2 form the character code (each in the range 0xa0 to 0xff).
72  *
73  * 5) "Private" multibyte charsets such as CNS 11643-1992 Plane 3.
74  *	  Each MULE character consists of 4 bytes: LCPRV2 + LC22 + C1 + C2,
75  *	  where LCPRV2 is a private-charset flag, LC22 is an identifier for
76  *	  the charset, and C1 and C2 form the character code (each in the range
77  *	  0xa0 to 0xff).  LCPRV2 is either 0x9c (if LC22 is in the range 0xf0
78  *	  to 0xf4) or 0x9d (if LC22 is in the range 0xf5 to 0xfe).
79  *
80  * "Official" encodings are those that have been assigned code numbers by
81  * the XEmacs project; "private" encodings have Postgres-specific charset
82  * identifiers.
83  *
84  * See the "XEmacs Internals Manual", available at http://www.xemacs.org,
85  * for more details.  Note that for historical reasons, Postgres'
86  * private-charset flag values do not match what XEmacs says they should be,
87  * so this isn't really exactly MULE (not that private charsets would be
88  * interoperable anyway).
89  *
90  * Note that XEmacs's implementation is different from what emacs does.
91  * We follow emacs's implementation, rather than XEmacs's.
92  *----------------------------------------------------
93  */
94 
95 /*
96  * Charset identifiers (also called "leading bytes" in the MULE documentation)
97  */
98 
99 /*
100  * Charset IDs for official single byte encodings (0x81-0x8e)
101  */
102 #define LC_ISO8859_1		0x81	/* ISO8859 Latin 1 */
103 #define LC_ISO8859_2		0x82	/* ISO8859 Latin 2 */
104 #define LC_ISO8859_3		0x83	/* ISO8859 Latin 3 */
105 #define LC_ISO8859_4		0x84	/* ISO8859 Latin 4 */
106 #define LC_TIS620			0x85	/* Thai (not supported yet) */
107 #define LC_ISO8859_7		0x86	/* Greek (not supported yet) */
108 #define LC_ISO8859_6		0x87	/* Arabic (not supported yet) */
109 #define LC_ISO8859_8		0x88	/* Hebrew (not supported yet) */
110 #define LC_JISX0201K		0x89	/* Japanese 1 byte kana */
111 #define LC_JISX0201R		0x8a	/* Japanese 1 byte Roman */
112 /* Note that 0x8b seems to be unused as of Emacs 20.7.
113  * However, there might be a chance that 0x8b could be used
114  * in later versions of Emacs.
115  */
116 #define LC_KOI8_R			0x8b	/* Cyrillic KOI8-R */
117 #define LC_ISO8859_5		0x8c	/* ISO8859 Cyrillic */
118 #define LC_ISO8859_9		0x8d	/* ISO8859 Latin 5 (not supported yet) */
119 #define LC_ISO8859_15		0x8e	/* ISO8859 Latin 15 (not supported yet) */
120 /* #define CONTROL_1		0x8f	control characters (unused) */
121 
122 /* Is a leading byte for "official" single byte encodings? */
123 #define IS_LC1(c)	((unsigned char)(c) >= 0x81 && (unsigned char)(c) <= 0x8d)
124 
125 /*
126  * Charset IDs for official multibyte encodings (0x90-0x99)
127  * 0x9a-0x9d are free. 0x9e and 0x9f are reserved.
128  */
129 #define LC_JISX0208_1978	0x90	/* Japanese Kanji, old JIS (not supported) */
130 #define LC_GB2312_80		0x91	/* Chinese */
131 #define LC_JISX0208			0x92	/* Japanese Kanji (JIS X 0208) */
132 #define LC_KS5601			0x93	/* Korean */
133 #define LC_JISX0212			0x94	/* Japanese Kanji (JIS X 0212) */
134 #define LC_CNS11643_1		0x95	/* CNS 11643-1992 Plane 1 */
135 #define LC_CNS11643_2		0x96	/* CNS 11643-1992 Plane 2 */
136 #define LC_JISX0213_1		0x97	/* Japanese Kanji (JIS X 0213 Plane 1)
137 									 * (not supported) */
138 #define LC_BIG5_1			0x98	/* Plane 1 Chinese traditional (not
139 									 * supported) */
140 #define LC_BIG5_2			0x99	/* Plane 1 Chinese traditional (not
141 									 * supported) */
142 
143 /* Is a leading byte for "official" multibyte encodings? */
144 #define IS_LC2(c)	((unsigned char)(c) >= 0x90 && (unsigned char)(c) <= 0x99)
145 
146 /*
147  * Postgres-specific prefix bytes for "private" single byte encodings
148  * (According to the MULE docs, we should be using 0x9e for this)
149  */
150 #define LCPRV1_A		0x9a
151 #define LCPRV1_B		0x9b
152 #define IS_LCPRV1(c)	((unsigned char)(c) == LCPRV1_A || (unsigned char)(c) == LCPRV1_B)
153 #define IS_LCPRV1_A_RANGE(c)	\
154 	((unsigned char)(c) >= 0xa0 && (unsigned char)(c) <= 0xdf)
155 #define IS_LCPRV1_B_RANGE(c)	\
156 	((unsigned char)(c) >= 0xe0 && (unsigned char)(c) <= 0xef)
157 
158 /*
159  * Postgres-specific prefix bytes for "private" multibyte encodings
160  * (According to the MULE docs, we should be using 0x9f for this)
161  */
162 #define LCPRV2_A		0x9c
163 #define LCPRV2_B		0x9d
164 #define IS_LCPRV2(c)	((unsigned char)(c) == LCPRV2_A || (unsigned char)(c) == LCPRV2_B)
165 #define IS_LCPRV2_A_RANGE(c)	\
166 	((unsigned char)(c) >= 0xf0 && (unsigned char)(c) <= 0xf4)
167 #define IS_LCPRV2_B_RANGE(c)	\
168 	((unsigned char)(c) >= 0xf5 && (unsigned char)(c) <= 0xfe)
169 
170 /*
171  * Charset IDs for private single byte encodings (0xa0-0xef)
172  */
173 #define LC_SISHENG			0xa0	/* Chinese SiSheng characters for
174 									 * PinYin/ZhuYin (not supported) */
175 #define LC_IPA				0xa1	/* IPA (International Phonetic
176 									 * Association) (not supported) */
177 #define LC_VISCII_LOWER		0xa2	/* Vietnamese VISCII1.1 lower-case (not
178 									 * supported) */
179 #define LC_VISCII_UPPER		0xa3	/* Vietnamese VISCII1.1 upper-case (not
180 									 * supported) */
181 #define LC_ARABIC_DIGIT		0xa4	/* Arabic digit (not supported) */
182 #define LC_ARABIC_1_COLUMN	0xa5	/* Arabic 1-column (not supported) */
183 #define LC_ASCII_RIGHT_TO_LEFT	0xa6	/* ASCII (left half of ISO8859-1) with
184 										 * right-to-left direction (not
185 										 * supported) */
186 #define LC_LAO				0xa7	/* Lao characters (ISO10646 0E80..0EDF)
187 									 * (not supported) */
188 #define LC_ARABIC_2_COLUMN	0xa8	/* Arabic 1-column (not supported) */
189 
190 /*
191  * Charset IDs for private multibyte encodings (0xf0-0xff)
192  */
193 #define LC_INDIAN_1_COLUMN	0xf0	/* Indian charset for 1-column width
194 									 * glyphs (not supported) */
195 #define LC_TIBETAN_1_COLUMN 0xf1	/* Tibetan 1-column width glyphs (not
196 									 * supported) */
197 #define LC_UNICODE_SUBSET_2 0xf2	/* Unicode characters of the range
198 									 * U+2500..U+33FF. (not supported) */
199 #define LC_UNICODE_SUBSET_3 0xf3	/* Unicode characters of the range
200 									 * U+E000..U+FFFF. (not supported) */
201 #define LC_UNICODE_SUBSET	0xf4	/* Unicode characters of the range
202 									 * U+0100..U+24FF. (not supported) */
203 #define LC_ETHIOPIC			0xf5	/* Ethiopic characters (not supported) */
204 #define LC_CNS11643_3		0xf6	/* CNS 11643-1992 Plane 3 */
205 #define LC_CNS11643_4		0xf7	/* CNS 11643-1992 Plane 4 */
206 #define LC_CNS11643_5		0xf8	/* CNS 11643-1992 Plane 5 */
207 #define LC_CNS11643_6		0xf9	/* CNS 11643-1992 Plane 6 */
208 #define LC_CNS11643_7		0xfa	/* CNS 11643-1992 Plane 7 */
209 #define LC_INDIAN_2_COLUMN	0xfb	/* Indian charset for 2-column width
210 									 * glyphs (not supported) */
211 #define LC_TIBETAN			0xfc	/* Tibetan (not supported) */
212 /* #define FREE				0xfd	free (unused) */
213 /* #define FREE				0xfe	free (unused) */
214 /* #define FREE				0xff	free (unused) */
215 
216 /*----------------------------------------------------
217  * end of MULE stuff
218  *----------------------------------------------------
219  */
220 
221 /*
222  * PostgreSQL encoding identifiers
223  *
224  * WARNING: the order of this enum must be same as order of entries
225  *			in the pg_enc2name_tbl[] array (in mb/encnames.c), and
226  *			in the pg_wchar_table[] array (in mb/wchar.c)!
227  *
228  *			If you add some encoding don't forget to check
229  *			PG_ENCODING_BE_LAST macro.
230  *
231  * PG_SQL_ASCII is default encoding and must be = 0.
232  *
233  * XXX	We must avoid renumbering any backend encoding until libpq's major
234  * version number is increased beyond 5; it turns out that the backend
235  * encoding IDs are effectively part of libpq's ABI as far as 8.2 initdb and
236  * psql are concerned.
237  */
238 typedef enum pg_enc
239 {
240 	PG_SQL_ASCII = 0,			/* SQL/ASCII */
241 	PG_EUC_JP,					/* EUC for Japanese */
242 	PG_EUC_CN,					/* EUC for Chinese */
243 	PG_EUC_KR,					/* EUC for Korean */
244 	PG_EUC_TW,					/* EUC for Taiwan */
245 	PG_EUC_JIS_2004,			/* EUC-JIS-2004 */
246 	PG_UTF8,					/* Unicode UTF8 */
247 	PG_MULE_INTERNAL,			/* Mule internal code */
248 	PG_LATIN1,					/* ISO-8859-1 Latin 1 */
249 	PG_LATIN2,					/* ISO-8859-2 Latin 2 */
250 	PG_LATIN3,					/* ISO-8859-3 Latin 3 */
251 	PG_LATIN4,					/* ISO-8859-4 Latin 4 */
252 	PG_LATIN5,					/* ISO-8859-9 Latin 5 */
253 	PG_LATIN6,					/* ISO-8859-10 Latin6 */
254 	PG_LATIN7,					/* ISO-8859-13 Latin7 */
255 	PG_LATIN8,					/* ISO-8859-14 Latin8 */
256 	PG_LATIN9,					/* ISO-8859-15 Latin9 */
257 	PG_LATIN10,					/* ISO-8859-16 Latin10 */
258 	PG_WIN1256,					/* windows-1256 */
259 	PG_WIN1258,					/* Windows-1258 */
260 	PG_WIN866,					/* (MS-DOS CP866) */
261 	PG_WIN874,					/* windows-874 */
262 	PG_KOI8R,					/* KOI8-R */
263 	PG_WIN1251,					/* windows-1251 */
264 	PG_WIN1252,					/* windows-1252 */
265 	PG_ISO_8859_5,				/* ISO-8859-5 */
266 	PG_ISO_8859_6,				/* ISO-8859-6 */
267 	PG_ISO_8859_7,				/* ISO-8859-7 */
268 	PG_ISO_8859_8,				/* ISO-8859-8 */
269 	PG_WIN1250,					/* windows-1250 */
270 	PG_WIN1253,					/* windows-1253 */
271 	PG_WIN1254,					/* windows-1254 */
272 	PG_WIN1255,					/* windows-1255 */
273 	PG_WIN1257,					/* windows-1257 */
274 	PG_KOI8U,					/* KOI8-U */
275 	/* PG_ENCODING_BE_LAST points to the above entry */
276 
277 	/* followings are for client encoding only */
278 	PG_SJIS,					/* Shift JIS (Windows-932) */
279 	PG_BIG5,					/* Big5 (Windows-950) */
280 	PG_GBK,						/* GBK (Windows-936) */
281 	PG_UHC,						/* UHC (Windows-949) */
282 	PG_GB18030,					/* GB18030 */
283 	PG_JOHAB,					/* EUC for Korean JOHAB */
284 	PG_SHIFT_JIS_2004,			/* Shift-JIS-2004 */
285 	_PG_LAST_ENCODING_			/* mark only */
286 
287 } pg_enc;
288 
289 #define PG_ENCODING_BE_LAST PG_KOI8U
290 
291 /*
292  * Please use these tests before access to pg_encconv_tbl[]
293  * or to other places...
294  */
295 #define PG_VALID_BE_ENCODING(_enc) \
296 		((_enc) >= 0 && (_enc) <= PG_ENCODING_BE_LAST)
297 
298 #define PG_ENCODING_IS_CLIENT_ONLY(_enc) \
299 		((_enc) > PG_ENCODING_BE_LAST && (_enc) < _PG_LAST_ENCODING_)
300 
301 #define PG_VALID_ENCODING(_enc) \
302 		((_enc) >= 0 && (_enc) < _PG_LAST_ENCODING_)
303 
304 /* On FE are possible all encodings */
305 #define PG_VALID_FE_ENCODING(_enc)	PG_VALID_ENCODING(_enc)
306 
307 /*
308  * Table for mapping an encoding number to official encoding name and
309  * possibly other subsidiary data.  Be careful to check encoding number
310  * before accessing a table entry!
311  *
312  * if (PG_VALID_ENCODING(encoding))
313  *		pg_enc2name_tbl[ encoding ];
314  */
315 typedef struct pg_enc2name
316 {
317 	const char *name;
318 	pg_enc		encoding;
319 #ifdef WIN32
320 	unsigned	codepage;		/* codepage for WIN32 */
321 #endif
322 } pg_enc2name;
323 
324 extern const pg_enc2name pg_enc2name_tbl[];
325 
326 /*
327  * Encoding names for gettext
328  */
329 typedef struct pg_enc2gettext
330 {
331 	pg_enc		encoding;
332 	const char *name;
333 } pg_enc2gettext;
334 
335 extern const pg_enc2gettext pg_enc2gettext_tbl[];
336 
337 /*
338  * Encoding names for ICU
339  */
340 extern bool is_encoding_supported_by_icu(int encoding);
341 extern const char *get_encoding_name_for_icu(int encoding);
342 
343 /*
344  * pg_wchar stuff
345  */
346 typedef int (*mb2wchar_with_len_converter) (const unsigned char *from,
347 											pg_wchar *to,
348 											int len);
349 
350 typedef int (*wchar2mb_with_len_converter) (const pg_wchar *from,
351 											unsigned char *to,
352 											int len);
353 
354 typedef int (*mblen_converter) (const unsigned char *mbstr);
355 
356 typedef int (*mbdisplaylen_converter) (const unsigned char *mbstr);
357 
358 typedef bool (*mbcharacter_incrementer) (unsigned char *mbstr, int len);
359 
360 typedef int (*mbverifier) (const unsigned char *mbstr, int len);
361 
362 typedef struct
363 {
364 	mb2wchar_with_len_converter mb2wchar_with_len;	/* convert a multibyte
365 													 * string to a wchar */
366 	wchar2mb_with_len_converter wchar2mb_with_len;	/* convert a wchar string
367 													 * to a multibyte */
368 	mblen_converter mblen;		/* get byte length of a char */
369 	mbdisplaylen_converter dsplen;	/* get display width of a char */
370 	mbverifier	mbverify;		/* verify multibyte sequence */
371 	int			maxmblen;		/* max bytes for a char in this encoding */
372 } pg_wchar_tbl;
373 
374 extern const pg_wchar_tbl pg_wchar_table[];
375 
376 /*
377  * Data structures for conversions between UTF-8 and other encodings
378  * (UtfToLocal() and LocalToUtf()).  In these data structures, characters of
379  * either encoding are represented by uint32 words; hence we can only support
380  * characters up to 4 bytes long.  For example, the byte sequence 0xC2 0x89
381  * would be represented by 0x0000C289, and 0xE8 0xA2 0xB4 by 0x00E8A2B4.
382  *
383  * There are three possible ways a character can be mapped:
384  *
385  * 1. Using a radix tree, from source to destination code.
386  * 2. Using a sorted array of source -> destination code pairs. This
387  *	  method is used for "combining" characters. There are so few of
388  *	  them that building a radix tree would be wasteful.
389  * 3. Using a conversion function.
390  */
391 
392 /*
393  * Radix tree for character conversion.
394  *
395  * Logically, this is actually four different radix trees, for 1-byte,
396  * 2-byte, 3-byte and 4-byte inputs. The 1-byte tree is a simple lookup
397  * table from source to target code. The 2-byte tree consists of two levels:
398  * one lookup table for the first byte, where the value in the lookup table
399  * points to a lookup table for the second byte. And so on.
400  *
401  * Physically, all the trees are stored in one big array, in 'chars16' or
402  * 'chars32', depending on the maximum value that needs to be reprented. For
403  * each level in each tree, we also store lower and upper bound of allowed
404  * values - values outside those bounds are considered invalid, and are left
405  * out of the tables.
406  *
407  * In the intermediate levels of the trees, the values stored are offsets
408  * into the chars[16|32] array.
409  *
410  * In the beginning of the chars[16|32] array, there is always a number of
411  * zeros, so that you safely follow an index from an intermediate table
412  * without explicitly checking for a zero. Following a zero any number of
413  * times will always bring you to the dummy, all-zeros table in the
414  * beginning. This helps to shave some cycles when looking up values.
415  */
416 typedef struct
417 {
418 	/*
419 	 * Array containing all the values. Only one of chars16 or chars32 is
420 	 * used, depending on how wide the values we need to represent are.
421 	 */
422 	const uint16 *chars16;
423 	const uint32 *chars32;
424 
425 	/* Radix tree for 1-byte inputs */
426 	uint32		b1root;			/* offset of table in the chars[16|32] array */
427 	uint8		b1_lower;		/* min allowed value for a single byte input */
428 	uint8		b1_upper;		/* max allowed value for a single byte input */
429 
430 	/* Radix tree for 2-byte inputs */
431 	uint32		b2root;			/* offset of 1st byte's table */
432 	uint8		b2_1_lower;		/* min/max allowed value for 1st input byte */
433 	uint8		b2_1_upper;
434 	uint8		b2_2_lower;		/* min/max allowed value for 2nd input byte */
435 	uint8		b2_2_upper;
436 
437 	/* Radix tree for 3-byte inputs */
438 	uint32		b3root;			/* offset of 1st byte's table */
439 	uint8		b3_1_lower;		/* min/max allowed value for 1st input byte */
440 	uint8		b3_1_upper;
441 	uint8		b3_2_lower;		/* min/max allowed value for 2nd input byte */
442 	uint8		b3_2_upper;
443 	uint8		b3_3_lower;		/* min/max allowed value for 3rd input byte */
444 	uint8		b3_3_upper;
445 
446 	/* Radix tree for 4-byte inputs */
447 	uint32		b4root;			/* offset of 1st byte's table */
448 	uint8		b4_1_lower;		/* min/max allowed value for 1st input byte */
449 	uint8		b4_1_upper;
450 	uint8		b4_2_lower;		/* min/max allowed value for 2nd input byte */
451 	uint8		b4_2_upper;
452 	uint8		b4_3_lower;		/* min/max allowed value for 3rd input byte */
453 	uint8		b4_3_upper;
454 	uint8		b4_4_lower;		/* min/max allowed value for 4th input byte */
455 	uint8		b4_4_upper;
456 
457 } pg_mb_radix_tree;
458 
459 /*
460  * UTF-8 to local code conversion map (for combined characters)
461  */
462 typedef struct
463 {
464 	uint32		utf1;			/* UTF-8 code 1 */
465 	uint32		utf2;			/* UTF-8 code 2 */
466 	uint32		code;			/* local code */
467 } pg_utf_to_local_combined;
468 
469 /*
470  * local code to UTF-8 conversion map (for combined characters)
471  */
472 typedef struct
473 {
474 	uint32		code;			/* local code */
475 	uint32		utf1;			/* UTF-8 code 1 */
476 	uint32		utf2;			/* UTF-8 code 2 */
477 } pg_local_to_utf_combined;
478 
479 /*
480  * callback function for algorithmic encoding conversions (in either direction)
481  *
482  * if function returns zero, it does not know how to convert the code
483  */
484 typedef uint32 (*utf_local_conversion_func) (uint32 code);
485 
486 /*
487  * Support macro for encoding conversion functions to validate their
488  * arguments.  (This could be made more compact if we included fmgr.h
489  * here, but we don't want to do that because this header file is also
490  * used by frontends.)
491  */
492 #define CHECK_ENCODING_CONVERSION_ARGS(srcencoding,destencoding) \
493 	check_encoding_conversion_args(PG_GETARG_INT32(0), \
494 								   PG_GETARG_INT32(1), \
495 								   PG_GETARG_INT32(4), \
496 								   (srcencoding), \
497 								   (destencoding))
498 
499 
500 /*
501  * These functions are considered part of libpq's exported API and
502  * are also declared in libpq-fe.h.
503  */
504 extern int	pg_char_to_encoding(const char *name);
505 extern const char *pg_encoding_to_char(int encoding);
506 extern int	pg_valid_server_encoding_id(int encoding);
507 
508 /*
509  * Remaining functions are not considered part of libpq's API, though many
510  * of them do exist inside libpq.
511  */
512 extern int	pg_mb2wchar(const char *from, pg_wchar *to);
513 extern int	pg_mb2wchar_with_len(const char *from, pg_wchar *to, int len);
514 extern int pg_encoding_mb2wchar_with_len(int encoding,
515 							  const char *from, pg_wchar *to, int len);
516 extern int	pg_wchar2mb(const pg_wchar *from, char *to);
517 extern int	pg_wchar2mb_with_len(const pg_wchar *from, char *to, int len);
518 extern int pg_encoding_wchar2mb_with_len(int encoding,
519 							  const pg_wchar *from, char *to, int len);
520 extern int	pg_char_and_wchar_strcmp(const char *s1, const pg_wchar *s2);
521 extern int	pg_wchar_strncmp(const pg_wchar *s1, const pg_wchar *s2, size_t n);
522 extern int	pg_char_and_wchar_strncmp(const char *s1, const pg_wchar *s2, size_t n);
523 extern size_t pg_wchar_strlen(const pg_wchar *wstr);
524 extern int	pg_mblen(const char *mbstr);
525 extern int	pg_dsplen(const char *mbstr);
526 extern int	pg_encoding_mblen(int encoding, const char *mbstr);
527 extern int	pg_encoding_dsplen(int encoding, const char *mbstr);
528 extern int	pg_encoding_verifymb(int encoding, const char *mbstr, int len);
529 extern int	pg_mule_mblen(const unsigned char *mbstr);
530 extern int	pg_mic_mblen(const unsigned char *mbstr);
531 extern int	pg_mbstrlen(const char *mbstr);
532 extern int	pg_mbstrlen_with_len(const char *mbstr, int len);
533 extern int	pg_mbcliplen(const char *mbstr, int len, int limit);
534 extern int pg_encoding_mbcliplen(int encoding, const char *mbstr,
535 					  int len, int limit);
536 extern int	pg_mbcharcliplen(const char *mbstr, int len, int imit);
537 extern int	pg_encoding_max_length(int encoding);
538 extern int	pg_database_encoding_max_length(void);
539 extern mbcharacter_incrementer pg_database_encoding_character_incrementer(void);
540 
541 extern int	PrepareClientEncoding(int encoding);
542 extern int	SetClientEncoding(int encoding);
543 extern void InitializeClientEncoding(void);
544 extern int	pg_get_client_encoding(void);
545 extern const char *pg_get_client_encoding_name(void);
546 
547 extern void SetDatabaseEncoding(int encoding);
548 extern int	GetDatabaseEncoding(void);
549 extern const char *GetDatabaseEncodingName(void);
550 extern void SetMessageEncoding(int encoding);
551 extern int	GetMessageEncoding(void);
552 
553 #ifdef ENABLE_NLS
554 extern int	pg_bind_textdomain_codeset(const char *domainname);
555 #endif
556 
557 extern int	pg_valid_client_encoding(const char *name);
558 extern int	pg_valid_server_encoding(const char *name);
559 
560 extern unsigned char *unicode_to_utf8(pg_wchar c, unsigned char *utf8string);
561 extern pg_wchar utf8_to_unicode(const unsigned char *c);
562 extern int	pg_utf_mblen(const unsigned char *);
563 extern unsigned char *pg_do_encoding_conversion(unsigned char *src, int len,
564 						  int src_encoding,
565 						  int dest_encoding);
566 
567 extern char *pg_client_to_server(const char *s, int len);
568 extern char *pg_server_to_client(const char *s, int len);
569 extern char *pg_any_to_server(const char *s, int len, int encoding);
570 extern char *pg_server_to_any(const char *s, int len, int encoding);
571 
572 extern unsigned short BIG5toCNS(unsigned short big5, unsigned char *lc);
573 extern unsigned short CNStoBIG5(unsigned short cns, unsigned char lc);
574 
575 extern void UtfToLocal(const unsigned char *utf, int len,
576 		   unsigned char *iso,
577 		   const pg_mb_radix_tree *map,
578 		   const pg_utf_to_local_combined *cmap, int cmapsize,
579 		   utf_local_conversion_func conv_func,
580 		   int encoding);
581 extern void LocalToUtf(const unsigned char *iso, int len,
582 		   unsigned char *utf,
583 		   const pg_mb_radix_tree *map,
584 		   const pg_local_to_utf_combined *cmap, int cmapsize,
585 		   utf_local_conversion_func conv_func,
586 		   int encoding);
587 
588 extern bool pg_verifymbstr(const char *mbstr, int len, bool noError);
589 extern bool pg_verify_mbstr(int encoding, const char *mbstr, int len,
590 				bool noError);
591 extern int pg_verify_mbstr_len(int encoding, const char *mbstr, int len,
592 					bool noError);
593 
594 extern void check_encoding_conversion_args(int src_encoding,
595 							   int dest_encoding,
596 							   int len,
597 							   int expected_src_encoding,
598 							   int expected_dest_encoding);
599 
600 extern void report_invalid_encoding(int encoding, const char *mbstr, int len) pg_attribute_noreturn();
601 extern void report_untranslatable_char(int src_encoding, int dest_encoding,
602 						   const char *mbstr, int len) pg_attribute_noreturn();
603 
604 extern void local2local(const unsigned char *l, unsigned char *p, int len,
605 			int src_encoding, int dest_encoding, const unsigned char *tab);
606 extern void pg_ascii2mic(const unsigned char *l, unsigned char *p, int len);
607 extern void pg_mic2ascii(const unsigned char *mic, unsigned char *p, int len);
608 extern void latin2mic(const unsigned char *l, unsigned char *p, int len,
609 		  int lc, int encoding);
610 extern void mic2latin(const unsigned char *mic, unsigned char *p, int len,
611 		  int lc, int encoding);
612 extern void latin2mic_with_table(const unsigned char *l, unsigned char *p,
613 					 int len, int lc, int encoding,
614 					 const unsigned char *tab);
615 extern void mic2latin_with_table(const unsigned char *mic, unsigned char *p,
616 					 int len, int lc, int encoding,
617 					 const unsigned char *tab);
618 
619 extern bool pg_utf8_islegal(const unsigned char *source, int length);
620 
621 #ifdef WIN32
622 extern WCHAR *pgwin32_message_to_UTF16(const char *str, int len, int *utf16len);
623 #endif
624 
625 #endif							/* PG_WCHAR_H */
626