| /* Character set conversion support for GDB. |
| Copyright (C) 2001-2021 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
| |
| This file is part of GDB. |
| |
| This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify |
| it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by |
| the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or |
| (at your option) any later version. |
| |
| This program 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 General Public License for more details. |
| |
| You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License |
| along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */ |
| |
| #ifndef CHARSET_H |
| #define CHARSET_H |
| |
| #include "gdbsupport/def-vector.h" |
| |
| /* If the target program uses a different character set than the host, |
| GDB has some support for translating between the two; GDB converts |
| characters and strings to the host character set before displaying |
| them, and converts characters and strings appearing in expressions |
| entered by the user to the target character set. |
| |
| GDB's code pretty much assumes that the host character set is some |
| superset of ASCII; there are plenty if ('0' + n) expressions and |
| the like. */ |
| |
| /* Return the name of the current host/target character set. The |
| result is owned by the charset module; the caller should not free |
| it. */ |
| const char *host_charset (void); |
| const char *target_charset (struct gdbarch *gdbarch); |
| const char *target_wide_charset (struct gdbarch *gdbarch); |
| |
| /* These values are used to specify the type of transliteration done |
| by convert_between_encodings. */ |
| enum transliterations |
| { |
| /* Error on failure to convert. */ |
| translit_none, |
| /* Transliterate to host char. */ |
| translit_char |
| }; |
| |
| /* Convert between two encodings. |
| |
| FROM is the name of the source encoding. |
| TO is the name of the target encoding. |
| BYTES holds the bytes to convert; this is assumed to be characters |
| in the target encoding. |
| NUM_BYTES is the number of bytes. |
| WIDTH is the width of a character from the FROM charset, in bytes. |
| For a variable width encoding, WIDTH should be the size of a "base |
| character". |
| OUTPUT is an obstack where the converted data is written. The |
| caller is responsible for initializing the obstack, and for |
| destroying the obstack should an error occur. |
| TRANSLIT specifies how invalid conversions should be handled. */ |
| |
| void convert_between_encodings (const char *from, const char *to, |
| const gdb_byte *bytes, |
| unsigned int num_bytes, |
| int width, struct obstack *output, |
| enum transliterations translit); |
| |
| |
| /* These values are used by wchar_iterate to report errors. */ |
| enum wchar_iterate_result |
| { |
| /* Ordinary return. */ |
| wchar_iterate_ok, |
| /* Invalid input sequence. */ |
| wchar_iterate_invalid, |
| /* Incomplete input sequence at the end of the input. */ |
| wchar_iterate_incomplete, |
| /* EOF. */ |
| wchar_iterate_eof |
| }; |
| |
| /* An iterator that returns host wchar_t's from a target string. */ |
| class wchar_iterator |
| { |
| public: |
| |
| /* Create a new character iterator which returns wchar_t's. INPUT is |
| the input buffer. BYTES is the number of bytes in the input |
| buffer. CHARSET is the name of the character set in which INPUT is |
| encoded. WIDTH is the number of bytes in a base character of |
| CHARSET. |
| |
| This constructor can throw on error. */ |
| wchar_iterator (const gdb_byte *input, size_t bytes, const char *charset, |
| size_t width); |
| |
| ~wchar_iterator (); |
| |
| /* Perform a single iteration of a wchar_t iterator. |
| |
| Returns the number of characters converted. A negative result |
| means that EOF has been reached. A positive result indicates the |
| number of valid wchar_ts in the result; *OUT_CHARS is updated to |
| point to the first valid character. |
| |
| In all cases aside from EOF, *PTR is set to point to the first |
| converted target byte. *LEN is set to the number of bytes |
| converted. |
| |
| A zero result means one of several unusual results. *OUT_RESULT is |
| set to indicate the type of un-ordinary return. |
| |
| wchar_iterate_invalid means that an invalid input character was |
| seen. The iterator is advanced by WIDTH (the argument to |
| the wchar_iterator constructor) bytes. |
| |
| wchar_iterate_incomplete means that an incomplete character was |
| seen at the end of the input sequence. |
| |
| wchar_iterate_eof means that all bytes were successfully |
| converted. The other output arguments are not set. */ |
| int iterate (enum wchar_iterate_result *out_result, gdb_wchar_t **out_chars, |
| const gdb_byte **ptr, size_t *len); |
| |
| private: |
| |
| /* The underlying iconv descriptor. */ |
| #ifdef PHONY_ICONV |
| int m_desc; |
| #else |
| iconv_t m_desc; |
| #endif |
| |
| /* The input string. This is updated as we convert characters. */ |
| const gdb_byte *m_input; |
| /* The number of bytes remaining in the input. */ |
| size_t m_bytes; |
| |
| /* The width of an input character. */ |
| size_t m_width; |
| |
| /* The output buffer. */ |
| gdb::def_vector<gdb_wchar_t> m_out; |
| }; |
| |
| |
| |
| /* GDB needs to know a few details of its execution character set. |
| This knowledge is isolated here and in charset.c. */ |
| |
| /* The escape character. */ |
| #define HOST_ESCAPE_CHAR 27 |
| |
| /* Convert a letter, like 'c', to its corresponding control |
| character. */ |
| char host_letter_to_control_character (char c); |
| |
| /* Convert a hex digit character to its numeric value. E.g., 'f' is |
| converted to 15. This function assumes that C is a valid hex |
| digit. Both upper- and lower-case letters are recognized. */ |
| int host_hex_value (char c); |
| |
| #endif /* CHARSET_H */ |