1/*
2 * Copyright (c) Ian F. Darwin 1986-1995.
3 * Software written by Ian F. Darwin and others;
4 * maintained 1995-present by Christos Zoulas and others.
5 *
6 * Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
7 * modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
8 * are met:
9 * 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
10 *    notice immediately at the beginning of the file, without modification,
11 *    this list of conditions, and the following disclaimer.
12 * 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
13 *    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
14 *    documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
15 *
16 * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
17 * ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
18 * IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
19 * ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR
20 * ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
21 * DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
22 * OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
23 * HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
24 * LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
25 * OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
26 * SUCH DAMAGE.
27 */
28/*
29 * Encoding -- determine the character encoding of a text file.
30 *
31 * Joerg Wunsch <joerg@freebsd.org> wrote the original support for 8-bit
32 * international characters.
33 */
34
35#include "file.h"
36
37#ifndef	lint
38FILE_RCSID("@(#)$File: encoding.c,v 1.7 2012/01/24 19:02:02 christos Exp $")
39#endif	/* lint */
40
41#include "magic.h"
42#include <string.h>
43#include <memory.h>
44#include <stdlib.h>
45
46
47private int looks_ascii(const unsigned char *, size_t, unichar *, size_t *);
48private int looks_utf8_with_BOM(const unsigned char *, size_t, unichar *,
49    size_t *);
50private int looks_ucs16(const unsigned char *, size_t, unichar *, size_t *);
51private int looks_latin1(const unsigned char *, size_t, unichar *, size_t *);
52private int looks_extended(const unsigned char *, size_t, unichar *, size_t *);
53private void from_ebcdic(const unsigned char *, size_t, unsigned char *);
54
55#ifdef DEBUG_ENCODING
56#define DPRINTF(a) printf a
57#else
58#define DPRINTF(a)
59#endif
60
61/*
62 * Try to determine whether text is in some character code we can
63 * identify.  Each of these tests, if it succeeds, will leave
64 * the text converted into one-unichar-per-character Unicode in
65 * ubuf, and the number of characters converted in ulen.
66 */
67protected int
68file_encoding(struct magic_set *ms, const unsigned char *buf, size_t nbytes, unichar **ubuf, size_t *ulen, const char **code, const char **code_mime, const char **type)
69{
70	size_t mlen;
71	int rv = 1, ucs_type;
72	unsigned char *nbuf = NULL;
73
74	*type = "text";
75	mlen = (nbytes + 1) * sizeof(nbuf[0]);
76	if ((nbuf = CAST(unsigned char *, calloc((size_t)1, mlen))) == NULL) {
77		file_oomem(ms, mlen);
78		goto done;
79	}
80	mlen = (nbytes + 1) * sizeof((*ubuf)[0]);
81	if ((*ubuf = CAST(unichar *, calloc((size_t)1, mlen))) == NULL) {
82		file_oomem(ms, mlen);
83		goto done;
84	}
85
86	if (looks_ascii(buf, nbytes, *ubuf, ulen)) {
87		DPRINTF(("ascii %" SIZE_T_FORMAT "u\n", *ulen));
88		*code = "ASCII";
89		*code_mime = "us-ascii";
90	} else if (looks_utf8_with_BOM(buf, nbytes, *ubuf, ulen) > 0) {
91		DPRINTF(("utf8/bom %" SIZE_T_FORMAT "u\n", *ulen));
92		*code = "UTF-8 Unicode (with BOM)";
93		*code_mime = "utf-8";
94	} else if (file_looks_utf8(buf, nbytes, *ubuf, ulen) > 1) {
95		DPRINTF(("utf8 %" SIZE_T_FORMAT "u\n", *ulen));
96		*code = "UTF-8 Unicode (with BOM)";
97		*code = "UTF-8 Unicode";
98		*code_mime = "utf-8";
99	} else if ((ucs_type = looks_ucs16(buf, nbytes, *ubuf, ulen)) != 0) {
100		if (ucs_type == 1) {
101			*code = "Little-endian UTF-16 Unicode";
102			*code_mime = "utf-16le";
103		} else {
104			*code = "Big-endian UTF-16 Unicode";
105			*code_mime = "utf-16be";
106		}
107		DPRINTF(("ucs16 %" SIZE_T_FORMAT "u\n", *ulen));
108	} else if (looks_latin1(buf, nbytes, *ubuf, ulen)) {
109		DPRINTF(("latin1 %" SIZE_T_FORMAT "u\n", *ulen));
110		*code = "ISO-8859";
111		*code_mime = "iso-8859-1";
112	} else if (looks_extended(buf, nbytes, *ubuf, ulen)) {
113		DPRINTF(("extended %" SIZE_T_FORMAT "u\n", *ulen));
114		*code = "Non-ISO extended-ASCII";
115		*code_mime = "unknown-8bit";
116	} else {
117		from_ebcdic(buf, nbytes, nbuf);
118
119		if (looks_ascii(nbuf, nbytes, *ubuf, ulen)) {
120			DPRINTF(("ebcdic %" SIZE_T_FORMAT "u\n", *ulen));
121			*code = "EBCDIC";
122			*code_mime = "ebcdic";
123		} else if (looks_latin1(nbuf, nbytes, *ubuf, ulen)) {
124			DPRINTF(("ebcdic/international %" SIZE_T_FORMAT "u\n",
125			    *ulen));
126			*code = "International EBCDIC";
127			*code_mime = "ebcdic";
128		} else { /* Doesn't look like text at all */
129			DPRINTF(("binary\n"));
130			rv = 0;
131			*type = "binary";
132		}
133	}
134
135 done:
136	free(nbuf);
137
138	return rv;
139}
140
141/*
142 * This table reflects a particular philosophy about what constitutes
143 * "text," and there is room for disagreement about it.
144 *
145 * Version 3.31 of the file command considered a file to be ASCII if
146 * each of its characters was approved by either the isascii() or
147 * isalpha() function.  On most systems, this would mean that any
148 * file consisting only of characters in the range 0x00 ... 0x7F
149 * would be called ASCII text, but many systems might reasonably
150 * consider some characters outside this range to be alphabetic,
151 * so the file command would call such characters ASCII.  It might
152 * have been more accurate to call this "considered textual on the
153 * local system" than "ASCII."
154 *
155 * It considered a file to be "International language text" if each
156 * of its characters was either an ASCII printing character (according
157 * to the real ASCII standard, not the above test), a character in
158 * the range 0x80 ... 0xFF, or one of the following control characters:
159 * backspace, tab, line feed, vertical tab, form feed, carriage return,
160 * escape.  No attempt was made to determine the language in which files
161 * of this type were written.
162 *
163 *
164 * The table below considers a file to be ASCII if all of its characters
165 * are either ASCII printing characters (again, according to the X3.4
166 * standard, not isascii()) or any of the following controls: bell,
167 * backspace, tab, line feed, form feed, carriage return, esc, nextline.
168 *
169 * I include bell because some programs (particularly shell scripts)
170 * use it literally, even though it is rare in normal text.  I exclude
171 * vertical tab because it never seems to be used in real text.  I also
172 * include, with hesitation, the X3.64/ECMA-43 control nextline (0x85),
173 * because that's what the dd EBCDIC->ASCII table maps the EBCDIC newline
174 * character to.  It might be more appropriate to include it in the 8859
175 * set instead of the ASCII set, but it's got to be included in *something*
176 * we recognize or EBCDIC files aren't going to be considered textual.
177 * Some old Unix source files use SO/SI (^N/^O) to shift between Greek
178 * and Latin characters, so these should possibly be allowed.  But they
179 * make a real mess on VT100-style displays if they're not paired properly,
180 * so we are probably better off not calling them text.
181 *
182 * A file is considered to be ISO-8859 text if its characters are all
183 * either ASCII, according to the above definition, or printing characters
184 * from the ISO-8859 8-bit extension, characters 0xA0 ... 0xFF.
185 *
186 * Finally, a file is considered to be international text from some other
187 * character code if its characters are all either ISO-8859 (according to
188 * the above definition) or characters in the range 0x80 ... 0x9F, which
189 * ISO-8859 considers to be control characters but the IBM PC and Macintosh
190 * consider to be printing characters.
191 */
192
193#define F 0   /* character never appears in text */
194#define T 1   /* character appears in plain ASCII text */
195#define I 2   /* character appears in ISO-8859 text */
196#define X 3   /* character appears in non-ISO extended ASCII (Mac, IBM PC) */
197
198private char text_chars[256] = {
199	/*                  BEL BS HT LF    FF CR    */
200	F, F, F, F, F, F, F, T, T, T, T, F, T, T, F, F,  /* 0x0X */
201	/*                              ESC          */
202	F, F, F, F, F, F, F, F, F, F, F, T, F, F, F, F,  /* 0x1X */
203	T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T,  /* 0x2X */
204	T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T,  /* 0x3X */
205	T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T,  /* 0x4X */
206	T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T,  /* 0x5X */
207	T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T,  /* 0x6X */
208	T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, T, F,  /* 0x7X */
209	/*            NEL                            */
210	X, X, X, X, X, T, X, X, X, X, X, X, X, X, X, X,  /* 0x8X */
211	X, X, X, X, X, X, X, X, X, X, X, X, X, X, X, X,  /* 0x9X */
212	I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I,  /* 0xaX */
213	I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I,  /* 0xbX */
214	I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I,  /* 0xcX */
215	I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I,  /* 0xdX */
216	I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I,  /* 0xeX */
217	I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I   /* 0xfX */
218};
219
220private int
221looks_ascii(const unsigned char *buf, size_t nbytes, unichar *ubuf,
222    size_t *ulen)
223{
224	size_t i;
225
226	*ulen = 0;
227
228	for (i = 0; i < nbytes; i++) {
229		int t = text_chars[buf[i]];
230
231		if (t != T)
232			return 0;
233
234		ubuf[(*ulen)++] = buf[i];
235	}
236
237	return 1;
238}
239
240private int
241looks_latin1(const unsigned char *buf, size_t nbytes, unichar *ubuf, size_t *ulen)
242{
243	size_t i;
244
245	*ulen = 0;
246
247	for (i = 0; i < nbytes; i++) {
248		int t = text_chars[buf[i]];
249
250		if (t != T && t != I)
251			return 0;
252
253		ubuf[(*ulen)++] = buf[i];
254	}
255
256	return 1;
257}
258
259private int
260looks_extended(const unsigned char *buf, size_t nbytes, unichar *ubuf,
261    size_t *ulen)
262{
263	size_t i;
264
265	*ulen = 0;
266
267	for (i = 0; i < nbytes; i++) {
268		int t = text_chars[buf[i]];
269
270		if (t != T && t != I && t != X)
271			return 0;
272
273		ubuf[(*ulen)++] = buf[i];
274	}
275
276	return 1;
277}
278
279/*
280 * Decide whether some text looks like UTF-8. Returns:
281 *
282 *     -1: invalid UTF-8
283 *      0: uses odd control characters, so doesn't look like text
284 *      1: 7-bit text
285 *      2: definitely UTF-8 text (valid high-bit set bytes)
286 *
287 * If ubuf is non-NULL on entry, text is decoded into ubuf, *ulen;
288 * ubuf must be big enough!
289 */
290protected int
291file_looks_utf8(const unsigned char *buf, size_t nbytes, unichar *ubuf, size_t *ulen)
292{
293	size_t i;
294	int n;
295	unichar c;
296	int gotone = 0, ctrl = 0;
297
298	if (ubuf)
299		*ulen = 0;
300
301	for (i = 0; i < nbytes; i++) {
302		if ((buf[i] & 0x80) == 0) {	   /* 0xxxxxxx is plain ASCII */
303			/*
304			 * Even if the whole file is valid UTF-8 sequences,
305			 * still reject it if it uses weird control characters.
306			 */
307
308			if (text_chars[buf[i]] != T)
309				ctrl = 1;
310
311			if (ubuf)
312				ubuf[(*ulen)++] = buf[i];
313		} else if ((buf[i] & 0x40) == 0) { /* 10xxxxxx never 1st byte */
314			return -1;
315		} else {			   /* 11xxxxxx begins UTF-8 */
316			int following;
317
318			if ((buf[i] & 0x20) == 0) {		/* 110xxxxx */
319				c = buf[i] & 0x1f;
320				following = 1;
321			} else if ((buf[i] & 0x10) == 0) {	/* 1110xxxx */
322				c = buf[i] & 0x0f;
323				following = 2;
324			} else if ((buf[i] & 0x08) == 0) {	/* 11110xxx */
325				c = buf[i] & 0x07;
326				following = 3;
327			} else if ((buf[i] & 0x04) == 0) {	/* 111110xx */
328				c = buf[i] & 0x03;
329				following = 4;
330			} else if ((buf[i] & 0x02) == 0) {	/* 1111110x */
331				c = buf[i] & 0x01;
332				following = 5;
333			} else
334				return -1;
335
336			for (n = 0; n < following; n++) {
337				i++;
338				if (i >= nbytes)
339					goto done;
340
341				if ((buf[i] & 0x80) == 0 || (buf[i] & 0x40))
342					return -1;
343
344				c = (c << 6) + (buf[i] & 0x3f);
345			}
346
347			if (ubuf)
348				ubuf[(*ulen)++] = c;
349			gotone = 1;
350		}
351	}
352done:
353	return ctrl ? 0 : (gotone ? 2 : 1);
354}
355
356/*
357 * Decide whether some text looks like UTF-8 with BOM. If there is no
358 * BOM, return -1; otherwise return the result of looks_utf8 on the
359 * rest of the text.
360 */
361private int
362looks_utf8_with_BOM(const unsigned char *buf, size_t nbytes, unichar *ubuf,
363    size_t *ulen)
364{
365	if (nbytes > 3 && buf[0] == 0xef && buf[1] == 0xbb && buf[2] == 0xbf)
366		return file_looks_utf8(buf + 3, nbytes - 3, ubuf, ulen);
367	else
368		return -1;
369}
370
371private int
372looks_ucs16(const unsigned char *buf, size_t nbytes, unichar *ubuf,
373    size_t *ulen)
374{
375	int bigend;
376	size_t i;
377
378	if (nbytes < 2)
379		return 0;
380
381	if (buf[0] == 0xff && buf[1] == 0xfe)
382		bigend = 0;
383	else if (buf[0] == 0xfe && buf[1] == 0xff)
384		bigend = 1;
385	else
386		return 0;
387
388	*ulen = 0;
389
390	for (i = 2; i + 1 < nbytes; i += 2) {
391		/* XXX fix to properly handle chars > 65536 */
392
393		if (bigend)
394			ubuf[(*ulen)++] = buf[i + 1] + 256 * buf[i];
395		else
396			ubuf[(*ulen)++] = buf[i] + 256 * buf[i + 1];
397
398		if (ubuf[*ulen - 1] == 0xfffe)
399			return 0;
400		if (ubuf[*ulen - 1] < 128 &&
401		    text_chars[(size_t)ubuf[*ulen - 1]] != T)
402			return 0;
403	}
404
405	return 1 + bigend;
406}
407
408#undef F
409#undef T
410#undef I
411#undef X
412
413/*
414 * This table maps each EBCDIC character to an (8-bit extended) ASCII
415 * character, as specified in the rationale for the dd(1) command in
416 * draft 11.2 (September, 1991) of the POSIX P1003.2 standard.
417 *
418 * Unfortunately it does not seem to correspond exactly to any of the
419 * five variants of EBCDIC documented in IBM's _Enterprise Systems
420 * Architecture/390: Principles of Operation_, SA22-7201-06, Seventh
421 * Edition, July, 1999, pp. I-1 - I-4.
422 *
423 * Fortunately, though, all versions of EBCDIC, including this one, agree
424 * on most of the printing characters that also appear in (7-bit) ASCII.
425 * Of these, only '|', '!', '~', '^', '[', and ']' are in question at all.
426 *
427 * Fortunately too, there is general agreement that codes 0x00 through
428 * 0x3F represent control characters, 0x41 a nonbreaking space, and the
429 * remainder printing characters.
430 *
431 * This is sufficient to allow us to identify EBCDIC text and to distinguish
432 * between old-style and internationalized examples of text.
433 */
434
435private unsigned char ebcdic_to_ascii[] = {
436  0,   1,   2,   3, 156,   9, 134, 127, 151, 141, 142,  11,  12,  13,  14,  15,
437 16,  17,  18,  19, 157, 133,   8, 135,  24,  25, 146, 143,  28,  29,  30,  31,
438128, 129, 130, 131, 132,  10,  23,  27, 136, 137, 138, 139, 140,   5,   6,   7,
439144, 145,  22, 147, 148, 149, 150,   4, 152, 153, 154, 155,  20,  21, 158,  26,
440' ', 160, 161, 162, 163, 164, 165, 166, 167, 168, 213, '.', '<', '(', '+', '|',
441'&', 169, 170, 171, 172, 173, 174, 175, 176, 177, '!', '$', '*', ')', ';', '~',
442'-', '/', 178, 179, 180, 181, 182, 183, 184, 185, 203, ',', '%', '_', '>', '?',
443186, 187, 188, 189, 190, 191, 192, 193, 194, '`', ':', '#', '@', '\'','=', '"',
444195, 'a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e', 'f', 'g', 'h', 'i', 196, 197, 198, 199, 200, 201,
445202, 'j', 'k', 'l', 'm', 'n', 'o', 'p', 'q', 'r', '^', 204, 205, 206, 207, 208,
446209, 229, 's', 't', 'u', 'v', 'w', 'x', 'y', 'z', 210, 211, 212, '[', 214, 215,
447216, 217, 218, 219, 220, 221, 222, 223, 224, 225, 226, 227, 228, ']', 230, 231,
448'{', 'A', 'B', 'C', 'D', 'E', 'F', 'G', 'H', 'I', 232, 233, 234, 235, 236, 237,
449'}', 'J', 'K', 'L', 'M', 'N', 'O', 'P', 'Q', 'R', 238, 239, 240, 241, 242, 243,
450'\\',159, 'S', 'T', 'U', 'V', 'W', 'X', 'Y', 'Z', 244, 245, 246, 247, 248, 249,
451'0', '1', '2', '3', '4', '5', '6', '7', '8', '9', 250, 251, 252, 253, 254, 255
452};
453
454#ifdef notdef
455/*
456 * The following EBCDIC-to-ASCII table may relate more closely to reality,
457 * or at least to modern reality.  It comes from
458 *
459 *   http://ftp.s390.ibm.com/products/oe/bpxqp9.html
460 *
461 * and maps the characters of EBCDIC code page 1047 (the code used for
462 * Unix-derived software on IBM's 390 systems) to the corresponding
463 * characters from ISO 8859-1.
464 *
465 * If this table is used instead of the above one, some of the special
466 * cases for the NEL character can be taken out of the code.
467 */
468
469private unsigned char ebcdic_1047_to_8859[] = {
4700x00,0x01,0x02,0x03,0x9C,0x09,0x86,0x7F,0x97,0x8D,0x8E,0x0B,0x0C,0x0D,0x0E,0x0F,
4710x10,0x11,0x12,0x13,0x9D,0x0A,0x08,0x87,0x18,0x19,0x92,0x8F,0x1C,0x1D,0x1E,0x1F,
4720x80,0x81,0x82,0x83,0x84,0x85,0x17,0x1B,0x88,0x89,0x8A,0x8B,0x8C,0x05,0x06,0x07,
4730x90,0x91,0x16,0x93,0x94,0x95,0x96,0x04,0x98,0x99,0x9A,0x9B,0x14,0x15,0x9E,0x1A,
4740x20,0xA0,0xE2,0xE4,0xE0,0xE1,0xE3,0xE5,0xE7,0xF1,0xA2,0x2E,0x3C,0x28,0x2B,0x7C,
4750x26,0xE9,0xEA,0xEB,0xE8,0xED,0xEE,0xEF,0xEC,0xDF,0x21,0x24,0x2A,0x29,0x3B,0x5E,
4760x2D,0x2F,0xC2,0xC4,0xC0,0xC1,0xC3,0xC5,0xC7,0xD1,0xA6,0x2C,0x25,0x5F,0x3E,0x3F,
4770xF8,0xC9,0xCA,0xCB,0xC8,0xCD,0xCE,0xCF,0xCC,0x60,0x3A,0x23,0x40,0x27,0x3D,0x22,
4780xD8,0x61,0x62,0x63,0x64,0x65,0x66,0x67,0x68,0x69,0xAB,0xBB,0xF0,0xFD,0xFE,0xB1,
4790xB0,0x6A,0x6B,0x6C,0x6D,0x6E,0x6F,0x70,0x71,0x72,0xAA,0xBA,0xE6,0xB8,0xC6,0xA4,
4800xB5,0x7E,0x73,0x74,0x75,0x76,0x77,0x78,0x79,0x7A,0xA1,0xBF,0xD0,0x5B,0xDE,0xAE,
4810xAC,0xA3,0xA5,0xB7,0xA9,0xA7,0xB6,0xBC,0xBD,0xBE,0xDD,0xA8,0xAF,0x5D,0xB4,0xD7,
4820x7B,0x41,0x42,0x43,0x44,0x45,0x46,0x47,0x48,0x49,0xAD,0xF4,0xF6,0xF2,0xF3,0xF5,
4830x7D,0x4A,0x4B,0x4C,0x4D,0x4E,0x4F,0x50,0x51,0x52,0xB9,0xFB,0xFC,0xF9,0xFA,0xFF,
4840x5C,0xF7,0x53,0x54,0x55,0x56,0x57,0x58,0x59,0x5A,0xB2,0xD4,0xD6,0xD2,0xD3,0xD5,
4850x30,0x31,0x32,0x33,0x34,0x35,0x36,0x37,0x38,0x39,0xB3,0xDB,0xDC,0xD9,0xDA,0x9F
486};
487#endif
488
489/*
490 * Copy buf[0 ... nbytes-1] into out[], translating EBCDIC to ASCII.
491 */
492private void
493from_ebcdic(const unsigned char *buf, size_t nbytes, unsigned char *out)
494{
495	size_t i;
496
497	for (i = 0; i < nbytes; i++) {
498		out[i] = ebcdic_to_ascii[buf[i]];
499	}
500}
501