Bug #4010
closedYAML fails to roundtrip non ASCII String
Description
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C:>ruby -v -ryaml -e 's="한글";p YAML.load(YAML.dump(s))==s'
ruby 1.9.3dev (2010-11-01 trunk 29655) [i386-mswin32_90]
false
C:>ruby -v -ryaml -e 's="한글";p YAML.load(YAML.dump(s))==s'
ruby 1.8.6 (2010-02-04 patchlevel 398) [i386-mingw32]
true
=end
Updated by tenderlovemaking (Aaron Patterson) about 14 years ago
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On Mon, Nov 01, 2010 at 11:36:58AM +0900, Heesob Park wrote:
Bug #4010: YAML fails to roundtrip non ASCII String
http://redmine.ruby-lang.org/issues/show/4010Author: Heesob Park
Status: Open, Priority: Normal
Category: lib, Target version: 1.9.x
ruby -v: ruby 1.9.3dev (2010-11-01 trunk 29655) [i386-mswin32_90]C:>ruby -v -ryaml -e 's="한글";p YAML.load(YAML.dump(s))==s'
ruby 1.9.3dev (2010-11-01 trunk 29655) [i386-mswin32_90]
falseC:>ruby -v -ryaml -e 's="한글";p YAML.load(YAML.dump(s))==s'
ruby 1.8.6 (2010-02-04 patchlevel 398) [i386-mingw32]
true
I'm pretty sure this is a known issue with Syck. Can you try to
reproduce this with psych?
ruby -v -ryaml -e 'YAML::ENGINE.yamler = "psych"; s="한글";p YAML.load(YAML.dump(s))==s'
--
Aaron Patterson
http://tenderlovemaking.com/
Attachment: (unnamed)
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Updated by phasis68 (Heesob Park) about 14 years ago
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The same result with psych.
$ ruby -v -ryaml -e 'YAML::ENGINE.yamler = "psych"; s="한글";pYAML.load(YAML.dump(s))==s'
ruby 1.9.3dev (2010-11-02 trunk 29667) [i686-linux]
/usr/local/lib/ruby/1.9.1/psych/deprecated.rb:79: warning: method redefined; discarding old to_yaml_properties
/usr/local/lib/ruby/1.9.1/syck/rubytypes.rb:13: warning: previous definition of to_yaml_properties was here
false
FYI the current encoding is 'EUC-KR'.
I know it works when the encoding is 'UTF-8'.
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Updated by tenderlovemaking (Aaron Patterson) about 14 years ago
=begin
On Tue, Nov 02, 2010 at 09:58:27PM +0900, Heesob Park wrote:
Issue #4010 has been updated by Heesob Park.
The same result with psych.
$ ruby -v -ryaml -e 'YAML::ENGINE.yamler = "psych"; s="한글";pYAML.load(YAML.dump(s))==s'
ruby 1.9.3dev (2010-11-02 trunk 29667) [i686-linux]
/usr/local/lib/ruby/1.9.1/psych/deprecated.rb:79: warning: method redefined; discarding old to_yaml_properties
/usr/local/lib/ruby/1.9.1/syck/rubytypes.rb:13: warning: previous definition of to_yaml_properties was here
falseFYI the current encoding is 'EUC-KR'.
I know it works when the encoding is 'UTF-8'.
I think the problem is that your default_internal encoding isn't being
set. YAML is usually stored as UTF-8, but psych will automatically
transcode the string to whatever your default_internal encoding is set
to.
Maybe this script will help illustrate the problem:
# coding: utf-8
require 'psych'
eucjp = "こんにちは!".encode('EUC-JP')
string = Psych.load(Psych.dump(eucjp))
p string.encoding # => #<Encoding:UTF-8>
p eucjp == string # => false
Encoding.default_internal = 'EUC-JP'
string = Psych.load(Psych.dump(eucjp))
p string.encoding # => #<Encoding:EUC-JP>
p eucjp == string # => true
Try running your Ruby like this:
$ ruby -EEUC-KR:EUC-KR -v -ryaml -e 'YAML::ENGINE.yamler = "psych"; s="한글";pYAML.load(YAML.dump(s))==s'¶
Aaron Patterson
http://tenderlovemaking.com/
Attachment: (unnamed)
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Updated by phasis68 (Heesob Park) about 14 years ago
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2010/11/3 Aaron Patterson aaron@tenderlovemaking.com:
On Tue, Nov 02, 2010 at 09:58:27PM +0900, Heesob Park wrote:
Issue #4010 has been updated by Heesob Park.
The same result with psych.
$ ruby -v -ryaml -e 'YAML::ENGINE.yamler = "psych"; s="한글";pYAML.load(YAML.dump(s))==s'
ruby 1.9.3dev (2010-11-02 trunk 29667) [i686-linux]
/usr/local/lib/ruby/1.9.1/psych/deprecated.rb:79: warning: method redefined; discarding old to_yaml_properties
/usr/local/lib/ruby/1.9.1/syck/rubytypes.rb:13: warning: previous definition of to_yaml_properties was here
falseFYI the current encoding is 'EUC-KR'.
I know it works when the encoding is 'UTF-8'.I think the problem is that your default_internal encoding isn't being
set. YAML is usually stored as UTF-8, but psych will automatically
transcode the string to whatever your default_internal encoding is set
to.Maybe this script will help illustrate the problem:
# coding: utf-8
require 'psych'
eucjp = "こんにちは!".encode('EUC-JP')
string = Psych.load(Psych.dump(eucjp))p string.encoding # => #Encoding:UTF-8
p eucjp == string # => falseEncoding.default_internal = 'EUC-JP'
string = Psych.load(Psych.dump(eucjp))
p string.encoding # => #Encoding:EUC-JP
p eucjp == string # => trueTry running your Ruby like this:
$ ruby -EEUC-KR:EUC-KR -v -ryaml -e 'YAML::ENGINE.yamler = "psych"; s="한글";pYAML.load(YAML.dump(s))==s'
Here is the result
$ ruby -EEUC-KR:EUC-KR -v -ryaml -e 'YAML::ENGINE.yamler = "psych";
s="한글";p YAML.load(YAML.dump(s))==s'
ruby 1.9.3dev (2010-11-02 trunk 29667) [i686-linux]
true
Did you mean it is not a bug and I must specify the default external
and internal character encodings?
$ irb
irb(main):001:0> Encoding.default_external
=> #Encoding:EUC-KR
irb(main):002:0> Encoding.default_internal
=> nil
Why ruby cannot detect Encoding.default_internal ?
Regards,
Park Heesob
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Updated by tenderlovemaking (Aaron Patterson) about 14 years ago
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On Wed, Nov 03, 2010 at 11:36:35AM +0900, Heesob Park wrote:
2010/11/3 Aaron Patterson aaron@tenderlovemaking.com:
On Tue, Nov 02, 2010 at 09:58:27PM +0900, Heesob Park wrote:
Issue #4010 has been updated by Heesob Park.
The same result with psych.
$ ruby -v -ryaml -e 'YAML::ENGINE.yamler = "psych"; s="한글";pYAML.load(YAML.dump(s))==s'
ruby 1.9.3dev (2010-11-02 trunk 29667) [i686-linux]
/usr/local/lib/ruby/1.9.1/psych/deprecated.rb:79: warning: method redefined; discarding old to_yaml_properties
/usr/local/lib/ruby/1.9.1/syck/rubytypes.rb:13: warning: previous definition of to_yaml_properties was here
falseFYI the current encoding is 'EUC-KR'.
I know it works when the encoding is 'UTF-8'.I think the problem is that your default_internal encoding isn't being
set. YAML is usually stored as UTF-8, but psych will automatically
transcode the string to whatever your default_internal encoding is set
to.Maybe this script will help illustrate the problem:
# coding: utf-8
require 'psych'
eucjp = "こんにちは!".encode('EUC-JP')
string = Psych.load(Psych.dump(eucjp))p string.encoding # => #Encoding:UTF-8
p eucjp == string # => falseEncoding.default_internal = 'EUC-JP'
string = Psych.load(Psych.dump(eucjp))
p string.encoding # => #Encoding:EUC-JP
p eucjp == string # => trueTry running your Ruby like this:
$ ruby -EEUC-KR:EUC-KR -v -ryaml -e 'YAML::ENGINE.yamler = "psych"; s="한글";pYAML.load(YAML.dump(s))==s'
Here is the result$ ruby -EEUC-KR:EUC-KR -v -ryaml -e 'YAML::ENGINE.yamler = "psych";
s="한글";p YAML.load(YAML.dump(s))==s'
ruby 1.9.3dev (2010-11-02 trunk 29667) [i686-linux]
trueDid you mean it is not a bug and I must specify the default external
and internal character encodings?
Yes. YAML is stored as UTF-8 or 16 (possibly 32 as well, depending on
the spec you choose). Strings you pull out of Psych will have an
encoding that matches the source document.
$ irb
irb(main):001:0> Encoding.default_external
=> #Encoding:EUC-KR
irb(main):002:0> Encoding.default_internal
=> nil
Why ruby cannot detect Encoding.default_internal ?
"default_external" indicates the encoding that files on disk probably
have. A good default is the OS setting.
magic comments indicate the encoding of string literals within that file.
"default_internal" indicates the encoding that you want strings internal
to your programs to have. Making that decision is not so easy. Magic
comments cannot be used because there can exist many magic comments in
your programs.
"default_internal" should be used by things like database adapters (or
in this case YAML parsers) where the encoding of the external entity may
differ from the encoding the user wants to use. The external entity
should transcode to the user's "default_internal" setting. Because of
this logic, there exists another problem with setting "default_internal"
to something for the user.
Here is an example of what could happen if default_internal was
automatically set:
"default_internal" is automatically set to something, say Shift-JIS, and
you load a YAML file. You know that your YAML file is stored as UTF-8,
and yet when you output the encoding from your program, you're surprised
to see it report Shift-JIS! You wanted the original encoding of the file,
but now you must call encode() to get it back to UTF-8. Even worse,
because you went from UTF-8 => Shift-JIS => UTF-8, now there may be data
loss due to encoding round trip problems.
Hope that helps!
--
Aaron Patterson
http://tenderlovemaking.com/
Attachment: (unnamed)
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Updated by tenderlovemaking (Aaron Patterson) about 14 years ago
- Status changed from Open to Rejected
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Closing since Psych works as expected. "default_internal" must be set for strings to be automatically transcoded.
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