Hi Peter-san.
Thank you for various. !
----- Original Message -----
From: "Peter Eisentraut" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Am Montag, 10. Dezember 2007 schrieb Hiroshi Saito:
Hi.
From: "Peter Eisentraut" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Am Montag, 10. Dezember 2007 schrieb Hiroshi Saito:
>> Hi Peter-san.
>>
>> It is this.
>> http://winpg.jp/~saito/pg83/ja.zip
>
> Sorry, we need the *po* (text) files, not the *mo* (binary) files.
Ooops, Although it is an object for Version 8.2.5.
http://www.postgresql.jp/wg/jpugdoc/po/postgresql-8-2-5-nls-patch.gz
OK, you have
PO file in EUC-JP
server encoding UTF-8
client encoding SJIS
Yes.
When the server wants to send an error message to the client, it will convert
them from the server to the client encoding. The English messages are ASCII,
so this will work, because server encodings are required to be ASCII
compatible. The result of the gettext calls, however, is encoded in EUC-JP,
so the server will take the EUC-JP bytes and attempt to do a UTF-8 to SJIS
conversion on them. This will cause a crash.
Probably no.
GetText is conversion po(EUC_JP) to SJIS. Then, The stderr output of a server is
outputted without an error to log by it. That's right message with it similar to start-up.
However, The conversion obstacle of a message is encountered at the time of the
conditions returned to a client. Conversion of the step of the following it takes place.
1. iconv(GetText)
po(EUC_JP) to SJIS.
2. message to client
UTF8(server encoding) to SJIS(client encoding)
But, this character that should be UTF-8 is a SJIS message(1.).
It causes an error.
Therefore, this log is proving.
http://winpg.jp/~saito/pg83/postgresql-8.3beta4_crash.log
Anyway, the current situation is it although there is a problem..
What you need to do is set the locale to something compatible with the server
encoding (e.g., ja_JP.utf8). Then gettext will recode its EUC-JP data to
UTF-8 before it is sent to the server. More specifically, you need to set
the LC_CTYPE locale category to make this happen. I understand that users in
Japanese environments like to keep the LC_COLLATE setting to C, and you
should still be able to do that. But without a proper LC_CTYPE setting, this
will not work.
(That is the explanation for Linux. Windows might be different in the
details, but I suspect it has the same mechanisms.)
As for message, the current state is not such.... probably..
It is the problem which arises only by the server with client encoding which can't be
used as server encoding. It may be a problem of Japan... If a message text is not
used by the server, a problem does not occur. Therefore, It is TODO until it has
the margin of time. sorry... I'm very busy now...
I am deeply grateful to you for your kindness.
Regards,
Hiroshi Saito
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