localedef(C)
localedef --
define locale environment
Syntax
localedef [ -b ] [ -c ]
[ -f charmap ] [ -i
sourcefile ] name
Description
localedef converts source definitions for locale
categories into a format usable by commands and library routines
that depend on the values of locale environment variables for their
behavior.
localedef expects to read source definitions for several
locale categories on the standard input unless a
sourcefile is defined with the -i option.
The output files are placed into the locale name.
The following categories can be defined:
LC_COLLATE-
Collation order used by commands such as
sort(C)
and
uniq(C).
localedef places the output in the file collate.
LC_CTYPE-
Character classification and case conversion. localedef
places the output in the file ctype.
LC_MESSAGES-
Formats of informative and diagnostic messages and interactive
responses. localedef places the output in the file
messages.
LC_MONETARY-
Monetary formatting. localedef places the output in the
file currency.
LC_NUMERIC-
Numeric, non-monetary formatting. localedef places the
output in the file numeric.
LC_TIME-
Date and time formats. localedef places the output in the
file time.
localedef takes the following options:
-b-
This option suppresses backward compatibility warning
messages. These messages are generated when information specified by
the sourcefile cannot be represented in the backward
compatibility portion of the binary representation.
-c-
This option creates permanent output even if warning messages are
produced by the command. Warning messages can be caused by
implementation-dependent conditions such as an optional keyword not
supported by the implementation being present in the source, or the
number of operands to the order keyword exceeds the limit
defined by the {COLL_WEIGHTS_MAX} variable. (See
getconf(C)
for information on variables.)
-f charmap-
charmap contains a mapping of character symbols and
collating element symbols to actual character encodings. Use this
option if symbolic names are used instead of collating symbols.
-i sourcefile-
sourcefile contains the source definitions for the locale
categories. Each entry begins with the environment variable name and
ends with an END environment variable name statement. If
this option is not present, input is taken from standard input.
If the name of a locale contains one or more slash
characters, it will be interpreted as a pathname where the locale
definitions (ctype, time and so on) will be
located. If name does not contain a slash character, the
location of the created definitions will be implementation
dependent; the locale itself will be public.
Exit values
localedef returns one of the following values:
0-
successful completion of command
1-
warnings occurred, but the command successfully completed
2-
the locale specification exceeded system limits, or the coded
character set(s) are not supported: no locale was created
> 3-
warnings or errors occurred, and the locale was not created
Examples
In this example, a locale definition for the Gaelic language in
Scotland is being created (the ISO 8859-1 codeset is
specified):
localedef -c -f chrmap.src -i locdef.src /usr/lib/lang/gd/GB/ISO8859-1
localedef reads chrmap.src for the character
mapping details, and locdef.src for the source
definitions. The resulting category definitions are placed in the
directory
/usr/lib/lang/gd/GB/ISO8859-1.
The directories in the pathname must exist prior to the command
being run.
See also
chrconv(M),
chrtbl(M),
colconv(M),
coltbl(M),
environ(M),
locale(C),
locale(M),
localedef(F),
mesconv(M),
mestbl(M),
monconv(M),
montbl(M),
numconv(M),
numtbl(M),
timconv(M),
timtbl(M)
Standards conformance
localedef is conformant with:
ISO/IEC DIS 99452:1992, Information technology Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX) Part 2: Shell and Utilities (IEEE Std 1003.21992);
X/Open CAE Specification, Commands and Utilities, Issue 4, 1992.
© 2005 The SCO Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
SCO OpenServer Release 6.0.0 -- 03 June 2005