André Warnier wrote:
Torsten Förtsch wrote:
On 11/29/2012 10:37 AM, André Warnier wrote:
When I say that it doesn't work, I mean in fact :
- the "Content-Type" response header sent by the server is properly set
according to what I do above (as verified in a browser plugin)
- but if what I print contains "accented" characters, they are not being
encoded properly

So, do I need to set something else so that the $r->print(string) will
output "string" properly ?


Background :

My PerlResponseHandler reads a html file from disk, replaces some
strings into it, and sends the result out via $r->print.
The source html file can be encoded in iso-8859-1 or UTF-8, and it
contains a proper declaration of the charset under which it is really
encoded :

<meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
or
<meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8">

To read the file, I first open it "raw", read a few lines, checking for
the above <meta> tag.  If found, I note the charset (say in $charset),
close the file, and re-open it as

open(my $fh,"<:encoding($charset)", $file);

(note : if $charset is "UTF-8", then the open becomes
open(my $fh,'<:utf8', $file);)

So, you convert the octet stream into a character stream when you read
the file. You have to do the reverse when you write it.

I have to, to be able to be consistent in my string-replacement logic.


  $r->print(Encode::encode $encoding, $string);

Modperl usually uses perlio. So, perl-script handler should be able to
push an encoding layer on top of the :Apache2 layer.

  binmode STDOUT, ':encoding(...)'

But I haven't tried this yet.

Now, that I think of it, perhaps even the following would work

  open my $fh, '>:Apache2:encoding(...)', $r;
  print $fh $string;

If it does not work it would be good to make it so.


I'll try the above and let you know.

I guess that if I can do
open my $fh, '>:Apache2:encoding(...)', $r;
then $r, under the hood, must be some kind of filehandle too.
And then I could just do
binmode($r,":encoding($charset)");
but then, this being mod_perl, it may leave it that way and have unexpected side-effects somewhere else..



Results :

1) using : open my $fh, '>:Apache2:encoding(...)', $r;

(Note: I can't find Apache2::encoding anywhere.  Was that a typo ?)

        $logger->warn("$pfx: reading form using encoding [$enc]") if $Debug>1;
...
        my $response_fh;
        unless (open ($response_fh,">:$enc",$r)) {
                $logger->error("$pfx Cannot open \$r : $?");
                return Apache2::Const::SERVER_ERROR;
        }

brings server error and logs :

[Thu Nov 29 15:48:42 2012] [warn] [client 192.168.245.129] AM::SendForm::response: reading form using encoding [encoding(iso-8859-1)] [Thu Nov 29 15:48:42 2012] [error] [client 192.168.245.129] AM::SendForm::response Cannot open $r : 0

2) using : binmode STDOUT, ':encoding(...)'

        $logger->warn("$pfx: reading form using encoding [$enc]") if $Debug>1;
...
        binmode(STDOUT,":$enc");
...
$logger->warn(" input line is [$line], utf8 flag : " . (Encode::is_utf8($line) ? "y" : "n"));
...
        $r->print($line);
...

does not bring server error and outputs the page, but apparently has no effect (characters are still wrong) :

[Thu Nov 29 15:55:52 2012] [warn] [client 192.168.245.129] input line is [\t\t\t\t<input name="ANSPR" type="radio" value="m" id="ANSPR">&nbsp;m\xc3\xa4nnlich\n], utf8 flag : y

(in the response also)

3) same as (2), but using simple "print $line;" instead of "$r->print($line);"

That is very bizarre. It runs through the code for many lines. It still prints the one "Männlich" line wrong (in the log and in the html output as well): client 192.168.245.129] input line is [\t\t\t\t<input name="ANSPR" type="radio" value="m" id="ANSPR">&nbsp;m\xc3\xa4nnlich\n], utf8 flag : y

but now in addition, it crashes a few lines further with a server error and 
this in the log :

[Thu Nov 29 16:01:45 2012] [warn] [client 192.168.245.129] input line is [<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>\n], utf8 flag : y [Thu Nov 29 16:01:45 2012] [error] [client 192.168.245.129] "\\x{4bae}" does not map to iso-8859-1 at /usr/local/lib/apache2/perllib/AM/SendForm.pm line 203, <$form_fh> line 101.\n

The line 101 of the input form is as shown in the log just before the error :
<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>

and the next line is a simple
<tr>

I have examined the form with a UTF-8 capable editor, and I see no extra bizarre characters anywhere near. I have no idea where this ""\\x{4bae}" could be coming from.

4) trying : $r->print(Encode::encode $encoding, $string);

as : $r->print(Encode::encode($charset,$line));

Bingo !

It still prints in the log :
[Thu Nov 29 16:21:42 2012] [warn] [client 192.168.245.129] input line is [\t\t\t\t<input name="ANSPR" type="radio" value="m" id="ANSPR">&nbsp;m\xc3\xa4nnlich\n], utf8 flag : y

But it outputs it correctly in the response document sent to the browser :
                                <input name="ANSPR" type="radio" value="m" 
id="ANSPR">&nbsp;männlich

and it also doesn't choke on the line on which it choked before :
[Thu Nov 29 16:21:42 2012] [warn] [client 192.168.245.129] input line is [<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>\n], utf8 flag : y [Thu Nov 29 16:21:42 2012] [warn] [client 192.168.245.129] input line is [<tr>\n], utf8 flag : y

This works, but does not seem to be very efficient. It makes an additional call to a function at each output line.
I don't know though how this compares to when it's perlio who encodes the 
output.

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