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LibIDN(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
LibIDN(3) |
Net::LibIDN - Perl bindings for GNU Libidn
use Net::LibIDN ':all';
idn_to_ascii("Räksmörgås.Josefßon.ORG") eq
idn_to_ascii(idn_to_unicode("xn--rksmrgs-5wao1o.josefsson.org"));
idn_prep_name("LibÜDN") eq "libüdn";
idn_punycode_encode("kistenmöhre") eq
idn_punycode_encode(idn_punycode_decode("kistenmhre-kcb"));
my $errpos;
tld_check("mèrle.se", $errpos) eq undef;
$errpos == 1;
tld_get("mainbase.mars") eq "mars";
my $hashref = Net::LibIDN::tld_get_table("de");
print "$hashref->{version}\n";
foreach (@{$hashref->{valid}})
{
print "Unicode range from ".$_->{start}." to ".$_->{end}."\n";
}
Provides bindings for GNU Libidn, a C library for handling Internationalized
Domain Names according to IDNA (RFC 3490), in a way very much inspired by
Turbo Fredriksson's PHP-IDN.
- Net::LibIDN::idn_to_ascii($clear_hostname,
[$charset, [$flags]]);
- Converts $clear_hostname which might contain
characters outside the range allowed in DNS names, to IDNA ACE. If
$charset is specified, treats string as being encoded
in it, otherwise assumes it is ISO-8859-1 encoded. If flag
IDNA_ALLOW_UNASSIGNED is set in $flags,
accepts also unassigned Unicode characters, if
IDNA_USE_STD3_ASCII_RULES is set, accepts only ASCII LDH characters
(letter-digit-hyphen). Flags can be combined with ||. Returns result of
conversion or undef on error.
- Net::LibIDN::idn_to_unicode($idn_hostname,
[$charset, [$flags]]);
- Converts ASCII $idn_hostname, which might be IDNA ACE
encoded, into the decoded form in $charset or
ISO-8859-1. Flags are interpreted as above. Returns result of conversion
or undef on error.
- Net::LibIDN::idn_punycode_encode($string,
[ $charset]);
- Encodes $string into "punycode" (RFC 3492).
If $charset is present, treats
$string as being in $charset,
otherwise uses ISO-8859-1. Returns result of conversion or undef on
error.
- Net::LibIDN::idn_punycode_decode($string,
[ $charset]);
- Decodes $string from "punycode" (RFC 3492).
If $charset is present, result is converted to
$charset, otherwise it is converted to ISO-8859-1.
Returns result of conversion or undef on error.
- Net::LibIDN::idn_prep_name($string,
[$charset]);
- Net::LibIDN::idn_prep_kerberos5($string,
[ $charset]);
- Net::LibIDN::idn_prep_node($string,
[$charset]);
- Net::LibIDN::idn_prep_resource($string,
[ $charset]);
- Net::LibIDN::idn_prep_plain($string,
[$charset]);
- Net::LibIDN::idn_prep_trace($string,
[$charset]);
- Net::LibIDN::idn_prep_sasl($string,
[$charset]);
- Net::LibIDN::idn_prep_iscsi($string,
[$charset]);
- Performs "stringprep" (RFC 3454) on
$string according to the named profile (e.g.
*_name -> "nameprep" (RFC 3491)). If
$charset is present, converts from and to this
charset before and after the operation respectively. Returns result
string, or undef on error.
- Net::LibIDN::tdl_check($string,
$errpos, [$charset,
[$tld]]);
- Checks whether or not $string conforms to the
restrictions on the sets of valid characters defined by TLD authorities
around the World. Treats $string as a hostname if
$tld is not present, determining the TLD from the
hostname. If $tld is present, uses the restrictions
defined by the parties responsible for TLD $tld.
$charset may be used to specify the character set
the $string is in. Should an invalid character be
detected, returns 0 and the 0-based position of the offending character in
$errpos. In case of other failure conditions,
$errpos is not touched, and undef is returned.
Should $string conform to the TLD restrictions, 1 is
returned.
- Net::LibIDN::tld_get($hostname);
- Returns top level domain of $hostname, or
undef if an error occurs or if no top level domain was found.
- Net::LibIDN::tld_get_table($tld);
- Retrieves a hash reference with the TLD restriction info of given TLD
$tld, or undef if $tld
is not found. The hash ref contains the following fields:
- $h->{name} ... name of TLD
- $h->{version} ... version string of this
restriction table
- $h->{nvalid} ... number of Unicode
intervals
- $h->{valid} ... [ {start =>
number, end => number}, ...] ... Unicode intervals
There is currently no support for Perl's unicode capabilities (man perlunicode).
All input strings are assumed to be octet strings, all output strings are
generated as octet strings. Thus, if you require Perl's unicode features, you
will have to convert your strings manually. For example:
use Encode;
use Data::Dumper;
print Dumper(Net::LibIDN::idn_to_unicode('xn--uro-j50a.com',
'utf-8'));
print Dumper(decode('utf-8',
Net::LibIDN::idn_to_unicode('xn--uro-j50a.com', 'utf-8')));
Thomas Jacob, http://internet24.de
perl(1), RFC 3454, RFC 3490-3492, http://www.gnu.org/software/libidn.
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