| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229230231232233234235236237238239240241242243244245246247248249250251252253254255256257258259260261262263264265266267268269270271272273274275276277278279280281282283284285286287288289290291292293294295296297298299300301302303304305306307308309310311312313314315316317318319320321322323324325326327328329330331332333334335336337338339340341342343344345346347348349350351352353354355356357358359360361362363364365366367368369370371372373374375376377378379380381382383384385386387388389390391392393394395396397398399400401402403404405406407408409410411412413414415416417418419420421422423424425426427428429430431432433434435436437438439440441442443444445446447448449450451452453454455456457458459460461462463464465466467468469470471472473474475476477478479480481482483484485486487488489490491492493494495496497498499500501502503504505506507508509510511512513514515516517518519520521522523524525526527528529530531532533534535536537538539540541542543544545546547548549550551552553554555556557558559560561562563564565566567568569570571572573574575576577578579580581582583584585586587588589590591592593594595596597598599600601602603604605606607608609610611612613614615616617618619620621622623624625626627628629630631632633634635636637638639640 | #! /bin/sh# Output a system dependent table of character encoding aliases.##   Copyright (C) 2000-2004, 2006 Free Software Foundation, Inc.##   This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it#   under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as published#   by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)#   any later version.##   This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,#   but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of#   MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU#   Library General Public License for more details.##   You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public#   License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software#   Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301,#   USA.## The table consists of lines of the form#    ALIAS  CANONICAL## ALIAS is the (system dependent) result of "nl_langinfo (CODESET)".# ALIAS is compared in a case sensitive way.## CANONICAL is the GNU canonical name for this character encoding.# It must be an encoding supported by libiconv. Support by GNU libc is# also desirable. CANONICAL is case insensitive. Usually an upper case# MIME charset name is preferred.# The current list of GNU canonical charset names is as follows.##       name              MIME?             used by which systems#   ASCII, ANSI_X3.4-1968       glibc solaris freebsd netbsd darwin#   ISO-8859-1              Y   glibc aix hpux irix osf solaris freebsd netbsd darwin#   ISO-8859-2              Y   glibc aix hpux irix osf solaris freebsd netbsd darwin#   ISO-8859-3              Y   glibc solaris#   ISO-8859-4              Y   osf solaris freebsd netbsd darwin#   ISO-8859-5              Y   glibc aix hpux irix osf solaris freebsd netbsd darwin#   ISO-8859-6              Y   glibc aix hpux solaris#   ISO-8859-7              Y   glibc aix hpux irix osf solaris netbsd darwin#   ISO-8859-8              Y   glibc aix hpux osf solaris#   ISO-8859-9              Y   glibc aix hpux irix osf solaris darwin#   ISO-8859-13                 glibc netbsd darwin#   ISO-8859-14                 glibc#   ISO-8859-15                 glibc aix osf solaris freebsd darwin#   KOI8-R                  Y   glibc solaris freebsd netbsd darwin#   KOI8-U                  Y   glibc freebsd netbsd darwin#   KOI8-T                      glibc#   CP437                       dos#   CP775                       dos#   CP850                       aix osf dos#   CP852                       dos#   CP855                       dos#   CP856                       aix#   CP857                       dos#   CP861                       dos#   CP862                       dos#   CP864                       dos#   CP865                       dos#   CP866                       freebsd netbsd darwin dos#   CP869                       dos#   CP874                       woe32 dos#   CP922                       aix#   CP932                       aix woe32 dos#   CP943                       aix#   CP949                       osf woe32 dos#   CP950                       woe32 dos#   CP1046                      aix#   CP1124                      aix#   CP1125                      dos#   CP1129                      aix#   CP1250                      woe32#   CP1251                      glibc solaris netbsd darwin woe32#   CP1252                      aix woe32#   CP1253                      woe32#   CP1254                      woe32#   CP1255                      glibc woe32#   CP1256                      woe32#   CP1257                      woe32#   GB2312                  Y   glibc aix hpux irix solaris freebsd netbsd darwin#   EUC-JP                  Y   glibc aix hpux irix osf solaris freebsd netbsd darwin#   EUC-KR                  Y   glibc aix hpux irix osf solaris freebsd netbsd darwin#   EUC-TW                      glibc aix hpux irix osf solaris netbsd#   BIG5                    Y   glibc aix hpux osf solaris freebsd netbsd darwin#   BIG5-HKSCS                  glibc solaris#   GBK                         glibc aix osf solaris woe32 dos#   GB18030                     glibc solaris netbsd#   SHIFT_JIS               Y   hpux osf solaris freebsd netbsd darwin#   JOHAB                       glibc solaris woe32#   TIS-620                     glibc aix hpux osf solaris#   VISCII                  Y   glibc#   TCVN5712-1                  glibc#   GEORGIAN-PS                 glibc#   HP-ROMAN8                   hpux#   HP-ARABIC8                  hpux#   HP-GREEK8                   hpux#   HP-HEBREW8                  hpux#   HP-TURKISH8                 hpux#   HP-KANA8                    hpux#   DEC-KANJI                   osf#   DEC-HANYU                   osf#   UTF-8                   Y   glibc aix hpux osf solaris netbsd darwin## Note: Names which are not marked as being a MIME name should not be used in# Internet protocols for information interchange (mail, news, etc.).## Note: ASCII and ANSI_X3.4-1968 are synonymous canonical names. Applications# must understand both names and treat them as equivalent.## The first argument passed to this file is the canonical host specification,#    CPU_TYPE-MANUFACTURER-OPERATING_SYSTEM# or#    CPU_TYPE-MANUFACTURER-KERNEL-OPERATING_SYSTEMhost="$1"os=`echo "$host" | sed -e 's/^[^-]*-[^-]*-\(.*\)$/\1/'`echo "# This file contains a table of character encoding aliases,"echo "# suitable for operating system '${os}'."echo "# It was automatically generated from config.charset."# List of references, updated during installation:echo "# Packages using this file: "case "$os" in    linux-gnulibc1*)	# Linux libc5 doesn't have nl_langinfo(CODESET); therefore	# localcharset.c falls back to using the full locale name	# from the environment variables.	echo "C ASCII"	echo "POSIX ASCII"	for l in af af_ZA ca ca_ES da da_DK de de_AT de_BE de_CH de_DE de_LU \	         en en_AU en_BW en_CA en_DK en_GB en_IE en_NZ en_US en_ZA \	         en_ZW es es_AR es_BO es_CL es_CO es_DO es_EC es_ES es_GT \	         es_HN es_MX es_PA es_PE es_PY es_SV es_US es_UY es_VE et \	         et_EE eu eu_ES fi fi_FI fo fo_FO fr fr_BE fr_CA fr_CH fr_FR \	         fr_LU ga ga_IE gl gl_ES id id_ID in in_ID is is_IS it it_CH \	         it_IT kl kl_GL nl nl_BE nl_NL no no_NO pt pt_BR pt_PT sv \	         sv_FI sv_SE; do	  echo "$l ISO-8859-1"	  echo "$l.iso-8859-1 ISO-8859-1"	  echo "$l.iso-8859-15 ISO-8859-15"	  echo "$l.iso-8859-15@euro ISO-8859-15"	  echo "$l@euro ISO-8859-15"	  echo "$l.cp-437 CP437"	  echo "$l.cp-850 CP850"	  echo "$l.cp-1252 CP1252"	  echo "$l.cp-1252@euro CP1252"	  #echo "$l.atari-st ATARI-ST" # not a commonly used encoding	  echo "$l.utf-8 UTF-8"	  echo "$l.utf-8@euro UTF-8"	done	for l in cs cs_CZ hr hr_HR hu hu_HU pl pl_PL ro ro_RO sk sk_SK sl \	         sl_SI sr sr_CS sr_YU; do	  echo "$l ISO-8859-2"	  echo "$l.iso-8859-2 ISO-8859-2"	  echo "$l.cp-852 CP852"	  echo "$l.cp-1250 CP1250"	  echo "$l.utf-8 UTF-8"	done	for l in mk mk_MK ru ru_RU; do	  echo "$l ISO-8859-5"	  echo "$l.iso-8859-5 ISO-8859-5"	  echo "$l.koi8-r KOI8-R"	  echo "$l.cp-866 CP866"	  echo "$l.cp-1251 CP1251"	  echo "$l.utf-8 UTF-8"	done	for l in ar ar_SA; do	  echo "$l ISO-8859-6"	  echo "$l.iso-8859-6 ISO-8859-6"	  echo "$l.cp-864 CP864"	  #echo "$l.cp-868 CP868" # not a commonly used encoding	  echo "$l.cp-1256 CP1256"	  echo "$l.utf-8 UTF-8"	done	for l in el el_GR gr gr_GR; do	  echo "$l ISO-8859-7"	  echo "$l.iso-8859-7 ISO-8859-7"	  echo "$l.cp-869 CP869"	  echo "$l.cp-1253 CP1253"	  echo "$l.cp-1253@euro CP1253"	  echo "$l.utf-8 UTF-8"	  echo "$l.utf-8@euro UTF-8"	done	for l in he he_IL iw iw_IL; do	  echo "$l ISO-8859-8"	  echo "$l.iso-8859-8 ISO-8859-8"	  echo "$l.cp-862 CP862"	  echo "$l.cp-1255 CP1255"	  echo "$l.utf-8 UTF-8"	done	for l in tr tr_TR; do	  echo "$l ISO-8859-9"	  echo "$l.iso-8859-9 ISO-8859-9"	  echo "$l.cp-857 CP857"	  echo "$l.cp-1254 CP1254"	  echo "$l.utf-8 UTF-8"	done	for l in lt lt_LT lv lv_LV; do	  #echo "$l BALTIC" # not a commonly used encoding, wrong encoding name	  echo "$l ISO-8859-13"	done	for l in ru_UA uk uk_UA; do	  echo "$l KOI8-U"	done	for l in zh zh_CN; do	  #echo "$l GB_2312-80" # not a commonly used encoding, wrong encoding name	  echo "$l GB2312"	done	for l in ja ja_JP ja_JP.EUC; do	  echo "$l EUC-JP"	done	for l in ko ko_KR; do	  echo "$l EUC-KR"	done	for l in th th_TH; do	  echo "$l TIS-620"	done	for l in fa fa_IR; do	  #echo "$l ISIRI-3342" # a broken encoding	  echo "$l.utf-8 UTF-8"	done	;;    linux* | *-gnu*)	# With glibc-2.1 or newer, we don't need any canonicalization,	# because glibc has iconv and both glibc and libiconv support all	# GNU canonical names directly. Therefore, the Makefile does not	# need to install the alias file at all.	# The following applies only to glibc-2.0.x and older libcs.	echo "ISO_646.IRV:1983 ASCII"	;;    aix*)	echo "ISO8859-1 ISO-8859-1"	echo "ISO8859-2 ISO-8859-2"	echo "ISO8859-5 ISO-8859-5"	echo "ISO8859-6 ISO-8859-6"	echo "ISO8859-7 ISO-8859-7"	echo "ISO8859-8 ISO-8859-8"	echo "ISO8859-9 ISO-8859-9"	echo "ISO8859-15 ISO-8859-15"	echo "IBM-850 CP850"	echo "IBM-856 CP856"	echo "IBM-921 ISO-8859-13"	echo "IBM-922 CP922"	echo "IBM-932 CP932"	echo "IBM-943 CP943"	echo "IBM-1046 CP1046"	echo "IBM-1124 CP1124"	echo "IBM-1129 CP1129"	echo "IBM-1252 CP1252"	echo "IBM-eucCN GB2312"	echo "IBM-eucJP EUC-JP"	echo "IBM-eucKR EUC-KR"	echo "IBM-eucTW EUC-TW"	echo "big5 BIG5"	echo "GBK GBK"	echo "TIS-620 TIS-620"	echo "UTF-8 UTF-8"	;;    hpux*)	echo "iso88591 ISO-8859-1"	echo "iso88592 ISO-8859-2"	echo "iso88595 ISO-8859-5"	echo "iso88596 ISO-8859-6"	echo "iso88597 ISO-8859-7"	echo "iso88598 ISO-8859-8"	echo "iso88599 ISO-8859-9"	echo "iso885915 ISO-8859-15"	echo "roman8 HP-ROMAN8"	echo "arabic8 HP-ARABIC8"	echo "greek8 HP-GREEK8"	echo "hebrew8 HP-HEBREW8"	echo "turkish8 HP-TURKISH8"	echo "kana8 HP-KANA8"	echo "tis620 TIS-620"	echo "big5 BIG5"	echo "eucJP EUC-JP"	echo "eucKR EUC-KR"	echo "eucTW EUC-TW"	echo "hp15CN GB2312"	#echo "ccdc ?" # what is this?	echo "SJIS SHIFT_JIS"	echo "utf8 UTF-8"	;;    irix*)	echo "ISO8859-1 ISO-8859-1"	echo "ISO8859-2 ISO-8859-2"	echo "ISO8859-5 ISO-8859-5"	echo "ISO8859-7 ISO-8859-7"	echo "ISO8859-9 ISO-8859-9"	echo "eucCN GB2312"	echo "eucJP EUC-JP"	echo "eucKR EUC-KR"	echo "eucTW EUC-TW"	;;    osf*)	echo "ISO8859-1 ISO-8859-1"	echo "ISO8859-2 ISO-8859-2"	echo "ISO8859-4 ISO-8859-4"	echo "ISO8859-5 ISO-8859-5"	echo "ISO8859-7 ISO-8859-7"	echo "ISO8859-8 ISO-8859-8"	echo "ISO8859-9 ISO-8859-9"	echo "ISO8859-15 ISO-8859-15"	echo "cp850 CP850"	echo "big5 BIG5"	echo "dechanyu DEC-HANYU"	echo "dechanzi GB2312"	echo "deckanji DEC-KANJI"	echo "deckorean EUC-KR"	echo "eucJP EUC-JP"	echo "eucKR EUC-KR"	echo "eucTW EUC-TW"	echo "GBK GBK"	echo "KSC5601 CP949"	echo "sdeckanji EUC-JP"	echo "SJIS SHIFT_JIS"	echo "TACTIS TIS-620"	echo "UTF-8 UTF-8"	;;    solaris*)	echo "646 ASCII"	echo "ISO8859-1 ISO-8859-1"	echo "ISO8859-2 ISO-8859-2"	echo "ISO8859-3 ISO-8859-3"	echo "ISO8859-4 ISO-8859-4"	echo "ISO8859-5 ISO-8859-5"	echo "ISO8859-6 ISO-8859-6"	echo "ISO8859-7 ISO-8859-7"	echo "ISO8859-8 ISO-8859-8"	echo "ISO8859-9 ISO-8859-9"	echo "ISO8859-15 ISO-8859-15"	echo "koi8-r KOI8-R"	echo "ansi-1251 CP1251"	echo "BIG5 BIG5"	echo "Big5-HKSCS BIG5-HKSCS"	echo "gb2312 GB2312"	echo "GBK GBK"	echo "GB18030 GB18030"	echo "cns11643 EUC-TW"	echo "5601 EUC-KR"	echo "ko_KR.johap92 JOHAB"	echo "eucJP EUC-JP"	echo "PCK SHIFT_JIS"	echo "TIS620.2533 TIS-620"	#echo "sun_eu_greek ?" # what is this?	echo "UTF-8 UTF-8"	;;    freebsd* | os2*)	# FreeBSD 4.2 doesn't have nl_langinfo(CODESET); therefore	# localcharset.c falls back to using the full locale name	# from the environment variables.	# Likewise for OS/2. OS/2 has XFree86 just like FreeBSD. Just	# reuse FreeBSD's locale data for OS/2.	echo "C ASCII"	echo "US-ASCII ASCII"	for l in la_LN lt_LN; do	  echo "$l.ASCII ASCII"	done	for l in da_DK de_AT de_CH de_DE en_AU en_CA en_GB en_US es_ES \	         fi_FI fr_BE fr_CA fr_CH fr_FR is_IS it_CH it_IT la_LN \	         lt_LN nl_BE nl_NL no_NO pt_PT sv_SE; do	  echo "$l.ISO_8859-1 ISO-8859-1"	  echo "$l.DIS_8859-15 ISO-8859-15"	done	for l in cs_CZ hr_HR hu_HU la_LN lt_LN pl_PL sl_SI; do	  echo "$l.ISO_8859-2 ISO-8859-2"	done	for l in la_LN lt_LT; do	  echo "$l.ISO_8859-4 ISO-8859-4"	done	for l in ru_RU ru_SU; do	  echo "$l.KOI8-R KOI8-R"	  echo "$l.ISO_8859-5 ISO-8859-5"	  echo "$l.CP866 CP866"	done	echo "uk_UA.KOI8-U KOI8-U"	echo "zh_TW.BIG5 BIG5"	echo "zh_TW.Big5 BIG5"	echo "zh_CN.EUC GB2312"	echo "ja_JP.EUC EUC-JP"	echo "ja_JP.SJIS SHIFT_JIS"	echo "ja_JP.Shift_JIS SHIFT_JIS"	echo "ko_KR.EUC EUC-KR"	;;    netbsd*)	echo "646 ASCII"	echo "ISO8859-1 ISO-8859-1"	echo "ISO8859-2 ISO-8859-2"	echo "ISO8859-4 ISO-8859-4"	echo "ISO8859-5 ISO-8859-5"	echo "ISO8859-7 ISO-8859-7"	echo "ISO8859-13 ISO-8859-13"	echo "ISO8859-15 ISO-8859-15"	echo "eucCN GB2312"	echo "eucJP EUC-JP"	echo "eucKR EUC-KR"	echo "eucTW EUC-TW"	echo "BIG5 BIG5"	echo "SJIS SHIFT_JIS"	;;    darwin[56]*)	# Darwin 6.8 doesn't have nl_langinfo(CODESET); therefore	# localcharset.c falls back to using the full locale name	# from the environment variables.	echo "C ASCII"	for l in en_AU en_CA en_GB en_US la_LN; do	  echo "$l.US-ASCII ASCII"	done	for l in da_DK de_AT de_CH de_DE en_AU en_CA en_GB en_US es_ES \	         fi_FI fr_BE fr_CA fr_CH fr_FR is_IS it_CH it_IT nl_BE \	         nl_NL no_NO pt_PT sv_SE; do	  echo "$l ISO-8859-1"	  echo "$l.ISO8859-1 ISO-8859-1"	  echo "$l.ISO8859-15 ISO-8859-15"	done	for l in la_LN; do	  echo "$l.ISO8859-1 ISO-8859-1"	  echo "$l.ISO8859-15 ISO-8859-15"	done	for l in cs_CZ hr_HR hu_HU la_LN pl_PL sl_SI; do	  echo "$l.ISO8859-2 ISO-8859-2"	done	for l in la_LN lt_LT; do	  echo "$l.ISO8859-4 ISO-8859-4"	done	for l in ru_RU; do	  echo "$l.KOI8-R KOI8-R"	  echo "$l.ISO8859-5 ISO-8859-5"	  echo "$l.CP866 CP866"	done	for l in bg_BG; do	  echo "$l.CP1251 CP1251"	done	echo "uk_UA.KOI8-U KOI8-U"	echo "zh_TW.BIG5 BIG5"	echo "zh_TW.Big5 BIG5"	echo "zh_CN.EUC GB2312"	echo "ja_JP.EUC EUC-JP"	echo "ja_JP.SJIS SHIFT_JIS"	echo "ko_KR.EUC EUC-KR"	;;    darwin*)	# Darwin 7.5 has nl_langinfo(CODESET), but it is useless:	# - It returns the empty string when LANG is set to a locale of the	#   form ll_CC, although ll_CC/LC_CTYPE is a symlink to an UTF-8	#   LC_CTYPE file.	# - The environment variables LANG, LC_CTYPE, LC_ALL are not set by	#   the system; nl_langinfo(CODESET) returns "US-ASCII" in this case.	# - The documentation says:	#     "... all code that calls BSD system routines should ensure	#      that the const *char parameters of these routines are in UTF-8	#      encoding. All BSD system functions expect their string	#      parameters to be in UTF-8 encoding and nothing else."	#   It also says	#     "An additional caveat is that string parameters for files,	#      paths, and other file-system entities must be in canonical	#      UTF-8. In a canonical UTF-8 Unicode string, all decomposable	#      characters are decomposed ..."	#   but this is not true: You can pass non-decomposed UTF-8 strings	#   to file system functions, and it is the OS which will convert	#   them to decomposed UTF-8 before accessing the file system.	# - The Apple Terminal application displays UTF-8 by default.	# - However, other applications are free to use different encodings:	#   - xterm uses ISO-8859-1 by default.	#   - TextEdit uses MacRoman by default.	# We prefer UTF-8 over decomposed UTF-8-MAC because one should	# minimize the use of decomposed Unicode. Unfortunately, through the	# Darwin file system, decomposed UTF-8 strings are leaked into user	# space nevertheless.	echo "* UTF-8"	;;    beos*)	# BeOS has a single locale, and it has UTF-8 encoding.	echo "* UTF-8"	;;    msdosdjgpp*)	# DJGPP 2.03 doesn't have nl_langinfo(CODESET); therefore	# localcharset.c falls back to using the full locale name	# from the environment variables.	echo "#"	echo "# The encodings given here may not all be correct."	echo "# If you find that the encoding given for your language and"	echo "# country is not the one your DOS machine actually uses, just"	echo "# correct it in this file, and send a mail to"	echo "# Juan Manuel Guerrero <juan.guerrero@gmx.de>"	echo "# and Bruno Haible <bruno@clisp.org>."	echo "#"	echo "C ASCII"	# ISO-8859-1 languages	echo "ca CP850"	echo "ca_ES CP850"	echo "da CP865"    # not CP850 ??	echo "da_DK CP865" # not CP850 ??	echo "de CP850"	echo "de_AT CP850"	echo "de_CH CP850"	echo "de_DE CP850"	echo "en CP850"	echo "en_AU CP850" # not CP437 ??	echo "en_CA CP850"	echo "en_GB CP850"	echo "en_NZ CP437"	echo "en_US CP437"	echo "en_ZA CP850" # not CP437 ??	echo "es CP850"	echo "es_AR CP850"	echo "es_BO CP850"	echo "es_CL CP850"	echo "es_CO CP850"	echo "es_CR CP850"	echo "es_CU CP850"	echo "es_DO CP850"	echo "es_EC CP850"	echo "es_ES CP850"	echo "es_GT CP850"	echo "es_HN CP850"	echo "es_MX CP850"	echo "es_NI CP850"	echo "es_PA CP850"	echo "es_PY CP850"	echo "es_PE CP850"	echo "es_SV CP850"	echo "es_UY CP850"	echo "es_VE CP850"	echo "et CP850"	echo "et_EE CP850"	echo "eu CP850"	echo "eu_ES CP850"	echo "fi CP850"	echo "fi_FI CP850"	echo "fr CP850"	echo "fr_BE CP850"	echo "fr_CA CP850"	echo "fr_CH CP850"	echo "fr_FR CP850"	echo "ga CP850"	echo "ga_IE CP850"	echo "gd CP850"	echo "gd_GB CP850"	echo "gl CP850"	echo "gl_ES CP850"	echo "id CP850"    # not CP437 ??	echo "id_ID CP850" # not CP437 ??	echo "is CP861"    # not CP850 ??	echo "is_IS CP861" # not CP850 ??	echo "it CP850"	echo "it_CH CP850"	echo "it_IT CP850"	echo "lt CP775"	echo "lt_LT CP775"	echo "lv CP775"	echo "lv_LV CP775"	echo "nb CP865"    # not CP850 ??	echo "nb_NO CP865" # not CP850 ??	echo "nl CP850"	echo "nl_BE CP850"	echo "nl_NL CP850"	echo "nn CP865"    # not CP850 ??	echo "nn_NO CP865" # not CP850 ??	echo "no CP865"    # not CP850 ??	echo "no_NO CP865" # not CP850 ??	echo "pt CP850"	echo "pt_BR CP850"	echo "pt_PT CP850"	echo "sv CP850"	echo "sv_SE CP850"	# ISO-8859-2 languages	echo "cs CP852"	echo "cs_CZ CP852"	echo "hr CP852"	echo "hr_HR CP852"	echo "hu CP852"	echo "hu_HU CP852"	echo "pl CP852"	echo "pl_PL CP852"	echo "ro CP852"	echo "ro_RO CP852"	echo "sk CP852"	echo "sk_SK CP852"	echo "sl CP852"	echo "sl_SI CP852"	echo "sq CP852"	echo "sq_AL CP852"	echo "sr CP852"    # CP852 or CP866 or CP855 ??	echo "sr_CS CP852" # CP852 or CP866 or CP855 ??	echo "sr_YU CP852" # CP852 or CP866 or CP855 ??	# ISO-8859-3 languages	echo "mt CP850"	echo "mt_MT CP850"	# ISO-8859-5 languages	echo "be CP866"	echo "be_BE CP866"	echo "bg CP866"    # not CP855 ??	echo "bg_BG CP866" # not CP855 ??	echo "mk CP866"    # not CP855 ??	echo "mk_MK CP866" # not CP855 ??	echo "ru CP866"	echo "ru_RU CP866"	echo "uk CP1125"	echo "uk_UA CP1125"	# ISO-8859-6 languages	echo "ar CP864"	echo "ar_AE CP864"	echo "ar_DZ CP864"	echo "ar_EG CP864"	echo "ar_IQ CP864"	echo "ar_IR CP864"	echo "ar_JO CP864"	echo "ar_KW CP864"	echo "ar_MA CP864"	echo "ar_OM CP864"	echo "ar_QA CP864"	echo "ar_SA CP864"	echo "ar_SY CP864"	# ISO-8859-7 languages	echo "el CP869"	echo "el_GR CP869"	# ISO-8859-8 languages	echo "he CP862"	echo "he_IL CP862"	# ISO-8859-9 languages	echo "tr CP857"	echo "tr_TR CP857"	# Japanese	echo "ja CP932"	echo "ja_JP CP932"	# Chinese	echo "zh_CN GBK"	echo "zh_TW CP950" # not CP938 ??	# Korean	echo "kr CP949"    # not CP934 ??	echo "kr_KR CP949" # not CP934 ??	# Thai	echo "th CP874"	echo "th_TH CP874"	# Other	echo "eo CP850"	echo "eo_EO CP850"	;;esac
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