Unicode 15.0.0 Support: Character encoding, character type info, and
transliteration tables are all updated to Unicode 15.0.0, using
the generator scripts contributed by Mike FABIAN (Red Hat).
Total added characters in newly generated CHARMAP: 4489
Total removed characters in newly generated WIDTH: 0
Total changed characters in newly generated WIDTH: 0
Total added characters in newly generated WIDTH: 4257
alpha: Added 4389 characters in new ctype which were not in old ctype
combining: Added 42 characters in new ctype which were not in old ctype
combining_level3: Added 34 characters in new ctype which were not in old ctype
graph: Added 4489 characters in new ctype which were not in old ctype
lower: Added 73 characters in new ctype which were not in old ctype
print: Added 4489 characters in new ctype which were not in old ctype
punct: Missing 5 characters of old ctype in new ctype
punct: Missing: ఄ 0xc04 TELUGU SIGN COMBINING ANUSVARA ABOVE
punct: Missing: ྂ 0xf82 TIBETAN SIGN NYI ZLA NAA DA
punct: Missing: ྃ 0xf83 TIBETAN SIGN SNA LDAN
punct: Missing: 𑂀 0x11080 KAITHI SIGN CANDRABINDU
punct: Missing: 𑂁 0x11081 KAITHI SIGN ANUSVARA
That’s OK, because these are now Alphabetic in DerivedCoreProperties.txt
punct: Added 105 characters in new ctype which were not in old ctype
Resolves: BZ #29604
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
We have had one downstream report from Canonical [1] that
an rrdtool test was broken by the differences in LC_TIME
that we had in the non-builtin C locale (C.UTF-8). If one
application has an issue there are going to be others, and
so with this commit we review and fix all the issues that
cause the builtin C locale to be different from C.UTF-8,
which includes:
* mon_decimal_point should be empty e.g. ""
- Depends on mon_decimal_point_wc fix.
* negative_sign should be empty e.g. ""
* week should be aligned with the builtin C/POSIX locale
* d_fmt corrected with escaped slashes e.g. "%m//%d//%y"
* yesstr and nostr should be empty e.g. ""
* country_ab2 and country_ab3 should be empty e.g. ""
We bump LC_IDENTIFICATION version and adjust the date to
indicate the change in the locale.
A new tst-c-utf8-consistency test is added to ensure
consistency between C/POSIX and C.UTF-8.
Tested on x86_64 and i686 without regression.
[1] https://sourceware.org/pipermail/libc-alpha/2022-January/135703.html
Co-authored-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
Add the Abkhazian language in the Georgia territory
The ab_GE was just recently added to CLDR, it should be available
in CLDR v41, https://github.com/unicode-org/cldr/pull/1402
The Abkhazian language has been added to Gnome for localization
The locale has been tested on Ubuntu 20.04, Mint 20.2 and Fedora 35 Beta
Signed-off-by: Nart Tlisha <daniel.abzakh@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Maxim Kuvyrkov <maxim.kuvyrkov@linaro.org>
Unicode 14.0.0 Support: Character encoding, character type info, and
transliteration tables are all updated to Unicode 14.0.0, using
the generator scripts contributed by Mike FABIAN (Red Hat).
Total added characters in newly generated CHARMAP: 838
Total removed characters in newly generated WIDTH: 1
(Characters not in WIDTH get width 1 by default, i.e. these have width 1 now.)
removed: <U1734> 0 : eaw=N category=Mc bidi=L name=HANUNOO SIGN PAMUDPOD
That seems intentional, the character had category Mn (Mark, nonspacing) before
and now has Mc (Mark, spacing combining)
Total changed characters in newly generated WIDTH: 0
Total added characters in newly generated WIDTH: 175
We add a new C.UTF-8 locale. This locale is not builtin to glibc, but
is provided as a distinct locale. The locale provides full support for
UTF-8 and this includes full code point sorting via STRCMP-based
collation (strcmp or wcscmp).
The collation uses a new keyword 'codepoint_collation' which drops all
collation rules and generates an empty zero rules collation to enable
STRCMP usage in collation. This ensures that we get full code point
sorting for C.UTF-8 with a minimal 1406 bytes of overhead (LC_COLLATE
structure information and ASCII collating tables).
The new locale is added to SUPPORTED. Minimal test data for specific
code points (minus those not supported by collate-test) is provided in
C.UTF-8.in, and this verifies code point sorting is working reasonably
across the range. The locale was tested manually with the full set of
code points without failure.
The locale is harmonized with locales already shipping in various
downstream distributions. A new tst-iconv9 test is added which verifies
the C.UTF-8 locale is generally usable.
Testing for fnmatch, regexec, and recomp is provided by extending
bug-regex1, bugregex19, bug-regex4, bug-regex6, transbug, tst-fnmatch,
tst-regcomp-truncated, and tst-regex to use C.UTF-8.
Tested on x86_64 or i686 without regression.
Reviewed-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
We stopped adding "Contributed by" or similar lines in sources in 2012
in favour of git logs and keeping the Contributors section of the
glibc manual up to date. Removing these lines makes the license
header a bit more consistent across files and also removes the
possibility of error in attribution when license blocks or files are
copied across since the contributed-by lines don't actually reflect
reality in those cases.
Move all "Contributed by" and similar lines (Written by, Test by,
etc.) into a new file CONTRIBUTED-BY to retain record of these
contributions. These contributors are also mentioned in
manual/contrib.texi, so we just maintain this additional record as a
courtesy to the earlier developers.
The following scripts were used to filter a list of files to edit in
place and to clean up the CONTRIBUTED-BY file respectively. These
were not added to the glibc sources because they're not expected to be
of any use in future given that this is a one time task:
https://gist.github.com/siddhesh/b5ecac94eabfd72ed2916d6d8157e7dchttps://gist.github.com/siddhesh/15ea1f5e435ace9774f485030695ee02
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
The 13th edition of Svenska Akademiens ordlista lists 'W' as a
distinct letter that sorts after 'V'. We adjust the sv_SE locale
(and tests) to match this updated and "reformed" language change.
This harmonizes us with CLDR 1.5.0 (2007) for sv_SE sorting of
the letter 'W'.
No regressions on x86_64, and locale sorting tests all pass.
Co-authored-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
In 2000 when date_fmt was originally added as an extension the
en_US locale did not have a date_fmt specifier and so used the
default which resulted in the abbreviated month name coming
before the day of the month (as expected in the US and other
locales). In commit 7395f3a0ef the
date_fmt was added to en_US with a 12H time to better align with
US user expectations. Unfortunately the abbreviated month name
and day were inverted during that transition, and that was seen
as a regression and reported against Fedora 32:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1830623
The progression of date_fmt looks like this:
"%a %b %e %H:%M:%S %Z %Y" <- Originally (2000)
"%a %d %b %Y %I:%M:%S %p %Z" <- glibc 2.29 (2019)
"%a %b %e %r %Z %Y" <- glibc 2.32 (2020) [this commit]
Note: "%r" is "%I:%M:%S %p" in en_US and so shorter to write.
Likewise the year is in the wrong place in commit
7395f3a0ef and this is corrected in
this patch.
For reference d_t_fmt:
"%a %d %b %Y %r %Z" <- d_t_fmt (1997)
Yes, d_t_fmt and date_fmt are *not* the same, this is just the
history of this locale. This commit does not change d_t_fmt to
better align with date_fmt. No users have requested we change
d_t_fmt or given any justification for such a change.
The only goals of this change are to place the abbreviated month
name before the day of the month as it has been printed since
2000, and place the year at the end. This minimizes the change
from commit 7395f3a0ef and makes
good on changing only from 24H clock to 12H clock.
Reviewed-by: Florian Weimer <fweimer@redhat.com>
Unicode 13.0.0 Support: Character encoding, character type info, and
transliteration tables are all updated to Unicode 13.0.0, using
the generator scripts contributed by Mike FABIAN (Red Hat).
Total added characters in newly generated CHARMAP: 5930
Total added characters in newly generated WIDTH: 5536
Confirmed by CLDR and a native speaker: "abril" is more often used even
if "abrial" is also correct. Both nominative (alt_mon) and genitive (mon)
cases are updated.
It is not specified what should be the content of d_t_fmt and date_fmt
but in the built-in C locale those fields have only one difference:
date_fmt contains "%Z" (the current time zone) while d_t_fmt does not.
For most of the locales this commit does the following operation:
copy d_t_fmt to date_fmt, and then remove "%Z" from d_t_fmt.
If "%Z" was originally missing from d_t_fmt add it to date_fmt.
It also corrects comments where necessary.
Exceptions:
* In bo_CN, dz_BT, and km_KH "%Z" has not been added to date_fmt because
it was too difficult. In these locales date_fmt has been set to the
copy of d_t_fmt.
* In en_DK "%Z" has not been removed from d_t_fmt in order to preserve
the conformance with the standard mentioned in the comment.
The command to identify and initially edit the locales that need the
update was:
for i in `grep -lw d_t_fmt *`
do
if ! grep -qw date_fmt $i ; then
awk '/d_t_fmt/ { print $0; gsub("d_t_fmt", "date_fmt"); } //{ print $0 }' < $i > $i.next
mv $i.next $i
fi
done
and then each file was further edited manually.
Currently d_t_fmt formats time as "plkst. %H un %M". A quick Google
search says that "plkst." means "o’clock" and "un" means "and".
Also this format does not display seconds.
CLDR does not mention anything like that. We have no reason to use
anything different than "%H:%M:%S".
Replacing incorrect abbreviated weekday names "Пнд", "Вто", "Срд"...
with correct ones "Пн", "Вт", "Ср"... makes the LC_TIME sections in
those two locales almost identical. The only remaining difference
was that ab_alt_mon elements in ru_UA were lowercase while in ru_RU
they had the first letter uppercase, the latter was pointed as
a better choice by a native speaker. This commit unifies LC_TIME
between ru_RU and ru_UA.
This commit adds previously missing transliterations for several code points
in the Unicode blocks "Miscellaneous Mathematical Symbols-A/B" -
transliterated to their approximate ASCII representations. It also adds a
corresponding iconv transliteration test.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
Sync these values with CLDR and langtable as much as possible. Add
missing values.
If possible, take the values from CLDR, if CLDR does not have it,
take it from langtable. The values from langtable which are not from
CLDR are from Wikipedia or native speakers.
The first day of the week in China (Mainland) should be Monday according
to the national standard GB/T 7408-2005. References:
* https://www.doc88.com/p-1166696540287.html
* https://unicode-org.atlassian.net/browse/CLDR-11510
[BZ #24682]
* localedata/locales/bo_CN (first_weekday): Add, set to 2 (Monday).
* localedata/locales/ug_CN (first_weekday): Likewise.
* localedata/locales/zh_CN (first_weekday): Likewise.
This commit updates month and weekday names (full and abbreviated)
from CLDR 35.1 with the following exceptions.
It was not clear why the full name of February in aa_DJ and aa_ER was
"Kudo" while the abbreviated version is "Nah" but some additional
sources [1] [2] as well as the content of aa_ER and aa_ER@saaho
suggest it should be "Naharsi Kudo". This commit consequently sets
the translation of February to "Naharsi Kudo" in aa_DJ and aa_ET.
aa_ER@saaho is not supported by CLDR but since the month names were
identical to aa_ER before this commit, the same values have been copied
from aa_ER.
Links:
[1] https://fr.wiktionary.org/wiki/naharsi_kudo
[2] http://www.mcit.gov.et/web/guest/-/localization-standard-for-afaraf
[BZ #21897]
* localedata/locales/aa_DJ (abday): Update from CLDR, all words
begin with an uppercase letter now.
(abmon): Likewise.
(mon): Update from CLDR, reword February from "Kudo" to
"Naharsi Kudo", April from "Agda Baxisso" to "Agda Baxis",
and August from "Liiqen" to "Leqeeni".
* localedata/locales/aa_ER (mon): Update from CLDR, reword
April from "Agda Baxisso" to "Agda Baxis" and August from
"Leqeeni" to "Liiqen".
* localedata/locales/aa_ER@saaho (mon): Likewise.
* localedata/locales/aa_ET (abmon): Update from CLDR, reword
abbreviated February from "Kud" to "Nah".
(mon): Update from CLDR, reword February from "Kudo" to
"Naharsi Kudo" and April from "Agda Baxisso" to "Agda Baxis".
These values were removed by the commit 0a410e76f5.
[BZ #24200]
* localedata/locales/ga_IE (first_weekday): Add, set to 2 (Monday).
* localedata/locales/en_IE (first_weekday): Likewise.
The Unicode sequences in the format <Uxxxx> should be used instead of
non-ASCII characters.
Reported by Piotr Drąg:
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=24652#c8
[BZ #24652]
* localedata/locales/szl_PL (day): Use the correct Unicode
sequences instead of non-ASCII characters.
This commit also provides the correct month names in both nominative
and genitive case for Silesian language, as required by the fix for
the bug 10871.
[BZ #24652]
* localedata/locales/szl_PL (abday): Spelling corrections.
(day): Likewise.
(abmon): Likewise.
(mon): Rename to...
(alt_mon): This, then apply spelling corrections.
(mon): New entry, month names in the genitive case.
According to CLDR 35.1 and the bug report the thousands grouping
separator should be always "." (a single dot) and digits should be
grouped by 3.
[BZ #23831]
* localedata/locales/nl_AW (mon_thousands_sep): Set to ".".
* localedata/locales/nl_NL (mon_thousands_sep): Likewise.
(thousands_sep): Likewise.
(grouping): Set to 3;3.
Follow the same changes as made in the commit 02d8b5ab1c because the
respective entries in nl_NL and nl_AW had been the same before the change
so they should be the same after. CLDR does not provide complete data
for nl_AW, it says it is missing and displays a copy of nl_NL.
[BZ #24614]
* localedata/locales/nl_AW (n_sep_by_space): Set to 2 (a space
between the currency symbol and the minus sign).
(n_sign_posn): Set to 4 (the minus sign after the currency symbol).
According to CLDR 35.1 and the bug report the correct monetary format
for negative amounts should be "EUR -1 234,56" while previously it was
"EUR 1 234,56-".
This patch does not change the thousands (grouping) separator.
[BZ #24614]
* localedata/Makefile (LOCALES): Add nl_NL.UTF-8.
* localedata/locales/nl_NL (n_sep_by_space): Set to 2 (a space
between the currency symbol and the minus sign).
(n_sign_posn): Set to 4 (the minus sign after the currency symbol).
* localedata/tst-strfmon1.c (tests): Add test data for nl_NL.UTF-8.
This commit fixes some errors and converts all month names to lowercase.
The content is synchronized with CLDR-35.1 now but trailing dots are
removed from abmon values in order to maintain consistency with the
previous values and with many other locales which do the same.
[BZ #24369]
* localedata/locales/tt_RU (mon): Update from CLDR-35.1, fix errors.
(abmon): Likewise, but remove the trailing dots.
Unicode 12.1.0 Support: Character encoding, character type info, and
transliteration tables are all updated to Unicode 12.1.0, using
the generator scripts contributed by Mike FABIAN (Red Hat).
Some info about the number of characters added or changed:
Total added characters in newly generated CHARMAP: 1
added: <U32FF> /xe3/x8b/xbf SQUARE ERA NAME REIWA
Total added characters in newly generated WIDTH: 1
added: <U32FF> 2 : eaw=W category=So bidi=L name=SQUARE ERA NAME REIWA
graph: Added 1 characters in new ctype which were not in old ctype
graph: Added: ㋿ U+32FF SQUARE ERA NAME REIWA
print: Added 1 characters in new ctype which were not in old ctype
print: Added: ㋿ U+32FF SQUARE ERA NAME REIWA
punct: Added 1 characters in new ctype which were not in old ctype
punct: Added: ㋿ U+32FF SQUARE ERA NAME REIWA
The Japanese era name will be changed on May 1, 2019. The Japanese
government made a preliminary announcement on April 1, 2019.
The glibc ja_JP locale must be updated to include the new era name for
strftime's alternative year format support.
Checked on x86_64-linux-gnu.
Reviewed-by: Carlos O'Donell <carlos@redhat.com>
ChangeLog:
[BZ #22964]
* localedata/locales/ja_JP (LC_TIME): Add entry for the new Japanese
era.
* time/tst-strftime2.c (dates): Add 2019-04-30 and 2019-05-01.
(mkreftable): Add rules for the new Japanese era and the new dates.