When converting text to/from wchars, mbstring makes one function call
for each and every byte or wchar to be converted. Typically, each of
these conversion functions contains a state machine, and its state has
to be restored and then saved for every single one of these calls.
It doesn't take much to see that this is grossly inefficient.
Instead of converting one byte or wchar on each call, the new
conversion functions will either fill up or drain a whole buffer of
wchars on each call. In benchmarks, this is about 3-10× faster.
Adding the new, faster conversion functions for all supported legacy
text encodings still needs some work. Also, all the code which uses
the old-style conversion functions needs to be converted to use the
new ones. After that, the old code can be dropped. (The mailparse
extension will also have to be fixed up so it will still compile.)
In a2bc57e0e5, mb_detect_encoding was modified to ensure it would never
return 'UUENCODE', 'QPrint', or other non-encodings as the "detected
text encoding". Before mb_detect_encoding was enhanced so that it could
detect any supported text encoding, those were never returned, and they
are not desired. Actually, we want to eventually remove them completely
from mbstring, since PHP already contains other implementations of
UUEncode, QPrint, Base64, and HTML entities.
For more clarity on why we need to suppress UUEncode, etc. from being
detected by mb_detect_encoding, the existing UUEncode implementation
in mbstring *never* treats any input as erroneous. It just accepts
everything. This means that it would *always* be treated as a valid
choice by mb_detect_encoding, and would be returned in many, many cases
where the input is obviously not UUEncoded.
It turns out that the form of mb_convert_encoding where the user passes
multiple candidate encodings (and mbstring auto-detects which one to
use) was also affected by the same issue. Apply the same fix.
The purpose of mbstring is for working with Unicode and legacy text
encodings; but Base64, QPrint, etc. are not text encodings and don't
really belong in mbstring. PHP already contains separate implementations
of Base64, QPrint, and HTML entities. It will be better to eventually
remove these non-encodings from mbstring.
Regarding HTML entities... there is a bit more to say. mbstring's
implementation of HTML entities is different from the other built-in
implementation (htmlspecialchars and htmlentities). Those functions
convert <, >, and & to HTML entities, but mbstring does not.
It appears that the original author of mbstring intended for something
to be done with <, >, and &. He used a table to identify which
characters should be converted to HTML entities, and </>/& all have a
special value in that table. However, nothing ever checks for that
special value, so the characters are passed through unconverted.
This seems like a very useless implementation of HTML entities. The most
important characters which need to be expressed as entities in HTML
documents are those three!
We must not reuse per-request memory across multiple requests, so this
check triggered during RINIT makes no sense. As explained in the bug
report[1], it can be even harmful, if some request startup fails, and
the pointers refer to already freed memory in the next request.
[1] <https://bugs.php.net/76167>
Closes GH-7604.
Among the text encodings supported by mbstring are several which are
not really 'text encodings'. These include Base64, QPrint, UUencode,
HTML entities, '7 bit', and '8 bit'.
Rather than providing an explicit list of text encodings which they are
interested in, users may pass the output of mb_list_encodings to
mb_detect_encoding. Since Base64, QPrint, and so on are included in
the output of mb_list_encodings, mb_detect_encoding can return one of
these as its 'detected encoding' (and in fact, this often happens).
Before mb_detect_encoding was enhanced so it could detect any of the
supported text encodings, this did not happen, and it is never desired.
mb_convert_kana is controlled by user-provided flags, which specify what it should convert
and to what. These flags come in inverse pairs, for example "fullwidth numerals to halfwidth
numerals" and "halfwidth numerals to fullwidth numerals". It does not make sense to combine
inverse flags.
But, clever reader of commit logs, you will surely say: What if I want all my halfwidth
numerals to become fullwidth, and all my fullwidth numerals to become halfwidth? Much too
clever, you are! Let's put aside the fact that this bizarre switch-up is ridiculous and
will never be used, and face up to another stark reality: mb_convert_kana does not work
for that case, and never has. This was probably never noticed because nobody ever tried.
Disallowing useless combinations of flags gives freedom to rearrange the kana conversion
code without changing behavior.
We can also reject unrecognized flags. This may help users to catch bugs.
Interestingly, the existing tests used a 'Z' flag, which is useless (it's not recognized
at all).
Headers should not be processed in a locale-depdendent fashion.
Switch from upper to lowercasing because that's the standard for
PHP and we provide an ASCII implementation of this operation.
This is adapted from GH-7506.
Previously, when passed an empty string, and given an encoding which
uses a variable number of bytes per character (and which doesn't have
a 'character length table'), mb_str_split would return an array
containing a single empty string, rather than an empty array.
The ISO-2022 encodings are among those which were affected by this bug.
* PHP-8.1:
Bug #81390: mb_detect_encoding should not prematurely stop processing input
mb_detect_encoding with only one candidate encoding uses mb_check_encoding
Optimize text encoding detection for speed (eliminate Unicode property lookups)
mb_convert_kana is able to convert fullwidth katakana to fullwidth
hiragana (and vice versa). The constants referring to these modes had
names like MBFL_FILT_TL_ZEN2HAN_KANA2HIRA.
The "ZEN2HAN" part of the name is misleading, since these modes do not
convert fullwidth (zenkaku) kana to halfwidth (hankaku). The converted
characters are fullwidth both before and after the conversion. So...
let's name the constants accordingly.
Previously, mbstring had a special mode whereby it would convert
erroneous input byte sequences to output like "BAD+XXXX", where "XXXX"
would be the erroneous bytes expressed in hexadecimal. This mode could
be enabled by calling `mb_substitute_character("long")`.
However, accurately reproducing input byte sequences from the cached
state of a conversion filter is often tricky, and this significantly
complicates the implementation. Further, the means used for passing
the erroneous bytes through to where the "BAD+XXXX" text is generated
only allows for up to 3 bytes to be passed, meaning that some erroneous
byte sequences are truncated anyways.
More to the point, a search of publically available PHP code indicates
that nobody is really using this feature anyways.
Incidentally, this feature also provided error output like "JIS+XXXX"
if the input 'should have' represented a JISX 0208 codepoint, but it
decodes to a codepoint which does not exist in the JISX 0208 charset.
Similarly, specific error output was provided for non-existent
JISX 0212 codepoints, and likewise for JISX 0213, CP932, and a few
other charsets. All of that is now consigned to the flames.
However, "long" error markers also include a somewhat more useful
"U+XXXX" marker for Unicode codepoints which were successfully
decoded from the input text, but cannot be represented in the output
encoding. Those are still supported.
With this change, there is no need to use a variety of special values
in the high bits of a wchar to represent different types of error
values. We can (and will) just use a single error value. This will be
equal to -1.
One complicating factor: Text conversion functions return an integer to
indicate whether the conversion operation should be immediately
aborted, and the magic 'abort' marker is -1. Also, almost all of these
functions would return the received byte/codepoint to indicate success.
That doesn't work with the new error value; if an input filter detects
an error and passes -1 to the output filter, and the output filter
returns it back, that would be taken to mean 'abort'.
Therefore, amend all these functions to return 0 for success.
1. Update: http://www.php.net/license/3_01.txt to https, as there is anyway server header "Location:" to https.
2. Update few license 3.0 to 3.01 as 3.0 states "php 5.1.1, 4.1.1, and earlier".
3. In some license comments is "at through the world-wide-web" while most is without "at", so deleted.
4. fixed indentation in some files before |
This flag indicated that an encoding was 'multi-byte'; it can use a variable
number of bytes to encode each character. As it turns out, we don't actually
need to check this flag anywhere, so it's better to remove it.
We're starting to see a mix between uses of zend_bool and bool.
Replace all usages with the standard bool type everywhere.
Of course, zend_bool is retained as an alias.
These flags identify text encodings in mbstring which use a constant number of
bytes per character. While some parts of the code do use these flags, usually
to detect cases which can be optimized due to constant-width encoding, nothing
cares whether the encodings are 'LE' (little-endian) or 'BE' (big-endian).
So we can simplify things by combining constants.
mbstring had an 'identify filter' for almost every supported text encoding
which was used when auto-detecting the most likely encoding for a string.
It would run over the string and set a 'flag' if it saw anything which
did not appear likely to be the encoding in question.
One problem with this scheme was that encodings which merely appeared
less likely to be the correct one were completely rejected, even if there
was no better candidate. Another problem was that the 'identify filters'
had a huge amount of code duplication with the 'conversion filters'.
Eliminate the identify filters. Instead, when auto-detecting text
encoding, use conversion filters to see whether the input string is valid
in candidate encodings or not. At the same type, watch the type of
codepoints which the string decodes to and mark it as less likely if
non-printable characters (ESC, form feed, bell, etc.) or 'private use
area' codepoints are seen.
Interestingly, one old test case in which JIS text was misidentified
as UTF-8 (and this wrong behavior was enshrined in the test) was 'fixed'
and the JIS string is now auto-detected as JIS.
Previously, `mb_check_encoding` did an awful lot of unneeded work. In order to
determine whether a string was valid or not, it would convert the whole string
into wchar (code points), which required dynamically allocating a (potentially
large) buffer. Then it would turn right around and convert that big 'ol buffer
of code points back to the original encoding again. Finally, it would check
whether any invalid bytes were detected during that long and onerous process.
The thing is, mbstring _already_ has machinery for detecting whether a string
is valid in a certain encoding or not, and it doesn't require copying any data
around or allocating buffers. Better yet, it can fail fast when an invalid byte
is found. Why not use it? It's sure a lot faster!
Further, the legacy code was also badly broken. Why? Because aside from
checking whether illegal characters were detected, it would also check whether
the conversion to and from wchars was lossless. But, some encodings have
more than one valid encoding for the same character. In such cases, it is
not possible to make the conversion to and from wchars lossless for every
valid character. So `mb_check_encoding` would actually reject good strings
in a lot of encodings!