GNU bug report logs -
#6705
w32 cmdproxy.c pass args to cygwin; erroneous charset conversion (problem description, solution/suggestion)
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Message #31 received at 6705 <at> debbugs.gnu.org (full text, mbox):
Eli Zaretskii wrote:
>> Date: Thu, 22 Jul 2010 23:59:09 +0300
>> From: Laimonas Vėbra<laimonas.vebra <at> gmail.com>
>> CC: 6705 <at> debbugs.gnu.org
>>
>> Eli Zaretskii wrote:
>>
>>> Sorry, I cannot understand your comments. You talk about corrupted
>>> conversion, but never add any detailed explanations, just examples.
>>> Could you please elaborate?
>>
>> That was supposed to be detailed explanations through the detailed
>> examples. It is the way it happens. I did check/investigate;
>
> I don't doubt that you checked, I just don't understand the
> description of the problem.
>
> Once again, if all you want to say is that you want to invoke external
> programs with command-line arguments encoded in anything other than
> the current locale's encoding, then this will not currently work in
> the native Windows build. But if you are trying to say anything else,
> please elaborate.
Well, it will work. It's not the problem to pass utf-8 arguments to
natvive (mingw) apps. It won't work with cygwin, and that „won't work“
is not for sure (it can, under some circumstances, and i'd say inproper
setup). So i think i should elaborate.
> None of it. Perhaps instead of going by example, just describe what
> encoding you used, in what Emacs command, and what was corrupted as
> result.
Ok, from the begining.
I'd like to grep for some utf-8 encoded string. Choose it whatever (non
ascii) value you like, let's say 'ĔĿİ' (hex: 0x[C494, C4BF, C4B0]).
echo -e "-ĔĿİ-\n_ĔĿİ_\nELI\nĔĿİ" > file.txt
grep --version
GNU grep 2.6.3 (cygwin)
wscript.echo (GetLocale())
1063
http://www.cryer.co.uk/brian/windows/info_windows_locale_table.htm
LANG="" (that means not set, cygwin default value "C.UTF-8")
M-x grep
grep -nH -e "ĔĿİ" file.txt
Grep finished with no matches found at Fri Jul 23 13:56:22
Why?
Because:
grep.c gets args "ĔĿİ" (utf-8 string, hex: 0x[C384, E2809D, C384,
C3A6, C384, C2B0]).
Why?
Because original string value 0x[C494, C4BF, C4B0] in interpreted to be
in the current locale codepage (cp1257) encoding/charset:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/goglobal/cc305150.aspx
and is interpreted (by the cygwin/os api) as six characters: 0x (C4, 94,
C4, BF, C4, B0); i.e. 'ĔĿİ', converted to utf-16 and then to utf-8.
> I didn't try to imply that Cygwin was the problem. I was suggesting
> to use the Cygwin build of Emacs. Why do you insist on using the
> native w32 build, when it is obvious that the compatibility between
> what it does and what Cygwin expects is marginal at best?
I tried to imply, that cygwin tools is mature/consistent enough for the
w32 to work with. And from that point of view there is no advantage of
using cygwin Emacs build instead of native one (cygwin build is slower
and potentially more buggy)
> Yes. But it doesn't make sense to do this kind of surgery in Emacs
> without benefiting from the *W APIs all over, does it?
Why? We benefit at least in that sense, that both of them (native and
cygwin app) will work (correctly) on w32. As correctly as it's possible
with the current code.
In other words -- (why) do you think it's not worth to tune Emacs with
cygwin system (plenty of useful tools; especially if we think about
working (efficiently, the same) with emacs on different systems: *nix, w32)?
This bug report was last modified 3 years and 88 days ago.
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Copyright (C) 1999 Darren O. Benham,
1997,2003 nCipher Corporation Ltd,
1994-97 Ian Jackson.