# Test behavior related to the locale. # Verify that our UTF-8 locale produces the expected output. echo -n A\u00FCA | display_bytes # Verify that exporting a change to the C locale produces the expected output. # The output should include the literal byte \xFC rather than the UTF-8 sequence for \u00FC. begin set -lx LC_ALL C echo -n B\u00FCB | display_bytes end # Since the previous change was localized to a block it should no # longer be in effect and we should be back to a UTF-8 locale. echo -n C\u00FCC | display_bytes # Verify that setting a non-exported locale var doesn't affect the behavior. # The output should include the UTF-8 sequence for \u00FC rather than that literal byte. # Just like the previous test. begin set -l LC_ALL C echo -n D\u00FCD | display_bytes end # Verify that fish can pass through non-ASCII characters in the C/POSIX # locale. This is to prevent regression of # https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell/issues/2802. # # These tests are needed because the relevant standards allow the functions # mbrtowc() and wcrtomb() to treat bytes with the high bit set as either valid # or invalid in the C/POSIX locales. GNU libc treats those bytes as invalid. # Other libc implementations (e.g., BSD) treat them as valid. We want fish to # always treat those bytes as valid. # The fish in the middle of the pipeline should be receiving a UTF-8 encoded # version of the unicode from the echo. It should pass those bytes thru # literally since it is in the C locale. We verify this by first passing the # echo output directly to the `xxd` program then via a fish instance. The # output should be "58c3bb58" for the first statement and "58c3bc58" for the # second. echo -n X\u00FBX | display_bytes echo X\u00FCX | env LC_ALL=C ../test/root/bin/fish -c 'read foo; echo -n $foo' | display_bytes # The next tests deliberately spawn another fish instance to test inheritence of env vars. # This test is subtle. Despite the presence of the \u00fc unicode char (a "u" # with an umlaut) the fact the locale is C/POSIX will cause the \xfc byte to # be emitted rather than the usual UTF-8 sequence \xc3\xbc. That's because the # few single-byte unicode chars (that are not ASCII) are generally in the # ISO 8859-x char sets which are encompassed by the C locale. The output should # be "59fc59". env LC_ALL=C ../test/root/bin/fish -c 'echo -n Y\u00FCY' | display_bytes # The user can specify a wide unicode character (one requiring more than a # single byte). In the C/POSIX locales we substitute a question-mark for the # unencodable wide char. The output should be "543f54". env LC_ALL=C ../test/root/bin/fish -c 'echo -n T\u01FDT' | display_bytes