postgresql/src/backend/utils/adt/pg_locale.c
Peter Eisentraut f2553d4306 Add option to use ICU as global locale provider
This adds the option to use ICU as the default locale provider for
either the whole cluster or a database.  New options for initdb,
createdb, and CREATE DATABASE are used to select this.

Since some (legacy) code still uses the libc locale facilities
directly, we still need to set the libc global locale settings even if
ICU is otherwise selected.  So pg_database now has three
locale-related fields: the existing datcollate and datctype, which are
always set, and a new daticulocale, which is only set if ICU is
selected.  A similar change is made in pg_collation for consistency,
but in that case, only the libc-related fields or the ICU-related
field is set, never both.

Reviewed-by: Julien Rouhaud <rjuju123@gmail.com>
Discussion: https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/flat/5e756dd6-0e91-d778-96fd-b1bcb06c161a%402ndquadrant.com
2022-03-17 11:13:16 +01:00

2159 lines
62 KiB
C

/*-----------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* PostgreSQL locale utilities
*
* Portions Copyright (c) 2002-2022, PostgreSQL Global Development Group
*
* src/backend/utils/adt/pg_locale.c
*
*-----------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
/*----------
* Here is how the locale stuff is handled: LC_COLLATE and LC_CTYPE
* are fixed at CREATE DATABASE time, stored in pg_database, and cannot
* be changed. Thus, the effects of strcoll(), strxfrm(), isupper(),
* toupper(), etc. are always in the same fixed locale.
*
* LC_MESSAGES is settable at run time and will take effect
* immediately.
*
* The other categories, LC_MONETARY, LC_NUMERIC, and LC_TIME are also
* settable at run-time. However, we don't actually set those locale
* categories permanently. This would have bizarre effects like no
* longer accepting standard floating-point literals in some locales.
* Instead, we only set these locale categories briefly when needed,
* cache the required information obtained from localeconv() or
* strftime(), and then set the locale categories back to "C".
* The cached information is only used by the formatting functions
* (to_char, etc.) and the money type. For the user, this should all be
* transparent.
*
* !!! NOW HEAR THIS !!!
*
* We've been bitten repeatedly by this bug, so let's try to keep it in
* mind in future: on some platforms, the locale functions return pointers
* to static data that will be overwritten by any later locale function.
* Thus, for example, the obvious-looking sequence
* save = setlocale(category, NULL);
* if (!setlocale(category, value))
* fail = true;
* setlocale(category, save);
* DOES NOT WORK RELIABLY: on some platforms the second setlocale() call
* will change the memory save is pointing at. To do this sort of thing
* safely, you *must* pstrdup what setlocale returns the first time.
*
* The POSIX locale standard is available here:
*
* http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/basedefs/xbd_chap07.html
*----------
*/
#include "postgres.h"
#include <time.h>
#include "access/htup_details.h"
#include "catalog/pg_collation.h"
#include "catalog/pg_control.h"
#include "mb/pg_wchar.h"
#include "utils/builtins.h"
#include "utils/formatting.h"
#include "utils/hsearch.h"
#include "utils/lsyscache.h"
#include "utils/memutils.h"
#include "utils/pg_locale.h"
#include "utils/syscache.h"
#ifdef USE_ICU
#include <unicode/ucnv.h>
#endif
#ifdef __GLIBC__
#include <gnu/libc-version.h>
#endif
#ifdef WIN32
#include <shlwapi.h>
#endif
#define MAX_L10N_DATA 80
/* GUC settings */
char *locale_messages;
char *locale_monetary;
char *locale_numeric;
char *locale_time;
/*
* lc_time localization cache.
*
* We use only the first 7 or 12 entries of these arrays. The last array
* element is left as NULL for the convenience of outside code that wants
* to sequentially scan these arrays.
*/
char *localized_abbrev_days[7 + 1];
char *localized_full_days[7 + 1];
char *localized_abbrev_months[12 + 1];
char *localized_full_months[12 + 1];
/* indicates whether locale information cache is valid */
static bool CurrentLocaleConvValid = false;
static bool CurrentLCTimeValid = false;
/* Cache for collation-related knowledge */
typedef struct
{
Oid collid; /* hash key: pg_collation OID */
bool collate_is_c; /* is collation's LC_COLLATE C? */
bool ctype_is_c; /* is collation's LC_CTYPE C? */
bool flags_valid; /* true if above flags are valid */
pg_locale_t locale; /* locale_t struct, or 0 if not valid */
} collation_cache_entry;
static HTAB *collation_cache = NULL;
#if defined(WIN32) && defined(LC_MESSAGES)
static char *IsoLocaleName(const char *); /* MSVC specific */
#endif
#ifdef USE_ICU
static void icu_set_collation_attributes(UCollator *collator, const char *loc);
#endif
/*
* pg_perm_setlocale
*
* This wraps the libc function setlocale(), with two additions. First, when
* changing LC_CTYPE, update gettext's encoding for the current message
* domain. GNU gettext automatically tracks LC_CTYPE on most platforms, but
* not on Windows. Second, if the operation is successful, the corresponding
* LC_XXX environment variable is set to match. By setting the environment
* variable, we ensure that any subsequent use of setlocale(..., "") will
* preserve the settings made through this routine. Of course, LC_ALL must
* also be unset to fully ensure that, but that has to be done elsewhere after
* all the individual LC_XXX variables have been set correctly. (Thank you
* Perl for making this kluge necessary.)
*/
char *
pg_perm_setlocale(int category, const char *locale)
{
char *result;
const char *envvar;
#ifndef WIN32
result = setlocale(category, locale);
#else
/*
* On Windows, setlocale(LC_MESSAGES) does not work, so just assume that
* the given value is good and set it in the environment variables. We
* must ignore attempts to set to "", which means "keep using the old
* environment value".
*/
#ifdef LC_MESSAGES
if (category == LC_MESSAGES)
{
result = (char *) locale;
if (locale == NULL || locale[0] == '\0')
return result;
}
else
#endif
result = setlocale(category, locale);
#endif /* WIN32 */
if (result == NULL)
return result; /* fall out immediately on failure */
/*
* Use the right encoding in translated messages. Under ENABLE_NLS, let
* pg_bind_textdomain_codeset() figure it out. Under !ENABLE_NLS, message
* format strings are ASCII, but database-encoding strings may enter the
* message via %s. This makes the overall message encoding equal to the
* database encoding.
*/
if (category == LC_CTYPE)
{
static char save_lc_ctype[LOCALE_NAME_BUFLEN];
/* copy setlocale() return value before callee invokes it again */
strlcpy(save_lc_ctype, result, sizeof(save_lc_ctype));
result = save_lc_ctype;
#ifdef ENABLE_NLS
SetMessageEncoding(pg_bind_textdomain_codeset(textdomain(NULL)));
#else
SetMessageEncoding(GetDatabaseEncoding());
#endif
}
switch (category)
{
case LC_COLLATE:
envvar = "LC_COLLATE";
break;
case LC_CTYPE:
envvar = "LC_CTYPE";
break;
#ifdef LC_MESSAGES
case LC_MESSAGES:
envvar = "LC_MESSAGES";
#ifdef WIN32
result = IsoLocaleName(locale);
if (result == NULL)
result = (char *) locale;
elog(DEBUG3, "IsoLocaleName() executed; locale: \"%s\"", result);
#endif /* WIN32 */
break;
#endif /* LC_MESSAGES */
case LC_MONETARY:
envvar = "LC_MONETARY";
break;
case LC_NUMERIC:
envvar = "LC_NUMERIC";
break;
case LC_TIME:
envvar = "LC_TIME";
break;
default:
elog(FATAL, "unrecognized LC category: %d", category);
return NULL; /* keep compiler quiet */
}
if (setenv(envvar, result, 1) != 0)
return NULL;
return result;
}
/*
* Is the locale name valid for the locale category?
*
* If successful, and canonname isn't NULL, a palloc'd copy of the locale's
* canonical name is stored there. This is especially useful for figuring out
* what locale name "" means (ie, the server environment value). (Actually,
* it seems that on most implementations that's the only thing it's good for;
* we could wish that setlocale gave back a canonically spelled version of
* the locale name, but typically it doesn't.)
*/
bool
check_locale(int category, const char *locale, char **canonname)
{
char *save;
char *res;
if (canonname)
*canonname = NULL; /* in case of failure */
save = setlocale(category, NULL);
if (!save)
return false; /* won't happen, we hope */
/* save may be pointing at a modifiable scratch variable, see above. */
save = pstrdup(save);
/* set the locale with setlocale, to see if it accepts it. */
res = setlocale(category, locale);
/* save canonical name if requested. */
if (res && canonname)
*canonname = pstrdup(res);
/* restore old value. */
if (!setlocale(category, save))
elog(WARNING, "failed to restore old locale \"%s\"", save);
pfree(save);
return (res != NULL);
}
/*
* GUC check/assign hooks
*
* For most locale categories, the assign hook doesn't actually set the locale
* permanently, just reset flags so that the next use will cache the
* appropriate values. (See explanation at the top of this file.)
*
* Note: we accept value = "" as selecting the postmaster's environment
* value, whatever it was (so long as the environment setting is legal).
* This will have been locked down by an earlier call to pg_perm_setlocale.
*/
bool
check_locale_monetary(char **newval, void **extra, GucSource source)
{
return check_locale(LC_MONETARY, *newval, NULL);
}
void
assign_locale_monetary(const char *newval, void *extra)
{
CurrentLocaleConvValid = false;
}
bool
check_locale_numeric(char **newval, void **extra, GucSource source)
{
return check_locale(LC_NUMERIC, *newval, NULL);
}
void
assign_locale_numeric(const char *newval, void *extra)
{
CurrentLocaleConvValid = false;
}
bool
check_locale_time(char **newval, void **extra, GucSource source)
{
return check_locale(LC_TIME, *newval, NULL);
}
void
assign_locale_time(const char *newval, void *extra)
{
CurrentLCTimeValid = false;
}
/*
* We allow LC_MESSAGES to actually be set globally.
*
* Note: we normally disallow value = "" because it wouldn't have consistent
* semantics (it'd effectively just use the previous value). However, this
* is the value passed for PGC_S_DEFAULT, so don't complain in that case,
* not even if the attempted setting fails due to invalid environment value.
* The idea there is just to accept the environment setting *if possible*
* during startup, until we can read the proper value from postgresql.conf.
*/
bool
check_locale_messages(char **newval, void **extra, GucSource source)
{
if (**newval == '\0')
{
if (source == PGC_S_DEFAULT)
return true;
else
return false;
}
/*
* LC_MESSAGES category does not exist everywhere, but accept it anyway
*
* On Windows, we can't even check the value, so accept blindly
*/
#if defined(LC_MESSAGES) && !defined(WIN32)
return check_locale(LC_MESSAGES, *newval, NULL);
#else
return true;
#endif
}
void
assign_locale_messages(const char *newval, void *extra)
{
/*
* LC_MESSAGES category does not exist everywhere, but accept it anyway.
* We ignore failure, as per comment above.
*/
#ifdef LC_MESSAGES
(void) pg_perm_setlocale(LC_MESSAGES, newval);
#endif
}
/*
* Frees the malloced content of a struct lconv. (But not the struct
* itself.) It's important that this not throw elog(ERROR).
*/
static void
free_struct_lconv(struct lconv *s)
{
if (s->decimal_point)
free(s->decimal_point);
if (s->thousands_sep)
free(s->thousands_sep);
if (s->grouping)
free(s->grouping);
if (s->int_curr_symbol)
free(s->int_curr_symbol);
if (s->currency_symbol)
free(s->currency_symbol);
if (s->mon_decimal_point)
free(s->mon_decimal_point);
if (s->mon_thousands_sep)
free(s->mon_thousands_sep);
if (s->mon_grouping)
free(s->mon_grouping);
if (s->positive_sign)
free(s->positive_sign);
if (s->negative_sign)
free(s->negative_sign);
}
/*
* Check that all fields of a struct lconv (or at least, the ones we care
* about) are non-NULL. The field list must match free_struct_lconv().
*/
static bool
struct_lconv_is_valid(struct lconv *s)
{
if (s->decimal_point == NULL)
return false;
if (s->thousands_sep == NULL)
return false;
if (s->grouping == NULL)
return false;
if (s->int_curr_symbol == NULL)
return false;
if (s->currency_symbol == NULL)
return false;
if (s->mon_decimal_point == NULL)
return false;
if (s->mon_thousands_sep == NULL)
return false;
if (s->mon_grouping == NULL)
return false;
if (s->positive_sign == NULL)
return false;
if (s->negative_sign == NULL)
return false;
return true;
}
/*
* Convert the strdup'd string at *str from the specified encoding to the
* database encoding.
*/
static void
db_encoding_convert(int encoding, char **str)
{
char *pstr;
char *mstr;
/* convert the string to the database encoding */
pstr = pg_any_to_server(*str, strlen(*str), encoding);
if (pstr == *str)
return; /* no conversion happened */
/* need it malloc'd not palloc'd */
mstr = strdup(pstr);
if (mstr == NULL)
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_OUT_OF_MEMORY),
errmsg("out of memory")));
/* replace old string */
free(*str);
*str = mstr;
pfree(pstr);
}
/*
* Return the POSIX lconv struct (contains number/money formatting
* information) with locale information for all categories.
*/
struct lconv *
PGLC_localeconv(void)
{
static struct lconv CurrentLocaleConv;
static bool CurrentLocaleConvAllocated = false;
struct lconv *extlconv;
struct lconv worklconv;
char *save_lc_monetary;
char *save_lc_numeric;
#ifdef WIN32
char *save_lc_ctype;
#endif
/* Did we do it already? */
if (CurrentLocaleConvValid)
return &CurrentLocaleConv;
/* Free any already-allocated storage */
if (CurrentLocaleConvAllocated)
{
free_struct_lconv(&CurrentLocaleConv);
CurrentLocaleConvAllocated = false;
}
/*
* This is tricky because we really don't want to risk throwing error
* while the locale is set to other than our usual settings. Therefore,
* the process is: collect the usual settings, set locale to special
* setting, copy relevant data into worklconv using strdup(), restore
* normal settings, convert data to desired encoding, and finally stash
* the collected data in CurrentLocaleConv. This makes it safe if we
* throw an error during encoding conversion or run out of memory anywhere
* in the process. All data pointed to by struct lconv members is
* allocated with strdup, to avoid premature elog(ERROR) and to allow
* using a single cleanup routine.
*/
memset(&worklconv, 0, sizeof(worklconv));
/* Save prevailing values of monetary and numeric locales */
save_lc_monetary = setlocale(LC_MONETARY, NULL);
if (!save_lc_monetary)
elog(ERROR, "setlocale(NULL) failed");
save_lc_monetary = pstrdup(save_lc_monetary);
save_lc_numeric = setlocale(LC_NUMERIC, NULL);
if (!save_lc_numeric)
elog(ERROR, "setlocale(NULL) failed");
save_lc_numeric = pstrdup(save_lc_numeric);
#ifdef WIN32
/*
* The POSIX standard explicitly says that it is undefined what happens if
* LC_MONETARY or LC_NUMERIC imply an encoding (codeset) different from
* that implied by LC_CTYPE. In practice, all Unix-ish platforms seem to
* believe that localeconv() should return strings that are encoded in the
* codeset implied by the LC_MONETARY or LC_NUMERIC locale name. Hence,
* once we have successfully collected the localeconv() results, we will
* convert them from that codeset to the desired server encoding.
*
* Windows, of course, resolutely does things its own way; on that
* platform LC_CTYPE has to match LC_MONETARY/LC_NUMERIC to get sane
* results. Hence, we must temporarily set that category as well.
*/
/* Save prevailing value of ctype locale */
save_lc_ctype = setlocale(LC_CTYPE, NULL);
if (!save_lc_ctype)
elog(ERROR, "setlocale(NULL) failed");
save_lc_ctype = pstrdup(save_lc_ctype);
/* Here begins the critical section where we must not throw error */
/* use numeric to set the ctype */
setlocale(LC_CTYPE, locale_numeric);
#endif
/* Get formatting information for numeric */
setlocale(LC_NUMERIC, locale_numeric);
extlconv = localeconv();
/* Must copy data now in case setlocale() overwrites it */
worklconv.decimal_point = strdup(extlconv->decimal_point);
worklconv.thousands_sep = strdup(extlconv->thousands_sep);
worklconv.grouping = strdup(extlconv->grouping);
#ifdef WIN32
/* use monetary to set the ctype */
setlocale(LC_CTYPE, locale_monetary);
#endif
/* Get formatting information for monetary */
setlocale(LC_MONETARY, locale_monetary);
extlconv = localeconv();
/* Must copy data now in case setlocale() overwrites it */
worklconv.int_curr_symbol = strdup(extlconv->int_curr_symbol);
worklconv.currency_symbol = strdup(extlconv->currency_symbol);
worklconv.mon_decimal_point = strdup(extlconv->mon_decimal_point);
worklconv.mon_thousands_sep = strdup(extlconv->mon_thousands_sep);
worklconv.mon_grouping = strdup(extlconv->mon_grouping);
worklconv.positive_sign = strdup(extlconv->positive_sign);
worklconv.negative_sign = strdup(extlconv->negative_sign);
/* Copy scalar fields as well */
worklconv.int_frac_digits = extlconv->int_frac_digits;
worklconv.frac_digits = extlconv->frac_digits;
worklconv.p_cs_precedes = extlconv->p_cs_precedes;
worklconv.p_sep_by_space = extlconv->p_sep_by_space;
worklconv.n_cs_precedes = extlconv->n_cs_precedes;
worklconv.n_sep_by_space = extlconv->n_sep_by_space;
worklconv.p_sign_posn = extlconv->p_sign_posn;
worklconv.n_sign_posn = extlconv->n_sign_posn;
/*
* Restore the prevailing locale settings; failure to do so is fatal.
* Possibly we could limp along with nondefault LC_MONETARY or LC_NUMERIC,
* but proceeding with the wrong value of LC_CTYPE would certainly be bad
* news; and considering that the prevailing LC_MONETARY and LC_NUMERIC
* are almost certainly "C", there's really no reason that restoring those
* should fail.
*/
#ifdef WIN32
if (!setlocale(LC_CTYPE, save_lc_ctype))
elog(FATAL, "failed to restore LC_CTYPE to \"%s\"", save_lc_ctype);
#endif
if (!setlocale(LC_MONETARY, save_lc_monetary))
elog(FATAL, "failed to restore LC_MONETARY to \"%s\"", save_lc_monetary);
if (!setlocale(LC_NUMERIC, save_lc_numeric))
elog(FATAL, "failed to restore LC_NUMERIC to \"%s\"", save_lc_numeric);
/*
* At this point we've done our best to clean up, and can call functions
* that might possibly throw errors with a clean conscience. But let's
* make sure we don't leak any already-strdup'd fields in worklconv.
*/
PG_TRY();
{
int encoding;
/* Release the pstrdup'd locale names */
pfree(save_lc_monetary);
pfree(save_lc_numeric);
#ifdef WIN32
pfree(save_lc_ctype);
#endif
/* If any of the preceding strdup calls failed, complain now. */
if (!struct_lconv_is_valid(&worklconv))
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_OUT_OF_MEMORY),
errmsg("out of memory")));
/*
* Now we must perform encoding conversion from whatever's associated
* with the locales into the database encoding. If we can't identify
* the encoding implied by LC_NUMERIC or LC_MONETARY (ie we get -1),
* use PG_SQL_ASCII, which will result in just validating that the
* strings are OK in the database encoding.
*/
encoding = pg_get_encoding_from_locale(locale_numeric, true);
if (encoding < 0)
encoding = PG_SQL_ASCII;
db_encoding_convert(encoding, &worklconv.decimal_point);
db_encoding_convert(encoding, &worklconv.thousands_sep);
/* grouping is not text and does not require conversion */
encoding = pg_get_encoding_from_locale(locale_monetary, true);
if (encoding < 0)
encoding = PG_SQL_ASCII;
db_encoding_convert(encoding, &worklconv.int_curr_symbol);
db_encoding_convert(encoding, &worklconv.currency_symbol);
db_encoding_convert(encoding, &worklconv.mon_decimal_point);
db_encoding_convert(encoding, &worklconv.mon_thousands_sep);
/* mon_grouping is not text and does not require conversion */
db_encoding_convert(encoding, &worklconv.positive_sign);
db_encoding_convert(encoding, &worklconv.negative_sign);
}
PG_CATCH();
{
free_struct_lconv(&worklconv);
PG_RE_THROW();
}
PG_END_TRY();
/*
* Everything is good, so save the results.
*/
CurrentLocaleConv = worklconv;
CurrentLocaleConvAllocated = true;
CurrentLocaleConvValid = true;
return &CurrentLocaleConv;
}
#ifdef WIN32
/*
* On Windows, strftime() returns its output in encoding CP_ACP (the default
* operating system codepage for the computer), which is likely different
* from SERVER_ENCODING. This is especially important in Japanese versions
* of Windows which will use SJIS encoding, which we don't support as a
* server encoding.
*
* So, instead of using strftime(), use wcsftime() to return the value in
* wide characters (internally UTF16) and then convert to UTF8, which we
* know how to handle directly.
*
* Note that this only affects the calls to strftime() in this file, which are
* used to get the locale-aware strings. Other parts of the backend use
* pg_strftime(), which isn't locale-aware and does not need to be replaced.
*/
static size_t
strftime_win32(char *dst, size_t dstlen,
const char *format, const struct tm *tm)
{
size_t len;
wchar_t wformat[8]; /* formats used below need 3 chars */
wchar_t wbuf[MAX_L10N_DATA];
/*
* Get a wchar_t version of the format string. We only actually use
* plain-ASCII formats in this file, so we can say that they're UTF8.
*/
len = MultiByteToWideChar(CP_UTF8, 0, format, -1,
wformat, lengthof(wformat));
if (len == 0)
elog(ERROR, "could not convert format string from UTF-8: error code %lu",
GetLastError());
len = wcsftime(wbuf, MAX_L10N_DATA, wformat, tm);
if (len == 0)
{
/*
* wcsftime failed, possibly because the result would not fit in
* MAX_L10N_DATA. Return 0 with the contents of dst unspecified.
*/
return 0;
}
len = WideCharToMultiByte(CP_UTF8, 0, wbuf, len, dst, dstlen - 1,
NULL, NULL);
if (len == 0)
elog(ERROR, "could not convert string to UTF-8: error code %lu",
GetLastError());
dst[len] = '\0';
return len;
}
/* redefine strftime() */
#define strftime(a,b,c,d) strftime_win32(a,b,c,d)
#endif /* WIN32 */
/*
* Subroutine for cache_locale_time().
* Convert the given string from encoding "encoding" to the database
* encoding, and store the result at *dst, replacing any previous value.
*/
static void
cache_single_string(char **dst, const char *src, int encoding)
{
char *ptr;
char *olddst;
/* Convert the string to the database encoding, or validate it's OK */
ptr = pg_any_to_server(src, strlen(src), encoding);
/* Store the string in long-lived storage, replacing any previous value */
olddst = *dst;
*dst = MemoryContextStrdup(TopMemoryContext, ptr);
if (olddst)
pfree(olddst);
/* Might as well clean up any palloc'd conversion result, too */
if (ptr != src)
pfree(ptr);
}
/*
* Update the lc_time localization cache variables if needed.
*/
void
cache_locale_time(void)
{
char buf[(2 * 7 + 2 * 12) * MAX_L10N_DATA];
char *bufptr;
time_t timenow;
struct tm *timeinfo;
bool strftimefail = false;
int encoding;
int i;
char *save_lc_time;
#ifdef WIN32
char *save_lc_ctype;
#endif
/* did we do this already? */
if (CurrentLCTimeValid)
return;
elog(DEBUG3, "cache_locale_time() executed; locale: \"%s\"", locale_time);
/*
* As in PGLC_localeconv(), it's critical that we not throw error while
* libc's locale settings have nondefault values. Hence, we just call
* strftime() within the critical section, and then convert and save its
* results afterwards.
*/
/* Save prevailing value of time locale */
save_lc_time = setlocale(LC_TIME, NULL);
if (!save_lc_time)
elog(ERROR, "setlocale(NULL) failed");
save_lc_time = pstrdup(save_lc_time);
#ifdef WIN32
/*
* On Windows, it appears that wcsftime() internally uses LC_CTYPE, so we
* must set it here. This code looks the same as what PGLC_localeconv()
* does, but the underlying reason is different: this does NOT determine
* the encoding we'll get back from strftime_win32().
*/
/* Save prevailing value of ctype locale */
save_lc_ctype = setlocale(LC_CTYPE, NULL);
if (!save_lc_ctype)
elog(ERROR, "setlocale(NULL) failed");
save_lc_ctype = pstrdup(save_lc_ctype);
/* use lc_time to set the ctype */
setlocale(LC_CTYPE, locale_time);
#endif
setlocale(LC_TIME, locale_time);
/* We use times close to current time as data for strftime(). */
timenow = time(NULL);
timeinfo = localtime(&timenow);
/* Store the strftime results in MAX_L10N_DATA-sized portions of buf[] */
bufptr = buf;
/*
* MAX_L10N_DATA is sufficient buffer space for every known locale, and
* POSIX defines no strftime() errors. (Buffer space exhaustion is not an
* error.) An implementation might report errors (e.g. ENOMEM) by
* returning 0 (or, less plausibly, a negative value) and setting errno.
* Report errno just in case the implementation did that, but clear it in
* advance of the calls so we don't emit a stale, unrelated errno.
*/
errno = 0;
/* localized days */
for (i = 0; i < 7; i++)
{
timeinfo->tm_wday = i;
if (strftime(bufptr, MAX_L10N_DATA, "%a", timeinfo) <= 0)
strftimefail = true;
bufptr += MAX_L10N_DATA;
if (strftime(bufptr, MAX_L10N_DATA, "%A", timeinfo) <= 0)
strftimefail = true;
bufptr += MAX_L10N_DATA;
}
/* localized months */
for (i = 0; i < 12; i++)
{
timeinfo->tm_mon = i;
timeinfo->tm_mday = 1; /* make sure we don't have invalid date */
if (strftime(bufptr, MAX_L10N_DATA, "%b", timeinfo) <= 0)
strftimefail = true;
bufptr += MAX_L10N_DATA;
if (strftime(bufptr, MAX_L10N_DATA, "%B", timeinfo) <= 0)
strftimefail = true;
bufptr += MAX_L10N_DATA;
}
/*
* Restore the prevailing locale settings; as in PGLC_localeconv(),
* failure to do so is fatal.
*/
#ifdef WIN32
if (!setlocale(LC_CTYPE, save_lc_ctype))
elog(FATAL, "failed to restore LC_CTYPE to \"%s\"", save_lc_ctype);
#endif
if (!setlocale(LC_TIME, save_lc_time))
elog(FATAL, "failed to restore LC_TIME to \"%s\"", save_lc_time);
/*
* At this point we've done our best to clean up, and can throw errors, or
* call functions that might throw errors, with a clean conscience.
*/
if (strftimefail)
elog(ERROR, "strftime() failed: %m");
/* Release the pstrdup'd locale names */
pfree(save_lc_time);
#ifdef WIN32
pfree(save_lc_ctype);
#endif
#ifndef WIN32
/*
* As in PGLC_localeconv(), we must convert strftime()'s output from the
* encoding implied by LC_TIME to the database encoding. If we can't
* identify the LC_TIME encoding, just perform encoding validation.
*/
encoding = pg_get_encoding_from_locale(locale_time, true);
if (encoding < 0)
encoding = PG_SQL_ASCII;
#else
/*
* On Windows, strftime_win32() always returns UTF8 data, so convert from
* that if necessary.
*/
encoding = PG_UTF8;
#endif /* WIN32 */
bufptr = buf;
/* localized days */
for (i = 0; i < 7; i++)
{
cache_single_string(&localized_abbrev_days[i], bufptr, encoding);
bufptr += MAX_L10N_DATA;
cache_single_string(&localized_full_days[i], bufptr, encoding);
bufptr += MAX_L10N_DATA;
}
localized_abbrev_days[7] = NULL;
localized_full_days[7] = NULL;
/* localized months */
for (i = 0; i < 12; i++)
{
cache_single_string(&localized_abbrev_months[i], bufptr, encoding);
bufptr += MAX_L10N_DATA;
cache_single_string(&localized_full_months[i], bufptr, encoding);
bufptr += MAX_L10N_DATA;
}
localized_abbrev_months[12] = NULL;
localized_full_months[12] = NULL;
CurrentLCTimeValid = true;
}
#if defined(WIN32) && defined(LC_MESSAGES)
/*
* Convert a Windows setlocale() argument to a Unix-style one.
*
* Regardless of platform, we install message catalogs under a Unix-style
* LL[_CC][.ENCODING][@VARIANT] naming convention. Only LC_MESSAGES settings
* following that style will elicit localized interface strings.
*
* Before Visual Studio 2012 (msvcr110.dll), Windows setlocale() accepted "C"
* (but not "c") and strings of the form <Language>[_<Country>][.<CodePage>],
* case-insensitive. setlocale() returns the fully-qualified form; for
* example, setlocale("thaI") returns "Thai_Thailand.874". Internally,
* setlocale() and _create_locale() select a "locale identifier"[1] and store
* it in an undocumented _locale_t field. From that LCID, we can retrieve the
* ISO 639 language and the ISO 3166 country. Character encoding does not
* matter, because the server and client encodings govern that.
*
* Windows Vista introduced the "locale name" concept[2], closely following
* RFC 4646. Locale identifiers are now deprecated. Starting with Visual
* Studio 2012, setlocale() accepts locale names in addition to the strings it
* accepted historically. It does not standardize them; setlocale("Th-tH")
* returns "Th-tH". setlocale(category, "") still returns a traditional
* string. Furthermore, msvcr110.dll changed the undocumented _locale_t
* content to carry locale names instead of locale identifiers.
*
* Visual Studio 2015 should still be able to do the same as Visual Studio
* 2012, but the declaration of locale_name is missing in _locale_t, causing
* this code compilation to fail, hence this falls back instead on to
* enumerating all system locales by using EnumSystemLocalesEx to find the
* required locale name. If the input argument is in Unix-style then we can
* get ISO Locale name directly by using GetLocaleInfoEx() with LCType as
* LOCALE_SNAME.
*
* MinGW headers declare _create_locale(), but msvcrt.dll lacks that symbol in
* releases before Windows 8. IsoLocaleName() always fails in a MinGW-built
* postgres.exe, so only Unix-style values of the lc_messages GUC can elicit
* localized messages. In particular, every lc_messages setting that initdb
* can select automatically will yield only C-locale messages. XXX This could
* be fixed by running the fully-qualified locale name through a lookup table.
*
* This function returns a pointer to a static buffer bearing the converted
* name or NULL if conversion fails.
*
* [1] https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/intl/locale-identifiers
* [2] https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/intl/locale-names
*/
#if _MSC_VER >= 1900
/*
* Callback function for EnumSystemLocalesEx() in get_iso_localename().
*
* This function enumerates all system locales, searching for one that matches
* an input with the format: <Language>[_<Country>], e.g.
* English[_United States]
*
* The input is a three wchar_t array as an LPARAM. The first element is the
* locale_name we want to match, the second element is an allocated buffer
* where the Unix-style locale is copied if a match is found, and the third
* element is the search status, 1 if a match was found, 0 otherwise.
*/
static BOOL CALLBACK
search_locale_enum(LPWSTR pStr, DWORD dwFlags, LPARAM lparam)
{
wchar_t test_locale[LOCALE_NAME_MAX_LENGTH];
wchar_t **argv;
(void) (dwFlags);
argv = (wchar_t **) lparam;
*argv[2] = (wchar_t) 0;
memset(test_locale, 0, sizeof(test_locale));
/* Get the name of the <Language> in English */
if (GetLocaleInfoEx(pStr, LOCALE_SENGLISHLANGUAGENAME,
test_locale, LOCALE_NAME_MAX_LENGTH))
{
/*
* If the enumerated locale does not have a hyphen ("en") OR the
* lc_message input does not have an underscore ("English"), we only
* need to compare the <Language> tags.
*/
if (wcsrchr(pStr, '-') == NULL || wcsrchr(argv[0], '_') == NULL)
{
if (_wcsicmp(argv[0], test_locale) == 0)
{
wcscpy(argv[1], pStr);
*argv[2] = (wchar_t) 1;
return FALSE;
}
}
/*
* We have to compare a full <Language>_<Country> tag, so we append
* the underscore and name of the country/region in English, e.g.
* "English_United States".
*/
else
{
size_t len;
wcscat(test_locale, L"_");
len = wcslen(test_locale);
if (GetLocaleInfoEx(pStr, LOCALE_SENGLISHCOUNTRYNAME,
test_locale + len,
LOCALE_NAME_MAX_LENGTH - len))
{
if (_wcsicmp(argv[0], test_locale) == 0)
{
wcscpy(argv[1], pStr);
*argv[2] = (wchar_t) 1;
return FALSE;
}
}
}
}
return TRUE;
}
/*
* This function converts a Windows locale name to an ISO formatted version
* for Visual Studio 2015 or greater.
*
* Returns NULL, if no valid conversion was found.
*/
static char *
get_iso_localename(const char *winlocname)
{
wchar_t wc_locale_name[LOCALE_NAME_MAX_LENGTH];
wchar_t buffer[LOCALE_NAME_MAX_LENGTH];
static char iso_lc_messages[LOCALE_NAME_MAX_LENGTH];
char *period;
int len;
int ret_val;
/*
* Valid locales have the following syntax:
* <Language>[_<Country>[.<CodePage>]]
*
* GetLocaleInfoEx can only take locale name without code-page and for the
* purpose of this API the code-page doesn't matter.
*/
period = strchr(winlocname, '.');
if (period != NULL)
len = period - winlocname;
else
len = pg_mbstrlen(winlocname);
memset(wc_locale_name, 0, sizeof(wc_locale_name));
memset(buffer, 0, sizeof(buffer));
MultiByteToWideChar(CP_ACP, 0, winlocname, len, wc_locale_name,
LOCALE_NAME_MAX_LENGTH);
/*
* If the lc_messages is already a Unix-style string, we have a direct
* match with LOCALE_SNAME, e.g. en-US, en_US.
*/
ret_val = GetLocaleInfoEx(wc_locale_name, LOCALE_SNAME, (LPWSTR) &buffer,
LOCALE_NAME_MAX_LENGTH);
if (!ret_val)
{
/*
* Search for a locale in the system that matches language and country
* name.
*/
wchar_t *argv[3];
argv[0] = wc_locale_name;
argv[1] = buffer;
argv[2] = (wchar_t *) &ret_val;
EnumSystemLocalesEx(search_locale_enum, LOCALE_WINDOWS, (LPARAM) argv,
NULL);
}
if (ret_val)
{
size_t rc;
char *hyphen;
/* Locale names use only ASCII, any conversion locale suffices. */
rc = wchar2char(iso_lc_messages, buffer, sizeof(iso_lc_messages), NULL);
if (rc == -1 || rc == sizeof(iso_lc_messages))
return NULL;
/*
* Simply replace the hyphen with an underscore. See comments in
* IsoLocaleName.
*/
hyphen = strchr(iso_lc_messages, '-');
if (hyphen)
*hyphen = '_';
return iso_lc_messages;
}
return NULL;
}
#endif /* _MSC_VER >= 1900 */
static char *
IsoLocaleName(const char *winlocname)
{
#if defined(_MSC_VER)
static char iso_lc_messages[LOCALE_NAME_MAX_LENGTH];
if (pg_strcasecmp("c", winlocname) == 0 ||
pg_strcasecmp("posix", winlocname) == 0)
{
strcpy(iso_lc_messages, "C");
return iso_lc_messages;
}
else
{
#if (_MSC_VER >= 1900) /* Visual Studio 2015 or later */
return get_iso_localename(winlocname);
#else
_locale_t loct;
loct = _create_locale(LC_CTYPE, winlocname);
if (loct != NULL)
{
size_t rc;
char *hyphen;
/* Locale names use only ASCII, any conversion locale suffices. */
rc = wchar2char(iso_lc_messages, loct->locinfo->locale_name[LC_CTYPE],
sizeof(iso_lc_messages), NULL);
_free_locale(loct);
if (rc == -1 || rc == sizeof(iso_lc_messages))
return NULL;
/*
* Since the message catalogs sit on a case-insensitive
* filesystem, we need not standardize letter case here. So long
* as we do not ship message catalogs for which it would matter,
* we also need not translate the script/variant portion, e.g.
* uz-Cyrl-UZ to uz_UZ@cyrillic. Simply replace the hyphen with
* an underscore.
*
* Note that the locale name can be less-specific than the value
* we would derive under earlier Visual Studio releases. For
* example, French_France.1252 yields just "fr". This does not
* affect any of the country-specific message catalogs available
* as of this writing (pt_BR, zh_CN, zh_TW).
*/
hyphen = strchr(iso_lc_messages, '-');
if (hyphen)
*hyphen = '_';
return iso_lc_messages;
}
#endif /* Visual Studio 2015 or later */
}
#endif /* defined(_MSC_VER) */
return NULL; /* Not supported on this version of msvc/mingw */
}
#endif /* WIN32 && LC_MESSAGES */
/*
* Detect aging strxfrm() implementations that, in a subset of locales, write
* past the specified buffer length. Affected users must update OS packages
* before using PostgreSQL 9.5 or later.
*
* Assume that the bug can come and go from one postmaster startup to another
* due to physical replication among diverse machines. Assume that the bug's
* presence will not change during the life of a particular postmaster. Given
* those assumptions, call this no less than once per postmaster startup per
* LC_COLLATE setting used. No known-affected system offers strxfrm_l(), so
* there is no need to consider pg_collation locales.
*/
void
check_strxfrm_bug(void)
{
char buf[32];
const int canary = 0x7F;
bool ok = true;
/*
* Given a two-byte ASCII string and length limit 7, 8 or 9, Solaris 10
* 05/08 returns 18 and modifies 10 bytes. It respects limits above or
* below that range.
*
* The bug is present in Solaris 8 as well; it is absent in Solaris 10
* 01/13 and Solaris 11.2. Affected locales include is_IS.ISO8859-1,
* en_US.UTF-8, en_US.ISO8859-1, and ru_RU.KOI8-R. Unaffected locales
* include de_DE.UTF-8, de_DE.ISO8859-1, zh_TW.UTF-8, and C.
*/
buf[7] = canary;
(void) strxfrm(buf, "ab", 7);
if (buf[7] != canary)
ok = false;
/*
* illumos bug #1594 was present in the source tree from 2010-10-11 to
* 2012-02-01. Given an ASCII string of any length and length limit 1,
* affected systems ignore the length limit and modify a number of bytes
* one less than the return value. The problem inputs for this bug do not
* overlap those for the Solaris bug, hence a distinct test.
*
* Affected systems include smartos-20110926T021612Z. Affected locales
* include en_US.ISO8859-1 and en_US.UTF-8. Unaffected locales include C.
*/
buf[1] = canary;
(void) strxfrm(buf, "a", 1);
if (buf[1] != canary)
ok = false;
if (!ok)
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_SYSTEM_ERROR),
errmsg_internal("strxfrm(), in locale \"%s\", writes past the specified array length",
setlocale(LC_COLLATE, NULL)),
errhint("Apply system library package updates.")));
}
/*
* Cache mechanism for collation information.
*
* We cache two flags: whether the collation's LC_COLLATE or LC_CTYPE is C
* (or POSIX), so we can optimize a few code paths in various places.
* For the built-in C and POSIX collations, we can know that without even
* doing a cache lookup, but we want to support aliases for C/POSIX too.
* For the "default" collation, there are separate static cache variables,
* since consulting the pg_collation catalog doesn't tell us what we need.
*
* Also, if a pg_locale_t has been requested for a collation, we cache that
* for the life of a backend.
*
* Note that some code relies on the flags not reporting false negatives
* (that is, saying it's not C when it is). For example, char2wchar()
* could fail if the locale is C, so str_tolower() shouldn't call it
* in that case.
*
* Note that we currently lack any way to flush the cache. Since we don't
* support ALTER COLLATION, this is OK. The worst case is that someone
* drops a collation, and a useless cache entry hangs around in existing
* backends.
*/
static collation_cache_entry *
lookup_collation_cache(Oid collation, bool set_flags)
{
collation_cache_entry *cache_entry;
bool found;
Assert(OidIsValid(collation));
Assert(collation != DEFAULT_COLLATION_OID);
if (collation_cache == NULL)
{
/* First time through, initialize the hash table */
HASHCTL ctl;
ctl.keysize = sizeof(Oid);
ctl.entrysize = sizeof(collation_cache_entry);
collation_cache = hash_create("Collation cache", 100, &ctl,
HASH_ELEM | HASH_BLOBS);
}
cache_entry = hash_search(collation_cache, &collation, HASH_ENTER, &found);
if (!found)
{
/*
* Make sure cache entry is marked invalid, in case we fail before
* setting things.
*/
cache_entry->flags_valid = false;
cache_entry->locale = 0;
}
if (set_flags && !cache_entry->flags_valid)
{
/* Attempt to set the flags */
HeapTuple tp;
Form_pg_collation collform;
tp = SearchSysCache1(COLLOID, ObjectIdGetDatum(collation));
if (!HeapTupleIsValid(tp))
elog(ERROR, "cache lookup failed for collation %u", collation);
collform = (Form_pg_collation) GETSTRUCT(tp);
if (collform->collprovider == COLLPROVIDER_LIBC)
{
Datum datum;
bool isnull;
const char *collcollate;
const char *collctype;
datum = SysCacheGetAttr(COLLOID, tp, Anum_pg_collation_collcollate, &isnull);
Assert(!isnull);
collcollate = TextDatumGetCString(datum);
datum = SysCacheGetAttr(COLLOID, tp, Anum_pg_collation_collctype, &isnull);
Assert(!isnull);
collctype = TextDatumGetCString(datum);
cache_entry->collate_is_c = ((strcmp(collcollate, "C") == 0) ||
(strcmp(collcollate, "POSIX") == 0));
cache_entry->ctype_is_c = ((strcmp(collctype, "C") == 0) ||
(strcmp(collctype, "POSIX") == 0));
}
else
{
cache_entry->collate_is_c = false;
cache_entry->ctype_is_c = false;
}
cache_entry->flags_valid = true;
ReleaseSysCache(tp);
}
return cache_entry;
}
/*
* Detect whether collation's LC_COLLATE property is C
*/
bool
lc_collate_is_c(Oid collation)
{
/*
* If we're asked about "collation 0", return false, so that the code will
* go into the non-C path and report that the collation is bogus.
*/
if (!OidIsValid(collation))
return false;
/*
* If we're asked about the default collation, we have to inquire of the C
* library. Cache the result so we only have to compute it once.
*/
if (collation == DEFAULT_COLLATION_OID)
{
static int result = -1;
char *localeptr;
if (default_locale.provider == COLLPROVIDER_ICU)
return false;
if (result >= 0)
return (bool) result;
localeptr = setlocale(LC_COLLATE, NULL);
if (!localeptr)
elog(ERROR, "invalid LC_COLLATE setting");
if (strcmp(localeptr, "C") == 0)
result = true;
else if (strcmp(localeptr, "POSIX") == 0)
result = true;
else
result = false;
return (bool) result;
}
/*
* If we're asked about the built-in C/POSIX collations, we know that.
*/
if (collation == C_COLLATION_OID ||
collation == POSIX_COLLATION_OID)
return true;
/*
* Otherwise, we have to consult pg_collation, but we cache that.
*/
return (lookup_collation_cache(collation, true))->collate_is_c;
}
/*
* Detect whether collation's LC_CTYPE property is C
*/
bool
lc_ctype_is_c(Oid collation)
{
/*
* If we're asked about "collation 0", return false, so that the code will
* go into the non-C path and report that the collation is bogus.
*/
if (!OidIsValid(collation))
return false;
/*
* If we're asked about the default collation, we have to inquire of the C
* library. Cache the result so we only have to compute it once.
*/
if (collation == DEFAULT_COLLATION_OID)
{
static int result = -1;
char *localeptr;
if (default_locale.provider == COLLPROVIDER_ICU)
return false;
if (result >= 0)
return (bool) result;
localeptr = setlocale(LC_CTYPE, NULL);
if (!localeptr)
elog(ERROR, "invalid LC_CTYPE setting");
if (strcmp(localeptr, "C") == 0)
result = true;
else if (strcmp(localeptr, "POSIX") == 0)
result = true;
else
result = false;
return (bool) result;
}
/*
* If we're asked about the built-in C/POSIX collations, we know that.
*/
if (collation == C_COLLATION_OID ||
collation == POSIX_COLLATION_OID)
return true;
/*
* Otherwise, we have to consult pg_collation, but we cache that.
*/
return (lookup_collation_cache(collation, true))->ctype_is_c;
}
struct pg_locale_struct default_locale;
void
make_icu_collator(const char *iculocstr,
struct pg_locale_struct *resultp)
{
#ifdef USE_ICU
UCollator *collator;
UErrorCode status;
status = U_ZERO_ERROR;
collator = ucol_open(iculocstr, &status);
if (U_FAILURE(status))
ereport(ERROR,
(errmsg("could not open collator for locale \"%s\": %s",
iculocstr, u_errorName(status))));
if (U_ICU_VERSION_MAJOR_NUM < 54)
icu_set_collation_attributes(collator, iculocstr);
/* We will leak this string if the caller errors later :-( */
resultp->info.icu.locale = MemoryContextStrdup(TopMemoryContext, iculocstr);
resultp->info.icu.ucol = collator;
#else /* not USE_ICU */
/* could get here if a collation was created by a build with ICU */
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED),
errmsg("ICU is not supported in this build"), \
errhint("You need to rebuild PostgreSQL using %s.", "--with-icu")));
#endif /* not USE_ICU */
}
/* simple subroutine for reporting errors from newlocale() */
#ifdef HAVE_LOCALE_T
static void
report_newlocale_failure(const char *localename)
{
int save_errno;
/*
* Windows doesn't provide any useful error indication from
* _create_locale(), and BSD-derived platforms don't seem to feel they
* need to set errno either (even though POSIX is pretty clear that
* newlocale should do so). So, if errno hasn't been set, assume ENOENT
* is what to report.
*/
if (errno == 0)
errno = ENOENT;
/*
* ENOENT means "no such locale", not "no such file", so clarify that
* errno with an errdetail message.
*/
save_errno = errno; /* auxiliary funcs might change errno */
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_INVALID_PARAMETER_VALUE),
errmsg("could not create locale \"%s\": %m",
localename),
(save_errno == ENOENT ?
errdetail("The operating system could not find any locale data for the locale name \"%s\".",
localename) : 0)));
}
#endif /* HAVE_LOCALE_T */
/*
* Create a locale_t from a collation OID. Results are cached for the
* lifetime of the backend. Thus, do not free the result with freelocale().
*
* As a special optimization, the default/database collation returns 0.
* Callers should then revert to the non-locale_t-enabled code path.
* Also, callers should avoid calling this before going down a C/POSIX
* fastpath, because such a fastpath should work even on platforms without
* locale_t support in the C library.
*
* For simplicity, we always generate COLLATE + CTYPE even though we
* might only need one of them. Since this is called only once per session,
* it shouldn't cost much.
*/
pg_locale_t
pg_newlocale_from_collation(Oid collid)
{
collation_cache_entry *cache_entry;
/* Callers must pass a valid OID */
Assert(OidIsValid(collid));
if (collid == DEFAULT_COLLATION_OID)
{
if (default_locale.provider == COLLPROVIDER_ICU)
return &default_locale;
else
return (pg_locale_t) 0;
}
cache_entry = lookup_collation_cache(collid, false);
if (cache_entry->locale == 0)
{
/* We haven't computed this yet in this session, so do it */
HeapTuple tp;
Form_pg_collation collform;
struct pg_locale_struct result;
pg_locale_t resultp;
Datum datum;
bool isnull;
tp = SearchSysCache1(COLLOID, ObjectIdGetDatum(collid));
if (!HeapTupleIsValid(tp))
elog(ERROR, "cache lookup failed for collation %u", collid);
collform = (Form_pg_collation) GETSTRUCT(tp);
/* We'll fill in the result struct locally before allocating memory */
memset(&result, 0, sizeof(result));
result.provider = collform->collprovider;
result.deterministic = collform->collisdeterministic;
if (collform->collprovider == COLLPROVIDER_LIBC)
{
#ifdef HAVE_LOCALE_T
const char *collcollate;
const char *collctype pg_attribute_unused();
locale_t loc;
datum = SysCacheGetAttr(COLLOID, tp, Anum_pg_collation_collcollate, &isnull);
Assert(!isnull);
collcollate = TextDatumGetCString(datum);
datum = SysCacheGetAttr(COLLOID, tp, Anum_pg_collation_collctype, &isnull);
Assert(!isnull);
collctype = TextDatumGetCString(datum);
if (strcmp(collcollate, collctype) == 0)
{
/* Normal case where they're the same */
errno = 0;
#ifndef WIN32
loc = newlocale(LC_COLLATE_MASK | LC_CTYPE_MASK, collcollate,
NULL);
#else
loc = _create_locale(LC_ALL, collcollate);
#endif
if (!loc)
report_newlocale_failure(collcollate);
}
else
{
#ifndef WIN32
/* We need two newlocale() steps */
locale_t loc1;
errno = 0;
loc1 = newlocale(LC_COLLATE_MASK, collcollate, NULL);
if (!loc1)
report_newlocale_failure(collcollate);
errno = 0;
loc = newlocale(LC_CTYPE_MASK, collctype, loc1);
if (!loc)
report_newlocale_failure(collctype);
#else
/*
* XXX The _create_locale() API doesn't appear to support
* this. Could perhaps be worked around by changing
* pg_locale_t to contain two separate fields.
*/
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED),
errmsg("collations with different collate and ctype values are not supported on this platform")));
#endif
}
result.info.lt = loc;
#else /* not HAVE_LOCALE_T */
/* platform that doesn't support locale_t */
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED),
errmsg("collation provider LIBC is not supported on this platform")));
#endif /* not HAVE_LOCALE_T */
}
else if (collform->collprovider == COLLPROVIDER_ICU)
{
const char *iculocstr;
datum = SysCacheGetAttr(COLLOID, tp, Anum_pg_collation_colliculocale, &isnull);
Assert(!isnull);
iculocstr = TextDatumGetCString(datum);
make_icu_collator(iculocstr, &result);
}
datum = SysCacheGetAttr(COLLOID, tp, Anum_pg_collation_collversion,
&isnull);
if (!isnull)
{
char *actual_versionstr;
char *collversionstr;
collversionstr = TextDatumGetCString(datum);
datum = SysCacheGetAttr(COLLOID, tp, collform->collprovider == COLLPROVIDER_ICU ? Anum_pg_collation_colliculocale : Anum_pg_collation_collcollate, &isnull);
Assert(!isnull);
actual_versionstr = get_collation_actual_version(collform->collprovider,
TextDatumGetCString(datum));
if (!actual_versionstr)
{
/*
* This could happen when specifying a version in CREATE
* COLLATION but the provider does not support versioning, or
* manually creating a mess in the catalogs.
*/
ereport(ERROR,
(errmsg("collation \"%s\" has no actual version, but a version was recorded",
NameStr(collform->collname))));
}
if (strcmp(actual_versionstr, collversionstr) != 0)
ereport(WARNING,
(errmsg("collation \"%s\" has version mismatch",
NameStr(collform->collname)),
errdetail("The collation in the database was created using version %s, "
"but the operating system provides version %s.",
collversionstr, actual_versionstr),
errhint("Rebuild all objects affected by this collation and run "
"ALTER COLLATION %s REFRESH VERSION, "
"or build PostgreSQL with the right library version.",
quote_qualified_identifier(get_namespace_name(collform->collnamespace),
NameStr(collform->collname)))));
}
ReleaseSysCache(tp);
/* We'll keep the pg_locale_t structures in TopMemoryContext */
resultp = MemoryContextAlloc(TopMemoryContext, sizeof(*resultp));
*resultp = result;
cache_entry->locale = resultp;
}
return cache_entry->locale;
}
/*
* Get provider-specific collation version string for the given collation from
* the operating system/library.
*/
char *
get_collation_actual_version(char collprovider, const char *collcollate)
{
char *collversion = NULL;
#ifdef USE_ICU
if (collprovider == COLLPROVIDER_ICU)
{
UCollator *collator;
UErrorCode status;
UVersionInfo versioninfo;
char buf[U_MAX_VERSION_STRING_LENGTH];
status = U_ZERO_ERROR;
collator = ucol_open(collcollate, &status);
if (U_FAILURE(status))
ereport(ERROR,
(errmsg("could not open collator for locale \"%s\": %s",
collcollate, u_errorName(status))));
ucol_getVersion(collator, versioninfo);
ucol_close(collator);
u_versionToString(versioninfo, buf);
collversion = pstrdup(buf);
}
else
#endif
if (collprovider == COLLPROVIDER_LIBC &&
pg_strcasecmp("C", collcollate) != 0 &&
pg_strncasecmp("C.", collcollate, 2) != 0 &&
pg_strcasecmp("POSIX", collcollate) != 0)
{
#if defined(__GLIBC__)
/* Use the glibc version because we don't have anything better. */
collversion = pstrdup(gnu_get_libc_version());
#elif defined(LC_VERSION_MASK)
locale_t loc;
/* Look up FreeBSD collation version. */
loc = newlocale(LC_COLLATE, collcollate, NULL);
if (loc)
{
collversion =
pstrdup(querylocale(LC_COLLATE_MASK | LC_VERSION_MASK, loc));
freelocale(loc);
}
else
ereport(ERROR,
(errmsg("could not load locale \"%s\"", collcollate)));
#elif defined(WIN32) && _WIN32_WINNT >= 0x0600
/*
* If we are targeting Windows Vista and above, we can ask for a name
* given a collation name (earlier versions required a location code
* that we don't have).
*/
NLSVERSIONINFOEX version = {sizeof(NLSVERSIONINFOEX)};
WCHAR wide_collcollate[LOCALE_NAME_MAX_LENGTH];
MultiByteToWideChar(CP_ACP, 0, collcollate, -1, wide_collcollate,
LOCALE_NAME_MAX_LENGTH);
if (!GetNLSVersionEx(COMPARE_STRING, wide_collcollate, &version))
{
/*
* GetNLSVersionEx() wants a language tag such as "en-US", not a
* locale name like "English_United States.1252". Until those
* values can be prevented from entering the system, or 100%
* reliably converted to the more useful tag format, tolerate the
* resulting error and report that we have no version data.
*/
if (GetLastError() == ERROR_INVALID_PARAMETER)
return NULL;
ereport(ERROR,
(errmsg("could not get collation version for locale \"%s\": error code %lu",
collcollate,
GetLastError())));
}
collversion = psprintf("%d.%d,%d.%d",
(version.dwNLSVersion >> 8) & 0xFFFF,
version.dwNLSVersion & 0xFF,
(version.dwDefinedVersion >> 8) & 0xFFFF,
version.dwDefinedVersion & 0xFF);
#endif
}
return collversion;
}
#ifdef USE_ICU
/*
* Converter object for converting between ICU's UChar strings and C strings
* in database encoding. Since the database encoding doesn't change, we only
* need one of these per session.
*/
static UConverter *icu_converter = NULL;
static void
init_icu_converter(void)
{
const char *icu_encoding_name;
UErrorCode status;
UConverter *conv;
if (icu_converter)
return; /* already done */
icu_encoding_name = get_encoding_name_for_icu(GetDatabaseEncoding());
if (!icu_encoding_name)
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_FEATURE_NOT_SUPPORTED),
errmsg("encoding \"%s\" not supported by ICU",
pg_encoding_to_char(GetDatabaseEncoding()))));
status = U_ZERO_ERROR;
conv = ucnv_open(icu_encoding_name, &status);
if (U_FAILURE(status))
ereport(ERROR,
(errmsg("could not open ICU converter for encoding \"%s\": %s",
icu_encoding_name, u_errorName(status))));
icu_converter = conv;
}
/*
* Convert a string in the database encoding into a string of UChars.
*
* The source string at buff is of length nbytes
* (it needn't be nul-terminated)
*
* *buff_uchar receives a pointer to the palloc'd result string, and
* the function's result is the number of UChars generated.
*
* The result string is nul-terminated, though most callers rely on the
* result length instead.
*/
int32_t
icu_to_uchar(UChar **buff_uchar, const char *buff, size_t nbytes)
{
UErrorCode status;
int32_t len_uchar;
init_icu_converter();
status = U_ZERO_ERROR;
len_uchar = ucnv_toUChars(icu_converter, NULL, 0,
buff, nbytes, &status);
if (U_FAILURE(status) && status != U_BUFFER_OVERFLOW_ERROR)
ereport(ERROR,
(errmsg("%s failed: %s", "ucnv_toUChars", u_errorName(status))));
*buff_uchar = palloc((len_uchar + 1) * sizeof(**buff_uchar));
status = U_ZERO_ERROR;
len_uchar = ucnv_toUChars(icu_converter, *buff_uchar, len_uchar + 1,
buff, nbytes, &status);
if (U_FAILURE(status))
ereport(ERROR,
(errmsg("%s failed: %s", "ucnv_toUChars", u_errorName(status))));
return len_uchar;
}
/*
* Convert a string of UChars into the database encoding.
*
* The source string at buff_uchar is of length len_uchar
* (it needn't be nul-terminated)
*
* *result receives a pointer to the palloc'd result string, and the
* function's result is the number of bytes generated (not counting nul).
*
* The result string is nul-terminated.
*/
int32_t
icu_from_uchar(char **result, const UChar *buff_uchar, int32_t len_uchar)
{
UErrorCode status;
int32_t len_result;
init_icu_converter();
status = U_ZERO_ERROR;
len_result = ucnv_fromUChars(icu_converter, NULL, 0,
buff_uchar, len_uchar, &status);
if (U_FAILURE(status) && status != U_BUFFER_OVERFLOW_ERROR)
ereport(ERROR,
(errmsg("%s failed: %s", "ucnv_fromUChars",
u_errorName(status))));
*result = palloc(len_result + 1);
status = U_ZERO_ERROR;
len_result = ucnv_fromUChars(icu_converter, *result, len_result + 1,
buff_uchar, len_uchar, &status);
if (U_FAILURE(status))
ereport(ERROR,
(errmsg("%s failed: %s", "ucnv_fromUChars",
u_errorName(status))));
return len_result;
}
/*
* Parse collation attributes and apply them to the open collator. This takes
* a string like "und@colStrength=primary;colCaseLevel=yes" and parses and
* applies the key-value arguments.
*
* Starting with ICU version 54, the attributes are processed automatically by
* ucol_open(), so this is only necessary for emulating this behavior on older
* versions.
*/
pg_attribute_unused()
static void
icu_set_collation_attributes(UCollator *collator, const char *loc)
{
char *str = asc_tolower(loc, strlen(loc));
str = strchr(str, '@');
if (!str)
return;
str++;
for (char *token = strtok(str, ";"); token; token = strtok(NULL, ";"))
{
char *e = strchr(token, '=');
if (e)
{
char *name;
char *value;
UColAttribute uattr;
UColAttributeValue uvalue;
UErrorCode status;
status = U_ZERO_ERROR;
*e = '\0';
name = token;
value = e + 1;
/*
* See attribute name and value lists in ICU i18n/coll.cpp
*/
if (strcmp(name, "colstrength") == 0)
uattr = UCOL_STRENGTH;
else if (strcmp(name, "colbackwards") == 0)
uattr = UCOL_FRENCH_COLLATION;
else if (strcmp(name, "colcaselevel") == 0)
uattr = UCOL_CASE_LEVEL;
else if (strcmp(name, "colcasefirst") == 0)
uattr = UCOL_CASE_FIRST;
else if (strcmp(name, "colalternate") == 0)
uattr = UCOL_ALTERNATE_HANDLING;
else if (strcmp(name, "colnormalization") == 0)
uattr = UCOL_NORMALIZATION_MODE;
else if (strcmp(name, "colnumeric") == 0)
uattr = UCOL_NUMERIC_COLLATION;
else
/* ignore if unknown */
continue;
if (strcmp(value, "primary") == 0)
uvalue = UCOL_PRIMARY;
else if (strcmp(value, "secondary") == 0)
uvalue = UCOL_SECONDARY;
else if (strcmp(value, "tertiary") == 0)
uvalue = UCOL_TERTIARY;
else if (strcmp(value, "quaternary") == 0)
uvalue = UCOL_QUATERNARY;
else if (strcmp(value, "identical") == 0)
uvalue = UCOL_IDENTICAL;
else if (strcmp(value, "no") == 0)
uvalue = UCOL_OFF;
else if (strcmp(value, "yes") == 0)
uvalue = UCOL_ON;
else if (strcmp(value, "shifted") == 0)
uvalue = UCOL_SHIFTED;
else if (strcmp(value, "non-ignorable") == 0)
uvalue = UCOL_NON_IGNORABLE;
else if (strcmp(value, "lower") == 0)
uvalue = UCOL_LOWER_FIRST;
else if (strcmp(value, "upper") == 0)
uvalue = UCOL_UPPER_FIRST;
else
status = U_ILLEGAL_ARGUMENT_ERROR;
if (status == U_ZERO_ERROR)
ucol_setAttribute(collator, uattr, uvalue, &status);
/*
* Pretend the error came from ucol_open(), for consistent error
* message across ICU versions.
*/
if (U_FAILURE(status))
ereport(ERROR,
(errmsg("could not open collator for locale \"%s\": %s",
loc, u_errorName(status))));
}
}
}
#endif /* USE_ICU */
/*
* These functions convert from/to libc's wchar_t, *not* pg_wchar_t.
* Therefore we keep them here rather than with the mbutils code.
*/
/*
* wchar2char --- convert wide characters to multibyte format
*
* This has the same API as the standard wcstombs_l() function; in particular,
* tolen is the maximum number of bytes to store at *to, and *from must be
* zero-terminated. The output will be zero-terminated iff there is room.
*/
size_t
wchar2char(char *to, const wchar_t *from, size_t tolen, pg_locale_t locale)
{
size_t result;
Assert(!locale || locale->provider == COLLPROVIDER_LIBC);
if (tolen == 0)
return 0;
#ifdef WIN32
/*
* On Windows, the "Unicode" locales assume UTF16 not UTF8 encoding, and
* for some reason mbstowcs and wcstombs won't do this for us, so we use
* MultiByteToWideChar().
*/
if (GetDatabaseEncoding() == PG_UTF8)
{
result = WideCharToMultiByte(CP_UTF8, 0, from, -1, to, tolen,
NULL, NULL);
/* A zero return is failure */
if (result <= 0)
result = -1;
else
{
Assert(result <= tolen);
/* Microsoft counts the zero terminator in the result */
result--;
}
}
else
#endif /* WIN32 */
if (locale == (pg_locale_t) 0)
{
/* Use wcstombs directly for the default locale */
result = wcstombs(to, from, tolen);
}
else
{
#ifdef HAVE_LOCALE_T
#ifdef HAVE_WCSTOMBS_L
/* Use wcstombs_l for nondefault locales */
result = wcstombs_l(to, from, tolen, locale->info.lt);
#else /* !HAVE_WCSTOMBS_L */
/* We have to temporarily set the locale as current ... ugh */
locale_t save_locale = uselocale(locale->info.lt);
result = wcstombs(to, from, tolen);
uselocale(save_locale);
#endif /* HAVE_WCSTOMBS_L */
#else /* !HAVE_LOCALE_T */
/* Can't have locale != 0 without HAVE_LOCALE_T */
elog(ERROR, "wcstombs_l is not available");
result = 0; /* keep compiler quiet */
#endif /* HAVE_LOCALE_T */
}
return result;
}
/*
* char2wchar --- convert multibyte characters to wide characters
*
* This has almost the API of mbstowcs_l(), except that *from need not be
* null-terminated; instead, the number of input bytes is specified as
* fromlen. Also, we ereport() rather than returning -1 for invalid
* input encoding. tolen is the maximum number of wchar_t's to store at *to.
* The output will be zero-terminated iff there is room.
*/
size_t
char2wchar(wchar_t *to, size_t tolen, const char *from, size_t fromlen,
pg_locale_t locale)
{
size_t result;
Assert(!locale || locale->provider == COLLPROVIDER_LIBC);
if (tolen == 0)
return 0;
#ifdef WIN32
/* See WIN32 "Unicode" comment above */
if (GetDatabaseEncoding() == PG_UTF8)
{
/* Win32 API does not work for zero-length input */
if (fromlen == 0)
result = 0;
else
{
result = MultiByteToWideChar(CP_UTF8, 0, from, fromlen, to, tolen - 1);
/* A zero return is failure */
if (result == 0)
result = -1;
}
if (result != -1)
{
Assert(result < tolen);
/* Append trailing null wchar (MultiByteToWideChar() does not) */
to[result] = 0;
}
}
else
#endif /* WIN32 */
{
/* mbstowcs requires ending '\0' */
char *str = pnstrdup(from, fromlen);
if (locale == (pg_locale_t) 0)
{
/* Use mbstowcs directly for the default locale */
result = mbstowcs(to, str, tolen);
}
else
{
#ifdef HAVE_LOCALE_T
#ifdef HAVE_MBSTOWCS_L
/* Use mbstowcs_l for nondefault locales */
result = mbstowcs_l(to, str, tolen, locale->info.lt);
#else /* !HAVE_MBSTOWCS_L */
/* We have to temporarily set the locale as current ... ugh */
locale_t save_locale = uselocale(locale->info.lt);
result = mbstowcs(to, str, tolen);
uselocale(save_locale);
#endif /* HAVE_MBSTOWCS_L */
#else /* !HAVE_LOCALE_T */
/* Can't have locale != 0 without HAVE_LOCALE_T */
elog(ERROR, "mbstowcs_l is not available");
result = 0; /* keep compiler quiet */
#endif /* HAVE_LOCALE_T */
}
pfree(str);
}
if (result == -1)
{
/*
* Invalid multibyte character encountered. We try to give a useful
* error message by letting pg_verifymbstr check the string. But it's
* possible that the string is OK to us, and not OK to mbstowcs ---
* this suggests that the LC_CTYPE locale is different from the
* database encoding. Give a generic error message if pg_verifymbstr
* can't find anything wrong.
*/
pg_verifymbstr(from, fromlen, false); /* might not return */
/* but if it does ... */
ereport(ERROR,
(errcode(ERRCODE_CHARACTER_NOT_IN_REPERTOIRE),
errmsg("invalid multibyte character for locale"),
errhint("The server's LC_CTYPE locale is probably incompatible with the database encoding.")));
}
return result;
}