* base64-decode-region inserts carriage-returns
@ 2002-06-08 20:42 Eric Hanchrow
2002-06-08 21:06 ` Eric Hanchrow
` (2 more replies)
0 siblings, 3 replies; 4+ messages in thread
From: Eric Hanchrow @ 2002-06-08 20:42 UTC (permalink / raw)
In GNU Emacs 21.2.1 (i386-debian-linux-gnu, X toolkit, Xaw3d scroll bars)
of 2002-05-18 on offby1, modified by Debian
configured using `configure i386-debian-linux-gnu --prefix=/usr --sharedstatedir=/var/lib --libexecdir=/usr/lib --localstatedir=/var/lib --infodir=/usr/share/info --mandir=/usr/share/man --with-pop=yes --with-x=yes --with-x-toolkit=athena --without-gif'
Important settings:
value of $LC_ALL: nil
value of $LC_COLLATE: nil
value of $LC_CTYPE: nil
value of $LC_MESSAGES: nil
value of $LC_MONETARY: nil
value of $LC_NUMERIC: nil
value of $LC_TIME: nil
value of $LANG: nil
locale-coding-system: nil
default-enable-multibyte-characters: nil
Using Bash, create a binary file containing eight bytes in two lines:
bash$ echo -n $'\001\002\003\n\001\002\003\n' > /tmp/bin
Double-check that the file contains what we think it does:
bash$ od -c /tmp/bin
you'll see 0000000 001 002 003 \n 001 002 003 \n
Start Emacs with -q --no-site-file.
Visit that file in Emacs:
M-x find-file-literally RET /tmp/bin RET
Base64-encode it:
C-x h M-x base64-encode-region RET
Put a carriage-return-linefeed pair at the end of the single line:
M-> C-q C-m RET
Save the encoded version:
C-x C-w bin.b64 RET
Revisit the file, thus setting the buffer to use the MS-DOS line
ending convention:
C-x C-v RET
Base64-decode the file:
C-x h M-x base64-decode-region
Save the decoded version to a different file for comparison with the
original:
C-x C-w bin.again RET
Now examine the newly-saved version with od back at the shell:
od -c /tmp/bin.again
you'll now see 0000000 001 002 003 \r \n 001 002 003 \r \n
Thus the binary file has had some carriage-returns inserted into it,
which is a Bad Thing, since those carriage-returns were not present in
the encoded data.
RFC 2045 says both
All line breaks or other characters not found in Table 1 must
be ignored by decoding software.
and
Any characters outside of the base64 alphabet are to be
ignored in base64-encoded data.
If this is indeed a bug (as opposed to my misunderstanding how
base64-decode-region is supposed to work) then a possible fix would be
to have base64-decode-region, after it's done its work, do
(set-buffer-file-coding-system 'raw-text-unix) or something similar.
--
PGP Fingerprint: 3E7B A3F3 96CA 8958 ACC5 C8BD 6337 0041 C01C 5276
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: base64-decode-region inserts carriage-returns
2002-06-08 20:42 base64-decode-region inserts carriage-returns Eric Hanchrow
@ 2002-06-08 21:06 ` Eric Hanchrow
2002-06-09 9:13 ` Eli Zaretskii
2002-06-10 10:14 ` Richard Stallman
2 siblings, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread
From: Eric Hanchrow @ 2002-06-08 21:06 UTC (permalink / raw)
I think 'no-conversion is a better suggestion than 'raw-text-unix.
And if the Emacs maintainers decide not to change Emacs, I can get
along just fine by putting the following in my .emacs:
(fset 'builtin-base64-decode-region (symbol-function 'base64-decode-region))
(defun base64-decode-region (beg end)
"Just like `builtin-base64-decode-region', but avoids putting
spurious carriage-returns in the output."
(interactive "r")
(builtin-base64-decode-region beg end)
(set-buffer-file-coding-system 'no-conversion))
--
PGP Fingerprint: 3E7B A3F3 96CA 8958 ACC5 C8BD 6337 0041 C01C 5276
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: base64-decode-region inserts carriage-returns
2002-06-08 20:42 base64-decode-region inserts carriage-returns Eric Hanchrow
2002-06-08 21:06 ` Eric Hanchrow
@ 2002-06-09 9:13 ` Eli Zaretskii
2002-06-10 10:14 ` Richard Stallman
2 siblings, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread
From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2002-06-09 9:13 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: bug-gnu-emacs
On 8 Jun 2002, Eric Hanchrow wrote:
> Save the decoded version to a different file for comparison with the
> original:
>
> C-x C-w bin.again RET
>
> Now examine the newly-saved version with od back at the shell:
>
> od -c /tmp/bin.again
>
> you'll now see 0000000 001 002 003 \r \n 001 002 003 \r \n
>
> Thus the binary file has had some carriage-returns inserted into it,
This happens because the buffer where you performed the conversion has
undecided-dos as the value of its buffer-file-coding-system variable.
> which is a Bad Thing, since those carriage-returns were not present in
> the encoded data.
I'm not sure your conclusion is right. base64-decode-region is a
primitive which acts on a region. It doesn't have any clue about what
does the caller want to do with the result of decoding, and it is IMHO
wrong to change buffer-file-coding-system because something you did with
a portion of buffer's text.
For example, imagine that some program source sent as a base64-encoded
attachment is being decoded on a Windows system. In that case, I think
there's nothing wrong with saving the result with DOS EOLs; users might
even expect that.
More generally, the way the buffer should be saved is something a user or
higher-level features should determine. That is, it is up to the caller
of base64-decode-region to decide whether or not to change the way buffer
is encoded when written Primitives that operate on a region should not
change that.
I'd say that a user-friendly interface to base64-decode-region should
decode the text in a scratch buffer, and the insert the result into the
user buffer. That way, the value of buffer-file-coding-system in the
scratch buffer doesn't count, and encoding of the user buffer is not
affected by a primitive.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: base64-decode-region inserts carriage-returns
2002-06-08 20:42 base64-decode-region inserts carriage-returns Eric Hanchrow
2002-06-08 21:06 ` Eric Hanchrow
2002-06-09 9:13 ` Eli Zaretskii
@ 2002-06-10 10:14 ` Richard Stallman
2 siblings, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread
From: Richard Stallman @ 2002-06-10 10:14 UTC (permalink / raw)
Cc: bug-gnu-emacs
Base64-decode the file:
C-x h M-x base64-decode-region
At this point you should have a buffer with newlines in it.
Save the decoded version to a different file for comparison with the
original:
C-x C-w bin.again RET
Since you already arranged to use MSDOS encoding, the file will
be encoded that way. That seems correct to me.
Now examine the newly-saved version with od back at the shell:
od -c /tmp/bin.again
you'll now see 0000000 001 002 003 \r \n 001 002 003 \r \n
I see no bug here. base64-decode-region produced the right results;
if you don't want that encoded in MSDOS when you save the file,
you should do something to specify otherwise.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
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2002-06-08 20:42 base64-decode-region inserts carriage-returns Eric Hanchrow
2002-06-08 21:06 ` Eric Hanchrow
2002-06-09 9:13 ` Eli Zaretskii
2002-06-10 10:14 ` Richard Stallman
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