I wrote: > I just noticed that the collation patch has modified char2wchar and > wchar2char to accept a collation OID as argument ... but it hasn't done > anything to make those arguments actually work. Since those functions > depend on wcstombs and mbstowcs, which respond to LC_CTYPE and nothing > else, this flat out does not work in non-default collations. What's > more, there doesn't seem to be any such thing as wcstombs_l or > mbstowcs_l (at least my Fedora box hasn't got them), so this can't be > fixed within the available glibc API.
I poked around a bit and found out that wcstombs_l and mbstowcs_l *do* exist in some BSD-derived systems (in particular, OS X has 'em; and Windows too). Not clear why XBD didn't see fit to include them, because so far as I can see there simply isn't any useful substitute. What I think we need to do is: * Redefine char2wchar and wchar2char as being like mbstowcs_l and wcstombs_l (in particular, take pg_locale_t *not* a collation OID). * Use mbstowcs_l and wcstombs_l where available. * Where they're not, install the locale_t with uselocale(), do mbstowcs or wcstombs, and revert to the former locale_t setting. This is ugly as sin, and not thread-safe, but of course lots of the backend is not thread-safe. A quick look at the glibc source for uselocale() suggests that it won't be too horribly inefficient. Comments, better ideas? regards, tom lane -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers