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a0ed51b3 LW |
1 | /* utf8.c |
2 | * | |
1129b882 | 3 | * Copyright (C) 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 |
b94e2f88 | 4 | * by Larry Wall and others |
a0ed51b3 LW |
5 | * |
6 | * You may distribute under the terms of either the GNU General Public | |
7 | * License or the Artistic License, as specified in the README file. | |
8 | * | |
9 | */ | |
10 | ||
11 | /* | |
4ac71550 TC |
12 | * 'What a fix!' said Sam. 'That's the one place in all the lands we've ever |
13 | * heard of that we don't want to see any closer; and that's the one place | |
14 | * we're trying to get to! And that's just where we can't get, nohow.' | |
15 | * | |
cdad3b53 | 16 | * [p.603 of _The Lord of the Rings_, IV/I: "The Taming of Sméagol"] |
a0ed51b3 LW |
17 | * |
18 | * 'Well do I understand your speech,' he answered in the same language; | |
19 | * 'yet few strangers do so. Why then do you not speak in the Common Tongue, | |
4ac71550 | 20 | * as is the custom in the West, if you wish to be answered?' |
cdad3b53 | 21 | * --Gandalf, addressing Théoden's door wardens |
4ac71550 TC |
22 | * |
23 | * [p.508 of _The Lord of the Rings_, III/vi: "The King of the Golden Hall"] | |
a0ed51b3 LW |
24 | * |
25 | * ...the travellers perceived that the floor was paved with stones of many | |
26 | * hues; branching runes and strange devices intertwined beneath their feet. | |
4ac71550 TC |
27 | * |
28 | * [p.512 of _The Lord of the Rings_, III/vi: "The King of the Golden Hall"] | |
a0ed51b3 LW |
29 | */ |
30 | ||
31 | #include "EXTERN.h" | |
864dbfa3 | 32 | #define PERL_IN_UTF8_C |
a0ed51b3 | 33 | #include "perl.h" |
b992490d | 34 | #include "invlist_inline.h" |
a0ed51b3 | 35 | |
806547a7 | 36 | static const char malformed_text[] = "Malformed UTF-8 character"; |
27da23d5 | 37 | static const char unees[] = |
806547a7 | 38 | "Malformed UTF-8 character (unexpected end of string)"; |
fb7e7255 KW |
39 | |
40 | /* Be sure to synchronize this message with the similar one in regcomp.c */ | |
760c7c2f | 41 | static const char cp_above_legal_max[] = |
d22ec717 KW |
42 | "Use of code point 0x%" UVXf " is not allowed; the" |
43 | " permissible max is 0x%" UVXf; | |
760c7c2f | 44 | |
d22ec717 | 45 | #define MAX_EXTERNALLY_LEGAL_CP ((UV) (IV_MAX)) |
901b21bf | 46 | |
48ef279e | 47 | /* |
ccfc67b7 | 48 | =head1 Unicode Support |
7fefc6c1 | 49 | These are various utility functions for manipulating UTF8-encoded |
72d33970 | 50 | strings. For the uninitiated, this is a method of representing arbitrary |
61296642 | 51 | Unicode characters as a variable number of bytes, in such a way that |
56da48f7 DM |
52 | characters in the ASCII range are unmodified, and a zero byte never appears |
53 | within non-zero characters. | |
166f8a29 | 54 | |
eaf7a4d2 CS |
55 | =cut |
56 | */ | |
57 | ||
9cbfb8ab KW |
58 | void |
59 | Perl__force_out_malformed_utf8_message(pTHX_ | |
60 | const U8 *const p, /* First byte in UTF-8 sequence */ | |
61 | const U8 * const e, /* Final byte in sequence (may include | |
62 | multiple chars */ | |
63 | const U32 flags, /* Flags to pass to utf8n_to_uvchr(), | |
64 | usually 0, or some DISALLOW flags */ | |
65 | const bool die_here) /* If TRUE, this function does not return */ | |
66 | { | |
67 | /* This core-only function is to be called when a malformed UTF-8 character | |
68 | * is found, in order to output the detailed information about the | |
69 | * malformation before dieing. The reason it exists is for the occasions | |
70 | * when such a malformation is fatal, but warnings might be turned off, so | |
71 | * that normally they would not be actually output. This ensures that they | |
72 | * do get output. Because a sequence may be malformed in more than one | |
73 | * way, multiple messages may be generated, so we can't make them fatal, as | |
74 | * that would cause the first one to die. | |
75 | * | |
76 | * Instead we pretend -W was passed to perl, then die afterwards. The | |
77 | * flexibility is here to return to the caller so they can finish up and | |
78 | * die themselves */ | |
79 | U32 errors; | |
80 | ||
81 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT__FORCE_OUT_MALFORMED_UTF8_MESSAGE; | |
82 | ||
83 | ENTER; | |
c15a80f3 | 84 | SAVEI8(PL_dowarn); |
9cbfb8ab KW |
85 | SAVESPTR(PL_curcop); |
86 | ||
87 | PL_dowarn = G_WARN_ALL_ON|G_WARN_ON; | |
88 | if (PL_curcop) { | |
89 | PL_curcop->cop_warnings = pWARN_ALL; | |
90 | } | |
91 | ||
92 | (void) utf8n_to_uvchr_error(p, e - p, NULL, flags & ~UTF8_CHECK_ONLY, &errors); | |
93 | ||
94 | LEAVE; | |
95 | ||
96 | if (! errors) { | |
97 | Perl_croak(aTHX_ "panic: _force_out_malformed_utf8_message should" | |
98 | " be called only when there are errors found"); | |
99 | } | |
100 | ||
101 | if (die_here) { | |
102 | Perl_croak(aTHX_ "Malformed UTF-8 character (fatal)"); | |
103 | } | |
104 | } | |
105 | ||
bb07812e KW |
106 | STATIC HV * |
107 | S_new_msg_hv(pTHX_ const char * const message, /* The message text */ | |
108 | U32 categories, /* Packed warning categories */ | |
109 | U32 flag) /* Flag associated with this message */ | |
110 | { | |
111 | /* Creates, populates, and returns an HV* that describes an error message | |
112 | * for the translators between UTF8 and code point */ | |
113 | ||
114 | SV* msg_sv = newSVpv(message, 0); | |
115 | SV* category_sv = newSVuv(categories); | |
116 | SV* flag_bit_sv = newSVuv(flag); | |
117 | ||
118 | HV* msg_hv = newHV(); | |
119 | ||
120 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_NEW_MSG_HV; | |
121 | ||
2b672cf5 KW |
122 | (void) hv_stores(msg_hv, "text", msg_sv); |
123 | (void) hv_stores(msg_hv, "warn_categories", category_sv); | |
124 | (void) hv_stores(msg_hv, "flag_bit", flag_bit_sv); | |
bb07812e KW |
125 | |
126 | return msg_hv; | |
127 | } | |
128 | ||
eaf7a4d2 | 129 | /* |
378516de | 130 | =for apidoc uvoffuni_to_utf8_flags |
eebe1485 | 131 | |
a27992cc | 132 | THIS FUNCTION SHOULD BE USED IN ONLY VERY SPECIALIZED CIRCUMSTANCES. |
de69f3af KW |
133 | Instead, B<Almost all code should use L</uvchr_to_utf8> or |
134 | L</uvchr_to_utf8_flags>>. | |
a27992cc | 135 | |
de69f3af KW |
136 | This function is like them, but the input is a strict Unicode |
137 | (as opposed to native) code point. Only in very rare circumstances should code | |
138 | not be using the native code point. | |
949cf498 | 139 | |
efa9cd84 | 140 | For details, see the description for L</uvchr_to_utf8_flags>. |
949cf498 | 141 | |
eebe1485 SC |
142 | =cut |
143 | */ | |
144 | ||
33f38593 KW |
145 | U8 * |
146 | Perl_uvoffuni_to_utf8_flags(pTHX_ U8 *d, UV uv, const UV flags) | |
147 | { | |
148 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_UVOFFUNI_TO_UTF8_FLAGS; | |
149 | ||
150 | return uvoffuni_to_utf8_flags_msgs(d, uv, flags, NULL); | |
151 | } | |
152 | ||
c94c2f39 KW |
153 | /* All these formats take a single UV code point argument */ |
154 | const char surrogate_cp_format[] = "UTF-16 surrogate U+%04" UVXf; | |
155 | const char nonchar_cp_format[] = "Unicode non-character U+%04" UVXf | |
156 | " is not recommended for open interchange"; | |
157 | const char super_cp_format[] = "Code point 0x%" UVXf " is not Unicode," | |
158 | " may not be portable"; | |
57ff5f59 KW |
159 | const char perl_extended_cp_format[] = "Code point 0x%" UVXf " is not" \ |
160 | " Unicode, requires a Perl extension," \ | |
161 | " and so is not portable"; | |
c94c2f39 | 162 | |
33f38593 | 163 | #define HANDLE_UNICODE_SURROGATE(uv, flags, msgs) \ |
8ee1cdcb KW |
164 | STMT_START { \ |
165 | if (flags & UNICODE_WARN_SURROGATE) { \ | |
33f38593 KW |
166 | U32 category = packWARN(WARN_SURROGATE); \ |
167 | const char * format = surrogate_cp_format; \ | |
168 | if (msgs) { \ | |
169 | *msgs = new_msg_hv(Perl_form(aTHX_ format, uv), \ | |
170 | category, \ | |
171 | UNICODE_GOT_SURROGATE); \ | |
172 | } \ | |
173 | else { \ | |
174 | Perl_ck_warner_d(aTHX_ category, format, uv); \ | |
175 | } \ | |
8ee1cdcb KW |
176 | } \ |
177 | if (flags & UNICODE_DISALLOW_SURROGATE) { \ | |
178 | return NULL; \ | |
179 | } \ | |
180 | } STMT_END; | |
181 | ||
33f38593 | 182 | #define HANDLE_UNICODE_NONCHAR(uv, flags, msgs) \ |
8ee1cdcb KW |
183 | STMT_START { \ |
184 | if (flags & UNICODE_WARN_NONCHAR) { \ | |
33f38593 KW |
185 | U32 category = packWARN(WARN_NONCHAR); \ |
186 | const char * format = nonchar_cp_format; \ | |
187 | if (msgs) { \ | |
188 | *msgs = new_msg_hv(Perl_form(aTHX_ format, uv), \ | |
189 | category, \ | |
190 | UNICODE_GOT_NONCHAR); \ | |
191 | } \ | |
192 | else { \ | |
193 | Perl_ck_warner_d(aTHX_ category, format, uv); \ | |
194 | } \ | |
8ee1cdcb KW |
195 | } \ |
196 | if (flags & UNICODE_DISALLOW_NONCHAR) { \ | |
197 | return NULL; \ | |
198 | } \ | |
199 | } STMT_END; | |
200 | ||
ba6ed43c KW |
201 | /* Use shorter names internally in this file */ |
202 | #define SHIFT UTF_ACCUMULATION_SHIFT | |
203 | #undef MARK | |
204 | #define MARK UTF_CONTINUATION_MARK | |
205 | #define MASK UTF_CONTINUATION_MASK | |
206 | ||
33f38593 KW |
207 | /* |
208 | =for apidoc uvchr_to_utf8_flags_msgs | |
209 | ||
210 | THIS FUNCTION SHOULD BE USED IN ONLY VERY SPECIALIZED CIRCUMSTANCES. | |
211 | ||
212 | Most code should use C<L</uvchr_to_utf8_flags>()> rather than call this directly. | |
213 | ||
214 | This function is for code that wants any warning and/or error messages to be | |
215 | returned to the caller rather than be displayed. All messages that would have | |
216 | been displayed if all lexcial warnings are enabled will be returned. | |
217 | ||
218 | It is just like C<L</uvchr_to_utf8_flags>> but it takes an extra parameter | |
219 | placed after all the others, C<msgs>. If this parameter is 0, this function | |
220 | behaves identically to C<L</uvchr_to_utf8_flags>>. Otherwise, C<msgs> should | |
221 | be a pointer to an C<HV *> variable, in which this function creates a new HV to | |
222 | contain any appropriate messages. The hash has three key-value pairs, as | |
223 | follows: | |
224 | ||
225 | =over 4 | |
226 | ||
227 | =item C<text> | |
228 | ||
229 | The text of the message as a C<SVpv>. | |
230 | ||
231 | =item C<warn_categories> | |
232 | ||
233 | The warning category (or categories) packed into a C<SVuv>. | |
234 | ||
235 | =item C<flag> | |
236 | ||
237 | A single flag bit associated with this message, in a C<SVuv>. | |
238 | The bit corresponds to some bit in the C<*errors> return value, | |
239 | such as C<UNICODE_GOT_SURROGATE>. | |
240 | ||
241 | =back | |
242 | ||
243 | It's important to note that specifying this parameter as non-null will cause | |
244 | any warnings this function would otherwise generate to be suppressed, and | |
245 | instead be placed in C<*msgs>. The caller can check the lexical warnings state | |
246 | (or not) when choosing what to do with the returned messages. | |
247 | ||
248 | The caller, of course, is responsible for freeing any returned HV. | |
249 | ||
250 | =cut | |
251 | */ | |
252 | ||
253 | /* Undocumented; we don't want people using this. Instead they should use | |
254 | * uvchr_to_utf8_flags_msgs() */ | |
dfe13c55 | 255 | U8 * |
33f38593 | 256 | Perl_uvoffuni_to_utf8_flags_msgs(pTHX_ U8 *d, UV uv, const UV flags, HV** msgs) |
a0ed51b3 | 257 | { |
33f38593 KW |
258 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_UVOFFUNI_TO_UTF8_FLAGS_MSGS; |
259 | ||
260 | if (msgs) { | |
261 | *msgs = NULL; | |
262 | } | |
7918f24d | 263 | |
2d1545e5 | 264 | if (OFFUNI_IS_INVARIANT(uv)) { |
4c8cd605 | 265 | *d++ = LATIN1_TO_NATIVE(uv); |
d9432125 KW |
266 | return d; |
267 | } | |
facc1dc2 | 268 | |
3ea68d71 | 269 | if (uv <= MAX_UTF8_TWO_BYTE) { |
facc1dc2 KW |
270 | *d++ = I8_TO_NATIVE_UTF8(( uv >> SHIFT) | UTF_START_MARK(2)); |
271 | *d++ = I8_TO_NATIVE_UTF8(( uv & MASK) | MARK); | |
3ea68d71 KW |
272 | return d; |
273 | } | |
d9432125 | 274 | |
ba6ed43c KW |
275 | /* Not 2-byte; test for and handle 3-byte result. In the test immediately |
276 | * below, the 16 is for start bytes E0-EF (which are all the possible ones | |
277 | * for 3 byte characters). The 2 is for 2 continuation bytes; these each | |
278 | * contribute SHIFT bits. This yields 0x4000 on EBCDIC platforms, 0x1_0000 | |
279 | * on ASCII; so 3 bytes covers the range 0x400-0x3FFF on EBCDIC; | |
280 | * 0x800-0xFFFF on ASCII */ | |
281 | if (uv < (16 * (1U << (2 * SHIFT)))) { | |
282 | *d++ = I8_TO_NATIVE_UTF8(( uv >> ((3 - 1) * SHIFT)) | UTF_START_MARK(3)); | |
283 | *d++ = I8_TO_NATIVE_UTF8(((uv >> ((2 - 1) * SHIFT)) & MASK) | MARK); | |
284 | *d++ = I8_TO_NATIVE_UTF8(( uv /* (1 - 1) */ & MASK) | MARK); | |
285 | ||
286 | #ifndef EBCDIC /* These problematic code points are 4 bytes on EBCDIC, so | |
287 | aren't tested here */ | |
288 | /* The most likely code points in this range are below the surrogates. | |
289 | * Do an extra test to quickly exclude those. */ | |
290 | if (UNLIKELY(uv >= UNICODE_SURROGATE_FIRST)) { | |
291 | if (UNLIKELY( UNICODE_IS_32_CONTIGUOUS_NONCHARS(uv) | |
292 | || UNICODE_IS_END_PLANE_NONCHAR_GIVEN_NOT_SUPER(uv))) | |
293 | { | |
33f38593 | 294 | HANDLE_UNICODE_NONCHAR(uv, flags, msgs); |
8ee1cdcb KW |
295 | } |
296 | else if (UNLIKELY(UNICODE_IS_SURROGATE(uv))) { | |
33f38593 | 297 | HANDLE_UNICODE_SURROGATE(uv, flags, msgs); |
760c7c2f | 298 | } |
ba6ed43c KW |
299 | } |
300 | #endif | |
301 | return d; | |
302 | } | |
303 | ||
304 | /* Not 3-byte; that means the code point is at least 0x1_0000 on ASCII | |
305 | * platforms, and 0x4000 on EBCDIC. There are problematic cases that can | |
306 | * happen starting with 4-byte characters on ASCII platforms. We unify the | |
307 | * code for these with EBCDIC, even though some of them require 5-bytes on | |
308 | * those, because khw believes the code saving is worth the very slight | |
309 | * performance hit on these high EBCDIC code points. */ | |
310 | ||
311 | if (UNLIKELY(UNICODE_IS_SUPER(uv))) { | |
d22ec717 KW |
312 | if (UNLIKELY(uv > MAX_EXTERNALLY_LEGAL_CP)) { |
313 | Perl_croak(aTHX_ cp_above_legal_max, uv, MAX_EXTERNALLY_LEGAL_CP); | |
a5bf80e0 | 314 | } |
33f38593 KW |
315 | if ( (flags & UNICODE_WARN_SUPER) |
316 | || ( (flags & UNICODE_WARN_PERL_EXTENDED) | |
0a8a1a5b | 317 | && UNICODE_IS_PERL_EXTENDED(uv))) |
a5bf80e0 | 318 | { |
33f38593 KW |
319 | const char * format = super_cp_format; |
320 | U32 category = packWARN(WARN_NON_UNICODE); | |
321 | U32 flag = UNICODE_GOT_SUPER; | |
322 | ||
323 | /* Choose the more dire applicable warning */ | |
324 | if (UNICODE_IS_PERL_EXTENDED(uv)) { | |
325 | format = perl_extended_cp_format; | |
326 | if (flags & (UNICODE_WARN_PERL_EXTENDED | |
327 | |UNICODE_DISALLOW_PERL_EXTENDED)) | |
328 | { | |
329 | flag = UNICODE_GOT_PERL_EXTENDED; | |
330 | } | |
331 | } | |
a5bf80e0 | 332 | |
33f38593 KW |
333 | if (msgs) { |
334 | *msgs = new_msg_hv(Perl_form(aTHX_ format, uv), | |
335 | category, flag); | |
336 | } | |
337 | else { | |
338 | Perl_ck_warner_d(aTHX_ packWARN(WARN_NON_UNICODE), format, uv); | |
339 | } | |
a5bf80e0 | 340 | } |
56576a04 | 341 | if ( (flags & UNICODE_DISALLOW_SUPER) |
0a8a1a5b KW |
342 | || ( (flags & UNICODE_DISALLOW_PERL_EXTENDED) |
343 | && UNICODE_IS_PERL_EXTENDED(uv))) | |
a5bf80e0 KW |
344 | { |
345 | return NULL; | |
346 | } | |
347 | } | |
ba6ed43c | 348 | else if (UNLIKELY(UNICODE_IS_END_PLANE_NONCHAR_GIVEN_NOT_SUPER(uv))) { |
33f38593 | 349 | HANDLE_UNICODE_NONCHAR(uv, flags, msgs); |
507b9800 | 350 | } |
d9432125 | 351 | |
ba6ed43c KW |
352 | /* Test for and handle 4-byte result. In the test immediately below, the |
353 | * 8 is for start bytes F0-F7 (which are all the possible ones for 4 byte | |
354 | * characters). The 3 is for 3 continuation bytes; these each contribute | |
355 | * SHIFT bits. This yields 0x4_0000 on EBCDIC platforms, 0x20_0000 on | |
356 | * ASCII, so 4 bytes covers the range 0x4000-0x3_FFFF on EBCDIC; | |
357 | * 0x1_0000-0x1F_FFFF on ASCII */ | |
358 | if (uv < (8 * (1U << (3 * SHIFT)))) { | |
359 | *d++ = I8_TO_NATIVE_UTF8(( uv >> ((4 - 1) * SHIFT)) | UTF_START_MARK(4)); | |
360 | *d++ = I8_TO_NATIVE_UTF8(((uv >> ((3 - 1) * SHIFT)) & MASK) | MARK); | |
361 | *d++ = I8_TO_NATIVE_UTF8(((uv >> ((2 - 1) * SHIFT)) & MASK) | MARK); | |
362 | *d++ = I8_TO_NATIVE_UTF8(( uv /* (1 - 1) */ & MASK) | MARK); | |
363 | ||
364 | #ifdef EBCDIC /* These were handled on ASCII platforms in the code for 3-byte | |
365 | characters. The end-plane non-characters for EBCDIC were | |
366 | handled just above */ | |
367 | if (UNLIKELY(UNICODE_IS_32_CONTIGUOUS_NONCHARS(uv))) { | |
33f38593 | 368 | HANDLE_UNICODE_NONCHAR(uv, flags, msgs); |
d528804a | 369 | } |
ba6ed43c | 370 | else if (UNLIKELY(UNICODE_IS_SURROGATE(uv))) { |
33f38593 | 371 | HANDLE_UNICODE_SURROGATE(uv, flags, msgs); |
ba6ed43c KW |
372 | } |
373 | #endif | |
374 | ||
375 | return d; | |
376 | } | |
377 | ||
378 | /* Not 4-byte; that means the code point is at least 0x20_0000 on ASCII | |
379 | * platforms, and 0x4000 on EBCDIC. At this point we switch to a loop | |
380 | * format. The unrolled version above turns out to not save all that much | |
381 | * time, and at these high code points (well above the legal Unicode range | |
382 | * on ASCII platforms, and well above anything in common use in EBCDIC), | |
383 | * khw believes that less code outweighs slight performance gains. */ | |
384 | ||
d9432125 | 385 | { |
5aaebcb3 | 386 | STRLEN len = OFFUNISKIP(uv); |
1d72bdf6 NIS |
387 | U8 *p = d+len-1; |
388 | while (p > d) { | |
4c8cd605 | 389 | *p-- = I8_TO_NATIVE_UTF8((uv & UTF_CONTINUATION_MASK) | UTF_CONTINUATION_MARK); |
1d72bdf6 NIS |
390 | uv >>= UTF_ACCUMULATION_SHIFT; |
391 | } | |
4c8cd605 | 392 | *p = I8_TO_NATIVE_UTF8((uv & UTF_START_MASK(len)) | UTF_START_MARK(len)); |
1d72bdf6 NIS |
393 | return d+len; |
394 | } | |
a0ed51b3 | 395 | } |
a5bf80e0 | 396 | |
646ca15d | 397 | /* |
07693fe6 KW |
398 | =for apidoc uvchr_to_utf8 |
399 | ||
bcb1a2d4 | 400 | Adds the UTF-8 representation of the native code point C<uv> to the end |
f2fc1b45 | 401 | of the string C<d>; C<d> should have at least C<UVCHR_SKIP(uv)+1> (up to |
c749c9fd KW |
402 | C<UTF8_MAXBYTES+1>) free bytes available. The return value is the pointer to |
403 | the byte after the end of the new character. In other words, | |
07693fe6 KW |
404 | |
405 | d = uvchr_to_utf8(d, uv); | |
406 | ||
407 | is the recommended wide native character-aware way of saying | |
408 | ||
409 | *(d++) = uv; | |
410 | ||
d22ec717 KW |
411 | This function accepts any code point from 0..C<IV_MAX> as input. |
412 | C<IV_MAX> is typically 0x7FFF_FFFF in a 32-bit word. | |
760c7c2f KW |
413 | |
414 | It is possible to forbid or warn on non-Unicode code points, or those that may | |
415 | be problematic by using L</uvchr_to_utf8_flags>. | |
de69f3af | 416 | |
07693fe6 KW |
417 | =cut |
418 | */ | |
419 | ||
de69f3af KW |
420 | /* This is also a macro */ |
421 | PERL_CALLCONV U8* Perl_uvchr_to_utf8(pTHX_ U8 *d, UV uv); | |
422 | ||
07693fe6 KW |
423 | U8 * |
424 | Perl_uvchr_to_utf8(pTHX_ U8 *d, UV uv) | |
425 | { | |
de69f3af | 426 | return uvchr_to_utf8(d, uv); |
07693fe6 KW |
427 | } |
428 | ||
de69f3af KW |
429 | /* |
430 | =for apidoc uvchr_to_utf8_flags | |
431 | ||
432 | Adds the UTF-8 representation of the native code point C<uv> to the end | |
f2fc1b45 | 433 | of the string C<d>; C<d> should have at least C<UVCHR_SKIP(uv)+1> (up to |
c749c9fd KW |
434 | C<UTF8_MAXBYTES+1>) free bytes available. The return value is the pointer to |
435 | the byte after the end of the new character. In other words, | |
de69f3af KW |
436 | |
437 | d = uvchr_to_utf8_flags(d, uv, flags); | |
438 | ||
439 | or, in most cases, | |
440 | ||
441 | d = uvchr_to_utf8_flags(d, uv, 0); | |
442 | ||
443 | This is the Unicode-aware way of saying | |
444 | ||
445 | *(d++) = uv; | |
446 | ||
d22ec717 KW |
447 | If C<flags> is 0, this function accepts any code point from 0..C<IV_MAX> as |
448 | input. C<IV_MAX> is typically 0x7FFF_FFFF in a 32-bit word. | |
760c7c2f KW |
449 | |
450 | Specifying C<flags> can further restrict what is allowed and not warned on, as | |
451 | follows: | |
de69f3af | 452 | |
796b6530 | 453 | If C<uv> is a Unicode surrogate code point and C<UNICODE_WARN_SURROGATE> is set, |
7ee537e6 KW |
454 | the function will raise a warning, provided UTF8 warnings are enabled. If |
455 | instead C<UNICODE_DISALLOW_SURROGATE> is set, the function will fail and return | |
456 | NULL. If both flags are set, the function will both warn and return NULL. | |
de69f3af | 457 | |
760c7c2f KW |
458 | Similarly, the C<UNICODE_WARN_NONCHAR> and C<UNICODE_DISALLOW_NONCHAR> flags |
459 | affect how the function handles a Unicode non-character. | |
93e6dbd6 | 460 | |
760c7c2f KW |
461 | And likewise, the C<UNICODE_WARN_SUPER> and C<UNICODE_DISALLOW_SUPER> flags |
462 | affect the handling of code points that are above the Unicode maximum of | |
463 | 0x10FFFF. Languages other than Perl may not be able to accept files that | |
464 | contain these. | |
93e6dbd6 KW |
465 | |
466 | The flag C<UNICODE_WARN_ILLEGAL_INTERCHANGE> selects all three of | |
467 | the above WARN flags; and C<UNICODE_DISALLOW_ILLEGAL_INTERCHANGE> selects all | |
ecc1615f KW |
468 | three DISALLOW flags. C<UNICODE_DISALLOW_ILLEGAL_INTERCHANGE> restricts the |
469 | allowed inputs to the strict UTF-8 traditionally defined by Unicode. | |
470 | Similarly, C<UNICODE_WARN_ILLEGAL_C9_INTERCHANGE> and | |
471 | C<UNICODE_DISALLOW_ILLEGAL_C9_INTERCHANGE> are shortcuts to select the | |
472 | above-Unicode and surrogate flags, but not the non-character ones, as | |
473 | defined in | |
474 | L<Unicode Corrigendum #9|http://www.unicode.org/versions/corrigendum9.html>. | |
475 | See L<perlunicode/Noncharacter code points>. | |
93e6dbd6 | 476 | |
57ff5f59 KW |
477 | Extremely high code points were never specified in any standard, and require an |
478 | extension to UTF-8 to express, which Perl does. It is likely that programs | |
479 | written in something other than Perl would not be able to read files that | |
480 | contain these; nor would Perl understand files written by something that uses a | |
481 | different extension. For these reasons, there is a separate set of flags that | |
482 | can warn and/or disallow these extremely high code points, even if other | |
483 | above-Unicode ones are accepted. They are the C<UNICODE_WARN_PERL_EXTENDED> | |
484 | and C<UNICODE_DISALLOW_PERL_EXTENDED> flags. For more information see | |
485 | L</C<UTF8_GOT_PERL_EXTENDED>>. Of course C<UNICODE_DISALLOW_SUPER> will | |
486 | treat all above-Unicode code points, including these, as malformations. (Note | |
487 | that the Unicode standard considers anything above 0x10FFFF to be illegal, but | |
488 | there are standards predating it that allow up to 0x7FFF_FFFF (2**31 -1)) | |
489 | ||
490 | A somewhat misleadingly named synonym for C<UNICODE_WARN_PERL_EXTENDED> is | |
491 | retained for backward compatibility: C<UNICODE_WARN_ABOVE_31_BIT>. Similarly, | |
492 | C<UNICODE_DISALLOW_ABOVE_31_BIT> is usable instead of the more accurately named | |
7c4a22ed KW |
493 | C<UNICODE_DISALLOW_PERL_EXTENDED>. The names are misleading because on EBCDIC |
494 | platforms,these flags can apply to code points that actually do fit in 31 bits. | |
495 | The new names accurately describe the situation in all cases. | |
de69f3af | 496 | |
de69f3af KW |
497 | =cut |
498 | */ | |
499 | ||
500 | /* This is also a macro */ | |
501 | PERL_CALLCONV U8* Perl_uvchr_to_utf8_flags(pTHX_ U8 *d, UV uv, UV flags); | |
502 | ||
07693fe6 KW |
503 | U8 * |
504 | Perl_uvchr_to_utf8_flags(pTHX_ U8 *d, UV uv, UV flags) | |
505 | { | |
de69f3af | 506 | return uvchr_to_utf8_flags(d, uv, flags); |
07693fe6 KW |
507 | } |
508 | ||
57ff5f59 KW |
509 | #ifndef UV_IS_QUAD |
510 | ||
e050c007 KW |
511 | STATIC int |
512 | S_is_utf8_cp_above_31_bits(const U8 * const s, | |
513 | const U8 * const e, | |
514 | const bool consider_overlongs) | |
83dc0f42 KW |
515 | { |
516 | /* Returns TRUE if the first code point represented by the Perl-extended- | |
517 | * UTF-8-encoded string starting at 's', and looking no further than 'e - | |
518 | * 1' doesn't fit into 31 bytes. That is, that if it is >= 2**31. | |
519 | * | |
520 | * The function handles the case where the input bytes do not include all | |
521 | * the ones necessary to represent a full character. That is, they may be | |
522 | * the intial bytes of the representation of a code point, but possibly | |
523 | * the final ones necessary for the complete representation may be beyond | |
524 | * 'e - 1'. | |
525 | * | |
e050c007 KW |
526 | * The function also can handle the case where the input is an overlong |
527 | * sequence. If 'consider_overlongs' is 0, the function assumes the | |
528 | * input is not overlong, without checking, and will return based on that | |
529 | * assumption. If this parameter is 1, the function will go to the trouble | |
530 | * of figuring out if it actually evaluates to above or below 31 bits. | |
83dc0f42 | 531 | * |
e050c007 | 532 | * The sequence is otherwise assumed to be well-formed, without checking. |
83dc0f42 KW |
533 | */ |
534 | ||
e050c007 KW |
535 | const STRLEN len = e - s; |
536 | int is_overlong; | |
537 | ||
538 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_IS_UTF8_CP_ABOVE_31_BITS; | |
539 | ||
540 | assert(! UTF8_IS_INVARIANT(*s) && e > s); | |
541 | ||
83dc0f42 KW |
542 | #ifdef EBCDIC |
543 | ||
e050c007 | 544 | PERL_UNUSED_ARG(consider_overlongs); |
83dc0f42 | 545 | |
e050c007 KW |
546 | /* On the EBCDIC code pages we handle, only the native start byte 0xFE can |
547 | * mean a 32-bit or larger code point (0xFF is an invariant). 0xFE can | |
548 | * also be the start byte for a 31-bit code point; we need at least 2 | |
549 | * bytes, and maybe up through 8 bytes, to determine that. (It can also be | |
550 | * the start byte for an overlong sequence, but for 30-bit or smaller code | |
551 | * points, so we don't have to worry about overlongs on EBCDIC.) */ | |
552 | if (*s != 0xFE) { | |
553 | return 0; | |
554 | } | |
83dc0f42 | 555 | |
e050c007 KW |
556 | if (len == 1) { |
557 | return -1; | |
558 | } | |
83dc0f42 | 559 | |
e050c007 | 560 | #else |
83dc0f42 | 561 | |
e050c007 KW |
562 | /* On ASCII, FE and FF are the only start bytes that can evaluate to |
563 | * needing more than 31 bits. */ | |
564 | if (LIKELY(*s < 0xFE)) { | |
565 | return 0; | |
566 | } | |
83dc0f42 | 567 | |
e050c007 KW |
568 | /* What we have left are FE and FF. Both of these require more than 31 |
569 | * bits unless they are for overlongs. */ | |
570 | if (! consider_overlongs) { | |
571 | return 1; | |
572 | } | |
83dc0f42 | 573 | |
e050c007 KW |
574 | /* Here, we have FE or FF. If the input isn't overlong, it evaluates to |
575 | * above 31 bits. But we need more than one byte to discern this, so if | |
576 | * passed just the start byte, it could be an overlong evaluating to | |
577 | * smaller */ | |
578 | if (len == 1) { | |
579 | return -1; | |
580 | } | |
83dc0f42 | 581 | |
e050c007 KW |
582 | /* Having excluded len==1, and knowing that FE and FF are both valid start |
583 | * bytes, we can call the function below to see if the sequence is | |
584 | * overlong. (We don't need the full generality of the called function, | |
585 | * but for these huge code points, speed shouldn't be a consideration, and | |
586 | * the compiler does have enough information, since it's static to this | |
587 | * file, to optimize to just the needed parts.) */ | |
588 | is_overlong = is_utf8_overlong_given_start_byte_ok(s, len); | |
83dc0f42 | 589 | |
e050c007 KW |
590 | /* If it isn't overlong, more than 31 bits are required. */ |
591 | if (is_overlong == 0) { | |
592 | return 1; | |
593 | } | |
83dc0f42 | 594 | |
e050c007 KW |
595 | /* If it is indeterminate if it is overlong, return that */ |
596 | if (is_overlong < 0) { | |
597 | return -1; | |
598 | } | |
599 | ||
600 | /* Here is overlong. Such a sequence starting with FE is below 31 bits, as | |
601 | * the max it can be is 2**31 - 1 */ | |
602 | if (*s == 0xFE) { | |
603 | return 0; | |
83dc0f42 KW |
604 | } |
605 | ||
e050c007 KW |
606 | #endif |
607 | ||
608 | /* Here, ASCII and EBCDIC rejoin: | |
609 | * On ASCII: We have an overlong sequence starting with FF | |
610 | * On EBCDIC: We have a sequence starting with FE. */ | |
611 | ||
612 | { /* For C89, use a block so the declaration can be close to its use */ | |
613 | ||
614 | #ifdef EBCDIC | |
615 | ||
5f995336 KW |
616 | /* U+7FFFFFFF (2 ** 31 - 1) |
617 | * [0] [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] 10 11 12 13 | |
618 | * IBM-1047: \xFE\x41\x41\x41\x41\x41\x41\x42\x73\x73\x73\x73\x73\x73 | |
619 | * IBM-037: \xFE\x41\x41\x41\x41\x41\x41\x42\x72\x72\x72\x72\x72\x72 | |
620 | * POSIX-BC: \xFE\x41\x41\x41\x41\x41\x41\x42\x75\x75\x75\x75\x75\x75 | |
621 | * I8: \xFF\xA0\xA0\xA0\xA0\xA0\xA0\xA1\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF | |
622 | * U+80000000 (2 ** 31): | |
623 | * IBM-1047: \xFE\x41\x41\x41\x41\x41\x41\x43\x41\x41\x41\x41\x41\x41 | |
624 | * IBM-037: \xFE\x41\x41\x41\x41\x41\x41\x43\x41\x41\x41\x41\x41\x41 | |
625 | * POSIX-BC: \xFE\x41\x41\x41\x41\x41\x41\x43\x41\x41\x41\x41\x41\x41 | |
626 | * I8: \xFF\xA0\xA0\xA0\xA0\xA0\xA0\xA2\xA0\xA0\xA0\xA0\xA0\xA0 | |
e050c007 KW |
627 | * |
628 | * and since we know that *s = \xfe, any continuation sequcence | |
629 | * following it that is gt the below is above 31 bits | |
630 | [0] [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] */ | |
631 | const U8 conts_for_highest_30_bit[] = "\x41\x41\x41\x41\x41\x41\x42"; | |
632 | ||
633 | #else | |
634 | ||
635 | /* FF overlong for U+7FFFFFFF (2 ** 31 - 1) | |
636 | * ASCII: \xFF\x80\x80\x80\x80\x80\x80\x81\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF | |
637 | * FF overlong for U+80000000 (2 ** 31): | |
638 | * ASCII: \xFF\x80\x80\x80\x80\x80\x80\x82\x80\x80\x80\x80\x80 | |
639 | * and since we know that *s = \xff, any continuation sequcence | |
640 | * following it that is gt the below is above 30 bits | |
641 | [0] [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] */ | |
642 | const U8 conts_for_highest_30_bit[] = "\x80\x80\x80\x80\x80\x80\x81"; | |
5f995336 | 643 | |
83dc0f42 KW |
644 | |
645 | #endif | |
e050c007 KW |
646 | const STRLEN conts_len = sizeof(conts_for_highest_30_bit) - 1; |
647 | const STRLEN cmp_len = MIN(conts_len, len - 1); | |
648 | ||
649 | /* Now compare the continuation bytes in s with the ones we have | |
650 | * compiled in that are for the largest 30 bit code point. If we have | |
651 | * enough bytes available to determine the answer, or the bytes we do | |
652 | * have differ from them, we can compare the two to get a definitive | |
653 | * answer (Note that in UTF-EBCDIC, the two lowest possible | |
654 | * continuation bytes are \x41 and \x42.) */ | |
655 | if (cmp_len >= conts_len || memNE(s + 1, | |
656 | conts_for_highest_30_bit, | |
657 | cmp_len)) | |
658 | { | |
659 | return cBOOL(memGT(s + 1, conts_for_highest_30_bit, cmp_len)); | |
660 | } | |
83dc0f42 | 661 | |
e050c007 KW |
662 | /* Here, all the bytes we have are the same as the highest 30-bit code |
663 | * point, but we are missing so many bytes that we can't make the | |
664 | * determination */ | |
665 | return -1; | |
666 | } | |
83dc0f42 KW |
667 | } |
668 | ||
57ff5f59 KW |
669 | #endif |
670 | ||
d6be65ae | 671 | PERL_STATIC_INLINE int |
12a4bed3 KW |
672 | S_is_utf8_overlong_given_start_byte_ok(const U8 * const s, const STRLEN len) |
673 | { | |
d6be65ae KW |
674 | /* Returns an int indicating whether or not the UTF-8 sequence from 's' to |
675 | * 's' + 'len' - 1 is an overlong. It returns 1 if it is an overlong; 0 if | |
676 | * it isn't, and -1 if there isn't enough information to tell. This last | |
677 | * return value can happen if the sequence is incomplete, missing some | |
678 | * trailing bytes that would form a complete character. If there are | |
679 | * enough bytes to make a definitive decision, this function does so. | |
680 | * Usually 2 bytes sufficient. | |
681 | * | |
682 | * Overlongs can occur whenever the number of continuation bytes changes. | |
683 | * That means whenever the number of leading 1 bits in a start byte | |
684 | * increases from the next lower start byte. That happens for start bytes | |
685 | * C0, E0, F0, F8, FC, FE, and FF. On modern perls, the following illegal | |
686 | * start bytes have already been excluded, so don't need to be tested here; | |
12a4bed3 KW |
687 | * ASCII platforms: C0, C1 |
688 | * EBCDIC platforms C0, C1, C2, C3, C4, E0 | |
d6be65ae | 689 | */ |
12a4bed3 KW |
690 | |
691 | const U8 s0 = NATIVE_UTF8_TO_I8(s[0]); | |
692 | const U8 s1 = NATIVE_UTF8_TO_I8(s[1]); | |
693 | ||
694 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_IS_UTF8_OVERLONG_GIVEN_START_BYTE_OK; | |
695 | assert(len > 1 && UTF8_IS_START(*s)); | |
696 | ||
697 | /* Each platform has overlongs after the start bytes given above (expressed | |
698 | * in I8 for EBCDIC). What constitutes an overlong varies by platform, but | |
699 | * the logic is the same, except the E0 overlong has already been excluded | |
700 | * on EBCDIC platforms. The values below were found by manually | |
701 | * inspecting the UTF-8 patterns. See the tables in utf8.h and | |
702 | * utfebcdic.h. */ | |
703 | ||
704 | # ifdef EBCDIC | |
705 | # define F0_ABOVE_OVERLONG 0xB0 | |
706 | # define F8_ABOVE_OVERLONG 0xA8 | |
707 | # define FC_ABOVE_OVERLONG 0xA4 | |
708 | # define FE_ABOVE_OVERLONG 0xA2 | |
709 | # define FF_OVERLONG_PREFIX "\xfe\x41\x41\x41\x41\x41\x41\x41" | |
710 | /* I8(0xfe) is FF */ | |
711 | # else | |
712 | ||
713 | if (s0 == 0xE0 && UNLIKELY(s1 < 0xA0)) { | |
d6be65ae | 714 | return 1; |
12a4bed3 KW |
715 | } |
716 | ||
717 | # define F0_ABOVE_OVERLONG 0x90 | |
718 | # define F8_ABOVE_OVERLONG 0x88 | |
719 | # define FC_ABOVE_OVERLONG 0x84 | |
720 | # define FE_ABOVE_OVERLONG 0x82 | |
721 | # define FF_OVERLONG_PREFIX "\xff\x80\x80\x80\x80\x80\x80" | |
722 | # endif | |
723 | ||
724 | ||
725 | if ( (s0 == 0xF0 && UNLIKELY(s1 < F0_ABOVE_OVERLONG)) | |
726 | || (s0 == 0xF8 && UNLIKELY(s1 < F8_ABOVE_OVERLONG)) | |
727 | || (s0 == 0xFC && UNLIKELY(s1 < FC_ABOVE_OVERLONG)) | |
728 | || (s0 == 0xFE && UNLIKELY(s1 < FE_ABOVE_OVERLONG))) | |
729 | { | |
d6be65ae | 730 | return 1; |
12a4bed3 KW |
731 | } |
732 | ||
b0b342d4 | 733 | /* Check for the FF overlong */ |
d6be65ae | 734 | return isFF_OVERLONG(s, len); |
b0b342d4 KW |
735 | } |
736 | ||
8d6204cc | 737 | PERL_STATIC_INLINE int |
b0b342d4 KW |
738 | S_isFF_OVERLONG(const U8 * const s, const STRLEN len) |
739 | { | |
8d6204cc KW |
740 | /* Returns an int indicating whether or not the UTF-8 sequence from 's' to |
741 | * 'e' - 1 is an overlong beginning with \xFF. It returns 1 if it is; 0 if | |
742 | * it isn't, and -1 if there isn't enough information to tell. This last | |
743 | * return value can happen if the sequence is incomplete, missing some | |
744 | * trailing bytes that would form a complete character. If there are | |
745 | * enough bytes to make a definitive decision, this function does so. */ | |
746 | ||
b0b342d4 | 747 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_ISFF_OVERLONG; |
12a4bed3 | 748 | |
8d6204cc KW |
749 | /* To be an FF overlong, all the available bytes must match */ |
750 | if (LIKELY(memNE(s, FF_OVERLONG_PREFIX, | |
751 | MIN(len, sizeof(FF_OVERLONG_PREFIX) - 1)))) | |
752 | { | |
753 | return 0; | |
754 | } | |
755 | ||
756 | /* To be an FF overlong sequence, all the bytes in FF_OVERLONG_PREFIX must | |
757 | * be there; what comes after them doesn't matter. See tables in utf8.h, | |
b0b342d4 | 758 | * utfebcdic.h. */ |
8d6204cc KW |
759 | if (len >= sizeof(FF_OVERLONG_PREFIX) - 1) { |
760 | return 1; | |
761 | } | |
12a4bed3 | 762 | |
8d6204cc KW |
763 | /* The missing bytes could cause the result to go one way or the other, so |
764 | * the result is indeterminate */ | |
765 | return -1; | |
12a4bed3 KW |
766 | } |
767 | ||
d22ec717 | 768 | #if defined(UV_IS_QUAD) /* These assume IV_MAX is 2**63-1 */ |
a77c906e KW |
769 | # ifdef EBCDIC /* Actually is I8 */ |
770 | # define HIGHEST_REPRESENTABLE_UTF8 \ | |
d22ec717 | 771 | "\xFF\xA7\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF" |
a77c906e KW |
772 | # else |
773 | # define HIGHEST_REPRESENTABLE_UTF8 \ | |
d22ec717 | 774 | "\xFF\x80\x87\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF" |
a77c906e KW |
775 | # endif |
776 | #endif | |
777 | ||
c285bbc4 | 778 | PERL_STATIC_INLINE int |
e050c007 KW |
779 | S_does_utf8_overflow(const U8 * const s, |
780 | const U8 * e, | |
781 | const bool consider_overlongs) | |
a77c906e | 782 | { |
c285bbc4 | 783 | /* Returns an int indicating whether or not the UTF-8 sequence from 's' to |
d22ec717 KW |
784 | * 'e' - 1 would overflow an IV on this platform; that is if it represents |
785 | * a code point larger than the highest representable code point. It | |
786 | * returns 1 if it does overflow; 0 if it doesn't, and -1 if there isn't | |
787 | * enough information to tell. This last return value can happen if the | |
788 | * sequence is incomplete, missing some trailing bytes that would form a | |
789 | * complete character. If there are enough bytes to make a definitive | |
790 | * decision, this function does so. | |
c285bbc4 | 791 | * |
e050c007 KW |
792 | * If 'consider_overlongs' is TRUE, the function checks for the possibility |
793 | * that the sequence is an overlong that doesn't overflow. Otherwise, it | |
794 | * assumes the sequence is not an overlong. This can give different | |
795 | * results only on ASCII 32-bit platforms. | |
796 | * | |
c285bbc4 KW |
797 | * (For ASCII platforms, we could use memcmp() because we don't have to |
798 | * convert each byte to I8, but it's very rare input indeed that would | |
799 | * approach overflow, so the loop below will likely only get executed once.) | |
800 | * | |
801 | * 'e' - 1 must not be beyond a full character. */ | |
a77c906e | 802 | |
a77c906e KW |
803 | |
804 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_DOES_UTF8_OVERFLOW; | |
805 | assert(s <= e && s + UTF8SKIP(s) >= e); | |
806 | ||
d22ec717 KW |
807 | #if ! defined(UV_IS_QUAD) |
808 | ||
809 | return is_utf8_cp_above_31_bits(s, e, consider_overlongs); | |
810 | ||
811 | #else | |
812 | ||
813 | PERL_UNUSED_ARG(consider_overlongs); | |
814 | ||
815 | { | |
816 | const STRLEN len = e - s; | |
817 | const U8 *x; | |
818 | const U8 * y = (const U8 *) HIGHEST_REPRESENTABLE_UTF8; | |
819 | ||
820 | for (x = s; x < e; x++, y++) { | |
821 | ||
822 | if (UNLIKELY(NATIVE_UTF8_TO_I8(*x) == *y)) { | |
823 | continue; | |
824 | } | |
825 | ||
826 | /* If this byte is larger than the corresponding highest UTF-8 | |
827 | * byte, the sequence overflow; otherwise the byte is less than, | |
828 | * and so the sequence doesn't overflow */ | |
829 | return NATIVE_UTF8_TO_I8(*x) > *y; | |
830 | ||
831 | } | |
832 | ||
833 | /* Got to the end and all bytes are the same. If the input is a whole | |
834 | * character, it doesn't overflow. And if it is a partial character, | |
835 | * there's not enough information to tell */ | |
836 | if (len < sizeof(HIGHEST_REPRESENTABLE_UTF8) - 1) { | |
837 | return -1; | |
838 | } | |
839 | ||
840 | return 0; | |
841 | } | |
842 | ||
843 | #endif | |
844 | ||
845 | } | |
846 | ||
847 | #if 0 | |
848 | ||
849 | /* This is the portions of the above function that deal with UV_MAX instead of | |
850 | * IV_MAX. They are left here in case we want to combine them so that internal | |
851 | * uses can have larger code points. The only logic difference is that the | |
852 | * 32-bit EBCDIC platform is treate like the 64-bit, and the 32-bit ASCII has | |
853 | * different logic. | |
854 | */ | |
855 | ||
856 | /* Anything larger than this will overflow the word if it were converted into a UV */ | |
857 | #if defined(UV_IS_QUAD) | |
858 | # ifdef EBCDIC /* Actually is I8 */ | |
859 | # define HIGHEST_REPRESENTABLE_UTF8 \ | |
860 | "\xFF\xAF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF" | |
861 | # else | |
862 | # define HIGHEST_REPRESENTABLE_UTF8 \ | |
863 | "\xFF\x80\x8F\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF" | |
864 | # endif | |
865 | #else /* 32-bit */ | |
866 | # ifdef EBCDIC | |
867 | # define HIGHEST_REPRESENTABLE_UTF8 \ | |
868 | "\xFF\xA0\xA0\xA0\xA0\xA0\xA0\xA3\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF" | |
869 | # else | |
870 | # define HIGHEST_REPRESENTABLE_UTF8 "\xFE\x83\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF\xBF" | |
871 | # endif | |
872 | #endif | |
873 | ||
a77c906e KW |
874 | #if ! defined(UV_IS_QUAD) && ! defined(EBCDIC) |
875 | ||
876 | /* On 32 bit ASCII machines, many overlongs that start with FF don't | |
877 | * overflow */ | |
e050c007 | 878 | if (consider_overlongs && isFF_OVERLONG(s, len) > 0) { |
c285bbc4 KW |
879 | |
880 | /* To be such an overlong, the first bytes of 's' must match | |
881 | * FF_OVERLONG_PREFIX, which is "\xff\x80\x80\x80\x80\x80\x80". If we | |
882 | * don't have any additional bytes available, the sequence, when | |
883 | * completed might or might not fit in 32 bits. But if we have that | |
884 | * next byte, we can tell for sure. If it is <= 0x83, then it does | |
885 | * fit. */ | |
886 | if (len <= sizeof(FF_OVERLONG_PREFIX) - 1) { | |
887 | return -1; | |
888 | } | |
889 | ||
890 | return s[sizeof(FF_OVERLONG_PREFIX) - 1] > 0x83; | |
a77c906e KW |
891 | } |
892 | ||
d22ec717 KW |
893 | /* Starting with the #else, the rest of the function is identical except |
894 | * 1. we need to move the 'len' declaration to be global to the function | |
895 | * 2. the endif move to just after the UNUSED_ARG. | |
896 | * An empty endif is given just below to satisfy the preprocessor | |
897 | */ | |
a77c906e KW |
898 | #endif |
899 | ||
d22ec717 | 900 | #endif |
a77c906e | 901 | |
12a4bed3 KW |
902 | #undef F0_ABOVE_OVERLONG |
903 | #undef F8_ABOVE_OVERLONG | |
904 | #undef FC_ABOVE_OVERLONG | |
905 | #undef FE_ABOVE_OVERLONG | |
906 | #undef FF_OVERLONG_PREFIX | |
907 | ||
35f8c9bd | 908 | STRLEN |
edc2c47a | 909 | Perl__is_utf8_char_helper(const U8 * const s, const U8 * e, const U32 flags) |
35f8c9bd | 910 | { |
2b479609 | 911 | STRLEN len; |
12a4bed3 | 912 | const U8 *x; |
35f8c9bd | 913 | |
2b479609 KW |
914 | /* A helper function that should not be called directly. |
915 | * | |
916 | * This function returns non-zero if the string beginning at 's' and | |
917 | * looking no further than 'e - 1' is well-formed Perl-extended-UTF-8 for a | |
918 | * code point; otherwise it returns 0. The examination stops after the | |
919 | * first code point in 's' is validated, not looking at the rest of the | |
920 | * input. If 'e' is such that there are not enough bytes to represent a | |
921 | * complete code point, this function will return non-zero anyway, if the | |
922 | * bytes it does have are well-formed UTF-8 as far as they go, and aren't | |
923 | * excluded by 'flags'. | |
924 | * | |
925 | * A non-zero return gives the number of bytes required to represent the | |
926 | * code point. Be aware that if the input is for a partial character, the | |
927 | * return will be larger than 'e - s'. | |
928 | * | |
929 | * This function assumes that the code point represented is UTF-8 variant. | |
56576a04 KW |
930 | * The caller should have excluded the possibility of it being invariant |
931 | * before calling this function. | |
2b479609 KW |
932 | * |
933 | * 'flags' can be 0, or any combination of the UTF8_DISALLOW_foo flags | |
934 | * accepted by L</utf8n_to_uvchr>. If non-zero, this function will return | |
935 | * 0 if the code point represented is well-formed Perl-extended-UTF-8, but | |
936 | * disallowed by the flags. If the input is only for a partial character, | |
937 | * the function will return non-zero if there is any sequence of | |
938 | * well-formed UTF-8 that, when appended to the input sequence, could | |
939 | * result in an allowed code point; otherwise it returns 0. Non characters | |
940 | * cannot be determined based on partial character input. But many of the | |
941 | * other excluded types can be determined with just the first one or two | |
942 | * bytes. | |
943 | * | |
944 | */ | |
945 | ||
946 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT__IS_UTF8_CHAR_HELPER; | |
947 | ||
948 | assert(0 == (flags & ~(UTF8_DISALLOW_ILLEGAL_INTERCHANGE | |
d044b7a7 | 949 | |UTF8_DISALLOW_PERL_EXTENDED))); |
2b479609 | 950 | assert(! UTF8_IS_INVARIANT(*s)); |
35f8c9bd | 951 | |
2b479609 | 952 | /* A variant char must begin with a start byte */ |
35f8c9bd KW |
953 | if (UNLIKELY(! UTF8_IS_START(*s))) { |
954 | return 0; | |
955 | } | |
956 | ||
edc2c47a KW |
957 | /* Examine a maximum of a single whole code point */ |
958 | if (e - s > UTF8SKIP(s)) { | |
959 | e = s + UTF8SKIP(s); | |
960 | } | |
961 | ||
2b479609 KW |
962 | len = e - s; |
963 | ||
964 | if (flags && isUTF8_POSSIBLY_PROBLEMATIC(*s)) { | |
965 | const U8 s0 = NATIVE_UTF8_TO_I8(s[0]); | |
35f8c9bd | 966 | |
56576a04 KW |
967 | /* Here, we are disallowing some set of largish code points, and the |
968 | * first byte indicates the sequence is for a code point that could be | |
969 | * in the excluded set. We generally don't have to look beyond this or | |
970 | * the second byte to see if the sequence is actually for one of the | |
971 | * excluded classes. The code below is derived from this table: | |
972 | * | |
2b479609 KW |
973 | * UTF-8 UTF-EBCDIC I8 |
974 | * U+D800: \xED\xA0\x80 \xF1\xB6\xA0\xA0 First surrogate | |
975 | * U+DFFF: \xED\xBF\xBF \xF1\xB7\xBF\xBF Final surrogate | |
976 | * U+110000: \xF4\x90\x80\x80 \xF9\xA2\xA0\xA0\xA0 First above Unicode | |
977 | * | |
56576a04 KW |
978 | * Keep in mind that legal continuation bytes range between \x80..\xBF |
979 | * for UTF-8, and \xA0..\xBF for I8. Anything above those aren't | |
980 | * continuation bytes. Hence, we don't have to test the upper edge | |
981 | * because if any of those is encountered, the sequence is malformed, | |
982 | * and would fail elsewhere in this function. | |
983 | * | |
984 | * The code here likewise assumes that there aren't other | |
985 | * malformations; again the function should fail elsewhere because of | |
986 | * these. For example, an overlong beginning with FC doesn't actually | |
987 | * have to be a super; it could actually represent a small code point, | |
988 | * even U+0000. But, since overlongs (and other malformations) are | |
989 | * illegal, the function should return FALSE in either case. | |
2b479609 KW |
990 | */ |
991 | ||
992 | #ifdef EBCDIC /* On EBCDIC, these are actually I8 bytes */ | |
993 | # define FIRST_START_BYTE_THAT_IS_DEFINITELY_SUPER 0xFA | |
19794540 | 994 | # define IS_UTF8_2_BYTE_SUPER(s0, s1) ((s0) == 0xF9 && (s1) >= 0xA2) |
2b479609 | 995 | |
19794540 KW |
996 | # define IS_UTF8_2_BYTE_SURROGATE(s0, s1) ((s0) == 0xF1 \ |
997 | /* B6 and B7 */ \ | |
998 | && ((s1) & 0xFE ) == 0xB6) | |
57ff5f59 | 999 | # define isUTF8_PERL_EXTENDED(s) (*s == I8_TO_NATIVE_UTF8(0xFF)) |
2b479609 KW |
1000 | #else |
1001 | # define FIRST_START_BYTE_THAT_IS_DEFINITELY_SUPER 0xF5 | |
19794540 KW |
1002 | # define IS_UTF8_2_BYTE_SUPER(s0, s1) ((s0) == 0xF4 && (s1) >= 0x90) |
1003 | # define IS_UTF8_2_BYTE_SURROGATE(s0, s1) ((s0) == 0xED && (s1) >= 0xA0) | |
57ff5f59 | 1004 | # define isUTF8_PERL_EXTENDED(s) (*s >= 0xFE) |
2b479609 KW |
1005 | #endif |
1006 | ||
1007 | if ( (flags & UTF8_DISALLOW_SUPER) | |
ddb65933 KW |
1008 | && UNLIKELY(s0 >= FIRST_START_BYTE_THAT_IS_DEFINITELY_SUPER)) |
1009 | { | |
2b479609 KW |
1010 | return 0; /* Above Unicode */ |
1011 | } | |
1012 | ||
d044b7a7 | 1013 | if ( (flags & UTF8_DISALLOW_PERL_EXTENDED) |
57ff5f59 | 1014 | && UNLIKELY(isUTF8_PERL_EXTENDED(s))) |
2b479609 | 1015 | { |
57ff5f59 | 1016 | return 0; |
2b479609 KW |
1017 | } |
1018 | ||
1019 | if (len > 1) { | |
1020 | const U8 s1 = NATIVE_UTF8_TO_I8(s[1]); | |
1021 | ||
1022 | if ( (flags & UTF8_DISALLOW_SUPER) | |
19794540 | 1023 | && UNLIKELY(IS_UTF8_2_BYTE_SUPER(s0, s1))) |
2b479609 KW |
1024 | { |
1025 | return 0; /* Above Unicode */ | |
1026 | } | |
1027 | ||
1028 | if ( (flags & UTF8_DISALLOW_SURROGATE) | |
19794540 | 1029 | && UNLIKELY(IS_UTF8_2_BYTE_SURROGATE(s0, s1))) |
2b479609 KW |
1030 | { |
1031 | return 0; /* Surrogate */ | |
1032 | } | |
1033 | ||
1034 | if ( (flags & UTF8_DISALLOW_NONCHAR) | |
1035 | && UNLIKELY(UTF8_IS_NONCHAR(s, e))) | |
1036 | { | |
1037 | return 0; /* Noncharacter code point */ | |
1038 | } | |
1039 | } | |
1040 | } | |
1041 | ||
1042 | /* Make sure that all that follows are continuation bytes */ | |
35f8c9bd KW |
1043 | for (x = s + 1; x < e; x++) { |
1044 | if (UNLIKELY(! UTF8_IS_CONTINUATION(*x))) { | |
1045 | return 0; | |
1046 | } | |
1047 | } | |
1048 | ||
af13dd8a | 1049 | /* Here is syntactically valid. Next, make sure this isn't the start of an |
12a4bed3 | 1050 | * overlong. */ |
d6be65ae | 1051 | if (len > 1 && is_utf8_overlong_given_start_byte_ok(s, len) > 0) { |
12a4bed3 | 1052 | return 0; |
af13dd8a KW |
1053 | } |
1054 | ||
12a4bed3 KW |
1055 | /* And finally, that the code point represented fits in a word on this |
1056 | * platform */ | |
e050c007 KW |
1057 | if (0 < does_utf8_overflow(s, e, |
1058 | 0 /* Don't consider overlongs */ | |
1059 | )) | |
1060 | { | |
12a4bed3 | 1061 | return 0; |
35f8c9bd KW |
1062 | } |
1063 | ||
2b479609 | 1064 | return UTF8SKIP(s); |
35f8c9bd KW |
1065 | } |
1066 | ||
7e2f38b2 | 1067 | char * |
63ab03b3 | 1068 | Perl__byte_dump_string(pTHX_ const U8 * const start, const STRLEN len, const bool format) |
7cf8d05d KW |
1069 | { |
1070 | /* Returns a mortalized C string that is a displayable copy of the 'len' | |
63ab03b3 | 1071 | * bytes starting at 'start'. 'format' gives how to display each byte. |
7e2f38b2 KW |
1072 | * Currently, there are only two formats, so it is currently a bool: |
1073 | * 0 \xab | |
1074 | * 1 ab (that is a space between two hex digit bytes) | |
1075 | */ | |
7cf8d05d KW |
1076 | |
1077 | const STRLEN output_len = 4 * len + 1; /* 4 bytes per each input, plus a | |
1078 | trailing NUL */ | |
63ab03b3 KW |
1079 | const U8 * s = start; |
1080 | const U8 * const e = start + len; | |
7cf8d05d KW |
1081 | char * output; |
1082 | char * d; | |
1083 | ||
1084 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT__BYTE_DUMP_STRING; | |
1085 | ||
1086 | Newx(output, output_len, char); | |
1087 | SAVEFREEPV(output); | |
1088 | ||
1089 | d = output; | |
63ab03b3 | 1090 | for (s = start; s < e; s++) { |
7cf8d05d KW |
1091 | const unsigned high_nibble = (*s & 0xF0) >> 4; |
1092 | const unsigned low_nibble = (*s & 0x0F); | |
1093 | ||
7e2f38b2 | 1094 | if (format) { |
63ab03b3 KW |
1095 | if (s > start) { |
1096 | *d++ = ' '; | |
1097 | } | |
7e2f38b2 KW |
1098 | } |
1099 | else { | |
1100 | *d++ = '\\'; | |
1101 | *d++ = 'x'; | |
1102 | } | |
7cf8d05d KW |
1103 | |
1104 | if (high_nibble < 10) { | |
1105 | *d++ = high_nibble + '0'; | |
1106 | } | |
1107 | else { | |
1108 | *d++ = high_nibble - 10 + 'a'; | |
1109 | } | |
1110 | ||
1111 | if (low_nibble < 10) { | |
1112 | *d++ = low_nibble + '0'; | |
1113 | } | |
1114 | else { | |
1115 | *d++ = low_nibble - 10 + 'a'; | |
1116 | } | |
1117 | } | |
1118 | ||
1119 | *d = '\0'; | |
1120 | return output; | |
1121 | } | |
1122 | ||
806547a7 | 1123 | PERL_STATIC_INLINE char * |
7cf8d05d KW |
1124 | S_unexpected_non_continuation_text(pTHX_ const U8 * const s, |
1125 | ||
1126 | /* How many bytes to print */ | |
3cc6a05e | 1127 | STRLEN print_len, |
7cf8d05d KW |
1128 | |
1129 | /* Which one is the non-continuation */ | |
1130 | const STRLEN non_cont_byte_pos, | |
1131 | ||
1132 | /* How many bytes should there be? */ | |
1133 | const STRLEN expect_len) | |
806547a7 KW |
1134 | { |
1135 | /* Return the malformation warning text for an unexpected continuation | |
1136 | * byte. */ | |
1137 | ||
7cf8d05d | 1138 | const char * const where = (non_cont_byte_pos == 1) |
806547a7 | 1139 | ? "immediately" |
7cf8d05d KW |
1140 | : Perl_form(aTHX_ "%d bytes", |
1141 | (int) non_cont_byte_pos); | |
806547a7 KW |
1142 | |
1143 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_UNEXPECTED_NON_CONTINUATION_TEXT; | |
1144 | ||
7cf8d05d KW |
1145 | /* We don't need to pass this parameter, but since it has already been |
1146 | * calculated, it's likely faster to pass it; verify under DEBUGGING */ | |
1147 | assert(expect_len == UTF8SKIP(s)); | |
1148 | ||
1149 | return Perl_form(aTHX_ "%s: %s (unexpected non-continuation byte 0x%02x," | |
1150 | " %s after start byte 0x%02x; need %d bytes, got %d)", | |
1151 | malformed_text, | |
7e2f38b2 | 1152 | _byte_dump_string(s, print_len, 0), |
7cf8d05d KW |
1153 | *(s + non_cont_byte_pos), |
1154 | where, | |
1155 | *s, | |
1156 | (int) expect_len, | |
1157 | (int) non_cont_byte_pos); | |
806547a7 KW |
1158 | } |
1159 | ||
35f8c9bd KW |
1160 | /* |
1161 | ||
de69f3af | 1162 | =for apidoc utf8n_to_uvchr |
378516de KW |
1163 | |
1164 | THIS FUNCTION SHOULD BE USED IN ONLY VERY SPECIALIZED CIRCUMSTANCES. | |
de69f3af | 1165 | Most code should use L</utf8_to_uvchr_buf>() rather than call this directly. |
67e989fb | 1166 | |
9041c2e3 | 1167 | Bottom level UTF-8 decode routine. |
de69f3af | 1168 | Returns the native code point value of the first character in the string C<s>, |
746afd53 KW |
1169 | which is assumed to be in UTF-8 (or UTF-EBCDIC) encoding, and no longer than |
1170 | C<curlen> bytes; C<*retlen> (if C<retlen> isn't NULL) will be set to | |
1171 | the length, in bytes, of that character. | |
949cf498 KW |
1172 | |
1173 | The value of C<flags> determines the behavior when C<s> does not point to a | |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1174 | well-formed UTF-8 character. If C<flags> is 0, encountering a malformation |
1175 | causes zero to be returned and C<*retlen> is set so that (S<C<s> + C<*retlen>>) | |
1176 | is the next possible position in C<s> that could begin a non-malformed | |
1177 | character. Also, if UTF-8 warnings haven't been lexically disabled, a warning | |
1178 | is raised. Some UTF-8 input sequences may contain multiple malformations. | |
1179 | This function tries to find every possible one in each call, so multiple | |
56576a04 | 1180 | warnings can be raised for the same sequence. |
949cf498 KW |
1181 | |
1182 | Various ALLOW flags can be set in C<flags> to allow (and not warn on) | |
1183 | individual types of malformations, such as the sequence being overlong (that | |
1184 | is, when there is a shorter sequence that can express the same code point; | |
1185 | overlong sequences are expressly forbidden in the UTF-8 standard due to | |
1186 | potential security issues). Another malformation example is the first byte of | |
1187 | a character not being a legal first byte. See F<utf8.h> for the list of such | |
94953955 KW |
1188 | flags. Even if allowed, this function generally returns the Unicode |
1189 | REPLACEMENT CHARACTER when it encounters a malformation. There are flags in | |
1190 | F<utf8.h> to override this behavior for the overlong malformations, but don't | |
1191 | do that except for very specialized purposes. | |
949cf498 | 1192 | |
796b6530 | 1193 | The C<UTF8_CHECK_ONLY> flag overrides the behavior when a non-allowed (by other |
949cf498 KW |
1194 | flags) malformation is found. If this flag is set, the routine assumes that |
1195 | the caller will raise a warning, and this function will silently just set | |
d088425d KW |
1196 | C<retlen> to C<-1> (cast to C<STRLEN>) and return zero. |
1197 | ||
75200dff | 1198 | Note that this API requires disambiguation between successful decoding a C<NUL> |
796b6530 | 1199 | character, and an error return (unless the C<UTF8_CHECK_ONLY> flag is set), as |
111fa700 KW |
1200 | in both cases, 0 is returned, and, depending on the malformation, C<retlen> may |
1201 | be set to 1. To disambiguate, upon a zero return, see if the first byte of | |
1202 | C<s> is 0 as well. If so, the input was a C<NUL>; if not, the input had an | |
f9380377 | 1203 | error. Or you can use C<L</utf8n_to_uvchr_error>>. |
949cf498 KW |
1204 | |
1205 | Certain code points are considered problematic. These are Unicode surrogates, | |
746afd53 | 1206 | Unicode non-characters, and code points above the Unicode maximum of 0x10FFFF. |
949cf498 | 1207 | By default these are considered regular code points, but certain situations |
ecc1615f KW |
1208 | warrant special handling for them, which can be specified using the C<flags> |
1209 | parameter. If C<flags> contains C<UTF8_DISALLOW_ILLEGAL_INTERCHANGE>, all | |
1210 | three classes are treated as malformations and handled as such. The flags | |
1211 | C<UTF8_DISALLOW_SURROGATE>, C<UTF8_DISALLOW_NONCHAR>, and | |
1212 | C<UTF8_DISALLOW_SUPER> (meaning above the legal Unicode maximum) can be set to | |
1213 | disallow these categories individually. C<UTF8_DISALLOW_ILLEGAL_INTERCHANGE> | |
1214 | restricts the allowed inputs to the strict UTF-8 traditionally defined by | |
1215 | Unicode. Use C<UTF8_DISALLOW_ILLEGAL_C9_INTERCHANGE> to use the strictness | |
1216 | definition given by | |
1217 | L<Unicode Corrigendum #9|http://www.unicode.org/versions/corrigendum9.html>. | |
1218 | The difference between traditional strictness and C9 strictness is that the | |
1219 | latter does not forbid non-character code points. (They are still discouraged, | |
1220 | however.) For more discussion see L<perlunicode/Noncharacter code points>. | |
1221 | ||
1222 | The flags C<UTF8_WARN_ILLEGAL_INTERCHANGE>, | |
1223 | C<UTF8_WARN_ILLEGAL_C9_INTERCHANGE>, C<UTF8_WARN_SURROGATE>, | |
796b6530 KW |
1224 | C<UTF8_WARN_NONCHAR>, and C<UTF8_WARN_SUPER> will cause warning messages to be |
1225 | raised for their respective categories, but otherwise the code points are | |
1226 | considered valid (not malformations). To get a category to both be treated as | |
1227 | a malformation and raise a warning, specify both the WARN and DISALLOW flags. | |
949cf498 | 1228 | (But note that warnings are not raised if lexically disabled nor if |
796b6530 | 1229 | C<UTF8_CHECK_ONLY> is also specified.) |
949cf498 | 1230 | |
57ff5f59 KW |
1231 | Extremely high code points were never specified in any standard, and require an |
1232 | extension to UTF-8 to express, which Perl does. It is likely that programs | |
1233 | written in something other than Perl would not be able to read files that | |
1234 | contain these; nor would Perl understand files written by something that uses a | |
1235 | different extension. For these reasons, there is a separate set of flags that | |
1236 | can warn and/or disallow these extremely high code points, even if other | |
1237 | above-Unicode ones are accepted. They are the C<UTF8_WARN_PERL_EXTENDED> and | |
1238 | C<UTF8_DISALLOW_PERL_EXTENDED> flags. For more information see | |
1239 | L</C<UTF8_GOT_PERL_EXTENDED>>. Of course C<UTF8_DISALLOW_SUPER> will treat all | |
1240 | above-Unicode code points, including these, as malformations. | |
1241 | (Note that the Unicode standard considers anything above 0x10FFFF to be | |
1242 | illegal, but there are standards predating it that allow up to 0x7FFF_FFFF | |
1243 | (2**31 -1)) | |
1244 | ||
1245 | A somewhat misleadingly named synonym for C<UTF8_WARN_PERL_EXTENDED> is | |
1246 | retained for backward compatibility: C<UTF8_WARN_ABOVE_31_BIT>. Similarly, | |
1247 | C<UTF8_DISALLOW_ABOVE_31_BIT> is usable instead of the more accurately named | |
1248 | C<UTF8_DISALLOW_PERL_EXTENDED>. The names are misleading because these flags | |
1249 | can apply to code points that actually do fit in 31 bits. This happens on | |
1250 | EBCDIC platforms, and sometimes when the L<overlong | |
1251 | malformation|/C<UTF8_GOT_LONG>> is also present. The new names accurately | |
1252 | describe the situation in all cases. | |
1253 | ||
ab8e6d41 | 1254 | |
949cf498 KW |
1255 | All other code points corresponding to Unicode characters, including private |
1256 | use and those yet to be assigned, are never considered malformed and never | |
1257 | warn. | |
67e989fb | 1258 | |
37607a96 | 1259 | =cut |
f9380377 KW |
1260 | |
1261 | Also implemented as a macro in utf8.h | |
1262 | */ | |
1263 | ||
1264 | UV | |
1265 | Perl_utf8n_to_uvchr(pTHX_ const U8 *s, | |
1266 | STRLEN curlen, | |
1267 | STRLEN *retlen, | |
1268 | const U32 flags) | |
1269 | { | |
1270 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_UTF8N_TO_UVCHR; | |
1271 | ||
1272 | return utf8n_to_uvchr_error(s, curlen, retlen, flags, NULL); | |
1273 | } | |
1274 | ||
2b9519f0 KW |
1275 | /* The tables below come from http://bjoern.hoehrmann.de/utf-8/decoder/dfa/, |
1276 | * which requires this copyright notice */ | |
1277 | ||
1278 | /* Copyright (c) 2008-2009 Bjoern Hoehrmann <bjoern@hoehrmann.de> | |
1279 | ||
1280 | Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of | |
1281 | this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in | |
1282 | the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to | |
1283 | use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies | |
1284 | of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do | |
1285 | so, subject to the following conditions: | |
1286 | ||
1287 | The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all | |
1288 | copies or substantial portions of the Software. | |
1289 | ||
1290 | THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR | |
1291 | IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, | |
1292 | FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE | |
1293 | AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER | |
1294 | LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, | |
1295 | OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE | |
1296 | SOFTWARE. | |
1297 | ||
1298 | */ | |
1299 | ||
1300 | #if 0 | |
1301 | static U8 utf8d_C9[] = { | |
1302 | /* The first part of the table maps bytes to character classes that | |
1303 | * to reduce the size of the transition table and create bitmasks. */ | |
1304 | 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, /*-1F*/ | |
1305 | 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, /*-3F*/ | |
1306 | 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, /*-5F*/ | |
1307 | 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, /*-7F*/ | |
1308 | 1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1, 9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9, /*-9F*/ | |
1309 | 7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7, 7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7, /*-BF*/ | |
1310 | 8,8,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2, 2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2, /*-DF*/ | |
1311 | 10,3,3,3,3,3,3,3,3,3,3,3,3,4,3,3, 11,6,6,6,5,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8, /*-FF*/ | |
1312 | ||
1313 | /* The second part is a transition table that maps a combination | |
1314 | * of a state of the automaton and a character class to a state. */ | |
1315 | 0,12,24,36,60,96,84,12,12,12,48,72, 12,12,12,12,12,12,12,12,12,12,12,12, | |
1316 | 12, 0,12,12,12,12,12, 0,12, 0,12,12, 12,24,12,12,12,12,12,24,12,24,12,12, | |
1317 | 12,12,12,12,12,12,12,24,12,12,12,12, 12,24,12,12,12,12,12,12,12,24,12,12, | |
1318 | 12,12,12,12,12,12,12,36,12,36,12,12, 12,36,12,12,12,12,12,36,12,36,12,12, | |
1319 | 12,36,12,12,12,12,12,12,12,12,12,12 | |
1320 | }; | |
1321 | ||
1322 | #endif | |
1323 | ||
1324 | #ifndef EBCDIC | |
1325 | ||
1326 | /* This is a version of the above table customized for Perl that doesn't | |
1327 | * exclude surrogates and accepts start bytes up through F7 (representing | |
1328 | * 2**21 - 1). */ | |
1329 | static U8 dfa_tab_for_perl[] = { | |
1330 | /* The first part of the table maps bytes to character classes to reduce | |
1331 | * the size of the transition table and create bitmasks. */ | |
1332 | 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, /*-1F*/ | |
1333 | 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, /*-3F*/ | |
1334 | 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, /*-5F*/ | |
1335 | 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, 0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0, /*-7F*/ | |
1336 | 1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1,1, 9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9,9, /*-9F*/ | |
1337 | 7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7, 7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7,7, /*-BF*/ | |
1338 | 8,8,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2, 2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2,2, /*-DF*/ | |
1339 | 10,3,3,3,3,3,3,3,3,3,3,3,3,3,3,3, 11,4,4,4,4,4,4,4,8,8,8,8,8,8,8,8, /*-FF*/ | |
1340 | ||
1341 | /* The second part is a transition table that maps a combination | |
1342 | * of a state of the automaton and a character class to a state. */ | |
1343 | 0,12,24,36,96,12,12,12,12,12,48,72, 12,12,12,12,12,12,12,12,12,12,12,12,/*23*/ | |
1344 | 12, 0,12,12,12,12,12, 0,12, 0,12,12, 12,24,12,12,12,12,12,24,12,24,12,12,/*47*/ | |
1345 | 12,12,12,12,12,12,12,24,12,12,12,12, 12,24,12,12,12,12,12,12,12,24,12,12,/*71*/ | |
1346 | 12,12,12,12,12,12,12,36,12,36,12,12, 12,36,12,12,12,12,12,36,12,36,12,12,/*95*/ | |
1347 | 12,36,12,12,12,12,12,36,12,36,12,12 /* 96- 107 */ | |
1348 | ||
1349 | /* The customization was to repurpose the surrogates type '4' to instead be | |
1350 | * for start bytes F1-F7. Types 5 and 6 are now unused, and their entries in | |
1351 | * the transition part of the table are set to 12, so are illegal. | |
1352 | * | |
1353 | * To do higher code points would require expansion and some rearrangement of | |
1354 | * the table. The type '1' entries for continuation bytes 80-8f would have to | |
1355 | * be split into several types, because they aren't treated uniformly for | |
1356 | * higher start bytes, since overlongs for F8 are 80-87; FC: 80-83; and FE: | |
1357 | * 80-81. We start needing to worry about overflow if FE is included. | |
1358 | * Ignoring, FE and FF, we could use type 5 for F9-FB, and 6 for FD (remember | |
1359 | * from the web site that these are used to right shift). FE would | |
1360 | * necessarily be type 7; and FF, type 8. And new states would have to be | |
1361 | * created for F8 and FC (and FE and FF if used), so quite a bit of work would | |
1362 | * be involved. | |
1363 | * | |
1364 | * XXX Better would be to customize the table so that the noncharacters are | |
1365 | * excluded. This again is non trivial, but doing so would simplify the code | |
1366 | * that uses this, and might make it small enough to make it inlinable */ | |
1367 | }; | |
1368 | ||
1369 | #endif | |
1370 | ||
f9380377 KW |
1371 | /* |
1372 | ||
1373 | =for apidoc utf8n_to_uvchr_error | |
1374 | ||
1375 | THIS FUNCTION SHOULD BE USED IN ONLY VERY SPECIALIZED CIRCUMSTANCES. | |
1376 | Most code should use L</utf8_to_uvchr_buf>() rather than call this directly. | |
1377 | ||
1378 | This function is for code that needs to know what the precise malformation(s) | |
37657a5b KW |
1379 | are when an error is found. If you also need to know the generated warning |
1380 | messages, use L</utf8n_to_uvchr_msgs>() instead. | |
f9380377 KW |
1381 | |
1382 | It is like C<L</utf8n_to_uvchr>> but it takes an extra parameter placed after | |
1383 | all the others, C<errors>. If this parameter is 0, this function behaves | |
1384 | identically to C<L</utf8n_to_uvchr>>. Otherwise, C<errors> should be a pointer | |
1385 | to a C<U32> variable, which this function sets to indicate any errors found. | |
1386 | Upon return, if C<*errors> is 0, there were no errors found. Otherwise, | |
1387 | C<*errors> is the bit-wise C<OR> of the bits described in the list below. Some | |
1388 | of these bits will be set if a malformation is found, even if the input | |
7a65503b | 1389 | C<flags> parameter indicates that the given malformation is allowed; those |
f9380377 KW |
1390 | exceptions are noted: |
1391 | ||
1392 | =over 4 | |
1393 | ||
57ff5f59 | 1394 | =item C<UTF8_GOT_PERL_EXTENDED> |
f9380377 | 1395 | |
57ff5f59 KW |
1396 | The input sequence is not standard UTF-8, but a Perl extension. This bit is |
1397 | set only if the input C<flags> parameter contains either the | |
1398 | C<UTF8_DISALLOW_PERL_EXTENDED> or the C<UTF8_WARN_PERL_EXTENDED> flags. | |
1399 | ||
1400 | Code points above 0x7FFF_FFFF (2**31 - 1) were never specified in any standard, | |
1401 | and so some extension must be used to express them. Perl uses a natural | |
1402 | extension to UTF-8 to represent the ones up to 2**36-1, and invented a further | |
1403 | extension to represent even higher ones, so that any code point that fits in a | |
1404 | 64-bit word can be represented. Text using these extensions is not likely to | |
1405 | be portable to non-Perl code. We lump both of these extensions together and | |
1406 | refer to them as Perl extended UTF-8. There exist other extensions that people | |
1407 | have invented, incompatible with Perl's. | |
1408 | ||
1409 | On EBCDIC platforms starting in Perl v5.24, the Perl extension for representing | |
1410 | extremely high code points kicks in at 0x3FFF_FFFF (2**30 -1), which is lower | |
1411 | than on ASCII. Prior to that, code points 2**31 and higher were simply | |
1412 | unrepresentable, and a different, incompatible method was used to represent | |
1413 | code points between 2**30 and 2**31 - 1. | |
1414 | ||
1415 | On both platforms, ASCII and EBCDIC, C<UTF8_GOT_PERL_EXTENDED> is set if | |
1416 | Perl extended UTF-8 is used. | |
1417 | ||
1418 | In earlier Perls, this bit was named C<UTF8_GOT_ABOVE_31_BIT>, which you still | |
1419 | may use for backward compatibility. That name is misleading, as this flag may | |
1420 | be set when the code point actually does fit in 31 bits. This happens on | |
1421 | EBCDIC platforms, and sometimes when the L<overlong | |
1422 | malformation|/C<UTF8_GOT_LONG>> is also present. The new name accurately | |
1423 | describes the situation in all cases. | |
f9380377 KW |
1424 | |
1425 | =item C<UTF8_GOT_CONTINUATION> | |
1426 | ||
1427 | The input sequence was malformed in that the first byte was a a UTF-8 | |
1428 | continuation byte. | |
1429 | ||
1430 | =item C<UTF8_GOT_EMPTY> | |
1431 | ||
1432 | The input C<curlen> parameter was 0. | |
1433 | ||
1434 | =item C<UTF8_GOT_LONG> | |
1435 | ||
1436 | The input sequence was malformed in that there is some other sequence that | |
1437 | evaluates to the same code point, but that sequence is shorter than this one. | |
1438 | ||
fecaf136 KW |
1439 | Until Unicode 3.1, it was legal for programs to accept this malformation, but |
1440 | it was discovered that this created security issues. | |
1441 | ||
f9380377 KW |
1442 | =item C<UTF8_GOT_NONCHAR> |
1443 | ||
1444 | The code point represented by the input UTF-8 sequence is for a Unicode | |
1445 | non-character code point. | |
1446 | This bit is set only if the input C<flags> parameter contains either the | |
1447 | C<UTF8_DISALLOW_NONCHAR> or the C<UTF8_WARN_NONCHAR> flags. | |
1448 | ||
1449 | =item C<UTF8_GOT_NON_CONTINUATION> | |
1450 | ||
1451 | The input sequence was malformed in that a non-continuation type byte was found | |
1452 | in a position where only a continuation type one should be. | |
1453 | ||
1454 | =item C<UTF8_GOT_OVERFLOW> | |
1455 | ||
1456 | The input sequence was malformed in that it is for a code point that is not | |
d22ec717 | 1457 | representable in the number of bits available in an IV on the current platform. |
f9380377 KW |
1458 | |
1459 | =item C<UTF8_GOT_SHORT> | |
1460 | ||
1461 | The input sequence was malformed in that C<curlen> is smaller than required for | |
1462 | a complete sequence. In other words, the input is for a partial character | |
1463 | sequence. | |
1464 | ||
1465 | =item C<UTF8_GOT_SUPER> | |
1466 | ||
1467 | The input sequence was malformed in that it is for a non-Unicode code point; | |
1468 | that is, one above the legal Unicode maximum. | |
1469 | This bit is set only if the input C<flags> parameter contains either the | |
1470 | C<UTF8_DISALLOW_SUPER> or the C<UTF8_WARN_SUPER> flags. | |
1471 | ||
1472 | =item C<UTF8_GOT_SURROGATE> | |
1473 | ||
1474 | The input sequence was malformed in that it is for a -Unicode UTF-16 surrogate | |
1475 | code point. | |
1476 | This bit is set only if the input C<flags> parameter contains either the | |
1477 | C<UTF8_DISALLOW_SURROGATE> or the C<UTF8_WARN_SURROGATE> flags. | |
1478 | ||
1479 | =back | |
1480 | ||
133551d8 KW |
1481 | To do your own error handling, call this function with the C<UTF8_CHECK_ONLY> |
1482 | flag to suppress any warnings, and then examine the C<*errors> return. | |
1483 | ||
f9380377 | 1484 | =cut |
37657a5b KW |
1485 | |
1486 | Also implemented as a macro in utf8.h | |
37607a96 | 1487 | */ |
67e989fb | 1488 | |
a0ed51b3 | 1489 | UV |
f9380377 | 1490 | Perl_utf8n_to_uvchr_error(pTHX_ const U8 *s, |
37657a5b KW |
1491 | STRLEN curlen, |
1492 | STRLEN *retlen, | |
1493 | const U32 flags, | |
1494 | U32 * errors) | |
1495 | { | |
1496 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_UTF8N_TO_UVCHR_ERROR; | |
1497 | ||
1498 | return utf8n_to_uvchr_msgs(s, curlen, retlen, flags, errors, NULL); | |
1499 | } | |
1500 | ||
1501 | /* | |
1502 | ||
1503 | =for apidoc utf8n_to_uvchr_msgs | |
1504 | ||
1505 | THIS FUNCTION SHOULD BE USED IN ONLY VERY SPECIALIZED CIRCUMSTANCES. | |
1506 | Most code should use L</utf8_to_uvchr_buf>() rather than call this directly. | |
1507 | ||
1508 | This function is for code that needs to know what the precise malformation(s) | |
1509 | are when an error is found, and wants the corresponding warning and/or error | |
1510 | messages to be returned to the caller rather than be displayed. All messages | |
1511 | that would have been displayed if all lexcial warnings are enabled will be | |
1512 | returned. | |
1513 | ||
1514 | It is just like C<L</utf8n_to_uvchr_error>> but it takes an extra parameter | |
1515 | placed after all the others, C<msgs>. If this parameter is 0, this function | |
1516 | behaves identically to C<L</utf8n_to_uvchr_error>>. Otherwise, C<msgs> should | |
1517 | be a pointer to an C<AV *> variable, in which this function creates a new AV to | |
1518 | contain any appropriate messages. The elements of the array are ordered so | |
1519 | that the first message that would have been displayed is in the 0th element, | |
1520 | and so on. Each element is a hash with three key-value pairs, as follows: | |
1521 | ||
1522 | =over 4 | |
1523 | ||
1524 | =item C<text> | |
1525 | ||
1526 | The text of the message as a C<SVpv>. | |
1527 | ||
1528 | =item C<warn_categories> | |
1529 | ||
1530 | The warning category (or categories) packed into a C<SVuv>. | |
1531 | ||
1532 | =item C<flag> | |
1533 | ||
1534 | A single flag bit associated with this message, in a C<SVuv>. | |
1535 | The bit corresponds to some bit in the C<*errors> return value, | |
1536 | such as C<UTF8_GOT_LONG>. | |
1537 | ||
1538 | =back | |
1539 | ||
1540 | It's important to note that specifying this parameter as non-null will cause | |
1541 | any warnings this function would otherwise generate to be suppressed, and | |
1542 | instead be placed in C<*msgs>. The caller can check the lexical warnings state | |
1543 | (or not) when choosing what to do with the returned messages. | |
1544 | ||
1545 | If the flag C<UTF8_CHECK_ONLY> is passed, no warnings are generated, and hence | |
1546 | no AV is created. | |
1547 | ||
1548 | The caller, of course, is responsible for freeing any returned AV. | |
1549 | ||
1550 | =cut | |
1551 | */ | |
1552 | ||
1553 | UV | |
1554 | Perl_utf8n_to_uvchr_msgs(pTHX_ const U8 *s, | |
1555 | STRLEN curlen, | |
1556 | STRLEN *retlen, | |
1557 | const U32 flags, | |
1558 | U32 * errors, | |
1559 | AV ** msgs) | |
a0ed51b3 | 1560 | { |
d4c19fe8 | 1561 | const U8 * const s0 = s; |
2b9519f0 | 1562 | const U8 * send = s0 + curlen; |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1563 | U32 possible_problems = 0; /* A bit is set here for each potential problem |
1564 | found as we go along */ | |
2b672cf5 | 1565 | UV uv = (UV) -1; |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1566 | STRLEN expectlen = 0; /* How long should this sequence be? |
1567 | (initialized to silence compilers' wrong | |
1568 | warning) */ | |
e308b348 | 1569 | STRLEN avail_len = 0; /* When input is too short, gives what that is */ |
f9380377 KW |
1570 | U32 discard_errors = 0; /* Used to save branches when 'errors' is NULL; |
1571 | this gets set and discarded */ | |
a0dbb045 | 1572 | |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1573 | /* The below are used only if there is both an overlong malformation and a |
1574 | * too short one. Otherwise the first two are set to 's0' and 'send', and | |
1575 | * the third not used at all */ | |
1576 | U8 * adjusted_s0 = (U8 *) s0; | |
e9f2c446 KW |
1577 | U8 temp_char_buf[UTF8_MAXBYTES + 1]; /* Used to avoid a Newx in this |
1578 | routine; see [perl #130921] */ | |
2b5e7bc2 | 1579 | UV uv_so_far = 0; /* (Initialized to silence compilers' wrong warning) */ |
7918f24d | 1580 | |
2b9519f0 KW |
1581 | UV state = 0; |
1582 | ||
37657a5b | 1583 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_UTF8N_TO_UVCHR_MSGS; |
f9380377 KW |
1584 | |
1585 | if (errors) { | |
1586 | *errors = 0; | |
1587 | } | |
1588 | else { | |
1589 | errors = &discard_errors; | |
1590 | } | |
a0dbb045 | 1591 | |
eb83ed87 KW |
1592 | /* The order of malformation tests here is important. We should consume as |
1593 | * few bytes as possible in order to not skip any valid character. This is | |
1594 | * required by the Unicode Standard (section 3.9 of Unicode 6.0); see also | |
1595 | * http://unicode.org/reports/tr36 for more discussion as to why. For | |
1596 | * example, once we've done a UTF8SKIP, we can tell the expected number of | |
1597 | * bytes, and could fail right off the bat if the input parameters indicate | |
1598 | * that there are too few available. But it could be that just that first | |
1599 | * byte is garbled, and the intended character occupies fewer bytes. If we | |
1600 | * blindly assumed that the first byte is correct, and skipped based on | |
1601 | * that number, we could skip over a valid input character. So instead, we | |
1602 | * always examine the sequence byte-by-byte. | |
1603 | * | |
1604 | * We also should not consume too few bytes, otherwise someone could inject | |
1605 | * things. For example, an input could be deliberately designed to | |
1606 | * overflow, and if this code bailed out immediately upon discovering that, | |
e2660c54 | 1607 | * returning to the caller C<*retlen> pointing to the very next byte (one |
eb83ed87 KW |
1608 | * which is actually part of of the overflowing sequence), that could look |
1609 | * legitimate to the caller, which could discard the initial partial | |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1610 | * sequence and process the rest, inappropriately. |
1611 | * | |
1612 | * Some possible input sequences are malformed in more than one way. This | |
1613 | * function goes to lengths to try to find all of them. This is necessary | |
1614 | * for correctness, as the inputs may allow one malformation but not | |
1615 | * another, and if we abandon searching for others after finding the | |
1616 | * allowed one, we could allow in something that shouldn't have been. | |
1617 | */ | |
eb83ed87 | 1618 | |
b5b9af04 | 1619 | if (UNLIKELY(curlen == 0)) { |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1620 | possible_problems |= UTF8_GOT_EMPTY; |
1621 | curlen = 0; | |
5a48568d | 1622 | uv = UNICODE_REPLACEMENT; |
2b5e7bc2 | 1623 | goto ready_to_handle_errors; |
0c443dc2 JH |
1624 | } |
1625 | ||
eb83ed87 KW |
1626 | expectlen = UTF8SKIP(s); |
1627 | ||
1628 | /* A well-formed UTF-8 character, as the vast majority of calls to this | |
1629 | * function will be for, has this expected length. For efficiency, set | |
1630 | * things up here to return it. It will be overriden only in those rare | |
1631 | * cases where a malformation is found */ | |
1632 | if (retlen) { | |
1633 | *retlen = expectlen; | |
1634 | } | |
1635 | ||
1636 | /* An invariant is trivially well-formed */ | |
2b9519f0 KW |
1637 | if (UTF8_IS_INVARIANT(*s0)) { |
1638 | return *s0; | |
a0ed51b3 | 1639 | } |
67e989fb | 1640 | |
2b9519f0 KW |
1641 | #ifndef EBCDIC |
1642 | ||
1643 | /* Measurements show that this dfa is somewhat faster than the regular code | |
1644 | * below, so use it first, dropping down for the non-normal cases. */ | |
1645 | ||
1646 | # define PERL_UTF8_DECODE_REJECT 12 | |
1647 | ||
1648 | while (s < send && LIKELY(state != PERL_UTF8_DECODE_REJECT)) { | |
1649 | UV type = dfa_tab_for_perl[*s]; | |
1650 | ||
1651 | if (state != 0) { | |
1652 | uv = (*s & 0x3fu) | (uv << UTF_ACCUMULATION_SHIFT); | |
1653 | state = dfa_tab_for_perl[256 + state + type]; | |
1654 | } | |
1655 | else { | |
1656 | uv = (0xff >> type) & (*s); | |
1657 | state = dfa_tab_for_perl[256 + type]; | |
1658 | } | |
1659 | ||
1660 | if (state == 0) { | |
1661 | ||
1662 | /* If this could be a code point that the flags don't allow (the first | |
1663 | * surrogate is the first such possible one), delve further, but we already | |
1664 | * have calculated 'uv' */ | |
1665 | if ( (flags & (UTF8_DISALLOW_ILLEGAL_INTERCHANGE | |
1666 | |UTF8_WARN_ILLEGAL_INTERCHANGE)) | |
1667 | && uv >= UNICODE_SURROGATE_FIRST) | |
1668 | { | |
1669 | curlen = s + 1 - s0; | |
1670 | goto got_uv; | |
1671 | } | |
1672 | ||
1673 | return uv; | |
1674 | } | |
1675 | ||
1676 | s++; | |
1677 | } | |
1678 | ||
1679 | /* Here, is some sort of failure. Use the full mechanism */ | |
1680 | ||
1681 | uv = *s0; | |
1682 | ||
1683 | #endif | |
1684 | ||
eb83ed87 | 1685 | /* A continuation character can't start a valid sequence */ |
b5b9af04 | 1686 | if (UNLIKELY(UTF8_IS_CONTINUATION(uv))) { |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1687 | possible_problems |= UTF8_GOT_CONTINUATION; |
1688 | curlen = 1; | |
1689 | uv = UNICODE_REPLACEMENT; | |
1690 | goto ready_to_handle_errors; | |
ba210ebe | 1691 | } |
9041c2e3 | 1692 | |
dcd27b3c | 1693 | /* Here is not a continuation byte, nor an invariant. The only thing left |
ddb65933 KW |
1694 | * is a start byte (possibly for an overlong). (We can't use UTF8_IS_START |
1695 | * because it excludes start bytes like \xC0 that always lead to | |
1696 | * overlongs.) */ | |
dcd27b3c | 1697 | |
534752c1 KW |
1698 | /* Convert to I8 on EBCDIC (no-op on ASCII), then remove the leading bits |
1699 | * that indicate the number of bytes in the character's whole UTF-8 | |
1700 | * sequence, leaving just the bits that are part of the value. */ | |
1701 | uv = NATIVE_UTF8_TO_I8(uv) & UTF_START_MASK(expectlen); | |
ba210ebe | 1702 | |
e308b348 KW |
1703 | /* Setup the loop end point, making sure to not look past the end of the |
1704 | * input string, and flag it as too short if the size isn't big enough. */ | |
e308b348 KW |
1705 | if (UNLIKELY(curlen < expectlen)) { |
1706 | possible_problems |= UTF8_GOT_SHORT; | |
1707 | avail_len = curlen; | |
e308b348 KW |
1708 | } |
1709 | else { | |
2b9519f0 | 1710 | send = (U8*) s0 + expectlen; |
e308b348 | 1711 | } |
e308b348 | 1712 | |
eb83ed87 | 1713 | /* Now, loop through the remaining bytes in the character's sequence, |
e308b348 | 1714 | * accumulating each into the working value as we go. */ |
eb83ed87 | 1715 | for (s = s0 + 1; s < send; s++) { |
b5b9af04 | 1716 | if (LIKELY(UTF8_IS_CONTINUATION(*s))) { |
8850bf83 | 1717 | uv = UTF8_ACCUMULATE(uv, *s); |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1718 | continue; |
1719 | } | |
1720 | ||
1721 | /* Here, found a non-continuation before processing all expected bytes. | |
1722 | * This byte indicates the beginning of a new character, so quit, even | |
1723 | * if allowing this malformation. */ | |
2b5e7bc2 | 1724 | possible_problems |= UTF8_GOT_NON_CONTINUATION; |
e308b348 | 1725 | break; |
eb83ed87 KW |
1726 | } /* End of loop through the character's bytes */ |
1727 | ||
1728 | /* Save how many bytes were actually in the character */ | |
1729 | curlen = s - s0; | |
1730 | ||
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1731 | /* Note that there are two types of too-short malformation. One is when |
1732 | * there is actual wrong data before the normal termination of the | |
1733 | * sequence. The other is that the sequence wasn't complete before the end | |
1734 | * of the data we are allowed to look at, based on the input 'curlen'. | |
1735 | * This means that we were passed data for a partial character, but it is | |
1736 | * valid as far as we saw. The other is definitely invalid. This | |
1737 | * distinction could be important to a caller, so the two types are kept | |
15b010f0 KW |
1738 | * separate. |
1739 | * | |
1740 | * A convenience macro that matches either of the too-short conditions. */ | |
1741 | # define UTF8_GOT_TOO_SHORT (UTF8_GOT_SHORT|UTF8_GOT_NON_CONTINUATION) | |
1742 | ||
1743 | if (UNLIKELY(possible_problems & UTF8_GOT_TOO_SHORT)) { | |
1744 | uv_so_far = uv; | |
1745 | uv = UNICODE_REPLACEMENT; | |
1746 | } | |
2b5e7bc2 | 1747 | |
08e73697 KW |
1748 | /* Check for overflow. The algorithm requires us to not look past the end |
1749 | * of the current character, even if partial, so the upper limit is 's' */ | |
e050c007 KW |
1750 | if (UNLIKELY(0 < does_utf8_overflow(s0, s, |
1751 | 1 /* Do consider overlongs */ | |
1752 | ))) | |
1753 | { | |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1754 | possible_problems |= UTF8_GOT_OVERFLOW; |
1755 | uv = UNICODE_REPLACEMENT; | |
eb83ed87 | 1756 | } |
eb83ed87 | 1757 | |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1758 | /* Check for overlong. If no problems so far, 'uv' is the correct code |
1759 | * point value. Simply see if it is expressible in fewer bytes. Otherwise | |
1760 | * we must look at the UTF-8 byte sequence itself to see if it is for an | |
1761 | * overlong */ | |
1762 | if ( ( LIKELY(! possible_problems) | |
1763 | && UNLIKELY(expectlen > (STRLEN) OFFUNISKIP(uv))) | |
56576a04 | 1764 | || ( UNLIKELY(possible_problems) |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1765 | && ( UNLIKELY(! UTF8_IS_START(*s0)) |
1766 | || ( curlen > 1 | |
d6be65ae | 1767 | && UNLIKELY(0 < is_utf8_overlong_given_start_byte_ok(s0, |
08e73697 | 1768 | s - s0)))))) |
2f8f112e | 1769 | { |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1770 | possible_problems |= UTF8_GOT_LONG; |
1771 | ||
abc28b54 | 1772 | if ( UNLIKELY( possible_problems & UTF8_GOT_TOO_SHORT) |
56576a04 | 1773 | |
abc28b54 KW |
1774 | /* The calculation in the 'true' branch of this 'if' |
1775 | * below won't work if overflows, and isn't needed | |
1776 | * anyway. Further below we handle all overflow | |
1777 | * cases */ | |
1778 | && LIKELY(! (possible_problems & UTF8_GOT_OVERFLOW))) | |
1779 | { | |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1780 | UV min_uv = uv_so_far; |
1781 | STRLEN i; | |
1782 | ||
1783 | /* Here, the input is both overlong and is missing some trailing | |
1784 | * bytes. There is no single code point it could be for, but there | |
1785 | * may be enough information present to determine if what we have | |
1786 | * so far is for an unallowed code point, such as for a surrogate. | |
56576a04 KW |
1787 | * The code further below has the intelligence to determine this, |
1788 | * but just for non-overlong UTF-8 sequences. What we do here is | |
1789 | * calculate the smallest code point the input could represent if | |
1790 | * there were no too short malformation. Then we compute and save | |
1791 | * the UTF-8 for that, which is what the code below looks at | |
1792 | * instead of the raw input. It turns out that the smallest such | |
1793 | * code point is all we need. */ | |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1794 | for (i = curlen; i < expectlen; i++) { |
1795 | min_uv = UTF8_ACCUMULATE(min_uv, | |
1796 | I8_TO_NATIVE_UTF8(UTF_CONTINUATION_MARK)); | |
1797 | } | |
1798 | ||
e9f2c446 | 1799 | adjusted_s0 = temp_char_buf; |
57ff5f59 | 1800 | (void) uvoffuni_to_utf8_flags(adjusted_s0, min_uv, 0); |
2b5e7bc2 | 1801 | } |
eb83ed87 KW |
1802 | } |
1803 | ||
2b9519f0 KW |
1804 | got_uv: |
1805 | ||
56576a04 KW |
1806 | /* Here, we have found all the possible problems, except for when the input |
1807 | * is for a problematic code point not allowed by the input parameters. */ | |
1808 | ||
06188866 KW |
1809 | /* uv is valid for overlongs */ |
1810 | if ( ( ( LIKELY(! (possible_problems & ~UTF8_GOT_LONG)) | |
1811 | ||
1812 | /* isn't problematic if < this */ | |
1813 | && uv >= UNICODE_SURROGATE_FIRST) | |
2b5e7bc2 | 1814 | || ( UNLIKELY(possible_problems) |
d60baaa7 KW |
1815 | |
1816 | /* if overflow, we know without looking further | |
1817 | * precisely which of the problematic types it is, | |
1818 | * and we deal with those in the overflow handling | |
1819 | * code */ | |
1820 | && LIKELY(! (possible_problems & UTF8_GOT_OVERFLOW)) | |
57ff5f59 KW |
1821 | && ( isUTF8_POSSIBLY_PROBLEMATIC(*adjusted_s0) |
1822 | || UNLIKELY(isUTF8_PERL_EXTENDED(s0))))) | |
760c7c2f KW |
1823 | && ((flags & ( UTF8_DISALLOW_NONCHAR |
1824 | |UTF8_DISALLOW_SURROGATE | |
1825 | |UTF8_DISALLOW_SUPER | |
d044b7a7 | 1826 | |UTF8_DISALLOW_PERL_EXTENDED |
760c7c2f KW |
1827 | |UTF8_WARN_NONCHAR |
1828 | |UTF8_WARN_SURROGATE | |
1829 | |UTF8_WARN_SUPER | |
d22ec717 | 1830 | |UTF8_WARN_PERL_EXTENDED)))) |
eb83ed87 | 1831 | { |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1832 | /* If there were no malformations, or the only malformation is an |
1833 | * overlong, 'uv' is valid */ | |
1834 | if (LIKELY(! (possible_problems & ~UTF8_GOT_LONG))) { | |
1835 | if (UNLIKELY(UNICODE_IS_SURROGATE(uv))) { | |
1836 | possible_problems |= UTF8_GOT_SURROGATE; | |
1837 | } | |
1838 | else if (UNLIKELY(uv > PERL_UNICODE_MAX)) { | |
1839 | possible_problems |= UTF8_GOT_SUPER; | |
1840 | } | |
1841 | else if (UNLIKELY(UNICODE_IS_NONCHAR(uv))) { | |
1842 | possible_problems |= UTF8_GOT_NONCHAR; | |
1843 | } | |
1844 | } | |
1845 | else { /* Otherwise, need to look at the source UTF-8, possibly | |
1846 | adjusted to be non-overlong */ | |
1847 | ||
1848 | if (UNLIKELY(NATIVE_UTF8_TO_I8(*adjusted_s0) | |
1849 | >= FIRST_START_BYTE_THAT_IS_DEFINITELY_SUPER)) | |
ea5ced44 | 1850 | { |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1851 | possible_problems |= UTF8_GOT_SUPER; |
1852 | } | |
1853 | else if (curlen > 1) { | |
1854 | if (UNLIKELY(IS_UTF8_2_BYTE_SUPER( | |
1855 | NATIVE_UTF8_TO_I8(*adjusted_s0), | |
1856 | NATIVE_UTF8_TO_I8(*(adjusted_s0 + 1))))) | |
ea5ced44 | 1857 | { |
2b5e7bc2 | 1858 | possible_problems |= UTF8_GOT_SUPER; |
ea5ced44 | 1859 | } |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1860 | else if (UNLIKELY(IS_UTF8_2_BYTE_SURROGATE( |
1861 | NATIVE_UTF8_TO_I8(*adjusted_s0), | |
1862 | NATIVE_UTF8_TO_I8(*(adjusted_s0 + 1))))) | |
1863 | { | |
1864 | possible_problems |= UTF8_GOT_SURROGATE; | |
ea5ced44 KW |
1865 | } |
1866 | } | |
c0236afe | 1867 | |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1868 | /* We need a complete well-formed UTF-8 character to discern |
1869 | * non-characters, so can't look for them here */ | |
1870 | } | |
1871 | } | |
949cf498 | 1872 | |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1873 | ready_to_handle_errors: |
1874 | ||
1875 | /* At this point: | |
1876 | * curlen contains the number of bytes in the sequence that | |
1877 | * this call should advance the input by. | |
e308b348 KW |
1878 | * avail_len gives the available number of bytes passed in, but |
1879 | * only if this is less than the expected number of | |
1880 | * bytes, based on the code point's start byte. | |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1881 | * possible_problems' is 0 if there weren't any problems; otherwise a bit |
1882 | * is set in it for each potential problem found. | |
1883 | * uv contains the code point the input sequence | |
1884 | * represents; or if there is a problem that prevents | |
1885 | * a well-defined value from being computed, it is | |
1886 | * some subsitute value, typically the REPLACEMENT | |
1887 | * CHARACTER. | |
1888 | * s0 points to the first byte of the character | |
56576a04 KW |
1889 | * s points to just after were we left off processing |
1890 | * the character | |
1891 | * send points to just after where that character should | |
1892 | * end, based on how many bytes the start byte tells | |
1893 | * us should be in it, but no further than s0 + | |
1894 | * avail_len | |
2b5e7bc2 | 1895 | */ |
eb83ed87 | 1896 | |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1897 | if (UNLIKELY(possible_problems)) { |
1898 | bool disallowed = FALSE; | |
1899 | const U32 orig_problems = possible_problems; | |
1900 | ||
37657a5b KW |
1901 | if (msgs) { |
1902 | *msgs = NULL; | |
1903 | } | |
1904 | ||
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1905 | while (possible_problems) { /* Handle each possible problem */ |
1906 | UV pack_warn = 0; | |
1907 | char * message = NULL; | |
37657a5b | 1908 | U32 this_flag_bit = 0; |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1909 | |
1910 | /* Each 'if' clause handles one problem. They are ordered so that | |
1911 | * the first ones' messages will be displayed before the later | |
6c64cd9d KW |
1912 | * ones; this is kinda in decreasing severity order. But the |
1913 | * overlong must come last, as it changes 'uv' looked at by the | |
1914 | * others */ | |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1915 | if (possible_problems & UTF8_GOT_OVERFLOW) { |
1916 | ||
56576a04 KW |
1917 | /* Overflow means also got a super and are using Perl's |
1918 | * extended UTF-8, but we handle all three cases here */ | |
2b5e7bc2 | 1919 | possible_problems |
d044b7a7 | 1920 | &= ~(UTF8_GOT_OVERFLOW|UTF8_GOT_SUPER|UTF8_GOT_PERL_EXTENDED); |
f9380377 KW |
1921 | *errors |= UTF8_GOT_OVERFLOW; |
1922 | ||
1923 | /* But the API says we flag all errors found */ | |
1924 | if (flags & (UTF8_WARN_SUPER|UTF8_DISALLOW_SUPER)) { | |
1925 | *errors |= UTF8_GOT_SUPER; | |
1926 | } | |
ddb65933 | 1927 | if (flags |
d044b7a7 | 1928 | & (UTF8_WARN_PERL_EXTENDED|UTF8_DISALLOW_PERL_EXTENDED)) |
ddb65933 | 1929 | { |
d044b7a7 | 1930 | *errors |= UTF8_GOT_PERL_EXTENDED; |
f9380377 | 1931 | } |
2b5e7bc2 | 1932 | |
d60baaa7 | 1933 | /* Disallow if any of the three categories say to */ |
56576a04 | 1934 | if ( ! (flags & UTF8_ALLOW_OVERFLOW) |
d60baaa7 | 1935 | || (flags & ( UTF8_DISALLOW_SUPER |
d044b7a7 | 1936 | |UTF8_DISALLOW_PERL_EXTENDED))) |
d60baaa7 KW |
1937 | { |
1938 | disallowed = TRUE; | |
1939 | } | |
1940 | ||
d22ec717 KW |
1941 | /* Likewise, warn if any say to */ |
1942 | if ( ! (flags & UTF8_ALLOW_OVERFLOW) | |
1943 | || (flags & (UTF8_WARN_SUPER|UTF8_WARN_PERL_EXTENDED))) | |
d60baaa7 | 1944 | { |
2b5e7bc2 | 1945 | |
ddb65933 KW |
1946 | /* The warnings code explicitly says it doesn't handle the |
1947 | * case of packWARN2 and two categories which have | |
1948 | * parent-child relationship. Even if it works now to | |
1949 | * raise the warning if either is enabled, it wouldn't | |
1950 | * necessarily do so in the future. We output (only) the | |
56576a04 | 1951 | * most dire warning */ |
ddb65933 | 1952 | if (! (flags & UTF8_CHECK_ONLY)) { |
37657a5b | 1953 | if (msgs || ckWARN_d(WARN_UTF8)) { |
ddb65933 KW |
1954 | pack_warn = packWARN(WARN_UTF8); |
1955 | } | |
37657a5b | 1956 | else if (msgs || ckWARN_d(WARN_NON_UNICODE)) { |
ddb65933 KW |
1957 | pack_warn = packWARN(WARN_NON_UNICODE); |
1958 | } | |
1959 | if (pack_warn) { | |
1960 | message = Perl_form(aTHX_ "%s: %s (overflows)", | |
1961 | malformed_text, | |
05b9033b | 1962 | _byte_dump_string(s0, curlen, 0)); |
37657a5b | 1963 | this_flag_bit = UTF8_GOT_OVERFLOW; |
ddb65933 | 1964 | } |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1965 | } |
1966 | } | |
1967 | } | |
1968 | else if (possible_problems & UTF8_GOT_EMPTY) { | |
1969 | possible_problems &= ~UTF8_GOT_EMPTY; | |
f9380377 | 1970 | *errors |= UTF8_GOT_EMPTY; |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1971 | |
1972 | if (! (flags & UTF8_ALLOW_EMPTY)) { | |
d1f8d421 KW |
1973 | |
1974 | /* This so-called malformation is now treated as a bug in | |
1975 | * the caller. If you have nothing to decode, skip calling | |
1976 | * this function */ | |
1977 | assert(0); | |
1978 | ||
2b5e7bc2 | 1979 | disallowed = TRUE; |
37657a5b KW |
1980 | if ( (msgs |
1981 | || ckWARN_d(WARN_UTF8)) && ! (flags & UTF8_CHECK_ONLY)) | |
1982 | { | |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1983 | pack_warn = packWARN(WARN_UTF8); |
1984 | message = Perl_form(aTHX_ "%s (empty string)", | |
1985 | malformed_text); | |
37657a5b | 1986 | this_flag_bit = UTF8_GOT_EMPTY; |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1987 | } |
1988 | } | |
1989 | } | |
1990 | else if (possible_problems & UTF8_GOT_CONTINUATION) { | |
1991 | possible_problems &= ~UTF8_GOT_CONTINUATION; | |
f9380377 | 1992 | *errors |= UTF8_GOT_CONTINUATION; |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1993 | |
1994 | if (! (flags & UTF8_ALLOW_CONTINUATION)) { | |
1995 | disallowed = TRUE; | |
37657a5b KW |
1996 | if (( msgs |
1997 | || ckWARN_d(WARN_UTF8)) && ! (flags & UTF8_CHECK_ONLY)) | |
1998 | { | |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
1999 | pack_warn = packWARN(WARN_UTF8); |
2000 | message = Perl_form(aTHX_ | |
2001 | "%s: %s (unexpected continuation byte 0x%02x," | |
2002 | " with no preceding start byte)", | |
2003 | malformed_text, | |
7e2f38b2 | 2004 | _byte_dump_string(s0, 1, 0), *s0); |
37657a5b | 2005 | this_flag_bit = UTF8_GOT_CONTINUATION; |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
2006 | } |
2007 | } | |
2008 | } | |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
2009 | else if (possible_problems & UTF8_GOT_SHORT) { |
2010 | possible_problems &= ~UTF8_GOT_SHORT; | |
f9380377 | 2011 | *errors |= UTF8_GOT_SHORT; |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
2012 | |
2013 | if (! (flags & UTF8_ALLOW_SHORT)) { | |
2014 | disallowed = TRUE; | |
37657a5b KW |
2015 | if (( msgs |
2016 | || ckWARN_d(WARN_UTF8)) && ! (flags & UTF8_CHECK_ONLY)) | |
2017 | { | |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
2018 | pack_warn = packWARN(WARN_UTF8); |
2019 | message = Perl_form(aTHX_ | |
56576a04 KW |
2020 | "%s: %s (too short; %d byte%s available, need %d)", |
2021 | malformed_text, | |
2022 | _byte_dump_string(s0, send - s0, 0), | |
2023 | (int)avail_len, | |
2024 | avail_len == 1 ? "" : "s", | |
2025 | (int)expectlen); | |
37657a5b | 2026 | this_flag_bit = UTF8_GOT_SHORT; |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
2027 | } |
2028 | } | |
ba210ebe | 2029 | |
2b5e7bc2 | 2030 | } |
e308b348 KW |
2031 | else if (possible_problems & UTF8_GOT_NON_CONTINUATION) { |
2032 | possible_problems &= ~UTF8_GOT_NON_CONTINUATION; | |
2033 | *errors |= UTF8_GOT_NON_CONTINUATION; | |
2034 | ||
2035 | if (! (flags & UTF8_ALLOW_NON_CONTINUATION)) { | |
2036 | disallowed = TRUE; | |
37657a5b KW |
2037 | if (( msgs |
2038 | || ckWARN_d(WARN_UTF8)) && ! (flags & UTF8_CHECK_ONLY)) | |
2039 | { | |
99a765e9 KW |
2040 | |
2041 | /* If we don't know for sure that the input length is | |
2042 | * valid, avoid as much as possible reading past the | |
2043 | * end of the buffer */ | |
2044 | int printlen = (flags & _UTF8_NO_CONFIDENCE_IN_CURLEN) | |
2045 | ? s - s0 | |
2046 | : send - s0; | |
e308b348 KW |
2047 | pack_warn = packWARN(WARN_UTF8); |
2048 | message = Perl_form(aTHX_ "%s", | |
2049 | unexpected_non_continuation_text(s0, | |
99a765e9 | 2050 | printlen, |
e308b348 KW |
2051 | s - s0, |
2052 | (int) expectlen)); | |
37657a5b | 2053 | this_flag_bit = UTF8_GOT_NON_CONTINUATION; |
e308b348 KW |
2054 | } |
2055 | } | |
2056 | } | |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
2057 | else if (possible_problems & UTF8_GOT_SURROGATE) { |
2058 | possible_problems &= ~UTF8_GOT_SURROGATE; | |
2059 | ||
f9380377 KW |
2060 | if (flags & UTF8_WARN_SURROGATE) { |
2061 | *errors |= UTF8_GOT_SURROGATE; | |
2062 | ||
2063 | if ( ! (flags & UTF8_CHECK_ONLY) | |
37657a5b | 2064 | && (msgs || ckWARN_d(WARN_SURROGATE))) |
f9380377 | 2065 | { |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
2066 | pack_warn = packWARN(WARN_SURROGATE); |
2067 | ||
2068 | /* These are the only errors that can occur with a | |
2069 | * surrogate when the 'uv' isn't valid */ | |
2070 | if (orig_problems & UTF8_GOT_TOO_SHORT) { | |
2071 | message = Perl_form(aTHX_ | |
2072 | "UTF-16 surrogate (any UTF-8 sequence that" | |
2073 | " starts with \"%s\" is for a surrogate)", | |
7e2f38b2 | 2074 | _byte_dump_string(s0, curlen, 0)); |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
2075 | } |
2076 | else { | |
c94c2f39 | 2077 | message = Perl_form(aTHX_ surrogate_cp_format, uv); |
2b5e7bc2 | 2078 | } |
37657a5b | 2079 | this_flag_bit = UTF8_GOT_SURROGATE; |
f9380377 | 2080 | } |
2b5e7bc2 | 2081 | } |
ba210ebe | 2082 | |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
2083 | if (flags & UTF8_DISALLOW_SURROGATE) { |
2084 | disallowed = TRUE; | |
f9380377 | 2085 | *errors |= UTF8_GOT_SURROGATE; |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
2086 | } |
2087 | } | |
2088 | else if (possible_problems & UTF8_GOT_SUPER) { | |
2089 | possible_problems &= ~UTF8_GOT_SUPER; | |
949cf498 | 2090 | |
f9380377 KW |
2091 | if (flags & UTF8_WARN_SUPER) { |
2092 | *errors |= UTF8_GOT_SUPER; | |
2093 | ||
2094 | if ( ! (flags & UTF8_CHECK_ONLY) | |
37657a5b | 2095 | && (msgs || ckWARN_d(WARN_NON_UNICODE))) |
f9380377 | 2096 | { |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
2097 | pack_warn = packWARN(WARN_NON_UNICODE); |
2098 | ||
2099 | if (orig_problems & UTF8_GOT_TOO_SHORT) { | |
2100 | message = Perl_form(aTHX_ | |
2101 | "Any UTF-8 sequence that starts with" | |
2102 | " \"%s\" is for a non-Unicode code point," | |
2103 | " may not be portable", | |
7e2f38b2 | 2104 | _byte_dump_string(s0, curlen, 0)); |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
2105 | } |
2106 | else { | |
c94c2f39 | 2107 | message = Perl_form(aTHX_ super_cp_format, uv); |
2b5e7bc2 | 2108 | } |
37657a5b | 2109 | this_flag_bit = UTF8_GOT_SUPER; |
f9380377 | 2110 | } |
2b5e7bc2 | 2111 | } |
ba210ebe | 2112 | |
57ff5f59 KW |
2113 | /* Test for Perl's extended UTF-8 after the regular SUPER ones, |
2114 | * and before possibly bailing out, so that the more dire | |
2115 | * warning will override the regular one. */ | |
2116 | if (UNLIKELY(isUTF8_PERL_EXTENDED(s0))) { | |
2b5e7bc2 | 2117 | if ( ! (flags & UTF8_CHECK_ONLY) |
d044b7a7 | 2118 | && (flags & (UTF8_WARN_PERL_EXTENDED|UTF8_WARN_SUPER)) |
37657a5b | 2119 | && (msgs || ckWARN_d(WARN_NON_UNICODE))) |
2b5e7bc2 | 2120 | { |
db0f09e6 | 2121 | pack_warn = packWARN(WARN_NON_UNICODE); |
2b5e7bc2 | 2122 | |
57ff5f59 KW |
2123 | /* If it is an overlong that evaluates to a code point |
2124 | * that doesn't have to use the Perl extended UTF-8, it | |
2125 | * still used it, and so we output a message that | |
2126 | * doesn't refer to the code point. The same is true | |
2127 | * if there was a SHORT malformation where the code | |
2128 | * point is not valid. In that case, 'uv' will have | |
2129 | * been set to the REPLACEMENT CHAR, and the message | |
2130 | * below without the code point in it will be selected | |
2131 | * */ | |
2132 | if (UNICODE_IS_PERL_EXTENDED(uv)) { | |
2b5e7bc2 | 2133 | message = Perl_form(aTHX_ |
57ff5f59 | 2134 | perl_extended_cp_format, uv); |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
2135 | } |
2136 | else { | |
2137 | message = Perl_form(aTHX_ | |
57ff5f59 KW |
2138 | "Any UTF-8 sequence that starts with" |
2139 | " \"%s\" is a Perl extension, and" | |
2140 | " so is not portable", | |
2141 | _byte_dump_string(s0, curlen, 0)); | |
2b5e7bc2 | 2142 | } |
37657a5b | 2143 | this_flag_bit = UTF8_GOT_PERL_EXTENDED; |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
2144 | } |
2145 | ||
d044b7a7 KW |
2146 | if (flags & ( UTF8_WARN_PERL_EXTENDED |
2147 | |UTF8_DISALLOW_PERL_EXTENDED)) | |
ddb65933 | 2148 | { |
d044b7a7 | 2149 | *errors |= UTF8_GOT_PERL_EXTENDED; |
f9380377 | 2150 | |
d044b7a7 | 2151 | if (flags & UTF8_DISALLOW_PERL_EXTENDED) { |
f9380377 KW |
2152 | disallowed = TRUE; |
2153 | } | |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
2154 | } |
2155 | } | |
eb83ed87 | 2156 | |
2b5e7bc2 | 2157 | if (flags & UTF8_DISALLOW_SUPER) { |
f9380377 | 2158 | *errors |= UTF8_GOT_SUPER; |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
2159 | disallowed = TRUE; |
2160 | } | |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
2161 | } |
2162 | else if (possible_problems & UTF8_GOT_NONCHAR) { | |
2163 | possible_problems &= ~UTF8_GOT_NONCHAR; | |
ba210ebe | 2164 | |
f9380377 KW |
2165 | if (flags & UTF8_WARN_NONCHAR) { |
2166 | *errors |= UTF8_GOT_NONCHAR; | |
2167 | ||
2168 | if ( ! (flags & UTF8_CHECK_ONLY) | |
37657a5b | 2169 | && (msgs || ckWARN_d(WARN_NONCHAR))) |
f9380377 | 2170 | { |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
2171 | /* The code above should have guaranteed that we don't |
2172 | * get here with errors other than overlong */ | |
2173 | assert (! (orig_problems | |
2174 | & ~(UTF8_GOT_LONG|UTF8_GOT_NONCHAR))); | |
2175 | ||
2176 | pack_warn = packWARN(WARN_NONCHAR); | |
c94c2f39 | 2177 | message = Perl_form(aTHX_ nonchar_cp_format, uv); |
37657a5b | 2178 | this_flag_bit = UTF8_GOT_NONCHAR; |
f9380377 | 2179 | } |
2b5e7bc2 | 2180 | } |
5b311467 | 2181 | |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
2182 | if (flags & UTF8_DISALLOW_NONCHAR) { |
2183 | disallowed = TRUE; | |
f9380377 | 2184 | *errors |= UTF8_GOT_NONCHAR; |
2b5e7bc2 | 2185 | } |
6c64cd9d KW |
2186 | } |
2187 | else if (possible_problems & UTF8_GOT_LONG) { | |
2188 | possible_problems &= ~UTF8_GOT_LONG; | |
2189 | *errors |= UTF8_GOT_LONG; | |
2190 | ||
2191 | if (flags & UTF8_ALLOW_LONG) { | |
2192 | ||
2193 | /* We don't allow the actual overlong value, unless the | |
2194 | * special extra bit is also set */ | |
2195 | if (! (flags & ( UTF8_ALLOW_LONG_AND_ITS_VALUE | |
2196 | & ~UTF8_ALLOW_LONG))) | |
2197 | { | |
2198 | uv = UNICODE_REPLACEMENT; | |
2199 | } | |
2200 | } | |
2201 | else { | |
2202 | disallowed = TRUE; | |
2203 | ||
37657a5b KW |
2204 | if (( msgs |
2205 | || ckWARN_d(WARN_UTF8)) && ! (flags & UTF8_CHECK_ONLY)) | |
2206 | { | |
6c64cd9d KW |
2207 | pack_warn = packWARN(WARN_UTF8); |
2208 | ||
2209 | /* These error types cause 'uv' to be something that | |
2210 | * isn't what was intended, so can't use it in the | |
2211 | * message. The other error types either can't | |
2212 | * generate an overlong, or else the 'uv' is valid */ | |
2213 | if (orig_problems & | |
2214 | (UTF8_GOT_TOO_SHORT|UTF8_GOT_OVERFLOW)) | |
2215 | { | |
2216 | message = Perl_form(aTHX_ | |
2217 | "%s: %s (any UTF-8 sequence that starts" | |
2218 | " with \"%s\" is overlong which can and" | |
2219 | " should be represented with a" | |
2220 | " different, shorter sequence)", | |
2221 | malformed_text, | |
2222 | _byte_dump_string(s0, send - s0, 0), | |
2223 | _byte_dump_string(s0, curlen, 0)); | |
2224 | } | |
2225 | else { | |
2226 | U8 tmpbuf[UTF8_MAXBYTES+1]; | |
1be62ab9 KW |
2227 | const U8 * const e = uvoffuni_to_utf8_flags(tmpbuf, |
2228 | uv, 0); | |
d819dc50 KW |
2229 | /* Don't use U+ for non-Unicode code points, which |
2230 | * includes those in the Latin1 range */ | |
2231 | const char * preface = ( uv > PERL_UNICODE_MAX | |
2232 | #ifdef EBCDIC | |
2233 | || uv <= 0xFF | |
2234 | #endif | |
2235 | ) | |
2236 | ? "0x" | |
2237 | : "U+"; | |
6c64cd9d KW |
2238 | message = Perl_form(aTHX_ |
2239 | "%s: %s (overlong; instead use %s to represent" | |
2240 | " %s%0*" UVXf ")", | |
2241 | malformed_text, | |
2242 | _byte_dump_string(s0, send - s0, 0), | |
2243 | _byte_dump_string(tmpbuf, e - tmpbuf, 0), | |
2244 | preface, | |
2245 | ((uv < 256) ? 2 : 4), /* Field width of 2 for | |
2246 | small code points */ | |
1be62ab9 | 2247 | UNI_TO_NATIVE(uv)); |
6c64cd9d | 2248 | } |
37657a5b | 2249 | this_flag_bit = UTF8_GOT_LONG; |
6c64cd9d KW |
2250 | } |
2251 | } | |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
2252 | } /* End of looking through the possible flags */ |
2253 | ||
2254 | /* Display the message (if any) for the problem being handled in | |
2255 | * this iteration of the loop */ | |
2256 | if (message) { | |
37657a5b | 2257 | if (msgs) { |
37657a5b KW |
2258 | assert(this_flag_bit); |
2259 | ||
2260 | if (*msgs == NULL) { | |
2261 | *msgs = newAV(); | |
2262 | } | |
2263 | ||
bb07812e KW |
2264 | av_push(*msgs, newRV_noinc((SV*) new_msg_hv(message, |
2265 | pack_warn, | |
2266 | this_flag_bit))); | |
37657a5b KW |
2267 | } |
2268 | else if (PL_op) | |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
2269 | Perl_warner(aTHX_ pack_warn, "%s in %s", message, |
2270 | OP_DESC(PL_op)); | |
2271 | else | |
2272 | Perl_warner(aTHX_ pack_warn, "%s", message); | |
2273 | } | |
ddb65933 | 2274 | } /* End of 'while (possible_problems)' */ |
a0dbb045 | 2275 | |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
2276 | /* Since there was a possible problem, the returned length may need to |
2277 | * be changed from the one stored at the beginning of this function. | |
2278 | * Instead of trying to figure out if that's needed, just do it. */ | |
2279 | if (retlen) { | |
2280 | *retlen = curlen; | |
2281 | } | |
a0dbb045 | 2282 | |
2b5e7bc2 KW |
2283 | if (disallowed) { |
2284 | if (flags & UTF8_CHECK_ONLY && retlen) { | |
2285 | *retlen = ((STRLEN) -1); | |
2286 | } | |
2287 | return 0; | |
2288 | } | |
eb83ed87 | 2289 | } |
ba210ebe | 2290 | |
2b5e7bc2 | 2291 | return UNI_TO_NATIVE(uv); |
a0ed51b3 LW |
2292 | } |
2293 | ||
8e84507e | 2294 | /* |
ec5f19d0 KW |
2295 | =for apidoc utf8_to_uvchr_buf |
2296 | ||
2297 | Returns the native code point of the first character in the string C<s> which | |
2298 | is assumed to be in UTF-8 encoding; C<send> points to 1 beyond the end of C<s>. | |
524080c4 | 2299 | C<*retlen> will be set to the length, in bytes, of that character. |
ec5f19d0 | 2300 | |
524080c4 KW |
2301 | If C<s> does not point to a well-formed UTF-8 character and UTF8 warnings are |
2302 | enabled, zero is returned and C<*retlen> is set (if C<retlen> isn't | |
796b6530 | 2303 | C<NULL>) to -1. If those warnings are off, the computed value, if well-defined |
173db420 | 2304 | (or the Unicode REPLACEMENT CHARACTER if not), is silently returned, and |
796b6530 | 2305 | C<*retlen> is set (if C<retlen> isn't C<NULL>) so that (S<C<s> + C<*retlen>>) is |
173db420 | 2306 | the next possible position in C<s> that could begin a non-malformed character. |
de69f3af | 2307 | See L</utf8n_to_uvchr> for details on when the REPLACEMENT CHARACTER is |
173db420 | 2308 | returned. |
ec5f19d0 KW |
2309 | |
2310 | =cut | |
52be2536 KW |
2311 | |
2312 | Also implemented as a macro in utf8.h | |
2313 | ||
ec5f19d0 KW |
2314 | */ |
2315 | ||
2316 | ||
2317 | UV | |
2318 | Perl_utf8_to_uvchr_buf(pTHX_ const U8 *s, const U8 *send, STRLEN *retlen) | |
2319 | { | |
7f974d7e KW |
2320 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_UTF8_TO_UVCHR_BUF; |
2321 | ||
ec5f19d0 KW |
2322 | assert(s < send); |
2323 | ||
2324 | return utf8n_to_uvchr(s, send - s, retlen, | |
ddb65933 | 2325 | ckWARN_d(WARN_UTF8) ? 0 : UTF8_ALLOW_ANY); |
ec5f19d0 KW |
2326 | } |
2327 | ||
52be2536 KW |
2328 | /* This is marked as deprecated |
2329 | * | |
ec5f19d0 KW |
2330 | =for apidoc utf8_to_uvuni_buf |
2331 | ||
de69f3af KW |
2332 | Only in very rare circumstances should code need to be dealing in Unicode |
2333 | (as opposed to native) code points. In those few cases, use | |
07dfe0a4 KW |
2334 | C<L<NATIVE_TO_UNI(utf8_to_uvchr_buf(...))|/utf8_to_uvchr_buf>> instead. If you |
2335 | are not absolutely sure this is one of those cases, then assume it isn't and | |
2336 | use plain C<utf8_to_uvchr_buf> instead. | |
4f83cdcd KW |
2337 | |
2338 | Returns the Unicode (not-native) code point of the first character in the | |
2339 | string C<s> which | |
ec5f19d0 KW |
2340 | is assumed to be in UTF-8 encoding; C<send> points to 1 beyond the end of C<s>. |
2341 | C<retlen> will be set to the length, in bytes, of that character. | |
2342 | ||
524080c4 KW |
2343 | If C<s> does not point to a well-formed UTF-8 character and UTF8 warnings are |
2344 | enabled, zero is returned and C<*retlen> is set (if C<retlen> isn't | |
2345 | NULL) to -1. If those warnings are off, the computed value if well-defined (or | |
2346 | the Unicode REPLACEMENT CHARACTER, if not) is silently returned, and C<*retlen> | |
2347 | is set (if C<retlen> isn't NULL) so that (S<C<s> + C<*retlen>>) is the | |
2348 | next possible position in C<s> that could begin a non-malformed character. | |
de69f3af | 2349 | See L</utf8n_to_uvchr> for details on when the REPLACEMENT CHARACTER is returned. |
ec5f19d0 KW |
2350 | |
2351 | =cut | |
2352 | */ | |
2353 | ||
2354 | UV | |
2355 | Perl_utf8_to_uvuni_buf(pTHX_ const U8 *s, const U8 *send, STRLEN *retlen) | |
2356 | { | |
2357 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_UTF8_TO_UVUNI_BUF; | |
2358 | ||
2359 | assert(send > s); | |
2360 | ||
5962d97e | 2361 | return NATIVE_TO_UNI(utf8_to_uvchr_buf(s, send, retlen)); |
ec5f19d0 KW |
2362 | } |
2363 | ||
b76347f2 | 2364 | /* |
87cea99e | 2365 | =for apidoc utf8_length |
b76347f2 | 2366 | |
b2e7ed74 KW |
2367 | Returns the number of characters in the sequence of UTF-8-encoded bytes starting |
2368 | at C<s> and ending at the byte just before C<e>. If <s> and <e> point to the | |
2369 | same place, it returns 0 with no warning raised. | |
2370 | ||
2371 | If C<e E<lt> s> or if the scan would end up past C<e>, it raises a UTF8 warning | |
2372 | and returns the number of valid characters. | |
b76347f2 JH |
2373 | |
2374 | =cut | |
2375 | */ | |
2376 | ||
2377 | STRLEN | |
35a4481c | 2378 | Perl_utf8_length(pTHX_ const U8 *s, const U8 *e) |
b76347f2 JH |
2379 | { |
2380 | STRLEN len = 0; | |
2381 | ||
7918f24d NC |
2382 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_UTF8_LENGTH; |
2383 | ||
8850bf83 JH |
2384 | /* Note: cannot use UTF8_IS_...() too eagerly here since e.g. |
2385 | * the bitops (especially ~) can create illegal UTF-8. | |
2386 | * In other words: in Perl UTF-8 is not just for Unicode. */ | |
2387 | ||
a3b680e6 AL |
2388 | if (e < s) |
2389 | goto warn_and_return; | |
b76347f2 | 2390 | while (s < e) { |
4cbf4130 | 2391 | s += UTF8SKIP(s); |
8e91ec7f AV |
2392 | len++; |
2393 | } | |
2394 | ||
2395 | if (e != s) { | |
2396 | len--; | |
2397 | warn_and_return: | |
9b387841 NC |
2398 | if (PL_op) |
2399 | Perl_ck_warner_d(aTHX_ packWARN(WARN_UTF8), | |
2400 | "%s in %s", unees, OP_DESC(PL_op)); | |
2401 | else | |
61a12c31 | 2402 | Perl_ck_warner_d(aTHX_ packWARN(WARN_UTF8), "%s", unees); |
b76347f2 JH |
2403 | } |
2404 | ||
2405 | return len; | |
2406 | } | |
2407 | ||
b06226ff | 2408 | /* |
fed3ba5d NC |
2409 | =for apidoc bytes_cmp_utf8 |
2410 | ||
a1433954 | 2411 | Compares the sequence of characters (stored as octets) in C<b>, C<blen> with the |
72d33970 FC |
2412 | sequence of characters (stored as UTF-8) |
2413 | in C<u>, C<ulen>. Returns 0 if they are | |
fed3ba5d NC |
2414 | equal, -1 or -2 if the first string is less than the second string, +1 or +2 |
2415 | if the first string is greater than the second string. | |
2416 | ||
2417 | -1 or +1 is returned if the shorter string was identical to the start of the | |
72d33970 FC |
2418 | longer string. -2 or +2 is returned if |
2419 | there was a difference between characters | |
fed3ba5d NC |
2420 | within the strings. |
2421 | ||
2422 | =cut | |
2423 | */ | |
2424 | ||
2425 | int | |
2426 | Perl_bytes_cmp_utf8(pTHX_ const U8 *b, STRLEN blen, const U8 *u, STRLEN ulen) | |
2427 | { | |
2428 | const U8 *const bend = b + blen; | |
2429 | const U8 *const uend = u + ulen; | |
2430 | ||
2431 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_BYTES_CMP_UTF8; | |
fed3ba5d NC |
2432 | |
2433 | while (b < bend && u < uend) { | |
2434 | U8 c = *u++; | |
2435 | if (!UTF8_IS_INVARIANT(c)) { | |
2436 | if (UTF8_IS_DOWNGRADEABLE_START(c)) { | |
2437 | if (u < uend) { | |
2438 | U8 c1 = *u++; | |
2439 | if (UTF8_IS_CONTINUATION(c1)) { | |
a62b247b | 2440 | c = EIGHT_BIT_UTF8_TO_NATIVE(c, c1); |
fed3ba5d | 2441 | } else { |
2b5e7bc2 | 2442 | /* diag_listed_as: Malformed UTF-8 character%s */ |
fed3ba5d | 2443 | Perl_ck_warner_d(aTHX_ packWARN(WARN_UTF8), |
56576a04 KW |
2444 | "%s %s%s", |
2445 | unexpected_non_continuation_text(u - 2, 2, 1, 2), | |
2446 | PL_op ? " in " : "", | |
2447 | PL_op ? OP_DESC(PL_op) : ""); | |
fed3ba5d NC |
2448 | return -2; |
2449 | } | |
2450 | } else { | |
2451 | if (PL_op) | |
2452 | Perl_ck_warner_d(aTHX_ packWARN(WARN_UTF8), | |
2453 | "%s in %s", unees, OP_DESC(PL_op)); | |
2454 | else | |
61a12c31 | 2455 | Perl_ck_warner_d(aTHX_ packWARN(WARN_UTF8), "%s", unees); |
fed3ba5d NC |
2456 | return -2; /* Really want to return undef :-) */ |
2457 | } | |
2458 | } else { | |
2459 | return -2; | |
2460 | } | |
2461 | } | |
2462 | if (*b != c) { | |
2463 | return *b < c ? -2 : +2; | |
2464 | } | |
2465 | ++b; | |
2466 | } | |
2467 | ||
2468 | if (b == bend && u == uend) | |
2469 | return 0; | |
2470 | ||
2471 | return b < bend ? +1 : -1; | |
2472 | } | |
2473 | ||
2474 | /* | |
87cea99e | 2475 | =for apidoc utf8_to_bytes |
6940069f | 2476 | |
3bc0c78c | 2477 | Converts a string C<"s"> of length C<*lenp> from UTF-8 into native byte encoding. |
a1433954 | 2478 | Unlike L</bytes_to_utf8>, this over-writes the original string, and |
09af0336 | 2479 | updates C<*lenp> to contain the new length. |
3bc0c78c KW |
2480 | Returns zero on failure (leaving C<"s"> unchanged) setting C<*lenp> to -1. |
2481 | ||
2482 | Upon successful return, the number of variants in the string can be computed by | |
23b37b12 KW |
2483 | having saved the value of C<*lenp> before the call, and subtracting the |
2484 | after-call value of C<*lenp> from it. | |
6940069f | 2485 | |
a1433954 | 2486 | If you need a copy of the string, see L</bytes_from_utf8>. |
95be277c | 2487 | |
6940069f GS |
2488 | =cut |
2489 | */ | |
2490 | ||
2491 | U8 * | |
09af0336 | 2492 | Perl_utf8_to_bytes(pTHX_ U8 *s, STRLEN *lenp) |
6940069f | 2493 | { |
9fe0d3c2 | 2494 | U8 * first_variant; |
246fae53 | 2495 | |
7918f24d | 2496 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_UTF8_TO_BYTES; |
81611534 | 2497 | PERL_UNUSED_CONTEXT; |
7918f24d | 2498 | |
9fe0d3c2 | 2499 | /* This is a no-op if no variants at all in the input */ |
09af0336 | 2500 | if (is_utf8_invariant_string_loc(s, *lenp, (const U8 **) &first_variant)) { |
9fe0d3c2 KW |
2501 | return s; |
2502 | } | |
2503 | ||
2504 | { | |
3c5aa262 | 2505 | U8 * const save = s; |
09af0336 | 2506 | U8 * const send = s + *lenp; |
3c5aa262 KW |
2507 | U8 * d; |
2508 | ||
2509 | /* Nothing before the first variant needs to be changed, so start the real | |
2510 | * work there */ | |
2511 | s = first_variant; | |
2512 | while (s < send) { | |
2513 | if (! UTF8_IS_INVARIANT(*s)) { | |
2514 | if (! UTF8_IS_NEXT_CHAR_DOWNGRADEABLE(s, send)) { | |
09af0336 | 2515 | *lenp = ((STRLEN) -1); |
3c5aa262 KW |
2516 | return 0; |
2517 | } | |
2518 | s++; | |
d59937ca KW |
2519 | } |
2520 | s++; | |
dcad2880 | 2521 | } |
dcad2880 | 2522 | |
3c5aa262 KW |
2523 | /* Is downgradable, so do it */ |
2524 | d = s = first_variant; | |
2525 | while (s < send) { | |
2526 | U8 c = *s++; | |
2527 | if (! UVCHR_IS_INVARIANT(c)) { | |
2528 | /* Then it is two-byte encoded */ | |
2529 | c = EIGHT_BIT_UTF8_TO_NATIVE(c, *s); | |
2530 | s++; | |
2531 | } | |
2532 | *d++ = c; | |
2533 | } | |
2534 | *d = '\0'; | |
09af0336 | 2535 | *lenp = d - save; |
3c5aa262 KW |
2536 | |
2537 | return save; | |
9fe0d3c2 | 2538 | } |
6940069f GS |
2539 | } |
2540 | ||
2541 | /* | |
87cea99e | 2542 | =for apidoc bytes_from_utf8 |
f9a63242 | 2543 | |
09af0336 | 2544 | Converts a potentially UTF-8 encoded string C<s> of length C<*lenp> into native |
41ae6089 | 2545 | byte encoding. On input, the boolean C<*is_utf8p> gives whether or not C<s> is |
4f3d592d KW |
2546 | actually encoded in UTF-8. |
2547 | ||
2548 | Unlike L</utf8_to_bytes> but like L</bytes_to_utf8>, this is non-destructive of | |
2549 | the input string. | |
2550 | ||
41ae6089 KW |
2551 | Do nothing if C<*is_utf8p> is 0, or if there are code points in the string |
2552 | not expressible in native byte encoding. In these cases, C<*is_utf8p> and | |
09af0336 | 2553 | C<*lenp> are unchanged, and the return value is the original C<s>. |
4f3d592d | 2554 | |
41ae6089 | 2555 | Otherwise, C<*is_utf8p> is set to 0, and the return value is a pointer to a |
4f3d592d | 2556 | newly created string containing a downgraded copy of C<s>, and whose length is |
9ff99fb3 KW |
2557 | returned in C<*lenp>, updated. The new string is C<NUL>-terminated. The |
2558 | caller is responsible for arranging for the memory used by this string to get | |
2559 | freed. | |
f9a63242 | 2560 | |
3bc0c78c | 2561 | Upon successful return, the number of variants in the string can be computed by |
23b37b12 KW |
2562 | having saved the value of C<*lenp> before the call, and subtracting the |
2563 | after-call value of C<*lenp> from it. | |
3bc0c78c | 2564 | |
37607a96 | 2565 | =cut |
976c1b08 KW |
2566 | |
2567 | There is a macro that avoids this function call, but this is retained for | |
2568 | anyone who calls it with the Perl_ prefix */ | |
f9a63242 JH |
2569 | |
2570 | U8 * | |
41ae6089 | 2571 | Perl_bytes_from_utf8(pTHX_ const U8 *s, STRLEN *lenp, bool *is_utf8p) |
f9a63242 | 2572 | { |
7918f24d | 2573 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_BYTES_FROM_UTF8; |
96a5add6 | 2574 | PERL_UNUSED_CONTEXT; |
f9a63242 | 2575 | |
976c1b08 KW |
2576 | return bytes_from_utf8_loc(s, lenp, is_utf8p, NULL); |
2577 | } | |
2578 | ||
2579 | /* | |
2580 | No = here because currently externally undocumented | |
2581 | for apidoc bytes_from_utf8_loc | |
2582 | ||
2583 | Like C<L</bytes_from_utf8>()>, but takes an extra parameter, a pointer to where | |
2584 | to store the location of the first character in C<"s"> that cannot be | |
2585 | converted to non-UTF8. | |
2586 | ||
2587 | If that parameter is C<NULL>, this function behaves identically to | |
2588 | C<bytes_from_utf8>. | |
2589 | ||
2590 | Otherwise if C<*is_utf8p> is 0 on input, the function behaves identically to | |
2591 | C<bytes_from_utf8>, except it also sets C<*first_non_downgradable> to C<NULL>. | |
2592 | ||
2593 | Otherwise, the function returns a newly created C<NUL>-terminated string | |
2594 | containing the non-UTF8 equivalent of the convertible first portion of | |
2595 | C<"s">. C<*lenp> is set to its length, not including the terminating C<NUL>. | |
2596 | If the entire input string was converted, C<*is_utf8p> is set to a FALSE value, | |
2597 | and C<*first_non_downgradable> is set to C<NULL>. | |
2598 | ||
2599 | Otherwise, C<*first_non_downgradable> set to point to the first byte of the | |
2600 | first character in the original string that wasn't converted. C<*is_utf8p> is | |
2601 | unchanged. Note that the new string may have length 0. | |
2602 | ||
2603 | Another way to look at it is, if C<*first_non_downgradable> is non-C<NULL> and | |
2604 | C<*is_utf8p> is TRUE, this function starts at the beginning of C<"s"> and | |
2605 | converts as many characters in it as possible stopping at the first one it | |
385b74be | 2606 | finds that can't be converted to non-UTF-8. C<*first_non_downgradable> is |
976c1b08 KW |
2607 | set to point to that. The function returns the portion that could be converted |
2608 | in a newly created C<NUL>-terminated string, and C<*lenp> is set to its length, | |
2609 | not including the terminating C<NUL>. If the very first character in the | |
2610 | original could not be converted, C<*lenp> will be 0, and the new string will | |
2611 | contain just a single C<NUL>. If the entire input string was converted, | |
2612 | C<*is_utf8p> is set to FALSE and C<*first_non_downgradable> is set to C<NULL>. | |
2613 | ||
2614 | Upon successful return, the number of variants in the converted portion of the | |
2615 | string can be computed by having saved the value of C<*lenp> before the call, | |
2616 | and subtracting the after-call value of C<*lenp> from it. | |
2617 | ||
2618 | =cut | |
2619 | ||
2620 | ||
2621 | */ | |
2622 | ||
2623 | U8 * | |
2624 | Perl_bytes_from_utf8_loc(const U8 *s, STRLEN *lenp, bool *is_utf8p, const U8** first_unconverted) | |
2625 | { | |
2626 | U8 *d; | |
2627 | const U8 *original = s; | |
2628 | U8 *converted_start; | |
2629 | const U8 *send = s + *lenp; | |
f9a63242 | 2630 | |
976c1b08 | 2631 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_BYTES_FROM_UTF8_LOC; |
170a1c22 | 2632 | |
976c1b08 KW |
2633 | if (! *is_utf8p) { |
2634 | if (first_unconverted) { | |
2635 | *first_unconverted = NULL; | |
2636 | } | |
2637 | ||
2638 | return (U8 *) original; | |
2639 | } | |
2640 | ||
2641 | Newx(d, (*lenp) + 1, U8); | |
2642 | ||
2643 | converted_start = d; | |
7299a045 KW |
2644 | while (s < send) { |
2645 | U8 c = *s++; | |
2646 | if (! UTF8_IS_INVARIANT(c)) { | |
976c1b08 KW |
2647 | |
2648 | /* Then it is multi-byte encoded. If the code point is above 0xFF, | |
2649 | * have to stop now */ | |
2650 | if (UNLIKELY (! UTF8_IS_NEXT_CHAR_DOWNGRADEABLE(s - 1, send))) { | |
2651 | if (first_unconverted) { | |
2652 | *first_unconverted = s - 1; | |
2653 | goto finish_and_return; | |
2654 | } | |
2655 | else { | |
2656 | Safefree(converted_start); | |
2657 | return (U8 *) original; | |
2658 | } | |
2659 | } | |
2660 | ||
7299a045 KW |
2661 | c = EIGHT_BIT_UTF8_TO_NATIVE(c, *s); |
2662 | s++; | |
38af28cf | 2663 | } |
7299a045 KW |
2664 | *d++ = c; |
2665 | } | |
170a1c22 | 2666 | |
976c1b08 KW |
2667 | /* Here, converted the whole of the input */ |
2668 | *is_utf8p = FALSE; | |
2669 | if (first_unconverted) { | |
2670 | *first_unconverted = NULL; | |
170a1c22 | 2671 | } |
976c1b08 KW |
2672 | |
2673 | finish_and_return: | |
46a08a6f KW |
2674 | *d = '\0'; |
2675 | *lenp = d - converted_start; | |
976c1b08 KW |
2676 | |
2677 | /* Trim unused space */ | |
2678 | Renew(converted_start, *lenp + 1, U8); | |
2679 | ||
2680 | return converted_start; | |
f9a63242 JH |
2681 | } |
2682 | ||
2683 | /* | |
87cea99e | 2684 | =for apidoc bytes_to_utf8 |
6940069f | 2685 | |
09af0336 | 2686 | Converts a string C<s> of length C<*lenp> bytes from the native encoding into |
ff97e5cf | 2687 | UTF-8. |
09af0336 | 2688 | Returns a pointer to the newly-created string, and sets C<*lenp> to |
9ff99fb3 KW |
2689 | reflect the new length in bytes. The caller is responsible for arranging for |
2690 | the memory used by this string to get freed. | |
6940069f | 2691 | |
3bc0c78c | 2692 | Upon successful return, the number of variants in the string can be computed by |
23b37b12 | 2693 | having saved the value of C<*lenp> before the call, and subtracting it from the |
3bc0c78c KW |
2694 | after-call value of C<*lenp>. |
2695 | ||
75200dff | 2696 | A C<NUL> character will be written after the end of the string. |
2bbc8d55 SP |
2697 | |
2698 | If you want to convert to UTF-8 from encodings other than | |
2699 | the native (Latin1 or EBCDIC), | |
a1433954 | 2700 | see L</sv_recode_to_utf8>(). |
c9ada85f | 2701 | |
497711e7 | 2702 | =cut |
6940069f GS |
2703 | */ |
2704 | ||
2705 | U8* | |
09af0336 | 2706 | Perl_bytes_to_utf8(pTHX_ const U8 *s, STRLEN *lenp) |
6940069f | 2707 | { |
09af0336 | 2708 | const U8 * const send = s + (*lenp); |
6940069f GS |
2709 | U8 *d; |
2710 | U8 *dst; | |
7918f24d NC |
2711 | |
2712 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_BYTES_TO_UTF8; | |
96a5add6 | 2713 | PERL_UNUSED_CONTEXT; |
6940069f | 2714 | |
09af0336 | 2715 | Newx(d, (*lenp) * 2 + 1, U8); |
6940069f GS |
2716 | dst = d; |
2717 | ||
2718 | while (s < send) { | |
55d09dc8 KW |
2719 | append_utf8_from_native_byte(*s, &d); |
2720 | s++; | |
6940069f | 2721 | } |
2e11cf67 | 2722 | |
6940069f | 2723 | *d = '\0'; |
09af0336 | 2724 | *lenp = d-dst; |
2e11cf67 KW |
2725 | |
2726 | /* Trim unused space */ | |
2727 | Renew(dst, *lenp + 1, U8); | |
2728 | ||
6940069f GS |
2729 | return dst; |
2730 | } | |
2731 | ||
a0ed51b3 | 2732 | /* |
624504c5 KW |
2733 | * Convert native (big-endian) UTF-16 to UTF-8. For reversed (little-endian), |
2734 | * use utf16_to_utf8_reversed(). | |
a0ed51b3 | 2735 | * |
624504c5 KW |
2736 | * UTF-16 requires 2 bytes for every code point below 0x10000; otherwise 4 bytes. |
2737 | * UTF-8 requires 1-3 bytes for every code point below 0x1000; otherwise 4 bytes. | |
2738 | * UTF-EBCDIC requires 1-4 bytes for every code point below 0x1000; otherwise 4-5 bytes. | |
2739 | * | |
2740 | * These functions don't check for overflow. The worst case is every code | |
2741 | * point in the input is 2 bytes, and requires 4 bytes on output. (If the code | |
2742 | * is never going to run in EBCDIC, it is 2 bytes requiring 3 on output.) Therefore the | |
2743 | * destination must be pre-extended to 2 times the source length. | |
2744 | * | |
2745 | * Do not use in-place. We optimize for native, for obvious reasons. */ | |
a0ed51b3 LW |
2746 | |
2747 | U8* | |
dea0fc0b | 2748 | Perl_utf16_to_utf8(pTHX_ U8* p, U8* d, I32 bytelen, I32 *newlen) |
a0ed51b3 | 2749 | { |
dea0fc0b JH |
2750 | U8* pend; |
2751 | U8* dstart = d; | |
2752 | ||
7918f24d NC |
2753 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_UTF16_TO_UTF8; |
2754 | ||
dea0fc0b | 2755 | if (bytelen & 1) |
56576a04 KW |
2756 | Perl_croak(aTHX_ "panic: utf16_to_utf8: odd bytelen %" UVuf, |
2757 | (UV)bytelen); | |
dea0fc0b JH |
2758 | |
2759 | pend = p + bytelen; | |
2760 | ||
a0ed51b3 | 2761 | while (p < pend) { |
dea0fc0b JH |
2762 | UV uv = (p[0] << 8) + p[1]; /* UTF-16BE */ |
2763 | p += 2; | |
2d1545e5 | 2764 | if (OFFUNI_IS_INVARIANT(uv)) { |
56d37426 | 2765 | *d++ = LATIN1_TO_NATIVE((U8) uv); |
a0ed51b3 LW |
2766 | continue; |
2767 | } | |
56d37426 KW |
2768 | if (uv <= MAX_UTF8_TWO_BYTE) { |
2769 | *d++ = UTF8_TWO_BYTE_HI(UNI_TO_NATIVE(uv)); | |
2770 | *d++ = UTF8_TWO_BYTE_LO(UNI_TO_NATIVE(uv)); | |
a0ed51b3 LW |
2771 | continue; |
2772 | } | |
ffd0a9d3 | 2773 | |
46956fad KW |
2774 | #define FIRST_HIGH_SURROGATE UNICODE_SURROGATE_FIRST |
2775 | #define LAST_HIGH_SURROGATE 0xDBFF | |
2776 | #define FIRST_LOW_SURROGATE 0xDC00 | |
2777 | #define LAST_LOW_SURROGATE UNICODE_SURROGATE_LAST | |
ffd0a9d3 | 2778 | #define FIRST_IN_PLANE1 0x10000 |
e23c50db KW |
2779 | |
2780 | /* This assumes that most uses will be in the first Unicode plane, not | |
2781 | * needing surrogates */ | |
2782 | if (UNLIKELY(uv >= UNICODE_SURROGATE_FIRST | |
2783 | && uv <= UNICODE_SURROGATE_LAST)) | |
2784 | { | |
2785 | if (UNLIKELY(p >= pend) || UNLIKELY(uv > LAST_HIGH_SURROGATE)) { | |
2786 | Perl_croak(aTHX_ "Malformed UTF-16 surrogate"); | |
2787 | } | |
2788 | else { | |
01ea242b | 2789 | UV low = (p[0] << 8) + p[1]; |
e23c50db KW |
2790 | if ( UNLIKELY(low < FIRST_LOW_SURROGATE) |
2791 | || UNLIKELY(low > LAST_LOW_SURROGATE)) | |
2792 | { | |
01ea242b | 2793 | Perl_croak(aTHX_ "Malformed UTF-16 surrogate"); |
e23c50db KW |
2794 | } |
2795 | p += 2; | |
46956fad | 2796 | uv = ((uv - FIRST_HIGH_SURROGATE) << 10) |
ffd0a9d3 | 2797 | + (low - FIRST_LOW_SURROGATE) + FIRST_IN_PLANE1; |
01ea242b | 2798 | } |
a0ed51b3 | 2799 | } |
56d37426 KW |
2800 | #ifdef EBCDIC |
2801 | d = uvoffuni_to_utf8_flags(d, uv, 0); | |
2802 | #else | |
ffd0a9d3 | 2803 | if (uv < FIRST_IN_PLANE1) { |
eb160463 GS |
2804 | *d++ = (U8)(( uv >> 12) | 0xe0); |
2805 | *d++ = (U8)(((uv >> 6) & 0x3f) | 0x80); | |
2806 | *d++ = (U8)(( uv & 0x3f) | 0x80); | |
a0ed51b3 LW |
2807 | continue; |
2808 | } | |
2809 | else { | |
eb160463 GS |
2810 | *d++ = (U8)(( uv >> 18) | 0xf0); |
2811 | *d++ = (U8)(((uv >> 12) & 0x3f) | 0x80); | |
2812 | *d++ = (U8)(((uv >> 6) & 0x3f) | 0x80); | |
2813 | *d++ = (U8)(( uv & 0x3f) | 0x80); | |
a0ed51b3 LW |
2814 | continue; |
2815 | } | |
56d37426 | 2816 | #endif |
a0ed51b3 | 2817 | } |
dea0fc0b | 2818 | *newlen = d - dstart; |
a0ed51b3 LW |
2819 | return d; |
2820 | } | |
2821 | ||
2822 | /* Note: this one is slightly destructive of the source. */ | |
2823 | ||
2824 | U8* | |
dea0fc0b | 2825 | Perl_utf16_to_utf8_reversed(pTHX_ U8* p, U8* d, I32 bytelen, I32 *newlen) |
a0ed51b3 LW |
2826 | { |
2827 | U8* s = (U8*)p; | |
d4c19fe8 | 2828 | U8* const send = s + bytelen; |
7918f24d NC |
2829 | |
2830 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_UTF16_TO_UTF8_REVERSED; | |
2831 | ||
e0ea5e2d | 2832 | if (bytelen & 1) |
147e3846 | 2833 | Perl_croak(aTHX_ "panic: utf16_to_utf8_reversed: odd bytelen %" UVuf, |
e0ea5e2d NC |
2834 | (UV)bytelen); |
2835 | ||
a0ed51b3 | 2836 | while (s < send) { |
d4c19fe8 | 2837 | const U8 tmp = s[0]; |
a0ed51b3 LW |
2838 | s[0] = s[1]; |
2839 | s[1] = tmp; | |
2840 | s += 2; | |
2841 | } | |
dea0fc0b | 2842 | return utf16_to_utf8(p, d, bytelen, newlen); |
a0ed51b3 LW |
2843 | } |
2844 | ||
922e8cb4 KW |
2845 | bool |
2846 | Perl__is_uni_FOO(pTHX_ const U8 classnum, const UV c) | |
2847 | { | |
2848 | U8 tmpbuf[UTF8_MAXBYTES+1]; | |
2849 | uvchr_to_utf8(tmpbuf, c); | |
da8c1a98 | 2850 | return _is_utf8_FOO_with_len(classnum, tmpbuf, tmpbuf + sizeof(tmpbuf)); |
922e8cb4 KW |
2851 | } |
2852 | ||
f9ae8fb6 JD |
2853 | /* Internal function so we can deprecate the external one, and call |
2854 | this one from other deprecated functions in this file */ | |
2855 | ||
f2645549 KW |
2856 | bool |
2857 | Perl__is_utf8_idstart(pTHX_ const U8 *p) | |
61b19385 | 2858 | { |
f2645549 | 2859 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT__IS_UTF8_IDSTART; |
61b19385 KW |
2860 | |
2861 | if (*p == '_') | |
2862 | return TRUE; | |
f25ce844 | 2863 | return is_utf8_common(p, &PL_utf8_idstart, "IdStart", NULL); |
61b19385 KW |
2864 | } |
2865 | ||
5092f92a | 2866 | bool |
eba68aa0 KW |
2867 | Perl__is_uni_perl_idcont(pTHX_ UV c) |
2868 | { | |
2869 | U8 tmpbuf[UTF8_MAXBYTES+1]; | |
2870 | uvchr_to_utf8(tmpbuf, c); | |
da8c1a98 | 2871 | return _is_utf8_perl_idcont_with_len(tmpbuf, tmpbuf + sizeof(tmpbuf)); |
eba68aa0 KW |
2872 | } |
2873 | ||
2874 | bool | |
f91dcd13 KW |
2875 | Perl__is_uni_perl_idstart(pTHX_ UV c) |
2876 | { | |
2877 | U8 tmpbuf[UTF8_MAXBYTES+1]; | |
2878 | uvchr_to_utf8(tmpbuf, c); | |
da8c1a98 | 2879 | return _is_utf8_perl_idstart_with_len(tmpbuf, tmpbuf + sizeof(tmpbuf)); |
f91dcd13 KW |
2880 | } |
2881 | ||
3a4c58c9 | 2882 | UV |
56576a04 KW |
2883 | Perl__to_upper_title_latin1(pTHX_ const U8 c, U8* p, STRLEN *lenp, |
2884 | const char S_or_s) | |
3a4c58c9 KW |
2885 | { |
2886 | /* We have the latin1-range values compiled into the core, so just use | |
4a4088c4 | 2887 | * those, converting the result to UTF-8. The only difference between upper |
3a4c58c9 KW |
2888 | * and title case in this range is that LATIN_SMALL_LETTER_SHARP_S is |
2889 | * either "SS" or "Ss". Which one to use is passed into the routine in | |
2890 | * 'S_or_s' to avoid a test */ | |
2891 | ||
2892 | UV converted = toUPPER_LATIN1_MOD(c); | |
2893 | ||
2894 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT__TO_UPPER_TITLE_LATIN1; | |
2895 | ||
2896 | assert(S_or_s == 'S' || S_or_s == 's'); | |
2897 | ||
6f2d5cbc | 2898 | if (UVCHR_IS_INVARIANT(converted)) { /* No difference between the two for |
f4cd282c | 2899 | characters in this range */ |
3a4c58c9 KW |
2900 | *p = (U8) converted; |
2901 | *lenp = 1; | |
2902 | return converted; | |
2903 | } | |
2904 | ||
2905 | /* toUPPER_LATIN1_MOD gives the correct results except for three outliers, | |
2906 | * which it maps to one of them, so as to only have to have one check for | |
2907 | * it in the main case */ | |
2908 | if (UNLIKELY(converted == LATIN_SMALL_LETTER_Y_WITH_DIAERESIS)) { | |
2909 | switch (c) { | |
2910 | case LATIN_SMALL_LETTER_Y_WITH_DIAERESIS: | |
2911 | converted = LATIN_CAPITAL_LETTER_Y_WITH_DIAERESIS; | |
2912 | break; | |
2913 | case MICRO_SIGN: | |
2914 | converted = GREEK_CAPITAL_LETTER_MU; | |
2915 | break; | |
79e064b9 KW |
2916 | #if UNICODE_MAJOR_VERSION > 2 \ |
2917 | || (UNICODE_MAJOR_VERSION == 2 && UNICODE_DOT_VERSION >= 1 \ | |
2918 | && UNICODE_DOT_DOT_VERSION >= 8) | |
3a4c58c9 KW |
2919 | case LATIN_SMALL_LETTER_SHARP_S: |
2920 | *(p)++ = 'S'; | |
2921 | *p = S_or_s; | |
2922 | *lenp = 2; | |
2923 | return 'S'; | |
79e064b9 | 2924 | #endif |
3a4c58c9 | 2925 | default: |
56576a04 KW |
2926 | Perl_croak(aTHX_ "panic: to_upper_title_latin1 did not expect" |
2927 | " '%c' to map to '%c'", | |
2928 | c, LATIN_SMALL_LETTER_Y_WITH_DIAERESIS); | |
e5964223 | 2929 | NOT_REACHED; /* NOTREACHED */ |
3a4c58c9 KW |
2930 | } |
2931 | } | |
2932 | ||
2933 | *(p)++ = UTF8_TWO_BYTE_HI(converted); | |
2934 | *p = UTF8_TWO_BYTE_LO(converted); | |
2935 | *lenp = 2; | |
2936 | ||
2937 | return converted; | |
2938 | } | |
2939 | ||
50bda2c3 KW |
2940 | /* Call the function to convert a UTF-8 encoded character to the specified case. |
2941 | * Note that there may be more than one character in the result. | |
2942 | * INP is a pointer to the first byte of the input character | |
2943 | * OUTP will be set to the first byte of the string of changed characters. It | |
2944 | * needs to have space for UTF8_MAXBYTES_CASE+1 bytes | |
2945 | * LENP will be set to the length in bytes of the string of changed characters | |
2946 | * | |
56576a04 KW |
2947 | * The functions return the ordinal of the first character in the string of |
2948 | * OUTP */ | |
2949 | #define CALL_UPPER_CASE(uv, s, d, lenp) \ | |
2950 | _to_utf8_case(uv, s, d, lenp, &PL_utf8_toupper, "ToUc", "") | |
2951 | #define CALL_TITLE_CASE(uv, s, d, lenp) \ | |
2952 | _to_utf8_case(uv, s, d, lenp, &PL_utf8_totitle, "ToTc", "") | |
2953 | #define CALL_LOWER_CASE(uv, s, d, lenp) \ | |
2954 | _to_utf8_case(uv, s, d, lenp, &PL_utf8_tolower, "ToLc", "") | |
50bda2c3 | 2955 | |
b9992569 KW |
2956 | /* This additionally has the input parameter 'specials', which if non-zero will |
2957 | * cause this to use the specials hash for folding (meaning get full case | |
50bda2c3 | 2958 | * folding); otherwise, when zero, this implies a simple case fold */ |
56576a04 KW |
2959 | #define CALL_FOLD_CASE(uv, s, d, lenp, specials) \ |
2960 | _to_utf8_case(uv, s, d, lenp, &PL_utf8_tofold, "ToCf", (specials) ? "" : NULL) | |
c3fd2246 | 2961 | |
84afefe6 JH |
2962 | UV |
2963 | Perl_to_uni_upper(pTHX_ UV c, U8* p, STRLEN *lenp) | |
a0ed51b3 | 2964 | { |
a1433954 KW |
2965 | /* Convert the Unicode character whose ordinal is <c> to its uppercase |
2966 | * version and store that in UTF-8 in <p> and its length in bytes in <lenp>. | |
2967 | * Note that the <p> needs to be at least UTF8_MAXBYTES_CASE+1 bytes since | |
c3fd2246 KW |
2968 | * the changed version may be longer than the original character. |
2969 | * | |
2970 | * The ordinal of the first character of the changed version is returned | |
2971 | * (but note, as explained above, that there may be more.) */ | |
2972 | ||
7918f24d NC |
2973 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_TO_UNI_UPPER; |
2974 | ||
3a4c58c9 KW |
2975 | if (c < 256) { |
2976 | return _to_upper_title_latin1((U8) c, p, lenp, 'S'); | |
2977 | } | |
2978 | ||
0ebc6274 | 2979 | uvchr_to_utf8(p, c); |
b9992569 | 2980 | return CALL_UPPER_CASE(c, p, p, lenp); |
a0ed51b3 LW |
2981 | } |
2982 | ||
84afefe6 JH |
2983 | UV |
2984 | Perl_to_uni_title(pTHX_ UV c, U8* p, STRLEN *lenp) | |
a0ed51b3 | 2985 | { |
7918f24d NC |
2986 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_TO_UNI_TITLE; |
2987 | ||
3a4c58c9 KW |
2988 | if (c < 256) { |
2989 | return _to_upper_title_latin1((U8) c, p, lenp, 's'); | |
2990 | } | |
2991 | ||
0ebc6274 | 2992 | uvchr_to_utf8(p, c); |
b9992569 | 2993 | return CALL_TITLE_CASE(c, p, p, lenp); |
a0ed51b3 LW |
2994 | } |
2995 | ||
afc16117 | 2996 | STATIC U8 |
eaf412bf | 2997 | S_to_lower_latin1(const U8 c, U8* p, STRLEN *lenp, const char dummy) |
afc16117 KW |
2998 | { |
2999 | /* We have the latin1-range values compiled into the core, so just use | |
4a4088c4 | 3000 | * those, converting the result to UTF-8. Since the result is always just |
a1433954 | 3001 | * one character, we allow <p> to be NULL */ |
afc16117 KW |
3002 | |
3003 | U8 converted = toLOWER_LATIN1(c); | |
3004 | ||
eaf412bf KW |
3005 | PERL_UNUSED_ARG(dummy); |
3006 | ||
afc16117 | 3007 | if (p != NULL) { |
6f2d5cbc | 3008 | if (NATIVE_BYTE_IS_INVARIANT(converted)) { |
afc16117 KW |
3009 | *p = converted; |
3010 | *lenp = 1; | |
3011 | } | |
3012 | else { | |
430c9760 KW |
3013 | /* Result is known to always be < 256, so can use the EIGHT_BIT |
3014 | * macros */ | |
3015 | *p = UTF8_EIGHT_BIT_HI(converted); | |
3016 | *(p+1) = UTF8_EIGHT_BIT_LO(converted); | |
afc16117 KW |
3017 | *lenp = 2; |
3018 | } | |
3019 | } | |
3020 | return converted; | |
3021 | } | |
3022 | ||
84afefe6 JH |
3023 | UV |
3024 | Perl_to_uni_lower(pTHX_ UV c, U8* p, STRLEN *lenp) | |
a0ed51b3 | 3025 | { |
7918f24d NC |
3026 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_TO_UNI_LOWER; |
3027 | ||
afc16117 | 3028 | if (c < 256) { |
eaf412bf | 3029 | return to_lower_latin1((U8) c, p, lenp, 0 /* 0 is a dummy arg */ ); |
bca00c02 KW |
3030 | } |
3031 | ||
afc16117 | 3032 | uvchr_to_utf8(p, c); |
b9992569 | 3033 | return CALL_LOWER_CASE(c, p, p, lenp); |
a0ed51b3 LW |
3034 | } |
3035 | ||
84afefe6 | 3036 | UV |
56576a04 KW |
3037 | Perl__to_fold_latin1(pTHX_ const U8 c, U8* p, STRLEN *lenp, |
3038 | const unsigned int flags) | |
a1dde8de | 3039 | { |
51910141 | 3040 | /* Corresponds to to_lower_latin1(); <flags> bits meanings: |
1ca267a5 | 3041 | * FOLD_FLAGS_NOMIX_ASCII iff non-ASCII to ASCII folds are prohibited |
51910141 | 3042 | * FOLD_FLAGS_FULL iff full folding is to be used; |
1ca267a5 KW |
3043 | * |
3044 | * Not to be used for locale folds | |
51910141 | 3045 | */ |
f673fad4 | 3046 | |
a1dde8de KW |
3047 | UV converted; |
3048 | ||
3049 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT__TO_FOLD_LATIN1; | |
81611534 | 3050 | PERL_UNUSED_CONTEXT; |
a1dde8de | 3051 | |
1ca267a5 KW |
3052 | assert (! (flags & FOLD_FLAGS_LOCALE)); |
3053 | ||
659a7c2d | 3054 | if (UNLIKELY(c == MICRO_SIGN)) { |
a1dde8de KW |
3055 | converted = GREEK_SMALL_LETTER_MU; |
3056 | } | |
9b63e895 KW |
3057 | #if UNICODE_MAJOR_VERSION > 3 /* no multifolds in early Unicode */ \ |
3058 | || (UNICODE_MAJOR_VERSION == 3 && ( UNICODE_DOT_VERSION > 0) \ | |
3059 | || UNICODE_DOT_DOT_VERSION > 0) | |
659a7c2d KW |
3060 | else if ( (flags & FOLD_FLAGS_FULL) |
3061 | && UNLIKELY(c == LATIN_SMALL_LETTER_SHARP_S)) | |
3062 | { | |
1ca267a5 KW |
3063 | /* If can't cross 127/128 boundary, can't return "ss"; instead return |
3064 | * two U+017F characters, as fc("\df") should eq fc("\x{17f}\x{17f}") | |
3065 | * under those circumstances. */ | |
3066 | if (flags & FOLD_FLAGS_NOMIX_ASCII) { | |
3067 | *lenp = 2 * sizeof(LATIN_SMALL_LETTER_LONG_S_UTF8) - 2; | |
3068 | Copy(LATIN_SMALL_LETTER_LONG_S_UTF8 LATIN_SMALL_LETTER_LONG_S_UTF8, | |
3069 | p, *lenp, U8); | |
3070 | return LATIN_SMALL_LETTER_LONG_S; | |
3071 | } | |
3072 | else { | |
4f489194 KW |
3073 | *(p)++ = 's'; |
3074 | *p = 's'; | |
3075 | *lenp = 2; | |
3076 | return 's'; | |
1ca267a5 | 3077 | } |
a1dde8de | 3078 | } |
9b63e895 | 3079 | #endif |
a1dde8de KW |
3080 | else { /* In this range the fold of all other characters is their lower |
3081 | case */ | |
3082 | converted = toLOWER_LATIN1(c); | |
3083 | } | |
3084 | ||
6f2d5cbc | 3085 | if (UVCHR_IS_INVARIANT(converted)) { |
a1dde8de KW |
3086 | *p = (U8) converted; |
3087 | *lenp = 1; | |
3088 | } | |
3089 | else { | |
3090 | *(p)++ = UTF8_TWO_BYTE_HI(converted); | |
3091 | *p = UTF8_TWO_BYTE_LO(converted); | |
3092 | *lenp = 2; | |
3093 | } | |
3094 | ||
3095 | return converted; | |
3096 | } | |
3097 | ||
3098 | UV | |
31f05a37 | 3099 | Perl__to_uni_fold_flags(pTHX_ UV c, U8* p, STRLEN *lenp, U8 flags) |
84afefe6 | 3100 | { |
4b593389 | 3101 | |
a0270393 KW |
3102 | /* Not currently externally documented, and subject to change |
3103 | * <flags> bits meanings: | |
3104 | * FOLD_FLAGS_FULL iff full folding is to be used; | |
31f05a37 KW |
3105 | * FOLD_FLAGS_LOCALE is set iff the rules from the current underlying |
3106 | * locale are to be used. | |
a0270393 KW |
3107 | * FOLD_FLAGS_NOMIX_ASCII iff non-ASCII to ASCII folds are prohibited |
3108 | */ | |
4b593389 | 3109 | |
36bb2ab6 | 3110 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT__TO_UNI_FOLD_FLAGS; |
7918f24d | 3111 | |
780fcc9f | 3112 | if (flags & FOLD_FLAGS_LOCALE) { |
8b7358b9 KW |
3113 | /* Treat a UTF-8 locale as not being in locale at all, except for |
3114 | * potentially warning */ | |
3115 | _CHECK_AND_WARN_PROBLEMATIC_LOCALE; | |
780fcc9f KW |
3116 | if (IN_UTF8_CTYPE_LOCALE) { |
3117 | flags &= ~FOLD_FLAGS_LOCALE; | |
3118 | } | |
3119 | else { | |
e7b7ac46 | 3120 | goto needs_full_generality; |
780fcc9f | 3121 | } |
31f05a37 KW |
3122 | } |
3123 | ||
a1dde8de | 3124 | if (c < 256) { |
e7b7ac46 | 3125 | return _to_fold_latin1((U8) c, p, lenp, |
31f05a37 | 3126 | flags & (FOLD_FLAGS_FULL | FOLD_FLAGS_NOMIX_ASCII)); |
a1dde8de KW |
3127 | } |
3128 | ||
2f306ab9 | 3129 | /* Here, above 255. If no special needs, just use the macro */ |
a0270393 KW |
3130 | if ( ! (flags & (FOLD_FLAGS_LOCALE|FOLD_FLAGS_NOMIX_ASCII))) { |
3131 | uvchr_to_utf8(p, c); | |
b9992569 | 3132 | return CALL_FOLD_CASE(c, p, p, lenp, flags & FOLD_FLAGS_FULL); |
a0270393 | 3133 | } |
567b353c | 3134 | else { /* Otherwise, _toFOLD_utf8_flags has the intelligence to deal with |
a0270393 KW |
3135 | the special flags. */ |
3136 | U8 utf8_c[UTF8_MAXBYTES + 1]; | |
e7b7ac46 KW |
3137 | |
3138 | needs_full_generality: | |
a0270393 | 3139 | uvchr_to_utf8(utf8_c, c); |
56576a04 KW |
3140 | return _toFOLD_utf8_flags(utf8_c, utf8_c + sizeof(utf8_c), |
3141 | p, lenp, flags); | |
a0270393 | 3142 | } |
84afefe6 JH |
3143 | } |
3144 | ||
26483009 | 3145 | PERL_STATIC_INLINE bool |
5141f98e | 3146 | S_is_utf8_common(pTHX_ const U8 *const p, SV **swash, |
f25ce844 | 3147 | const char *const swashname, SV* const invlist) |
bde6a22d | 3148 | { |
ea317ccb KW |
3149 | /* returns a boolean giving whether or not the UTF8-encoded character that |
3150 | * starts at <p> is in the swash indicated by <swashname>. <swash> | |
3151 | * contains a pointer to where the swash indicated by <swashname> | |
3152 | * is to be stored; which this routine will do, so that future calls will | |
f25ce844 KW |
3153 | * look at <*swash> and only generate a swash if it is not null. <invlist> |
3154 | * is NULL or an inversion list that defines the swash. If not null, it | |
3155 | * saves time during initialization of the swash. | |
ea317ccb KW |
3156 | * |
3157 | * Note that it is assumed that the buffer length of <p> is enough to | |
3158 | * contain all the bytes that comprise the character. Thus, <*p> should | |
3159 | * have been checked before this call for mal-formedness enough to assure | |
3160 | * that. */ | |
3161 | ||
7918f24d NC |
3162 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_IS_UTF8_COMMON; |
3163 | ||
492a624f | 3164 | /* The API should have included a length for the UTF-8 character in <p>, |
28123549 | 3165 | * but it doesn't. We therefore assume that p has been validated at least |
492a624f KW |
3166 | * as far as there being enough bytes available in it to accommodate the |
3167 | * character without reading beyond the end, and pass that number on to the | |
3168 | * validating routine */ | |
6302f837 | 3169 | if (! isUTF8_CHAR(p, p + UTF8SKIP(p))) { |
86ae6e94 | 3170 | _force_out_malformed_utf8_message(p, p + UTF8SKIP(p), |
99a765e9 | 3171 | _UTF8_NO_CONFIDENCE_IN_CURLEN, |
86ae6e94 KW |
3172 | 1 /* Die */ ); |
3173 | NOT_REACHED; /* NOTREACHED */ | |
28123549 | 3174 | } |
86ae6e94 | 3175 | |
87367d5f KW |
3176 | if (!*swash) { |
3177 | U8 flags = _CORE_SWASH_INIT_ACCEPT_INVLIST; | |
f25ce844 KW |
3178 | *swash = _core_swash_init("utf8", |
3179 | ||
3180 | /* Only use the name if there is no inversion | |
3181 | * list; otherwise will go out to disk */ | |
3182 | (invlist) ? "" : swashname, | |
3183 | ||
3184 | &PL_sv_undef, 1, 0, invlist, &flags); | |
87367d5f | 3185 | } |
28123549 | 3186 | |
bde6a22d NC |
3187 | return swash_fetch(*swash, p, TRUE) != 0; |
3188 | } | |
3189 | ||
da8c1a98 | 3190 | PERL_STATIC_INLINE bool |
56576a04 KW |
3191 | S_is_utf8_common_with_len(pTHX_ const U8 *const p, const U8 * const e, |
3192 | SV **swash, const char *const swashname, | |
3193 | SV* const invlist) | |
da8c1a98 KW |
3194 | { |
3195 | /* returns a boolean giving whether or not the UTF8-encoded character that | |
3196 | * starts at <p>, and extending no further than <e - 1> is in the swash | |
3197 | * indicated by <swashname>. <swash> contains a pointer to where the swash | |
3198 | * indicated by <swashname> is to be stored; which this routine will do, so | |
3199 | * that future calls will look at <*swash> and only generate a swash if it | |
3200 | * is not null. <invlist> is NULL or an inversion list that defines the | |
3201 | * swash. If not null, it saves time during initialization of the swash. | |
3202 | */ | |
3203 | ||
3204 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_IS_UTF8_COMMON_WITH_LEN; | |
3205 | ||
3206 | if (! isUTF8_CHAR(p, e)) { | |
3207 | _force_out_malformed_utf8_message(p, e, 0, 1); | |
3208 | NOT_REACHED; /* NOTREACHED */ | |
3209 | } | |
3210 | ||
3211 | if (!*swash) { | |
3212 | U8 flags = _CORE_SWASH_INIT_ACCEPT_INVLIST; | |
3213 | *swash = _core_swash_init("utf8", | |
3214 | ||
3215 | /* Only use the name if there is no inversion | |
3216 | * list; otherwise will go out to disk */ | |
3217 | (invlist) ? "" : swashname, | |
3218 | ||
3219 | &PL_sv_undef, 1, 0, invlist, &flags); | |
3220 | } | |
3221 | ||
3222 | return swash_fetch(*swash, p, TRUE) != 0; | |
3223 | } | |
3224 | ||
34aeb2e9 KW |
3225 | STATIC void |
3226 | S_warn_on_first_deprecated_use(pTHX_ const char * const name, | |
3227 | const char * const alternative, | |
3228 | const bool use_locale, | |
3229 | const char * const file, | |
3230 | const unsigned line) | |
3231 | { | |
3232 | const char * key; | |
3233 | ||
3234 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_WARN_ON_FIRST_DEPRECATED_USE; | |
3235 | ||
3236 | if (ckWARN_d(WARN_DEPRECATED)) { | |
3237 | ||
3238 | key = Perl_form(aTHX_ "%s;%d;%s;%d", name, use_locale, file, line); | |
3239 | if (! hv_fetch(PL_seen_deprecated_macro, key, strlen(key), 0)) { | |
3240 | if (! PL_seen_deprecated_macro) { | |
3241 | PL_seen_deprecated_macro = newHV(); | |
3242 | } | |
3243 | if (! hv_store(PL_seen_deprecated_macro, key, | |
3244 | strlen(key), &PL_sv_undef, 0)) | |
3245 | { | |
3246 | Perl_croak(aTHX_ "panic: hv_store() unexpectedly failed"); | |
3247 | } | |
3248 | ||
c44e9413 | 3249 | if (instr(file, "mathoms.c")) { |
607313a1 KW |
3250 | Perl_warner(aTHX_ WARN_DEPRECATED, |
3251 | "In %s, line %d, starting in Perl v5.30, %s()" | |
3252 | " will be removed. Avoid this message by" | |
3253 | " converting to use %s().\n", | |
3254 | file, line, name, alternative); | |
3255 | } | |
3256 | else { | |
34aeb2e9 KW |
3257 | Perl_warner(aTHX_ WARN_DEPRECATED, |
3258 | "In %s, line %d, starting in Perl v5.30, %s() will" | |
3259 | " require an additional parameter. Avoid this" | |
3260 | " message by converting to use %s().\n", | |
3261 | file, line, name, alternative); | |
607313a1 | 3262 | } |
34aeb2e9 KW |
3263 | } |
3264 | } | |
3265 | } | |
3266 | ||
bde6a22d | 3267 | bool |
34aeb2e9 | 3268 | Perl__is_utf8_FOO(pTHX_ U8 classnum, |
be99e2c2 | 3269 | const U8 * const p, |
34aeb2e9 KW |
3270 | const char * const name, |
3271 | const char * const alternative, | |
3272 | const bool use_utf8, | |
3273 | const bool use_locale, | |
3274 | const char * const file, | |
3275 | const unsigned line) | |
922e8cb4 | 3276 | { |
922e8cb4 KW |
3277 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT__IS_UTF8_FOO; |
3278 | ||
34aeb2e9 KW |
3279 | warn_on_first_deprecated_use(name, alternative, use_locale, file, line); |
3280 | ||
3281 | if (use_utf8 && UTF8_IS_ABOVE_LATIN1(*p)) { | |
34aeb2e9 KW |
3282 | |
3283 | switch (classnum) { | |
3284 | case _CC_WORDCHAR: | |
3285 | case _CC_DIGIT: | |
3286 | case _CC_ALPHA: | |
3287 | case _CC_LOWER: | |
3288 | case _CC_UPPER: | |
3289 | case _CC_PUNCT: | |
3290 | case _CC_PRINT: | |
3291 | case _CC_ALPHANUMERIC: | |
3292 | case _CC_GRAPH: | |
3293 | case _CC_CASED: | |
3294 | ||
3295 | return is_utf8_common(p, | |
3296 | &PL_utf8_swash_ptrs[classnum], | |
3297 | swash_property_names[classnum], | |
3298 | PL_XPosix_ptrs[classnum]); | |
3299 | ||
3300 | case _CC_SPACE: | |
3301 | return is_XPERLSPACE_high(p); | |
3302 | case _CC_BLANK: | |
3303 | return is_HORIZWS_high(p); | |
3304 | case _CC_XDIGIT: | |
3305 | return is_XDIGIT_high(p); | |
3306 | case _CC_CNTRL: | |
3307 | return 0; | |
3308 | case _CC_ASCII: | |
3309 | return 0; | |
3310 | case _CC_VERTSPACE: | |
3311 | return is_VERTWS_high(p); | |
3312 | case _CC_IDFIRST: | |
3313 | if (! PL_utf8_perl_idstart) { | |
22f0498f KW |
3314 | PL_utf8_perl_idstart |
3315 | = _new_invlist_C_array(_Perl_IDStart_invlist); | |
34aeb2e9 | 3316 | } |
22f0498f KW |
3317 | return is_utf8_common(p, &PL_utf8_perl_idstart, |
3318 | "_Perl_IDStart", NULL); | |
34aeb2e9 KW |
3319 | case _CC_IDCONT: |
3320 | if (! PL_utf8_perl_idcont) { | |
22f0498f KW |
3321 | PL_utf8_perl_idcont |
3322 | = _new_invlist_C_array(_Perl_IDCont_invlist); | |
34aeb2e9 | 3323 | } |
22f0498f KW |
3324 | return is_utf8_common(p, &PL_utf8_perl_idcont, |
3325 | "_Perl_IDCont", NULL); | |
34aeb2e9 KW |
3326 | } |
3327 | } | |
3328 | ||
3329 | /* idcont is the same as wordchar below 256 */ | |
3330 | if (classnum == _CC_IDCONT) { | |
3331 | classnum = _CC_WORDCHAR; | |
3332 | } | |
3333 | else if (classnum == _CC_IDFIRST) { | |
3334 | if (*p == '_') { | |
3335 | return TRUE; | |
3336 | } | |
3337 | classnum = _CC_ALPHA; | |
3338 | } | |
3339 | ||
3340 | if (! use_locale) { | |
3341 | if (! use_utf8 || UTF8_IS_INVARIANT(*p)) { | |
3342 | return _generic_isCC(*p, classnum); | |
3343 | } | |
922e8cb4 | 3344 | |
34aeb2e9 KW |
3345 | return _generic_isCC(EIGHT_BIT_UTF8_TO_NATIVE(*p, *(p + 1 )), classnum); |
3346 | } | |
3347 | else { | |
3348 | if (! use_utf8 || UTF8_IS_INVARIANT(*p)) { | |
3349 | return isFOO_lc(classnum, *p); | |
3350 | } | |
3351 | ||
3352 | return isFOO_lc(classnum, EIGHT_BIT_UTF8_TO_NATIVE(*p, *(p + 1 ))); | |
3353 | } | |
3354 | ||
3355 | NOT_REACHED; /* NOTREACHED */ | |
922e8cb4 KW |
3356 | } |
3357 | ||
3358 | bool | |
da8c1a98 KW |
3359 | Perl__is_utf8_FOO_with_len(pTHX_ const U8 classnum, const U8 *p, |
3360 | const U8 * const e) | |
3361 | { | |
3362 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT__IS_UTF8_FOO_WITH_LEN; | |
3363 | ||
3364 | assert(classnum < _FIRST_NON_SWASH_CC); | |
3365 | ||
3366 | return is_utf8_common_with_len(p, | |
3367 | e, | |
3368 | &PL_utf8_swash_ptrs[classnum], | |
3369 | swash_property_names[classnum], | |
3370 | PL_XPosix_ptrs[classnum]); | |
3371 | } | |
3372 | ||
3373 | bool | |
da8c1a98 KW |
3374 | Perl__is_utf8_perl_idstart_with_len(pTHX_ const U8 *p, const U8 * const e) |
3375 | { | |
3376 | SV* invlist = NULL; | |
3377 | ||
3378 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT__IS_UTF8_PERL_IDSTART_WITH_LEN; | |
3379 | ||
3380 | if (! PL_utf8_perl_idstart) { | |
3381 | invlist = _new_invlist_C_array(_Perl_IDStart_invlist); | |
3382 | } | |
3383 | return is_utf8_common_with_len(p, e, &PL_utf8_perl_idstart, | |
3384 | "_Perl_IDStart", invlist); | |
3385 | } | |
3386 | ||
3387 | bool | |
f2645549 | 3388 | Perl__is_utf8_xidstart(pTHX_ const U8 *p) |
c11ff943 | 3389 | { |
f2645549 | 3390 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT__IS_UTF8_XIDSTART; |
c11ff943 KW |
3391 | |
3392 | if (*p == '_') | |
3393 | return TRUE; | |
f25ce844 | 3394 | return is_utf8_common(p, &PL_utf8_xidstart, "XIdStart", NULL); |
c11ff943 KW |
3395 | } |
3396 | ||
3397 | bool | |
da8c1a98 KW |
3398 | Perl__is_utf8_perl_idcont_with_len(pTHX_ const U8 *p, const U8 * const e) |
3399 | { | |
3400 | SV* invlist = NULL; | |
3401 | ||
3402 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT__IS_UTF8_PERL_IDCONT_WITH_LEN; | |
3403 | ||
3404 | if (! PL_utf8_perl_idcont) { | |
3405 | invlist = _new_invlist_C_array(_Perl_IDCont_invlist); | |
3406 | } | |
3407 | return is_utf8_common_with_len(p, e, &PL_utf8_perl_idcont, | |
3408 | "_Perl_IDCont", invlist); | |
3409 | } | |
3410 | ||
3411 | bool | |
f2645549 | 3412 | Perl__is_utf8_idcont(pTHX_ const U8 *p) |
82686b01 | 3413 | { |
f2645549 | 3414 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT__IS_UTF8_IDCONT; |
7918f24d | 3415 | |
f25ce844 | 3416 | return is_utf8_common(p, &PL_utf8_idcont, "IdContinue", NULL); |
a0ed51b3 LW |
3417 | } |
3418 | ||
3419 | bool | |
f2645549 | 3420 | Perl__is_utf8_xidcont(pTHX_ const U8 *p) |
c11ff943 | 3421 | { |
f2645549 | 3422 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT__IS_UTF8_XIDCONT; |
c11ff943 | 3423 | |
f25ce844 | 3424 | return is_utf8_common(p, &PL_utf8_idcont, "XIdContinue", NULL); |
c11ff943 KW |
3425 | } |
3426 | ||
3427 | bool | |
7dbf68d2 KW |
3428 | Perl__is_utf8_mark(pTHX_ const U8 *p) |
3429 | { | |
7dbf68d2 KW |
3430 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT__IS_UTF8_MARK; |
3431 | ||
f25ce844 | 3432 | return is_utf8_common(p, &PL_utf8_mark, "IsM", NULL); |
7dbf68d2 KW |
3433 | } |
3434 | ||
b9992569 | 3435 | /* change namve uv1 to 'from' */ |
6a4a25f4 | 3436 | STATIC UV |
b9992569 KW |
3437 | S__to_utf8_case(pTHX_ const UV uv1, const U8 *p, U8* ustrp, STRLEN *lenp, |
3438 | SV **swashp, const char *normal, const char *special) | |
3439 | { | |
0134edef | 3440 | STRLEN len = 0; |
7918f24d | 3441 | |
b9992569 | 3442 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT__TO_UTF8_CASE; |
7918f24d | 3443 | |
36eaa811 KW |
3444 | /* For code points that don't change case, we already know that the output |
3445 | * of this function is the unchanged input, so we can skip doing look-ups | |
3446 | * for them. Unfortunately the case-changing code points are scattered | |
3447 | * around. But there are some long consecutive ranges where there are no | |
3448 | * case changing code points. By adding tests, we can eliminate the lookup | |
3449 | * for all the ones in such ranges. This is currently done here only for | |
3450 | * just a few cases where the scripts are in common use in modern commerce | |
3451 | * (and scripts adjacent to those which can be included without additional | |
3452 | * tests). */ | |
3453 | ||
3454 | if (uv1 >= 0x0590) { | |
3455 | /* This keeps from needing further processing the code points most | |
3456 | * likely to be used in the following non-cased scripts: Hebrew, | |
3457 | * Arabic, Syriac, Thaana, NKo, Samaritan, Mandaic, Devanagari, | |
3458 | * Bengali, Gurmukhi, Gujarati, Oriya, Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, | |
3459 | * Malayalam, Sinhala, Thai, Lao, Tibetan, Myanmar */ | |
3460 | if (uv1 < 0x10A0) { | |
3461 | goto cases_to_self; | |
3462 | } | |
3463 | ||
3464 | /* The following largish code point ranges also don't have case | |
3465 | * changes, but khw didn't think they warranted extra tests to speed | |
3466 | * them up (which would slightly slow down everything else above them): | |
3467 | * 1100..139F Hangul Jamo, Ethiopic | |
3468 | * 1400..1CFF Unified Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics, Ogham, Runic, | |
3469 | * Tagalog, Hanunoo, Buhid, Tagbanwa, Khmer, Mongolian, | |
3470 | * Limbu, Tai Le, New Tai Lue, Buginese, Tai Tham, | |
3471 | * Combining Diacritical Marks Extended, Balinese, | |
3472 | * Sundanese, Batak, Lepcha, Ol Chiki | |
3473 | * 2000..206F General Punctuation | |
3474 | */ | |
3475 | ||
3476 | if (uv1 >= 0x2D30) { | |
3477 | ||
3478 | /* This keeps the from needing further processing the code points | |
3479 | * most likely to be used in the following non-cased major scripts: | |
3480 | * CJK, Katakana, Hiragana, plus some less-likely scripts. | |
3481 | * | |
3482 | * (0x2D30 above might have to be changed to 2F00 in the unlikely | |
3483 | * event that Unicode eventually allocates the unused block as of | |
3484 | * v8.0 2FE0..2FEF to code points that are cased. khw has verified | |
3485 | * that the test suite will start having failures to alert you | |
3486 | * should that happen) */ | |
3487 | if (uv1 < 0xA640) { | |
3488 | goto cases_to_self; | |
3489 | } | |
3490 | ||
3491 | if (uv1 >= 0xAC00) { | |
3492 | if (UNLIKELY(UNICODE_IS_SURROGATE(uv1))) { | |
5af9bc97 KW |
3493 | if (ckWARN_d(WARN_SURROGATE)) { |
3494 | const char* desc = (PL_op) ? OP_DESC(PL_op) : normal; | |
3495 | Perl_warner(aTHX_ packWARN(WARN_SURROGATE), | |
56576a04 KW |
3496 | "Operation \"%s\" returns its argument for" |
3497 | " UTF-16 surrogate U+%04" UVXf, desc, uv1); | |
5af9bc97 KW |
3498 | } |
3499 | goto cases_to_self; | |
3500 | } | |
36eaa811 KW |
3501 | |
3502 | /* AC00..FAFF Catches Hangul syllables and private use, plus | |
3503 | * some others */ | |
3504 | if (uv1 < 0xFB00) { | |
3505 | goto cases_to_self; | |
3506 | ||
3507 | } | |
3508 | ||
5af9bc97 | 3509 | if (UNLIKELY(UNICODE_IS_SUPER(uv1))) { |
d22ec717 KW |
3510 | if (UNLIKELY(uv1 > MAX_EXTERNALLY_LEGAL_CP)) { |
3511 | Perl_croak(aTHX_ cp_above_legal_max, uv1, | |
3512 | MAX_EXTERNALLY_LEGAL_CP); | |
5af9bc97 KW |
3513 | } |
3514 | if (ckWARN_d(WARN_NON_UNICODE)) { | |
3515 | const char* desc = (PL_op) ? OP_DESC(PL_op) : normal; | |
3516 | Perl_warner(aTHX_ packWARN(WARN_NON_UNICODE), | |
56576a04 KW |
3517 | "Operation \"%s\" returns its argument for" |
3518 | " non-Unicode code point 0x%04" UVXf, desc, uv1); | |
5af9bc97 KW |
3519 | } |
3520 | goto cases_to_self; | |
3521 | } | |
3bfc1e70 KW |
3522 | #ifdef HIGHEST_CASE_CHANGING_CP_FOR_USE_ONLY_BY_UTF8_DOT_C |
3523 | if (UNLIKELY(uv1 | |
3524 | > HIGHEST_CASE_CHANGING_CP_FOR_USE_ONLY_BY_UTF8_DOT_C)) | |
3525 | { | |
3526 | ||
56576a04 KW |
3527 | /* As of Unicode 10.0, this means we avoid swash creation |
3528 | * for anything beyond high Plane 1 (below emojis) */ | |
3bfc1e70 KW |
3529 | goto cases_to_self; |
3530 | } | |
3531 | #endif | |
36eaa811 KW |
3532 | } |
3533 | } | |
9ae3ac1a | 3534 | |
36eaa811 KW |
3535 | /* Note that non-characters are perfectly legal, so no warning should |
3536 | * be given. There are so few of them, that it isn't worth the extra | |
3537 | * tests to avoid swash creation */ | |
9ae3ac1a KW |
3538 | } |
3539 | ||
0134edef | 3540 | if (!*swashp) /* load on-demand */ |
56576a04 KW |
3541 | *swashp = _core_swash_init("utf8", normal, &PL_sv_undef, |
3542 | 4, 0, NULL, NULL); | |
0134edef | 3543 | |
a6f87d8c | 3544 | if (special) { |
0134edef | 3545 | /* It might be "special" (sometimes, but not always, |
2a37f04d | 3546 | * a multicharacter mapping) */ |
4a8240a3 | 3547 | HV *hv = NULL; |
b08cf34e JH |
3548 | SV **svp; |
3549 | ||
4a8240a3 KW |
3550 | /* If passed in the specials name, use that; otherwise use any |
3551 | * given in the swash */ | |
3552 | if (*special != '\0') { | |
3553 | hv = get_hv(special, 0); | |
3554 | } | |
3555 | else { | |
3556 | svp = hv_fetchs(MUTABLE_HV(SvRV(*swashp)), "SPECIALS", 0); | |
3557 | if (svp) { | |
3558 | hv = MUTABLE_HV(SvRV(*svp)); | |
3559 | } | |
3560 | } | |
3561 | ||
176fe009 | 3562 | if (hv |
5f560d8a | 3563 | && (svp = hv_fetch(hv, (const char*)p, UVCHR_SKIP(uv1), FALSE)) |
176fe009 KW |
3564 | && (*svp)) |
3565 | { | |
cfd0369c | 3566 | const char *s; |
47654450 | 3567 | |
cfd0369c | 3568 | s = SvPV_const(*svp, len); |
47654450 | 3569 | if (len == 1) |
f4cd282c | 3570 | /* EIGHTBIT */ |
c80e42f3 | 3571 | len = uvchr_to_utf8(ustrp, *(U8*)s) - ustrp; |
2a37f04d | 3572 | else { |
d2dcd0fb | 3573 | Copy(s, ustrp, len, U8); |
29e98929 | 3574 | } |
983ffd37 | 3575 | } |
0134edef JH |
3576 | } |
3577 | ||
3578 | if (!len && *swashp) { | |
4a4088c4 | 3579 | const UV uv2 = swash_fetch(*swashp, p, TRUE /* => is UTF-8 */); |
d4c19fe8 | 3580 | |
0134edef JH |
3581 | if (uv2) { |
3582 | /* It was "normal" (a single character mapping). */ | |
f4cd282c | 3583 | len = uvchr_to_utf8(ustrp, uv2) - ustrp; |
2a37f04d JH |
3584 | } |
3585 | } | |
1feea2c7 | 3586 | |
cbe07460 KW |
3587 | if (len) { |
3588 | if (lenp) { | |
3589 | *lenp = len; | |
3590 | } | |
3591 | return valid_utf8_to_uvchr(ustrp, 0); | |
3592 | } | |
3593 | ||
3594 | /* Here, there was no mapping defined, which means that the code point maps | |
3595 | * to itself. Return the inputs */ | |
e24dfe9c | 3596 | cases_to_self: |
bfdf22ec | 3597 | len = UTF8SKIP(p); |
ca9fab46 KW |
3598 | if (p != ustrp) { /* Don't copy onto itself */ |
3599 | Copy(p, ustrp, len, U8); | |
3600 | } | |
0134edef | 3601 | |
2a37f04d JH |
3602 | if (lenp) |
3603 | *lenp = len; | |
3604 | ||
f4cd282c | 3605 | return uv1; |
cbe07460 | 3606 | |
a0ed51b3 LW |
3607 | } |
3608 | ||
051a06d4 | 3609 | STATIC UV |
56576a04 KW |
3610 | S_check_locale_boundary_crossing(pTHX_ const U8* const p, const UV result, |
3611 | U8* const ustrp, STRLEN *lenp) | |
051a06d4 | 3612 | { |
4a4088c4 | 3613 | /* This is called when changing the case of a UTF-8-encoded character above |
31f05a37 KW |
3614 | * the Latin1 range, and the operation is in a non-UTF-8 locale. If the |
3615 | * result contains a character that crosses the 255/256 boundary, disallow | |
3616 | * the change, and return the original code point. See L<perlfunc/lc> for | |
3617 | * why; | |
051a06d4 | 3618 | * |
a1433954 KW |
3619 | * p points to the original string whose case was changed; assumed |
3620 | * by this routine to be well-formed | |
051a06d4 | 3621 | * result the code point of the first character in the changed-case string |
56576a04 KW |
3622 | * ustrp points to the changed-case string (<result> represents its |
3623 | * first char) | |
051a06d4 KW |
3624 | * lenp points to the length of <ustrp> */ |
3625 | ||
3626 | UV original; /* To store the first code point of <p> */ | |
3627 | ||
3628 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_CHECK_LOCALE_BOUNDARY_CROSSING; | |
3629 | ||
a4f12ed7 | 3630 | assert(UTF8_IS_ABOVE_LATIN1(*p)); |
051a06d4 KW |
3631 | |
3632 | /* We know immediately if the first character in the string crosses the | |
3633 | * boundary, so can skip */ | |
3634 | if (result > 255) { | |
3635 | ||
3636 | /* Look at every character in the result; if any cross the | |
3637 | * boundary, the whole thing is disallowed */ | |
3638 | U8* s = ustrp + UTF8SKIP(ustrp); | |
3639 | U8* e = ustrp + *lenp; | |
3640 | while (s < e) { | |
a4f12ed7 | 3641 | if (! UTF8_IS_ABOVE_LATIN1(*s)) { |
051a06d4 KW |
3642 | goto bad_crossing; |
3643 | } | |
3644 | s += UTF8SKIP(s); | |
3645 | } | |
3646 | ||
613abc6d KW |
3647 | /* Here, no characters crossed, result is ok as-is, but we warn. */ |
3648 | _CHECK_AND_OUTPUT_WIDE_LOCALE_UTF8_MSG(p, p + UTF8SKIP(p)); | |
051a06d4 KW |
3649 | return result; |
3650 | } | |
3651 | ||
7b52d656 | 3652 | bad_crossing: |
051a06d4 KW |
3653 | |
3654 | /* Failed, have to return the original */ | |
4b88fb76 | 3655 | original = valid_utf8_to_uvchr(p, lenp); |
ab0b796c KW |
3656 | |
3657 | /* diag_listed_as: Can't do %s("%s") on non-UTF-8 locale; resolved to "%s". */ | |
3658 | Perl_ck_warner(aTHX_ packWARN(WARN_LOCALE), | |
56576a04 KW |
3659 | "Can't do %s(\"\\x{%" UVXf "}\") on non-UTF-8" |
3660 | " locale; resolved to \"\\x{%" UVXf "}\".", | |
357aadde | 3661 | OP_DESC(PL_op), |
ab0b796c KW |
3662 | original, |
3663 | original); | |
051a06d4 KW |
3664 | Copy(p, ustrp, *lenp, char); |
3665 | return original; | |
3666 | } | |
3667 | ||
607313a1 KW |
3668 | STATIC U32 |
3669 | S_check_and_deprecate(pTHX_ const U8 *p, | |
3670 | const U8 **e, | |
3671 | const unsigned int type, /* See below */ | |
3672 | const bool use_locale, /* Is this a 'LC_' | |
3673 | macro call? */ | |
3674 | const char * const file, | |
3675 | const unsigned line) | |
3676 | { | |
3677 | /* This is a temporary function to deprecate the unsafe calls to the case | |
3678 | * changing macros and functions. It keeps all the special stuff in just | |
3679 | * one place. | |
3680 | * | |
3681 | * It updates *e with the pointer to the end of the input string. If using | |
3682 | * the old-style macros, *e is NULL on input, and so this function assumes | |
3683 | * the input string is long enough to hold the entire UTF-8 sequence, and | |
3684 | * sets *e accordingly, but it then returns a flag to pass the | |
3685 | * utf8n_to_uvchr(), to tell it that this size is a guess, and to avoid | |
3686 | * using the full length if possible. | |
3687 | * | |
3688 | * It also does the assert that *e > p when *e is not NULL. This should be | |
3689 | * migrated to the callers when this function gets deleted. | |
3690 | * | |
3691 | * The 'type' parameter is used for the caller to specify which case | |
3692 | * changing function this is called from: */ | |
3693 | ||
3694 | # define DEPRECATE_TO_UPPER 0 | |
3695 | # define DEPRECATE_TO_TITLE 1 | |
3696 | # define DEPRECATE_TO_LOWER 2 | |
3697 | # define DEPRECATE_TO_FOLD 3 | |
3698 | ||
3699 | U32 utf8n_flags = 0; | |
3700 | const char * name; | |
3701 | const char * alternative; | |
3702 | ||
3703 | PERL_ARGS_ASSERT_CHECK_AND_DEPRECATE; | |
3704 | ||
3705 | if (*e == NULL) { | |
3706 | utf8n_flags = _UTF8_NO_CONFIDENCE_IN_CURLEN; | |
3707 | *e = p + UTF8SKIP(p); | |
3708 | ||
3709 | /* For mathoms.c calls, we use the function name we know is stored | |
c44e9413 | 3710 | * there. It could be part of a larger path */ |
607313a1 | 3711 | if (type == DEPRECATE_TO_UPPER) { |
c44e9413 | 3712 | name = instr(file, "mathoms.c") |
607313a1 KW |
3713 | ? "to_utf8_upper" |
3714 | : "toUPPER_utf8"; | |
3715 | alternative = "toUPPER_utf8_safe"; | |
3716 | } | |
3717 | else if (type == DEPRECATE_TO_TITLE) { | |
c44e9413 | 3718 | name = instr(file, "mathoms.c") |
607313a1 KW |
3719 | ? "to_utf8_title" |
3720 | : "toTITLE_utf8"; | |
3721 | alternative = "toTITLE_utf8_safe"; | |
3722 | } | |
3723 | else if (type == DEPRECATE_TO_LOWER) { | |
c44e9413 | 3724 | name = instr(file, "mathoms.c") |
607313a1 KW |
3725 | ? "to_utf8_lower" |
3726 | : "toLOWER_utf8"; | |
3727 | alternative = "toLOWER_utf8_safe"; | |
3728 | } | |
3729 | else if (type == DEPRECATE_TO_FOLD) { | |
c44e9413 | 3730 | name = instr(file, "mathoms.c") |
607313a1 KW |
3731 | ? "to_utf8_fold" |
3732 | : "toFOLD_utf8"; | |
3733 | alternative = "toFOLD_utf8_safe"; | |
3734 | } | |
3735 | else Perl_croak(aTHX_ "panic: Unexpected case change type"); | |
3736 | ||
3737 | warn_on_first_deprecated_use(name, alternative, use_locale, file, line); | |
3738 | } | |
3739 | else { | |
3740 | assert (p < *e); | |
3741 | } | |
3742 | ||
3743 | return utf8n_flags; | |
3744 | } | |
3745 | ||
eaf412bf KW |
3746 | /* The process for changing the case is essentially the same for the four case |