1<section xmlns="http://docbook.org/ns/docbook" version="5.0"
2	 xml:id="std.localization.facet.codecvt" xreflabel="codecvt">
3<?dbhtml filename="codecvt.html"?>
4
5<info><title>codecvt</title>
6  <keywordset>
7    <keyword>ISO C++</keyword>
8    <keyword>codecvt</keyword>
9  </keywordset>
10</info>
11
12
13
14<para>
15The standard class codecvt attempts to address conversions between
16different character encoding schemes. In particular, the standard
17attempts to detail conversions between the implementation-defined wide
18characters (hereafter referred to as <type>wchar_t</type>) and the standard
19type <type>char</type> that is so beloved in classic <quote>C</quote>
20(which can now be referred to as narrow characters.)  This document attempts
21to describe how the GNU libstdc++ implementation deals with the conversion
22between wide and narrow characters, and also presents a framework for dealing
23with the huge number of other encodings that iconv can convert,
24including Unicode and UTF8. Design issues and requirements are
25addressed, and examples of correct usage for both the required
26specializations for wide and narrow characters and the
27implementation-provided extended functionality are given.
28</para>
29
30<section xml:id="facet.codecvt.req"><info><title>Requirements</title></info>
31
32
33<para>
34Around page 425 of the C++ Standard, this charming heading comes into view:
35</para>
36
37<blockquote>
38<para>
3922.2.1.5 - Template class codecvt
40</para>
41</blockquote>
42
43<para>
44The text around the codecvt definition gives some clues:
45</para>
46
47<blockquote>
48<para>
49<emphasis>
50-1- The class <code>codecvt&lt;internT,externT,stateT&gt;</code> is for use
51when converting from one codeset to another, such as from wide characters
52to multibyte characters, between wide character encodings such as
53Unicode and EUC.
54</emphasis>
55</para>
56</blockquote>
57
58<para>
59Hmm. So, in some unspecified way, Unicode encodings and
60translations between other character sets should be handled by this
61class.
62</para>
63
64<blockquote>
65<para>
66<emphasis>
67-2- The <type>stateT</type> argument selects the pair of codesets being mapped between.
68</emphasis>
69</para>
70</blockquote>
71
72<para>
73Ah ha! Another clue...
74</para>
75
76<blockquote>
77<para>
78<emphasis>
79-3- The instantiations required in the Table 51 (lib.locale.category), namely
80<classname>codecvt&lt;wchar_t,char,mbstate_t&gt;</classname> and
81<classname>codecvt&lt;char,char,mbstate_t&gt;</classname>, convert the
82implementation-defined native character set.
83<classname>codecvt&lt;char,char,mbstate_t&gt;</classname> implements a
84degenerate conversion; it does not convert at all.
85<classname>codecvt&lt;wchar_t,char,mbstate_t&gt;</classname> converts between
86the native character sets for tiny and wide characters. Instantiations on
87<type>mbstate_t</type> perform conversion between encodings known to the library
88implementor.  Other encodings can be converted by specializing on a
89user-defined <type>stateT</type> type. The <type>stateT</type> object can
90contain any state that is useful to communicate to or from the specialized
91<function>do_convert</function> member.
92</emphasis>
93</para>
94</blockquote>
95
96<para>
97At this point, a couple points become clear:
98</para>
99
100<para>
101One: The standard clearly implies that attempts to add non-required
102(yet useful and widely used) conversions need to do so through the
103third template parameter, <type>stateT</type>.</para>
104
105<para>
106Two: The required conversions, by specifying <type>mbstate_t</type> as the
107third template parameter, imply an implementation strategy that is mostly
108(or wholly) based on the underlying C library, and the functions
109<function>mcsrtombs</function> and <function>wcsrtombs</function> in
110particular.</para>
111</section>
112
113<section xml:id="facet.codecvt.design"><info><title>Design</title></info>
114
115
116<section xml:id="codecvt.design.wchar_t_size"><info><title><type>wchar_t</type> Size</title></info>
117
118
119    <para>
120      The simple implementation detail of <type>wchar_t</type>'s size seems to
121      repeatedly confound people. Many systems use a two byte,
122      unsigned integral type to represent wide characters, and use an
123      internal encoding of Unicode or UCS2. (See AIX, Microsoft NT,
124      Java, others.) Other systems, use a four byte, unsigned integral
125      type to represent wide characters, and use an internal encoding
126      of UCS4. (GNU/Linux systems using glibc, in particular.) The C
127      programming language (and thus C++) does not specify a specific
128      size for the type <type>wchar_t</type>.
129    </para>
130
131    <para>
132      Thus, portable C++ code cannot assume a byte size (or endianness) either.
133    </para>
134  </section>
135
136<section xml:id="codecvt.design.unicode"><info><title>Support for Unicode</title></info>
137
138  <para>
139    Probably the most frequently asked question about code conversion
140    is: "So dudes, what's the deal with Unicode strings?"
141    The dude part is optional, but apparently the usefulness of
142    Unicode strings is pretty widely appreciated. The Unicode character
143    set (and useful encodings like UTF-8, UCS-4, ISO 8859-10,
144    etc etc etc) were not mentioned in the first C++ standard. (The 2011
145    standard added support for string literals with different encodings
146    and some library facilities for converting between encodings, but the
147    notes below have not been updated to reflect that.)
148  </para>
149
150  <para>
151    A couple of comments:
152  </para>
153
154  <para>
155    The thought that all one needs to convert between two arbitrary
156    codesets is two types and some kind of state argument is
157    unfortunate. In particular, encodings may be stateless. The naming
158    of the third parameter as <type>stateT</type> is unfortunate, as what is
159    really needed is some kind of generalized type that accounts for the
160    issues that abstract encodings will need. The minimum information
161    that is required includes:
162  </para>
163
164  <itemizedlist>
165    <listitem>
166      <para>
167	Identifiers for each of the codesets involved in the
168	conversion. For example, using the iconv family of functions
169	from the Single Unix Specification (what used to be called
170	X/Open) hosted on the GNU/Linux operating system allows
171	bi-directional mapping between far more than the following
172	tantalizing possibilities:
173      </para>
174
175      <para>
176	(An edited list taken from <code>`iconv --list`</code> on a
177	Red Hat 6.2/Intel system:
178      </para>
179
180<blockquote>
181<programlisting>
1828859_1, 8859_9, 10646-1:1993, 10646-1:1993/UCS4, ARABIC, ARABIC7,
183ASCII, EUC-CN, EUC-JP, EUC-KR, EUC-TW, GREEK-CCIcode, GREEK, GREEK7-OLD,
184GREEK7, GREEK8, HEBREW, ISO-8859-1, ISO-8859-2, ISO-8859-3,
185ISO-8859-4, ISO-8859-5, ISO-8859-6, ISO-8859-7, ISO-8859-8,
186ISO-8859-9, ISO-8859-10, ISO-8859-11, ISO-8859-13, ISO-8859-14,
187ISO-8859-15, ISO-10646, ISO-10646/UCS2, ISO-10646/UCS4,
188ISO-10646/UTF-8, ISO-10646/UTF8, SHIFT-JIS, SHIFT_JIS, UCS-2, UCS-4,
189UCS2, UCS4, UNICODE, UNICODEBIG, UNICODELIcodeLE, US-ASCII, US, UTF-8,
190UTF-16, UTF8, UTF16).
191</programlisting>
192</blockquote>
193
194<para>
195For iconv-based implementations, string literals for each of the
196encodings (i.e. "UCS-2" and "UTF-8") are necessary,
197although for other,
198non-iconv implementations a table of enumerated values or some other
199mechanism may be required.
200</para>
201</listitem>
202
203<listitem><para>
204 Maximum length of the identifying string literal.
205</para></listitem>
206
207<listitem><para>
208 Some encodings require explicit endian-ness. As such, some kind
209  of endian marker or other byte-order marker will be necessary. See
210  "Footnotes for C/C++ developers" in Haible for more information on
211  UCS-2/Unicode endian issues. (Summary: big endian seems most likely,
212  however implementations, most notably Microsoft, vary.)
213</para></listitem>
214
215<listitem><para>
216 Types representing the conversion state, for conversions involving
217  the machinery in the "C" library, or the conversion descriptor, for
218  conversions using iconv (such as the type iconv_t.)  Note that the
219  conversion descriptor encodes more information than a simple encoding
220  state type.
221</para></listitem>
222
223<listitem><para>
224 Conversion descriptors for both directions of encoding. (i.e., both
225  UCS-2 to UTF-8 and UTF-8 to UCS-2.)
226</para></listitem>
227
228<listitem><para>
229 Something to indicate if the conversion requested if valid.
230</para></listitem>
231
232<listitem><para>
233 Something to represent if the conversion descriptors are valid.
234</para></listitem>
235
236<listitem><para>
237 Some way to enforce strict type checking on the internal and
238  external types. As part of this, the size of the internal and
239  external types will need to be known.
240</para></listitem>
241</itemizedlist>
242</section>
243
244<section xml:id="codecvt.design.issues"><info><title>Other Issues</title></info>
245
246<para>
247In addition, multi-threaded and multi-locale environments also impact
248the design and requirements for code conversions. In particular, they
249affect the required specialization
250<classname>codecvt&lt;wchar_t, char, mbstate_t&gt;</classname>
251when implemented using standard "C" functions.
252</para>
253
254<para>
255Three problems arise, one big, one of medium importance, and one small.
256</para>
257
258<para>
259First, the small: <function>mcsrtombs</function> and
260<function>wcsrtombs</function> may not be multithread-safe
261on all systems required by the GNU tools. For GNU/Linux and glibc,
262this is not an issue.
263</para>
264
265<para>
266Of medium concern, in the grand scope of things, is that the functions
267used to implement this specialization work on null-terminated
268strings. Buffers, especially file buffers, may not be null-terminated,
269thus giving conversions that end prematurely or are otherwise
270incorrect. Yikes!
271</para>
272
273<para>
274The last, and fundamental problem, is the assumption of a global
275locale for all the "C" functions referenced above. For something like
276C++ iostreams (where codecvt is explicitly used) the notion of
277multiple locales is fundamental. In practice, most users may not run
278into this limitation. However, as a quality of implementation issue,
279the GNU C++ library would like to offer a solution that allows
280multiple locales and or simultaneous usage with computationally
281correct results. In short, libstdc++ is trying to offer, as an
282option, a high-quality implementation, damn the additional complexity!
283</para>
284
285<para>
286For the required specialization
287<classname>codecvt&lt;wchar_t, char, mbstate_t&gt;</classname>,
288conversions are made between the internal character set (always UCS4
289on GNU/Linux) and whatever the currently selected locale for the
290LC_CTYPE category implements.
291</para>
292
293</section>
294
295</section>
296
297<section xml:id="facet.codecvt.impl"><info><title>Implementation</title></info>
298
299
300<para>
301The two required specializations are implemented as follows:
302</para>
303
304<para>
305<code>
306codecvt&lt;char, char, mbstate_t&gt;
307</code>
308</para>
309<para>
310This is a degenerate (i.e., does nothing) specialization. Implementing
311this was a piece of cake.
312</para>
313
314<para>
315<code>
316codecvt&lt;char, wchar_t, mbstate_t&gt;
317</code>
318</para>
319
320<para>
321This specialization, by specifying all the template parameters, pretty
322much ties the hands of implementors. As such, the implementation is
323straightforward, involving <function>mcsrtombs</function> for the conversions
324between <type>char</type> to <type>wchar_t</type> and
325<function>wcsrtombs</function> for conversions between <type>wchar_t</type>
326and <type>char</type>.
327</para>
328
329<para>
330Neither of these two required specializations deals with Unicode
331characters. As such, libstdc++ implements a partial specialization
332of the <type>codecvt</type> class with an iconv wrapper class,
333<classname>encoding_state</classname> as the third template parameter.
334</para>
335
336<para>
337This implementation should be standards conformant. First of all, the
338standard explicitly points out that instantiations on the third
339template parameter, <type>stateT</type>, are the proper way to implement
340non-required conversions. Second of all, the standard says (in Chapter
34117) that partial specializations of required classes are A-OK. Third
342of all, the requirements for the <type>stateT</type> type elsewhere in the
343standard (see 21.1.2 traits typedefs) only indicate that this type be copy
344constructible.
345</para>
346
347<para>
348As such, the type <type>encoding_state</type> is defined as a non-templatized,
349POD type to be used as the third type of a <type>codecvt</type> instantiation.
350This type is just a wrapper class for iconv, and provides an easy interface
351to iconv functionality.
352</para>
353
354<para>
355There are two constructors for <type>encoding_state</type>:
356</para>
357
358<para>
359<code>
360encoding_state() : __in_desc(0), __out_desc(0)
361</code>
362</para>
363<para>
364This default constructor sets the internal encoding to some default
365(currently UCS4) and the external encoding to whatever is returned by
366<code>nl_langinfo(CODESET)</code>.
367</para>
368
369<para>
370<code>
371encoding_state(const char* __int, const char* __ext)
372</code>
373</para>
374
375<para>
376This constructor takes as parameters string literals that indicate the
377desired internal and external encoding. There are no defaults for
378either argument.
379</para>
380
381<para>
382One of the issues with iconv is that the string literals identifying
383conversions are not standardized. Because of this, the thought of
384mandating and/or enforcing some set of pre-determined valid
385identifiers seems iffy: thus, a more practical (and non-migraine
386inducing) strategy was implemented: end-users can specify any string
387(subject to a pre-determined length qualifier, currently 32 bytes) for
388encodings. It is up to the user to make sure that these strings are
389valid on the target system.
390</para>
391
392<para>
393<code>
394void
395_M_init()
396</code>
397</para>
398<para>
399Strangely enough, this member function attempts to open conversion
400descriptors for a given encoding_state object. If the conversion
401descriptors are not valid, the conversion descriptors returned will
402not be valid and the resulting calls to the codecvt conversion
403functions will return error.
404</para>
405
406<para>
407<code>
408bool
409_M_good()
410</code>
411</para>
412
413<para>
414Provides a way to see if the given <type>encoding_state</type> object has been
415properly initialized. If the string literals describing the desired
416internal and external encoding are not valid, initialization will
417fail, and this will return false. If the internal and external
418encodings are valid, but <function>iconv_open</function> could not allocate
419conversion descriptors, this will also return false. Otherwise, the object is
420ready to convert and will return true.
421</para>
422
423<para>
424<code>
425encoding_state(const encoding_state&amp;)
426</code>
427</para>
428
429<para>
430As iconv allocates memory and sets up conversion descriptors, the copy
431constructor can only copy the member data pertaining to the internal
432and external code conversions, and not the conversion descriptors
433themselves.
434</para>
435
436<para>
437Definitions for all the required codecvt member functions are provided
438for this specialization, and usage of <code>codecvt&lt;<replaceable>internal
439character type</replaceable>, <replaceable>external character type</replaceable>, <replaceable>encoding_state</replaceable>&gt;</code> is consistent with other
440codecvt usage.
441</para>
442
443</section>
444
445<section xml:id="facet.codecvt.use"><info><title>Use</title></info>
446
447<para>A conversion involving a string literal.</para>
448
449<programlisting>
450  typedef codecvt_base::result                  result;
451  typedef unsigned short                        unicode_t;
452  typedef unicode_t                             int_type;
453  typedef char                                  ext_type;
454  typedef encoding_state                          state_type;
455  typedef codecvt&lt;int_type, ext_type, state_type&gt; unicode_codecvt;
456
457  const ext_type*       e_lit = "black pearl jasmine tea";
458  int                   size = strlen(e_lit);
459  int_type              i_lit_base[24] =
460  { 25088, 27648, 24832, 25344, 27392, 8192, 28672, 25856, 24832, 29184,
461    27648, 8192, 27136, 24832, 29440, 27904, 26880, 28160, 25856, 8192, 29696,
462    25856, 24832, 2560
463  };
464  const int_type*       i_lit = i_lit_base;
465  const ext_type*       efrom_next;
466  const int_type*       ifrom_next;
467  ext_type*             e_arr = new ext_type[size + 1];
468  ext_type*             eto_next;
469  int_type*             i_arr = new int_type[size + 1];
470  int_type*             ito_next;
471
472  // construct a locale object with the specialized facet.
473  locale                loc(locale::classic(), new unicode_codecvt);
474  // sanity check the constructed locale has the specialized facet.
475  VERIFY( has_facet&lt;unicode_codecvt&gt;(loc) );
476  const unicode_codecvt&amp; cvt = use_facet&lt;unicode_codecvt&gt;(loc);
477  // convert between const char* and unicode strings
478  unicode_codecvt::state_type state01("UNICODE", "ISO_8859-1");
479  initialize_state(state01);
480  result r1 = cvt.in(state01, e_lit, e_lit + size, efrom_next,
481		     i_arr, i_arr + size, ito_next);
482  VERIFY( r1 == codecvt_base::ok );
483  VERIFY( !int_traits::compare(i_arr, i_lit, size) );
484  VERIFY( efrom_next == e_lit + size );
485  VERIFY( ito_next == i_arr + size );
486</programlisting>
487
488</section>
489
490<section xml:id="facet.codecvt.future"><info><title>Future</title></info>
491
492<itemizedlist>
493<listitem>
494  <para>
495   a. things that are sketchy, or remain unimplemented:
496      do_encoding, max_length and length member functions
497      are only weakly implemented. I have no idea how to do
498      this correctly, and in a generic manner.  Nathan?
499</para>
500</listitem>
501
502<listitem>
503  <para>
504   b. conversions involving <type>std::string</type>
505  </para>
506   <itemizedlist>
507      <listitem><para>
508      how should operators != and == work for string of
509      different/same encoding?
510      </para></listitem>
511
512      <listitem><para>
513      what is equal? A byte by byte comparison or an
514      encoding then byte comparison?
515      </para></listitem>
516
517      <listitem><para>
518      conversions between narrow, wide, and unicode strings
519      </para></listitem>
520   </itemizedlist>
521</listitem>
522<listitem><para>
523   c. conversions involving std::filebuf and std::ostream
524</para>
525   <itemizedlist>
526      <listitem><para>
527      how to initialize the state object in a
528      standards-conformant manner?
529      </para></listitem>
530
531		<listitem><para>
532      how to synchronize the "C" and "C++"
533      conversion information?
534      </para></listitem>
535
536		<listitem><para>
537      wchar_t/char internal buffers and conversions between
538      internal/external buffers?
539      </para></listitem>
540   </itemizedlist>
541</listitem>
542</itemizedlist>
543</section>
544
545
546<bibliography xml:id="facet.codecvt.biblio"><info><title>Bibliography</title></info>
547
548
549  <biblioentry>
550    <citetitle>
551      The GNU C Library
552    </citetitle>
553    <author><personname><surname>McGrath</surname><firstname>Roland</firstname></personname></author>
554    <author><personname><surname>Drepper</surname><firstname>Ulrich</firstname></personname></author>
555    <copyright>
556      <year>2007</year>
557      <holder>FSF</holder>
558    </copyright>
559    <pagenums>
560      Chapters 6 Character Set Handling and 7 Locales and Internationalization
561    </pagenums>
562  </biblioentry>
563
564  <biblioentry>
565    <citetitle>
566      Correspondence
567    </citetitle>
568    <author><personname><surname>Drepper</surname><firstname>Ulrich</firstname></personname></author>
569    <copyright>
570      <year>2002</year>
571      <holder/>
572    </copyright>
573  </biblioentry>
574
575  <biblioentry>
576    <citetitle>
577      ISO/IEC 14882:1998 Programming languages - C++
578    </citetitle>
579    <copyright>
580      <year>1998</year>
581      <holder>ISO</holder>
582    </copyright>
583  </biblioentry>
584
585  <biblioentry>
586    <citetitle>
587      ISO/IEC 9899:1999 Programming languages - C
588    </citetitle>
589    <copyright>
590      <year>1999</year>
591      <holder>ISO</holder>
592    </copyright>
593  </biblioentry>
594
595  <biblioentry>
596      <title>
597	<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
598	      xlink:href="https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/">
599      System Interface Definitions, Issue 7 (IEEE Std. 1003.1-2008)
600	</link>
601      </title>
602
603    <copyright>
604      <year>2008</year>
605      <holder>
606	The Open Group/The Institute of Electrical and Electronics
607	Engineers, Inc.
608      </holder>
609    </copyright>
610  </biblioentry>
611
612  <biblioentry>
613    <citetitle>
614      The C++ Programming Language, Special Edition
615    </citetitle>
616    <author><personname><surname>Stroustrup</surname><firstname>Bjarne</firstname></personname></author>
617    <copyright>
618      <year>2000</year>
619      <holder>Addison Wesley, Inc.</holder>
620    </copyright>
621    <pagenums>Appendix D</pagenums>
622    <publisher>
623      <publishername>
624	Addison Wesley
625      </publishername>
626    </publisher>
627  </biblioentry>
628
629
630  <biblioentry>
631    <citetitle>
632      Standard C++ IOStreams and Locales
633    </citetitle>
634    <subtitle>
635      Advanced Programmer's Guide and Reference
636    </subtitle>
637    <author><personname><surname>Langer</surname><firstname>Angelika</firstname></personname></author>
638    <author><personname><surname>Kreft</surname><firstname>Klaus</firstname></personname></author>
639    <copyright>
640      <year>2000</year>
641      <holder>Addison Wesley Longman, Inc.</holder>
642    </copyright>
643    <publisher>
644      <publishername>
645	Addison Wesley Longman
646      </publishername>
647    </publisher>
648  </biblioentry>
649
650  <biblioentry>
651      <title>
652	<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
653	      xlink:href="http://www.lysator.liu.se/c/na1.html">
654      A brief description of Normative Addendum 1
655	</link>
656      </title>
657
658    <author><personname><surname>Feather</surname><firstname>Clive</firstname></personname></author>
659    <pagenums>Extended Character Sets</pagenums>
660  </biblioentry>
661
662  <biblioentry>
663      <title>
664	<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
665	      xlink:href="https://tldp.org/HOWTO/Unicode-HOWTO.html">
666	  The Unicode HOWTO
667	</link>
668      </title>
669
670    <author><personname><surname>Haible</surname><firstname>Bruno</firstname></personname></author>
671  </biblioentry>
672
673  <biblioentry>
674      <title>
675	<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
676	      xlink:href="https://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/unicode.html">
677      UTF-8 and Unicode FAQ for Unix/Linux
678	</link>
679      </title>
680
681
682    <author><personname><surname>Khun</surname><firstname>Markus</firstname></personname></author>
683  </biblioentry>
684
685</bibliography>
686
687</section>
688