NAME
iconv_open
,
iconv_open_into
,
iconv_close
, iconv
—
codeset conversion functions
LIBRARY
library “libc”
SYNOPSIS
#include
<iconv.h>
iconv_t
iconv_open
(const
char *dstname, const char
*srcname);
int
iconv_open_into
(const
char *dstname, const char
*srcname,
iconv_allocation_t
*ptr);
int
iconv_close
(iconv_t
cd);
size_t
iconv
(iconv_t
cd, char ** restrict
src, size_t * restrict
srcleft, char ** restrict
dst, size_t * restrict
dstleft);
size_t
__iconv
(iconv_t
cd, char ** restrict
src, size_t * restrict
srcleft, char ** restrict
dst, size_t * restrict
dstleft, uint32_t
flags, size_t *
invalids);
DESCRIPTION
Theiconv_open
()
function opens a converter from the codeset srcname to
the codeset dstname and returns its descriptor. The
arguments srcname and dstname
accept "" and "char", which refer to the current locale
encoding.
The
iconv_open_into
()
creates a conversion descriptor on a preallocated space. The
iconv_allocation_t is used as a spaceholder type when
allocating such space. The dstname and
srcname arguments are the same as in the case of
iconv_open
(). The ptr argument
is a pointer of iconv_allocation_t to the preallocated
space.
The
iconv_close
()
function closes the specified converter cd.
The
iconv
()
function converts the string in the buffer *src of
length *srcleft bytes and stores the converted string
in the buffer *dst of size
*dstleft bytes. After calling
iconv
(), the values pointed to by
src, srcleft,
dst, and dstleft are updated as
follows:
- *src
- Pointer to the byte just after the last character fetched.
- *srcleft
- Number of remaining bytes in the source buffer.
- *dst
- Pointer to the byte just after the last character stored.
- *dstleft
- Number of remainder bytes in the destination buffer.
If the string pointed to by *src contains a byte sequence which is not a valid character in the source codeset, the conversion stops just after the last successful conversion. If the output buffer is too small to store the converted character, the conversion also stops in the same way. In these cases, the values pointed to by src, srcleft, dst, and dstleft are updated to the state just after the last successful conversion.
If the string pointed to by
*src contains a character which is valid under the
source codeset but can not be converted to the destination codeset, the
character is replaced by an “invalid character” which depends
on the destination codeset, e.g., ‘?’, and the conversion is
continued.
iconv
()
returns the number of such “invalid conversions”.
There are two special cases of
iconv
():
- src == NULL || *src == NULL
- If the source and/or destination codesets are stateful,
iconv
() places these into their initial state.If both dst and *dst are non-
NULL
,iconv
() stores the shift sequence for the destination switching to the initial state in the buffer pointed to by *dst. The buffer size is specified by the value pointed to by dstleft as above.iconv
() will fail if the buffer is too small to store the shift sequence.On the other hand, dst or *dst may be
NULL
. In this case, the shift sequence for the destination switching to the initial state is discarded.
The
__iconv
()
function works just like iconv
() but if
iconv
() fails, the invalid character count is lost
there. This is a not bug rather a limitation of IEEE Std
1003.1-2008 (“POSIX.1”), so
__iconv
() is provided as an alternative but
non-standard interface. It also has a flags argument, where currently the
following flags can be passed:
- __ICONV_F_HIDE_INVALID
- Skip invalid characters, instead of returning with an error.
RETURN VALUES
Upon successful completion of
iconv_open
(), it returns a conversion descriptor.
Otherwise, iconv_open
() returns (iconv_t)-1 and sets
errno to indicate the error.
Upon successful completion of
iconv_open_into
(), it returns 0. Otherwise,
iconv_open_into
() returns -1, and sets errno to
indicate the error.
Upon successful completion of
iconv_close
(), it returns 0. Otherwise,
iconv_close
() returns -1 and sets errno to indicate
the error.
Upon successful completion of iconv
(), it
returns the number of “invalid” conversions. Otherwise,
iconv
() returns (size_t)-1 and sets errno to
indicate the error.
ERRORS
The iconv_open
() function may cause an
error in the following cases:
- [
ENOMEM
] - Memory is exhausted.
- [
EINVAL
] - There is no converter specified by srcname and dstname.
iconv_open_into
() function may cause an error in the
following cases:
- [
EINVAL
] - There is no converter specified by srcname and dstname.
The iconv_close
() function may cause an
error in the following case:
- [
EBADF
] - The conversion descriptor specified by cd is invalid.
The iconv
() function may cause an error in
the following cases:
- [
EBADF
] - The conversion descriptor specified by cd is invalid.
- [
EILSEQ
] - The string pointed to by *src contains a byte sequence which does not describe a valid character of the source codeset.
- [
E2BIG
] - The output buffer pointed to by *dst is too small to store the result string.
- [
EINVAL
] - The string pointed to by *src terminates with an incomplete character or shift sequence.
SEE ALSO
iconv(1), mkcsmapper(1), mkesdb(1), __iconv_get_list(3), iconv_canonicalize(3), iconvctl(3), iconvlist(3)
STANDARDS
The iconv_open
(),
iconv_close
(), and iconv
()
functions conform to IEEE Std 1003.1-2008
(“POSIX.1”).
The iconv_open_into
() function is a
GNU-specific extension and it is not part of any standard, thus its use may
break portability. The __iconv
() function is an own
extension and it is not part of any standard, thus its use may break
portability.