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linux-next/fs/hfs/trans.c
Roman Zippel 328b922786 [PATCH] hfs: NLS support
This adds NLS support to HFS.  Using the kernel options iocharset and codepage
it's possible to map the disk encoding to a local mapping.  If these options
are not used, it falls back to the old direct mapping.

Signed-off-by: Roman Zippel <zippel@linux-m68k.org>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Morton <akpm@osdl.org>
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@osdl.org>
2005-09-07 16:57:50 -07:00

149 lines
3.3 KiB
C

/*
* linux/fs/hfs/trans.c
*
* Copyright (C) 1995-1997 Paul H. Hargrove
* This file may be distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License.
*
* This file contains routines for converting between the Macintosh
* character set and various other encodings. This includes dealing
* with ':' vs. '/' as the path-element separator.
*/
#include <linux/types.h>
#include <linux/nls.h>
#include "hfs_fs.h"
/*================ Global functions ================*/
/*
* hfs_mac2asc()
*
* Given a 'Pascal String' (a string preceded by a length byte) in
* the Macintosh character set produce the corresponding filename using
* the 'trivial' name-mangling scheme, returning the length of the
* mangled filename. Note that the output string is not NULL
* terminated.
*
* The name-mangling works as follows:
* The character '/', which is illegal in Linux filenames is replaced
* by ':' which never appears in HFS filenames. All other characters
* are passed unchanged from input to output.
*/
int hfs_mac2asc(struct super_block *sb, char *out, const struct hfs_name *in)
{
struct nls_table *nls_disk = HFS_SB(sb)->nls_disk;
struct nls_table *nls_io = HFS_SB(sb)->nls_io;
const char *src;
char *dst;
int srclen, dstlen, size;
src = in->name;
srclen = in->len;
dst = out;
dstlen = HFS_MAX_NAMELEN;
if (nls_io) {
wchar_t ch;
while (srclen > 0) {
if (nls_disk) {
size = nls_disk->char2uni(src, srclen, &ch);
if (size <= 0) {
ch = '?';
size = 1;
}
src += size;
srclen -= size;
} else {
ch = *src++;
srclen--;
}
if (ch == '/')
ch = ':';
size = nls_io->uni2char(ch, dst, dstlen);
if (size < 0) {
if (size == -ENAMETOOLONG)
goto out;
*dst = '?';
size = 1;
}
dst += size;
dstlen -= size;
}
} else {
char ch;
while (--srclen >= 0)
*dst++ = (ch = *src++) == '/' ? ':' : ch;
}
out:
return dst - out;
}
/*
* hfs_asc2mac()
*
* Given an ASCII string (not null-terminated) and its length,
* generate the corresponding filename in the Macintosh character set
* using the 'trivial' name-mangling scheme, returning the length of
* the mangled filename. Note that the output string is not NULL
* terminated.
*
* This routine is a inverse to hfs_mac2triv().
* A ':' is replaced by a '/'.
*/
void hfs_asc2mac(struct super_block *sb, struct hfs_name *out, struct qstr *in)
{
struct nls_table *nls_disk = HFS_SB(sb)->nls_disk;
struct nls_table *nls_io = HFS_SB(sb)->nls_io;
const char *src;
char *dst;
int srclen, dstlen, size;
src = in->name;
srclen = in->len;
dst = out->name;
dstlen = HFS_NAMELEN;
if (nls_io) {
wchar_t ch;
while (srclen > 0) {
size = nls_io->char2uni(src, srclen, &ch);
if (size < 0) {
ch = '?';
size = 1;
}
src += size;
srclen -= size;
if (ch == ':')
ch = '/';
if (nls_disk) {
size = nls_disk->uni2char(ch, dst, dstlen);
if (size < 0) {
if (size == -ENAMETOOLONG)
goto out;
*dst = '?';
size = 1;
}
dst += size;
dstlen -= size;
} else {
*dst++ = ch > 0xff ? '?' : ch;
dstlen--;
}
}
} else {
char ch;
if (dstlen > srclen)
dstlen = srclen;
while (--dstlen >= 0)
*dst++ = (ch = *src++) == ':' ? '/' : ch;
}
out:
out->len = dst - (char *)out->name;
dstlen = HFS_NAMELEN - out->len;
while (--dstlen >= 0)
*dst++ = 0;
}