History log of /PHP-8.2/ext/mbstring/tests/cp1254_encoding.phpt (Results 1 – 5 of 5)
Revision Date Author Comments
# 3c732251 21-Jul-2021 Alex Dowad

New internal interface for fast text conversion in mbstring

When converting text to/from wchars, mbstring makes one function call
for each and every byte or wchar to be converted. Typica

New internal interface for fast text conversion in mbstring

When converting text to/from wchars, mbstring makes one function call
for each and every byte or wchar to be converted. Typically, each of
these conversion functions contains a state machine, and its state has
to be restored and then saved for every single one of these calls.
It doesn't take much to see that this is grossly inefficient.

Instead of converting one byte or wchar on each call, the new
conversion functions will either fill up or drain a whole buffer of
wchars on each call. In benchmarks, this is about 3-10× faster.

Adding the new, faster conversion functions for all supported legacy
text encodings still needs some work. Also, all the code which uses
the old-style conversion functions needs to be converted to use the
new ones. After that, the old code can be dropped. (The mailparse
extension will also have to be fixed up so it will still compile.)

show more ...


# 776296e1 30-Aug-2021 Alex Dowad

mbstring no longer provides 'long' substitutions for erroneous input bytes

Previously, mbstring had a special mode whereby it would convert
erroneous input byte sequences to output like

mbstring no longer provides 'long' substitutions for erroneous input bytes

Previously, mbstring had a special mode whereby it would convert
erroneous input byte sequences to output like "BAD+XXXX", where "XXXX"
would be the erroneous bytes expressed in hexadecimal. This mode could
be enabled by calling `mb_substitute_character("long")`.

However, accurately reproducing input byte sequences from the cached
state of a conversion filter is often tricky, and this significantly
complicates the implementation. Further, the means used for passing
the erroneous bytes through to where the "BAD+XXXX" text is generated
only allows for up to 3 bytes to be passed, meaning that some erroneous
byte sequences are truncated anyways.

More to the point, a search of publically available PHP code indicates
that nobody is really using this feature anyways.

Incidentally, this feature also provided error output like "JIS+XXXX"
if the input 'should have' represented a JISX 0208 codepoint, but it
decodes to a codepoint which does not exist in the JISX 0208 charset.
Similarly, specific error output was provided for non-existent
JISX 0212 codepoints, and likewise for JISX 0213, CP932, and a few
other charsets. All of that is now consigned to the flames.

However, "long" error markers also include a somewhat more useful
"U+XXXX" marker for Unicode codepoints which were successfully
decoded from the input text, but cannot be represented in the output
encoding. Those are still supported.

With this change, there is no need to use a variety of special values
in the high bits of a wchar to represent different types of error
values. We can (and will) just use a single error value. This will be
equal to -1.

One complicating factor: Text conversion functions return an integer to
indicate whether the conversion operation should be immediately
aborted, and the magic 'abort' marker is -1. Also, almost all of these
functions would return the received byte/codepoint to indicate success.
That doesn't work with the new error value; if an input filter detects
an error and passes -1 to the output filter, and the output filter
returns it back, that would be taken to mean 'abort'.

Therefore, amend all these functions to return 0 for success.

show more ...


# 51b9d7a5 27-Jul-2021 Alex Dowad

Test behavior of 'long' illegal character markers

After mb_substitute_character("long"), mbstring will respond to
erroneous input by inserting 'long' error markers into the output.
D

Test behavior of 'long' illegal character markers

After mb_substitute_character("long"), mbstring will respond to
erroneous input by inserting 'long' error markers into the output.
Depending on the situation, these error markers will either look like
BAD+XXXX (for general bad input), U+XXXX (when the input is OK, but it
converts to Unicode codepoints which cannot be represented in the
output encoding), or an encoding-specific marker like JISX+XXXX or
W932+XXXX.

We have almost no tests for this feature. Add a bunch of tests to
ensure that all our legacy encoding handlers work in a reasonable
way when 'long' error markers are enabled.

show more ...


# 39131219 11-Jun-2021 Nikita Popov

Migrate more SKIPIF -> EXTENSIONS (#7139)

This is a mix of more automated and manual migration. It should remove all applicable extension_loaded() checks outside of skipif.inc files.


# 0b13305c 18-Oct-2020 Alex Dowad

Add test suite for CP1254 encoding