1 /* CPP Library - charsets 2 Copyright (C) 1998-2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 3 4 Broken out of c-lex.c Apr 2003, adding valid C99 UCN ranges. 5 6 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it 7 under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the 8 Free Software Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option) any 9 later version. 10 11 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, 12 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of 13 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the 14 GNU General Public License for more details. 15 16 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License 17 along with this program; see the file COPYING3. If not see 18 <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */ 19 20 #include "config.h" 21 #include "system.h" 22 #include "cpplib.h" 23 #include "internal.h" 24 25 /* Character set handling for C-family languages. 26 27 Terminological note: In what follows, "charset" or "character set" 28 will be taken to mean both an abstract set of characters and an 29 encoding for that set. 30 31 The C99 standard discusses two character sets: source and execution. 32 The source character set is used for internal processing in translation 33 phases 1 through 4; the execution character set is used thereafter. 34 Both are required by 5.2.1.2p1 to be multibyte encodings, not wide 35 character encodings (see 3.7.2, 3.7.3 for the standardese meanings 36 of these terms). Furthermore, the "basic character set" (listed in 37 5.2.1p3) is to be encoded in each with values one byte wide, and is 38 to appear in the initial shift state. 39 40 It is not explicitly mentioned, but there is also a "wide execution 41 character set" used to encode wide character constants and wide 42 string literals; this is supposed to be the result of applying the 43 standard library function mbstowcs() to an equivalent narrow string 44 (6.4.5p5). However, the behavior of hexadecimal and octal 45 \-escapes is at odds with this; they are supposed to be translated 46 directly to wchar_t values (6.4.4.4p5,6). 47 48 The source character set is not necessarily the character set used 49 to encode physical source files on disk; translation phase 1 converts 50 from whatever that encoding is to the source character set. 51 52 The presence of universal character names in C99 (6.4.3 et seq.) 53 forces the source character set to be isomorphic to ISO 10646, 54 that is, Unicode. There is no such constraint on the execution 55 character set; note also that the conversion from source to 56 execution character set does not occur for identifiers (5.1.1.2p1#5). 57 58 For convenience of implementation, the source character set's 59 encoding of the basic character set should be identical to the 60 execution character set OF THE HOST SYSTEM's encoding of the basic 61 character set, and it should not be a state-dependent encoding. 62 63 cpplib uses UTF-8 or UTF-EBCDIC for the source character set, 64 depending on whether the host is based on ASCII or EBCDIC (see 65 respectively Unicode section 2.3/ISO10646 Amendment 2, and Unicode 66 Technical Report #16). With limited exceptions, it relies on the 67 system library's iconv() primitive to do charset conversion 68 (specified in SUSv2). */ 69 70 #if !HAVE_ICONV 71 /* Make certain that the uses of iconv(), iconv_open(), iconv_close() 72 below, which are guarded only by if statements with compile-time 73 constant conditions, do not cause link errors. */ 74 #define iconv_open(x, y) (errno = EINVAL, (iconv_t)-1) 75 #define iconv(a,b,c,d,e) (errno = EINVAL, (size_t)-1) 76 #define iconv_close(x) (void)0 77 #define ICONV_CONST 78 #endif 79 80 #if HOST_CHARSET == HOST_CHARSET_ASCII 81 #define SOURCE_CHARSET "UTF-8" 82 #define LAST_POSSIBLY_BASIC_SOURCE_CHAR 0x7e 83 #elif HOST_CHARSET == HOST_CHARSET_EBCDIC 84 #define SOURCE_CHARSET "UTF-EBCDIC" 85 #define LAST_POSSIBLY_BASIC_SOURCE_CHAR 0xFF 86 #else 87 #error "Unrecognized basic host character set" 88 #endif 89 90 #ifndef EILSEQ 91 #define EILSEQ EINVAL 92 #endif 93 94 /* This structure is used for a resizable string buffer throughout. */ 95 /* Don't call it strbuf, as that conflicts with unistd.h on systems 96 such as DYNIX/ptx where unistd.h includes stropts.h. */ 97 struct _cpp_strbuf 98 { 99 uchar *text; 100 size_t asize; 101 size_t len; 102 }; 103 104 /* This is enough to hold any string that fits on a single 80-column 105 line, even if iconv quadruples its size (e.g. conversion from 106 ASCII to UTF-32) rounded up to a power of two. */ 107 #define OUTBUF_BLOCK_SIZE 256 108 109 /* Conversions between UTF-8 and UTF-16/32 are implemented by custom 110 logic. This is because a depressing number of systems lack iconv, 111 or have have iconv libraries that do not do these conversions, so 112 we need a fallback implementation for them. To ensure the fallback 113 doesn't break due to neglect, it is used on all systems. 114 115 UTF-32 encoding is nice and simple: a four-byte binary number, 116 constrained to the range 00000000-7FFFFFFF to avoid questions of 117 signedness. We do have to cope with big- and little-endian 118 variants. 119 120 UTF-16 encoding uses two-byte binary numbers, again in big- and 121 little-endian variants, for all values in the 00000000-0000FFFF 122 range. Values in the 00010000-0010FFFF range are encoded as pairs 123 of two-byte numbers, called "surrogate pairs": given a number S in 124 this range, it is mapped to a pair (H, L) as follows: 125 126 H = (S - 0x10000) / 0x400 + 0xD800 127 L = (S - 0x10000) % 0x400 + 0xDC00 128 129 Two-byte values in the D800...DFFF range are ill-formed except as a 130 component of a surrogate pair. Even if the encoding within a 131 two-byte value is little-endian, the H member of the surrogate pair 132 comes first. 133 134 There is no way to encode values in the 00110000-7FFFFFFF range, 135 which is not currently a problem as there are no assigned code 136 points in that range; however, the author expects that it will 137 eventually become necessary to abandon UTF-16 due to this 138 limitation. Note also that, because of these pairs, UTF-16 does 139 not meet the requirements of the C standard for a wide character 140 encoding (see 3.7.3 and 6.4.4.4p11). 141 142 UTF-8 encoding looks like this: 143 144 value range encoded as 145 00000000-0000007F 0xxxxxxx 146 00000080-000007FF 110xxxxx 10xxxxxx 147 00000800-0000FFFF 1110xxxx 10xxxxxx 10xxxxxx 148 00010000-001FFFFF 11110xxx 10xxxxxx 10xxxxxx 10xxxxxx 149 00200000-03FFFFFF 111110xx 10xxxxxx 10xxxxxx 10xxxxxx 10xxxxxx 150 04000000-7FFFFFFF 1111110x 10xxxxxx 10xxxxxx 10xxxxxx 10xxxxxx 10xxxxxx 151 152 Values in the 0000D800 ... 0000DFFF range (surrogates) are invalid, 153 which means that three-byte sequences ED xx yy, with A0 <= xx <= BF, 154 never occur. Note also that any value that can be encoded by a 155 given row of the table can also be encoded by all successive rows, 156 but this is not done; only the shortest possible encoding for any 157 given value is valid. For instance, the character 07C0 could be 158 encoded as any of DF 80, E0 9F 80, F0 80 9F 80, F8 80 80 9F 80, or 159 FC 80 80 80 9F 80. Only the first is valid. 160 161 An implementation note: the transformation from UTF-16 to UTF-8, or 162 vice versa, is easiest done by using UTF-32 as an intermediary. */ 163 164 /* Internal primitives which go from an UTF-8 byte stream to native-endian 165 UTF-32 in a cppchar_t, or vice versa; this avoids an extra marshal/unmarshal 166 operation in several places below. */ 167 static inline int 168 one_utf8_to_cppchar (const uchar **inbufp, size_t *inbytesleftp, 169 cppchar_t *cp) 170 { 171 static const uchar masks[6] = { 0x7F, 0x1F, 0x0F, 0x07, 0x03, 0x01 }; 172 static const uchar patns[6] = { 0x00, 0xC0, 0xE0, 0xF0, 0xF8, 0xFC }; 173 174 cppchar_t c; 175 const uchar *inbuf = *inbufp; 176 size_t nbytes, i; 177 178 if (*inbytesleftp < 1) 179 return EINVAL; 180 181 c = *inbuf; 182 if (c < 0x80) 183 { 184 *cp = c; 185 *inbytesleftp -= 1; 186 *inbufp += 1; 187 return 0; 188 } 189 190 /* The number of leading 1-bits in the first byte indicates how many 191 bytes follow. */ 192 for (nbytes = 2; nbytes < 7; nbytes++) 193 if ((c & ~masks[nbytes-1]) == patns[nbytes-1]) 194 goto found; 195 return EILSEQ; 196 found: 197 198 if (*inbytesleftp < nbytes) 199 return EINVAL; 200 201 c = (c & masks[nbytes-1]); 202 inbuf++; 203 for (i = 1; i < nbytes; i++) 204 { 205 cppchar_t n = *inbuf++; 206 if ((n & 0xC0) != 0x80) 207 return EILSEQ; 208 c = ((c << 6) + (n & 0x3F)); 209 } 210 211 /* Make sure the shortest possible encoding was used. */ 212 if (c <= 0x7F && nbytes > 1) return EILSEQ; 213 if (c <= 0x7FF && nbytes > 2) return EILSEQ; 214 if (c <= 0xFFFF && nbytes > 3) return EILSEQ; 215 if (c <= 0x1FFFFF && nbytes > 4) return EILSEQ; 216 if (c <= 0x3FFFFFF && nbytes > 5) return EILSEQ; 217 218 /* Make sure the character is valid. */ 219 if (c > 0x7FFFFFFF || (c >= 0xD800 && c <= 0xDFFF)) return EILSEQ; 220 221 *cp = c; 222 *inbufp = inbuf; 223 *inbytesleftp -= nbytes; 224 return 0; 225 } 226 227 static inline int 228 one_cppchar_to_utf8 (cppchar_t c, uchar **outbufp, size_t *outbytesleftp) 229 { 230 static const uchar masks[6] = { 0x00, 0xC0, 0xE0, 0xF0, 0xF8, 0xFC }; 231 static const uchar limits[6] = { 0x80, 0xE0, 0xF0, 0xF8, 0xFC, 0xFE }; 232 size_t nbytes; 233 uchar buf[6], *p = &buf[6]; 234 uchar *outbuf = *outbufp; 235 236 nbytes = 1; 237 if (c < 0x80) 238 *--p = c; 239 else 240 { 241 do 242 { 243 *--p = ((c & 0x3F) | 0x80); 244 c >>= 6; 245 nbytes++; 246 } 247 while (c >= 0x3F || (c & limits[nbytes-1])); 248 *--p = (c | masks[nbytes-1]); 249 } 250 251 if (*outbytesleftp < nbytes) 252 return E2BIG; 253 254 while (p < &buf[6]) 255 *outbuf++ = *p++; 256 *outbytesleftp -= nbytes; 257 *outbufp = outbuf; 258 return 0; 259 } 260 261 /* The following four functions transform one character between the two 262 encodings named in the function name. All have the signature 263 int (*)(iconv_t bigend, const uchar **inbufp, size_t *inbytesleftp, 264 uchar **outbufp, size_t *outbytesleftp) 265 266 BIGEND must have the value 0 or 1, coerced to (iconv_t); it is 267 interpreted as a boolean indicating whether big-endian or 268 little-endian encoding is to be used for the member of the pair 269 that is not UTF-8. 270 271 INBUFP, INBYTESLEFTP, OUTBUFP, OUTBYTESLEFTP work exactly as they 272 do for iconv. 273 274 The return value is either 0 for success, or an errno value for 275 failure, which may be E2BIG (need more space), EILSEQ (ill-formed 276 input sequence), ir EINVAL (incomplete input sequence). */ 277 278 static inline int 279 one_utf8_to_utf32 (iconv_t bigend, const uchar **inbufp, size_t *inbytesleftp, 280 uchar **outbufp, size_t *outbytesleftp) 281 { 282 uchar *outbuf; 283 cppchar_t s = 0; 284 int rval; 285 286 /* Check for space first, since we know exactly how much we need. */ 287 if (*outbytesleftp < 4) 288 return E2BIG; 289 290 rval = one_utf8_to_cppchar (inbufp, inbytesleftp, &s); 291 if (rval) 292 return rval; 293 294 outbuf = *outbufp; 295 outbuf[bigend ? 3 : 0] = (s & 0x000000FF); 296 outbuf[bigend ? 2 : 1] = (s & 0x0000FF00) >> 8; 297 outbuf[bigend ? 1 : 2] = (s & 0x00FF0000) >> 16; 298 outbuf[bigend ? 0 : 3] = (s & 0xFF000000) >> 24; 299 300 *outbufp += 4; 301 *outbytesleftp -= 4; 302 return 0; 303 } 304 305 static inline int 306 one_utf32_to_utf8 (iconv_t bigend, const uchar **inbufp, size_t *inbytesleftp, 307 uchar **outbufp, size_t *outbytesleftp) 308 { 309 cppchar_t s; 310 int rval; 311 const uchar *inbuf; 312 313 if (*inbytesleftp < 4) 314 return EINVAL; 315 316 inbuf = *inbufp; 317 318 s = inbuf[bigend ? 0 : 3] << 24; 319 s += inbuf[bigend ? 1 : 2] << 16; 320 s += inbuf[bigend ? 2 : 1] << 8; 321 s += inbuf[bigend ? 3 : 0]; 322 323 if (s >= 0x7FFFFFFF || (s >= 0xD800 && s <= 0xDFFF)) 324 return EILSEQ; 325 326 rval = one_cppchar_to_utf8 (s, outbufp, outbytesleftp); 327 if (rval) 328 return rval; 329 330 *inbufp += 4; 331 *inbytesleftp -= 4; 332 return 0; 333 } 334 335 static inline int 336 one_utf8_to_utf16 (iconv_t bigend, const uchar **inbufp, size_t *inbytesleftp, 337 uchar **outbufp, size_t *outbytesleftp) 338 { 339 int rval; 340 cppchar_t s = 0; 341 const uchar *save_inbuf = *inbufp; 342 size_t save_inbytesleft = *inbytesleftp; 343 uchar *outbuf = *outbufp; 344 345 rval = one_utf8_to_cppchar (inbufp, inbytesleftp, &s); 346 if (rval) 347 return rval; 348 349 if (s > 0x0010FFFF) 350 { 351 *inbufp = save_inbuf; 352 *inbytesleftp = save_inbytesleft; 353 return EILSEQ; 354 } 355 356 if (s < 0xFFFF) 357 { 358 if (*outbytesleftp < 2) 359 { 360 *inbufp = save_inbuf; 361 *inbytesleftp = save_inbytesleft; 362 return E2BIG; 363 } 364 outbuf[bigend ? 1 : 0] = (s & 0x00FF); 365 outbuf[bigend ? 0 : 1] = (s & 0xFF00) >> 8; 366 367 *outbufp += 2; 368 *outbytesleftp -= 2; 369 return 0; 370 } 371 else 372 { 373 cppchar_t hi, lo; 374 375 if (*outbytesleftp < 4) 376 { 377 *inbufp = save_inbuf; 378 *inbytesleftp = save_inbytesleft; 379 return E2BIG; 380 } 381 382 hi = (s - 0x10000) / 0x400 + 0xD800; 383 lo = (s - 0x10000) % 0x400 + 0xDC00; 384 385 /* Even if we are little-endian, put the high surrogate first. 386 ??? Matches practice? */ 387 outbuf[bigend ? 1 : 0] = (hi & 0x00FF); 388 outbuf[bigend ? 0 : 1] = (hi & 0xFF00) >> 8; 389 outbuf[bigend ? 3 : 2] = (lo & 0x00FF); 390 outbuf[bigend ? 2 : 3] = (lo & 0xFF00) >> 8; 391 392 *outbufp += 4; 393 *outbytesleftp -= 4; 394 return 0; 395 } 396 } 397 398 static inline int 399 one_utf16_to_utf8 (iconv_t bigend, const uchar **inbufp, size_t *inbytesleftp, 400 uchar **outbufp, size_t *outbytesleftp) 401 { 402 cppchar_t s; 403 const uchar *inbuf = *inbufp; 404 int rval; 405 406 if (*inbytesleftp < 2) 407 return EINVAL; 408 s = inbuf[bigend ? 0 : 1] << 8; 409 s += inbuf[bigend ? 1 : 0]; 410 411 /* Low surrogate without immediately preceding high surrogate is invalid. */ 412 if (s >= 0xDC00 && s <= 0xDFFF) 413 return EILSEQ; 414 /* High surrogate must have a following low surrogate. */ 415 else if (s >= 0xD800 && s <= 0xDBFF) 416 { 417 cppchar_t hi = s, lo; 418 if (*inbytesleftp < 4) 419 return EINVAL; 420 421 lo = inbuf[bigend ? 2 : 3] << 8; 422 lo += inbuf[bigend ? 3 : 2]; 423 424 if (lo < 0xDC00 || lo > 0xDFFF) 425 return EILSEQ; 426 427 s = (hi - 0xD800) * 0x400 + (lo - 0xDC00) + 0x10000; 428 } 429 430 rval = one_cppchar_to_utf8 (s, outbufp, outbytesleftp); 431 if (rval) 432 return rval; 433 434 /* Success - update the input pointers (one_cppchar_to_utf8 has done 435 the output pointers for us). */ 436 if (s <= 0xFFFF) 437 { 438 *inbufp += 2; 439 *inbytesleftp -= 2; 440 } 441 else 442 { 443 *inbufp += 4; 444 *inbytesleftp -= 4; 445 } 446 return 0; 447 } 448 449 /* Helper routine for the next few functions. The 'const' on 450 one_conversion means that we promise not to modify what function is 451 pointed to, which lets the inliner see through it. */ 452 453 static inline bool 454 conversion_loop (int (*const one_conversion)(iconv_t, const uchar **, size_t *, 455 uchar **, size_t *), 456 iconv_t cd, const uchar *from, size_t flen, struct _cpp_strbuf *to) 457 { 458 const uchar *inbuf; 459 uchar *outbuf; 460 size_t inbytesleft, outbytesleft; 461 int rval; 462 463 inbuf = from; 464 inbytesleft = flen; 465 outbuf = to->text + to->len; 466 outbytesleft = to->asize - to->len; 467 468 for (;;) 469 { 470 do 471 rval = one_conversion (cd, &inbuf, &inbytesleft, 472 &outbuf, &outbytesleft); 473 while (inbytesleft && !rval); 474 475 if (__builtin_expect (inbytesleft == 0, 1)) 476 { 477 to->len = to->asize - outbytesleft; 478 return true; 479 } 480 if (rval != E2BIG) 481 { 482 errno = rval; 483 return false; 484 } 485 486 outbytesleft += OUTBUF_BLOCK_SIZE; 487 to->asize += OUTBUF_BLOCK_SIZE; 488 to->text = XRESIZEVEC (uchar, to->text, to->asize); 489 outbuf = to->text + to->asize - outbytesleft; 490 } 491 } 492 493 494 /* These functions convert entire strings between character sets. 495 They all have the signature 496 497 bool (*)(iconv_t cd, const uchar *from, size_t flen, struct _cpp_strbuf *to); 498 499 The input string FROM is converted as specified by the function 500 name plus the iconv descriptor CD (which may be fake), and the 501 result appended to TO. On any error, false is returned, otherwise true. */ 502 503 /* These four use the custom conversion code above. */ 504 static bool 505 convert_utf8_utf16 (iconv_t cd, const uchar *from, size_t flen, 506 struct _cpp_strbuf *to) 507 { 508 return conversion_loop (one_utf8_to_utf16, cd, from, flen, to); 509 } 510 511 static bool 512 convert_utf8_utf32 (iconv_t cd, const uchar *from, size_t flen, 513 struct _cpp_strbuf *to) 514 { 515 return conversion_loop (one_utf8_to_utf32, cd, from, flen, to); 516 } 517 518 static bool 519 convert_utf16_utf8 (iconv_t cd, const uchar *from, size_t flen, 520 struct _cpp_strbuf *to) 521 { 522 return conversion_loop (one_utf16_to_utf8, cd, from, flen, to); 523 } 524 525 static bool 526 convert_utf32_utf8 (iconv_t cd, const uchar *from, size_t flen, 527 struct _cpp_strbuf *to) 528 { 529 return conversion_loop (one_utf32_to_utf8, cd, from, flen, to); 530 } 531 532 /* Identity conversion, used when we have no alternative. */ 533 static bool 534 convert_no_conversion (iconv_t cd ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED, 535 const uchar *from, size_t flen, struct _cpp_strbuf *to) 536 { 537 if (to->len + flen > to->asize) 538 { 539 to->asize = to->len + flen; 540 to->text = XRESIZEVEC (uchar, to->text, to->asize); 541 } 542 memcpy (to->text + to->len, from, flen); 543 to->len += flen; 544 return true; 545 } 546 547 /* And this one uses the system iconv primitive. It's a little 548 different, since iconv's interface is a little different. */ 549 #if HAVE_ICONV 550 551 #define CONVERT_ICONV_GROW_BUFFER \ 552 do { \ 553 outbytesleft += OUTBUF_BLOCK_SIZE; \ 554 to->asize += OUTBUF_BLOCK_SIZE; \ 555 to->text = XRESIZEVEC (uchar, to->text, to->asize); \ 556 outbuf = (char *)to->text + to->asize - outbytesleft; \ 557 } while (0) 558 559 static bool 560 convert_using_iconv (iconv_t cd, const uchar *from, size_t flen, 561 struct _cpp_strbuf *to) 562 { 563 ICONV_CONST char *inbuf; 564 char *outbuf; 565 size_t inbytesleft, outbytesleft; 566 567 /* Reset conversion descriptor and check that it is valid. */ 568 if (iconv (cd, 0, 0, 0, 0) == (size_t)-1) 569 return false; 570 571 inbuf = (ICONV_CONST char *)from; 572 inbytesleft = flen; 573 outbuf = (char *)to->text + to->len; 574 outbytesleft = to->asize - to->len; 575 576 for (;;) 577 { 578 iconv (cd, &inbuf, &inbytesleft, &outbuf, &outbytesleft); 579 if (__builtin_expect (inbytesleft == 0, 1)) 580 { 581 /* Close out any shift states, returning to the initial state. */ 582 if (iconv (cd, 0, 0, &outbuf, &outbytesleft) == (size_t)-1) 583 { 584 if (errno != E2BIG) 585 return false; 586 587 CONVERT_ICONV_GROW_BUFFER; 588 if (iconv (cd, 0, 0, &outbuf, &outbytesleft) == (size_t)-1) 589 return false; 590 } 591 592 to->len = to->asize - outbytesleft; 593 return true; 594 } 595 if (errno != E2BIG) 596 return false; 597 598 CONVERT_ICONV_GROW_BUFFER; 599 } 600 } 601 #else 602 #define convert_using_iconv 0 /* prevent undefined symbol error below */ 603 #endif 604 605 /* Arrange for the above custom conversion logic to be used automatically 606 when conversion between a suitable pair of character sets is requested. */ 607 608 #define APPLY_CONVERSION(CONVERTER, FROM, FLEN, TO) \ 609 CONVERTER.func (CONVERTER.cd, FROM, FLEN, TO) 610 611 struct conversion 612 { 613 const char *pair; 614 convert_f func; 615 iconv_t fake_cd; 616 }; 617 static const struct conversion conversion_tab[] = { 618 { "UTF-8/UTF-32LE", convert_utf8_utf32, (iconv_t)0 }, 619 { "UTF-8/UTF-32BE", convert_utf8_utf32, (iconv_t)1 }, 620 { "UTF-8/UTF-16LE", convert_utf8_utf16, (iconv_t)0 }, 621 { "UTF-8/UTF-16BE", convert_utf8_utf16, (iconv_t)1 }, 622 { "UTF-32LE/UTF-8", convert_utf32_utf8, (iconv_t)0 }, 623 { "UTF-32BE/UTF-8", convert_utf32_utf8, (iconv_t)1 }, 624 { "UTF-16LE/UTF-8", convert_utf16_utf8, (iconv_t)0 }, 625 { "UTF-16BE/UTF-8", convert_utf16_utf8, (iconv_t)1 }, 626 }; 627 628 /* Subroutine of cpp_init_iconv: initialize and return a 629 cset_converter structure for conversion from FROM to TO. If 630 iconv_open() fails, issue an error and return an identity 631 converter. Silently return an identity converter if FROM and TO 632 are identical. */ 633 static struct cset_converter 634 init_iconv_desc (cpp_reader *pfile, const char *to, const char *from) 635 { 636 struct cset_converter ret; 637 char *pair; 638 size_t i; 639 640 if (!strcasecmp (to, from)) 641 { 642 ret.func = convert_no_conversion; 643 ret.cd = (iconv_t) -1; 644 ret.width = -1; 645 return ret; 646 } 647 648 pair = (char *) alloca(strlen(to) + strlen(from) + 2); 649 650 strcpy(pair, from); 651 strcat(pair, "/"); 652 strcat(pair, to); 653 for (i = 0; i < ARRAY_SIZE (conversion_tab); i++) 654 if (!strcasecmp (pair, conversion_tab[i].pair)) 655 { 656 ret.func = conversion_tab[i].func; 657 ret.cd = conversion_tab[i].fake_cd; 658 ret.width = -1; 659 return ret; 660 } 661 662 /* No custom converter - try iconv. */ 663 if (HAVE_ICONV) 664 { 665 ret.func = convert_using_iconv; 666 ret.cd = iconv_open (to, from); 667 ret.width = -1; 668 669 if (ret.cd == (iconv_t) -1) 670 { 671 if (errno == EINVAL) 672 cpp_error (pfile, CPP_DL_ERROR, /* FIXME should be DL_SORRY */ 673 "conversion from %s to %s not supported by iconv", 674 from, to); 675 else 676 cpp_errno (pfile, CPP_DL_ERROR, "iconv_open"); 677 678 ret.func = convert_no_conversion; 679 } 680 } 681 else 682 { 683 cpp_error (pfile, CPP_DL_ERROR, /* FIXME: should be DL_SORRY */ 684 "no iconv implementation, cannot convert from %s to %s", 685 from, to); 686 ret.func = convert_no_conversion; 687 ret.cd = (iconv_t) -1; 688 ret.width = -1; 689 } 690 return ret; 691 } 692 693 /* If charset conversion is requested, initialize iconv(3) descriptors 694 for conversion from the source character set to the execution 695 character sets. If iconv is not present in the C library, and 696 conversion is requested, issue an error. */ 697 698 void 699 cpp_init_iconv (cpp_reader *pfile) 700 { 701 const char *ncset = CPP_OPTION (pfile, narrow_charset); 702 const char *wcset = CPP_OPTION (pfile, wide_charset); 703 const char *default_wcset; 704 705 bool be = CPP_OPTION (pfile, bytes_big_endian); 706 707 if (CPP_OPTION (pfile, wchar_precision) >= 32) 708 default_wcset = be ? "UTF-32BE" : "UTF-32LE"; 709 else if (CPP_OPTION (pfile, wchar_precision) >= 16) 710 default_wcset = be ? "UTF-16BE" : "UTF-16LE"; 711 else 712 /* This effectively means that wide strings are not supported, 713 so don't do any conversion at all. */ 714 default_wcset = SOURCE_CHARSET; 715 716 if (!ncset) 717 ncset = SOURCE_CHARSET; 718 if (!wcset) 719 wcset = default_wcset; 720 721 pfile->narrow_cset_desc = init_iconv_desc (pfile, ncset, SOURCE_CHARSET); 722 pfile->narrow_cset_desc.width = CPP_OPTION (pfile, char_precision); 723 pfile->utf8_cset_desc = init_iconv_desc (pfile, "UTF-8", SOURCE_CHARSET); 724 pfile->utf8_cset_desc.width = CPP_OPTION (pfile, char_precision); 725 pfile->char16_cset_desc = init_iconv_desc (pfile, 726 be ? "UTF-16BE" : "UTF-16LE", 727 SOURCE_CHARSET); 728 pfile->char16_cset_desc.width = 16; 729 pfile->char32_cset_desc = init_iconv_desc (pfile, 730 be ? "UTF-32BE" : "UTF-32LE", 731 SOURCE_CHARSET); 732 pfile->char32_cset_desc.width = 32; 733 pfile->wide_cset_desc = init_iconv_desc (pfile, wcset, SOURCE_CHARSET); 734 pfile->wide_cset_desc.width = CPP_OPTION (pfile, wchar_precision); 735 } 736 737 /* Destroy iconv(3) descriptors set up by cpp_init_iconv, if necessary. */ 738 void 739 _cpp_destroy_iconv (cpp_reader *pfile) 740 { 741 if (HAVE_ICONV) 742 { 743 if (pfile->narrow_cset_desc.func == convert_using_iconv) 744 iconv_close (pfile->narrow_cset_desc.cd); 745 if (pfile->utf8_cset_desc.func == convert_using_iconv) 746 iconv_close (pfile->utf8_cset_desc.cd); 747 if (pfile->char16_cset_desc.func == convert_using_iconv) 748 iconv_close (pfile->char16_cset_desc.cd); 749 if (pfile->char32_cset_desc.func == convert_using_iconv) 750 iconv_close (pfile->char32_cset_desc.cd); 751 if (pfile->wide_cset_desc.func == convert_using_iconv) 752 iconv_close (pfile->wide_cset_desc.cd); 753 } 754 } 755 756 /* Utility routine for use by a full compiler. C is a character taken 757 from the *basic* source character set, encoded in the host's 758 execution encoding. Convert it to (the target's) execution 759 encoding, and return that value. 760 761 Issues an internal error if C's representation in the narrow 762 execution character set fails to be a single-byte value (C99 763 5.2.1p3: "The representation of each member of the source and 764 execution character sets shall fit in a byte.") May also issue an 765 internal error if C fails to be a member of the basic source 766 character set (testing this exactly is too hard, especially when 767 the host character set is EBCDIC). */ 768 cppchar_t 769 cpp_host_to_exec_charset (cpp_reader *pfile, cppchar_t c) 770 { 771 uchar sbuf[1]; 772 struct _cpp_strbuf tbuf; 773 774 /* This test is merely an approximation, but it suffices to catch 775 the most important thing, which is that we don't get handed a 776 character outside the unibyte range of the host character set. */ 777 if (c > LAST_POSSIBLY_BASIC_SOURCE_CHAR) 778 { 779 cpp_error (pfile, CPP_DL_ICE, 780 "character 0x%lx is not in the basic source character set\n", 781 (unsigned long)c); 782 return 0; 783 } 784 785 /* Being a character in the unibyte range of the host character set, 786 we can safely splat it into a one-byte buffer and trust that that 787 is a well-formed string. */ 788 sbuf[0] = c; 789 790 /* This should never need to reallocate, but just in case... */ 791 tbuf.asize = 1; 792 tbuf.text = XNEWVEC (uchar, tbuf.asize); 793 tbuf.len = 0; 794 795 if (!APPLY_CONVERSION (pfile->narrow_cset_desc, sbuf, 1, &tbuf)) 796 { 797 cpp_errno (pfile, CPP_DL_ICE, "converting to execution character set"); 798 return 0; 799 } 800 if (tbuf.len != 1) 801 { 802 cpp_error (pfile, CPP_DL_ICE, 803 "character 0x%lx is not unibyte in execution character set", 804 (unsigned long)c); 805 return 0; 806 } 807 c = tbuf.text[0]; 808 free(tbuf.text); 809 return c; 810 } 811 812 813 814 /* Utility routine that computes a mask of the form 0000...111... with 815 WIDTH 1-bits. */ 816 static inline size_t 817 width_to_mask (size_t width) 818 { 819 width = MIN (width, BITS_PER_CPPCHAR_T); 820 if (width >= CHAR_BIT * sizeof (size_t)) 821 return ~(size_t) 0; 822 else 823 return ((size_t) 1 << width) - 1; 824 } 825 826 /* A large table of unicode character information. */ 827 enum { 828 /* Valid in a C99 identifier? */ 829 C99 = 1, 830 /* Valid in a C99 identifier, but not as the first character? */ 831 DIG = 2, 832 /* Valid in a C++ identifier? */ 833 CXX = 4, 834 /* NFC representation is not valid in an identifier? */ 835 CID = 8, 836 /* Might be valid NFC form? */ 837 NFC = 16, 838 /* Might be valid NFKC form? */ 839 NKC = 32, 840 /* Certain preceding characters might make it not valid NFC/NKFC form? */ 841 CTX = 64 842 }; 843 844 static const struct { 845 /* Bitmap of flags above. */ 846 unsigned char flags; 847 /* Combining class of the character. */ 848 unsigned char combine; 849 /* Last character in the range described by this entry. */ 850 unsigned short end; 851 } ucnranges[] = { 852 #include "ucnid.h" 853 }; 854 855 /* Returns 1 if C is valid in an identifier, 2 if C is valid except at 856 the start of an identifier, and 0 if C is not valid in an 857 identifier. We assume C has already gone through the checks of 858 _cpp_valid_ucn. Also update NST for C if returning nonzero. The 859 algorithm is a simple binary search on the table defined in 860 ucnid.h. */ 861 862 static int 863 ucn_valid_in_identifier (cpp_reader *pfile, cppchar_t c, 864 struct normalize_state *nst) 865 { 866 int mn, mx, md; 867 868 if (c > 0xFFFF) 869 return 0; 870 871 mn = 0; 872 mx = ARRAY_SIZE (ucnranges) - 1; 873 while (mx != mn) 874 { 875 md = (mn + mx) / 2; 876 if (c <= ucnranges[md].end) 877 mx = md; 878 else 879 mn = md + 1; 880 } 881 882 /* When -pedantic, we require the character to have been listed by 883 the standard for the current language. Otherwise, we accept the 884 union of the acceptable sets for C++98 and C99. */ 885 if (! (ucnranges[mn].flags & (C99 | CXX))) 886 return 0; 887 888 if (CPP_PEDANTIC (pfile) 889 && ((CPP_OPTION (pfile, c99) && !(ucnranges[mn].flags & C99)) 890 || (CPP_OPTION (pfile, cplusplus) 891 && !(ucnranges[mn].flags & CXX)))) 892 return 0; 893 894 /* Update NST. */ 895 if (ucnranges[mn].combine != 0 && ucnranges[mn].combine < nst->prev_class) 896 nst->level = normalized_none; 897 else if (ucnranges[mn].flags & CTX) 898 { 899 bool safe; 900 cppchar_t p = nst->previous; 901 902 /* Easy cases from Bengali, Oriya, Tamil, Jannada, and Malayalam. */ 903 if (c == 0x09BE) 904 safe = p != 0x09C7; /* Use 09CB instead of 09C7 09BE. */ 905 else if (c == 0x0B3E) 906 safe = p != 0x0B47; /* Use 0B4B instead of 0B47 0B3E. */ 907 else if (c == 0x0BBE) 908 safe = p != 0x0BC6 && p != 0x0BC7; /* Use 0BCA/0BCB instead. */ 909 else if (c == 0x0CC2) 910 safe = p != 0x0CC6; /* Use 0CCA instead of 0CC6 0CC2. */ 911 else if (c == 0x0D3E) 912 safe = p != 0x0D46 && p != 0x0D47; /* Use 0D4A/0D4B instead. */ 913 /* For Hangul, characters in the range AC00-D7A3 are NFC/NFKC, 914 and are combined algorithmically from a sequence of the form 915 1100-1112 1161-1175 11A8-11C2 916 (if the third is not present, it is treated as 11A7, which is not 917 really a valid character). 918 Unfortunately, C99 allows (only) the NFC form, but C++ allows 919 only the combining characters. */ 920 else if (c >= 0x1161 && c <= 0x1175) 921 safe = p < 0x1100 || p > 0x1112; 922 else if (c >= 0x11A8 && c <= 0x11C2) 923 safe = (p < 0xAC00 || p > 0xD7A3 || (p - 0xAC00) % 28 != 0); 924 else 925 { 926 /* Uh-oh, someone updated ucnid.h without updating this code. */ 927 cpp_error (pfile, CPP_DL_ICE, "Character %x might not be NFKC", c); 928 safe = true; 929 } 930 if (!safe && c < 0x1161) 931 nst->level = normalized_none; 932 else if (!safe) 933 nst->level = MAX (nst->level, normalized_identifier_C); 934 } 935 else if (ucnranges[mn].flags & NKC) 936 ; 937 else if (ucnranges[mn].flags & NFC) 938 nst->level = MAX (nst->level, normalized_C); 939 else if (ucnranges[mn].flags & CID) 940 nst->level = MAX (nst->level, normalized_identifier_C); 941 else 942 nst->level = normalized_none; 943 nst->previous = c; 944 nst->prev_class = ucnranges[mn].combine; 945 946 /* In C99, UCN digits may not begin identifiers. */ 947 if (CPP_OPTION (pfile, c99) && (ucnranges[mn].flags & DIG)) 948 return 2; 949 950 return 1; 951 } 952 953 /* [lex.charset]: The character designated by the universal character 954 name \UNNNNNNNN is that character whose character short name in 955 ISO/IEC 10646 is NNNNNNNN; the character designated by the 956 universal character name \uNNNN is that character whose character 957 short name in ISO/IEC 10646 is 0000NNNN. If the hexadecimal value 958 for a universal character name corresponds to a surrogate code point 959 (in the range 0xD800-0xDFFF, inclusive), the program is ill-formed. 960 Additionally, if the hexadecimal value for a universal-character-name 961 outside a character or string literal corresponds to a control character 962 (in either of the ranges 0x00-0x1F or 0x7F-0x9F, both inclusive) or to a 963 character in the basic source character set, the program is ill-formed. 964 965 C99 6.4.3: A universal character name shall not specify a character 966 whose short identifier is less than 00A0 other than 0024 ($), 0040 (@), 967 or 0060 (`), nor one in the range D800 through DFFF inclusive. 968 969 *PSTR must be preceded by "\u" or "\U"; it is assumed that the 970 buffer end is delimited by a non-hex digit. Returns zero if the 971 UCN has not been consumed. 972 973 Otherwise the nonzero value of the UCN, whether valid or invalid, 974 is returned. Diagnostics are emitted for invalid values. PSTR 975 is updated to point one beyond the UCN, or to the syntactically 976 invalid character. 977 978 IDENTIFIER_POS is 0 when not in an identifier, 1 for the start of 979 an identifier, or 2 otherwise. */ 980 981 cppchar_t 982 _cpp_valid_ucn (cpp_reader *pfile, const uchar **pstr, 983 const uchar *limit, int identifier_pos, 984 struct normalize_state *nst) 985 { 986 cppchar_t result, c; 987 unsigned int length; 988 const uchar *str = *pstr; 989 const uchar *base = str - 2; 990 991 if (!CPP_OPTION (pfile, cplusplus) && !CPP_OPTION (pfile, c99)) 992 cpp_error (pfile, CPP_DL_WARNING, 993 "universal character names are only valid in C++ and C99"); 994 else if (CPP_WTRADITIONAL (pfile) && identifier_pos == 0) 995 cpp_warning (pfile, CPP_W_TRADITIONAL, 996 "the meaning of '\\%c' is different in traditional C", 997 (int) str[-1]); 998 999 if (str[-1] == 'u') 1000 length = 4; 1001 else if (str[-1] == 'U') 1002 length = 8; 1003 else 1004 { 1005 cpp_error (pfile, CPP_DL_ICE, "In _cpp_valid_ucn but not a UCN"); 1006 length = 4; 1007 } 1008 1009 result = 0; 1010 do 1011 { 1012 c = *str; 1013 if (!ISXDIGIT (c)) 1014 break; 1015 str++; 1016 result = (result << 4) + hex_value (c); 1017 } 1018 while (--length && str < limit); 1019 1020 /* Partial UCNs are not valid in strings, but decompose into 1021 multiple tokens in identifiers, so we can't give a helpful 1022 error message in that case. */ 1023 if (length && identifier_pos) 1024 return 0; 1025 1026 *pstr = str; 1027 if (length) 1028 { 1029 cpp_error (pfile, CPP_DL_ERROR, 1030 "incomplete universal character name %.*s", 1031 (int) (str - base), base); 1032 result = 1; 1033 } 1034 /* The C99 standard permits $, @ and ` to be specified as UCNs. We use 1035 hex escapes so that this also works with EBCDIC hosts. 1036 C++0x permits everything below 0xa0 within literals; 1037 ucn_valid_in_identifier will complain about identifiers. */ 1038 else if ((result < 0xa0 1039 && !CPP_OPTION (pfile, cplusplus) 1040 && (result != 0x24 && result != 0x40 && result != 0x60)) 1041 || (result & 0x80000000) 1042 || (result >= 0xD800 && result <= 0xDFFF)) 1043 { 1044 cpp_error (pfile, CPP_DL_ERROR, 1045 "%.*s is not a valid universal character", 1046 (int) (str - base), base); 1047 result = 1; 1048 } 1049 else if (identifier_pos && result == 0x24 1050 && CPP_OPTION (pfile, dollars_in_ident)) 1051 { 1052 if (CPP_OPTION (pfile, warn_dollars) && !pfile->state.skipping) 1053 { 1054 CPP_OPTION (pfile, warn_dollars) = 0; 1055 cpp_error (pfile, CPP_DL_PEDWARN, "'$' in identifier or number"); 1056 } 1057 NORMALIZE_STATE_UPDATE_IDNUM (nst); 1058 } 1059 else if (identifier_pos) 1060 { 1061 int validity = ucn_valid_in_identifier (pfile, result, nst); 1062 1063 if (validity == 0) 1064 cpp_error (pfile, CPP_DL_ERROR, 1065 "universal character %.*s is not valid in an identifier", 1066 (int) (str - base), base); 1067 else if (validity == 2 && identifier_pos == 1) 1068 cpp_error (pfile, CPP_DL_ERROR, 1069 "universal character %.*s is not valid at the start of an identifier", 1070 (int) (str - base), base); 1071 } 1072 1073 if (result == 0) 1074 result = 1; 1075 1076 return result; 1077 } 1078 1079 /* Convert an UCN, pointed to by FROM, to UTF-8 encoding, then translate 1080 it to the execution character set and write the result into TBUF. 1081 An advanced pointer is returned. Issues all relevant diagnostics. */ 1082 static const uchar * 1083 convert_ucn (cpp_reader *pfile, const uchar *from, const uchar *limit, 1084 struct _cpp_strbuf *tbuf, struct cset_converter cvt) 1085 { 1086 cppchar_t ucn; 1087 uchar buf[6]; 1088 uchar *bufp = buf; 1089 size_t bytesleft = 6; 1090 int rval; 1091 struct normalize_state nst = INITIAL_NORMALIZE_STATE; 1092 1093 from++; /* Skip u/U. */ 1094 ucn = _cpp_valid_ucn (pfile, &from, limit, 0, &nst); 1095 1096 rval = one_cppchar_to_utf8 (ucn, &bufp, &bytesleft); 1097 if (rval) 1098 { 1099 errno = rval; 1100 cpp_errno (pfile, CPP_DL_ERROR, 1101 "converting UCN to source character set"); 1102 } 1103 else if (!APPLY_CONVERSION (cvt, buf, 6 - bytesleft, tbuf)) 1104 cpp_errno (pfile, CPP_DL_ERROR, 1105 "converting UCN to execution character set"); 1106 1107 return from; 1108 } 1109 1110 /* Subroutine of convert_hex and convert_oct. N is the representation 1111 in the execution character set of a numeric escape; write it into the 1112 string buffer TBUF and update the end-of-string pointer therein. WIDE 1113 is true if it's a wide string that's being assembled in TBUF. This 1114 function issues no diagnostics and never fails. */ 1115 static void 1116 emit_numeric_escape (cpp_reader *pfile, cppchar_t n, 1117 struct _cpp_strbuf *tbuf, struct cset_converter cvt) 1118 { 1119 size_t width = cvt.width; 1120 1121 if (width != CPP_OPTION (pfile, char_precision)) 1122 { 1123 /* We have to render this into the target byte order, which may not 1124 be our byte order. */ 1125 bool bigend = CPP_OPTION (pfile, bytes_big_endian); 1126 size_t cwidth = CPP_OPTION (pfile, char_precision); 1127 size_t cmask = width_to_mask (cwidth); 1128 size_t nbwc = width / cwidth; 1129 size_t i; 1130 size_t off = tbuf->len; 1131 cppchar_t c; 1132 1133 if (tbuf->len + nbwc > tbuf->asize) 1134 { 1135 tbuf->asize += OUTBUF_BLOCK_SIZE; 1136 tbuf->text = XRESIZEVEC (uchar, tbuf->text, tbuf->asize); 1137 } 1138 1139 for (i = 0; i < nbwc; i++) 1140 { 1141 c = n & cmask; 1142 n >>= cwidth; 1143 tbuf->text[off + (bigend ? nbwc - i - 1 : i)] = c; 1144 } 1145 tbuf->len += nbwc; 1146 } 1147 else 1148 { 1149 /* Note: this code does not handle the case where the target 1150 and host have a different number of bits in a byte. */ 1151 if (tbuf->len + 1 > tbuf->asize) 1152 { 1153 tbuf->asize += OUTBUF_BLOCK_SIZE; 1154 tbuf->text = XRESIZEVEC (uchar, tbuf->text, tbuf->asize); 1155 } 1156 tbuf->text[tbuf->len++] = n; 1157 } 1158 } 1159 1160 /* Convert a hexadecimal escape, pointed to by FROM, to the execution 1161 character set and write it into the string buffer TBUF. Returns an 1162 advanced pointer, and issues diagnostics as necessary. 1163 No character set translation occurs; this routine always produces the 1164 execution-set character with numeric value equal to the given hex 1165 number. You can, e.g. generate surrogate pairs this way. */ 1166 static const uchar * 1167 convert_hex (cpp_reader *pfile, const uchar *from, const uchar *limit, 1168 struct _cpp_strbuf *tbuf, struct cset_converter cvt) 1169 { 1170 cppchar_t c, n = 0, overflow = 0; 1171 int digits_found = 0; 1172 size_t width = cvt.width; 1173 size_t mask = width_to_mask (width); 1174 1175 if (CPP_WTRADITIONAL (pfile)) 1176 cpp_warning (pfile, CPP_W_TRADITIONAL, 1177 "the meaning of '\\x' is different in traditional C"); 1178 1179 from++; /* Skip 'x'. */ 1180 while (from < limit) 1181 { 1182 c = *from; 1183 if (! hex_p (c)) 1184 break; 1185 from++; 1186 overflow |= n ^ (n << 4 >> 4); 1187 n = (n << 4) + hex_value (c); 1188 digits_found = 1; 1189 } 1190 1191 if (!digits_found) 1192 { 1193 cpp_error (pfile, CPP_DL_ERROR, 1194 "\\x used with no following hex digits"); 1195 return from; 1196 } 1197 1198 if (overflow | (n != (n & mask))) 1199 { 1200 cpp_error (pfile, CPP_DL_PEDWARN, 1201 "hex escape sequence out of range"); 1202 n &= mask; 1203 } 1204 1205 emit_numeric_escape (pfile, n, tbuf, cvt); 1206 1207 return from; 1208 } 1209 1210 /* Convert an octal escape, pointed to by FROM, to the execution 1211 character set and write it into the string buffer TBUF. Returns an 1212 advanced pointer, and issues diagnostics as necessary. 1213 No character set translation occurs; this routine always produces the 1214 execution-set character with numeric value equal to the given octal 1215 number. */ 1216 static const uchar * 1217 convert_oct (cpp_reader *pfile, const uchar *from, const uchar *limit, 1218 struct _cpp_strbuf *tbuf, struct cset_converter cvt) 1219 { 1220 size_t count = 0; 1221 cppchar_t c, n = 0; 1222 size_t width = cvt.width; 1223 size_t mask = width_to_mask (width); 1224 bool overflow = false; 1225 1226 while (from < limit && count++ < 3) 1227 { 1228 c = *from; 1229 if (c < '0' || c > '7') 1230 break; 1231 from++; 1232 overflow |= n ^ (n << 3 >> 3); 1233 n = (n << 3) + c - '0'; 1234 } 1235 1236 if (n != (n & mask)) 1237 { 1238 cpp_error (pfile, CPP_DL_PEDWARN, 1239 "octal escape sequence out of range"); 1240 n &= mask; 1241 } 1242 1243 emit_numeric_escape (pfile, n, tbuf, cvt); 1244 1245 return from; 1246 } 1247 1248 /* Convert an escape sequence (pointed to by FROM) to its value on 1249 the target, and to the execution character set. Do not scan past 1250 LIMIT. Write the converted value into TBUF. Returns an advanced 1251 pointer. Handles all relevant diagnostics. */ 1252 static const uchar * 1253 convert_escape (cpp_reader *pfile, const uchar *from, const uchar *limit, 1254 struct _cpp_strbuf *tbuf, struct cset_converter cvt) 1255 { 1256 /* Values of \a \b \e \f \n \r \t \v respectively. */ 1257 #if HOST_CHARSET == HOST_CHARSET_ASCII 1258 static const uchar charconsts[] = { 7, 8, 27, 12, 10, 13, 9, 11 }; 1259 #elif HOST_CHARSET == HOST_CHARSET_EBCDIC 1260 static const uchar charconsts[] = { 47, 22, 39, 12, 21, 13, 5, 11 }; 1261 #else 1262 #error "unknown host character set" 1263 #endif 1264 1265 uchar c; 1266 1267 c = *from; 1268 switch (c) 1269 { 1270 /* UCNs, hex escapes, and octal escapes are processed separately. */ 1271 case 'u': case 'U': 1272 return convert_ucn (pfile, from, limit, tbuf, cvt); 1273 1274 case 'x': 1275 return convert_hex (pfile, from, limit, tbuf, cvt); 1276 break; 1277 1278 case '0': case '1': case '2': case '3': 1279 case '4': case '5': case '6': case '7': 1280 return convert_oct (pfile, from, limit, tbuf, cvt); 1281 1282 /* Various letter escapes. Get the appropriate host-charset 1283 value into C. */ 1284 case '\\': case '\'': case '"': case '?': break; 1285 1286 case '(': case '{': case '[': case '%': 1287 /* '\(', etc, can be used at the beginning of a line in a long 1288 string split onto multiple lines with \-newline, to prevent 1289 Emacs or other text editors from getting confused. '\%' can 1290 be used to prevent SCCS from mangling printf format strings. */ 1291 if (CPP_PEDANTIC (pfile)) 1292 goto unknown; 1293 break; 1294 1295 case 'b': c = charconsts[1]; break; 1296 case 'f': c = charconsts[3]; break; 1297 case 'n': c = charconsts[4]; break; 1298 case 'r': c = charconsts[5]; break; 1299 case 't': c = charconsts[6]; break; 1300 case 'v': c = charconsts[7]; break; 1301 1302 case 'a': 1303 if (CPP_WTRADITIONAL (pfile)) 1304 cpp_warning (pfile, CPP_W_TRADITIONAL, 1305 "the meaning of '\\a' is different in traditional C"); 1306 c = charconsts[0]; 1307 break; 1308 1309 case 'e': case 'E': 1310 if (CPP_PEDANTIC (pfile)) 1311 cpp_error (pfile, CPP_DL_PEDWARN, 1312 "non-ISO-standard escape sequence, '\\%c'", (int) c); 1313 c = charconsts[2]; 1314 break; 1315 1316 default: 1317 unknown: 1318 if (ISGRAPH (c)) 1319 cpp_error (pfile, CPP_DL_PEDWARN, 1320 "unknown escape sequence: '\\%c'", (int) c); 1321 else 1322 { 1323 /* diagnostic.c does not support "%03o". When it does, this 1324 code can use %03o directly in the diagnostic again. */ 1325 char buf[32]; 1326 sprintf(buf, "%03o", (int) c); 1327 cpp_error (pfile, CPP_DL_PEDWARN, 1328 "unknown escape sequence: '\\%s'", buf); 1329 } 1330 } 1331 1332 /* Now convert what we have to the execution character set. */ 1333 if (!APPLY_CONVERSION (cvt, &c, 1, tbuf)) 1334 cpp_errno (pfile, CPP_DL_ERROR, 1335 "converting escape sequence to execution character set"); 1336 1337 return from + 1; 1338 } 1339 1340 /* TYPE is a token type. The return value is the conversion needed to 1341 convert from source to execution character set for the given type. */ 1342 static struct cset_converter 1343 converter_for_type (cpp_reader *pfile, enum cpp_ttype type) 1344 { 1345 switch (type) 1346 { 1347 default: 1348 return pfile->narrow_cset_desc; 1349 case CPP_UTF8STRING: 1350 return pfile->utf8_cset_desc; 1351 case CPP_CHAR16: 1352 case CPP_STRING16: 1353 return pfile->char16_cset_desc; 1354 case CPP_CHAR32: 1355 case CPP_STRING32: 1356 return pfile->char32_cset_desc; 1357 case CPP_WCHAR: 1358 case CPP_WSTRING: 1359 return pfile->wide_cset_desc; 1360 } 1361 } 1362 1363 /* FROM is an array of cpp_string structures of length COUNT. These 1364 are to be converted from the source to the execution character set, 1365 escape sequences translated, and finally all are to be 1366 concatenated. WIDE indicates whether or not to produce a wide 1367 string. The result is written into TO. Returns true for success, 1368 false for failure. */ 1369 bool 1370 cpp_interpret_string (cpp_reader *pfile, const cpp_string *from, size_t count, 1371 cpp_string *to, enum cpp_ttype type) 1372 { 1373 struct _cpp_strbuf tbuf; 1374 const uchar *p, *base, *limit; 1375 size_t i; 1376 struct cset_converter cvt = converter_for_type (pfile, type); 1377 1378 tbuf.asize = MAX (OUTBUF_BLOCK_SIZE, from->len); 1379 tbuf.text = XNEWVEC (uchar, tbuf.asize); 1380 tbuf.len = 0; 1381 1382 for (i = 0; i < count; i++) 1383 { 1384 p = from[i].text; 1385 if (*p == 'u') 1386 { 1387 if (*++p == '8') 1388 p++; 1389 } 1390 else if (*p == 'L' || *p == 'U') p++; 1391 if (*p == 'R') 1392 { 1393 const uchar *prefix; 1394 1395 /* Skip over 'R"'. */ 1396 p += 2; 1397 prefix = p; 1398 while (*p != '(') 1399 p++; 1400 p++; 1401 limit = from[i].text + from[i].len; 1402 if (limit >= p + (p - prefix) + 1) 1403 limit -= (p - prefix) + 1; 1404 1405 /* Raw strings are all normal characters; these can be fed 1406 directly to convert_cset. */ 1407 if (!APPLY_CONVERSION (cvt, p, limit - p, &tbuf)) 1408 goto fail; 1409 1410 continue; 1411 } 1412 1413 p++; /* Skip leading quote. */ 1414 limit = from[i].text + from[i].len - 1; /* Skip trailing quote. */ 1415 1416 for (;;) 1417 { 1418 base = p; 1419 while (p < limit && *p != '\\') 1420 p++; 1421 if (p > base) 1422 { 1423 /* We have a run of normal characters; these can be fed 1424 directly to convert_cset. */ 1425 if (!APPLY_CONVERSION (cvt, base, p - base, &tbuf)) 1426 goto fail; 1427 } 1428 if (p == limit) 1429 break; 1430 1431 p = convert_escape (pfile, p + 1, limit, &tbuf, cvt); 1432 } 1433 } 1434 /* NUL-terminate the 'to' buffer and translate it to a cpp_string 1435 structure. */ 1436 emit_numeric_escape (pfile, 0, &tbuf, cvt); 1437 tbuf.text = XRESIZEVEC (uchar, tbuf.text, tbuf.len); 1438 to->text = tbuf.text; 1439 to->len = tbuf.len; 1440 return true; 1441 1442 fail: 1443 cpp_errno (pfile, CPP_DL_ERROR, "converting to execution character set"); 1444 free (tbuf.text); 1445 return false; 1446 } 1447 1448 /* Subroutine of do_line and do_linemarker. Convert escape sequences 1449 in a string, but do not perform character set conversion. */ 1450 bool 1451 cpp_interpret_string_notranslate (cpp_reader *pfile, const cpp_string *from, 1452 size_t count, cpp_string *to, 1453 enum cpp_ttype type ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED) 1454 { 1455 struct cset_converter save_narrow_cset_desc = pfile->narrow_cset_desc; 1456 bool retval; 1457 1458 pfile->narrow_cset_desc.func = convert_no_conversion; 1459 pfile->narrow_cset_desc.cd = (iconv_t) -1; 1460 pfile->narrow_cset_desc.width = CPP_OPTION (pfile, char_precision); 1461 1462 retval = cpp_interpret_string (pfile, from, count, to, CPP_STRING); 1463 1464 pfile->narrow_cset_desc = save_narrow_cset_desc; 1465 return retval; 1466 } 1467 1468 1469 /* Subroutine of cpp_interpret_charconst which performs the conversion 1470 to a number, for narrow strings. STR is the string structure returned 1471 by cpp_interpret_string. PCHARS_SEEN and UNSIGNEDP are as for 1472 cpp_interpret_charconst. */ 1473 static cppchar_t 1474 narrow_str_to_charconst (cpp_reader *pfile, cpp_string str, 1475 unsigned int *pchars_seen, int *unsignedp) 1476 { 1477 size_t width = CPP_OPTION (pfile, char_precision); 1478 size_t max_chars = CPP_OPTION (pfile, int_precision) / width; 1479 size_t mask = width_to_mask (width); 1480 size_t i; 1481 cppchar_t result, c; 1482 bool unsigned_p; 1483 1484 /* The value of a multi-character character constant, or a 1485 single-character character constant whose representation in the 1486 execution character set is more than one byte long, is 1487 implementation defined. This implementation defines it to be the 1488 number formed by interpreting the byte sequence in memory as a 1489 big-endian binary number. If overflow occurs, the high bytes are 1490 lost, and a warning is issued. 1491 1492 We don't want to process the NUL terminator handed back by 1493 cpp_interpret_string. */ 1494 result = 0; 1495 for (i = 0; i < str.len - 1; i++) 1496 { 1497 c = str.text[i] & mask; 1498 if (width < BITS_PER_CPPCHAR_T) 1499 result = (result << width) | c; 1500 else 1501 result = c; 1502 } 1503 1504 if (i > max_chars) 1505 { 1506 i = max_chars; 1507 cpp_error (pfile, CPP_DL_WARNING, 1508 "character constant too long for its type"); 1509 } 1510 else if (i > 1 && CPP_OPTION (pfile, warn_multichar)) 1511 cpp_warning (pfile, CPP_W_MULTICHAR, "multi-character character constant"); 1512 1513 /* Multichar constants are of type int and therefore signed. */ 1514 if (i > 1) 1515 unsigned_p = 0; 1516 else 1517 unsigned_p = CPP_OPTION (pfile, unsigned_char); 1518 1519 /* Truncate the constant to its natural width, and simultaneously 1520 sign- or zero-extend to the full width of cppchar_t. 1521 For single-character constants, the value is WIDTH bits wide. 1522 For multi-character constants, the value is INT_PRECISION bits wide. */ 1523 if (i > 1) 1524 width = CPP_OPTION (pfile, int_precision); 1525 if (width < BITS_PER_CPPCHAR_T) 1526 { 1527 mask = ((cppchar_t) 1 << width) - 1; 1528 if (unsigned_p || !(result & (1 << (width - 1)))) 1529 result &= mask; 1530 else 1531 result |= ~mask; 1532 } 1533 *pchars_seen = i; 1534 *unsignedp = unsigned_p; 1535 return result; 1536 } 1537 1538 /* Subroutine of cpp_interpret_charconst which performs the conversion 1539 to a number, for wide strings. STR is the string structure returned 1540 by cpp_interpret_string. PCHARS_SEEN and UNSIGNEDP are as for 1541 cpp_interpret_charconst. TYPE is the token type. */ 1542 static cppchar_t 1543 wide_str_to_charconst (cpp_reader *pfile, cpp_string str, 1544 unsigned int *pchars_seen, int *unsignedp, 1545 enum cpp_ttype type) 1546 { 1547 bool bigend = CPP_OPTION (pfile, bytes_big_endian); 1548 size_t width = converter_for_type (pfile, type).width; 1549 size_t cwidth = CPP_OPTION (pfile, char_precision); 1550 size_t mask = width_to_mask (width); 1551 size_t cmask = width_to_mask (cwidth); 1552 size_t nbwc = width / cwidth; 1553 size_t off, i; 1554 cppchar_t result = 0, c; 1555 1556 /* This is finicky because the string is in the target's byte order, 1557 which may not be our byte order. Only the last character, ignoring 1558 the NUL terminator, is relevant. */ 1559 off = str.len - (nbwc * 2); 1560 result = 0; 1561 for (i = 0; i < nbwc; i++) 1562 { 1563 c = bigend ? str.text[off + i] : str.text[off + nbwc - i - 1]; 1564 result = (result << cwidth) | (c & cmask); 1565 } 1566 1567 /* Wide character constants have type wchar_t, and a single 1568 character exactly fills a wchar_t, so a multi-character wide 1569 character constant is guaranteed to overflow. */ 1570 if (str.len > nbwc * 2) 1571 cpp_error (pfile, CPP_DL_WARNING, 1572 "character constant too long for its type"); 1573 1574 /* Truncate the constant to its natural width, and simultaneously 1575 sign- or zero-extend to the full width of cppchar_t. */ 1576 if (width < BITS_PER_CPPCHAR_T) 1577 { 1578 if (type == CPP_CHAR16 || type == CPP_CHAR32 1579 || CPP_OPTION (pfile, unsigned_wchar) 1580 || !(result & (1 << (width - 1)))) 1581 result &= mask; 1582 else 1583 result |= ~mask; 1584 } 1585 1586 if (type == CPP_CHAR16 || type == CPP_CHAR32 1587 || CPP_OPTION (pfile, unsigned_wchar)) 1588 *unsignedp = 1; 1589 else 1590 *unsignedp = 0; 1591 1592 *pchars_seen = 1; 1593 return result; 1594 } 1595 1596 /* Interpret a (possibly wide) character constant in TOKEN. 1597 PCHARS_SEEN points to a variable that is filled in with the number 1598 of characters seen, and UNSIGNEDP to a variable that indicates 1599 whether the result has signed type. */ 1600 cppchar_t 1601 cpp_interpret_charconst (cpp_reader *pfile, const cpp_token *token, 1602 unsigned int *pchars_seen, int *unsignedp) 1603 { 1604 cpp_string str = { 0, 0 }; 1605 bool wide = (token->type != CPP_CHAR); 1606 cppchar_t result; 1607 1608 /* an empty constant will appear as L'', u'', U'' or '' */ 1609 if (token->val.str.len == (size_t) (2 + wide)) 1610 { 1611 cpp_error (pfile, CPP_DL_ERROR, "empty character constant"); 1612 return 0; 1613 } 1614 else if (!cpp_interpret_string (pfile, &token->val.str, 1, &str, token->type)) 1615 return 0; 1616 1617 if (wide) 1618 result = wide_str_to_charconst (pfile, str, pchars_seen, unsignedp, 1619 token->type); 1620 else 1621 result = narrow_str_to_charconst (pfile, str, pchars_seen, unsignedp); 1622 1623 if (str.text != token->val.str.text) 1624 free ((void *)str.text); 1625 1626 return result; 1627 } 1628 1629 /* Convert an identifier denoted by ID and LEN, which might contain 1630 UCN escapes, to the source character set, either UTF-8 or 1631 UTF-EBCDIC. Assumes that the identifier is actually a valid identifier. */ 1632 cpp_hashnode * 1633 _cpp_interpret_identifier (cpp_reader *pfile, const uchar *id, size_t len) 1634 { 1635 /* It turns out that a UCN escape always turns into fewer characters 1636 than the escape itself, so we can allocate a temporary in advance. */ 1637 uchar * buf = (uchar *) alloca (len + 1); 1638 uchar * bufp = buf; 1639 size_t idp; 1640 1641 for (idp = 0; idp < len; idp++) 1642 if (id[idp] != '\\') 1643 *bufp++ = id[idp]; 1644 else 1645 { 1646 unsigned length = id[idp+1] == 'u' ? 4 : 8; 1647 cppchar_t value = 0; 1648 size_t bufleft = len - (bufp - buf); 1649 int rval; 1650 1651 idp += 2; 1652 while (length && idp < len && ISXDIGIT (id[idp])) 1653 { 1654 value = (value << 4) + hex_value (id[idp]); 1655 idp++; 1656 length--; 1657 } 1658 idp--; 1659 1660 /* Special case for EBCDIC: if the identifier contains 1661 a '$' specified using a UCN, translate it to EBCDIC. */ 1662 if (value == 0x24) 1663 { 1664 *bufp++ = '$'; 1665 continue; 1666 } 1667 1668 rval = one_cppchar_to_utf8 (value, &bufp, &bufleft); 1669 if (rval) 1670 { 1671 errno = rval; 1672 cpp_errno (pfile, CPP_DL_ERROR, 1673 "converting UCN to source character set"); 1674 break; 1675 } 1676 } 1677 1678 return CPP_HASHNODE (ht_lookup (pfile->hash_table, 1679 buf, bufp - buf, HT_ALLOC)); 1680 } 1681 1682 /* Convert an input buffer (containing the complete contents of one 1683 source file) from INPUT_CHARSET to the source character set. INPUT 1684 points to the input buffer, SIZE is its allocated size, and LEN is 1685 the length of the meaningful data within the buffer. The 1686 translated buffer is returned, *ST_SIZE is set to the length of 1687 the meaningful data within the translated buffer, and *BUFFER_START 1688 is set to the start of the returned buffer. *BUFFER_START may 1689 differ from the return value in the case of a BOM or other ignored 1690 marker information. 1691 1692 INPUT is expected to have been allocated with xmalloc. This 1693 function will either set *BUFFER_START to INPUT, or free it and set 1694 *BUFFER_START to a pointer to another xmalloc-allocated block of 1695 memory. */ 1696 uchar * 1697 _cpp_convert_input (cpp_reader *pfile, const char *input_charset, 1698 uchar *input, size_t size, size_t len, 1699 const unsigned char **buffer_start, off_t *st_size) 1700 { 1701 struct cset_converter input_cset; 1702 struct _cpp_strbuf to; 1703 unsigned char *buffer; 1704 1705 input_cset = init_iconv_desc (pfile, SOURCE_CHARSET, input_charset); 1706 if (input_cset.func == convert_no_conversion) 1707 { 1708 to.text = input; 1709 to.asize = size; 1710 to.len = len; 1711 } 1712 else 1713 { 1714 to.asize = MAX (65536, len); 1715 to.text = XNEWVEC (uchar, to.asize); 1716 to.len = 0; 1717 1718 if (!APPLY_CONVERSION (input_cset, input, len, &to)) 1719 cpp_error (pfile, CPP_DL_ERROR, 1720 "failure to convert %s to %s", 1721 CPP_OPTION (pfile, input_charset), SOURCE_CHARSET); 1722 1723 free (input); 1724 } 1725 1726 /* Clean up the mess. */ 1727 if (input_cset.func == convert_using_iconv) 1728 iconv_close (input_cset.cd); 1729 1730 /* Resize buffer if we allocated substantially too much, or if we 1731 haven't enough space for the \n-terminator or following 1732 15 bytes of padding (used to quiet warnings from valgrind or 1733 Address Sanitizer, when the optimized lexer accesses aligned 1734 16-byte memory chunks, including the bytes after the malloced, 1735 area, and stops lexing on '\n'). */ 1736 if (to.len + 4096 < to.asize || to.len + 16 > to.asize) 1737 to.text = XRESIZEVEC (uchar, to.text, to.len + 16); 1738 1739 memset (to.text + to.len, '\0', 16); 1740 1741 /* If the file is using old-school Mac line endings (\r only), 1742 terminate with another \r, not an \n, so that we do not mistake 1743 the \r\n sequence for a single DOS line ending and erroneously 1744 issue the "No newline at end of file" diagnostic. */ 1745 if (to.len && to.text[to.len - 1] == '\r') 1746 to.text[to.len] = '\r'; 1747 else 1748 to.text[to.len] = '\n'; 1749 1750 buffer = to.text; 1751 *st_size = to.len; 1752 #if HOST_CHARSET == HOST_CHARSET_ASCII 1753 /* The HOST_CHARSET test just above ensures that the source charset 1754 is UTF-8. So, ignore a UTF-8 BOM if we see one. Note that 1755 glib'c UTF-8 iconv() provider (as of glibc 2.7) does not ignore a 1756 BOM -- however, even if it did, we would still need this code due 1757 to the 'convert_no_conversion' case. */ 1758 if (to.len >= 3 && to.text[0] == 0xef && to.text[1] == 0xbb 1759 && to.text[2] == 0xbf) 1760 { 1761 *st_size -= 3; 1762 buffer += 3; 1763 } 1764 #endif 1765 1766 *buffer_start = to.text; 1767 return buffer; 1768 } 1769 1770 /* Decide on the default encoding to assume for input files. */ 1771 const char * 1772 _cpp_default_encoding (void) 1773 { 1774 const char *current_encoding = NULL; 1775 1776 /* We disable this because the default codeset is 7-bit ASCII on 1777 most platforms, and this causes conversion failures on every 1778 file in GCC that happens to have one of the upper 128 characters 1779 in it -- most likely, as part of the name of a contributor. 1780 We should definitely recognize in-band markers of file encoding, 1781 like: 1782 - the appropriate Unicode byte-order mark (FE FF) to recognize 1783 UTF16 and UCS4 (in both big-endian and little-endian flavors) 1784 and UTF8 1785 - a "#i", "#d", "/ *", "//", " #p" or "#p" (for #pragma) to 1786 distinguish ASCII and EBCDIC. 1787 - now we can parse something like "#pragma GCC encoding <xyz> 1788 on the first line, or even Emacs/VIM's mode line tags (there's 1789 a problem here in that VIM uses the last line, and Emacs has 1790 its more elaborate "local variables" convention). 1791 - investigate whether Java has another common convention, which 1792 would be friendly to support. 1793 (Zack Weinberg and Paolo Bonzini, May 20th 2004) */ 1794 #if defined (HAVE_LOCALE_H) && defined (HAVE_LANGINFO_CODESET) && 0 1795 setlocale (LC_CTYPE, ""); 1796 current_encoding = nl_langinfo (CODESET); 1797 #endif 1798 if (current_encoding == NULL || *current_encoding == '\0') 1799 current_encoding = SOURCE_CHARSET; 1800 1801 return current_encoding; 1802 } 1803