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- .HTML "Hello World or Καλημέρα κόσμε or こんにちは 世界
- .TL
- Hello World
- .br
- or
- .br
- .ft R
- Καλημέρα κόσμε
- .ft
- .br
- or
- .br
- \f(Jpこんにちは 世界\fP
- .AU
- Rob Pike
- Ken Thompson
- .sp
- rob,ken@plan9.bell-labs.com
- .AB
- .FS
- Originally appeared, in a slightly different form, in
- .I
- Proc. of the Winter 1993 USENIX Conf.,
- .R
- pp. 43-50,
- San Diego
- .FE
- Plan 9 from Bell Labs has recently been converted from ASCII
- to an ASCII-compatible variant of the Unicode Standard, a 16-bit character set.
- In this paper we explain the reasons for the change,
- describe the character set and representation we chose,
- and present the programming models and software changes
- that support the new text format.
- Although we stopped short of full internationalization\(emfor
- example, system error messages are in Unixese, not Japanese\(emwe
- believe Plan 9 is the first system to treat the representation
- of all major languages on a uniform, equal footing throughout all its
- software.
- .AE
- .SH
- Introduction
- .PP
- The world is multilingual but most computer systems
- are based on English and ASCII.
- The first release of Plan 9 [Pike90], a new distributed operating
- system from Bell Laboratories, seemed a good occasion
- to correct this chauvinism.
- It is easier to make such deep changes when building new systems than
- by refitting old ones.
- .PP
- The ANSI C standard [ANSIC] contains some guidance on the matter of
- `wide' and `multi-byte' characters but falls far short of
- solving the myriad associated problems.
- We could find no literature on how to convert a
- .I system
- to larger character sets, although some individual
- .I programs
- had been converted.
- This paper reports what we discovered as we
- explored the problem of representing multilingual
- text at all levels of an operating system,
- from the file system and kernel through
- the applications and up to the window system
- and display.
- .PP
- Plan 9 has not been `internationalized':
- its manuals are in English,
- its error messages are in English,
- and it can display text that goes from left to right only.
- But before we can address these other problems,
- we need to handle, uniformly and comfortably,
- the textual representation of all the major written languages.
- That subproblem is richer than we had anticipated.
- .SH
- Standards
- .PP
- Our first step was to select a standard.
- At the time (January 1992),
- there were only two viable options:
- ISO 10646 [ISO10646] and Unicode [Unicode].
- The documents describing both proposals were still in the draft stage.
- .PP
- The draft of ISO 10646 was not
- very attractive to us.
- It defined a sparse set of 32-bit characters,
- which would be
- hard to implement
- and have punitive storage requirements.
- Also, the draft attempted to
- mollify national interests by allocating
- 16-bit subspaces to national committees
- to partition individually.
- The suggested mode of use was to
- ``flip'' between separate national
- standards to implement the international standard.
- This did not strike us as a sound basis for a character set.
- As well, transmitting 32-bit values in a byte stream,
- such as in pipes, would be expensive and hard to implement.
- Since the standard does not define a byte order for such
- transmission, the byte stream would also have to carry
- state to enable the values to be recovered.
- .PP
- The Unicode Standard is a proposal by a consortium of mostly American
- computer companies formed
- to protest the technical
- failings of ISO 10646.
- It defines a uniform 16-bit code based on the
- principle of unification:
- two characters are the same if they look the
- same even though they are from different
- languages.
- This principle, called Han unification,
- allows the large Japanese, Chinese, and Korean
- character sets to be packed comfortably into a 16-bit representation.
- .PP
- We chose the Unicode Standard for its technical merits and because its
- code space was better defined.
- Moreover,
- the Unicode Consortium was derailing the
- ISO 10646 standard.
- (Now, in 1995,
- ISO 10646 is a standard
- with one 16-bit group defined,
- which is almost exactly the Unicode Standard.
- As most people expected, the two standards bodies
- reached a détente and
- ISO 10646 and Unicode represent the same character set.)
- .PP
- The Unicode Standard defines an adequate character set
- but an unreasonable representation.
- It states that all characters
- are 16 bits wide and are communicated and stored in
- 16-bit units.
- It also reserves a pair of characters
- (hexadecimal FFFE and FEFF) to detect byte order
- in transmitted text, requiring state in the byte stream.
- (The Unicode Consortium was thinking of files, not pipes.)
- To adopt this encoding,
- we would have had to convert all text going
- into and out of Plan 9 between ASCII and Unicode, which cannot be done.
- Within a single program, in command of all its input and output,
- it is possible to define characters as 16-bit quantities;
- in the context of a networked system with
- hundreds of applications on diverse machines
- by different manufacturers,
- it is impossible.
- .PP
- We needed a way to adapt the Unicode Standard to the tools-and-pipes
- model of text processing embodied by the Unix system.
- To do that, we
- needed an ASCII-compatible textual
- representation of Unicode characters for transmission
- and storage.
- In the draft ISO standard there was an informative
- (non-required)
- Annex
- called UTF
- that provided a byte stream encoding
- of the 32-bit ISO code.
- The encoding uses multibyte sequences composed
- from the 190 printable characters of Latin-1
- to represent character values larger
- than 159.
- .PP
- The UTF encoding has several good properties.
- By far the most important is that
- a byte in the ASCII range 0-127 represents
- itself in UTF.
- Thus UTF is backward compatible with ASCII.
- .PP
- UTF has other advantages.
- It is a byte encoding and is
- therefore byte-order independent.
- ASCII control characters appear in the byte stream
- only as themselves, never as an element of a sequence
- encoding another character,
- so newline bytes separate lines of UTF text.
- Finally, ANSI C's
- .CW strcmp
- function applied to UTF strings preserves the ordering of Unicode characters.
- .PP
- To encode and decode UTF is expensive (involving multiplication,
- division, and modulo operations) but workable.
- UTF's major disadvantage is that the encoding
- is not self-synchronizing.
- It is in general impossible to find the character
- boundaries in a UTF string without reading from
- the beginning of the string, although in practice
- control characters such as newlines,
- tabs, and blanks provide synchronization points.
- .PP
- In August 1992,
- X-Open circulated a proposal for another UTF-like
- byte encoding of Unicode characters.
- Their major concern was that an embedded character
- in a file name
- (in particular a slash)
- could be part of an escape sequence in UTF and
- therefore confuse a traditional file system.
- Their proposal would allow all 7-bit ASCII characters
- to represent themselves
- .I "and only themselves"
- in text.
- Multibyte sequences would contain only characters
- with the high bit set.
- We proposed a modification to the new UTF that
- would address our synchronization problem.
- Our proposal, which was originally known informally as UTF-2 and FSS-UTF,
- is now referred to as UTF-8 and has been approved by ISO to become
- Annex P to ISO 10646.
- .PP
- The model for text in Plan 9 is chosen from these
- three standards*:
- .FS
- * ``That's the nice thing about standards\(emthere's so many to choose from.'' \- Andy Tannenbaum (no, the other one)
- .FE
- the Unicode character set encoded as a byte stream by
- UTF-8, from
- (soon to be) Annex P of ISO 10646.
- Although this mixture may seem like a precarious position for us to adopt,
- it is not as bad as it sounds.
- ISO 10646 and the Unicode Standard have converged,
- other systems such as Linux have adopted the same character set and encoding,
- and the general feeling seems to be that Unicode and UTF-8 will be accepted as the way
- to exchange text between systems.
- The prognosis for wide acceptance is good.
- .PP
- There are a couple of aspects of the Unicode Standard we have not faced.
- One is the issue of right-to-left text such as Hebrew or Arabic.
- Since that is an issue of display, not representation, we believe
- we can defer that problem for the moment without affecting our
- ability to solve it later.
- Another issue is diacriticals and `combining characters',
- which cause overstriking of multiple Unicode characters.
- Although necessary for some scripts, such as Thai, Arabic, and Hebrew,
- such characters confuse the issues for Latin languages because they
- generate multiple representations for accented characters.
- ISO 10646 describes three levels of implementation;
- in Plan 9 we decided not to address the issue.
- Again, this can be labeled as a display issue and its finer points are still being debated,
- so we felt comfortable deferring. Mañana.
- .PP
- Although we converted Plan 9 in the altruistic interests of
- serving foreign languages, we have found the large character
- set attractive for other reasons. The Unicode Standard includes many
- characters\(emmathematical symbols, scientific notation,
- more general punctuation, and more\(emthat we now use
- daily in our work. We no longer test our imaginations
- to find ways to include non-ASCII symbols in our text;
- why type
- .CW :-)
- when you can use the character ☺?
- Most compelling is the ability to absorb documents
- and data that contain non-ASCII characters; our browser for the
- Oxford English Dictionary
- lets us see the dictionary as it really is, with pronunciation
- in the IPA font, foreign phrases properly rendered, and so on,
- .I "in plain text.
- .PP
- In the rest of this paper, except when
- stated otherwise, the term `UTF' refers to the UTF-8 encoding
- of Unicode characters as adopted by Plan 9.
- .SH
- C Compiler
- .PP
- The first program to be converted to UTF
- was the C Compiler.
- There are two levels of conversion.
- On the syntactic level,
- input to the C compiler
- is UTF; on the semantic level,
- the C language needs to define
- how compiled programs manipulate
- the UTF set.
- .PP
- The syntactic part is simple.
- The ANSI C language standard defines the
- source character set to be ASCII.
- Since UTF is backward compatible with ASCII,
- the compiler needs little change.
- The only places where a larger character set
- is allowed are in character constants, strings, and comments.
- Since 7-bit ASCII characters can represent only
- themselves in UTF,
- the compiler does not have to be careful while looking
- for the termination of a string or comment.
- .PP
- The Plan 9 compiler extends ANSI C to treat any Unicode
- character with a value outside of the ASCII range as
- an alphabetic.
- To a Greek programmer or an English mathematician,
- α is a sensible and now valid variable name.
- .PP
- On the semantic level, ANSI C allows,
- but does not tie down,
- the notion of a
- .I "wide character
- and admits string and character constants
- of this type.
- We chose the wide character type to be
- .CW unsigned
- .CW short .
- In the libraries, the word
- .CW Rune
- is defined by a
- .CW typedef
- to be equivalent to
- .CW unsigned
- .CW short
- and is
- used to signify a Unicode character.
- .PP
- There are surprises; for example:
- .P1
- L'x' \f1is 120\fP
- \&'x' \f1is 120\fP
- L'ÿ' \f1is 255\fP
- \&'ÿ' \f1is -1, stdio \fPEOF\f1 (if \fPchar\f1 is signed)\fP
- L'\f1α\fP' \f1is 945\fP
- \&'\f1α\fP' \f1is illegal\fP
- .P2
- In the string constants,
- .P1
- "\f(Jpこんにちは 世界\fP"
- L"\f(Jpこんにちは 世界\fP",
- .P2
- the former is an array of
- .CW chars
- with 22 elements
- and a null byte,
- while the latter is an array of
- .CW unsigned
- .CW shorts
- .CW Runes ) (
- with 8 elements and a null
- .CW Rune .
- .PP
- The Plan 9 library provides an output conversion function,
- .CW print
- (analogous to
- .CW printf ),
- with formats
- .CW %c ,
- .CW %C ,
- .CW %s ,
- and
- .CW %S .
- Since
- .CW print
- produces text, its output is always UTF.
- The character conversion
- .CW %c
- (lower case) masks its argument
- to 8 bits before converting to UTF.
- Thus
- .CW L'ÿ'
- and
- .CW 'ÿ'
- printed under
- .CW %c
- will be identical,
- but
- .CW L'\f1α\fP'
- will print as the Unicode
- character with decimal value 177.
- The character conversion
- .CW %C
- (upper case) masks its argument
- to 16 bits before converting to UTF.
- Thus
- .CW L'ÿ'
- and
- .CW L'\f1α\fP'
- will print correctly under
- .CW %C ,
- but
- .CW 'ÿ'
- will not.
- The conversion
- .CW %s
- (lower case)
- expects a pointer to
- .CW char
- and copies UTF sequences up to a null byte.
- The conversion
- .CW %S
- (upper case) expects a pointer to
- .CW Rune
- and
- performs sequential
- .CW %C
- conversions until a null
- .CW Rune
- is encountered.
- .PP
- Another problem in format conversion
- is the definition of
- .CW %10s :
- does the number refer to bytes or characters?
- We decided that such formats were most
- often used to align output columns and
- so made the number count characters.
- Some programs, however, use the count
- to place blank-padded strings
- in fixed-sized arrays.
- These programs must be found and corrected.
- .PP
- Here is a complete example:
- .P1
- #include <u.h>
- char c[] = "\f(Jpこんにちは 世界\fP";
- Rune s[] = L"\f(Jpこんにちは 世界\fP";
- main(void)
- {
- print("%d, %d\en", sizeof(c), sizeof(s));
- print("%s\en", c);
- print("%S\en", s);
- }
- .P2
- .PP
- This program prints
- .CW 23,
- .CW 18
- and then two identical lines of
- UTF text.
- In practice,
- .CW %S
- and
- .CW L"..."
- are rare in programs; one reason is
- that most formatted I/O is done in unconverted UTF.
- .SH
- Ramifications
- .PP
- All programs in Plan 9 now read and write text as UTF, not ASCII.
- This change breaks two deep-rooted symmetries implicit in most C programs:
- .IP 1.
- A character is no longer a
- .CW char .
- .IP 2.
- The internal representation (Rune) of a character now differs from its
- external representation (UTF).
- .PP
- In the sections that follow,
- we show how these issues were faced in the layers of
- system software from the operating system up to the applications.
- The effects are wide-reaching and often surprising.
- .SH
- Operating system
- .PP
- Since UTF is the only format for text in Plan 9,
- the interface to the operating system had to be converted to UTF.
- Text strings cross the interface in several places:
- command arguments,
- file names,
- user names (people can log in using their native name),
- error messages,
- and miscellaneous minor places such as commands to the I/O system.
- Little change was required: null-terminated UTF strings
- are equivalent to null-terminated ASCII strings for most purposes
- of the operating system.
- The library routines described in the next section made that
- change straightforward.
- .PP
- The window system, once called
- .CW 8.5 ,
- is now rightfully called
- .CW 8½ .
- .SH
- Libraries
- .PP
- A header file included by all programs (see [Pike92]) declares
- the
- .CW Rune
- type to hold 16-bit character values:
- .P1
- typedef unsigned short Rune;
- .P2
- Also defined are several constants relevant to UTF:
- .P1
- enum
- {
- UTFmax = 3, /* maximum bytes per rune */
- Runesync = 0x80, /* can't appear in UTF sequence (<) */
- Runeself = 0x80, /* rune==UTF sequence (<) */
- Runeerror = 0x80, /* decoding error in UTF */
- };
- .P2
- (With the original UTF,
- .CW Runesync
- was hexadecimal 21 and
- .CW Runeself
- was A0.)
- .CW UTFmax
- bytes are sufficient
- to hold the UTF encoding of any Unicode character.
- Characters of value less than
- .CW Runesync
- only appear in a UTF string as
- themselves, never as part of a sequence encoding another character.
- Characters of value less than
- .CW Runeself
- encode into single bytes
- of the same value.
- Finally, when the library detects errors in UTF input\(embyte sequences
- that are not valid UTF sequences\(emit converts the first byte of the
- error sequence to the character
- .CW Runeerror .
- There is little a rune-oriented program can do when given bad data
- except exit, which is unreasonable, or carry on.
- Originally the conversion routines, described below,
- returned errors when given invalid UTF,
- but we found ourselves repeatedly checking for errors and ignoring them.
- We therefore decided to convert a bad sequence to a valid rune
- and continue processing.
- (The ANSI C routines, on the other hand, return errors.)
- .PP
- This technique does have the unfortunate property that converting
- invalid UTF byte strings in and out of runes does not preserve the input,
- but this circumstance only occurs when non-textual input is
- given to a textual program.
- The Unicode Standard defines an error character, value FFFD, to stand for
- characters from other sets that it does not represent.
- The
- .CW Runeerror
- character is a different concept, related to the encoding rather than the character set, so we
- chose a different character for it.
- .PP
- The Plan 9 C library contains a number of routines for
- manipulating runes.
- The first set converts between runes and UTF strings:
- .P1
- extern int runetochar(char*, Rune*);
- extern int chartorune(Rune*, char*);
- extern int runelen(long);
- extern int fullrune(char*, int);
- .P2
- .CW Runetochar
- translates a single
- .CW Rune
- to a UTF sequence and returns the number of bytes produced.
- .CW Chartorune
- goes the other way, reporting how many bytes were consumed.
- .CW Runelen
- returns the number of bytes in the UTF encoding of a rune.
- .CW Fullrune
- examines a UTF string up to a specified number of bytes
- and reports whether the string begins with a complete UTF encoding.
- All these routines use the
- .CW Runeerror
- character to work around encoding problems.
- .PP
- There is also a set of routines for examining null-terminated UTF strings,
- based on the model of the ANSI standard
- .CW str
- routines, but with
- .CW utf
- substituted for
- .CW str
- and
- .CW rune
- for
- .CW chr :
- .P1
- extern int utflen(char*);
- extern char* utfrune(char*, long);
- extern char* utfrrune(char*, long);
- extern char* utfutf(char*, char*);
- .P2
- .CW Utflen
- returns the number of runes in a UTF string;
- .CW utfrune
- returns a pointer to the first occurrence of a rune in a UTF string;
- and
- .CW utfrrune
- a pointer to the last.
- .CW Utfutf
- searches for the first occurrence of a UTF string in another UTF string.
- Given the synchronizing property of UTF-8,
- .CW utfutf
- is the same as
- .CW strstr
- if the arguments point to valid UTF strings.
- .PP
- It is a mistake to use
- .CW strchr
- or
- .CW strrchr
- unless searching for a 7-bit ASCII character, that is, a character
- less than
- .CW Runeself .
- .PP
- We have no routines for manipulating null-terminated arrays of
- .CW Runes .
- Although they should probably exist for completeness, we have
- found no need for them, for the same reason that
- .CW %S
- and
- .CW L"..."
- are rarely used.
- .PP
- Most Plan 9 programs use a new buffered I/O library, BIO, in place of
- Standard I/O.
- BIO contains routines to read and write UTF streams, converting to and from
- runes.
- .CW Bgetrune
- returns, as a
- .CW Rune
- within a
- .CW long ,
- the next character in the UTF input stream;
- .CW Bputrune
- takes a rune and writes its UTF representation.
- .CW Bungetrune
- puts a rune back into the input stream for rereading.
- .PP
- Plan 9 programs use a simple set of macros to process command line arguments.
- Converting these macros to UTF automatically updated the
- argument processing of most programs.
- In general,
- argument flag names can no longer be held in bytes and
- arrays of 256 bytes cannot be used to hold a set of flags.
- .PP
- We have done nothing analogous to ANSI C's locales, partly because
- we do not feel qualified to define locales and partly because we remain
- unconvinced of that model for dealing with the problems.
- That is really more an issue of internationalization than conversion
- to a larger character set; on the other hand,
- because we have chosen a single character set that encompasses
- most languages, some of the need for
- locales is eliminated.
- (We have a utility,
- .CW tcs ,
- that translates between UTF and other character sets.)
- .PP
- There are several reasons why our library does not follow the ANSI design
- for wide and multi-byte characters.
- The ANSI model was designed by a committee, untried, almost
- as an afterthought, whereas
- we wanted to design as we built.
- (We made several major changes to the interface
- as we became familiar with the problems involved.)
- We disagree with ANSI C's handling of invalid multi-byte sequences.
- Also, the ANSI C library is incomplete:
- although it contains some crucial routines for handling
- wide and multi-byte characters, there are some serious omissions.
- For example, our software can exploit
- the fact that UTF preserves ASCII characters in the byte stream.
- We could remove that assumption by replacing all
- calls to
- .CW strchr
- with
- .CW utfrune
- and so on.
- (Because of the weaker properties of the original UTF,
- we have actually done so.)
- ANSI C cannot:
- the standard says nothing about the representation, so portable code should
- .I never
- call
- .CW strchr ,
- yet there is no ANSI equivalent to
- .CW utfrune .
- ANSI C simultaneously invalidates
- .CW strchr
- and offers no replacement.
- .PP
- Finally, ANSI did nothing to integrate wide characters
- into the I/O system: it gives no method for printing
- wide characters.
- We therefore needed to invent some things and decided to invent
- everything.
- In the end, some of our entry points do correspond closely to
- ANSI routines\(emfor example
- .CW chartorune
- and
- .CW runetochar
- are similar to
- .CW mbtowc
- and
- .CW wctomb \(embut
- Plan 9's library defines more functionality, enough
- to write real applications comfortably.
- .SH
- Converting the tools
- .PP
- The source for our tools and applications had already been converted to
- work with Latin-1, so it was `8-bit safe', but the conversion to the Unicode
- Standard and UTF is more involved.
- Some programs needed no change at all:
- .CW cat ,
- for instance,
- interprets its argument strings, delivered in UTF,
- as file names that it passes uninterpreted to the
- .CW open
- system call,
- and then just copies bytes from its input to its output;
- it never makes decisions based on the values of the bytes.
- (Plan 9
- .CW cat
- has no options such as
- .CW -v
- to complicate matters.)
- Most programs, however, needed modest change.
- .PP
- It is difficult to
- find automatically the places that need attention,
- but
- .CW grep
- helps.
- Software that uses the libraries conscientiously can be searched
- for calls to library routines that examine bytes as characters:
- .CW strchr ,
- .CW strrchr ,
- .CW strstr ,
- etc.
- Replacing these by calls to
- .CW utfrune ,
- .CW utfrrune ,
- and
- .CW utfutf
- is enough to fix many programs.
- Few tools actually need to operate on runes internally;
- more typically they need only to look for the final slash in a file
- name and similar trivial tasks.
- Of the 170 C source programs in the top levels of
- .CW /sys/src/cmd ,
- only 23 now contain the word
- .CW Rune .
- .PP
- The programs that
- .I do
- store runes internally
- are mostly those whose
- .I raison
- .I d'être
- is character manipulation:
- .CW sam
- (the text editor),
- .CW sed ,
- .CW sort ,
- .CW tr ,
- .CW troff ,
- .CW 8½
- (the window system and terminal emulator),
- and so on.
- To decide whether to compute using runes
- or UTF-encoded byte strings requires balancing the cost of converting
- the data when read and written
- against the cost of converting relevant text on demand.
- For programs such as editors that run a long time with a relatively
- constant dataset, runes are the better choice.
- There are space considerations too, but they are more complicated:
- plain ASCII text grows when converted to runes; UTF-encoded Japanese
- shrinks.
- .PP
- Again, it is hard to automate the conversion of a program from
- .CW chars
- to
- .CW Runes .
- It is not enough just to change the type of variables; the assumption
- that bytes and characters are equivalent can be insidious.
- For instance, to clear a character array by
- .P1
- memset(buf, 0, BUFSIZE)
- .P2
- becomes wrong if
- .CW buf
- is changed from an array of
- .CW chars
- to an array of
- .CW Runes .
- Any program that indexes tables based on character values needs
- rethinking.
- Consider
- .CW tr ,
- which originally used multiple 256-byte arrays for the mapping.
- The naïve conversion would yield multiple 65536-rune arrays.
- Instead Plan 9
- .CW tr
- saves space by building in effect
- a run-encoded version of the map.
- .PP
- .CW Sort
- has related problems.
- The cooperation of UTF and
- .CW strcmp
- means that a simple sort\(emone with no options\(emcan be done
- on the original UTF strings using
- .CW strcmp .
- With sorting options enabled, however,
- .CW sort
- may need to convert its input to runes: for example,
- option
- .CW -t\f1α\fP
- requires searching for alphas in the input text to
- crack the input into fields.
- The field specifier
- .CW +3.2
- refers to 2 runes beyond the third field.
- Some of the other options are hopelessly provincial:
- consider the case-folding and dictionary order options
- (Japanese doesn't even have an official dictionary order) or
- .CW -M
- which compares by case-insensitive English month name.
- Handling these options involves the
- larger issues of internationalization and is beyond the scope
- of this paper and our expertise.
- Plan 9
- .CW sort
- works sensibly with options that make sense relative to the input.
- The simple and most important options are, however, usually meaningful.
- In particular,
- .CW sort
- sorts UTF into the same order that
- .CW look
- expects.
- .PP
- Regular expression-matching algorithms need rethinking to
- be applied to UTF text.
- Deterministic automata are usually applied to bytes;
- converting them to operate on variable-sized byte sequences is awkward.
- On the other hand, converting the input stream to runes adds measurable
- expense
- and the state tables expand
- from size 256 to 65536; it can be expensive just to generate them.
- For simple string searching,
- the Boyer-Moore algorithm works with UTF provided the input is
- guaranteed to be only valid UTF strings; however, it does not work
- with the old UTF encoding.
- At a more mundane level, even character classes are harder:
- the usual bit-vector representation within a non-deterministic automaton
- is unwieldy with 65536 characters in the alphabet.
- .PP
- We compromised.
- An existing library for compiling and executing regular expressions
- was adapted to work on runes, with two entry points for searching
- in arrays of runes and arrays of chars (the pattern is always UTF text).
- Character classes are represented internally as runs of runes;
- the reserved value
- .CW FFFF
- marks the end of the class.
- Then
- .I all
- utilities that use regular expressions\(emeditors,
- .CW grep ,
- .CW awk ,
- etc.\(emexcept the shell, whose notation
- was grandfathered, were converted to use the library.
- For some programs, there was a concomitant loss of performance,
- but there was also a strong advantage.
- To our knowledge, Plan 9 is the only Unix-like system
- that has a single definition and implementation of
- regular expressions; patterns are written and interpreted
- identically by all the programs in the system.
- .PP
- A handful of programs have the notion of character built into them
- so strongly as to confuse the issue of what they should do with UTF input.
- Such programs were treated as individual special cases.
- For example,
- .CW wc
- is, by default, unchanged in behavior and output; a new option,
- .CW -r ,
- counts the number of correctly encoded runes\(emvalid UTF sequences\(emin
- its input;
- .CW -b
- the number of invalid sequences.
- .PP
- It took us several months to convert all the software in the system
- to the Unicode Standard and the old UTF.
- When we decided to convert from that to the new UTF,
- only three things needed to be done.
- First, we rewrote the library routines to encode and decode the
- new UTF. This took an evening.
- Next, we converted all the files containing UTF
- to the new encoding.
- We wrote a trivial program to look for non-ASCII bytes in
- text files and used a Plan 9 program called
- .CW tcs
- (translate character set) to change encodings.
- Finally, we recompiled all the system software;
- the library interface was unchanged, so recompilation was sufficient
- to effect the transformation.
- The second two steps were done concurrently and took an afternoon.
- We concluded that the actual encoding is relatively unimportant to the
- software; the adoption of large characters and a byte-stream encoding
- .I per
- .I se
- are much deeper issues.
- .SH
- Graphics and fonts
- .PP
- Plan 9 provides only minimal support for plain text terminals.
- It is instead designed to be used with all character input and
- output mediated by a window system such as
- .CW 8½ .
- The window system and related software are responsible for the
- display of UTF text as Unicode character images.
- For plain text, the window system must provide a user-settable
- .I font
- that provides a (possibly empty) picture for each Unicode character.
- Fancier applications that use bold and Italic characters
- need multiple fonts storing multiple pictures for each
- Unicode value.
- All the issues are apparent, though,
- in just the problem of
- displaying a single image for each character, that is, the
- Unicode equivalent of a plain text terminal.
- With 128 or even 256 characters, a font can be just
- an array of bitmaps. With 65536 characters,
- a more sophisticated design is necessary. To store the ideographs
- for just Japanese as 16×16×1 bit images,
- the smallest they can reasonably be, takes over a quarter of a
- megabyte. Make the images a little larger, store more bits per
- pixel, and hold a copy in every running application, and the
- memory cost becomes unreasonable.
- .PP
- The structure of the bitmap graphics services is described at length elsewhere
- [Pike91].
- In summary, the memory holding the bitmaps is stored in the same machine that has
- the display, mouse, and keyboard: the terminal in Plan 9 terminology,
- the workstation in others'.
- Access to that memory and associated services is provided
- by device files served by system
- software on the terminal. One of those files,
- .CW /dev/bitblt ,
- interprets messages written upon it as requests for actions
- corresponding to entry points in the graphics library:
- allocate a bitmap, execute a raster operation, draw a text string, etc.
- The window system
- acts as a multiplexer that mediates access to the services
- and resources of the terminal by simulating in each client window
- a set of files mirroring those provided by the system.
- That is, each window has a distinct
- .CW /dev/mouse ,
- .CW /dev/bitblt ,
- and so on through which applications drive graphical
- input and output.
- .PP
- One of the resources managed by
- .CW 8½
- and the terminal is the set of active
- .I subfonts.
- Each subfont holds the
- bitmaps and associated data structures for a sequential set of Unicode
- characters.
- Subfonts are stored in files and loaded into the terminal by
- .CW 8½
- or an application.
- For example, one subfont
- might hold the images of the first 256 characters of the Unicode space,
- corresponding to the Latin-1 character set;
- another might hold the standard phonetic character set, Unicode characters
- with value 0250 to 02E9.
- These files are collected in directories corresponding to typefaces:
- .CW /lib/font/bit/pelm
- contains the Pellucida Monospace character set, with subfonts holding
- the Latin-1, Greek, Cyrillic and other components of the typeface.
- A suffix on subfont files encodes (in a subfont-specific
- way) the size of the images:
- .CW /lib/font/bit/pelm/latin1.9
- contains the Latin-1 Pellucida Monospace characters with lower
- case letters 9 pixels high;
- .CW /lib/font/bit/jis/jis5400.16
- contains 16-pixel high
- ideographs starting at Unicode value 5400.
- .PP
- The subfonts do not identify which portion of the Unicode space
- they cover. Instead, a
- font file, in plain text,
- describes how to assemble subfonts into a complete
- character set.
- The font file is presented as an argument to the window system
- to determine how plain text is displayed in text windows and
- applications.
- Here is the beginning of the font file
- .CW /lib/font/bit/pelm/jis.9.font ,
- which describes the layout of a font covering that portion of
- the Unicode Standard for which we have characters of typical
- display size, using Japanese characters
- to cover the Han space:
- .P1
- 18 14
- 0x0000 0x00FF latin1.9
- 0x0100 0x017E latineur.9
- 0x0250 0x02E9 ipa.9
- 0x0386 0x03F5 greek.9
- 0x0400 0x0475 cyrillic.9
- 0x2000 0x2044 ../misc/genpunc.9
- 0x2070 0x208E supsub.9
- 0x20A0 0x20AA currency.9
- 0x2100 0x2138 ../misc/letterlike.9
- 0x2190 0x21EA ../misc/arrows
- 0x2200 0x227F ../misc/math1
- 0x2280 0x22F1 ../misc/math2
- 0x2300 0x232C ../misc/tech
- 0x2500 0x257F ../misc/chart
- 0x2600 0x266F ../misc/ding
- .P2
- .P1
- 0x3000 0x303f ../jis/jis3000.16
- 0x30a1 0x30fe ../jis/katakana.16
- 0x3041 0x309e ../jis/hiragana.16
- 0x4e00 0x4fff ../jis/jis4e00.16
- 0x5000 0x51ff ../jis/jis5000.16
- \&...
- .P2
- The first two numbers set the interline spacing of the font (18
- pixels) and the distance from the baseline to the top of the
- line (14 pixels).
- When characters are displayed, they are placed so as best
- to fit within those constraints; characters
- too large to fit will be truncated.
- The rest of the file associates subfont files
- with portions of Unicode space.
- The first four such files are in the Pellucida Monospace typeface
- and directory; others reside in other directories. The file names
- are relative to the font file's own location.
- .PP
- There are several advantages to this two-level structure.
- First, it simultaneously breaks the huge Unicode space into manageable
- components and provides a unifying architecture for
- assembling fonts from disjoint pieces.
- Second, the structure promotes sharing.
- For example, we have only one set of Japanese
- characters but dozens of typefaces for the Latin-1 characters,
- and this structure permits us to store only one copy of the
- Japanese set but use it with any Roman typeface.
- Also, customization is easy.
- English-speaking users who don't need Japanese characters
- but may want to read an on-line Oxford English Dictionary can
- assemble a custom font with the
- Latin-1 (or even just ASCII) characters and the International
- Phonetic Alphabet (IPA).
- Moreover, to do so requires just editing a plain text file,
- not using a special font editing tool.
- Finally, the structure guides the design of
- caching protocols to improve performance and memory usage.
- .PP
- To load a complete Unicode character set into each application
- would consume too
- much memory and, particularly on slow terminal lines, would take
- unreasonably long.
- Instead, Plan 9 assembles a multi-level cache structure for
- each font.
- An application opens a font file, reads and parses it,
- and allocates a data structure.
- A message written to
- .CW /dev/bitblt
- allocates an associated structure held in the terminal, in particular,
- a bitmap to act as a cache
- for recently used character images.
- Other messages copy these images to bitmaps such as the screen
- by loading characters from subfonts into the cache on demand and
- from there to the destination bitmap.
- The protocol to draw characters is in terms of cache indices,
- not Unicode character number or UTF sequences.
- These details are hidden from the application, which instead
- sees only a subroutine to draw a string in a bitmap from a
- given font, functions to discover character size information,
- and routines to allocate and to free fonts.
- .PP
- As needed, whole
- subfonts are opened by the graphics library, read, and then downloaded
- to the terminal.
- They are held open by the library in an LRU-replacement list.
- Even when the program closes a subfont, it is retained
- in the terminal for later use.
- When the application opens the subfont, it asks the terminal
- if it already has a copy to avoid reading it from the file
- server if possible.
- This level of cache has the property that the bitmaps for, say,
- all the Japanese characters are stored only once, in the terminal;
- the applications read only size and width information from the terminal
- and share the images.
- .PP
- The sizes of the character and subfont caches held by the
- application are adaptive.
- A simple algorithm monitors the cache miss rate to enlarge and
- shrink the caches as required.
- The size of the character cache is limited to 2048 images maximum,
- which in practice seems enough even for Japanese text.
- For plain ASCII-like text it naturally stays around 128 images.
- .PP
- This mechanism sounds complicated but is implemented by only about
- 500 lines in the library and considerably less in each of the
- terminal's graphics driver and
- .CW 8½ .
- It has the advantage that only characters that are
- being used are loaded into memory.
- It is also efficient: if the characters being drawn
- are in the cache the extra overhead is negligible.
- It works particularly well for alphabetic character sets,
- but also adapts on demand for ideographic sets.
- When a user first looks at Japanese text, it takes a few
- seconds to read all the font data, but thereafter the
- text is drawn almost as fast as regular text (the images
- are larger, so draw a little slower).
- Also, because the bitmaps are remembered by the terminal,
- if a second application then looks at Japanese text
- it starts faster than the first.
- .PP
- We considered
- building a `font server'
- to cache character images and associated data
- for the applications, the window system, and the terminal.
- We rejected this design because, although isolating
- many of the problems of font management into a separate program,
- it didn't simplify the applications.
- Moreover, in a distributed system such as Plan 9 it is easy
- to have too many special purpose servers.
- Making the management of the fonts the concern of only
- the essential components simplifies the system and makes
- bootstrapping less intricate.
- .SH
- Input
- .PP
- A completely different problem is how to type Unicode characters
- as input to the system.
- We selected an unused key on our ASCII keyboards
- to serve as a prefix for multi-keystroke
- sequences that generate Unicode characters.
- For example, the character
- .CW ü
- is generated by the prefix key
- (typically
- .CW ALT
- or
- .CW Compose )
- followed by a double quote and a lower-case
- .CW u .
- When that character is read by the application, from the file
- .CW /dev/cons ,
- it is of course presented as its UTF encoding.
- Such sequences generate characters from an arbitrary set that
- includes all of Latin-1 plus a selection of mathematical
- and technical characters.
- An arbitrary Unicode character may be generated by typing the prefix,
- an upper case X, and four hexadecimal digits that identify
- the Unicode value.
- .PP
- These simple mechanisms are adequate for most of our day-to-day needs:
- it's easy to remember to type `ALT 1 2' for ½\^ or `ALT accent letter'
- for accented Latin letters.
- For the occasional unusual character, the cut and paste features of
- .CW 8½
- serve well. A program called (perhaps misleadingly)
- .CW unicode
- takes as argument a hexadecimal value, and prints the UTF representation of that character,
- which may then be picked up with the mouse and used as input.
- .PP
- These methods
- are clearly unsatisfactory when working in a non-English language.
- In the native country of such a language
- the appropriate keyboard is likely to be at hand.
- But it's also reasonable\(emespecially now that the system handles Unicode characters\(emto
- work in a language foreign to the keyboard.
- .PP
- For alphabetic languages such as Greek or Russian, it is
- straightforward to construct a program that does phonetic substitution,
- so that, for example, typing a Latin `a' yields the Greek `α'.
- Within Plan 9, such a program can be inserted transparently
- between the real keyboard and a program such as the window system,
- providing a manageable input device for such languages.
- .PP
- For ideographic languages such as Chinese or Japanese the problem is harder.
- Native users of such languages have adopted methods for dealing with
- Latin keyboards that involve a hybrid technique based on phonetics
- to generate a list of possible symbols followed by menu selection to
- choose the desired one.
- Such methods can be
- effective, but their design must be rooted in information about
- the language unknown to non-native speakers.
- .CW Cxterm , (
- a Chinese terminal emulator built by and for
- Chinese programmers,
- employs such a technique
- [Pong and Zhang].)
- Although the technical problem of implementing such a device
- is easy in Plan 9\(emit is just an elaboration of the technique for
- alphabetic languages\(emour lack of familiarity with such languages
- has restrained our enthusiasm for building one.
- .PP
- The input problem is technically the least interesting but perhaps
- emotionally the most important of the problems of converting a system
- to an international character set.
- Beyond that remain the deeper problems of internationalization
- such as multi-lingual error messages and command names,
- problems we are not qualified to solve.
- With the ability to treat text of most languages on an equal
- footing, though, we can begin down that path.
- Perhaps people in non-English speaking countries will
- consider adopting Plan 9, solving the input problem locally\(emperhaps
- just by plugging in their local terminals\(emand begin to use
- a system with at least the capacity to be international.
- .SH
- Acknowledgements
- .PP
- Dennis Ritchie provided consultation and encouragement.
- Bob Flandrena converted most of the standard tools to UTF.
- Brian Kernighan suffered cheerfully with several
- inadequate implementations and converted
- .CW troff
- to UTF.
- Rich Drechsler converted his Postscript driver to UTF.
- John Hobby built the Postscript ☺.
- We thank them all.
- .SH
- References
- .LP
- [ANSIC] \f2American National Standard for Information Systems \-
- Programming Language C\f1, American National Standards Institute, Inc.,
- New York, 1990.
- .LP
- [ISO10646]
- ISO/IEC DIS 10646-1:1993
- \f2Information technology \-
- Universal Multiple-Octet Coded Character Set (UCS) \(em
- Part 1: Architecture and Basic Multilingual Plane\fP.
- .LP
- [Pike90] R. Pike, D. Presotto, K. Thompson, H. Trickey,
- ``Plan 9 from Bell Labs'',
- UKUUG Proc. of the Summer 1990 Conf.,
- London, England,
- 1990.
- .LP
- [Pike91] R. Pike, ``8½, The Plan 9 Window System'', USENIX Summer
- Conf. Proc., Nashville, 1991, reprinted in this volume.
- .LP
- [Pike92] R. Pike, ``How to Use the Plan 9 C Compiler'', this volume.
- .LP
- [Pong and Zhang] Man-Chi Pong and Yongguang Zhang, ``cxterm:
- A Chinese Terminal Emulator for the X Window System'',
- .I
- Software\(emPractice and Experience,
- .R
- Vol 22(1), 809-926, October 1992.
- .LP
- [Unicode]
- \f2The Unicode Standard,
- Worldwide Character Encoding,
- Version 1.0, Volume 1\f1,
- The Unicode Consortium,
- Addison Wesley,
- New York,
- 1991.
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