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Tue, Jun 25, 09:41

utf8.diviner

@title User Guide: UTF-8 and Character Encoding
@group userguide
How Phabricator handles character encodings.
= Overview =
Phabricator stores all internal text data as UTF-8, processes all text data
as UTF-8, outputs in UTF-8, and expects all inputs to be UTF-8. Principally,
this means that you should write your source code in UTF-8. In most cases this
does not require you to change anything, because ASCII text is a subset of
UTF-8.
If you have a repository with source files that do not have UTF-8, you have two
options:
- Convert all files in the repository to ASCII or UTF-8 (see "Detecting and
Repairing Files" below). This is recommended, especially if the encoding
problems are accidental.
- Configure Phabricator to convert files into UTF-8 from whatever encoding
your repository is in when it needs to (see "Support for Alternate
Encodings" below). This is not completely supported, and repositories with
files that have multiple encodings are not supported.
= Detecting and Repairing Files =
It is recommended that you write source files only in ASCII text, but
Phabricator fully supports UTF-8 source files.
If you have a project which isn't valid UTF-8 because a few files have random
binary nonsense in them, there is a script in libphutil which can help you
identify and fix them:
project/ $ libphutil/scripts/utils/utf8.php
Generally, run this script on all source files with "-t" to find files with bad
byte ranges, and then run it without "-t" on each file to identify where there
are problems. For example:
project/ $ find . -type f -name '*.c' -print0 | xargs -0 -n256 ./utf8 -t
./hello_world.c
If this script exits without output, you're in good shape and all the files that
were identified are valid UTF-8. If it found some problems, you need to repair
them. You can identify the specific problems by omitting the "-t" flag:
project/ $ ./utf8.php hello_world.c
FAIL hello_world.c
3 main()
4 {
5 printf ("Hello World<0xE9><0xD6>!\n");
6 }
7
This shows the offending bytes on line 5 (in the actual console display, they'll
be highlighted). Often a codebase will mostly be valid UTF-8 but have a few
scattered files that have other things in them, like curly quotes which someone
copy-pasted from Word into a comment. In these cases, you can just manually
identify and fix the problems pretty easily.
If you have a prohibitively large number of UTF-8 issues in your source code,
Phabricator doesn't include any default tools to help you process them in a
systematic way. You could hack up `utf8.php` as a starting point, or use other
tools to batch-process your source files.
= Support for Alternate Encodings =
Phabricator has some support for encodings other than UTF-8.
NOTE: Alternate encodings are not completely supported, and a few features will
not work correctly. Codebases with files that have multiple different encodings
(for example, some files in ISO-8859-1 and some files in Shift-JIS) are not
supported at all.
To use an alternate encoding, edit the repository in Diffusion and specify the
encoding to use.
Optionally, you can use the `--encoding` flag when running `arc`, or set
`encoding` in your `.arcconfig`.

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