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iconv(3C)


iconv -- codeset conversion function

Synopsis

   #include <iconv.h>
   

size_t iconv(iconv_t cd, const char **inbuf, size_t *inbytesleft, char **outbuf, size_t *outbytesleft);

Description

iconv converts the characters or sequence of characters in inbuf from one codeset to another and places the converted sequence in the array pointed to by outbuf.

The from and to codesets are specified with the ``iconv_open'' function call, which returns cd (the conversion descriptor). The argument inbuf is a pointer to a pointer, which in turn points to the first character in the input buffer. The number of bytes remaining to be converted is stored in the variable pointed to by inbytesleft. The outbuf argument is a pointer to a pointer to the first available byte in the ouput buffer. outbytesleft points to a variable containing the number of bytes that are available in the buffer.

For encodings that are state-dependent, the conversion descriptor cd is placed into its initial shift state by a call where inbuf is a null pointer or points to a null pointer. When a call is made to iconv in this way, and if outbuf is neither a null pointer or a pointer to a null pointer, and outbytesleft points to a positive value, then the sequence of bytes needed to change the output character stream to its initial state is placed in the output buffer. The iconv function will fail if the output buffer has insufficient space to hold the reset sequence. If further calls are made with inbuf not acting as a null pointer or a pointer to a null pointer, the conversion process takes place from the conversion descriptor's current state.

If during the conversion process, an invalid character in the input codeset is encountered, the process halts after the last successful character converted. If the input buffer contains an incomplete character or shift sequence at its end, the conversion process stops after the last successful character conversion. If the output buffer has insufficient space to hold the newly converted input, the conversion is halted prior to the input bytes that would cause the output buffer to overflow. The variable that is pointed to by inbuf is updated so that it points to the byte following the last successfully converted byte. The value pointed to by inbytesleft is decremented to reflect the number of bytes that have not been converted. The variable pointed to by outbuf is updated to point to the byte following the last byte of converted output data. The value pointed to by outbytesleft is decremented to indicate the number of remaining free bytes in the output buffer.

For encodings that are state-dependent, the conversion descriptor is updated to reflect the shift state that was in effect after the last successfully converted character. If iconv encounters a character which is legal in the input codeset, but does not occur in the output codeset, it is converted in an implementation dependent fashion.

Return values

If iconv encounters no errors, inbytesleft will point to a variable with a value of zero, and iconv will return the number of non-identical conversions performed. If the conversion process encounters an error, then inbytesleft will point to a variable with a positive value, iconv will return (size_t)-1, and errno will be set to indicate the error.

Errors

Failure of the iconv function will occur when:


EILSEQ
Encountered an input byte not belonging to the input codeset.

E2BIG
Insufficient space in the output buffer.

EINVAL
Encountered an incomplete character or shift sequence at the end of the input buffer.

EBADF
cd may be an invalid conversion descriptor.

Usage

Here is a section of the iconv command source code which makes use of the iconv functions:
   #include <iconv.h>
   

char inbuf[LINE_MAX], outbuf[LINE_MAX];

main(int argc, char **argv) { /* Argument processing ... */

if ((cd = iconv_open(tcode, fcode)) == (iconv_t) -1) { if (errno == EINVAL) { /* error: conversion not supported */ } else { /* error: unknown */ } exit(1); }

/* for each file */ process(fd, fname, cd);

exit(0); }

process(int fd, char *fname, iconv_t cd) { char *inptr, *outptr; size_t bytesleft, spaceleft, linebytes; int eof = 0; char *ct, *cf;

inptr = inbuf; bytesleft = 0; while ((linebytes = read(fd, inptr, LINEMAX - bytesleft)) > 0 || bytesleft > 0) { inptr = inbuf; if (linebytes > 0) bytesleft += linebytes; eof = linebytes == 0 ? 1 : 0; /* true if read returned 0 */ linebytes = bytesleft; spaceleft = LINEMAX; outptr = outbuf;

if (iconv(cd, &inptr, &bytesleft, &outptr, &spaceleft) == (size_t)-1) { switch (errno) { case EILSEQ: write(1, outbuf, LINEMAX - spaceleft); /* error: could not convert */ return(1); break; case E2BIG: break; /* write outbuf and continue */

case EINVAL: if (eof) { /* if at EOF */ write(1, outbuf, LINEMAX - spaceleft); /* error: incomplete char at eof */ return(1); } break; default: write(1, outbuf, LINEMAX - spaceleft); /* error: unknown */ return(1); break; } /* * move the partial char left at the end of * the input buffer to the beginning */ } else { inptr = inbuf; } write(1, outbuf, LINEMAX - spaceleft); } return(0); }

References

iconv(1), iconv_close(3C), iconv_open(3C), iconvh(5)
© 2004 The SCO Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
UnixWare 7 Release 7.1.4 - 25 April 2004