Systemd/src/libsystemd-terminal/term-charset.c
Thomas Hindoe Paaboel Andersen 2eec67acbb remove unused includes
This patch removes includes that are not used. The removals were found with
include-what-you-use which checks if any of the symbols from a header is
in use.
2015-02-23 23:53:42 +01:00

489 lines
12 KiB
C

/*-*- Mode: C; c-basic-offset: 8; indent-tabs-mode: nil -*-*/
/***
This file is part of systemd.
Copyright (C) 2014 David Herrmann <dh.herrmann@gmail.com>
systemd is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
systemd is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
Lesser General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License
along with systemd; If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
***/
/*
* VTE Character Sets
* These are predefined charactersets that can be loaded into GL and GR. By
* default we use unicode_lower and unicode_upper, that is, both sets have the
* exact unicode mapping. unicode_lower is effectively ASCII and unicode_upper
* as defined by the unicode standard (I guess, ISO 8859-1).
* Several other character sets are defined here. However, all of them are
* limited to the 96 character space of GL or GR. Everything beyond GR (which
* was not supported by the classic VTs by DEC but is available in VT emulators
* that support unicode/UTF8) is always mapped to unicode and cannot be changed
* by these character sets. Even mapping GL and GR is only available for
* backwards compatibility as new applications can use the Unicode functionality
* of the VTE.
*
* Moreover, mapping GR is almost unnecessary to support. In fact, Unicode UTF-8
* support in VTE works by reading every incoming data as UTF-8 stream. This
* maps GL/ASCII to ASCII, as UTF-8 is backwards compatible to ASCII, however,
* everything that has the 8th bit set is a >=2-byte haracter in UTF-8. That is,
* this is in no way backwards compatible to >=VT220 8bit support. Therefore, if
* someone maps a character set into GR and wants to use them with this VTE,
* then they must already send UTF-8 characters to use GR (all GR characters are
* 8-bits). Hence, they can easily also send the correct UTF-8 character for the
* unicode mapping.
* The only advantage is that most characters in many sets are 3-byte UTF-8
* characters and by mapping the set into GR/GL you can use 2 or 1 byte UTF-8
* characters which saves bandwidth.
* Another reason is, if you have older applications that use the VT220 8-bit
* support and you put a ASCII/8bit-extension to UTF-8 converter in between, you
* need these mappings to have the application behave correctly if it uses GL/GR
* mappings extensively.
*
* Anyway, we support GL/GR mappings so here are the most commonly used maps as
* defined by Unicode-standard, DEC-private maps and other famous charmaps.
*
* Characters 1-32 are always the control characters (part of CL) and cannot be
* mapped. Characters 34-127 (94 characters) are part of GL and can be mapped.
* Characters 33 and 128 are not part of GL and always mapped by the VTE.
* However, for GR they can be mapped differently (96 chars) so we have to
* include them. The mapper has to take care not to use them in GL.
*/
#include "term-internal.h"
/*
* Lower Unicode character set. This maps the characters to the basic ASCII
* characters 33-126. These are all graphics characters defined in ASCII.
*/
term_charset term_unicode_lower = {
[0] = 32,
[1] = 33,
[2] = 34,
[3] = 35,
[4] = 36,
[5] = 37,
[6] = 38,
[7] = 39,
[8] = 40,
[9] = 41,
[10] = 42,
[11] = 43,
[12] = 44,
[13] = 45,
[14] = 46,
[15] = 47,
[16] = 48,
[17] = 49,
[18] = 50,
[19] = 51,
[20] = 52,
[21] = 53,
[22] = 54,
[23] = 55,
[24] = 56,
[25] = 57,
[26] = 58,
[27] = 59,
[28] = 60,
[29] = 61,
[30] = 62,
[31] = 63,
[32] = 64,
[33] = 65,
[34] = 66,
[35] = 67,
[36] = 68,
[37] = 69,
[38] = 70,
[39] = 71,
[40] = 72,
[41] = 73,
[42] = 74,
[43] = 75,
[44] = 76,
[45] = 77,
[46] = 78,
[47] = 79,
[48] = 80,
[49] = 81,
[50] = 82,
[51] = 83,
[52] = 84,
[53] = 85,
[54] = 86,
[55] = 87,
[56] = 88,
[57] = 89,
[58] = 90,
[59] = 91,
[60] = 92,
[61] = 93,
[62] = 94,
[63] = 95,
[64] = 96,
[65] = 97,
[66] = 98,
[67] = 99,
[68] = 100,
[69] = 101,
[70] = 102,
[71] = 103,
[72] = 104,
[73] = 105,
[74] = 106,
[75] = 107,
[76] = 108,
[77] = 109,
[78] = 110,
[79] = 111,
[80] = 112,
[81] = 113,
[82] = 114,
[83] = 115,
[84] = 116,
[85] = 117,
[86] = 118,
[87] = 119,
[88] = 120,
[89] = 121,
[90] = 122,
[91] = 123,
[92] = 124,
[93] = 125,
[94] = 126,
[95] = 127,
};
/*
* Upper Unicode Table
* This maps all characters to the upper unicode characters 161-254. These are
* not compatible to any older 8 bit character sets. See the Unicode standard
* for the definitions of each symbol.
*/
term_charset term_unicode_upper = {
[0] = 160,
[1] = 161,
[2] = 162,
[3] = 163,
[4] = 164,
[5] = 165,
[6] = 166,
[7] = 167,
[8] = 168,
[9] = 169,
[10] = 170,
[11] = 171,
[12] = 172,
[13] = 173,
[14] = 174,
[15] = 175,
[16] = 176,
[17] = 177,
[18] = 178,
[19] = 179,
[20] = 180,
[21] = 181,
[22] = 182,
[23] = 183,
[24] = 184,
[25] = 185,
[26] = 186,
[27] = 187,
[28] = 188,
[29] = 189,
[30] = 190,
[31] = 191,
[32] = 192,
[33] = 193,
[34] = 194,
[35] = 195,
[36] = 196,
[37] = 197,
[38] = 198,
[39] = 199,
[40] = 200,
[41] = 201,
[42] = 202,
[43] = 203,
[44] = 204,
[45] = 205,
[46] = 206,
[47] = 207,
[48] = 208,
[49] = 209,
[50] = 210,
[51] = 211,
[52] = 212,
[53] = 213,
[54] = 214,
[55] = 215,
[56] = 216,
[57] = 217,
[58] = 218,
[59] = 219,
[60] = 220,
[61] = 221,
[62] = 222,
[63] = 223,
[64] = 224,
[65] = 225,
[66] = 226,
[67] = 227,
[68] = 228,
[69] = 229,
[70] = 230,
[71] = 231,
[72] = 232,
[73] = 233,
[74] = 234,
[75] = 235,
[76] = 236,
[77] = 237,
[78] = 238,
[79] = 239,
[80] = 240,
[81] = 241,
[82] = 242,
[83] = 243,
[84] = 244,
[85] = 245,
[86] = 246,
[87] = 247,
[88] = 248,
[89] = 249,
[90] = 250,
[91] = 251,
[92] = 252,
[93] = 253,
[94] = 254,
[95] = 255,
};
/*
* The DEC supplemental graphics set. For its definition see here:
* http://vt100.net/docs/vt220-rm/table2-3b.html
* Its basically a mixture of common European symbols that are not part of
* ASCII. Most often, this is mapped into GR to extend the basci ASCII part.
*
* This is very similar to unicode_upper, however, few symbols differ so do not
* mix them up!
*/
term_charset term_dec_supplemental_graphics = {
[0] = -1, /* undefined */
[1] = 161,
[2] = 162,
[3] = 163,
[4] = 0,
[5] = 165,
[6] = 0,
[7] = 167,
[8] = 164,
[9] = 169,
[10] = 170,
[11] = 171,
[12] = 0,
[13] = 0,
[14] = 0,
[15] = 0,
[16] = 176,
[17] = 177,
[18] = 178,
[19] = 179,
[20] = 0,
[21] = 181,
[22] = 182,
[23] = 183,
[24] = 0,
[25] = 185,
[26] = 186,
[27] = 187,
[28] = 188,
[29] = 189,
[30] = 0,
[31] = 191,
[32] = 192,
[33] = 193,
[34] = 194,
[35] = 195,
[36] = 196,
[37] = 197,
[38] = 198,
[39] = 199,
[40] = 200,
[41] = 201,
[42] = 202,
[43] = 203,
[44] = 204,
[45] = 205,
[46] = 206,
[47] = 207,
[48] = 0,
[49] = 209,
[50] = 210,
[51] = 211,
[52] = 212,
[53] = 213,
[54] = 214,
[55] = 338,
[56] = 216,
[57] = 217,
[58] = 218,
[59] = 219,
[60] = 220,
[61] = 376,
[62] = 0,
[63] = 223,
[64] = 224,
[65] = 225,
[66] = 226,
[67] = 227,
[68] = 228,
[69] = 229,
[70] = 230,
[71] = 231,
[72] = 232,
[73] = 233,
[74] = 234,
[75] = 235,
[76] = 236,
[77] = 237,
[78] = 238,
[79] = 239,
[80] = 0,
[81] = 241,
[82] = 242,
[83] = 243,
[84] = 244,
[85] = 245,
[86] = 246,
[87] = 339,
[88] = 248,
[89] = 249,
[90] = 250,
[91] = 251,
[92] = 252,
[93] = 255,
[94] = 0,
[95] = -1, /* undefined */
};
/*
* DEC special graphics character set. See here for its definition:
* http://vt100.net/docs/vt220-rm/table2-4.html
* This contains several characters to create ASCII drawings and similar. Its
* commonly mapped into GR to extend the basic ASCII characters.
*
* Lower 62 characters map to ASCII 33-64, everything beyond is special and
* commonly used for ASCII drawings. It depends on the Unicode Standard 3.2 for
* the extended horizontal scan-line characters 3, 5, 7, and 9.
*/
term_charset term_dec_special_graphics = {
[0] = -1, /* undefined */
[1] = 33,
[2] = 34,
[3] = 35,
[4] = 36,
[5] = 37,
[6] = 38,
[7] = 39,
[8] = 40,
[9] = 41,
[10] = 42,
[11] = 43,
[12] = 44,
[13] = 45,
[14] = 46,
[15] = 47,
[16] = 48,
[17] = 49,
[18] = 50,
[19] = 51,
[20] = 52,
[21] = 53,
[22] = 54,
[23] = 55,
[24] = 56,
[25] = 57,
[26] = 58,
[27] = 59,
[28] = 60,
[29] = 61,
[30] = 62,
[31] = 63,
[32] = 64,
[33] = 65,
[34] = 66,
[35] = 67,
[36] = 68,
[37] = 69,
[38] = 70,
[39] = 71,
[40] = 72,
[41] = 73,
[42] = 74,
[43] = 75,
[44] = 76,
[45] = 77,
[46] = 78,
[47] = 79,
[48] = 80,
[49] = 81,
[50] = 82,
[51] = 83,
[52] = 84,
[53] = 85,
[54] = 86,
[55] = 87,
[56] = 88,
[57] = 89,
[58] = 90,
[59] = 91,
[60] = 92,
[61] = 93,
[62] = 94,
[63] = 0,
[64] = 9830,
[65] = 9618,
[66] = 9225,
[67] = 9228,
[68] = 9229,
[69] = 9226,
[70] = 176,
[71] = 177,
[72] = 9252,
[73] = 9227,
[74] = 9496,
[75] = 9488,
[76] = 9484,
[77] = 9492,
[78] = 9532,
[79] = 9146,
[80] = 9147,
[81] = 9472,
[82] = 9148,
[83] = 9149,
[84] = 9500,
[85] = 9508,
[86] = 9524,
[87] = 9516,
[88] = 9474,
[89] = 8804,
[90] = 8805,
[91] = 960,
[92] = 8800,
[93] = 163,
[94] = 8901,
[95] = -1, /* undefined */
};