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#!/home/simon/prog/text-generation-webui/installer_files/env/bin/perl | |
eval 'exec /home/simon/prog/text-generation-webui/installer_files/env/bin/perl -S $0 ${1+"$@"}' | |
if 0; # ^ Run only under a shell | |
#!./perl | |
BEGIN { | |
# @INC poking no longer needed w/ new MakeMaker and Makefile.PL's | |
# with $ENV{PERL_CORE} set | |
# In case we need it in future... | |
require Config; import Config; | |
pop @INC if $INC[-1] eq '.'; | |
} | |
use strict; | |
use warnings; | |
use Getopt::Std; | |
use Config; | |
my @orig_ARGV = @ARGV; | |
our $VERSION = do { my @r = (q$Revision: 2.23 $ =~ /\d+/g); sprintf "%d."."%02d" x $#r, @r }; | |
# These may get re-ordered. | |
# RAW is a do_now as inserted by &enter | |
# AGG is an aggregated do_now, as built up by &process | |
use constant { | |
RAW_NEXT => 0, | |
RAW_IN_LEN => 1, | |
RAW_OUT_BYTES => 2, | |
RAW_FALLBACK => 3, | |
AGG_MIN_IN => 0, | |
AGG_MAX_IN => 1, | |
AGG_OUT_BYTES => 2, | |
AGG_NEXT => 3, | |
AGG_IN_LEN => 4, | |
AGG_OUT_LEN => 5, | |
AGG_FALLBACK => 6, | |
}; | |
# (See the algorithm in encengine.c - we're building structures for it) | |
# There are two sorts of structures. | |
# "do_now" (an array, two variants of what needs storing) is whatever we need | |
# to do now we've read an input byte. | |
# It's housed in a "do_next" (which is how we got to it), and in turn points | |
# to a "do_next" which contains all the "do_now"s for the next input byte. | |
# There will be a "do_next" which is the start state. | |
# For a single byte encoding it's the only "do_next" - each "do_now" points | |
# back to it, and each "do_now" will cause bytes. There is no state. | |
# For a multi-byte encoding where all characters in the input are the same | |
# length, then there will be a tree of "do_now"->"do_next"->"do_now" | |
# branching out from the start state, one step for each input byte. | |
# The leaf "do_now"s will all be at the same distance from the start state, | |
# only the leaf "do_now"s cause output bytes, and they in turn point back to | |
# the start state. | |
# For an encoding where there are variable length input byte sequences, you | |
# will encounter a leaf "do_now" sooner for the shorter input sequences, but | |
# as before the leaves will point back to the start state. | |
# The system will cope with escape encodings (imagine them as a mostly | |
# self-contained tree for each escape state, and cross links between trees | |
# at the state-switching characters) but so far no input format defines these. | |
# The system will also cope with having output "leaves" in the middle of | |
# the bifurcating branches, not just at the extremities, but again no | |
# input format does this yet. | |
# There are two variants of the "do_now" structure. The first, smaller variant | |
# is generated by &enter as the input file is read. There is one structure | |
# for each input byte. Say we are mapping a single byte encoding to a | |
# single byte encoding, with "ABCD" going "abcd". There will be | |
# 4 "do_now"s, {"A" => [...,"a",...], "B" => [...,"b",...], "C"=>..., "D"=>...} | |
# &process then walks the tree, building aggregate "do_now" structures for | |
# adjacent bytes where possible. The aggregate is for a contiguous range of | |
# bytes which each produce the same length of output, each move to the | |
# same next state, and each have the same fallback flag. | |
# So our 4 RAW "do_now"s above become replaced by a single structure | |
# containing: | |
# ["A", "D", "abcd", 1, ...] | |
# ie, for an input byte $_ in "A".."D", output 1 byte, found as | |
# substr ("abcd", (ord $_ - ord "A") * 1, 1) | |
# which maps very nicely into pointer arithmetic in C for encengine.c | |
sub encode_U | |
{ | |
# UTF-8 encode long hand - only covers part of perl's range | |
## my $uv = shift; | |
# chr() works in native space so convert value from table | |
# into that space before using chr(). | |
my $ch = chr(utf8::unicode_to_native($_[0])); | |
# Now get core perl to encode that the way it likes. | |
utf8::encode($ch); | |
return $ch; | |
} | |
sub encode_S | |
{ | |
# encode single byte | |
## my ($ch,$page) = @_; return chr($ch); | |
return chr $_[0]; | |
} | |
sub encode_D | |
{ | |
# encode double byte MS byte first | |
## my ($ch,$page) = @_; return chr($page).chr($ch); | |
return chr ($_[1]) . chr $_[0]; | |
} | |
sub encode_M | |
{ | |
# encode Multi-byte - single for 0..255 otherwise double | |
## my ($ch,$page) = @_; | |
## return &encode_D if $page; | |
## return &encode_S; | |
return chr ($_[1]) . chr $_[0] if $_[1]; | |
return chr $_[0]; | |
} | |
my %encode_types = (U => \&encode_U, | |
S => \&encode_S, | |
D => \&encode_D, | |
M => \&encode_M, | |
); | |
# Win32 does not expand globs on command line | |
if ($^O eq 'MSWin32' and !$ENV{PERL_CORE}) { | |
eval "\@ARGV = map(glob(\$_),\@ARGV)"; | |
@ARGV = @orig_ARGV unless @ARGV; | |
} | |
my %opt; | |
# I think these are: | |
# -Q to disable the duplicate codepoint test | |
# -S make mapping errors fatal | |
# -q to remove comments written to output files | |
# -O to enable the (brute force) substring optimiser | |
# -o <output> to specify the output file name (else it's the first arg) | |
# -f <inlist> to give a file with a list of input files (else use the args) | |
# -n <name> to name the encoding (else use the basename of the input file. | |
#Getopt::Long::Configure("bundling"); | |
#GetOptions(\%opt, qw(C M=s S Q q O o=s f=s n=s v)); | |
getopts('CM:SQqOo:f:n:v',\%opt); | |
$opt{M} and make_makefile_pl($opt{M}, @ARGV); | |
$opt{C} and make_configlocal_pm($opt{C}, @ARGV); | |
$opt{v} ||= $ENV{ENC2XS_VERBOSE}; | |
$opt{q} ||= $ENV{ENC2XS_NO_COMMENTS}; | |
sub verbose { | |
print STDERR @_ if $opt{v}; | |
} | |
sub verbosef { | |
printf STDERR @_ if $opt{v}; | |
} | |
# ($cpp, $static, $sized) = compiler_info($declaration) | |
# | |
# return some information about the compiler and compile options we're using: | |
# | |
# $declaration - true if we're doing a declaration rather than a definition. | |
# | |
# $cpp - we're using C++ | |
# $static - ok to declare the arrays as static | |
# $sized - the array declarations should be sized | |
sub compiler_info { | |
my ($declaration) = @_; | |
my $ccflags = $Config{ccflags}; | |
if (defined $Config{ccwarnflags}) { | |
$ccflags .= " " . $Config{ccwarnflags}; | |
} | |
my $compat = $ccflags =~ /\Q-Wc++-compat/; | |
my $pedantic = $ccflags =~ /-pedantic/; | |
my $cpp = ($Config{d_cplusplus} || '') eq 'define'; | |
# The encpage_t tables contain recursive and mutually recursive | |
# references. To allow them to compile under C++ and some restrictive | |
# cc options, it may be necessary to make the tables non-static/const | |
# (thus moving them from the text to the data segment) and/or not | |
# include the size in the declaration. | |
my $static = !( | |
$cpp | |
|| ($compat && $pedantic) | |
|| ($^O eq 'MacOS' && $declaration) | |
); | |
# -Wc++-compat on its own warns if the array declaration is sized. | |
# The easiest way to avoid this warning is simply not to include | |
# the size in the declaration. | |
# With -pedantic as well, the issue doesn't arise because $static | |
# above becomes false. | |
my $sized = $declaration && !($compat && !$pedantic); | |
return ($cpp, $static, $sized); | |
} | |
# This really should go first, else the die here causes empty (non-erroneous) | |
# output files to be written. | |
my @encfiles; | |
if (exists $opt{f}) { | |
# -F is followed by name of file containing list of filenames | |
my $flist = $opt{f}; | |
open(FLIST,$flist) || die "Cannot open $flist:$!"; | |
chomp(@encfiles = <FLIST>); | |
close(FLIST); | |
} else { | |
@encfiles = @ARGV; | |
} | |
my $cname = $opt{o} ? $opt{o} : shift(@ARGV); | |
unless ($cname) { #debuging a win32 nmake error-only. works via cmdline | |
print "\nARGV:"; | |
print "$_ " for @ARGV; | |
print "\nopt:"; | |
print " $_ => ",defined $opt{$_}?$opt{$_}:"undef","\n" for keys %opt; | |
} | |
chmod(0666,$cname) if -f $cname && !-w $cname; | |
open(C,">", $cname) || die "Cannot open $cname:$!"; | |
my $dname = $cname; | |
my $hname = $cname; | |
my ($doC,$doEnc,$doUcm,$doPet); | |
if ($cname =~ /\.(c|xs)$/i) # VMS may have upcased filenames with DECC$ARGV_PARSE_STYLE defined | |
{ | |
$doC = 1; | |
$dname =~ s/(\.[^\.]*)?$/.exh/; | |
chmod(0666,$dname) if -f $cname && !-w $dname; | |
open(D,">", $dname) || die "Cannot open $dname:$!"; | |
$hname =~ s/(\.[^\.]*)?$/.h/; | |
chmod(0666,$hname) if -f $cname && !-w $hname; | |
open(H,">", $hname) || die "Cannot open $hname:$!"; | |
foreach my $fh (\*C,\*D,\*H) | |
{ | |
print $fh <<"END" unless $opt{'q'}; | |
/* | |
!!!!!!! DO NOT EDIT THIS FILE !!!!!!! | |
This file was autogenerated by: | |
$^X $0 @orig_ARGV | |
enc2xs VERSION $VERSION | |
*/ | |
END | |
} | |
if ($cname =~ /(\w+)\.xs$/) | |
{ | |
print C "#define PERL_NO_GET_CONTEXT\n"; | |
print C "#include <EXTERN.h>\n"; | |
print C "#include <perl.h>\n"; | |
print C "#include <XSUB.h>\n"; | |
} | |
print C "#include \"encode.h\"\n\n"; | |
} | |
elsif ($cname =~ /\.enc$/) | |
{ | |
$doEnc = 1; | |
} | |
elsif ($cname =~ /\.ucm$/) | |
{ | |
$doUcm = 1; | |
} | |
elsif ($cname =~ /\.pet$/) | |
{ | |
$doPet = 1; | |
} | |
my %encoding; | |
my %strings; | |
my $string_acc; | |
my %strings_in_acc; | |
my $saved = 0; | |
my $subsave = 0; | |
my $strings = 0; | |
sub cmp_name | |
{ | |
if ($a =~ /^.*-(\d+)/) | |
{ | |
my $an = $1; | |
if ($b =~ /^.*-(\d+)/) | |
{ | |
my $r = $an <=> $1; | |
return $r if $r; | |
} | |
} | |
return $a cmp $b; | |
} | |
foreach my $enc (sort cmp_name @encfiles) | |
{ | |
my ($name,$sfx) = $enc =~ /^.*?([\w-]+)\.(enc|ucm)$/; | |
$name = $opt{'n'} if exists $opt{'n'}; | |
if (open(E,$enc)) | |
{ | |
if ($sfx eq 'enc') | |
{ | |
compile_enc(\*E,lc($name)); | |
} | |
else | |
{ | |
compile_ucm(\*E,lc($name)); | |
} | |
} | |
else | |
{ | |
warn "Cannot open $enc for $name:$!"; | |
} | |
} | |
if ($doC) | |
{ | |
verbose "Writing compiled form\n"; | |
foreach my $name (sort cmp_name keys %encoding) | |
{ | |
my ($e2u,$u2e,$erep,$min_el,$max_el) = @{$encoding{$name}}; | |
process($name.'_utf8',$e2u); | |
addstrings(\*C,$e2u); | |
process('utf8_'.$name,$u2e); | |
addstrings(\*C,$u2e); | |
} | |
outbigstring(\*C,"enctable"); | |
foreach my $name (sort cmp_name keys %encoding) | |
{ | |
my ($e2u,$u2e,$erep,$min_el,$max_el) = @{$encoding{$name}}; | |
outtable(\*C,$e2u, "enctable"); | |
outtable(\*C,$u2e, "enctable"); | |
# push(@{$encoding{$name}},outstring(\*C,$e2u->{Cname}.'_def',$erep)); | |
} | |
my ($cpp) = compiler_info(0); | |
my $ext = $cpp ? 'extern "C"' : "extern"; | |
my $exta = $cpp ? 'extern "C"' : "static"; | |
my $extb = $cpp ? 'extern "C"' : ""; | |
foreach my $enc (sort cmp_name keys %encoding) | |
{ | |
# my ($e2u,$u2e,$rep,$min_el,$max_el,$rsym) = @{$encoding{$enc}}; | |
my ($e2u,$u2e,$rep,$min_el,$max_el) = @{$encoding{$enc}}; | |
#my @info = ($e2u->{Cname},$u2e->{Cname},$rsym,length($rep),$min_el,$max_el); | |
my $replen = 0; | |
$replen++ while($rep =~ /\G\\x[0-9A-Fa-f]/g); | |
my $sym = "${enc}_encoding"; | |
$sym =~ s/\W+/_/g; | |
my @info = ($e2u->{Cname},$u2e->{Cname},"${sym}_rep_character",$replen, | |
$min_el,$max_el); | |
print C "${exta} const U8 ${sym}_rep_character[] = \"$rep\";\n"; | |
print C "${exta} const char ${sym}_enc_name[] = \"$enc\";\n\n"; | |
print C "${extb} const encode_t $sym = \n"; | |
# This is to make null encoding work -- dankogai | |
for (my $i = (scalar @info) - 1; $i >= 0; --$i){ | |
$info[$i] ||= 1; | |
} | |
# end of null tweak -- dankogai | |
print C " {",join(',',@info,"{${sym}_enc_name,(const char *)0}"),"};\n\n"; | |
} | |
foreach my $enc (sort cmp_name keys %encoding) | |
{ | |
my $sym = "${enc}_encoding"; | |
$sym =~ s/\W+/_/g; | |
print H "${ext} encode_t $sym;\n"; | |
print D " Encode_XSEncoding(aTHX_ &$sym);\n"; | |
} | |
if ($cname =~ /(\w+)\.xs$/) | |
{ | |
my $mod = $1; | |
print C <<'END'; | |
static void | |
Encode_XSEncoding(pTHX_ encode_t *enc) | |
{ | |
dSP; | |
HV *stash = gv_stashpv("Encode::XS", TRUE); | |
SV *iv = newSViv(PTR2IV(enc)); | |
SV *sv = sv_bless(newRV_noinc(iv),stash); | |
int i = 0; | |
/* with the SvLEN() == 0 hack, PVX won't be freed. We cast away name's | |
constness, in the hope that perl won't mess with it. */ | |
assert(SvTYPE(iv) >= SVt_PV); assert(SvLEN(iv) == 0); | |
SvFLAGS(iv) |= SVp_POK; | |
SvPVX(iv) = (char*) enc->name[0]; | |
PUSHMARK(sp); | |
XPUSHs(sv); | |
while (enc->name[i]) | |
{ | |
const char *name = enc->name[i++]; | |
XPUSHs(sv_2mortal(newSVpvn(name,strlen(name)))); | |
} | |
PUTBACK; | |
call_pv("Encode::define_encoding",G_DISCARD); | |
SvREFCNT_dec(sv); | |
} | |
END | |
print C "\nMODULE = Encode::$mod\tPACKAGE = Encode::$mod\n\n"; | |
print C "BOOT:\n{\n"; | |
print C "#include \"$dname\"\n"; | |
print C "}\n"; | |
} | |
# Close in void context is bad, m'kay | |
close(D) or warn "Error closing '$dname': $!"; | |
close(H) or warn "Error closing '$hname': $!"; | |
my $perc_saved = $saved/($strings + $saved) * 100; | |
my $perc_subsaved = $subsave/($strings + $subsave) * 100; | |
verbosef "%d bytes in string tables\n",$strings; | |
verbosef "%d bytes (%.3g%%) saved spotting duplicates\n", | |
$saved, $perc_saved if $saved; | |
verbosef "%d bytes (%.3g%%) saved using substrings\n", | |
$subsave, $perc_subsaved if $subsave; | |
} | |
elsif ($doEnc) | |
{ | |
foreach my $name (sort cmp_name keys %encoding) | |
{ | |
my ($e2u,$u2e,$erep,$min_el,$max_el) = @{$encoding{$name}}; | |
output_enc(\*C,$name,$e2u); | |
} | |
} | |
elsif ($doUcm) | |
{ | |
foreach my $name (sort cmp_name keys %encoding) | |
{ | |
my ($e2u,$u2e,$erep,$min_el,$max_el) = @{$encoding{$name}}; | |
output_ucm(\*C,$name,$u2e,$erep,$min_el,$max_el); | |
} | |
} | |
# writing half meg files and then not checking to see if you just filled the | |
# disk is bad, m'kay | |
close(C) or die "Error closing '$cname': $!"; | |
# End of the main program. | |
sub compile_ucm | |
{ | |
my ($fh,$name) = @_; | |
my $e2u = {}; | |
my $u2e = {}; | |
my $cs; | |
my %attr; | |
while (<$fh>) | |
{ | |
s/#.*$//; | |
last if /^\s*CHARMAP\s*$/i; | |
if (/^\s*<(\w+)>\s+"?([^"]*)"?\s*$/i) # " # Grrr | |
{ | |
$attr{$1} = $2; | |
} | |
} | |
if (!defined($cs = $attr{'code_set_name'})) | |
{ | |
warn "No <code_set_name> in $name\n"; | |
} | |
else | |
{ | |
$name = $cs unless exists $opt{'n'}; | |
} | |
my $erep; | |
my $urep; | |
my $max_el; | |
my $min_el; | |
if (exists $attr{'subchar'}) | |
{ | |
#my @byte; | |
#$attr{'subchar'} =~ /^\s*/cg; | |
#push(@byte,$1) while $attr{'subchar'} =~ /\G\\x([0-9a-f]+)/icg; | |
#$erep = join('',map(chr(hex($_)),@byte)); | |
$erep = $attr{'subchar'}; | |
$erep =~ s/^\s+//; $erep =~ s/\s+$//; | |
} | |
print "Reading $name ($cs)\n" | |
unless defined $ENV{MAKEFLAGS} | |
and $ENV{MAKEFLAGS} =~ /\b(s|silent|quiet)\b/; | |
my $nfb = 0; | |
my $hfb = 0; | |
while (<$fh>) | |
{ | |
s/#.*$//; | |
last if /^\s*END\s+CHARMAP\s*$/i; | |
next if /^\s*$/; | |
my (@uni, @byte) = (); | |
my ($uni, $byte, $fb) = m/^(\S+)\s+(\S+)\s+(\S+)\s+/o | |
or die "Bad line: $_"; | |
while ($uni =~ m/\G<([U0-9a-fA-F\+]+)>/g){ | |
push @uni, map { substr($_, 1) } split(/\+/, $1); | |
} | |
while ($byte =~ m/\G\\x([0-9a-fA-F]+)/g){ | |
push @byte, $1; | |
} | |
if (@uni) | |
{ | |
my $uch = join('', map { encode_U(hex($_)) } @uni ); | |
my $ech = join('',map(chr(hex($_)),@byte)); | |
my $el = length($ech); | |
$max_el = $el if (!defined($max_el) || $el > $max_el); | |
$min_el = $el if (!defined($min_el) || $el < $min_el); | |
if (length($fb)) | |
{ | |
$fb = substr($fb,1); | |
$hfb++; | |
} | |
else | |
{ | |
$nfb++; | |
$fb = '0'; | |
} | |
# $fb is fallback flag | |
# 0 - round trip safe | |
# 1 - fallback for unicode -> enc | |
# 2 - skip sub-char mapping | |
# 3 - fallback enc -> unicode | |
enter($u2e,$uch,$ech,$u2e,$fb+0) if ($fb =~ /[01]/); | |
enter($e2u,$ech,$uch,$e2u,$fb+0) if ($fb =~ /[03]/); | |
} | |
else | |
{ | |
warn $_; | |
} | |
} | |
if ($nfb && $hfb) | |
{ | |
die "$nfb entries without fallback, $hfb entries with\n"; | |
} | |
$encoding{$name} = [$e2u,$u2e,$erep,$min_el,$max_el]; | |
} | |
sub compile_enc | |
{ | |
my ($fh,$name) = @_; | |
my $e2u = {}; | |
my $u2e = {}; | |
my $type; | |
while ($type = <$fh>) | |
{ | |
last if $type !~ /^\s*#/; | |
} | |
chomp($type); | |
return if $type eq 'E'; | |
# Do the hash lookup once, rather than once per function call. 4% speedup. | |
my $type_func = $encode_types{$type}; | |
my ($def,$sym,$pages) = split(/\s+/,scalar(<$fh>)); | |
warn "$type encoded $name\n"; | |
my $rep = ''; | |
# Save a defined test by setting these to defined values. | |
my $min_el = ~0; # A very big integer | |
my $max_el = 0; # Anything must be longer than 0 | |
{ | |
my $v = hex($def); | |
$rep = &$type_func($v & 0xFF, ($v >> 8) & 0xffe); | |
} | |
my $errors; | |
my $seen; | |
# use -Q to silence the seen test. Makefile.PL uses this by default. | |
$seen = {} unless $opt{Q}; | |
do | |
{ | |
my $line = <$fh>; | |
chomp($line); | |
my $page = hex($line); | |
my $ch = 0; | |
my $i = 16; | |
do | |
{ | |
# So why is it 1% faster to leave the my here? | |
my $line = <$fh>; | |
$line =~ s/\r\n$/\n/; | |
die "$.:${line}Line should be exactly 65 characters long including | |
newline (".length($line).")" unless length ($line) == 65; | |
# Split line into groups of 4 hex digits, convert groups to ints | |
# This takes 65.35 | |
# map {hex $_} $line =~ /(....)/g | |
# This takes 63.75 (2.5% less time) | |
# unpack "n*", pack "H*", $line | |
# There's an implicit loop in map. Loops are bad, m'kay. Ops are bad, m'kay | |
# Doing it as while ($line =~ /(....)/g) took 74.63 | |
foreach my $val (unpack "n*", pack "H*", $line) | |
{ | |
next if $val == 0xFFFD; | |
my $ech = &$type_func($ch,$page); | |
if ($val || (!$ch && !$page)) | |
{ | |
my $el = length($ech); | |
$max_el = $el if $el > $max_el; | |
$min_el = $el if $el < $min_el; | |
my $uch = encode_U($val); | |
if ($seen) { | |
# We're doing the test. | |
# We don't need to read this quickly, so storing it as a scalar, | |
# rather than 3 (anon array, plus the 2 scalars it holds) saves | |
# RAM and may make us faster on low RAM systems. [see __END__] | |
if (exists $seen->{$uch}) | |
{ | |
warn sprintf("U%04X is %02X%02X and %04X\n", | |
$val,$page,$ch,$seen->{$uch}); | |
$errors++; | |
} | |
else | |
{ | |
$seen->{$uch} = $page << 8 | $ch; | |
} | |
} | |
# Passing 2 extra args each time is 3.6% slower! | |
# Even with having to add $fallback ||= 0 later | |
enter_fb0($e2u,$ech,$uch); | |
enter_fb0($u2e,$uch,$ech); | |
} | |
else | |
{ | |
# No character at this position | |
# enter($e2u,$ech,undef,$e2u); | |
} | |
$ch++; | |
} | |
} while --$i; | |
} while --$pages; | |
die "\$min_el=$min_el, \$max_el=$max_el - seems we read no lines" | |
if $min_el > $max_el; | |
die "$errors mapping conflicts\n" if ($errors && $opt{'S'}); | |
$encoding{$name} = [$e2u,$u2e,$rep,$min_el,$max_el]; | |
} | |
# my ($a,$s,$d,$t,$fb) = @_; | |
sub enter { | |
my ($current,$inbytes,$outbytes,$next,$fallback) = @_; | |
# state we shift to after this (multibyte) input character defaults to same | |
# as current state. | |
$next ||= $current; | |
# Making sure it is defined seems to be faster than {no warnings;} in | |
# &process, or passing it in as 0 explicitly. | |
# XXX $fallback ||= 0; | |
# Start at the beginning and work forwards through the string to zero. | |
# effectively we are removing 1 character from the front each time | |
# but we don't actually edit the string. [this alone seems to be 14% speedup] | |
# Hence -$pos is the length of the remaining string. | |
my $pos = -length $inbytes; | |
while (1) { | |
my $byte = substr $inbytes, $pos, 1; | |
# RAW_NEXT => 0, | |
# RAW_IN_LEN => 1, | |
# RAW_OUT_BYTES => 2, | |
# RAW_FALLBACK => 3, | |
# to unicode an array would seem to be better, because the pages are dense. | |
# from unicode can be very sparse, favouring a hash. | |
# hash using the bytes (all length 1) as keys rather than ord value, | |
# as it's easier to sort these in &process. | |
# It's faster to always add $fallback even if it's undef, rather than | |
# choosing between 3 and 4 element array. (hence why we set it defined | |
# above) | |
my $do_now = $current->{Raw}{$byte} ||= [{},-$pos,'',$fallback]; | |
# When $pos was -1 we were at the last input character. | |
unless (++$pos) { | |
$do_now->[RAW_OUT_BYTES] = $outbytes; | |
$do_now->[RAW_NEXT] = $next; | |
return; | |
} | |
# Tail recursion. The intermediate state may not have a name yet. | |
$current = $do_now->[RAW_NEXT]; | |
} | |
} | |
# This is purely for optimisation. It's just &enter hard coded for $fallback | |
# of 0, using only a 3 entry array ref to save memory for every entry. | |
sub enter_fb0 { | |
my ($current,$inbytes,$outbytes,$next) = @_; | |
$next ||= $current; | |
my $pos = -length $inbytes; | |
while (1) { | |
my $byte = substr $inbytes, $pos, 1; | |
my $do_now = $current->{Raw}{$byte} ||= [{},-$pos,'']; | |
unless (++$pos) { | |
$do_now->[RAW_OUT_BYTES] = $outbytes; | |
$do_now->[RAW_NEXT] = $next; | |
return; | |
} | |
$current = $do_now->[RAW_NEXT]; | |
} | |
} | |
sub process | |
{ | |
my ($name,$a) = @_; | |
$name =~ s/\W+/_/g; | |
$a->{Cname} = $name; | |
my $raw = $a->{Raw}; | |
my ($l, $agg_max_in, $agg_next, $agg_in_len, $agg_out_len, $agg_fallback); | |
my @ent; | |
$agg_max_in = 0; | |
foreach my $key (sort keys %$raw) { | |
# RAW_NEXT => 0, | |
# RAW_IN_LEN => 1, | |
# RAW_OUT_BYTES => 2, | |
# RAW_FALLBACK => 3, | |
my ($next, $in_len, $out_bytes, $fallback) = @{$raw->{$key}}; | |
# Now we are converting from raw to aggregate, switch from 1 byte strings | |
# to numbers | |
my $b = ord $key; | |
$fallback ||= 0; | |
if ($l && | |
# If this == fails, we're going to reset $agg_max_in below anyway. | |
$b == ++$agg_max_in && | |
# References in numeric context give the pointer as an int. | |
$agg_next == $next && | |
$agg_in_len == $in_len && | |
$agg_out_len == length $out_bytes && | |
$agg_fallback == $fallback | |
# && length($l->[AGG_OUT_BYTES]) < 16 | |
) { | |
# my $i = ord($b)-ord($l->[AGG_MIN_IN]); | |
# we can aggregate this byte onto the end. | |
$l->[AGG_MAX_IN] = $b; | |
$l->[AGG_OUT_BYTES] .= $out_bytes; | |
} else { | |
# AGG_MIN_IN => 0, | |
# AGG_MAX_IN => 1, | |
# AGG_OUT_BYTES => 2, | |
# AGG_NEXT => 3, | |
# AGG_IN_LEN => 4, | |
# AGG_OUT_LEN => 5, | |
# AGG_FALLBACK => 6, | |
# Reset the last thing we saw, plus set 5 lexicals to save some derefs. | |
# (only gains .6% on euc-jp -- is it worth it?) | |
push @ent, $l = [$b, $agg_max_in = $b, $out_bytes, $agg_next = $next, | |
$agg_in_len = $in_len, $agg_out_len = length $out_bytes, | |
$agg_fallback = $fallback]; | |
} | |
if (exists $next->{Cname}) { | |
$next->{'Forward'} = 1 if $next != $a; | |
} else { | |
process(sprintf("%s_%02x",$name,$b),$next); | |
} | |
} | |
# encengine.c rules say that last entry must be for 255 | |
if ($agg_max_in < 255) { | |
push @ent, [1+$agg_max_in, 255,undef,$a,0,0]; | |
} | |
$a->{'Entries'} = \@ent; | |
} | |
sub addstrings | |
{ | |
my ($fh,$a) = @_; | |
my $name = $a->{'Cname'}; | |
# String tables | |
foreach my $b (@{$a->{'Entries'}}) | |
{ | |
next unless $b->[AGG_OUT_LEN]; | |
$strings{$b->[AGG_OUT_BYTES]} = undef; | |
} | |
if ($a->{'Forward'}) | |
{ | |
my ($cpp, $static, $sized) = compiler_info(1); | |
my $count = $sized ? scalar(@{$a->{'Entries'}}) : ''; | |
if ($static) { | |
# we cannot ask Config for d_plusplus since we can override CC=g++-6 on the cmdline | |
print $fh "#ifdef __cplusplus\n"; # -fpermissive since g++-6 | |
print $fh "extern encpage_t $name\[$count];\n"; | |
print $fh "#else\n"; | |
print $fh "static const encpage_t $name\[$count];\n"; | |
print $fh "#endif\n"; | |
} else { | |
print $fh "extern encpage_t $name\[$count];\n"; | |
} | |
} | |
$a->{'DoneStrings'} = 1; | |
foreach my $b (@{$a->{'Entries'}}) | |
{ | |
my ($s,$e,$out,$t,$end,$l) = @$b; | |
addstrings($fh,$t) unless $t->{'DoneStrings'}; | |
} | |
} | |
sub outbigstring | |
{ | |
my ($fh,$name) = @_; | |
$string_acc = ''; | |
# Make the big string in the string accumulator. Longest first, on the hope | |
# that this makes it more likely that we find the short strings later on. | |
# Not sure if it helps sorting strings of the same length lexically. | |
foreach my $s (sort {length $b <=> length $a || $a cmp $b} keys %strings) { | |
my $index = index $string_acc, $s; | |
if ($index >= 0) { | |
$saved += length($s); | |
$strings_in_acc{$s} = $index; | |
} else { | |
OPTIMISER: { | |
if ($opt{'O'}) { | |
my $sublength = length $s; | |
while (--$sublength > 0) { | |
# progressively lop characters off the end, to see if the start of | |
# the new string overlaps the end of the accumulator. | |
if (substr ($string_acc, -$sublength) | |
eq substr ($s, 0, $sublength)) { | |
$subsave += $sublength; | |
$strings_in_acc{$s} = length ($string_acc) - $sublength; | |
# append the last bit on the end. | |
$string_acc .= substr ($s, $sublength); | |
last OPTIMISER; | |
} | |
# or if the end of the new string overlaps the start of the | |
# accumulator | |
next unless substr ($string_acc, 0, $sublength) | |
eq substr ($s, -$sublength); | |
# well, the last $sublength characters of the accumulator match. | |
# so as we're prepending to the accumulator, need to shift all our | |
# existing offsets forwards | |
$_ += $sublength foreach values %strings_in_acc; | |
$subsave += $sublength; | |
$strings_in_acc{$s} = 0; | |
# append the first bit on the start. | |
$string_acc = substr ($s, 0, -$sublength) . $string_acc; | |
last OPTIMISER; | |
} | |
} | |
# Optimiser (if it ran) found nothing, so just going have to tack the | |
# whole thing on the end. | |
$strings_in_acc{$s} = length $string_acc; | |
$string_acc .= $s; | |
}; | |
} | |
} | |
$strings = length $string_acc; | |
my ($cpp) = compiler_info(0); | |
my $var = $cpp ? '' : 'static'; | |
my $definition = "\n$var const U8 $name\[$strings] = { " . | |
join(',',unpack "C*",$string_acc); | |
# We have a single long line. Split it at convenient commas. | |
print $fh $1, "\n" while $definition =~ /\G(.{74,77},)/gcs; | |
print $fh substr ($definition, pos $definition), " };\n"; | |
} | |
sub findstring { | |
my ($name,$s) = @_; | |
my $offset = $strings_in_acc{$s}; | |
die "Can't find string " . join (',',unpack "C*",$s) . " in accumulator" | |
unless defined $offset; | |
"$name + $offset"; | |
} | |
sub outtable | |
{ | |
my ($fh,$a,$bigname) = @_; | |
my $name = $a->{'Cname'}; | |
$a->{'Done'} = 1; | |
foreach my $b (@{$a->{'Entries'}}) | |
{ | |
my ($s,$e,$out,$t,$end,$l) = @$b; | |
outtable($fh,$t,$bigname) unless $t->{'Done'}; | |
} | |
my ($cpp, $static) = compiler_info(0); | |
my $count = scalar(@{$a->{'Entries'}}); | |
if ($static) { | |
print $fh "#ifdef __cplusplus\n"; # -fpermissive since g++-6 | |
print $fh "encpage_t $name\[$count] = {\n"; | |
print $fh "#else\n"; | |
print $fh "static const encpage_t $name\[$count] = {\n"; | |
print $fh "#endif\n"; | |
} else { | |
print $fh "\nencpage_t $name\[$count] = {\n"; | |
} | |
foreach my $b (@{$a->{'Entries'}}) | |
{ | |
my ($sc,$ec,$out,$t,$end,$l,$fb) = @$b; | |
# $end |= 0x80 if $fb; # what the heck was on your mind, Nick? -- Dan | |
print $fh "{"; | |
if ($l) | |
{ | |
printf $fh findstring($bigname,$out); | |
} | |
else | |
{ | |
print $fh "0"; | |
} | |
print $fh ",",$t->{Cname}; | |
printf $fh ",0x%02x,0x%02x,$l,$end},\n",$sc,$ec; | |
} | |
print $fh "};\n"; | |
} | |
sub output_enc | |
{ | |
my ($fh,$name,$a) = @_; | |
die "Changed - fix me for new structure"; | |
foreach my $b (sort keys %$a) | |
{ | |
my ($s,$e,$out,$t,$end,$l,$fb) = @{$a->{$b}}; | |
} | |
} | |
sub decode_U | |
{ | |
my $s = shift; | |
} | |
my @uname; | |
sub char_names{} # cf. https://rt.cpan.org/Ticket/Display.html?id=132471 | |
sub output_ucm_page | |
{ | |
my ($cmap,$a,$t,$pre) = @_; | |
# warn sprintf("Page %x\n",$pre); | |
my $raw = $t->{Raw}; | |
foreach my $key (sort keys %$raw) { | |
# RAW_NEXT => 0, | |
# RAW_IN_LEN => 1, | |
# RAW_OUT_BYTES => 2, | |
# RAW_FALLBACK => 3, | |
my ($next, $in_len, $out_bytes, $fallback) = @{$raw->{$key}}; | |
my $u = ord $key; | |
$fallback ||= 0; | |
if ($next != $a && $next != $t) { | |
output_ucm_page($cmap,$a,$next,(($pre|($u &0x3F)) << 6)&0xFFFF); | |
} elsif (length $out_bytes) { | |
if ($pre) { | |
$u = $pre|($u &0x3f); | |
} | |
my $s = sprintf "<U%04X> ",$u; | |
#foreach my $c (split(//,$out_bytes)) { | |
# $s .= sprintf "\\x%02X",ord($c); | |
#} | |
# 9.5% faster changing that loop to this: | |
$s .= sprintf +("\\x%02X" x length $out_bytes), unpack "C*", $out_bytes; | |
$s .= sprintf " |%d # %s\n",($fallback ? 1 : 0),$uname[$u]; | |
push(@$cmap,$s); | |
} else { | |
warn join(',',$u, @{$raw->{$key}},$a,$t); | |
} | |
} | |
} | |
sub output_ucm | |
{ | |
my ($fh,$name,$h,$rep,$min_el,$max_el) = @_; | |
print $fh "# $0 @orig_ARGV\n" unless $opt{'q'}; | |
print $fh "<code_set_name> \"$name\"\n"; | |
char_names(); | |
if (defined $min_el) | |
{ | |
print $fh "<mb_cur_min> $min_el\n"; | |
} | |
if (defined $max_el) | |
{ | |
print $fh "<mb_cur_max> $max_el\n"; | |
} | |
if (defined $rep) | |
{ | |
print $fh "<subchar> "; | |
foreach my $c (split(//,$rep)) | |
{ | |
printf $fh "\\x%02X",ord($c); | |
} | |
print $fh "\n"; | |
} | |
my @cmap; | |
output_ucm_page(\@cmap,$h,$h,0); | |
print $fh "#\nCHARMAP\n"; | |
foreach my $line (sort { substr($a,8) cmp substr($b,8) } @cmap) | |
{ | |
print $fh $line; | |
} | |
print $fh "END CHARMAP\n"; | |
} | |
use vars qw( | |
$_Enc2xs | |
$_Version | |
$_Inc | |
$_E2X | |
$_Name | |
$_TableFiles | |
$_Now | |
); | |
sub find_e2x{ | |
eval { require File::Find; }; | |
my (@inc, %e2x_dir); | |
for my $inc (@INC){ | |
push @inc, $inc unless $inc eq '.'; #skip current dir | |
} | |
File::Find::find( | |
sub { | |
my ($dev,$ino,$mode,$nlink,$uid,$gid,$rdev,$size, | |
$atime,$mtime,$ctime,$blksize,$blocks) | |
= lstat($_) or return; | |
-f _ or return; | |
if (/^.*\.e2x$/o){ | |
no warnings 'once'; | |
$e2x_dir{$File::Find::dir} ||= $mtime; | |
} | |
return; | |
}, @inc); | |
warn join("\n", keys %e2x_dir), "\n"; | |
for my $d (sort {$e2x_dir{$a} <=> $e2x_dir{$b}} keys %e2x_dir){ | |
$_E2X = $d; | |
# warn "$_E2X => ", scalar localtime($e2x_dir{$d}); | |
return $_E2X; | |
} | |
} | |
sub make_makefile_pl | |
{ | |
eval { require Encode } or die "You need to install Encode to use enc2xs -M\nerror: $@\n"; | |
# our used for variable expansion | |
$_Enc2xs = $0; | |
$_Version = $VERSION; | |
$_E2X = find_e2x(); | |
$_Name = shift; | |
$_TableFiles = join(",", map {qq('$_')} @_); | |
$_Now = scalar localtime(); | |
eval { require File::Spec; }; | |
_print_expand(File::Spec->catfile($_E2X,"Makefile_PL.e2x"),"Makefile.PL"); | |
_print_expand(File::Spec->catfile($_E2X,"_PM.e2x"), "$_Name.pm"); | |
_print_expand(File::Spec->catfile($_E2X,"_T.e2x"), "t/$_Name.t"); | |
_print_expand(File::Spec->catfile($_E2X,"README.e2x"), "README"); | |
_print_expand(File::Spec->catfile($_E2X,"Changes.e2x"), "Changes"); | |
exit; | |
} | |
use vars qw( | |
$_ModLines | |
$_LocalVer | |
); | |
sub make_configlocal_pm { | |
eval { require Encode } or die "Unable to require Encode: $@\n"; | |
eval { require File::Spec; }; | |
# our used for variable expantion | |
my %in_core = map { $_ => 1 } ( | |
'ascii', 'iso-8859-1', 'utf8', | |
'ascii-ctrl', 'null', 'utf-8-strict' | |
); | |
my %LocalMod = (); | |
# check @enc; | |
use File::Find (); | |
my $wanted = sub{ | |
-f $_ or return; | |
$File::Find::name =~ /\A\./ and return; | |
$File::Find::name =~ /\.pm\z/ or return; | |
$File::Find::name =~ m/\bEncode\b/ or return; | |
my $mod = $File::Find::name; | |
$mod =~ s/.*\bEncode\b/Encode/o; | |
$mod =~ s/\.pm\z//o; | |
$mod =~ s,/,::,og; | |
eval qq{ require $mod; } or return; | |
warn qq{ require $mod;\n}; | |
for my $enc ( Encode->encodings() ) { | |
no warnings; | |
$in_core{$enc} and next; | |
$Encode::Config::ExtModule{$enc} and next; | |
$LocalMod{$enc} ||= $mod; | |
} | |
}; | |
File::Find::find({wanted => $wanted}, @INC); | |
$_ModLines = ""; | |
for my $enc ( sort keys %LocalMod ) { | |
$_ModLines .= | |
qq(\$Encode::ExtModule{'$enc'} = "$LocalMod{$enc}";\n); | |
} | |
warn $_ModLines if $_ModLines; | |
$_LocalVer = _mkversion(); | |
$_E2X = find_e2x(); | |
$_Inc = $INC{"Encode.pm"}; | |
$_Inc =~ s/\.pm$//o; | |
_print_expand( File::Spec->catfile( $_E2X, "ConfigLocal_PM.e2x" ), | |
File::Spec->catfile( $_Inc, "ConfigLocal.pm" ), 1 ); | |
exit; | |
} | |
sub _mkversion{ | |
# v-string is now depreciated; use time() instead; | |
#my ($ss,$mm,$hh,$dd,$mo,$yyyy) = localtime(); | |
#$yyyy += 1900, $mo +=1; | |
#return sprintf("v%04d.%04d.%04d", $yyyy, $mo*100+$dd, $hh*100+$mm); | |
return time(); | |
} | |
sub _print_expand{ | |
eval { require File::Basename } or die "File::Basename needed. Are you on miniperl?;\nerror: $@\n"; | |
File::Basename->import(); | |
my ($src, $dst, $clobber) = @_; | |
if (!$clobber and -e $dst){ | |
warn "$dst exists. skipping\n"; | |
return; | |
} | |
warn "Generating $dst...\n"; | |
open my $in, $src or die "$src : $!"; | |
if ((my $d = dirname($dst)) ne '.'){ | |
-d $d or mkdir $d, 0755 or die "mkdir $d : $!"; | |
} | |
open my $out, ">", $dst or die "$!"; | |
my $asis = 0; | |
while (<$in>){ | |
if (/^#### END_OF_HEADER/){ | |
$asis = 1; next; | |
} | |
s/(\$_[A-Z][A-Za-z0-9]+)_/$1/gee unless $asis; | |
print $out $_; | |
} | |
} | |
__END__ | |
=head1 NAME | |
enc2xs -- Perl Encode Module Generator | |
=head1 SYNOPSIS | |
enc2xs -[options] | |
enc2xs -M ModName mapfiles... | |
enc2xs -C | |
=head1 DESCRIPTION | |
F<enc2xs> builds a Perl extension for use by Encode from either | |
Unicode Character Mapping files (.ucm) or Tcl Encoding Files (.enc). | |
Besides being used internally during the build process of the Encode | |
module, you can use F<enc2xs> to add your own encoding to perl. | |
No knowledge of XS is necessary. | |
=head1 Quick Guide | |
If you want to know as little about Perl as possible but need to | |
add a new encoding, just read this chapter and forget the rest. | |
=over 4 | |
=item 0.Z<> | |
Have a .ucm file ready. You can get it from somewhere or you can write | |
your own from scratch or you can grab one from the Encode distribution | |
and customize it. For the UCM format, see the next Chapter. In the | |
example below, I'll call my theoretical encoding myascii, defined | |
in I<my.ucm>. C<$> is a shell prompt. | |
$ ls -F | |
my.ucm | |
=item 1.Z<> | |
Issue a command as follows; | |
$ enc2xs -M My my.ucm | |
generating Makefile.PL | |
generating My.pm | |
generating README | |
generating Changes | |
Now take a look at your current directory. It should look like this. | |
$ ls -F | |
Makefile.PL My.pm my.ucm t/ | |
The following files were created. | |
Makefile.PL - MakeMaker script | |
My.pm - Encode submodule | |
t/My.t - test file | |
=over 4 | |
=item 1.1.Z<> | |
If you want *.ucm installed together with the modules, do as follows; | |
$ mkdir Encode | |
$ mv *.ucm Encode | |
$ enc2xs -M My Encode/*ucm | |
=back | |
=item 2.Z<> | |
Edit the files generated. You don't have to if you have no time AND no | |
intention to give it to someone else. But it is a good idea to edit | |
the pod and to add more tests. | |
=item 3.Z<> | |
Now issue a command all Perl Mongers love: | |
$ perl Makefile.PL | |
Writing Makefile for Encode::My | |
=item 4.Z<> | |
Now all you have to do is make. | |
$ make | |
cp My.pm blib/lib/Encode/My.pm | |
/usr/local/bin/perl /usr/local/bin/enc2xs -Q -O \ | |
-o encode_t.c -f encode_t.fnm | |
Reading myascii (myascii) | |
Writing compiled form | |
128 bytes in string tables | |
384 bytes (75%) saved spotting duplicates | |
1 bytes (0.775%) saved using substrings | |
.... | |
chmod 644 blib/arch/auto/Encode/My/My.bs | |
$ | |
The time it takes varies depending on how fast your machine is and | |
how large your encoding is. Unless you are working on something big | |
like euc-tw, it won't take too long. | |
=item 5.Z<> | |
You can "make install" already but you should test first. | |
$ make test | |
PERL_DL_NONLAZY=1 /usr/local/bin/perl -Iblib/arch -Iblib/lib \ | |
-e 'use Test::Harness qw(&runtests $verbose); \ | |
$verbose=0; runtests @ARGV;' t/*.t | |
t/My....ok | |
All tests successful. | |
Files=1, Tests=2, 0 wallclock secs | |
( 0.09 cusr + 0.01 csys = 0.09 CPU) | |
=item 6.Z<> | |
If you are content with the test result, just "make install" | |
=item 7.Z<> | |
If you want to add your encoding to Encode's demand-loading list | |
(so you don't have to "use Encode::YourEncoding"), run | |
enc2xs -C | |
to update Encode::ConfigLocal, a module that controls local settings. | |
After that, "use Encode;" is enough to load your encodings on demand. | |
=back | |
=head1 The Unicode Character Map | |
Encode uses the Unicode Character Map (UCM) format for source character | |
mappings. This format is used by IBM's ICU package and was adopted | |
by Nick Ing-Simmons for use with the Encode module. Since UCM is | |
more flexible than Tcl's Encoding Map and far more user-friendly, | |
this is the recommended format for Encode now. | |
A UCM file looks like this. | |
# | |
# Comments | |
# | |
<code_set_name> "US-ascii" # Required | |
<code_set_alias> "ascii" # Optional | |
<mb_cur_min> 1 # Required; usually 1 | |
<mb_cur_max> 1 # Max. # of bytes/char | |
<subchar> \x3F # Substitution char | |
# | |
CHARMAP | |
<U0000> \x00 |0 # <control> | |
<U0001> \x01 |0 # <control> | |
<U0002> \x02 |0 # <control> | |
.... | |
<U007C> \x7C |0 # VERTICAL LINE | |
<U007D> \x7D |0 # RIGHT CURLY BRACKET | |
<U007E> \x7E |0 # TILDE | |
<U007F> \x7F |0 # <control> | |
END CHARMAP | |
=over 4 | |
=item * | |
Anything that follows C<#> is treated as a comment. | |
=item * | |
The header section continues until a line containing the word | |
CHARMAP. This section has a form of I<E<lt>keywordE<gt> value>, one | |
pair per line. Strings used as values must be quoted. Barewords are | |
treated as numbers. I<\xXX> represents a byte. | |
Most of the keywords are self-explanatory. I<subchar> means | |
substitution character, not subcharacter. When you decode a Unicode | |
sequence to this encoding but no matching character is found, the byte | |
sequence defined here will be used. For most cases, the value here is | |
\x3F; in ASCII, this is a question mark. | |
=item * | |
CHARMAP starts the character map section. Each line has a form as | |
follows: | |
<UXXXX> \xXX.. |0 # comment | |
^ ^ ^ | |
| | +- Fallback flag | |
| +-------- Encoded byte sequence | |
+-------------- Unicode Character ID in hex | |
The format is roughly the same as a header section except for the | |
fallback flag: | followed by 0..3. The meaning of the possible | |
values is as follows: | |
=over 4 | |
=item |0 | |
Round trip safe. A character decoded to Unicode encodes back to the | |
same byte sequence. Most characters have this flag. | |
=item |1 | |
Fallback for unicode -> encoding. When seen, enc2xs adds this | |
character for the encode map only. | |
=item |2 | |
Skip sub-char mapping should there be no code point. | |
=item |3 | |
Fallback for encoding -> unicode. When seen, enc2xs adds this | |
character for the decode map only. | |
=back | |
=item * | |
And finally, END OF CHARMAP ends the section. | |
=back | |
When you are manually creating a UCM file, you should copy ascii.ucm | |
or an existing encoding which is close to yours, rather than write | |
your own from scratch. | |
When you do so, make sure you leave at least B<U0000> to B<U0020> as | |
is, unless your environment is EBCDIC. | |
B<CAVEAT>: not all features in UCM are implemented. For example, | |
icu:state is not used. Because of that, you need to write a perl | |
module if you want to support algorithmical encodings, notably | |
the ISO-2022 series. Such modules include L<Encode::JP::2022_JP>, | |
L<Encode::KR::2022_KR>, and L<Encode::TW::HZ>. | |
=head2 Coping with duplicate mappings | |
When you create a map, you SHOULD make your mappings round-trip safe. | |
That is, C<encode('your-encoding', decode('your-encoding', $data)) eq | |
$data> stands for all characters that are marked as C<|0>. Here is | |
how to make sure: | |
=over 4 | |
=item * | |
Sort your map in Unicode order. | |
=item * | |
When you have a duplicate entry, mark either one with '|1' or '|3'. | |
=item * | |
And make sure the '|1' or '|3' entry FOLLOWS the '|0' entry. | |
=back | |
Here is an example from big5-eten. | |
<U2550> \xF9\xF9 |0 | |
<U2550> \xA2\xA4 |3 | |
Internally Encoding -> Unicode and Unicode -> Encoding Map looks like | |
this; | |
E to U U to E | |
-------------------------------------- | |
\xF9\xF9 => U2550 U2550 => \xF9\xF9 | |
\xA2\xA4 => U2550 | |
So it is round-trip safe for \xF9\xF9. But if the line above is upside | |
down, here is what happens. | |
E to U U to E | |
-------------------------------------- | |
\xA2\xA4 => U2550 U2550 => \xF9\xF9 | |
(\xF9\xF9 => U2550 is now overwritten!) | |
The Encode package comes with F<ucmlint>, a crude but sufficient | |
utility to check the integrity of a UCM file. Check under the | |
Encode/bin directory for this. | |
When in doubt, you can use F<ucmsort>, yet another utility under | |
Encode/bin directory. | |
=head1 Bookmarks | |
=over 4 | |
=item * | |
ICU Home Page | |
L<http://www.icu-project.org/> | |
=item * | |
ICU Character Mapping Tables | |
L<http://site.icu-project.org/charts/charset> | |
=item * | |
ICU:Conversion Data | |
L<http://www.icu-project.org/userguide/conversion-data.html> | |
=back | |
=head1 SEE ALSO | |
L<Encode>, | |
L<perlmod>, | |
L<perlpod> | |
=cut | |
# -Q to disable the duplicate codepoint test | |
# -S make mapping errors fatal | |
# -q to remove comments written to output files | |
# -O to enable the (brute force) substring optimiser | |
# -o <output> to specify the output file name (else it's the first arg) | |
# -f <inlist> to give a file with a list of input files (else use the args) | |
# -n <name> to name the encoding (else use the basename of the input file. | |
With %seen holding array refs: | |
865.66 real 28.80 user 8.79 sys | |
7904 maximum resident set size | |
1356 average shared memory size | |
18566 average unshared data size | |
229 average unshared stack size | |
46080 page reclaims | |
33373 page faults | |
With %seen holding simple scalars: | |
342.16 real 27.11 user 3.54 sys | |
8388 maximum resident set size | |
1394 average shared memory size | |
14969 average unshared data size | |
236 average unshared stack size | |
28159 page reclaims | |
9839 page faults | |
Yes, 5 minutes is faster than 15. Above is for CP936 in CN. Only difference is | |
how %seen is storing things its seen. So it is pathalogically bad on a 16M | |
RAM machine, but it's going to help even on modern machines. | |
Swapping is bad, m'kay :-) | |