glibc/iconv/gconv_charset.c
Arjun Shankar 7d4ec75e11 intl: Handle translation output codesets with suffixes [BZ #26383]
Commit 91927b7c76 (Rewrite iconv option parsing [BZ #19519]) did not
handle cases where the output codeset for translations (via the `gettext'
family of functions) might have a caller specified encoding suffix such as
TRANSLIT or IGNORE.  This led to a regression where translations did not
work when the codeset had a suffix.

This commit fixes the above issue by parsing any suffixes passed to
__dcigettext and adds two new test-cases to intl/tst-codeset.c to
verify correct behaviour.  The iconv-internal function __gconv_create_spec
and the static iconv-internal function gconv_destroy_spec are now visible
internally within glibc and used in intl/dcigettext.c.
2020-09-25 14:47:06 +02:00

229 lines
7.9 KiB
C

/* Charset name normalization.
Copyright (C) 2020 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of the GNU C Library.
The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
The GNU C Library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
Lesser General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
License along with the GNU C Library; if not, see
<http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <ctype.h>
#include <locale.h>
#include <stdbool.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include "gconv_int.h"
#include "gconv_charset.h"
/* This function returns a pointer to the last suffix in a conversion code
string. Valid suffixes matched by this function are of the form: '/' or ','
followed by arbitrary text that doesn't contain '/' or ','. It does not
edit the string in any way. The caller is expected to parse the suffix and
remove it (by e.g. truncating the string) before the next call. */
static char *
find_suffix (char *s)
{
/* The conversion code is in the form of a triplet, separated by '/' chars.
The third component of the triplet contains suffixes. If we don't have two
slashes, we don't have a suffix. */
int slash_count = 0;
char *suffix_term = NULL;
for (int i = 0; s[i] != '\0'; i++)
switch (s[i])
{
case '/':
slash_count++;
/* Fallthrough */
case ',':
suffix_term = &s[i];
}
if (slash_count >= 2)
return suffix_term;
return NULL;
}
struct gconv_parsed_code
{
char *code;
bool translit;
bool ignore;
};
/* This function parses an iconv_open encoding PC.CODE, strips any suffixes
(such as TRANSLIT or IGNORE) from it and sets corresponding flags in it. */
static void
gconv_parse_code (struct gconv_parsed_code *pc)
{
pc->translit = false;
pc->ignore = false;
while (1)
{
/* First drop any trailing whitespaces and separators. */
size_t len = strlen (pc->code);
while ((len > 0)
&& (isspace (pc->code[len - 1])
|| pc->code[len - 1] == ','
|| pc->code[len - 1] == '/'))
len--;
pc->code[len] = '\0';
if (len == 0)
return;
char * suffix = find_suffix (pc->code);
if (suffix == NULL)
{
/* At this point, we have processed and removed all suffixes from the
code and what remains of the code is suffix free. */
return;
}
else
{
/* A suffix is processed from the end of the code array going
backwards, one suffix at a time. The suffix is an index into the
code character array and points to: one past the end of the code
and any unprocessed suffixes, and to the beginning of the suffix
currently being processed during this iteration. We must process
this suffix and then drop it from the code by terminating the
preceding text with NULL.
We want to allow and recognize suffixes such as:
"/TRANSLIT" i.e. single suffix
"//TRANSLIT" i.e. single suffix and multiple separators
"//TRANSLIT/IGNORE" i.e. suffixes separated by "/"
"/TRANSLIT//IGNORE" i.e. suffixes separated by "//"
"//IGNORE,TRANSLIT" i.e. suffixes separated by ","
"//IGNORE," i.e. trailing ","
"//TRANSLIT/" i.e. trailing "/"
"//TRANSLIT//" i.e. trailing "//"
"/" i.e. empty suffix.
Unknown suffixes are silently discarded and ignored. */
if ((__strcasecmp_l (suffix,
GCONV_TRIPLE_SEPARATOR
GCONV_TRANSLIT_SUFFIX,
_nl_C_locobj_ptr) == 0)
|| (__strcasecmp_l (suffix,
GCONV_SUFFIX_SEPARATOR
GCONV_TRANSLIT_SUFFIX,
_nl_C_locobj_ptr) == 0))
pc->translit = true;
if ((__strcasecmp_l (suffix,
GCONV_TRIPLE_SEPARATOR
GCONV_IGNORE_ERRORS_SUFFIX,
_nl_C_locobj_ptr) == 0)
|| (__strcasecmp_l (suffix,
GCONV_SUFFIX_SEPARATOR
GCONV_IGNORE_ERRORS_SUFFIX,
_nl_C_locobj_ptr) == 0))
pc->ignore = true;
/* We just processed this suffix. We can now drop it from the
code string by truncating it at the suffix's position. */
suffix[0] = '\0';
}
}
}
/* This function accepts the charset names of the source and destination of the
conversion and populates *conv_spec with an equivalent conversion
specification that may later be used by __gconv_open. The charset names
might contain options in the form of suffixes that alter the conversion,
e.g. "ISO-10646/UTF-8/TRANSLIT". It processes the charset names, ignoring
and truncating any suffix options in fromcode, and processing and truncating
any suffix options in tocode. Supported suffix options ("TRANSLIT" or
"IGNORE") when found in tocode lead to the corresponding flag in *conv_spec
to be set to true. Unrecognized suffix options are silently discarded. If
the function succeeds, it returns conv_spec back to the caller. It returns
NULL upon failure. conv_spec must be allocated and freed by the caller. */
struct gconv_spec *
__gconv_create_spec (struct gconv_spec *conv_spec, const char *fromcode,
const char *tocode)
{
struct gconv_parsed_code pfc, ptc;
struct gconv_spec *ret = NULL;
pfc.code = __strdup (fromcode);
ptc.code = __strdup (tocode);
if ((pfc.code == NULL)
|| (ptc.code == NULL))
goto out;
gconv_parse_code (&pfc);
gconv_parse_code (&ptc);
/* We ignore suffixes in the fromcode because that is how the current
implementation has always handled them. Only suffixes in the tocode are
processed and handled. The reality is that invalid input in the input
character set should only be ignored if the fromcode specifies IGNORE.
The current implementation ignores invalid intput in the input character
set if the tocode contains IGNORE. We preserve this behavior for
backwards compatibility. In the future we may split the handling of
IGNORE to allow a finer grained specification of ignorning invalid input
and/or ignoring invalid output. */
conv_spec->translit = ptc.translit;
conv_spec->ignore = ptc.ignore;
/* 3 extra bytes because 1 extra for '\0', and 2 extra so strip might
be able to add one or two trailing '/' characters if necessary. */
conv_spec->fromcode = malloc (strlen (fromcode) + 3);
if (conv_spec->fromcode == NULL)
goto out;
conv_spec->tocode = malloc (strlen (tocode) + 3);
if (conv_spec->tocode == NULL)
{
free (conv_spec->fromcode);
conv_spec->fromcode = NULL;
goto out;
}
/* Strip unrecognized characters and ensure that the code has two '/'
characters as per conversion code triplet specification. */
strip (conv_spec->fromcode, pfc.code);
strip (conv_spec->tocode, ptc.code);
ret = conv_spec;
out:
free (pfc.code);
free (ptc.code);
return ret;
}
libc_hidden_def (__gconv_create_spec)
void
__gconv_destroy_spec (struct gconv_spec *conv_spec)
{
free (conv_spec->fromcode);
free (conv_spec->tocode);
return;
}
libc_hidden_def (__gconv_destroy_spec)