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326 lines
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326 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
PostgreSQL 7.0 multi-byte (MB) support README Mar 22 2000
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Tatsuo Ishii
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ishii@postgresql.org
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http://www.sra.co.jp/people/t-ishii/PostgreSQL/
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0. Introduction
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The MB support is intended for allowing PostgreSQL to handle
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multi-byte character sets such as EUC(Extended Unix Code), Unicode and
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Mule internal code. With the MB enabled you can use multi-byte
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character sets in regexp ,LIKE and some other functions. The default
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encoding system chosen is determined while initializing your
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PostgreSQL installation using initdb(1). Note that this can be
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overridden when you create a database using createdb(1) or by using a
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create database SQL command. So you could have multiple databases with
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each different encoding system.
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MB also fixes some problems concerning with 8-bit single byte
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character sets including ISO8859. (I would not say all of problems
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have been fixed. I just confirmed that the regression test ran fine
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and a few French characters could be used with the patch. Please let
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me know if you find any problem while using 8-bit characters)
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1. How to use
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run configure with a multibyte option:
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% ./configure --enable-multibyte[=encoding_system]
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where the encoding_system is one of:
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SQL_ASCII ASCII
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EUC_JP Japanese EUC
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EUC_CN Chinese EUC
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EUC_KR Korean EUC
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EUC_TW Taiwan EUC
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UNICODE Unicode(UTF-8)
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MULE_INTERNAL Mule internal
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LATIN1 ISO 8859-1 English and some European languages
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LATIN2 ISO 8859-2 English and some European languages
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LATIN3 ISO 8859-3 English and some European languages
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LATIN4 ISO 8859-4 English and some European languages
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LATIN5 ISO 8859-5 English and some European languages
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KOI8 KOI8-R
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WIN Windows CP1251
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ALT Windows CP866
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Example:
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% ./configure --enable-multibyte=EUC_JP
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If the encoding system is omitted (./configure --enable-multibyte),
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SQL_ASCII is assumed.
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2. How to set the encoding
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initdb command defines the default encoding for a PostgreSQL
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installation. For example:
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% initdb -E EUC_JP
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sets the default encoding to EUC_JP(Extended Unix Code for Japanese).
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Note that you can use "--encoding" instead of "-E" if you like longer
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option string:-) If no -E or --encoding option is given, the encoding
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specified at the compile time is used.
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You can create a database with a different encoding.
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% createdb -E EUC_KR korean
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will create a database named "korean" with EUC_KR encoding. The
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another way to accomplish this is to use a SQL command:
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CREATE DATABASE korean WITH ENCODING = 'EUC_KR';
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The encoding for a database is represented as "encoding" column in the
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pg_database system catalog. You can see that by using -l or \l of psql
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command.
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$ psql -l
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List of databases
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Database | Owner | Encoding
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---------------+---------+---------------
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euc_cn | t-ishii | EUC_CN
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euc_jp | t-ishii | EUC_JP
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euc_kr | t-ishii | EUC_KR
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euc_tw | t-ishii | EUC_TW
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mule_internal | t-ishii | MULE_INTERNAL
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regression | t-ishii | SQL_ASCII
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template1 | t-ishii | EUC_JP
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test | t-ishii | EUC_JP
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unicode | t-ishii | UNICODE
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(9 rows)
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3. Automatic encoding translation between backend and frontend
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PostgreSQL supports an automatic encoding translation between backend
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and frontend for some encodings.
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encoding of backend available encoding of frontend
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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EUC_JP EUC_JP, SJIS
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EUC_TW EUC_TW, BIG5
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LATIN2 LATIN2, WIN1250
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LATIN5 LATIN5, WIN, ALT
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MULE_INTERNAL EUC_JP, SJIS, EUC_KR, EUC_CN,
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EUC_TW, BIG5, LATIN1 to LATIN5,
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WIN, ALT, WIN1250
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To enable the automatic encoding translation, you have to tell
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PostgreSQL the encoding you would like to use in frontend. There are
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several ways to accomplish this.
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o using \encoding command in psql
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\encoding allows you to change frontend encoding on the fly. For
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example, to change the encoding to SJIS, type:
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\encoding SJIS
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o using libpq functions
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\encoding actually calls PQsetClientEncoding() for its purpose.
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int PQsetClientEncoding(PGconn *conn, const char *encoding)
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conn is a connection to the backend, and encoding is an encoding you
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want to use. If it successfully sets the encoding, it returns 0,
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otherwise -1. The current encoding for this connection can be shown by
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using:
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int PQclientEncoding(const PGconn *conn)
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Note that it returns the "encoding id," not the encoding symbol string
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such as "EUC_JP." To convert an encoding id to an encoding symbol, you
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can use:
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char *pg_encoding_to_char(int encoding_id)
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o using PGCLIENTENCODING
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If an environment variable PGCLIENTENCODING is defined in the
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frontend, an automatic encoding translation is done by the backend.
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o using SET CLIENT_ENCODING TO command
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Setting the frontend side encoding can be done a SQL command:
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SET CLIENT_ENCODING TO 'encoding';
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Also you can use SQL92 syntax "SET NAMES" for this purpose:
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SET NAMES 'encoding';
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To query the current the frontend encoding:
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SHOW CLIENT_ENCODING;
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To return to the default encoding:
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RESET CLIENT_ENCODING;
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4. About Unicode
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An automatic encoding translation between Unicode and any other
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encodings is not supported (yet).
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5. What happens if the translation is not possible?
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Suppose you choose EUC_JP for the backend, LATIN1 for the frontend,
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then some Japanese characters could not be translated into LATIN1. In
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this case, a letter cannot be represented in the LATIN1 character set,
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would be transformed as:
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(HEXA DECIMAL)
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6. References
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These are good sources to start learning various kind of encoding
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systems.
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ftp://ftp.ora.com/pub/examples/nutshell/ujip/doc/cjk.inf
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Detailed explanations of EUC_JP, EUC_CN, EUC_KR, EUC_TW
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appear in section 3.2.
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Unicode: http://www.unicode.org/
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The homepage of UNICODE.
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RFC 2044
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UTF-8 is defined here.
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5. History
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May 20, 2000
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* SJIS UDC (NEC selection IBM kanji) support contributed
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by Eiji Tokuya
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* Changes above will appear in 7.0.1
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Mar 22, 2000
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* Add new libpq functions PQsetClientEncoding, PQclientEncoding
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* ./configure --with-mb=EUC_JP
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now deprecated. use
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./configure --enable-multibyte=EUC_JP
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instead
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* Add SQL_ASCII regression test case
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* Add SJIS User Defined Character (UDC) support
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* All of above will appear in 7.0
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July 11, 1999
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* Add support for WIN1250 (Windows Czech) as a client encoding
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(contributed by Pavel Behal)
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* fix some compiler warnings (contributed by Tomoaki Nishiyama)
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Mar 23, 1999
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* Add support for KOI8(KOI8-R), WIN(CP1251), ALT(CP866)
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(thanks Oleg Broytmann for testing)
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* Fix problem with MB and locale
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Jan 26, 1999
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* Add support for Big5 for fronend encoding
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(you need to create a database with EUC_TW to use Big5)
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* Add regression test case for EUC_TW
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(contributed by Jonah Kuo <jonahkuo@mail.ttn.com.tw>)
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Dec 15, 1998
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* Bugs related to SQL_ASCII support fixed
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Nov 5, 1998
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* 6.4 release. In this version, pg_database has "encoding"
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column that represents the database encoding
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Jul 22, 1998
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* determine encoding at initdb/createdb rather than compile time
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* support for PGCLIENTENCODING when issuing COPY command
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* support for SQL92 syntax "SET NAMES"
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* support for LATIN2-5
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* add UNICODE regression test case
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* new test suite for MB
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* clean up source files
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Jun 5, 1998
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* add support for the encoding translation between the backend
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and the frontend
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* new command SET CLIENT_ENCODING etc. added
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* add support for LATIN1 character set
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* enhance 8 bit cleaness
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April 21, 1998 some enhancements/fixes
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* character_length(), position(), substring() are now aware of
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multi-byte characters
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* add octet_length()
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* add --with-mb option to configure
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* new regression tests for EUC_KR
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(contributed by "Soonmyung. Hong" <hong@lunaris.hanmesoft.co.kr>)
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* add some test cases to the EUC_JP regression test
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* fix problem in regress/regress.sh in case of System V
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* fix toupper(), tolower() to handle 8bit chars
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Mar 25, 1998 MB PL2 is incorporated into PostgreSQL 6.3.1
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Mar 10, 1998 PL2 released
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* add regression test for EUC_JP, EUC_CN and MULE_INTERNAL
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* add an English document (this file)
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* fix problems concerning 8-bit single byte characters
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Mar 1, 1998 PL1 released
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Appendix:
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[Here is a good documentation explaining how to use WIN1250 on
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Windows/ODBC from Pavel Behal. Please note that Installation step 1)
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is not necceary in 6.5.1 -- Tatsuo]
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Version: 0.91 for PgSQL 6.5
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Author: Pavel Behal
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Revised by: Tatsuo Ishii
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Email: behal@opf.slu.cz
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Licence: The Same as PostgreSQL
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Sorry for my Eglish and C code, I'm not native :-)
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!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! NO WARRANTY !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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Instalation:
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------------
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1) Change three affected files in source directories
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(I don't have time to create proper patch diffs, I don't know how)
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2) Compile with enabled locale and multibyte set to LATIN2
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3) Setup properly your instalation, do not forget to create locale
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variables in your profile (environment). Ex. (may not be exactly true):
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LC_ALL=cs_CZ.ISO8859-2
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LC_COLLATE=cs_CZ.ISO8859-2
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LC_CTYPE=cs_CZ.ISO8859-2
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LC_MONETARY=cs_CZ.ISO8859-2
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LC_NUMERIC=cs_CZ.ISO8859-2
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LC_TIME=cs_CZ.ISO8859-2
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4) You have to start the postmaster with locales set!
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5) Try it with Czech language, it have to sort
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5) Install ODBC driver for PgSQL into your M$ Windows
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6) Setup properly your data source. Include this line in your ODBC
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configuration dialog in field "Connect Settings:" :
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SET CLIENT_ENCODING = 'WIN1250';
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7) Now try it again, but in Windows with ODBC.
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Description:
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------------
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- Depends on proper system locales, tested with RH6.0 and Slackware 3.6,
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with cs_CZ.iso8859-2 loacle
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- Never try to set-up server multibyte database encoding to WIN1250,
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always use LATIN2 instead. There is not WIN1250 locale in Unix
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- WIN1250 encoding is useable only for M$W ODBC clients. The characters are
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on thy fly re-coded, to be displayed and stored back properly
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Important:
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----------
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- it reorders your sort order depending on your LC_... setting, so don't be
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confused with regression tests, they don't use locale
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- "ch" is corectly sorted only in some newer locales (Ex. RH6.0)
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- you have to insert money as '162,50' (with comma in aphostrophes!)
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- not tested properly
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