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108 lines
3.7 KiB
Plaintext
108 lines
3.7 KiB
Plaintext
===========
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1999 Jul 21
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===========
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Josef Balatka, <balatka@email.cz> asked us not to remove RECODE and sent me
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Czech ISO-8859-2 -> WIN-1250 translation table.
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RECODE is no longer contains just Cyrillic RECODE and will stay in
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PostgreSQL.
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He also created some bits of documentation, mostly concerning RECODE -
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see README.Charsets.
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===========
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1999 Apr 14
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===========
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Tatsuo Ishii <t-ishii@sra.co.jp> updated Multibyte support extending it
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to Cyrillic language. Now PostgreSQL supports KOI8-R, WIN-1251, ISO8859-5
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and CP866 (ALT) encodings.
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Short instruction on using this feature follows. Longer discussion of
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Multibyte support is in README.mb.
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WARNING! Now with Multibyte support Cyrillic RECODE declared obsolete
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and will be removed from Postgres. If you are using RECODE consider
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switching to Multibyte support.
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Instructions on how to prepare Postgres for Cyrillic Multibyte support.
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----------------------------------------------------------------------
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First, you need to backup all your databases. I recommend to backup the
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entire Postgres directory, including binaries and libraries - thus you can
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easily restore if something goes wrong.
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Dump you data: pg_dumpall > dump.db
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Stop postmaster.
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Configure, compile and install Postgres. (I'll mostly talk about KOI8-R
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encoding, this is just to make examples a little more clear; you can use
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any supported encoding.)
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cd src
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./configure --enable-locale --with-mb=KOI8
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make
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make install
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Make sure you've backed up your databases. Doublecheck your backup. I
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really mean it - make regular backups and test your backups sometimes by
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fake restore.
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Remove your data directory (better, rename or move it).
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Run initdb saying your primary encoding: initdb -e KOI8. If you omit
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encoding, primary encoding from configure will be taken.
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Start postmaster.
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Create databases: createdb -e KOI8. Again, you can omit encoding -
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default encoding will be used. You are not forced to use the same encoding
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for all your databases - you can create different databases with different
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encodings.
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Load your data from the dump you've created: psql < dump.db
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That's all! Now you are ready to enjoy the full power of Multibyte
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support.
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To use Multibyte support you do not need to do something special - just
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execute your queries. If client program does not set encoding, it will get
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the data in database encoding. But client may ask Postgres to do automatic
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server-to-client and client-to-server conversions. There are 2 (two) ways
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client program declares its encoding:
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1) client explicitly executes the query SET CLIENT_ENCODING TO 'win';
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2) client started with environment variable set. Examples -
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using sh syntax:
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PGCLIENTENCODING='win'; export PGCLIENTENCODING
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using csh syntax:
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setenv PGCLIENTENCODING 'win'
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Setting PGCLIENTENCODING even if you use same client encding as the
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database would omit an overhead of asking the database encoding while
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initiating the connection, so it is good idea to set it in any case.
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Now you may run test suite and see Multibyte support in action. Go to
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.../src/test/locale and run
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make clean all test-koi2win
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===========
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1998 Nov 20
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===========
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I extended locale support, originally written by Oleg Bartunov
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<oleg@sai.msu.su>. Now ORDER BY (if PostgreSQL configured with
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--enable-locale) uses strcoll() for all text fields: char(n), varchar(n),
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text.
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I included test suite .../src/test/locale. I didn't include this in
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the regression test because not so much people require locale support. Read
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.../src/test/locale/README for details on the test suite.
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Many thanks to Oleg Bartunov (oleg@sai.msu.su) and Thomas G. Lockhart
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(lockhart@alumni.caltech.edu) for hints, tips, help and discussion.
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Oleg.
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