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-rw-r--r--chapter07/profile.xml48
1 files changed, 31 insertions, 17 deletions
diff --git a/chapter07/profile.xml b/chapter07/profile.xml
index dd53a5141..e2748d9df 100644
--- a/chapter07/profile.xml
+++ b/chapter07/profile.xml
@@ -69,17 +69,20 @@
for the desired language (e.g., <quote>en</quote>) and
<replaceable>[CC]</replaceable> with the two-letter code for the appropriate
country (e.g., <quote>GB</quote>). <replaceable>[charmap]</replaceable> should
- be replaced with the canonical charmap for your chosen locale.</para>
+ be replaced with the canonical charmap for your chosen locale. Optional
+ modifiers such as <quote>@euro</quote> may also be present.</para>
<para>The list of all locales supported by Glibc can be obtained by running
the following command:</para>
<screen role="nodump"><userinput>locale -a</userinput></screen>
- <para>Locales can have a number of synonyms, e.g. <quote>ISO-8859-1</quote>
+ <para>Charmaps can have a number of aliases, e.g., <quote>ISO-8859-1</quote>
is also referred to as <quote>iso8859-1</quote> and <quote>iso88591</quote>.
- Some applications cannot handle the various synonyms correctly, so it is
- safest to choose the canonical name for a particular locale. To determine
+ Some applications cannot handle the various synonyms correctly (e.g., require
+ that <quote>UTF-8</quote> is written as <quote>UTF-8</quote>, not
+ <quote>utf8</quote>), so it is safest in most
+ cases to choose the canonical name for a particular locale. To determine
the canonical name, run the following command, where <replaceable>[locale
name]</replaceable> is the output given by <command>locale -a</command> for
your preferred locale (<quote>en_GB.iso88591</quote> in our example).</para>
@@ -115,6 +118,7 @@ LC_ALL=[locale name] locale int_prefix</userinput></screen>
Further instructions assume that there are no such error messages from
Glibc.</para>
+ <!-- FIXME: the xlib example will became obsolete real soon -->
<para>Some packages beyond LFS may also lack support for your chosen locale. One
example is the X library (part of the X Window System), which outputs the
following error message:</para>
@@ -139,23 +143,33 @@ LC_ALL=[locale name] locale int_prefix</userinput></screen>
<screen><userinput>cat &gt; /etc/profile &lt;&lt; "EOF"
<literal># Begin /etc/profile
-export LANG=<replaceable>[ll]</replaceable>_<replaceable>[CC]</replaceable>.<replaceable>[charmap]</replaceable>
+export LANG=<replaceable>[ll]</replaceable>_<replaceable>[CC]</replaceable>.<replaceable>[charmap]</replaceable><replaceable>[@modifiers]</replaceable>
export INPUTRC=/etc/inputrc
# End /etc/profile</literal>
EOF</userinput></screen>
- <note>
- <para>The <quote>C</quote> (default) and <quote>en_US</quote> (the
- recommended one for United States English users) locales are different.</para>
- </note>
-
- <para>Setting the keyboard layout, screen font, and locale-related environment
- variables are the only internationalization steps needed to support locales
- that use ordinary single-byte encodings and left-to-right writing direction.
- More complex cases (including UTF-8 based locales) require additional steps
- and additional patches because many applications tend to not work properly
- under such conditions. These steps and patches are not included in the LFS
- book and such locales are not yet supported by LFS.</para>
+ <para>The <quote>C</quote> (default) and <quote>en_US</quote> (the recommended
+ one for United States English users) locales are different. <quote>C</quote>
+ uses the US-ASCII 7-bit character set, and treats bytes with the high bit set
+ as invalid characters. That's why, e.g., the <command>ls</command> command
+ substitutes them with question marks in that locale. Also, an attempt to send
+ mail with such characters from Mutt or Pine results in non-RFC-conforming
+ messages being sent (the charset in the outgoing mail is indicated as <quote>unknown
+ 8-bit</quote>). So you can use the <quote>C</quote> locale only if you are sure that
+ you will never need 8-bit characters.</para>
+
+ <para>UTF-8 based locales are not supported well by many programs. E.g., the
+ <command>watch</command> program displays only ASCII characters in UTF-8
+ locales and has no such restriction in traditional 8-bit locales like en_US.
+ Without patches and/or installing software beyond BLFS, in UTF-8 based locales
+ you will not be able to do such basic tasks as printing plain-text files from
+ the command line, recording Windows-readable CDs with filenames containing
+ non-ASCII characters, viewing ID3v1 tags in MP3 files and so on. Work is in
+ progress to document and, if possible, fix such problems, see
+ <ulink url="&blfs-root;view/svn/introduction/locale-issues.html"/>.
+ It is, however, safe to use UTF-8 based locales if you are going to use only
+ KDE or GNOME and never open the terminal.</para>
+ <!-- All abovementioned problems except "watch" have a known fix beyond BLFS -->
</sect1>