summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/doc/bugs/problems_with_utf8_names.mdwn
blob: 29213e1ec907037bb52a1ebfe2688b00fcfaadec (plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
There are problems with displaying filenames in UTF8 encoding, as shown here:

    $ echo $LANG
    en_GB.UTF-8
    $ git init
    $ git annex init test
    [...]
    $ touch "Umlaut Ü.txt"
    $ git annex add Uml*
    add Umlaut Ã.txt ok
    (Recording state in git...)
    $ find -name U\* | hexdump -C
    00000000  2e 2f 55 6d 6c 61 75 74  20 c3 9c 2e 74 78 74 0a  |./Umlaut ...txt.|
    00000010
    $ git annex find | hexdump -C
    00000000  55 6d 6c 61 75 74 20 c3  83 c2 9c 2e 74 78 74 0a  |Umlaut .....txt.|
    00000010
    $

It looks like the common latin1-to-UTF8 encoding. Functionality other than otuput seems not to be affected.

> Yes, I believe that git-annex is reading filename data from git
> as a stream of char8s, and not decoding unicode in it into logical
> characters.
> Haskell then I guess, tries to unicode encode it when it's output to
> the console.
> This only seems to matter WRT its output to the console; the data
> does not get mangled internally and so it accesses the right files
> under the hood.
> 
> I am too new to haskell to really have a handle on how to handle
> unicode and other encodings issues with it. In general, there are three
> valid approaches: --[[Joey]] 
> 
> 1. Convert all input data to unicode and be unicode clean end-to-end
>    internally. Problimatic here since filenames may not necessarily be
>    encoded in utf-8 (an archive could have historical filenames using
>    varying encodings), and you don't want which files are accessed to
>    depend on locale settings.
>    > I tried to do this by making parts of GitRepo call
>    > Codec.Binary.UTF8.String.decodeString when reading filenames from
>    > git. This seemed to break attempts to operate on the files,
>    > weirdly encoded strings were seen in syscalls in strace.
> 1. Keep input and internal data un-decoded, but decode it when
>    outputting a filename (assuming the filename is encoded using the
>    user's configured encoding), and allow haskell's output encoding to then
>    encode it according to the user's locale configuration.
>    > This is now [[implemented|done]]. I'm not very happy that I have to watch
>    > out for any place that a filename is output and call `showFile`
>    > on it, but there are really not too many such places in git-annex.
>    >
>    > Note that this only affects filenames apparently. 
>    > (Names of files in the annex, and also some places where names
>    > of keys are displayed.) Utf-8 in the uuid.map file etc seems
>    > to be handled cleanly.
> 1. Avoid encodings entirely. Mostly what I'm doing now; probably
>    could find a way to disable encoding of console output. Then the raw
>    filename would be displayed, which should work ok. git-annex does
>    not really need to pull apart filenames; they are almost entirely
>    opaque blobs. I guess that the `--exclude` option is the exception
>    to that, but it is currently not unicode safe anyway. (Update: tried
>    `--exclude` again, seems it is unicode clean..)
>    One other possible
>    issue would be that this could cause problems if git-annex were
>    translated.

----

Simpler test case:

<pre>
import Codec.Binary.UTF8.String
import System.Environment

main = do
        args <- getArgs
        let file = decodeString $ head args
        putStrLn $ "file is: " ++ file
        putStr =<< readFile file
</pre>

If I pass this a filename like 'ü', it will fail, and notice
the bad encoding of the filename in the error message:

<pre>
$ echo hi > ü; runghc foo.hs ü
file is: ü
foo.hs: �: openFile: does not exist (No such file or directory)
</pre>

On the other hand, if I remove the decodeString, it prints the filename
wrong, while accessing it right:

<pre>
$ runghc foo.hs ü
file is: üa
hi
</pre>

The only way that seems to consistently work is to delay decoding the
filename to places where it's output. But then it's easy to miss some.