.\" $Id: libidnkit.3.in,v 1.1.1.1 2003-06-04 00:27:15 marka Exp $ .\" .\" Copyright (c) 2001,2002 Japan Network Information Center. .\" All rights reserved. .\" .\" By using this file, you agree to the terms and conditions set forth bellow. .\" .\" LICENSE TERMS AND CONDITIONS .\" .\" The following License Terms and Conditions apply, unless a different .\" license is obtained from Japan Network Information Center ("JPNIC"), .\" a Japanese association, Kokusai-Kougyou-Kanda Bldg 6F, 2-3-4 Uchi-Kanda, .\" Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo 101-0047, Japan. .\" .\" 1. Use, Modification and Redistribution (including distribution of any .\" modified or derived work) in source and/or binary forms is permitted .\" under this License Terms and Conditions. .\" .\" 2. Redistribution of source code must retain the copyright notices as they .\" appear in each source code file, this License Terms and Conditions. .\" .\" 3. Redistribution in binary form must reproduce the Copyright Notice, .\" this License Terms and Conditions, in the documentation and/or other .\" materials provided with the distribution. For the purposes of binary .\" distribution the "Copyright Notice" refers to the following language: .\" "Copyright (c) 2000-2002 Japan Network Information Center. All rights reserved." .\" .\" 4. The name of JPNIC may not be used to endorse or promote products .\" derived from this Software without specific prior written approval of .\" JPNIC. .\" .\" 5. Disclaimer/Limitation of Liability: THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY JPNIC .\" "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT .\" LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A .\" PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL JPNIC BE LIABLE .\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR .\" CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF .\" SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR .\" BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, .\" WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR .\" OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF .\" ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES. .\" .TH libidnkit 3 "Mar 11, 2002" .\" .SH NAME libidnkit, libidnkitlite \- Internationalized Domain Name Handling Libraries .\" .SH SYNOPSIS .nf #include idn_result_t \fBidn_nameinit\fP(int\ load_file) idn_result_t \fBidn_encodename\fP(int\ actions,\ const\ char\ *from,\ char\ *to,\ size_t\ tolen) idn_result_t \fBidn_decodename\fP(int\ actions,\ const\ char\ *from,\ char\ *to,\ size_t\ tolen) idn_result_t \fBidn_decodename2\fP(int\ actions,\ const\ char\ *from,\ char\ *to,\ size_t\ tolen, const\ char\ *auxencoding) idn_result_t \fBidn_enable\fP(int\ on_off) #include char * \fBidn_result_tostring\fP(idn_result_t\ result) .\" .SH OVERVIEW The \fBlibidnkit\fR and \fBlibidnkitlite\fR libraries support various manipulations of internationalized domain names, including: .RS 2 .IP \- 2 encoding convesion .IP \- 2 name preparation .RE .PP They are designed according to IDNA framework where each application must do necessary preparations for the internationalized domain names before passing them to the resolver. .PP To help applications do the preparation, the libraries provide easy-to-use, high-level interface for the work. .PP Both libraries provide almost the same API. The difference between them is that \fBlibidnkit\fR internally uses \fIiconv\fR function to provide encoding conversion from UTF-8 to the local encoding (such as iso-8859-1, usually determined by the current locale), and vise versa. \fBlibidnkitlite\fR is lightweight version of libidnkit. It assumes local encoding is UTF-8 so that it never uses \fIiconv\fR. .PP This manual describes only a small subset of the API that the libraries provide, most important functions for application programmers. For other API, please refer to the idnkit's specification document (which is not yet available) or the header files typically found under `/usr/local/include/idn/' on your system. .\" .SH DESCRIPTION .PP The \fBidn_nameinit\fR function initializes the library. It also sets default configuration if \fIload_file\fR is 0, otherwise it tries to read a configuration file. If \fBidn_nameinit\fR is called more than once, the library initialization will take place only at the first call while the actual configuration procedure will occur at every call. .PP If there are no errors, \fBidn_nameinit\fR returns \fBidn_success\fR. Otherwise, the returned value indicates the cause of the error. See the section ``RETURN VALUES'' below for the error codes. .PP Usually you don't have to call this function explicitly because it is implicitly called when \fBidn_encodename\fR or \fBidn_decodename\fR is first called without prior calling of \fBidn_nameinit\fR. In such case, initialization without the configuration file takes place. .\" .PP \fBidn_encodename\fR function performs name preparation and encoding conversion on the internationalized domain name specified by \fIfrom\fR, and stores the result to \fIto\fR, whose length is specified by \fItolen\fR. \fIactions\fR is a bitwise-OR of the following macros, specifying which subprocesses in the encoding process are to be employed. .RS 2 .nf .ft CW IDN_LOCALCONV Local encoding to UTF-8 conversion IDN_DELIMMAP Delimiter mapping IDN_LOCALMAP Local mapping IDN_NAMEPREP NAMEPREP mapping, normalization, prohibited character check and bidirectional string check IDN_UNASCHECK NAMEPREP unassigned codepoint check IDN_ASCCHECK ASCII range character check IDN_IDNCONV UTF-8 to IDN encoding conversion IDN_LENCHECK Label length check .ft R .fi .RE .PP Details of this encoding process can be found in the section ``NAME ENCODING''. .PP For convenience, also \fBIDN_ENCODE_QUERY\fR, \fBIDN_ENCODE_APP\fR and \fBIDN_ENCODE_STORED\fR macros are provided. \fBIDN_ENCODE_QUERY\fR is used to encode a ``query string'' (see the IDNA specification). It is equal to .RS 4 .nf .ft CW (IDN_LOCALCONV | IDN_DELIMMAP | IDN_LOCALMAP | IDN_NAMEPREP | IDN_IDNCONV | IDN_LENCHECK) .ft R .fi .RE .PP if you are using \fBlibidnkit\fR, and equal to .RS 4 .nf .ft CW (IDN_DELIMMAP | IDN_LOCALMAP | IDN_NAMEPREP | IDN_IDNCONV | IDN_LENCHECK) .ft R .fi .RE .PP if you are using \fBlibidnkitlite\fR. .PP \fBIDN_ENCODE_APP\fR is used for ordinary application to encode a domain name. It performs \fBIDN_ASCCHECK\fR in addition with \fBIDN_ENCODE_QUERY\fR. \fBIDN_ENCODE_STORED\fR is used to encode a ``stored string'' (see the IDNA specification). It performs \fBIDN_ENCODE_APP\fR plus \fBIDN_UNASCHECK\fR. .PP \fBidn_decodename\fR function performs the reverse of \fBidn_encodename\fR. It converts the internationalized domain name given by \fIfrom\fR, which is represented in a special encoding called ACE, to the application's local codeset and stores into \fIto\fR, whose length is specified by \fItolen\fR. As in \fBidn_encodename\fR, \fIactions\fR is a bitwise-OR of the following macros. .RS 2 .nf .ft CW IDN_DELIMMAP Delimiter mapping IDN_NAMEPREP NAMEPREP mapping, normalization, prohibited character check and bidirectional string check IDN_UNASCHECK NAMEPREP unassigned codepoint check IDN_IDNCONV UTF-8 to IDN encoding conversion IDN_RTCHECK Round trip check IDN_ASCCHECK ASCII range character check IDN_LOCALCONV Local encoding to UTF-8 conversion .ft R .fi .RE .PP Details of this decoding process can be found in the section ``NAME DECODING''. .PP For convenience, also \fBIDN_DECODE_QUERY\fR, \fBIDN_DECODE_APP\fR and \fBIDN_DECODE_STORED\fR macros are provided. \fBIDN_DECODE_QUERY\fR is used to decode a ``qeury string'' (see the IDNA specification). It is equal to .RS 4 .nf .ft CW (IDN_DELIMMAP | IDN_NAMEPREP | IDN_IDNCONV | IDN_RTCHECK | IDN_LOCALCONV) .ft R .fi .RE .PP if you are using \fBlibidnkit\fR, and equal to .RS 4 .nf .ft CW (IDN_DELIMMAP | IDN_NAMEPREP | IDN_IDNCONV | IDN_RTCHECK) .ft R .fi .RE .PP if you are using \fBlibidnkitlite\fR. .PP \fBIDN_DECODE_APP\fR is used for ordinary application to decode a domain name. It performs \fBIDN_ASCCHECK\fR in addition with \fBIDN_DECODE_QUERY\fR. \fBIDN_DECODE_STORED\fR is used to decode a ``stored string'' (see the IDNA specification). It performs \fBIDN_DECODE_APP\fR plus \fBIDN_UNASCHECK\fR. .PP \fBidn_decodename2\fR function provides the same functionality as \fBidn_decodename\fR except that character encoding of \fIfrom\fR is supposed to be \fIauxencoding\fR. If IDN encoding is Punycode and \fIauxencoding\fR is ISO 8859-2 for example, it is assumed that the Punycode string stored in \fIfrom\fR is written in ISO 8859-2. .PP In the IDN decode procedure, \fBIDN_NAMEPREP\fR is done before \fBIDN_IDNCONV\fR, and some non-ASCII characters are converted to ASCII characters as the result of \fBIDN_NAMEPREP\fR. Therefore, ACE string given by \fBfrom\fR may contains those non-ASCII characters. That is the reason \fBdocode_name2\fR exists. .PP All of the functions above return error code of type \fBidn_result_t\fR. All codes other than \fBidn_success\fR indicates some kind of failure. \fBidn_result_tostring\fR function takes an error code \fIresult\fR and returns a pointer to the corresponding message string. .\" .SH "NAME ENCODING" Name encoding is a process that transforms the specified internationalized domain name to a certain string suitable for name resolution. For each label in a given domain name, the encoding processor performs: .\" .IP "(1) Convert to UTF-8 (IDN_LOCALCONV)" Convert the encoding of the given domain name from application's local encoding (e.g. ISO-8859-1) to UTF-8. Note that \fBlibidnkitlite\fR doesn't support this step. .\" .IP "(2) Delimiter mapping (IDN_DELIMMAP)" Map domain name delimiters to `.' (U+002E). The recoginzed delimiters are: U+3002 (ideographic full stop), U+FF0E (fullwidth full stop), U+FF61 (halfwidth ideographic full stop). .\" .IP "(3) Local mapping (IDN_LOCALMAP)" Apply character mapping whose rule is determined by the TLD of the name. .\" .IP "(4) NAMEPREP (IDN_NAMEPREP, IDN_UNASCHECK)" Perform name preparation (NAMEPREP), which is a standard process for name canonicalizaion of internationalized domain names. .br NAMEPREP consists of 5 steps: mapping, normalization, prohibited character check, bidirectional text check and unassigned codepoint check. The first four steps are done by IDN_NAMEPREP, and the last step is done by IDN_UNASCHECK. .\" .IP "(5) ASCII range character check (IDN_ASCCHECK)" Checks if the domain name contains non-LDH ASCII character (not alpha-numeric or hyphen), or it begins or end with hyphen. .\" .IP "(6) Convert to ACE (IDN_IDNCONV)" Convert the NAMEPREPed name to a special encoding designed for representing internationalized domain names. .br The encoding is also known as ACE (ASCII Compatible Encoding) since a string in the encoding is just like a traditional ASCII domain name consisting of only letters, numbers and hyphens. .\" .IP "(7) Label length check (IDN_LENCHECK)" For each label, check the number of characters in it. It must be in the range 1 to 63. .PP There are many configuration parameters for this process, such as the ACE or the local mapping rules. These parameters are read from the default idnkit's configuration file, \fBidn.conf\fR. See idn.conf(5) for details. .\" .SH "NAME DECODING" Name decoding is a reverse process of the name encoding. It transforms the specified internationalized domain name in a special encoding suitable for name resolution to the normal name string in the application's current codeset. However, name encoding and name decoding are not symmetric. .PP For each label in a given domain name, the decoding processor performs: .\" .IP "(1) Delimiter mapping (IDN_DELIMMAP)" Map domain name delimiters to `.' (U+002E). The recoginzed delimiters are: U+3002 (ideographic full stop), U+FF0E (fullwidth full stop), U+FF61 (halfwidth ideographic full stop). .\" .IP "(2) NAMEPREP (IDN_NAMEPREP, IDN_UNASCHECK)" Perform name preparation (NAMEPREP), which is a standard process for name canonicalizaion of internationalized domain names. .\" .IP "(3) Convert to UTF-8 (IDN_IDNCONV)" Convert the encoding of the given domain name from ACE to UTF-8. .\" .IP "(4) Round trip check (IDN_RTCHECK)" Encode the result of (3) using the ``NAME ENCODING'' scheme, and then compare it with the result of the step (2). If they are different, the check is failed. If IDN_UNASCHECK, IDN_ASCCHECK or both are specified, also they are done in the encoding processes. .\" .IP "(5) Convert to local encoding" Convert the result of (3) from UTF-8 to the application's local encoding (e.g. ISO-8859-1). Note that \fBlibidnkitlite\fR doesn't support this step. .PP If prohibited character check, unassigned codepoint check or bidirectional text check at step (2) is failed, or round trip check at step (4) is failed, the original input label is returned. .PP The configuration parameters for this process, are also read from the configuration file \fBidn.conf\fR. .\" .SH "IDN_DISABLE" If the \fBIDN_DISABLE\fR environ variable is defined at run-time, the libraries disable internationalized domain name support, by default. In this case, \fBidn_encodename\fR and \fBidn_decodename\fR don't encode/decode an input name, but instead they simply ouput a copy of the input name as the result of encoding/decoding. .PP If your application should always enable mulitilingual domain name support regardless of definition of \fBIDN_DISABLE\fR, call .RS 4 .nf .ft CW idn_enable(1) .ft R .fi .RE .PP before performing encoding/decoding. .\" .SH "RETURN VALUES" Most of the API functions return values of type \fBidn_result_t\fR in order to indicate the status of the call. The following is a complete list of the status codes. Note that some of them are never returned by the functions described in this manual. .TP 15 .SB idn_success Not an error. The call succeeded. .TP .SB idn_notfound Specified information does not exist. .TP .SB idn_invalid_encoding The encoding of the specified string is invalid. .TP .SB idn_invalid_syntax There is a syntax error in the configuration file. .TP .SB idn_invalid_name The specified name is not valid. .TP .SB idn_invalid_message The specified DNS message is not valid. .TP .SB idn_invalid_action The specified action contains invalid flags. .TP .SB idn_invalid_codepoint The specified Unicode code point value is not valid. .TP .SB idn_invalid_length The number of characters in an ACE label is not in the range 1 to 63. .TP .SB idn_buffer_overflow The specified buffer is too small to hold the result. .TP .SB idn_noentry The specified key does not exist in the hash table. .TP .SB idn_nomemory Memory allocation using malloc failed. .TP .SB idn_nofile The specified file could not be opened. .TP .SB idn_nomapping Some characters do not have the mapping to the target character set. .TP .SB idn_context_required Context information is required. .TP .SB idn_prohibited The specified string contains some prohibited characters. .TP .SB idn_failure Generic error which is not covered by the above codes. .\" .SH EXAMPLES To get the address of a internationalized domain name in the application's local codeset, use \fBidn_encodename\fR to convert the name to the format suitable for passing to resolver functions. .RS 4 .nf .ft CW idn_result_t r; char ace_name[256]; struct hostent *hp; \&... r = idn_encodename(IDN_ENCODE_APP, name, ace_name, sizeof(ace_name)); if (r != idn_success) { fprintf(stderr, "idn_encodename failed: %s\en", idn_result_tostring(r)); exit(1); } hp = gethostbyname(ace_name); \&... .ft R .fi .RE .PP To decode the internationalized domain name returned from a resolver function, use \fBidn_decodename\fR. .RS 4 .nf .ft CW idn_result_t r; char local_name[256]; struct hostent *hp; \&... hp = gethostbyname(name); r = idn_decodename(IDN_DECODE_APP, hp->h_name, local_name, sizeof(local_name)); if (r != idn_success) { fprintf(stderr, "idn_decodename failed: %s\en", idn_result_tostring(r)); exit(1); } printf("name: %s\en", local_name); \&... .ft R .fi .RE .\" .SH "SEE ALSO" idn.conf(5)