mirror of
https://github.com/EGroupware/egroupware.git
synced 2024-11-26 09:53:20 +01:00
198 lines
7.5 KiB
Plaintext
198 lines
7.5 KiB
Plaintext
|
*******************************************************************************
|
||
|
* *
|
||
|
* IDNA Convert (idna_convert.class.php) *
|
||
|
* *
|
||
|
* http://idnaconv.phlymail.de mailto:phlymail@phlylabs.de *
|
||
|
*******************************************************************************
|
||
|
* (c) 2004-2011 phlyLabs, Berlin *
|
||
|
* This file is encoded in UTF-8 *
|
||
|
*******************************************************************************
|
||
|
|
||
|
Introduction
|
||
|
------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
The class idna_convert allows to convert internationalized domain names
|
||
|
(see RFC 3490, 3491, 3492 and 3454 for detials) as they can be used with various
|
||
|
registries worldwide to be translated between their original (localized) form
|
||
|
and their encoded form as it will be used in the DNS (Domain Name System).
|
||
|
|
||
|
The class provides two public methods, encode() and decode(), which do exactly
|
||
|
what you would expect them to do. You are allowed to use complete domain names,
|
||
|
simple strings and complete email addresses as well. That means, that you might
|
||
|
use any of the following notations:
|
||
|
|
||
|
- www.nörgler.com
|
||
|
- xn--nrgler-wxa
|
||
|
- xn--brse-5qa.xn--knrz-1ra.info
|
||
|
|
||
|
Errors, incorrectly encoded or invalid strings will lead to either a FALSE
|
||
|
response (when in strict mode) or to only partially converted strings.
|
||
|
You can query the occured error by calling the method get_last_error().
|
||
|
|
||
|
Unicode strings are expected to be either UTF-8 strings, UCS-4 strings or UCS-4
|
||
|
arrays. The default format is UTF-8. For setting different encodings, you can
|
||
|
call the method setParams() - please see the inline documentation for details.
|
||
|
ACE strings (the Punycode form) are always 7bit ASCII strings.
|
||
|
|
||
|
ATTENTION: As of version 0.6.0 this class is written in the OOP style of PHP5.
|
||
|
Since PHP4 is no longer actively maintained, you should switch to PHP5 as fast as
|
||
|
possible.
|
||
|
We expect to see no compatibility issues with the upcoming PHP6, too.
|
||
|
|
||
|
ATTENTION: BC break! As of version 0.6.4 the class per default allows the German
|
||
|
ligature ß to be encoded as the DeNIC, the registry for .DE allows domains
|
||
|
containing ß.
|
||
|
In older builds "ß" was mapped to "ss". Should you still need this behaviour,
|
||
|
see example 5 below.
|
||
|
|
||
|
ATTENTION: As of version 0.8.0 the class fully supports IDNA 2008. Thus the
|
||
|
aforementioned parameter is deprecated and replaced by a parameter to switch
|
||
|
between the standards. See the updated example 5 below.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Files
|
||
|
-----
|
||
|
idna_convert.class.php - The actual class
|
||
|
example.php - An example web page for converting
|
||
|
transcode_wrapper.php - Convert various encodings, see below
|
||
|
uctc.php - phlyLabs' Unicode Transcoder, see below
|
||
|
ReadMe.txt - This file
|
||
|
LICENCE - The LGPL licence file
|
||
|
|
||
|
The class is contained in idna_convert.class.php.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Examples
|
||
|
--------
|
||
|
1. Say we wish to encode the domain name nörgler.com:
|
||
|
|
||
|
// Include the class
|
||
|
require_once('idna_convert.class.php');
|
||
|
// Instantiate it
|
||
|
$IDN = new idna_convert();
|
||
|
// The input string, if input is not UTF-8 or UCS-4, it must be converted before
|
||
|
$input = utf8_encode('nörgler.com');
|
||
|
// Encode it to its punycode presentation
|
||
|
$output = $IDN->encode($input);
|
||
|
// Output, what we got now
|
||
|
echo $output; // This will read: xn--nrgler-wxa.com
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
2. We received an email from a punycoded domain and are willing to learn, how
|
||
|
the domain name reads originally
|
||
|
|
||
|
// Include the class
|
||
|
require_once('idna_convert.class.php');
|
||
|
// Instantiate it
|
||
|
$IDN = new idna_convert();
|
||
|
// The input string
|
||
|
$input = 'andre@xn--brse-5qa.xn--knrz-1ra.info';
|
||
|
// Encode it to its punycode presentation
|
||
|
$output = $IDN->decode($input);
|
||
|
// Output, what we got now, if output should be in a format different to UTF-8
|
||
|
// or UCS-4, you will have to convert it before outputting it
|
||
|
echo utf8_decode($output); // This will read: andre@börse.knörz.info
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
3. The input is read from a UCS-4 coded file and encoded line by line. By
|
||
|
appending the optional second parameter we tell enode() about the input
|
||
|
format to be used
|
||
|
|
||
|
// Include the class
|
||
|
require_once('idna_convert.class.php');
|
||
|
// Instantiate it
|
||
|
$IDN = new dinca_convert();
|
||
|
// Iterate through the input file line by line
|
||
|
foreach (file('ucs4-domains.txt') as $line) {
|
||
|
echo $IDN->encode(trim($line), 'ucs4_string');
|
||
|
echo "\n";
|
||
|
}
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
4. We wish to convert a whole URI into the IDNA form, but leave the path or
|
||
|
query string component of it alone. Just using encode() would lead to mangled
|
||
|
paths or query strings. Here the public method encode_uri() comes into play:
|
||
|
|
||
|
// Include the class
|
||
|
require_once('idna_convert.class.php');
|
||
|
// Instantiate it
|
||
|
$IDN = new idna_convert();
|
||
|
// The input string, a whole URI in UTF-8 (!)
|
||
|
$input = 'http://nörgler:secret@nörgler.com/my_päth_is_not_ÄSCII/');
|
||
|
// Encode it to its punycode presentation
|
||
|
$output = $IDN->encode_uri($input);
|
||
|
// Output, what we got now
|
||
|
echo $output; // http://nörgler:secret@xn--nrgler-wxa.com/my_päth_is_not_ÄSCII/
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
5. To support IDNA 2008, the class needs to be invoked with an additional
|
||
|
parameter. This can also be achieved on an instance.
|
||
|
|
||
|
// Include the class
|
||
|
require_once('idna_convert.class.php');
|
||
|
// Instantiate it
|
||
|
$IDN = new idna_convert(array('idn_version' => 2008));
|
||
|
// Sth. containing the German letter ß
|
||
|
$input = 'meine-straße.de');
|
||
|
// Encode it to its punycode presentation
|
||
|
$output = $IDN->encode_uri($input);
|
||
|
// Output, what we got now
|
||
|
echo $output; // xn--meine-strae-46a.de
|
||
|
// Switch back to old IDNA 2003, the original standard
|
||
|
$IDN->set_parameter('idn_version', 2003);
|
||
|
// Sth. containing the German letter ß
|
||
|
$input = 'meine-straße.de');
|
||
|
// Encode it to its punycode presentation
|
||
|
$output = $IDN->encode_uri($input);
|
||
|
// Output, what we got now
|
||
|
echo $output; // meine-strasse.de
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Transcode wrapper
|
||
|
-----------------
|
||
|
In case you have strings in different encoding than ISO-8859-1 and UTF-8 you might need to
|
||
|
translate these strings to UTF-8 before feeding the IDNA converter with it.
|
||
|
PHP's built in functions utf8_encode() and utf8_decode() can only deal with ISO-8859-1.
|
||
|
Use the file transcode_wrapper.php for the conversion. It requires either iconv, libiconv
|
||
|
or mbstring installed together with one of the relevant PHP extensions.
|
||
|
The functions you will find useful are
|
||
|
encode_utf8() as a replacement for utf8_encode() and
|
||
|
decode_utf8() as a replacement for utf8_decode().
|
||
|
|
||
|
Example usage:
|
||
|
<?php
|
||
|
require_once('idna_convert.class.php');
|
||
|
require_once('transcode_wrapper.php');
|
||
|
$mystring = '<something in e.g. ISO-8859-15';
|
||
|
$mystring = encode_utf8($mystring, 'ISO-8859-15');
|
||
|
echo $IDN->encode($mystring);
|
||
|
?>
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
UCTC - Unicode Transcoder
|
||
|
-------------------------
|
||
|
Another class you might find useful when dealing with one or more of the Unicode encoding
|
||
|
flavours. The class is static, it requires PHP5. It can transcode into each other:
|
||
|
- UCS-4 string / array
|
||
|
- UTF-8
|
||
|
- UTF-7
|
||
|
- UTF-7 IMAP (modified UTF-7)
|
||
|
All encodings expect / return a string in the given format, with one major exception:
|
||
|
UCS-4 array is jsut an array, where each value represents one codepoint in the string, i.e.
|
||
|
every value is a 32bit integer value.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Example usage:
|
||
|
<?php
|
||
|
require_once('uctc.php');
|
||
|
$mystring = 'nörgler.com';
|
||
|
echo uctc::convert($mystring, 'utf8', 'utf7imap');
|
||
|
?>
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Contact us
|
||
|
----------
|
||
|
In case of errors, bugs, questions, wishes, please don't hesitate to contact us
|
||
|
under the email address above.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The team of phlyLabs
|
||
|
http://phlylabs.de
|
||
|
mailto:phlymail@phlylabs.de
|