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* 26.1.50; Emacs can't decode the text file on opening the file, but can decode it on revert-buffer
@ 2018-11-04  8:44 Zhang Haijun
  2018-11-04  9:18 ` Eli Zaretskii
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread
From: Zhang Haijun @ 2018-11-04  8:44 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: emacs-devel@gnu.org

I have sent a bug report mail to bug-gnu-emacs@gnu.org, but didn't 
receive the bug number mail. So I send it here.

I put the attachment file to: http://119.37.194.6/upload/tmp/emacs-26.txt


Following is the bug report mail:

Open the attachment text file with "emacs -Q". There are many 
unrecognized chars(like \342\200\230). Following is the encoding info of 
the buffer.

-------------------------------------------------
= -- no-conversion (alias: binary)

Do no conversion.

When you visit a file with this coding, the file is read into a
unibyte buffer as is, thus each byte of a file is treated as a
character.
Type: raw-text (text with random binary characters)
EOL type: LF
--------------------------------------------------

But if I run the command revert-buffer, then there is no unrecognized 
chars. Encoding info of the buffer becomes:

---------------------------------------------------
U -- utf-8-unix (alias: mule-utf-8-unix cp65001-unix)

UTF-8 (no signature (BOM))
Type: utf-8 (UTF-8: Emacs internal multibyte form)
EOL type: LF
This coding system encodes the following charsets:
   unicode
---------------------------------------------------



In GNU Emacs 26.1.50 (build 4, x86_64-pc-linux-gnu, GTK+ Version 3.22.26)
  of 2018-11-04 built on centos7.home
Repository revision: 7cadb328092e354225149bbc74c2ddaf4b49b638
Windowing system distributor 'The X.Org Foundation', version 11.0.11905000
Recent messages:
For information about GNU Emacs and the GNU system, type C-h C-a.
Quit [3 times]
user-error: Beginning of history; no preceding item
funcall-interactively: End of buffer

Configured using:
  'configure --prefix=/home/jun/apps/emacs-26 --without-makeinfo
  --with-x-toolkit=gtk3 --with-modules'

Configured features:
XPM JPEG TIFF GIF PNG RSVG IMAGEMAGICK SOUND DBUS GSETTINGS GLIB NOTIFY
LIBSELINUX GNUTLS LIBXML2 FREETYPE XFT ZLIB TOOLKIT_SCROLL_BARS GTK3 X11
XDBE XIM MODULES THREADS

Important settings:
   value of $LANG: en_US.UTF-8
   value of $XMODIFIERS: @im=fcitx
   locale-coding-system: utf-8-unix

Major mode: Text

Minor modes in effect:
   diff-auto-refine-mode: t
   tooltip-mode: t
   global-eldoc-mode: t
   electric-indent-mode: t
   mouse-wheel-mode: t
   tool-bar-mode: t
   menu-bar-mode: t
   file-name-shadow-mode: t
   global-font-lock-mode: t
   font-lock-mode: t
   blink-cursor-mode: t
   auto-composition-mode: t
   auto-encryption-mode: t
   auto-compression-mode: t
   line-number-mode: t
   transient-mark-mode: t

Load-path shadows:
None found.

Features:
(shadow sort mail-extr emacsbug message rmc puny seq byte-opt gv
bytecomp byte-compile cconv cl-loaddefs cl-lib dired dired-loaddefs
format-spec rfc822 mml mml-sec password-cache epa derived epg epg-config
gnus-util rmail rmail-loaddefs mm-decode mm-bodies mm-encode mail-parse
rfc2231 mailabbrev gmm-utils mailheader sendmail rfc2047 rfc2045
ietf-drums mm-util mail-prsvr mail-utils vc-git diff-mode easymenu
easy-mmode elec-pair time-date mule-util tooltip eldoc electric uniquify
ediff-hook vc-hooks lisp-float-type mwheel term/x-win x-win
term/common-win x-dnd tool-bar dnd fontset image regexp-opt fringe
tabulated-list replace newcomment text-mode elisp-mode lisp-mode
prog-mode register page menu-bar rfn-eshadow isearch timer select
scroll-bar mouse jit-lock font-lock syntax facemenu font-core
term/tty-colors frame cl-generic cham georgian utf-8-lang misc-lang
vietnamese tibetan thai tai-viet lao korean japanese eucjp-ms cp51932
hebrew greek romanian slovak czech european ethiopic indian cyrillic
chinese composite charscript charprop case-table epa-hook jka-cmpr-hook
help simple abbrev obarray minibuffer cl-preloaded nadvice loaddefs
button faces cus-face macroexp files text-properties overlay sha1 md5
base64 format env code-pages mule custom widget hashtable-print-readable
backquote threads dbusbind inotify dynamic-setting system-font-setting
font-render-setting move-toolbar gtk x-toolkit x multi-tty
make-network-process emacs)

Memory information:
((conses 16 98466 14078)
  (symbols 48 20784 1)
  (miscs 40 42 154)
  (strings 32 29892 1511)
  (string-bytes 1 791061)
  (vectors 16 14723)
  (vector-slots 8 510132 7238)
  (floats 8 51 372)
  (intervals 56 222 0)
  (buffers 992 13)
  (heap 1024 24474 3071))

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread

* Re: 26.1.50; Emacs can't decode the text file on opening the file, but can decode it on revert-buffer
  2018-11-04  8:44 26.1.50; Emacs can't decode the text file on opening the file, but can decode it on revert-buffer Zhang Haijun
@ 2018-11-04  9:18 ` Eli Zaretskii
       [not found]   ` <16B3CA28-C893-4854-AD64-1C224C1EDDB2@outlook.com>
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread
From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2018-11-04  9:18 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: emacs-devel, Zhang Haijun, emacs-devel@gnu.org

On November 4, 2018 10:44:36 AM GMT+02:00, Zhang Haijun <ccsmile2008@outlook.com> wrote:
> I have sent a bug report mail to bug-gnu-emacs@gnu.org, but didn't 
> receive the bug number mail. So I send it here.
> 
> I put the attachment file to:
> http://119.37.194.6/upload/tmp/emacs-26.txt
> 
> 
> Following is the bug report mail:
> 
> Open the attachment text file with "emacs -Q". There are many 
> unrecognized chars(like \342\200\230). Following is the encoding info
> of 
> the buffer.
> 
> -------------------------------------------------
> = -- no-conversion (alias: binary)
> 
> Do no conversion.
> 
> When you visit a file with this coding, the file is read into a
> unibyte buffer as is, thus each byte of a file is treated as a
> character.
> Type: raw-text (text with random binary characters)
> EOL type: LF
> --------------------------------------------------
> 
> But if I run the command revert-buffer, then there is no unrecognized 
> chars. Encoding info of the buffer becomes:
> 
> ---------------------------------------------------
> U -- utf-8-unix (alias: mule-utf-8-unix cp65001-unix)
> 
> UTF-8 (no signature (BOM))
> Type: utf-8 (UTF-8: Emacs internal multibyte form)
> EOL type: LF
> This coding system encodes the following charsets:
>    unicode
> ---------------------------------------------------


This file includes null bytes, which by default cause Emacs to disable all decoding, because such files are deemed to be binary files.
If you don't like this, set inhibit-null-byte-detection to a non-nil value.

This is not a bug, but the intended behavior.




^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread

* Re: 26.1.50; Emacs can't decode the text file on opening the file, but can decode it on revert-buffer
       [not found]   ` <16B3CA28-C893-4854-AD64-1C224C1EDDB2@outlook.com>
@ 2018-11-04 14:49     ` Eli Zaretskii
       [not found]       ` <B213388B-58E6-4F5B-8CE8-79AC5AD3062B@outlook.com>
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread
From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2018-11-04 14:49 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Zhang Haijun; +Cc: emacs-devel

> From: Zhang Haijun <ccsmile2008@outlook.com>
> CC: "emacs-devel@gnu.org" <emacs-devel@gnu.org>
> Date: Sun, 4 Nov 2018 12:28:52 +0000
> 
> > This file includes null bytes, which by default cause Emacs to disable all decoding, because such files are deemed to be binary files.
> > If you don't like this, set inhibit-null-byte-detection to a non-nil value.
> > 
> > This is not a bug, but the intended behavior.
> 
> Then why the encoding of the buffer changed after revert-buffer?

It's a subtle bug: revert-buffer reads and decodes the file in small
chunks, so by the time it gets to the furst null byte, it already
decided that the encoding is UTF-8.  By contrast, find-file decodes
the entire file at once, so it sees the null bytes when it detects the
encoding.

We had this behavior since Emacs 23.1; Emacs 22 doesn't change the
encoding when this buffer is reverted.



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread

* Re: 26.1.50; Emacs can't decode the text file on opening the file, but can decode it on revert-buffer
       [not found]       ` <B213388B-58E6-4F5B-8CE8-79AC5AD3062B@outlook.com>
@ 2018-11-04 17:13         ` Eli Zaretskii
  2018-11-05  8:59           ` Zhang Haijun
                             ` (2 more replies)
  0 siblings, 3 replies; 14+ messages in thread
From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2018-11-04 17:13 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Zhang Haijun; +Cc: emacs-devel

> From: Zhang Haijun <ccsmile2008@outlook.com>
> CC: "emacs-devel@gnu.org" <emacs-devel@gnu.org>
> Date: Sun, 4 Nov 2018 15:14:07 +0000
> 
> > It's a subtle bug: revert-buffer reads and decodes the file in small
> > chunks, so by the time it gets to the furst null byte, it already
> > decided that the encoding is UTF-8.  By contrast, find-file decodes
> > the entire file at once, so it sees the null bytes when it detects the
> > encoding.
> > 
> > We had this behavior since Emacs 23.1; Emacs 22 doesn't change the
> > encoding when this buffer is reverted.
> 
> OK. Thanks for your explanation. I like the behavior of revert-buffer. 
> It may be useful to print some warning message when there are invalid bytes.
> How to search invalid bytes in buffer?

They are not invalid bytes, they are zero bytes.  You can search for
them like this:

  C-s C-q C-SPC



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread

* Re: 26.1.50; Emacs can't decode the text file on opening the file, but can decode it on revert-buffer
  2018-11-04 17:13         ` Eli Zaretskii
@ 2018-11-05  8:59           ` Zhang Haijun
  2018-11-05  9:00           ` Zhang Haijun
  2018-11-05  9:00           ` Zhang Haijun
  2 siblings, 0 replies; 14+ messages in thread
From: Zhang Haijun @ 2018-11-05  8:59 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: emacs-devel@gnu.org



On 11/05/2018 01:13 AM, Eli Zaretskii wrote:
> 
> They are not invalid bytes, they are zero bytes.  You can search for
> them like this:
> 
>    C-s C-q C-SPC
> 

I mean chars like ^@, ^H and \342\200\230. How to search them? Is there 
a regexp or a function for this?

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread

* Re: 26.1.50; Emacs can't decode the text file on opening the file, but can decode it on revert-buffer
  2018-11-04 17:13         ` Eli Zaretskii
  2018-11-05  8:59           ` Zhang Haijun
@ 2018-11-05  9:00           ` Zhang Haijun
  2018-11-05  9:00           ` Zhang Haijun
  2 siblings, 0 replies; 14+ messages in thread
From: Zhang Haijun @ 2018-11-05  9:00 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: emacs-devel@gnu.org



On 11/05/2018 01:13 AM, Eli Zaretskii wrote:
> 
> They are not invalid bytes, they are zero bytes.  You can search for
> them like this:
> 
>    C-s C-q C-SPC
> 

I mean chars like ^@, ^H and \342\200\230. How to search them? Is there 
a regexp or a function for this?

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread

* Re: 26.1.50; Emacs can't decode the text file on opening the file, but can decode it on revert-buffer
  2018-11-04 17:13         ` Eli Zaretskii
  2018-11-05  8:59           ` Zhang Haijun
  2018-11-05  9:00           ` Zhang Haijun
@ 2018-11-05  9:00           ` Zhang Haijun
  2018-11-05  9:39             ` Phil Sainty
  2 siblings, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread
From: Zhang Haijun @ 2018-11-05  9:00 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: emacs-devel@gnu.org



On 11/05/2018 01:13 AM, Eli Zaretskii wrote:
> 
> They are not invalid bytes, they are zero bytes.  You can search for
> them like this:
> 
>    C-s C-q C-SPC
> 

I mean chars like ^@, ^H and \342\200\230. How to search them? Is there 
a regexp or a function for this?

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread

* Re: 26.1.50; Emacs can't decode the text file on opening the file, but can decode it on revert-buffer
  2018-11-05  9:00           ` Zhang Haijun
@ 2018-11-05  9:39             ` Phil Sainty
  2018-11-05 10:10               ` Stephen Berman
  2018-11-05 14:08               ` Zhang Haijun
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 14+ messages in thread
From: Phil Sainty @ 2018-11-05  9:39 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Zhang Haijun; +Cc: Eli Zaretskii, emacs-devel@gnu.org

On 5/11/18 10:00 PM, Zhang Haijun wrote:
> On 11/05/2018 01:13 AM, Eli Zaretskii wrote:
>> They are not invalid bytes, they are zero bytes.  You can search for
>> them like this:
>>
>>    C-s C-q C-SPC
>
> I mean chars like ^@, ^H and \342\200\230. How to search them?

^@ is the null char and Eli just showed you how to search for it.

Similarly, C-s C-q C-h will search for a ^H char.

Assuming \342\200\230 is three octal characters then, I would probably
resort to editing the search string and using `insert-char':

C-s M-e
C-x 8 RET #o342 RET
etc...

If you can *see* an instance of the character already, you might just
move point to that character and use C-s C-w (and maybe a bit of C-M-w
if that grabs too many chars).

Or if you mean "any non-ascii character" then the regexp [^[:ascii:]]
will match those.


-Phil




^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread

* Re: 26.1.50; Emacs can't decode the text file on opening the file, but can decode it on revert-buffer
  2018-11-05  9:39             ` Phil Sainty
@ 2018-11-05 10:10               ` Stephen Berman
  2018-11-05 14:08               ` Zhang Haijun
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 14+ messages in thread
From: Stephen Berman @ 2018-11-05 10:10 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Phil Sainty; +Cc: Eli Zaretskii, emacs-devel@gnu.org, Zhang Haijun

On Mon, 5 Nov 2018 22:39:45 +1300 Phil Sainty <psainty@orcon.net.nz> wrote:

[...]
> If you can *see* an instance of the character already, you might just
> move point to that character and use C-s C-w (and maybe a bit of C-M-w
> if that grabs too many chars).                                   ^^^^^
[...]

This binding has changed (it keeps biting me too), see /etc/NEWS:
  
  * Changes in Specialized Modes and Packages in Emacs 27.1
  [...]
  ** Search and Replace
  [...]
  *** New isearch bindings.
  
  'C-M-w' in isearch changed from isearch-del-char to the new function
  isearch-yank-symbol-or-char.  isearch-del-char is now bound to
  'C-M-d'.

Steve Berman



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread

* Re: 26.1.50; Emacs can't decode the text file on opening the file, but can decode it on revert-buffer
  2018-11-05  9:39             ` Phil Sainty
  2018-11-05 10:10               ` Stephen Berman
@ 2018-11-05 14:08               ` Zhang Haijun
  2018-11-05 15:02                 ` Stephen Berman
  2018-11-05 16:00                 ` Eli Zaretskii
  1 sibling, 2 replies; 14+ messages in thread
From: Zhang Haijun @ 2018-11-05 14:08 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Phil Sainty; +Cc: Eli Zaretskii, emacs-devel@gnu.org



On 11/05/2018 05:39 PM, Phil Sainty wrote:
> On 5/11/18 10:00 PM, Zhang Haijun wrote:
>> On 11/05/2018 01:13 AM, Eli Zaretskii wrote:
>>> They are not invalid bytes, they are zero bytes.  You can search for
>>> them like this:
>>>
>>>     C-s C-q C-SPC
>>
>> I mean chars like ^@, ^H and \342\200\230. How to search them?
> 
> ^@ is the null char and Eli just showed you how to search for it.
> 
> Similarly, C-s C-q C-h will search for a ^H char.
> 
> Assuming \342\200\230 is three octal characters then, I would probably
> resort to editing the search string and using `insert-char':
> 
> C-s M-e
> C-x 8 RET #o342 RET
> etc...
> 
> If you can *see* an instance of the character already, you might just
> move point to that character and use C-s C-w (and maybe a bit of C-M-w
> if that grabs too many chars).
> 
> Or if you mean "any non-ascii character" then the regexp [^[:ascii:]]
> will match those.
> 
> 
> -Phil
> 

I don't know the specific char to search. As the orignal problem I met, 
I opened the text file. Emacs can't decode it and it didn't show any 
warning message like position of the null byte. Then what should I do to 
find the null byte(or other bytes which can prevent emacs from decoding)?

How to search these unknown bytes?

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread

* Re: 26.1.50; Emacs can't decode the text file on opening the file, but can decode it on revert-buffer
  2018-11-05 14:08               ` Zhang Haijun
@ 2018-11-05 15:02                 ` Stephen Berman
  2018-11-05 16:00                 ` Eli Zaretskii
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 14+ messages in thread
From: Stephen Berman @ 2018-11-05 15:02 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Zhang Haijun; +Cc: Phil Sainty, Eli Zaretskii, emacs-devel@gnu.org

On Mon, 5 Nov 2018 14:08:46 +0000 Zhang Haijun <ccsmile2008@outlook.com> wrote:

> On 11/05/2018 05:39 PM, Phil Sainty wrote:
>> On 5/11/18 10:00 PM, Zhang Haijun wrote:
>>> On 11/05/2018 01:13 AM, Eli Zaretskii wrote:
>>>> They are not invalid bytes, they are zero bytes.  You can search for
>>>> them like this:
>>>>
>>>>     C-s C-q C-SPC
>>>
>>> I mean chars like ^@, ^H and \342\200\230. How to search them?
>> 
>> ^@ is the null char and Eli just showed you how to search for it.
>> 
>> Similarly, C-s C-q C-h will search for a ^H char.
>> 
>> Assuming \342\200\230 is three octal characters then, I would probably
>> resort to editing the search string and using `insert-char':
>> 
>> C-s M-e
>> C-x 8 RET #o342 RET
>> etc...
>> 
>> If you can *see* an instance of the character already, you might just
>> move point to that character and use C-s C-w (and maybe a bit of C-M-w
>> if that grabs too many chars).
>> 
>> Or if you mean "any non-ascii character" then the regexp [^[:ascii:]]
>> will match those.
>> 
>> 
>> -Phil
>> 
>
> I don't know the specific char to search. As the orignal problem I met, 
> I opened the text file. Emacs can't decode it and it didn't show any 
> warning message like position of the null byte. Then what should I do to 
> find the null byte(or other bytes which can prevent emacs from decoding)?
>
> How to search these unknown bytes?

All of the above (the ascii control characters ^@ and ^H and octal
characters like \342\200\230) are non-printing characters, so you can
find them with this regexp isearch: `C-M-s [^[:print:]]'.

Steve Berman



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread

* Re: 26.1.50; Emacs can't decode the text file on opening the file, but can decode it on revert-buffer
  2018-11-05 14:08               ` Zhang Haijun
  2018-11-05 15:02                 ` Stephen Berman
@ 2018-11-05 16:00                 ` Eli Zaretskii
  2018-11-06  1:39                   ` Zhang Haijun
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread
From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2018-11-05 16:00 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Zhang Haijun; +Cc: psainty, emacs-devel

> From: Zhang Haijun <ccsmile2008@outlook.com>
> CC: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>, "emacs-devel@gnu.org" <emacs-devel@gnu.org>
> Date: Mon, 5 Nov 2018 14:08:46 +0000
> 
> I don't know the specific char to search.

The _only_ character that can disable decoding is the null byte, so
you need to search only for null bytes, by typing "C-q C-SPC" at the
Isearch prompt.



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread

* Re: 26.1.50; Emacs can't decode the text file on opening the file, but can decode it on revert-buffer
  2018-11-05 16:00                 ` Eli Zaretskii
@ 2018-11-06  1:39                   ` Zhang Haijun
  2018-11-06  3:31                     ` Eli Zaretskii
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 14+ messages in thread
From: Zhang Haijun @ 2018-11-06  1:39 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Eli Zaretskii; +Cc: psainty@orcon.net.nz, emacs-devel@gnu.org



On 11/06/2018 12:00 AM, Eli Zaretskii wrote:
>> From: Zhang Haijun <ccsmile2008@outlook.com>
>> CC: Eli Zaretskii <eliz@gnu.org>, "emacs-devel@gnu.org" <emacs-devel@gnu.org>
>> Date: Mon, 5 Nov 2018 14:08:46 +0000
>>
>> I don't know the specific char to search.
> 
> The _only_ character that can disable decoding is the null byte, so
> you need to search only for null bytes, by typing "C-q C-SPC" at the
> Isearch prompt.
> 

OK. Thank you.
For Chinese, C-SPC is bound by OS to toggle the system input method. Is 
"C-q C-SPC" the same as 'C-q C-@'?

^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread

* Re: 26.1.50; Emacs can't decode the text file on opening the file, but can decode it on revert-buffer
  2018-11-06  1:39                   ` Zhang Haijun
@ 2018-11-06  3:31                     ` Eli Zaretskii
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 14+ messages in thread
From: Eli Zaretskii @ 2018-11-06  3:31 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Zhang Haijun; +Cc: psainty, emacs-devel

> From: Zhang Haijun <ccsmile2008@outlook.com>
> CC: "psainty@orcon.net.nz" <psainty@orcon.net.nz>, "emacs-devel@gnu.org"
> 	<emacs-devel@gnu.org>
> Date: Tue, 6 Nov 2018 01:39:53 +0000
> 
> For Chinese, C-SPC is bound by OS to toggle the system input method. Is 
> "C-q C-SPC" the same as 'C-q C-@'?

Yes.



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 14+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2018-11-06  3:31 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 14+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2018-11-04  8:44 26.1.50; Emacs can't decode the text file on opening the file, but can decode it on revert-buffer Zhang Haijun
2018-11-04  9:18 ` Eli Zaretskii
     [not found]   ` <16B3CA28-C893-4854-AD64-1C224C1EDDB2@outlook.com>
2018-11-04 14:49     ` Eli Zaretskii
     [not found]       ` <B213388B-58E6-4F5B-8CE8-79AC5AD3062B@outlook.com>
2018-11-04 17:13         ` Eli Zaretskii
2018-11-05  8:59           ` Zhang Haijun
2018-11-05  9:00           ` Zhang Haijun
2018-11-05  9:00           ` Zhang Haijun
2018-11-05  9:39             ` Phil Sainty
2018-11-05 10:10               ` Stephen Berman
2018-11-05 14:08               ` Zhang Haijun
2018-11-05 15:02                 ` Stephen Berman
2018-11-05 16:00                 ` Eli Zaretskii
2018-11-06  1:39                   ` Zhang Haijun
2018-11-06  3:31                     ` Eli Zaretskii

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