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putty-source/unix/uxucs.c
Simon Tatham cab553028a Proper support for using the font's own character encoding. If we
know what that encoding actually is, we can do our best to support
additional charsets (VT100 linedrawing, SCO ACS, UTF-8 mode) using
the available characters; if we don't, we fall back to a mode where
we disable all Unicode cut-and-paste and assume any Unicode
character is undisplayable.

[originally from svn r2413]
2003-01-01 22:25:25 +00:00

210 lines
5.1 KiB
C

#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <ctype.h>
#include <locale.h>
#include <limits.h>
#include <wchar.h>
#include <time.h>
#include "putty.h"
#include "terminal.h"
#include "misc.h"
/*
* Unix Unicode-handling routines.
*/
int is_dbcs_leadbyte(int codepage, char byte)
{
return 0; /* we don't do DBCS */
}
int mb_to_wc(int codepage, int flags, char *mbstr, int mblen,
wchar_t *wcstr, int wclen)
{
if (codepage == DEFAULT_CODEPAGE) {
int n = 0;
mbstate_t state = { 0 };
setlocale(LC_CTYPE, "");
while (mblen > 0) {
size_t i = mbrtowc(wcstr+n, mbstr, (size_t)mblen, &state);
if (i == (size_t)-1 || i == (size_t)-2)
break;
n++;
mbstr += i;
mblen -= i;
}
setlocale(LC_CTYPE, "C");
return n;
} else if (codepage == CS_NONE) {
int n = 0;
while (mblen > 0) {
wcstr[n] = 0xD800 | (mbstr[0] & 0xFF);
n++;
mbstr++;
mblen--;
}
return n;
} else
return charset_to_unicode(&mbstr, &mblen, wcstr, wclen, codepage,
NULL, NULL, 0);
}
int wc_to_mb(int codepage, int flags, wchar_t *wcstr, int wclen,
char *mbstr, int mblen, char *defchr, int *defused)
{
/* FIXME: we should remove the defused param completely... */
if (defused)
*defused = 0;
if (codepage == DEFAULT_CODEPAGE) {
char output[MB_LEN_MAX];
mbstate_t state = { 0 };
int n = 0;
setlocale(LC_CTYPE, "");
while (wclen > 0) {
int i = wcrtomb(output, wcstr[0], &state);
if (i == (size_t)-1 || i > n - mblen)
break;
memcpy(mbstr+n, output, i);
n += i;
wcstr++;
wclen--;
}
setlocale(LC_CTYPE, "C");
return n;
} else if (codepage == CS_NONE) {
int n = 0;
while (wclen > 0 && n < mblen) {
if (*wcstr >= 0xD800 && *wcstr < 0xD900)
mbstr[n++] = (*wcstr & 0xFF);
else if (defchr)
mbstr[n++] = *defchr;
wcstr++;
wclen--;
}
return n;
} else {
return charset_from_unicode(&wcstr, &wclen, mbstr, mblen, codepage,
NULL, NULL, 0);
}
}
void init_ucs(int font_charset)
{
int i;
/*
* In the platform-independent parts of the code, font_codepage
* is used only for system DBCS support - which we don't
* support at all. So we set this to something which will never
* be used.
*/
font_codepage = -1;
/*
* line_codepage should be decoded from the specification in
* cfg.
*/
line_codepage = charset_from_mimeenc(cfg.line_codepage);
if (line_codepage == CS_NONE)
line_codepage = charset_from_xenc(cfg.line_codepage);
/*
* If line_codepage is _still_ CS_NONE, we assume we're using
* the font's own encoding. This has been passed in to us, so
* we use that. If it's still CS_NONE after _that_ - i.e. the
* font we were given had an incomprehensible charset - then we
* fall back to using the D800 page.
*/
if (line_codepage == CS_NONE)
line_codepage = font_charset;
/*
* Set up unitab_line, by translating each individual character
* in the line codepage into Unicode.
*/
for (i = 0; i < 256; i++) {
char c[1], *p;
wchar_t wc[1];
int len;
c[0] = i;
p = c;
len = 1;
if (line_codepage == CS_NONE)
unitab_line[i] = 0xD800 | i;
else if (1 == charset_to_unicode(&p, &len, wc, 1, line_codepage,
NULL, L"", 0))
unitab_line[i] = wc[0];
else
unitab_line[i] = 0xFFFD;
}
/*
* Set up unitab_xterm. This is the same as unitab_line except
* in the line-drawing regions, where it follows the Unicode
* encoding.
*
* (Note that the strange X encoding of line-drawing characters
* in the bottom 32 glyphs of ISO8859-1 fonts is taken care of
* by the font encoding, which will spot such a font and act as
* if it were in a variant encoding of ISO8859-1.)
*/
for (i = 0; i < 256; i++) {
static const wchar_t unitab_xterm_std[32] = {
0x2666, 0x2592, 0x2409, 0x240c, 0x240d, 0x240a, 0x00b0, 0x00b1,
0x2424, 0x240b, 0x2518, 0x2510, 0x250c, 0x2514, 0x253c, 0x23ba,
0x23bb, 0x2500, 0x23bc, 0x23bd, 0x251c, 0x2524, 0x2534, 0x252c,
0x2502, 0x2264, 0x2265, 0x03c0, 0x2260, 0x00a3, 0x00b7, 0x0020
};
if (i >= 0x5F && i < 0x7F)
unitab_xterm[i] = unitab_xterm_std[i & 0x1F];
else
unitab_xterm[i] = unitab_line[i];
}
/*
* Set up unitab_scoacs. The SCO Alternate Character Set is
* simply CP437.
*/
for (i = 0; i < 256; i++) {
char c[1], *p;
wchar_t wc[1];
int len;
c[0] = i;
p = c;
len = 1;
if (1 == charset_to_unicode(&p, &len, wc, 1, CS_CP437, NULL, L"", 0))
unitab_scoacs[i] = wc[0];
else
unitab_scoacs[i] = 0xFFFD;
}
/*
* Find the control characters in the line codepage. For
* direct-to-font mode using the D800 hack, we assume 00-1F and
* 7F are controls, but allow 80-9F through. (It's as good a
* guess as anything; and my bet is that half the weird fonts
* used in this way will be IBM or MS code pages anyway.)
*/
for (i = 0; i < 256; i++) {
int lineval = unitab_line[i];
if (lineval < ' ' || (lineval >= 0x7F && lineval < 0xA0) ||
(lineval >= 0xD800 && lineval < 0xD820) || (lineval == 0xD87F))
unitab_ctrl[i] = i;
else
unitab_ctrl[i] = 0xFF;
}
}