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  • Author : Bruno Haible
    Date : 2023-05-25 01:43:25
    Hash : bf03f38b
    Message : man pages: List a fifth condition when iconv(3) may stop. Based on the patch to the man-pages project <https://marc.info/?l=linux-man&m=168496625522371&w=2> = <https://lore.kernel.org/linux-man/2f9c4dbd-7aa6-fc7a-f126-453603ef695e@gmail.com/T/#m25e33d4defa1118e5c84951790f0319360abf9d4> * man/iconv.3: List a fifth condition.

  • man/iconv.3
  • .\" Copyright (c) Free Software Foundation, Inc.
    .\"
    .\" This is free documentation; you can redistribute it and/or
    .\" modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
    .\" published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of
    .\" the License, or (at your option) any later version.
    .\"
    .\" References consulted:
    .\"   GNU glibc-2 source code and manual
    .\"   OpenGroup's Single Unix specification http://www.UNIX-systems.org/online.html
    .\"
    .TH ICONV 3  "May 24, 2023" "GNU"
    .SH NAME
    iconv \- perform character set conversion
    .SH SYNOPSIS
    .nf
    .B #include <iconv.h>
    .sp
    .BI "size_t iconv (iconv_t " cd ,
    .BI "              const char* * " inbuf ", size_t * "inbytesleft ,
    .BI "              char* * " outbuf ", size_t * "outbytesleft );
    .fi
    .SH DESCRIPTION
    The argument \fIcd\fP must be a conversion descriptor created using the
    function \fBiconv_open\fP.
    .PP
    The main case is when \fIinbuf\fP is not NULL and \fI*inbuf\fP is not NULL.
    In this case, the \fBiconv\fP function converts the multibyte sequence
    starting at \fI*inbuf\fP to a multibyte sequence starting at \fI*outbuf\fP.
    At most \fI*inbytesleft\fP bytes, starting at \fI*inbuf\fP, will be read.
    At most \fI*outbytesleft\fP bytes, starting at \fI*outbuf\fP, will be written.
    .PP
    The \fBiconv\fP function converts one multibyte character at a time, and for
    each character conversion it increments \fI*inbuf\fP and decrements
    \fI*inbytesleft\fP by the number of converted input bytes, it increments
    \fI*outbuf\fP and decrements \fI*outbytesleft\fP by the number of converted
    output bytes, and it updates the conversion state contained in \fIcd\fP.
    If the character encoding of the input is stateful, the \fBiconv\fP function
    can also convert a sequence of input bytes to an update of the conversion state
    without producing any output bytes; such input is called a \fIshift sequence\fP.
    The conversion can stop for five reasons:
    .PP
    1. An invalid multibyte sequence is encountered in the input. In this case
    it sets \fBerrno\fP to \fBEILSEQ\fP and returns (size_t)(\-1). \fI*inbuf\fP
    is left pointing to the beginning of the invalid multibyte sequence.
    .PP
    2. The input byte sequence has been entirely converted, i.e. \fI*inbytesleft\fP
    has gone down to 0. In this case \fBiconv\fP returns the number of
    non-reversible conversions performed during this call.
    .PP
    3. An incomplete multibyte sequence is encountered in the input, and the
    input byte sequence terminates after it. In this case it sets \fBerrno\fP to
    \fBEINVAL\fP and returns (size_t)(\-1). \fI*inbuf\fP is left pointing to the
    beginning of the incomplete multibyte sequence.
    .PP
    4. A multibyte sequence is encountered that is valid but that cannot be
    translated to the character encoding of the output.
    This condition depends on the implementation and on the conversion
    descriptor.
    In the GNU C library and GNU libiconv, if \fIcd\fP was created without the
    suffix \fB//TRANSLIT\fP or \fB//IGNORE\fP, the conversion is strict: lossy
    conversions produce this condition.
    If the suffix \fB//TRANSLIT\fP was specified, transliteration can avoid this
    condition in some cases.
    In the musl C library, this condition cannot occur because a conversion to
    \fB\[aq]*\[aq]\fP is used as a fallback.
    In the FreeBSD, NetBSD, and Solaris implementations of \fBiconv\fP, this
    condition cannot occur either, because a conversion to \fB\[aq]?\[aq]\fP is
    used as a fallback.
    When this condition is met, the \fBiconv\fP function sets \fBerrno\fP to
    \fBEILSEQ\fP and returns (size_t)(\-1).
    \fI*inbuf\fP is left pointing to the beginning of the unconvertible multibyte
    sequence.
    .PP
    5. The output buffer has no more room for the next converted character. In
    this case it sets \fBerrno\fP to \fBE2BIG\fP and returns (size_t)(\-1).
    .PP
    A different case is when \fIinbuf\fP is NULL or \fI*inbuf\fP is NULL, but
    \fIoutbuf\fP is not NULL and \fI*outbuf\fP is not NULL. In this case, the
    \fBiconv\fP function attempts to set \fIcd\fP's conversion state to the
    initial state and store a corresponding shift sequence at \fI*outbuf\fP.
    At most \fI*outbytesleft\fP bytes, starting at \fI*outbuf\fP, will be written.
    If the output buffer has no more room for this reset sequence, it sets
    \fBerrno\fP to \fBE2BIG\fP and returns (size_t)(\-1). Otherwise it increments
    \fI*outbuf\fP and decrements \fI*outbytesleft\fP by the number of bytes
    written.
    .PP
    A third case is when \fIinbuf\fP is NULL or \fI*inbuf\fP is NULL, and
    \fIoutbuf\fP is NULL or \fI*outbuf\fP is NULL. In this case, the \fBiconv\fP
    function sets \fIcd\fP's conversion state to the initial state.
    .SH "RETURN VALUE"
    The \fBiconv\fP function returns the number of characters converted in a
    non-reversible way during this call; reversible conversions are not counted.
    In case of error, it sets \fBerrno\fP and returns (size_t)(\-1).
    .SH ERRORS
    The following errors can occur, among others:
    .TP
    .B E2BIG
    There is not sufficient room at \fI*outbuf\fP.
    .TP
    .B EILSEQ
    An invalid multibyte sequence has been encountered in the input.
    .TP
    .B EINVAL
    An incomplete multibyte sequence has been encountered in the input.
    .SH "CONFORMING TO"
    POSIX:2001
    .SH "SEE ALSO"
    .BR iconv_open (3),
    .BR iconvctl (3)
    .BR iconv_close (3)