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ICONV(3C)							     ICONV(3C)

NAME
       iconv - code conversion function

SYNOPSIS
   Default
       #include <iconv.h>

       extern size_t iconv(iconv_t cd, const char **restrict inbuf,
	    size_t *restrict inbytesleft, char **restrict outbuf,
	    size_t *restrict outbytesleft);

   SUSv3
       #include <iconv.h>

       size_t iconv(iconv_t cd, char **restrict inbuf,
	    size_t *restrict inbytesleft, char **restrict outbuf,
	    size_t *restrict outbytesleft);

DESCRIPTION
       The  iconv() function converts the sequence of characters from one code
       set,  in the array specified by inbuf, into a sequence of corresponding
       characters  in  another code set, in the array specified by outbuf. The
       code sets are those specified in the iconv_open()  call	that  returned
       the  conversion descriptor, cd. The inbuf argument points to a variable
       that points to the first character in the input buffer and  inbytesleft
       indicates the number of bytes to the end of the buffer to be converted.
       The outbuf argument points to a	variable  that	points	to  the	 first
       available byte in the output buffer and outbytesleft indicates the num‐
       ber of the available bytes to the end of the buffer.

       For state-dependent encodings, the conversion descriptor cd  is	placed
       into  its  initial  shift  state	 by  a	call for which inbuf is a null
       pointer, or for which inbuf points to a null pointer. When  iconv()  is
       called  in  this way, and if  outbuf is not a null pointer or a pointer
       to a null pointer, and outbytesleft points to a positive value, iconv()
       will  place,  into  the output buffer,  the byte sequence to change the
       output buffer to its initial shift state.  If the output buffer is  not
       large  enough  to hold the entire reset sequence, iconv() will fail and
       set  errno to E2BIG. Subsequent calls with inbuf as other than  a  null
       pointer	or  a  pointer to a null pointer cause the  conversion to take
       place from the current state of the conversion descriptor.

       If a sequence of input bytes does not form a  valid  character  in  the
       specified  code	set, conversion stops  after the previous successfully
       converted character. If the input buffer ends with an incomplete	 char‐
       acter  or  shift sequence, conversion stops after the previous success‐
       fully converted bytes. If the output buffer is not large enough to hold
       the  entire  converted  input, conversion stops just prior to the input
       bytes that would cause the output  buffer  to  overflow.	 The  variable
       pointed	to by inbuf is updated to point to the byte following the last
       byte successfully used in the conversion.   The	value  pointed	to  by
       inbytesleft  is	decremented  to	 reflect the number of bytes still not
       converted in the input buffer. The variable pointed  to	by  outbuf  is
       updated	to point to the byte following the last byte of converted out‐
       put data. The value  pointed  to	 by  outbytesleft  is  decremented  to
       reflect	the  number of bytes still available in the output buffer. For
       state-dependent encodings, the  conversion  descriptor  is  updated  to
       reflect	the shift state in effect at the end of the last  successfully
       converted byte sequence.

       If  iconv() encounters a character in the input buffer that  is	legal,
       but  for which an identical character does not exist in the target code
       set, iconv() performs  an  implementation-defined  conversion  on  this
       character.

RETURN VALUES
       The  iconv() function updates the variables pointed to by the arguments
       to reflect the extent of the conversion and returns the number of  non-
       identical  conversions  performed.   If	the entire string in the input
       buffer is converted, the value pointed to by inbytesleft will be 0.  If
       the  input conversion is stopped due to any conditions mentioned above,
       the value pointed to by	inbytesleft will be non-zero and  errno is set
       to indicate the condition.  If an error occurs iconv() returns (size_t)
       −1 and sets errno to indicate the error.

ERRORS
       The iconv() function will fail if:

       EILSEQ
		 Input conversion stopped due to an input byte that  does  not
		 belong to the input code set.

       E2BIG
		 Input	conversion  stopped due to lack of space in the output
		 buffer.

       EINVAL
		 Input conversion stopped due to an incomplete	 character  or
		 shift sequence at the end of the input buffer.

       The iconv() function may fail if:

       EBADF
		The cd argument is not a valid open conversion descriptor.

EXAMPLES
       Example 1 Using the iconv() Functions

       The following example uses the iconv() functions:

	 #include <stdio.h>
	 #include <errno.h>
	 #include <string.h>
	 #include <iconv.h>
	 #include <stdlib.h>

	 /*
	  * For state-dependent encodings, changes the state of the
	  * conversion descriptor to initial shift state.  Also, outputs
	  * the byte sequence to change the state to initial state.
	  * This code is assuming the iconv call for initializing the
	  * state will not fail due to lack of space in the output buffer.
	  */
	 #define INIT_SHIFT_STATE(cd, fptr, ileft, tptr, oleft) \
	     { \
		 fptr = NULL; \
		 ileft = 0; \
		 tptr = to; \
		 oleft = BUFSIZ; \
		 (void) iconv(cd, &fptr, &ileft, &tptr, &oleft); \
		 (void) fwrite(to, 1, BUFSIZ - oleft, stdout); \
	     }

	 int
	 main(int argc, char **argv)
	 {
	     iconv_t cd;
	     char    from[BUFSIZ], to[BUFSIZ];
	     char    *from_code, *to_code;
	     char    *tptr;
	     const char	 *fptr;
	     size_t  ileft, oleft, num, ret;

	     if (argc != 3) {
		 (void) fprintf(stderr,
		     "Usage: %s from_codeset to_codeset\\n", argv[0]);
		 return (1);
	     }

	     from_code = argv[1];
	     to_code = argv[2];

	     cd = iconv_open((const char *)to_code, (const char *)from_code);
	     if (cd == (iconv_t)-1) {
		 /*
		  * iconv_open failed
		  */
		 (void) fprintf(stderr,
		     "iconv_open(%s, %s) failed\\n", to_code, from_code);
		 return (1);
	     }

	     ileft = 0;
	     while ((ileft +=
		 (num = fread(from + ileft, 1, BUFSIZ - ileft, stdin))) > 0) {
		 if (num == 0) {
		     /*
		      * Input buffer still contains incomplete character
		      * or sequence.  However, no more input character.
		      */

		     /*
		      * Initializes the conversion descriptor and outputs
		      * the sequence to change the state to initial state.
		      */
		     INIT_SHIFT_STATE(cd, fptr, ileft, tptr, oleft);
		     (void) iconv_close(cd);

		     (void) fprintf(stderr, "Conversion error\\n");
		     return (1);
		 }

		 fptr = from;
		 for (;;) {
		     tptr = to;
		     oleft = BUFSIZ;

		     ret = iconv(cd, &fptr, &ileft, &tptr, &oleft);
		     if (ret != (size_t)-1) {
			 /*
			  * iconv succeeded
			  */

			 /*
			  * Outputs converted characters
			  */
			 (void) fwrite(to, 1, BUFSIZ - oleft, stdout);
			 break;
		     }

		     /*
		      * iconv failed
		      */
		     if (errno == EINVAL) {
			 /*
			* Incomplete character or shift sequence
			  */

			 /*
			  * Outputs converted characters
			  */
			 (void) fwrite(to, 1, BUFSIZ - oleft, stdout);
			 /*
			  * Copies remaining characters in input buffer
			  * to the top of the input buffer.
			  */
			 (void) memmove(from, fptr, ileft);
			 /*
			  * Tries to fill input buffer from stdin
			  */
			 break;
		     } else if (errno == E2BIG) {
			 /*
			  * Lack of space in output buffer
			  */

			 /*
			  * Outputs converted characters
			  */
			 (void) fwrite(to, 1, BUFSIZ - oleft, stdout);
			 /*
			  * Tries to convert remaining characters in
			  * input buffer with emptied output buffer
			  */
			 continue;
		     } else if (errno == EILSEQ) {
			 /*
			  * Illegal character or shift sequence
			  */

			 /*
			  * Outputs converted characters
			  */
			 (void) fwrite(to, 1, BUFSIZ - oleft, stdout);
			 /*
			  * Initializes the conversion descriptor and
			  * outputs the sequence to change the state to
			  * initial state.
			  */
			 INIT_SHIFT_STATE(cd, fptr, ileft, tptr, oleft);
			 (void) iconv_close(cd);

			 (void) fprintf(stderr,
			  "Illegal character or sequence\\n");
			 return (1);
		     } else if (errno == EBADF) {
			 /*
			  * Invalid conversion descriptor.
			  * Actually, this shouldn't happen here.
			  */
			 (void) fprintf(stderr, "Conversion error\\n");
			 return (1);
		     } else {
			 /*
			  * This errno is not defined
			  */
			 (void) fprintf(stderr, "iconv error\\n");
			 return (1);
		     }
		 }
	     }

	     /*
	      * Initializes the conversion descriptor and outputs
	      * the sequence to change the state to initial state.
	      */
	     INIT_SHIFT_STATE(cd, fptr, ileft, tptr, oleft);

	     (void) iconv_close(cd);
	     return (0);
	 }

FILES
       /usr/lib/iconv/*.so

	   conversion modules for 32-bit

       /usr/lib/iconv/sparcv9/*.so

	   conversion modules for 64-bit sparc

       /usr/lib/iconv/amd64/*.so

	   conversion modules for 64-bit amd64

       /usr/lib/iconv/geniconvtbl/binarytables/*.bt

	   conversion binary tables

ATTRIBUTES
       See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:

       ┌────────────────────┬─────────────────┐
       │  ATTRIBUTE TYPE    │ ATTRIBUTE VALUE │
       ├────────────────────┼─────────────────┤
       │Interface Stability │ Standard	      │
       ├────────────────────┼─────────────────┤
       │MT-Level	    │ MT-Safe	      │
       └────────────────────┴─────────────────┘

SEE ALSO
       geniconvtbl(1),	iconv(1),  iconv_close(3C),  iconv_open(3C),  genicon‐
       vtbl(4), attributes(5), iconv(5), iconv_unicode(5), standards(5)

				  Oct 6, 2004			     ICONV(3C)
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