2002-09-20 00:24:01 +00:00
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/* Character set conversion support for GDB.
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2009-01-03 05:58:08 +00:00
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Copyright (C) 2001, 2007, 2008, 2009 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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2002-09-20 00:24:01 +00:00
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This file is part of GDB.
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This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
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it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
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2007-08-23 18:08:50 +00:00
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the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or
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2002-09-20 00:24:01 +00:00
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(at your option) any later version.
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This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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GNU General Public License for more details.
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You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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2007-08-23 18:08:50 +00:00
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along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
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2002-09-20 00:24:01 +00:00
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#ifndef CHARSET_H
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#define CHARSET_H
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/* If the target program uses a different character set than the host,
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GDB has some support for translating between the two; GDB converts
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characters and strings to the host character set before displaying
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them, and converts characters and strings appearing in expressions
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entered by the user to the target character set.
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At the moment, GDB only supports single-byte, stateless character
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sets. This includes the ISO-8859 family (ASCII extended with
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accented characters, and (I think) Cyrillic, for European
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languages), and the EBCDIC family (used on IBM's mainframes).
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Unfortunately, it excludes many Asian scripts, the fixed- and
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variable-width Unicode encodings, and other desireable things.
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Patches are welcome! (For example, it would be nice if the Java
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string support could simply get absorbed into some more general
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multi-byte encoding support.)
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Furthermore, GDB's code pretty much assumes that the host character
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set is some superset of ASCII; there are plenty if ('0' + n)
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expressions and the like.
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When the `iconv' library routine supports a character set meeting
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the requirements above, it's easy to plug an entry into GDB's table
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that uses iconv to handle the details. */
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/* Return the name of the current host/target character set. The
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result is owned by the charset module; the caller should not free
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it. */
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const char *host_charset (void);
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const char *target_charset (void);
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/* In general, the set of C backslash escapes (\n, \f) is specific to
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the character set. Not all character sets will have form feed
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characters, for example.
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The following functions allow GDB to parse and print control
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characters in a character-set-independent way. They are both
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language-specific (to C and C++) and character-set-specific.
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Putting them here is a compromise. */
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/* If the target character TARGET_CHAR have a backslash escape in the
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C language (i.e., a character like 'n' or 't'), return the host
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character string that should follow the backslash. Otherwise,
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return zero.
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When this function returns non-zero, the string it returns is
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statically allocated; the caller is not responsible for freeing it. */
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const char *c_target_char_has_backslash_escape (int target_char);
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/* If the host character HOST_CHAR is a valid backslash escape in the
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C language for the target character set, return non-zero, and set
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*TARGET_CHAR to the target character the backslash escape represents.
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Otherwise, return zero. */
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int c_parse_backslash (int host_char, int *target_char);
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/* Return non-zero if the host character HOST_CHAR can be printed
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literally --- that is, if it can be readably printed as itself in a
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character or string constant. Return zero if it should be printed
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using some kind of numeric escape, like '\031' in C, '^(25)' in
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Chill, or #25 in Pascal. */
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int host_char_print_literally (int host_char);
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/* If the host character HOST_CHAR has an equivalent in the target
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character set, set *TARGET_CHAR to that equivalent, and return
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non-zero. Otherwise, return zero. */
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int host_char_to_target (int host_char, int *target_char);
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/* If the target character TARGET_CHAR has an equivalent in the host
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character set, set *HOST_CHAR to that equivalent, and return
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non-zero. Otherwise, return zero. */
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int target_char_to_host (int target_char, int *host_char);
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/* If the target character TARGET_CHAR has a corresponding control
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character (also in the target character set), set *TARGET_CTRL_CHAR
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to the control character, and return non-zero. Otherwise, return
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zero. */
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int target_char_to_control_char (int target_char, int *target_ctrl_char);
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#endif /* CHARSET_H */
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