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32 .\" From: @(#)vis.3 8.1 (Berkeley) 6/9/93
33 .\" $FreeBSD: src/lib/libc/gen/vis.3,v 1.26 2004/07/17 12:27:25 tjr Exp $
34 .\"
35 .Dd March 21, 2004
36 .Dt VIS 3
37 .Os
38 .Sh NAME
39 .Nm vis
40 .Nd visually encode characters
41 .Sh LIBRARY
42 .Lb libc
43 .Sh SYNOPSIS
44 .In vis.h
45 .Ft char *
46 .Fn vis "char *dst" "int c" "int flag" "int nextc"
47 .Ft int
48 .Fn strvis "char *dst" "const char *src" "int flag"
49 .Ft int
50 .Fn strvisx "char *dst" "const char *src" "size_t len" "int flag"
51 .Sh DESCRIPTION
52 The
53 .Fn vis
54 function
55 copies into
56 .Fa dst
57 a string which represents the character
58 .Fa c .
59 If
60 .Fa c
61 needs no encoding, it is copied in unaltered.
62 The string is
63 null terminated, and a pointer to the end of the string is
64 returned.
65 The maximum length of any encoding is four
66 characters (not including the trailing
67 .Dv NUL ) ;
68 thus, when
69 encoding a set of characters into a buffer, the size of the buffer should
70 be four times the number of characters encoded, plus one for the trailing
71 .Dv NUL .
72 The
73 .Fa flag
74 argument is used for altering the default range of
75 characters considered for encoding and for altering the visual
76 representation.
77 The additional character,
78 .Fa nextc ,
79 is only used when selecting the
80 .Dv VIS_CSTYLE
81 encoding format (explained below).
82 .Pp
83 The
84 .Fn strvis
85 and
86 .Fn strvisx
87 functions copy into
88 .Fa dst
89 a visual representation of
90 the string
91 .Fa src .
92 The
93 .Fn strvis
94 function encodes characters from
95 .Fa src
96 up to the
97 first
98 .Dv NUL .
99 The
100 .Fn strvisx
101 function encodes exactly
102 .Fa len
103 characters from
104 .Fa src
105 (this
106 is useful for encoding a block of data that may contain
107 .Dv NUL Ns 's ) .
108 Both forms
109 .Dv NUL
110 terminate
111 .Fa dst .
112 The size of
113 .Fa dst
114 must be four times the number
115 of characters encoded from
116 .Fa src
117 (plus one for the
118 .Dv NUL ) .
119 Both
120 forms return the number of characters in dst (not including
121 the trailing
122 .Dv NUL ) .
123 .Pp
124 The encoding is a unique, invertible representation composed entirely of
125 graphic characters; it can be decoded back into the original form using
126 the
127 .Xr unvis 3
128 or
129 .Xr strunvis 3
130 functions.
131 .Pp
132 There are two parameters that can be controlled: the range of
133 characters that are encoded, and the type
134 of representation used.
135 By default, all non-graphic characters
136 except space, tab, and newline are encoded.
137 (See
138 .Xr isgraph 3 . )
139 The following flags
140 alter this:
141 .Bl -tag -width VIS_WHITEX
142 .It Dv VIS_GLOB
143 Also encode magic characters
144 .Ql ( * ,
145 .Ql \&? ,
146 .Ql \&[
147 and
148 .Ql # )
149 recognized by
150 .Xr glob 3 .
151 .It Dv VIS_SP
152 Also encode space.
153 .It Dv VIS_TAB
154 Also encode tab.
155 .It Dv VIS_NL
156 Also encode newline.
157 .It Dv VIS_WHITE
158 Synonym for
159 .Dv VIS_SP
160 \&|
161 .Dv VIS_TAB
162 \&|
163 .Dv VIS_NL .
164 .It Dv VIS_SAFE
165 Only encode "unsafe" characters.
166 Unsafe means control
167 characters which may cause common terminals to perform
168 unexpected functions.
169 Currently this form allows space,
170 tab, newline, backspace, bell, and return - in addition
171 to all graphic characters - unencoded.
172 .El
173 .Pp
174 There are four forms of encoding.
175 Most forms use the backslash character
176 .Ql \e
177 to introduce a special
178 sequence; two backslashes are used to represent a real backslash.
179 These are the visual formats:
180 .Bl -tag -width VIS_HTTPSTYLE
181 .It (default)
182 Use an
183 .Ql M
184 to represent meta characters (characters with the 8th
185 bit set), and use caret
186 .Ql ^
187 to represent control characters see
188 .Pf ( Xr iscntrl 3 ) .
189 The following formats are used:
190 .Bl -tag -width xxxxx
191 .It Dv \e^C
192 Represents the control character
193 .Ql C .
194 Spans characters
195 .Ql \e000
196 through
197 .Ql \e037 ,
198 and
199 .Ql \e177
200 (as
201 .Ql \e^? ) .
202 .It Dv \eM-C
203 Represents character
204 .Ql C
205 with the 8th bit set.
206 Spans characters
207 .Ql \e241
208 through
209 .Ql \e376 .
210 .It Dv \eM^C
211 Represents control character
212 .Ql C
213 with the 8th bit set.
214 Spans characters
215 .Ql \e200
216 through
217 .Ql \e237 ,
218 and
219 .Ql \e377
220 (as
221 .Ql \eM^? ) .
222 .It Dv \e040
223 Represents
224 .Tn ASCII
225 space.
226 .It Dv \e240
227 Represents Meta-space.
228 .El
229 .Pp
230 .It Dv VIS_CSTYLE
231 Use C-style backslash sequences to represent standard non-printable
232 characters.
233 The following sequences are used to represent the indicated characters:
234 .Bd -unfilled -offset indent
235 .Li \ea Tn - BEL No (007)
236 .Li \eb Tn - BS No (010)
237 .Li \ef Tn - NP No (014)
238 .Li \en Tn - NL No (012)
239 .Li \er Tn - CR No (015)
240 .Li \et Tn - HT No (011)
241 .Li \ev Tn - VT No (013)
242 .Li \e0 Tn - NUL No (000)
243 .Ed
244 .Pp
245 When using this format, the
246 .Fa nextc
247 argument is looked at to determine
248 if a
249 .Dv NUL
250 character can be encoded as
251 .Ql \e0
252 instead of
253 .Ql \e000 .
254 If
255 .Fa nextc
256 is an octal digit, the latter representation is used to
257 avoid ambiguity.
258 .It Dv VIS_HTTPSTYLE
259 Use URI encoding as described in RFC 1808.
260 The form is
261 .Ql %dd
262 where
263 .Ar d
264 represents a hexadecimal digit.
265 .It Dv VIS_OCTAL
266 Use a three digit octal sequence.
267 The form is
268 .Ql \eddd
269 where
270 .Ar d
271 represents an octal digit.
272 .El
273 .Pp
274 There is one additional flag,
275 .Dv VIS_NOSLASH ,
276 which inhibits the
277 doubling of backslashes and the backslash before the default
278 format (that is, control characters are represented by
279 .Ql ^C
280 and
281 meta characters as
282 .Ql M-C ) .
283 With this flag set, the encoding is
284 ambiguous and non-invertible.
285 .Sh SEE ALSO
286 .Xr unvis 1 ,
287 .Xr unvis 3
288 .Rs
289 .%A R. Fielding
290 .%T Relative Uniform Resource Locators
291 .%O RFC1808
292 .Re
293 .Sh HISTORY
294 These functions first appeared in
295 .Bx 4.4 .
296 .Sh BUGS
297 The
298 .Nm
299 family of functions do not recognize multibyte characters, and thus
300 may consider them to be non-printable when they are in fact printable
301 (and vice versa.)