CHARSET_INFO ============ A structure containing data for charset+collation pair implementation. Virtual functions which use this data are collected into separate structures MY_CHARSET_HANDLER and MY_COLLATION_HANDLER. typedef struct charset_info_st { uint number; uint primary_number; uint binary_number; uint state; const char *csname; const char *name; const char *comment; uchar *ctype; uchar *to_lower; uchar *to_upper; uchar *sort_order; uint16 *tab_to_uni; MY_UNI_IDX *tab_from_uni; uchar state_map[256]; uchar ident_map[256]; uint strxfrm_multiply; uint mbminlen; uint mbmaxlen; uint16 max_sort_char; /* For LIKE optimization */ MY_CHARSET_HANDLER *cset; MY_COLLATION_HANDLER *coll; } CHARSET_INFO; CHARSET_INFO fields description: =============================== Numbers (identifiers) --------------------- number - an ID uniquely identifying this charset+collation pair. primary_number - ID of a charset+collation pair, which consists of the same character set and the default collation of this character set. Not really used now. Intended to optimize some parts of the code where we need to find the default collation using its non-default counterpart for the given character set. binary_numner - ID of a charset+collation pair, which consists of the same character set and the binary collation of this character set. Not really used now. Names ----- csname - name of the character set for this charset+collation pair. name - name of the collation for this charset+collation pair. comment - a text comment, dysplayed in "Description" column of SHOW CHARACTER SET output. Conversion tables ----------------- ctype - pointer to array[257] of "type of characters" bit mask for each chatacter, e.g. if a character is a digit or a letter or a separator, etc. Monty 2004-10-21: If you look at the macros, we use ctype[(char)+1]. ctype[0] is traditionally in most ctype libraries reserved for EOF (-1). The idea is that you can use the result from fgetc() directly with ctype[]. As we have to be compatible with external ctype[] versions, it's better to do it the same way as they do... to_lower - pointer to array[256] used in LCASE() to_upper - pointer to array[256] used in UCASE() sort_order - pointer to array[256] used for strings comparison Unicode conversion data ----------------------- For 8bit character sets: tab_to_uni : array[256] of charset->Unicode translation tab_from_uni: a structure for Unicode->charset translation Non-8 bit charsets have their own structures per charset hidden in correspondent ctype-xxx.c file and don't use tab_to_uni and tab_from_uni tables. Parser maps ----------- state_map[] ident_map[] These maps are to quickly identify if a character is an identificator part, a digit, a special character, or a part of other SQL language lexical item. Probably can be combined with ctype array in the future. But for some reasons these two arrays are used in the parser, while a separate ctype[] array is used in the other part of the code, like fulltext, etc. Misc fields ----------- strxfrm_multiply - how many times a sort key (i.e. a string which can be passed into memcmp() for comparison) can be longer than the original string. Usually it is 1. For some complex collations it can be bigger. For example in latin1_german2_ci, a sort key is up to twice longer than the original string. e.g. Letter 'A' with two dots above is substituted with 'AE'. mbminlen - mininum multibyte sequence length. Now always 1 except ucs2. For ucs2 it is 2. mbmaxlen - maximum multibyte sequence length. 1 for 8bit charsets. Can be also 2 or 3. max_sort_char - for LIKE range in case of 8bit character sets - native code of maximum character (max_str pad byte); in case of UTF8 and UCS2 - Unicode code of the maximum possible character (usually U+FFFF). This code is converted to multibyte representation (usually 0xEFBFBF) and then used as a pad sequence for max_str. in case of other multibyte character sets - max_str pad byte (usually 0xFF). MY_CHARSET_HANDLER ================== MY_CHARSET_HANDLER is a collection of character-set related routines. Defined in m_ctype.h. Have the following set of functions: Multibyte routines ------------------ ismbchar() - detects if the given string is a multibyte sequence mbcharlen() - returns length of multibyte sequence starting with the given character numchars() - returns number of characters in the given string, e.g. in SQL function CHAR_LENGTH(). charpos() - calculates the offset of the given position in the string. Used in SQL functions LEFT(), RIGHT(), SUBSTRING(), INSERT() well_formed_length() - finds the length of correctly formed multybyte beginning. Used in INSERTs to cut a beginning of the given string which is a) "well formed" according to the given character set. b) can fit into the given data type Terminates the string in the good position, taking in account multibyte character boundaries. lengthsp() - returns the length of the given string without traling spaces. Unicode conversion routines --------------------------- mb_wc - converts the left multibyte sequence into it Unicode code. mc_mb - converts the given Unicode code into multibyte sequence. Case and sort conversion ------------------------ caseup_str - converts the given 0-terminated string into the upper case casedn_str - converts the given 0-terminated string into the lower case caseup - converts the given string into the lower case using length casedn - converts the given string into the lower case using length Number-to-string conversion routines ------------------------------------ snprintf() long10_to_str() longlong10_to_str() The names are pretty self-descripting. String padding routines ----------------------- fill() - writes the given Unicode value into the given string with the given length. Used to pad the string, usually with space character, according to the given charset. String-to-numner conversion routines ------------------------------------ strntol() strntoul() strntoll() strntoull() strntod() These functions are almost for the same thing with their STDLIB counterparts, but also: - accept length instead of 0-terminator - and are character set dependant Simple scanner routines ----------------------- scan() - to skip leading spaces in the given string. Used when a string value is inserted into a numeric field. MY_COLLATION_HANDLER ==================== strnncoll() - compares two strings according to the given collation strnncollsp() - like the above but ignores trailing spaces strnxfrm() - makes a sort key suitable for memcmp() corresponding to the given string like_range() - creates a LIKE range, for optimizer wildcmp() - wildcard comparison, for LIKE strcasecmp() - 0-terminated string comparison instr() - finds the first substring appearence in the string hash_sort() - calculates hash value taking in account the collation rules, e.g. case-insensitivity, accent sensitivity, etc.