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			28 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
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			627 lines
		
	
	
		
			28 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			C++
		
	
	
	
	
	
| /****************************************************************/
 | ||
| /*                                                              */
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| /*                            NLS.H                             */
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| /*                           FreeDOS                            */
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| /*                                                              */
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| /*    National Language Support data structures                 */
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| /*                                                              */
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| /*                   Copyright (c) 2000                         */
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| /*                         Steffen Kaiser                       */
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| /*                      All Rights Reserved                     */
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| /*                                                              */
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| /* This file is part of FreeDOS.                                */
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| /*                                                              */
 | ||
| /* DOS-C is free software; you can redistribute it and/or       */
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| /* modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License  */
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| /* as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version */
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| /* 2, or (at your option) any later version.                    */
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| /*                                                              */
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| /* DOS-C is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but */
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| /* WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of   */
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| /* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See    */
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| /* the GNU General Public License for more details.             */
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| /*                                                              */
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| /* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public    */
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| /* License along with DOS-C; see the file COPYING.  If not,     */
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| /* write to the Free Software Foundation, 675 Mass Ave,         */
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| /* Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.                                    */
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| /****************************************************************/
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| 
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| /* one byte alignment */
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| #include <algnbyte.h>
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| 
 | ||
| /*
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|  *	Description of the organization of NLS information -- 2000/02/13 ska
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|  *
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|  *	Glossar:
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|  *	NLS package -- NLS information incl. any code required to access or
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|  *		correctly interprete this particular information
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|  *
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|  *	Abbreviation:
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|  *	(NLS) pkg -- NLS package
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|  *
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|  *	The code included into the kernel does "only" support NLS packages
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|  *	structurally compatible with the one of the U.S.A. / CP437.
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|  *	I guess that most NLS packages has been tweaked to be compatible,
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|  *	so that this is not a real limitation, but for all other packages
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|  *	the external NLSFUNC can supply every piece of code necessary.
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|  *	To allow this the interface between the kernel and NLSFUNC has been
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|  *	extended; at the same time the interface has been reduced, because some
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|  *	of the API functions do not seem to offer any functionality required
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|  *	for now. This, however, may be a misinterpretation because of
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|  *	lack of understanding.
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|  *
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|  *	The supported structure consists of the following assumptions:
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|  *	1) The pkg must contain the tables 2 (Upcase character), 4
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|  *		(Upcase filename character) and 5 (filename termination
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|  *		characters); because they are used internally.
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|  *	2) The tables 2 and 4 must contain exactly 128 (0x80) characters.
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|  *		The character at index 0 corresponses to character 128 (0x80).
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|  *		The characters in the range of 0..0x7f are constructed out of
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|  *		the 7-bit US-ASCII (+ control characters) character set and are
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|  *		upcased not through the table, but by the expression:
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|  *			(ch >= 'a' && ch <= 'z')? ch - 'a' + 'A': ch
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|  *			with: 'a' == 97; 'z' == 122; 'A' == 65
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|  *	3) The data to be returned by DOS-65 is enlisted in the
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|  *		nlsPointer[] array of the nlsPackage structure, including
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|  *		the DOS-65-01 data, which always must be last entry of the
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|  *		array.
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|  *	4) DOS-38 returns the 34 bytes beginning with the byte at offset
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|  *		4 behind the size field of DOS-65-01.
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|  *
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|  *	It seems that pure DOS can internally maintain two NLS pkgs:
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|  *	NLS#1: The hardcoded pkg of U.S.A. on CP437, and
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|  *	NLS#2: the pkg loaded via COUNTRY= from within CONFIG.SYS.
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|  *	I do interprete this behaviour as follows:
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|  *	CONFIG.SYS is read in more passes; before COUTRY= can be evaluated,
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|  *	many actions must be performed, e.g. to load kernel at all, open
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|  *	CONFIG.SYS and begin reading. The kernel requires at least two
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|  *	NLS information _before_ COUNTRY= has been evaluated - both upcase
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|  *	tables. To not implement the same function multiple times, e.g.
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|  *	to upcase with and without table, the kernel uses the default
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|  *	NLS pkg until a more appropriate one can be loaded and hopes that
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|  *	the BIOS (and the user) can live with its outcome.
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|  *	Though, theoretically, the hardcoded NLS pkg could be purged
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|  *	or overwritten once the COUNTRY= statement has been evaluated.
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|  *	It would be possible that this NLS pkg internally performs different
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|  *	purposes, for now this behaviour will be kept.
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|  *
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|  *	The current implementation extends the above "two maintained
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|  *	NLS pkgs" into that the kernel chains all NLS pkgs loaded in
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|  *	memory into one single linked list. When the user does neither
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|  *	wants to load other NLS pkgs without executing NLSFUNC and the
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|  *	loaded NLS pkgs do not contain code themselves, no other code is
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|  *	required, but some memory to store the NLS pkgs into.
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|  *
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|  *	Furthermore, because the kernel needs to include the code for the
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|  *	hardcoded NLS pkg anyway, every NLS pkg can use it; so only
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|  *	NLS pkgs that structurally differ from U.S.A./CP437 actually need
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|  *	to add any code and residently install the MUX handler for NLSFUNC.
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|  *	This technique reduces the overhead calling the MUX handler, when
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|  *	it is not needed.
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|  *	However, NLSFUNC is always required if the user wants to return
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|  *	information about NLS pkgs _not_ loaded into memory.
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|  *
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|  *=== Attention: Because the nlsInfoBlock structure differs from the
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|  *===	the "traditional" (aka MS) implementation, the MUX-14 interface
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|  *===	is _not_ MS-compatible, although all the registers etc.
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|  *===	do conform. -- 2000/02/26 ska
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|  *
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|  *	Previous failed attempts to implement NLS handling and a full-
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|  *	featured MUX-14 supporting any-structured NLS pkgs suggest
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|  *	to keep the implement as simple as possible and keep the
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|  *	optimization direction off balance and to tend toward either
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|  *	an optimization for speed or size.
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|  *
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|  *	The most problem is that the MUX interrupt chain is considered
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|  *	highly overcrowded, so if the kernels invokes it itself, the
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|  *	performance might decrease dramatically; on the other side, the
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|  *	more complex the interface between kernel and a _probably_ installed
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|  *	external NLSFUNC becomes the more difficult all the stuff is becoming
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|  *	and, most importantly, the size grows unnecessarily, because many
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|  *	people don't use NLSFUNC at all.
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|  *
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|  *	The kernel uses the NLS pkg itself for two operations:
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|  *	1) DOS-65-2x and DOS-65-Ax: Upcase character, string, memory area, &
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|  *	2) whenever a filename is passed into the kernel, its components
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|  *		must be identified, invalid characters must be detected
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|  *		and, finally, all letters must be uppercased.
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|  *	I do not consider operation 1) an action critical for performance,
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|  *	because traditional DOS programming praxis says: Do it Yourself; so
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|  *	one can consider oneself lucky that a program aquires the upcase
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|  *	table once in its life time (I mean: lucky the program calls NLS at all).
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|  *	Operation 2), in opposite, might dramatically reduce performance, if
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|  *	it lacks proper implementations.
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|  *
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|  *	Straight forward implementation:
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|  *	The basic implementation of the NLS channels all requests of DOS-65,
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|  *	DOS-66, and DOS-38 through MUX-14. Hereby, any external program, such
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|  *	as NLSFUNC, may (or may not) install a piece of code to filter
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|  *	one, few, or all requests in order to perform them itself, by default
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|  *	all requests will end within the root of the MUX interrupt, which is
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|  *	located within the kernel itself. An access path could look like this:
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|  *	1. Call to DOS-65-XX, DOS-66-XX, or DOS-38.
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|  *	2. The kernel is enterred through the usual INT-21 API handler.
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|  *	3. The request is decoded and one of the NLS.C function is called.
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|  *	4. This function packs a new request and calls MUX-14.
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|  *	5. Every TSR/driver hooking INT-2F will check, if the request is
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|  *		directed for itself;
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|  *	5.1. If not, the request is passed on to the next item of the MUX
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|  *		interrupt chain;
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|  *	5.2. If so, the TSR, e.g. NLSFUNC, tests if the request is to be
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|  *		performed internally;
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|  *	5.2.1. If so, the request is performed and the MUX-14 call is
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|  *		terminated (goto step 8.)
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|  *	5.2.2. If not, the request is passed on (see step 5.1.)
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|  *	6. If all TSRs had their chance to filter requests, but none decided
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|  *		to perform the request itself, the kernel is (re-)enterred
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|  *		through its INT-2F (MUX) API handler.
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|  *	7. Here the request is decoded again and performed with the kernel-
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|  *		internal code; then the MUX-14 call is terminated.
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|  *	8. When the MUX-14 call returns, it has setup all return parameters
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|  *		already, so the INT-21 call is terminated as well.
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|  *
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|  *	Note: The traditional MUX-14 is NOT supported to offer functionality
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|  *	to the kernel at the first place, but to let the kernel access and
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|  *	return any values they must be loaded into memory, but the user may
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|  *	request information through the DOS-65 interface of NLS pkgs _not_
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|  *	already loaded. Theoretically, NLSFUNC needs not allocate any internal
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|  *	buffer to load the data into, because the user already supplied one;
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|  *	also if the kernel would instruct NLSFUNC to load the requested
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|  *	NLS pkg, more memory than necessary would be allocated. However, all
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|  *	except subfunction 1 return a _pointer_ to the data rather than the
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|  *	data itself; that means that NLSFUNC must cache the requested data
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|  *	somewhere, but how long?
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|  *
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|  *	Performance tweaks:
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|  *	When the system -- This word applies to the combination of kernel and
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|  *	any loaded MUX-14 extension <20> la NLSFUNC here. -- uppercases
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|  *	_filenames_, it must perform a DOS-65-A2 internally. In the basic
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|  *	implementation this request would be channeled through MUX-14, even
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|  *	if there is no external NLSFUNC at all. Also, when a NLS pkg had
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|  *	been loaded by the kernel itself, it complies to above mentioned
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|  *	rules and it is very unlikely that it is necessary to probe if
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|  *	a MUX-14 TSR might want to perform the request itself. Therefore
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|  *	each NLS pkg contains some flags that allow the kernel to bypass
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|  *	the MUX-14 request and invoke the proper function directly. Both
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|  *	default NLS pkgs will have those flags enabled, because they are
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|  *	already loaded into memory and must comply to the rules.
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|  *
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|  *	Note: Those flags do not alter the way the request is actually
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|  *	performed, but the MUX-14 call is omitted only (steps 4. through 6.).
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|  *
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|  *	======= Description of the API
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|  *
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|  *	There are three APIs to be supported by NLS:
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|  *	1) DOS API: DOS-38, DOS-65, DOS-66;
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|  *	2) MUX-14, and
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|  *	3) internal: upcasing filenames.
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|  *
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|  *	1) and 2) address the used NLS pkg by the country code / codepage pair.
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|  *	3) uses the currently active NLS pkg only; furthermore, these functions
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|  *	more or less match DOS-64-A*. Therefore, the NLS system merges the
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|  *	interfaces 1) and 3) and offers function suitable for both ones.
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|  *
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|  *	Both 1) and 3) must channel the request through the MUX chain, if
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|  *	appropriate, whereas 2) is the back-end and does natively process the
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|  *	request totally on its own.
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|  *
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|  *	The API of 1) and 3) consists of:
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|  *		+ DosUpChar(), DosUpString(), and DosUpMem(): to upcase an object
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|  *	(DOS-65-2[0-2]);
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|  *		+ DosYesNo(): to check a character, if it is the yes or no prompt
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|  *	(DOS-65-23);
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|  *		+ DosUpFChar(), DosUpFString(), and DosUpFMem(): to upcase an object
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|  *	for filenames (DOS-65-A[0-2]);
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|  *		+ DosGetData(): to retreive certain information (DOS-38, all the
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|  *	other DOS-65-** subfunctions);
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|  *		+ DosSetCountry(): to change the currently active country code
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|  *	(DOS-38);
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|  *		+ DosSetCodepage(): to change the currently active codepage (DOS-66).
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|  *
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|  *	The API of 2) consists of:
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|  *		+ syscall_MUX14().
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|  *	This function is invoked for all MUX-14 requests and recieves the
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|  *	registers of the particular INT-2F call, it will then decode the
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|  *	registers and pass the request forth to a NLS-internal interface
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|  *	consisting of the following "static" functions:
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|  *		+ nlsUpMem(): called for DosUp*(),
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|  *		+ nlsUpFMem(): called for DosUpF*(),
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|  *		+ nlsYesNo(): called for DosYesNo(),
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|  *		+ nlsGetData(): called for DosGetData(),&
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|  *		+ nlsSetPackage(): called for DosSetCountry() and DosSetCodepage().
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|  *	In opposite of the APIs 1) through 3) the NLS-internal functions address
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|  *	the NLS pkg to operate upon by a (struct nlsInfoBlock *) pointer.
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|  *
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|  *	This designs supports to easily implement to bypass the MUX chain to
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|  *	speed up especially the internal API to upcase filenames, because
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|  *	the Dos*() functions can decide do not pass the request through MUX,
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|  *	but directly call the nls*() function instead. This way it is ensured
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|  *	that the performed actions are the same in both cases and, with repect
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|  *	to the functions that operate with the currently active NLS pkg, the
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|  *	performance is rather high, because one can use the globally available
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|  *	pointer to the current NLS pkg and need not search for a country code/
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|  *	codepage pair.
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|  *
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|  *	======== Compile-time options
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|  *
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|  *	Win9x supports to change the individual portions of a NLS pkg
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|  *	through DOS-65-00; also there are no references what happens when
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|  *	a program changes the areas addressed by returned pointers. The
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|  *	current implementation does _not_ support changes of the NLS pkg
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|  *	except by invoking DOS-38 (Set Country Code) or DOS-66 (Set Codepage).
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|  *	Future implementations might offer this ability; to reduce the
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|  *	overhead introduced by this feature, the macro NLS_MODIFYABLE_DATA
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|  *	enables the appropriate code.
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|  *	NLS_MODIFYABLE_DATA is *disabled* by default.
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|  *
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|  *	The tables 2 and 4 (upcase tables) are accessed relatively often,
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|  *	but theoretically these tables could be located at any position
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|  *	of the pointer array. If the macro NLS_REORDER_POINTERS is enabled,
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|  *	both NLSFUNC and the internal loader will reorder the pointers
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|  *	array so that mandatory tables are located at predictable indexes.
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|  *	This removes that the kernel must search for the table when
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|  *	one of the DOS-65-[2A]x functions is called or a filename has been
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|  *	passed in (which must be uppercased to be suitable for internal
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|  *	purpose). However, when some program try to tweak the internal
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|  *	tables this assumption could be wrong.
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|  *	This setting has any effect only, if the kernel tries to access
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|  *	information itself; it is ignored when the user calls DOS-65-0x
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|  *	to return such pointer.
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|  *	NLS_REORDER_POINTERS is *enabled* by default.
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|  */
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| 
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| /* Define if some user program possibly modifies the value of the internal
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| 	tables or the DOS-65-00 (Set Country Information) API function
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| 	is to be supported. */
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| /* Currently unimplemented! -- 2000/02/13 ska*/
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| /* #define NLS_MODIFYABLE_DATA */
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| 
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| /* Define if the pointer array shall be reordered to allow a quick
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| 	access to often used and mandatoryly present tables. */
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| #define NLS_REORDER_POINTERS
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| 
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| /*
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|  *	How the kernel and NLSFUNC communicate with each other
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|  */
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|         /* Must be pased to and returned by NLSFUNC upon MUX-14-00 */
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| #define NLS_FREEDOS_NLSFUNC_ID	0x534b
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| 		/* What version of nlsInfo and accompanying associations
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| 		   Must be passed to NLSFUNC upon MUX-14-00 to identify the
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| 		   correct kernel to the tools. */
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| #define NLS_FREEDOS_NLSFUNC_VERSION 0xFD01
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|         /* Represents a call to DOS-38 within DOS-65 handlers.
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|            Current implementation relys on 0x101! */
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| #define NLS_DOS_38 0x101
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|         /* NLSFUNC may return NLS_REDO to instruct the kernel to
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|            try to perform the same action another time. This is most
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|            useful if the kernel only loads the NLS pkg into memory so
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|            the kernel will find it and will process the request internally
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|            now. */
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| #define NLS_REDO 353
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| 
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| /* Codes of the subfunctions of external NLSFUNC */
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| #define NLSFUNC_INSTALL_CHECK	0
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| #define NLSFUNC_DOS38			4
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| #define NLSFUNC_GETDATA			2
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| #define NLSFUNC_DRDOS_GETDATA	0xfe
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| #define NLSFUNC_LOAD_PKG		3
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| #define NLSFUNC_LOAD_PKG2		1
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| #define NLSFUNC_UPMEM			0x22
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| #define NLSFUNC_YESNO			0x23
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| #define NLSFUNC_FILE_UPMEM		0xa2
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| 
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| /* The NLS implementation flags encode what feature is in effect;
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| 	a "1" in the bitfield means that the feature is active.
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| 	All currently non-defined bits are to be zero to allow future
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| 	useage. */
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| #define NLS_CODE_MODIFYABLE_DATA	0x0001
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| #define NLS_CODE_REORDER_POINTERS 	0x0002
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| 
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| /* NLS package useage flags encode what feature is in effect for this
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| 	particular package:
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| 	a "1" in the bitfield means that the feature is active/enabled.
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| 	All currently non-defined bits are to be zero to allow future
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| 	useage. */
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| #define NLS_FLAG_DIRECT_UPCASE		0x0001  /* DOS-65-2[012], */
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| #define NLS_FLAG_DIRECT_FUPCASE		0x0002  /* DOS-65-A[012], internal */
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| #define NLS_FLAG_DIRECT_YESNO		0x0004  /* DOS-65-23 */
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| #define	NLS_FLAG_DIRECT_GETDATA		0x0008  /* DOS-65-XX, DOS-38 */
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| 
 | ||
| #define NLS_FLAG_HARDCODED (NLS_FLAG_DIRECT_UPCASE		\
 | ||
| 							| NLS_FLAG_DIRECT_FUPCASE	\
 | ||
| 							| NLS_FLAG_DIRECT_YESNO		\
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| 							| NLS_FLAG_DIRECT_GETDATA)
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| 
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|         /* No codepage / country code given */
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| #define NLS_DEFAULT ((UWORD)-1)
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| 
 | ||
| struct CountrySpecificInfo {
 | ||
|   short CountryID;    /*  = W1 W437   # Country ID & Codepage */
 | ||
|   short CodePage;
 | ||
|   short DateFormat;           /*    Date format: 0/1/2: U.S.A./Europe/Japan */
 | ||
|   char  CurrencyString[5];    /* '$' ,'EUR'   */
 | ||
|   char  ThousandSeparator[2]; /* ','          # Thousand's separator */
 | ||
|   char  DecimalPoint[2];      /* '.'        # Decimal point        */
 | ||
|   char  DateSeparator[2];     /* '-'  */
 | ||
|   char  TimeSeparator[2];     /* ':'  */
 | ||
|   char  CurrencyFormat;       /* = 0  # Currency format (bit array) 
 | ||
|                                  0Fh    BYTE    currency format
 | ||
|                                  bit 2 = set if currency symbol replaces decimal point
 | ||
|                                  bit 1 = number of spaces between value and currency symbol
 | ||
|                                  bit 0 = 0 if currency symbol precedes value
 | ||
|                                  1 if currency symbol follows value    
 | ||
|                               */
 | ||
|   char  CurrencyPrecision;    /* = 2  # Currency precision           */
 | ||
|   char  TimeFormat;           /* = 0  # time format: 0/1: 12/24 houres */
 | ||
| };
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /*
 | ||
|  *	This is the data in the exact order returned by DOS-65-01
 | ||
|  */
 | ||
| struct nlsExtCntryInfo {
 | ||
|   UBYTE subfct;                 /* always 1 */
 | ||
|   WORD size;                    /* size of this structure
 | ||
|                                    without this WORD itself */
 | ||
|   WORD countryCode;             /* current country code */
 | ||
|   WORD codePage;                /* current code page (CP) */
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|   /*
 | ||
|    *      This is the data in the exact order as to return on
 | ||
|    *      DOS-38; it is also the most (important) part of DOS-65-01
 | ||
|    */
 | ||
|   /* Note: The ASCIZ strings might become
 | ||
|      a totally different understanding with
 | ||
|      DBCS (Double Byte Character Support) */
 | ||
|   WORD dateFmt;                 /* order of portions of date
 | ||
|                                    0: mm/dd/yyyy (USA)
 | ||
|                                    1: dd/mm/yyyy (Europe)
 | ||
|                                    2: yyyy/mm/dd (Japan)
 | ||
|                                  */
 | ||
|   char curr[5];                 /* ASCIZ of currency string */
 | ||
|   char thSep[2];                /* ASCIZ of thousand's separator */
 | ||
|   char point[2];                /* ASCIZ of decimal point */
 | ||
|   char dateSep[2];              /* ASCIZ of date separator */
 | ||
|   char timeSep[2];              /* ASCIZ of time separator */
 | ||
|   BYTE currFmt;                 /* format of currency:
 | ||
|                                    bit 0: currency string is placed
 | ||
|                                    0: before number
 | ||
|                                    1: behind number
 | ||
|                                    bit 1: currency string and number are
 | ||
|                                    separated by a space
 | ||
|                                    0: No
 | ||
|                                    1: Yes
 | ||
|                                    bit 2: currency string replaces decimal
 | ||
|                                    sign
 | ||
|                                    0: No
 | ||
|                                    1: Yes
 | ||
|                                  */
 | ||
|   BYTE prescision;              /* of monetary numbers */
 | ||
|   BYTE timeFmt;                 /* time format:
 | ||
|                                    0: 12 hours (append AM/PM)
 | ||
|                                    1: 24 houres
 | ||
|                                  */
 | ||
|     VOID(FAR * upCaseFct) (VOID);       /* far call to a function upcasing the
 | ||
|                                            character in register AL */
 | ||
|   char dataSep[2];              /* ASCIZ of separator in data records */
 | ||
| };
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| struct nlsPointer {             /* Information of DOS-65-0X is addressed
 | ||
|                                    by a pointer */
 | ||
|   UBYTE subfct;                 /* number of the subfunction */
 | ||
|   VOID FAR *pointer;            /* the pointer to be returned when the subfunction
 | ||
|                                    of DOS-65 is called (Note: won't work for
 | ||
|                                    subfunctions 0, 1, 0x20, 0x21, 0x22, 0x23,
 | ||
|                                    0xA0, 0xA1,& 0xA2 */
 | ||
| };
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| struct nlsPackage {             /* the contents of one chain item of the
 | ||
|                                    list of NLS packages */
 | ||
|   struct nlsPackage FAR *nxt;   /* next item in chain */
 | ||
|   UWORD cntry, cp;              /* country ID / codepage of this NLS pkg */
 | ||
|   int flags;                    /* direct access and other flags */
 | ||
|   /* Note: Depending on the flags above all remaining
 | ||
|      portions may be omitted, if the external NLSFUNC-like
 | ||
|      MUX-14 processor does not require them and performs
 | ||
|      all actions itself, so that the kernel never tries to
 | ||
|      fetch this information itself. */
 | ||
|   UBYTE yeschar;                /* yes / no character DOS-65-23 */
 | ||
|   UBYTE nochar;
 | ||
|   unsigned numSubfct;           /* number of supported sub-functions */
 | ||
|   struct nlsPointer nlsPointers[1];     /* grows dynamically */
 | ||
| };
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| struct nlsDBCS {                /* The internal structure is unknown to me */
 | ||
|   UWORD numEntries;
 | ||
|   UWORD dbcsTbl[1];
 | ||
| };
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| struct nlsCharTbl {
 | ||
|   /* table containing a list of characters */
 | ||
|   UWORD numEntries;             /* number of entries of this table.
 | ||
|                                    If <= 0x80, the first element of
 | ||
|                                    the table corresponse to character 0x80 */
 | ||
|   unsigned char tbl[1];         /* grows dynamically */
 | ||
| };
 | ||
| #define nlsChBuf(len)		struct nlsCharTbl##len {		\
 | ||
| 			UWORD numEntries;							\
 | ||
| 			unsigned char tbl[len];						\
 | ||
| 		}
 | ||
| nlsChBuf(128);
 | ||
| nlsChBuf(256);
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /* in file names permittable characters for DOS-65-05 */
 | ||
| struct nlsFnamTerm {
 | ||
|   WORD size;                    /* size of this structure */
 | ||
|   BYTE dummy1;
 | ||
|   char firstCh, lastCh;         /* first, last permittable character */
 | ||
|   BYTE dummy2;
 | ||
|   char firstExcl, lastExcl;     /* first, last excluded character */
 | ||
|   BYTE dummy3;
 | ||
|   BYTE numSep;                  /* number of file name separators */
 | ||
|   char separators[1];           /* grows dynamically */
 | ||
| };
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| struct nlsInfoBlock {           /* This block contains all information
 | ||
|                                    shared by the kernel and the external NLSFUNC program */
 | ||
|   char FAR *fname;              /* filename from COUNTRY=;
 | ||
|                                    maybe tweaked by NLSFUNC */
 | ||
|   UWORD sysCodePage;            /* system code page */
 | ||
|   unsigned flags;               /* implementation flags */
 | ||
|   struct nlsPackage FAR *actPkg;        /* current NLS package */
 | ||
|   struct nlsPackage FAR *chain; /* first item of info chain --
 | ||
|                                    hardcoded U.S.A./CP437 */
 | ||
| };
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| extern struct nlsInfoBlock nlsInfo;
 | ||
| extern struct nlsPackage ASM nlsPackageHardcoded;
 | ||
|         /* These are the "must have" tables within the hard coded NLS pkg */
 | ||
| extern struct nlsFnamTerm nlsFnameTermHardcoded;
 | ||
| extern struct nlsDBCS ASM nlsDBCSHardcoded;
 | ||
| extern struct nlsCharTbl nlsUpcaseHardcoded;
 | ||
| extern struct nlsCharTbl nlsFUpcaseHardcoded;
 | ||
| extern struct nlsCharTbl nlsCollHardcoded;
 | ||
| extern struct nlsExtCntryInfo nlsCntryInfoHardcoded;
 | ||
| extern BYTE FAR hcTablesStart[], hcTablesEnd[];
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /***********************************************************************
 | ||
|  ***** Definitions & Declarations for COUNTRY.SYS **********************
 | ||
|  ***********************************************************************/
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /* Note: These definitions are shared among all tools accessing the
 | ||
| 	COUNTRY.SYS file as well -- 2000/06/11 ska*/
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /* File structure:
 | ||
| 	S0: Base (Primary) structure -- file header
 | ||
| 	Offset	Size	Meaning
 | ||
| 	0		array	ID string "FreeDOS COUNTRY.SYS v1.0\r\n"
 | ||
| 	26		array	Copyright etc. (plain 7bit ASCII text)
 | ||
| 	26+N	2byte	\x1a\0
 | ||
| 	26+N+2	array	padded with \0 upto next offset
 | ||
| 	128		word	number of country/codepage pairs	(N1)
 | ||
| 	130		8byte	country code / codepage entries	(S1)
 | ||
| 	130+8*N1	end of array
 | ||
| 	===
 | ||
| 	S1: structure of country/codepage pair
 | ||
| 	Offset	Size	Meaning
 | ||
| 	0		dword	relative position of table definition	(S2)
 | ||
| 	4		word	codepage ID
 | ||
| 	6		word	country code
 | ||
| 	8		end of structure
 | ||
| 	===
 | ||
| 	S2: table definition of one country/codepage pair
 | ||
| 	Offset	Size	Meaning
 | ||
| 	0		word	number of function entries	(N2)
 | ||
| 	2		8byte	function definition	(S3)
 | ||
| 	2+8*N2	end of array
 | ||
| 	===
 | ||
| 	S3: function definition
 | ||
| 	Offset	Size	Meaning
 | ||
| 	0		dword	relative position of function data (see S4)
 | ||
| 	4		word	number of bytes of data
 | ||
| 	6		byte	function ID (same as passed to DOS-65-XX)
 | ||
| 	7		byte	reserved for future use (currently 0 (zero))
 | ||
| 	8		end of structure
 | ||
| 	===
 | ||
| 	S4: function data
 | ||
| 	In opposite of the structures and arrays, the function data
 | ||
| 	is just a structure-less stream of bytes, which is used as it is.
 | ||
| 	Currently no validation check is performed over this data.
 | ||
| 	That means, for instance, that a definition of function 2 (upcase
 | ||
| 	table) has length 130 and the data consists of a word value with
 | ||
| 	the length (128) and 128 bytes individual information.
 | ||
| 	That way the DBCS is implemented exactly the same way as all the
 | ||
| 	other tables; the only exception is pseudo-table 0x23.
 | ||
| 	===
 | ||
| 	"relative position" means this DWord specifies the amount of bytes
 | ||
| 	between end of the current structure and the data the pointer is
 | ||
| 	referring to. This shall enable future implementations to embed
 | ||
| 	COUNTRY.SYS into other files.
 | ||
| */
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| #define CSYS_FD_IDSTRING "FreeDOS COUNTRY.SYS v1.0\r\n\x1a"
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| #if 0
 | ||
| struct csys_function {       /* S3: function definition */
 | ||
|   UDWORD csys_rpos;             /* relative position to actual data */
 | ||
|   UWORD csys_length;
 | ||
|   UBYTE csys_fctID;             /* As passed to DOS-65-XX */
 | ||
|   UBYTE csys_reserved1;         /* always 0, reserved for future use */
 | ||
| };
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| struct csys_ccDefinition {   /* S1: country/codepage reference */
 | ||
|   UDWORD csys_rpos;             /* moving the 4byte value to the front
 | ||
|                                    can increase performance */
 | ||
|   UWORD csys_cp;
 | ||
|   UWORD csys_cntry;
 | ||
| };
 | ||
| #endif
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| struct csys_ccDefinition {   /* country/codepage reference */
 | ||
|   UDWORD csys_pos; /* moving the 4byte value to the front
 | ||
|                                    can increase performance */
 | ||
|   UWORD csys_cntry;
 | ||
|   UWORD csys_cp;
 | ||
|   UWORD csys_size1;			/* size of nlsPackage struct rpos is pointing to */
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /* initially the object rpos is pointing to conforms to a
 | ||
| 	struct nlsPackage, where:
 | ||
| 	  struct nlsPackage FAR *nxt;   is missing
 | ||
| 	  UWORD cntry, cp;              is missing
 | ||
| 	  int flags;                    is NLS_FLAG_HARDCODED, if the
 | ||
| 	  									kernel is to handle the data of its own
 | ||
| 	  UBYTE yeschar;                is filled
 | ||
| 	  UBYTE nochar;					is filled
 | ||
| 	  unsigned numSubfct;           is filled
 | ||
| 	  struct nlsPointer nlsPointers[1];   is filled
 | ||
| 	  									the pointer member is the absolute
 | ||
| 	  									position of the data within the file
 | ||
| 	  									of this structure:
 | ||
| 	  										UWORD count
 | ||
| 	  										count bytes
 | ||
| 	  										The "count" value is not a part
 | ||
| 	  										of the data itself.
 | ||
| 			Also: The data must be ordered corresponding to
 | ||
| 			NLS_CODE_REORDER_POINTERS.
 | ||
| 			Also: The last nlsPointer is subfct #1 _incl_ all its
 | ||
| 			data [is the extended country information: struct nlsExtCntryInfo]
 | ||
| */
 | ||
| };
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| struct csys_numEntries {     /* helper structure for "number of entries" */
 | ||
|   UWORD csys_entries;
 | ||
| };
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /* Header of the COUNTRY.SYS file */
 | ||
| struct nlsCSys_fileHeader {     /* COUNTRY.SYS header */
 | ||
|   unsigned char csys_idstring[sizeof(CSYS_FD_IDSTRING)];
 | ||
|   UWORD csys_maxTotalSize;	/* maximal size of the total amount of
 | ||
|   								any individual definition, that includes
 | ||
|   								the nlsPackage skeleton and the sum of
 | ||
|   								all bytes required to load all the
 | ||
|   								subfunctions individually.
 | ||
|   								--> The code is to allocate maxTotalSize
 | ||
|   								and load any country definition of this
 | ||
|   								file into this buffer without any
 | ||
|   								overflow. */
 | ||
| 	DWORD csys_posIndex;	/* absolute position of index table */
 | ||
| };
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /* Structure created by CountryInfoLoad() */
 | ||
| struct nlsCSys_loadPackage {
 | ||
| 	UWORD csys_size;
 | ||
| 	struct nlsPackage csys_pkg;
 | ||
| };
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| /* standard alignment */
 | ||
| #include <algndflt.h>
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| #ifdef DEBUG
 | ||
|         /* Enable debugging of NLS part */
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|         /* Caution: Enabling NLS debugging usually generates
 | ||
|            _a_lot_ of noise. */
 | ||
| /*& #define NLS_DEBUG */
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| #endif
 |