# Common tools for test files to find the locales which exist on the # system. Caller should have verified that this isn't miniperl before calling # the functions. # Note that it's okay that some languages have their native names # capitalized here even though that's not "right". They are lowercased # anyway later during the scanning process (and besides, some clueless # vendor might have them capitalized erroneously anyway). # Functions whose names begin with underscore are internal helper functions # for this file, and are not to be used by outside callers. use Config; use strict; use warnings; use feature 'state'; eval { require POSIX; import POSIX 'locale_h'; }; my $has_locale_h = ! $@; my @known_categories = ( qw(LC_ALL LC_COLLATE LC_CTYPE LC_MESSAGES LC_MONETARY LC_NUMERIC LC_TIME LC_ADDRESS LC_IDENTIFICATION LC_MEASUREMENT LC_PAPER LC_TELEPHONE LC_SYNTAX LC_TOD)); my @platform_categories; sub is_category_valid($) { my $cat_name = shift =~ s/^LC_//r; # Recognize Configure option to exclude a category return $Config{ccflags} !~ /\bD?NO_LOCALE_$cat_name\b/; } # LC_ALL can be -1 on some platforms. And, in fact the implementors could # legally use any integer to represent any category. But it makes the most # sense for them to have used small integers. Below, we create new locale # numbers for ones missing from this machine. We make them very negative, # hopefully more negative than anything likely to be a valid category on the # platform, but also below is a check to be sure that our guess is valid. my $max_bad_category_number = -1000000; # Initialize this hash so that it looks like e.g., # 6 => 'CTYPE', # where 6 is the value of &POSIX::LC_CTYPE my %category_name; my %category_number; if ($has_locale_h) { my $number_for_missing_category = $max_bad_category_number; foreach my $name (@known_categories) { my $number = eval "&POSIX::$name"; if ($@) { # Use a negative number (smaller than any legitimate category # number) if the platform doesn't support this category, so we # have an entry for all the ones that might be specified in calls # to us. $number = $number_for_missing_category--; } elsif ( $number !~ / ^ -? \d+ $ /x || $number <= $max_bad_category_number) { # We think this should be an int. And it has to be larger than # any of our synthetic numbers. die "Unexpected locale category number '$number' for $name" } else { push @platform_categories, $name; } $name =~ s/LC_//; $category_name{$number} = "$name"; $category_number{$name} = $number; } } sub _my_diag($) { my $message = shift; if (defined &main::diag) { diag($message); } else { local($\, $", $,) = (undef, ' ', ''); print STDERR $message, "\n"; } } sub _my_fail($) { my $message = shift; if (defined &main::fail) { fail($message); } else { local($\, $", $,) = (undef, ' ', ''); print "not ok 0 $message\n"; } } sub _trylocale ($$$$) { # For use only by other functions in this file! # Adds the locale given by the first parameter to the list given by the # 3rd iff the platform supports the locale in each of the category numbers # given by the 2nd parameter, which is either a single category or a # reference to a list of categories. # # The 4th parameter is true if to accept locales that aren't apparently # fully compatible with Perl. my $locale = shift; my $categories = shift; my $list = shift; my $allow_incompatible = shift; return if ! $locale || grep { $locale eq $_ } @$list; # This is a toy (pig latin) locale that is not fully implemented on some # systems return if $locale =~ / ^ pig $ /ix; # Certain platforms have a crippled locale system in which setlocale # returns success for just about any possible locale name, but if anything # actually happens as a result of the call, it is that the underlying # locale is set to a system default, likely C or C.UTF-8. We can't test # such systems fully, but we shouldn't disable the user from using # locales, as it may work out for them (or not). return if defined $Config{d_setlocale_accepts_any_locale_name} && $locale !~ / ^ (?: C | POSIX | C\.UTF-8 ) $/ix; $categories = [ $categories ] unless ref $categories; my $badutf8 = 0; my $plays_well = 1; use warnings 'locale'; local $SIG{__WARN__} = sub { $badutf8 = 1 if grep { /Malformed UTF-8/ } @_; $plays_well = 0 if grep { /Locale .* may not work well(?# )|The Perl program will use the expected meanings/i } @_; }; # Incompatible locales aren't warned about unless using locales. use locale; # Sort the input so CTYPE is first, COLLATE comes after all but ALL. This # is because locale.c detects bad locales only with CTYPE, and COLLATE on # some platforms can core dump if it is a bad locale. my @sorted; my $has_ctype = 0; my $has_all = 0; my $has_collate = 0; foreach my $category (@$categories) { die "category '$category' must instead be a number" unless $category =~ / ^ -? \d+ $ /x; if ($category_name{$category} eq 'CTYPE') { $has_ctype = 1; } elsif ($category_name{$category} eq 'ALL') { $has_all = 1; } elsif ($category_name{$category} eq 'COLLATE') { $has_collate = 1; } else { push @sorted, $category unless grep { $_ == $category } @sorted; } } push @sorted, $category_number{'COLLATE'} if $has_collate; push @sorted, $category_number{'ALL'} if $has_all; unshift @sorted, $category_number{'CTYPE'} if $has_ctype || ! $allow_incompatible; foreach my $category (@sorted) { return unless setlocale($category, $locale); last if $badutf8 || ! $plays_well; } if ($badutf8) { _my_fail("Verify locale name doesn't contain malformed utf8"); return; } push @$list, $locale if $plays_well || $allow_incompatible; } sub _decode_encodings { # For use only by other functions in this file! my @enc; foreach (split(/ /, shift)) { if (/^(\d+)$/) { push @enc, "ISO8859-$1"; push @enc, "iso8859$1"; # HP if ($1 eq '1') { push @enc, "roman8"; # HP } push @enc, $_; push @enc, "$_.UTF-8"; push @enc, "$_.65001"; # Windows UTF-8 push @enc, "$_.ACP"; # Windows ANSI code page push @enc, "$_.OCP"; # Windows OEM code page push @enc, "$_.1252"; # Windows } } if ($^O eq 'os390') { push @enc, qw(IBM-037 IBM-819 IBM-1047); } push @enc, "UTF-8"; push @enc, "65001"; # Windows UTF-8 return @enc; } sub valid_locale_categories() { # Returns a list of the locale categories (expressed as strings, like # "LC_ALL) known to this program that are available on this platform. return grep { is_category_valid($_) } @platform_categories; } sub locales_enabled(;$) { # If no parameter is specified, the function returns 1 if there is any # "safe" locale handling available to the caller; otherwise 0. Safeness # is defined here as the caller operating in the main thread of a program, # or if threaded locales are safe on the platform and Configured to be # used. This sub is used for testing purposes, and for those, this # definition of safety is sufficient, and necessary to get some tests to # run on certain configurations on certain platforms. But beware that the # main thread can change the locale of any subthreads unless # ${^SAFE_LOCALES} is non-zero. # # Use the optional parameter to discover if a particular category or # categories are available on the system. 1 is returned if the global # criteria described in the previous paragraph are true, AND if all the # specified categories are available on the platform and Configured to be # used. Otherwise 0 is returned. The parameter is either a single POSIX # locale category or a reference to a list of them. Each category must be # its name as a string, like 'LC_TIME' (the initial 'LC_' is optional), or # the number this platform uses to signify the category (e.g., # 'locales_enabled(&POSIX::LC_CTYPE)' # # When the function returns 1 and a parameter was specified as a list # reference, the reference will be altered on return to point to an # equivalent list such that the categories are numeric instead of strings # and sorted to meet the input expectations of _trylocale(). # # It is a fatal error to call this with something that isn't a known # category to this file. If this happens, look first for a typo, and # second if you are using a category unknown to Perl. In the latter case # a bug report should be submitted. # khw cargo-culted the '?' in the pattern on the next line. return 0 if $Config{ccflags} =~ /\bD?NO_LOCALE\b/; # If we can't load the POSIX XS module, we can't have locales even if they # normally would be available return 0 if ! defined &DynaLoader::boot_DynaLoader; # Don't test locales where they aren't safe. On systems with unsafe # threads, for the purposes of testing, we consider the main thread safe, # and all other threads unsafe. if (! ${^SAFE_LOCALES}) { return 0 if $^O eq 'os390'; # Threaded locales don't work well here require threads; return 0 if threads->tid() != 0; } # If no setlocale, we need the POSIX 2008 alternatives if (! $Config{d_setlocale}) { return 0 if $Config{ccflags} =~ /\bD?NO_POSIX_2008_LOCALE\b/; return 0 unless $Config{d_newlocale}; return 0 unless $Config{d_uselocale}; return 0 unless $Config{d_duplocale}; return 0 unless $Config{d_freelocale}; } # Done with the global possibilities. Now check if any passed in category # is disabled. my $categories_ref = $_[0]; my $return_categories_numbers = 0; my @categories_numbers; my $has_LC_ALL = 0; my $has_LC_COLLATE = 0; if (defined $categories_ref) { my @local_categories_copy; my $reftype = ref $categories_ref; if ($reftype eq 'ARRAY') { @local_categories_copy = @$categories_ref; $return_categories_numbers = 1; } elsif ($reftype ne "") { die "Parameter to locales_enabled() must be an ARRAY;" . " instead you used a $reftype"; } else { # Single category passed in @local_categories_copy = $categories_ref; } for my $category_name_or_number (@local_categories_copy) { my $name; my $number; if ($category_name_or_number =~ / ^ -? \d+ $ /x) { $number = $category_name_or_number; die "Invalid locale category number '$number'" unless grep { $number == $_ } keys %category_name; $name = $category_name{$number}; } else { $name = $category_name_or_number; $name =~ s/ ^ LC_ //x; foreach my $trial (keys %category_name) { if ($category_name{$trial} eq $name) { $number = $trial; last; } } die "Invalid locale category name '$name'" unless defined $number; } return 0 if $number <= $max_bad_category_number || ! is_category_valid($name); eval "defined &POSIX::LC_$name"; return 0 if $@; if ($return_categories_numbers) { if ($name eq 'CTYPE') { unshift @categories_numbers, $number; # Always first } elsif ($name eq 'ALL') { $has_LC_ALL = 1; } elsif ($name eq 'COLLATE') { $has_LC_COLLATE = 1; } else { push @categories_numbers, $number; } } } } if ($return_categories_numbers) { # COLLATE comes after all other locales except ALL, which comes last if ($has_LC_COLLATE) { push @categories_numbers, $category_number{'COLLATE'}; } if ($has_LC_ALL) { push @categories_numbers, $category_number{'ALL'}; } @$categories_ref = @categories_numbers; } return 1; } sub find_locales ($;$) { # Returns an array of all the locales we found on the system. If the # optional 2nd parameter is non-zero, the list includes all found locales; # otherwise it is restricted to those locales that play well with Perl, as # far as we can easily determine. # # The first parameter is either a single locale category or a reference to # a list of categories to find valid locales for it (or in the case of # multiple) for all of them. Each category can be a name (like 'LC_ALL' # or simply 'ALL') or the C enum value for the category. my $input_categories = shift; my $allow_incompatible = shift // 0; my @categories = (ref $input_categories) ? $input_categories->@* : $input_categories; return unless locales_enabled(\@categories); # Note, the subroutine call above converts the $categories into a form # suitable for _trylocale(). # Visual C's CRT goes silly on strings of the form "en_US.ISO8859-1" # and mingw32 uses said silly CRT # This doesn't seem to be an issue any more, at least on Windows XP, # so re-enable the tests for Windows XP onwards. my $winxp = ($^O eq 'MSWin32' && defined &Win32::GetOSVersion && join('.', (Win32::GetOSVersion())[1..2]) >= 5.1); return if (($^O eq 'MSWin32' && !$winxp) && $Config{cc} =~ /^(cl|gcc|g\+\+|ici)/i); my @Locale; _trylocale("C", \@categories, \@Locale, $allow_incompatible); _trylocale("POSIX", \@categories, \@Locale, $allow_incompatible); if ($Config{d_has_C_UTF8} && $Config{d_has_C_UTF8} eq 'true') { _trylocale("C.UTF-8", \@categories, \@Locale, $allow_incompatible); } # There's no point in looking at anything more if we know that setlocale # will return success on any garbage or non-garbage name. return sort @Locale if defined $Config{d_setlocale_accepts_any_locale_name}; foreach (1..16) { _trylocale("ISO8859-$_", \@categories, \@Locale, $allow_incompatible); _trylocale("iso8859$_", \@categories, \@Locale, $allow_incompatible); _trylocale("iso8859-$_", \@categories, \@Locale, $allow_incompatible); _trylocale("iso_8859_$_", \@categories, \@Locale, $allow_incompatible); _trylocale("isolatin$_", \@categories, \@Locale, $allow_incompatible); _trylocale("isolatin-$_", \@categories, \@Locale, $allow_incompatible); _trylocale("iso_latin_$_", \@categories, \@Locale, $allow_incompatible); } # Sanitize the environment so that we can run the external 'locale' # program without the taint mode getting grumpy. # $ENV{PATH} is special in VMS. delete local $ENV{PATH} if $^O ne 'VMS' or $Config{d_setenv}; # Other subversive stuff. delete local @ENV{qw(IFS CDPATH ENV BASH_ENV)}; if (-x "/usr/bin/locale" && open(LOCALES, '-|', "/usr/bin/locale -a 2>/dev/null")) { while () { # It seems that /usr/bin/locale steadfastly outputs 8 bit data, which # ain't great when we're running this testPERL_UNICODE= so that utf8 # locales will cause all IO hadles to default to (assume) utf8 next unless utf8::valid($_); chomp; _trylocale($_, \@categories, \@Locale, $allow_incompatible); } close(LOCALES); } elsif ($^O eq 'VMS' && defined($ENV{'SYS$I18N_LOCALE'}) && -d 'SYS$I18N_LOCALE') { # The SYS$I18N_LOCALE logical name search list was not present on # VAX VMS V5.5-12, but was on AXP && VAX VMS V6.2 as well as later versions. opendir(LOCALES, "SYS\$I18N_LOCALE:"); while ($_ = readdir(LOCALES)) { chomp; _trylocale($_, \@categories, \@Locale, $allow_incompatible); } close(LOCALES); } elsif (($^O eq 'openbsd' || $^O eq 'bitrig' ) && -e '/usr/share/locale') { # OpenBSD doesn't have a locale executable, so reading # /usr/share/locale is much easier and faster than the last resort # method. opendir(LOCALES, '/usr/share/locale'); while ($_ = readdir(LOCALES)) { chomp; _trylocale($_, \@categories, \@Locale, $allow_incompatible); } close(LOCALES); } else { # Final fallback. Try our list of locales hard-coded here # This is going to be slow. my @Data; # Locales whose name differs if the utf8 bit is on are stored in these # two files with appropriate encodings. my $data_file = ($^H & 0x08 || (${^OPEN} || "") =~ /:utf8/) ? _source_location() . "/lib/locale/utf8" : _source_location() . "/lib/locale/latin1"; if (-e $data_file) { @Data = do $data_file; } else { _my_diag(__FILE__ . ":" . __LINE__ . ": '$data_file' doesn't exist"); } # The rest of the locales are in this file. state @my_data = ; close DATA if fileno DATA; push @Data, @my_data; foreach my $line (@Data) { chomp $line; my ($locale_name, $language_codes, $country_codes, $encodings) = split /:/, $line; _my_diag(__FILE__ . ":" . __LINE__ . ": Unexpected syntax in '$line'") unless defined $locale_name; my @enc = _decode_encodings($encodings); foreach my $loc (split(/ /, $locale_name)) { _trylocale($loc, \@categories, \@Locale, $allow_incompatible); foreach my $enc (@enc) { _trylocale("$loc.$enc", \@categories, \@Locale, $allow_incompatible); } $loc = lc $loc; foreach my $enc (@enc) { _trylocale("$loc.$enc", \@categories, \@Locale, $allow_incompatible); } } foreach my $lang (split(/ /, $language_codes)) { _trylocale($lang, \@categories, \@Locale, $allow_incompatible); foreach my $country (split(/ /, $country_codes)) { my $lc = "${lang}_${country}"; _trylocale($lc, \@categories, \@Locale, $allow_incompatible); foreach my $enc (@enc) { _trylocale("$lc.$enc", \@categories, \@Locale, $allow_incompatible); } my $lC = "${lang}_\U${country}"; _trylocale($lC, \@categories, \@Locale, $allow_incompatible); foreach my $enc (@enc) { _trylocale("$lC.$enc", \@categories, \@Locale, $allow_incompatible); } } } } } @Locale = sort @Locale; return @Locale; } sub is_locale_utf8 ($) { # Return a boolean as to if core Perl thinks the input # is a UTF-8 locale # On z/OS, even locales marked as UTF-8 aren't. return 0 if ord "A" != 65; return 0 unless locales_enabled('LC_CTYPE'); my $locale = shift; use locale; no warnings 'locale'; # We may be trying out a weird locale my $save_locale = setlocale(&POSIX::LC_CTYPE()); if (! $save_locale) { ok(0, "Verify could save previous locale"); return 0; } if (! setlocale(&POSIX::LC_CTYPE(), $locale)) { ok(0, "Verify could setlocale to $locale"); return 0; } my $ret = 0; # Use an op that gives different results for UTF-8 than any other locale. # If a platform has UTF-8 locales, there should be at least one locale on # most platforms with UTF-8 in its name, so if there is a bug in the op # giving a false negative, we should get a failure for those locales as we # go through testing all the locales on the platform. if (CORE::fc(chr utf8::unicode_to_native(0xdf)) ne "ss") { if ($locale =~ /UTF-?8/i) { ok (0, "Verify $locale with UTF-8 in name is a UTF-8 locale"); } } else { $ret = 1; } die "Couldn't restore locale '$save_locale'" unless setlocale(&POSIX::LC_CTYPE(), $save_locale); return $ret; } sub find_utf8_ctype_locales (;$) { # Return the names of the locales that core # Perl thinks are UTF-8 LC_CTYPE locales. # Optional parameter is a reference to a # list of locales to try; if omitted, this # tries all locales it can find on the # platform return unless locales_enabled('LC_CTYPE'); my $locales_ref = shift; my @return; if (! defined $locales_ref) { my @locales = find_locales(&POSIX::LC_CTYPE()); $locales_ref = \@locales; } foreach my $locale (@$locales_ref) { push @return, $locale if is_locale_utf8($locale); } return @return; } sub find_utf8_ctype_locale (;$) { # Return the name of a locale that core Perl # thinks is a UTF-8 LC_CTYPE non-turkic # locale. # Optional parameter is a reference to a # list of locales to try; if omitted, this # tries all locales it can find on the # platform my $try_locales_ref = shift; my @utf8_locales = find_utf8_ctype_locales($try_locales_ref); my @turkic_locales = find_utf8_turkic_locales($try_locales_ref); my %seen_turkic; # Create undef elements in the hash for turkic locales @seen_turkic{@turkic_locales} = (); foreach my $locale (@utf8_locales) { return $locale unless exists $seen_turkic{$locale}; } return; } sub find_utf8_turkic_locales (;$) { # Return the name of all the locales that core Perl thinks are UTF-8 # Turkic LC_CTYPE. Optional parameter is a reference to a list of locales # to try; if omitted, this tries all locales it can find on the platform my @return; return unless locales_enabled('LC_CTYPE'); my $save_locale = setlocale(&POSIX::LC_CTYPE()); foreach my $locale (find_utf8_ctype_locales(shift)) { use locale; setlocale(&POSIX::LC_CTYPE(), $locale); push @return, $locale if uc('i') eq "\x{130}"; } setlocale(&POSIX::LC_CTYPE(), $save_locale); return @return; } sub find_utf8_turkic_locale (;$) { my @turkics = find_utf8_turkic_locales(shift); return unless @turkics; return $turkics[0] } # returns full path to the directory containing the current source # file, inspired by mauke's Dir::Self sub _source_location { require File::Spec; my $caller_filename = (caller)[1]; my $loc = File::Spec->rel2abs( File::Spec->catpath( (File::Spec->splitpath($caller_filename))[0, 1], '' ) ); return ($loc =~ /^(.*)$/)[0]; # untaint } 1 # Format of data is: locale_name, language_codes, country_codes, encodings __DATA__ Afrikaans:af:za:1 15 Arabic:ar:dz eg sa:6 arabic8 Brezhoneg Breton:br:fr:1 15 Bulgarski Bulgarian:bg:bg:5 Chinese:zh:cn tw:cn.EUC eucCN eucTW euc.CN euc.TW Big5 GB2312 tw.EUC Hrvatski Croatian:hr:hr:2 Cymraeg Welsh:cy:cy:1 14 15 Czech:cs:cz:2 Dansk Danish:da:dk:1 15 Nederlands Dutch:nl:be nl:1 15 English American British:en:au ca gb ie nz us uk zw:1 15 cp850 Esperanto:eo:eo:3 Eesti Estonian:et:ee:4 6 13 Suomi Finnish:fi:fi:1 15 Flamish::fl:1 15 Deutsch German:de:at be ch de lu:1 15 Euskaraz Basque:eu:es fr:1 15 Galego Galician:gl:es:1 15 Ellada Greek:el:gr:7 g8 Frysk:fy:nl:1 15 Greenlandic:kl:gl:4 6 Hebrew:iw:il:8 hebrew8 Hungarian:hu:hu:2 Indonesian:id:id:1 15 Gaeilge Irish:ga:IE:1 14 15 Italiano Italian:it:ch it:1 15 Nihongo Japanese:ja:jp:euc eucJP jp.EUC sjis Korean:ko:kr: Latine Latin:la:va:1 15 Latvian:lv:lv:4 6 13 Lithuanian:lt:lt:4 6 13 Macedonian:mk:mk:1 15 Maltese:mt:mt:3 Moldovan:mo:mo:2 Norsk Norwegian:no no\@nynorsk nb nn:no:1 15 Occitan:oc:es:1 15 Polski Polish:pl:pl:2 Rumanian:ro:ro:2 Russki Russian:ru:ru su ua:5 koi8 koi8r KOI8-R koi8u cp1251 cp866 Serbski Serbian:sr:yu:5 Slovak:sk:sk:2 Slovene Slovenian:sl:si:2 Sqhip Albanian:sq:sq:1 15 Svenska Swedish:sv:fi se:1 15 Thai:th:th:11 tis620 Turkish:tr:tr:9 turkish8 Yiddish:yi::1 15