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Create a set of prereqs to help understand how file names are handled by the filesystem when they contain NFC and NFD Unicode characters. Signed-off-by: Jeff Hostetler <jeffhost@microsoft.com> Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>maint
Jeff Hostetler
2 years ago
committed by
Junio C Hamano
1 changed files with 162 additions and 0 deletions
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# Help detect how Unicode NFC and NFD are handled on the filesystem. |
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# A simple character that has a NFD form. |
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# |
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# NFC: U+00e9 LATIN SMALL LETTER E WITH ACUTE |
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# UTF8(NFC): \xc3 \xa9 |
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# |
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# NFD: U+0065 LATIN SMALL LETTER E |
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# U+0301 COMBINING ACUTE ACCENT |
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# UTF8(NFD): \x65 + \xcc \x81 |
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# |
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utf8_nfc=$(printf "\xc3\xa9") |
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utf8_nfd=$(printf "\x65\xcc\x81") |
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# Is the OS or the filesystem "Unicode composition sensitive"? |
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# |
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# That is, does the OS or the filesystem allow files to exist with |
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# both the NFC and NFD spellings? Or, does the OS/FS lie to us and |
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# tell us that the NFC and NFD forms are equivalent. |
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# |
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# This is or may be independent of what type of filesystem we have, |
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# since it might be handled by the OS at a layer above the FS. |
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# Testing shows on MacOS using APFS, HFS+, and FAT32 reports a |
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# collision, for example. |
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# |
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# This does not tell us how the Unicode pathname will be spelled |
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# on disk, but rather only that the two spelling "collide". We |
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# will examine the actual on disk spelling in a later prereq. |
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# |
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test_lazy_prereq UNICODE_COMPOSITION_SENSITIVE ' |
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mkdir trial_${utf8_nfc} && |
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mkdir trial_${utf8_nfd} |
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' |
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# Is the spelling of an NFC pathname preserved on disk? |
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# |
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# On MacOS with HFS+ and FAT32, NFC paths are converted into NFD |
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# and on APFS, NFC paths are preserved. As we have established |
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# above, this is independent of "composition sensitivity". |
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# |
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test_lazy_prereq UNICODE_NFC_PRESERVED ' |
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mkdir c_${utf8_nfc} && |
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ls | test-tool hexdump >dump && |
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grep "63 5f c3 a9" dump |
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' |
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# Is the spelling of an NFD pathname preserved on disk? |
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# |
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test_lazy_prereq UNICODE_NFD_PRESERVED ' |
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mkdir d_${utf8_nfd} && |
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ls | test-tool hexdump >dump && |
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grep "64 5f 65 cc 81" dump |
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' |
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# The following _DOUBLE_ forms are more for my curiosity, |
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# but there may be quirks lurking when there are multiple |
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# combining characters in non-canonical order. |
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# Unicode also allows multiple combining characters |
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# that can be decomposed in pieces. |
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# |
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# NFC: U+1f67 GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH DASIA AND PERISPOMENI |
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# UTF8(NFC): \xe1 \xbd \xa7 |
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# |
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# NFD1: U+1f61 GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH DASIA |
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# U+0342 COMBINING GREEK PERISPOMENI |
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# UTF8(NFD1): \xe1 \xbd \xa1 + \xcd \x82 |
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# |
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# But U+1f61 decomposes into |
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# NFD2: U+03c9 GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA |
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# U+0314 COMBINING REVERSED COMMA ABOVE |
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# UTF8(NFD2): \xcf \x89 + \xcc \x94 |
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# |
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# Yielding: \xcf \x89 + \xcc \x94 + \xcd \x82 |
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# |
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# Note that I've used the canonical ordering of the |
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# combinining characters. It is also possible to |
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# swap them. My testing shows that that non-standard |
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# ordering also causes a collision in mkdir. However, |
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# the resulting names don't draw correctly on the |
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# terminal (implying that the on-disk format also has |
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# them out of order). |
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# |
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greek_nfc=$(printf "\xe1\xbd\xa7") |
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greek_nfd1=$(printf "\xe1\xbd\xa1\xcd\x82") |
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greek_nfd2=$(printf "\xcf\x89\xcc\x94\xcd\x82") |
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# See if a double decomposition also collides. |
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# |
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test_lazy_prereq UNICODE_DOUBLE_COMPOSITION_SENSITIVE ' |
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mkdir trial_${greek_nfc} && |
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mkdir trial_${greek_nfd2} |
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' |
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# See if the NFC spelling appears on the disk. |
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# |
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test_lazy_prereq UNICODE_DOUBLE_NFC_PRESERVED ' |
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mkdir c_${greek_nfc} && |
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ls | test-tool hexdump >dump && |
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grep "63 5f e1 bd a7" dump |
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' |
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# See if the NFD spelling appears on the disk. |
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# |
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test_lazy_prereq UNICODE_DOUBLE_NFD_PRESERVED ' |
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mkdir d_${greek_nfd2} && |
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ls | test-tool hexdump >dump && |
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grep "64 5f cf 89 cc 94 cd 82" dump |
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' |
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# The following is for debugging. I found it useful when |
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# trying to understand the various (OS, FS) quirks WRT |
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# Unicode and how composition/decomposition is handled. |
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# For example, when trying to understand how (macOS, APFS) |
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# and (macOS, HFS) and (macOS, FAT32) compare. |
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# |
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# It is rather noisy, so it is disabled by default. |
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# |
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if test "$unicode_debug" = "true" |
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then |
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if test_have_prereq UNICODE_COMPOSITION_SENSITIVE |
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then |
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echo NFC and NFD are distinct on this OS/filesystem. |
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else |
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echo NFC and NFD are aliases on this OS/filesystem. |
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fi |
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if test_have_prereq UNICODE_NFC_PRESERVED |
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then |
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echo NFC maintains original spelling. |
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else |
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echo NFC is modified. |
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fi |
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if test_have_prereq UNICODE_NFD_PRESERVED |
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then |
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echo NFD maintains original spelling. |
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else |
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echo NFD is modified. |
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fi |
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if test_have_prereq UNICODE_DOUBLE_COMPOSITION_SENSITIVE |
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then |
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echo DOUBLE NFC and NFD are distinct on this OS/filesystem. |
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else |
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echo DOUBLE NFC and NFD are aliases on this OS/filesystem. |
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fi |
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if test_have_prereq UNICODE_DOUBLE_NFC_PRESERVED |
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then |
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echo Double NFC maintains original spelling. |
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else |
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echo Double NFC is modified. |
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fi |
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if test_have_prereq UNICODE_DOUBLE_NFD_PRESERVED |
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then |
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echo Double NFD maintains original spelling. |
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else |
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echo Double NFD is modified. |
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fi |
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fi |
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