1ICONV(3P) POSIX Programmer's Manual ICONV(3P)
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6 This manual page is part of the POSIX Programmer's Manual. The Linux
7 implementation of this interface may differ (consult the corresponding
8 Linux manual page for details of Linux behavior), or the interface may
9 not be implemented on Linux.
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13 iconv — codeset conversion function
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16 #include <iconv.h>
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18 size_t iconv(iconv_t cd, char **restrict inbuf,
19 size_t *restrict inbytesleft, char **restrict outbuf,
20 size_t *restrict outbytesleft);
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23 The iconv() function shall convert the sequence of characters from one
24 codeset, in the array specified by inbuf, into a sequence of corre‐
25 sponding characters in another codeset, in the array specified by out‐
26 buf. The codesets are those specified in the iconv_open() call that
27 returned the conversion descriptor, cd. The inbuf argument points to a
28 variable that points to the first character in the input buffer and
29 inbytesleft indicates the number of bytes to the end of the buffer to
30 be converted. The outbuf argument points to a variable that points to
31 the first available byte in the output buffer and outbytesleft indi‐
32 cates the number of the available bytes to the end of the buffer.
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34 For state-dependent encodings, the conversion descriptor cd is placed
35 into its initial shift state by a call for which inbuf is a null
36 pointer, or for which inbuf points to a null pointer. When iconv() is
37 called in this way, and if outbuf is not a null pointer or a pointer to
38 a null pointer, and outbytesleft points to a positive value, iconv()
39 shall place, into the output buffer, the byte sequence to change the
40 output buffer to its initial shift state. If the output buffer is not
41 large enough to hold the entire reset sequence, iconv() shall fail and
42 set errno to [E2BIG]. Subsequent calls with inbuf as other than a null
43 pointer or a pointer to a null pointer cause the conversion to take
44 place from the current state of the conversion descriptor.
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46 If a sequence of input bytes does not form a valid character in the
47 specified codeset, conversion shall stop after the previous success‐
48 fully converted character. If the input buffer ends with an incomplete
49 character or shift sequence, conversion shall stop after the previous
50 successfully converted bytes. If the output buffer is not large enough
51 to hold the entire converted input, conversion shall stop just prior to
52 the input bytes that would cause the output buffer to overflow. The
53 variable pointed to by inbuf shall be updated to point to the byte fol‐
54 lowing the last byte successfully used in the conversion. The value
55 pointed to by inbytesleft shall be decremented to reflect the number of
56 bytes still not converted in the input buffer. The variable pointed to
57 by outbuf shall be updated to point to the byte following the last byte
58 of converted output data. The value pointed to by outbytesleft shall be
59 decremented to reflect the number of bytes still available in the out‐
60 put buffer. For state-dependent encodings, the conversion descriptor
61 shall be updated to reflect the shift state in effect at the end of the
62 last successfully converted byte sequence.
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64 If iconv() encounters a character in the input buffer that is valid,
65 but for which an identical character does not exist in the target code‐
66 set, iconv() shall perform an implementation-defined conversion on this
67 character.
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70 The iconv() function shall update the variables pointed to by the argu‐
71 ments to reflect the extent of the conversion and return the number of
72 non-identical conversions performed. If the entire string in the input
73 buffer is converted, the value pointed to by inbytesleft shall be 0. If
74 the input conversion is stopped due to any conditions mentioned above,
75 the value pointed to by inbytesleft shall be non-zero and errno shall
76 be set to indicate the condition. If an error occurs, iconv() shall
77 return (size_t)−1 and set errno to indicate the error.
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80 The iconv() function shall fail if:
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82 EILSEQ Input conversion stopped due to an input byte that does not
83 belong to the input codeset.
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85 E2BIG Input conversion stopped due to lack of space in the output buf‐
86 fer.
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88 EINVAL Input conversion stopped due to an incomplete character or shift
89 sequence at the end of the input buffer.
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91 The iconv() function may fail if:
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93 EBADF The cd argument is not a valid open conversion descriptor.
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95 The following sections are informative.
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98 None.
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101 The inbuf argument indirectly points to the memory area which contains
102 the conversion input data. The outbuf argument indirectly points to the
103 memory area which is to contain the result of the conversion. The
104 objects indirectly pointed to by inbuf and outbuf are not restricted to
105 containing data that is directly representable in the ISO C standard
106 language char data type. The type of inbuf and outbuf, char **, does
107 not imply that the objects pointed to are interpreted as null-termi‐
108 nated C strings or arrays of characters. Any interpretation of a byte
109 sequence that represents a character in a given character set encoding
110 scheme is done internally within the codeset converters. For example,
111 the area pointed to indirectly by inbuf and/or outbuf can contain all
112 zero octets that are not interpreted as string terminators but as coded
113 character data according to the respective codeset encoding scheme. The
114 type of the data (char, short, long, and so on) read or stored in the
115 objects is not specified, but may be inferred for both the input and
116 output data by the converters determined by the fromcode and tocode
117 arguments of iconv_open().
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119 Regardless of the data type inferred by the converter, the size of the
120 remaining space in both input and output objects (the intbytesleft and
121 outbytesleft arguments) is always measured in bytes.
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123 For implementations that support the conversion of state-dependent
124 encodings, the conversion descriptor must be able to accurately reflect
125 the shift-state in effect at the end of the last successful conversion.
126 It is not required that the conversion descriptor itself be updated,
127 which would require it to be a pointer type. Thus, implementations are
128 free to implement the descriptor as a handle (other than a pointer
129 type) by which the conversion information can be accessed and updated.
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132 None.
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135 None.
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138 iconv_open(), iconv_close(), mbsrtowcs()
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140 The Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1‐2008, <iconv.h>
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143 Portions of this text are reprinted and reproduced in electronic form
144 from IEEE Std 1003.1, 2013 Edition, Standard for Information Technology
145 -- Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX), The Open Group Base
146 Specifications Issue 7, Copyright (C) 2013 by the Institute of Electri‐
147 cal and Electronics Engineers, Inc and The Open Group. (This is
148 POSIX.1-2008 with the 2013 Technical Corrigendum 1 applied.) In the
149 event of any discrepancy between this version and the original IEEE and
150 The Open Group Standard, the original IEEE and The Open Group Standard
151 is the referee document. The original Standard can be obtained online
152 at http://www.unix.org/online.html .
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154 Any typographical or formatting errors that appear in this page are
155 most likely to have been introduced during the conversion of the source
156 files to man page format. To report such errors, see https://www.ker‐
157 nel.org/doc/man-pages/reporting_bugs.html .
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161IEEE/The Open Group 2013 ICONV(3P)