localedef - compile locale definition files
localedef |
[options] outputpath |
localedef |
--add-to-archive [options] compiledpath |
localedef |
--delete-from-archive [options] localename ... |
localedef |
--list-archive [options] |
The localedef program reads the indicated charmap
and input files, compiles them to a binary form quickly usable by the
locale functions in the C library (setlocale(3),
localeconv(3), etc.), and places the output in outputpath.
The outputpath argument is interpreted as follows:
- •
- If outputpath contains a slash character ('/'), it is interpreted
as the name of the directory where the output definitions are to be
stored. In this case, there is a separate output file for each locale
category (LC_TIME, LC_NUMERIC, and so on).
- •
- If the --no-archive option is used, outputpath is the name
of a subdirectory in /usr/lib/locale where per-category compiled
files are placed.
- •
- Otherwise, outputpath is the name of a locale and the compiled
locale data is added to the archive file
/usr/lib/locale/locale-archive. A locale archive is a memory-mapped
file which contains all the system-provided locales; it is used by all
localized programs when the environment variable LOCPATH is not
set.
In any case, localedef aborts if the directory in which it
tries to write locale files has not already been created.
If no charmapfile is given, the value ANSI_X3.4-1968
(for ASCII) is used by default. If no inputfile is given, or if it is
given as a dash (-), localedef reads from standard input.
A few options direct localedef to do something other than
compile locale definitions. Only one of these options should be used at a
time.
- --add-to-archive
- Add the compiledpath directories to the locale archive file. The
directories should have been created by previous runs of localedef,
using --no-archive.
- --delete-from-archive
- Delete the named locales from the locale archive file.
- --list-archive
- List the locales contained in the locale archive file.
Some of the following options are sensible only for certain
operations; generally, it should be self-evident which ones. Notice that
-f and -c are reversed from what you might expect; that is,
-f is not the same as --force.
- -f charmapfile,
--charmap=charmapfile
- Specify the file that defines the character set that is used by the input
file. If charmapfile contains a slash character ('/'), it is
interpreted as the name of the character map. Otherwise, the file is
sought in the current directory and the default directory for character
maps. If the environment variable I18NPATH is set,
$I18NPATH/charmaps/ and $I18NPATH/ are also searched after
the current directory. The default directory for character maps is printed
by localedef --help.
- -i inputfile,
--inputfile=inputfile
- Specify the locale definition file to compile. The file is sought in the
current directory and the default directory for locale definition files.
If the environment variable I18NPATH is set,
$I18NPATH/locales/ and $I18NPATH are also searched after the
current directory. The default directory for locale definition files is
printed by localedef --help.
- -u repertoirefile,
--repertoire-map=repertoirefile
- Read mappings from symbolic names to Unicode code points from
repertoirefile. If repertoirefile contains a slash character
('/'), it is interpreted as the pathname of the repertoire map. Otherwise,
the file is sought in the current directory and the default directory for
repertoire maps. If the environment variable I18NPATH is set,
$I18NPATH/repertoiremaps/ and $I18NPATH are also searched
after the current directory. The default directory for repertoire maps is
printed by localedef --help.
- -A aliasfile,
--alias-file=aliasfile
- Use aliasfile to look up aliases for locale names. There is no
default aliases file.
- --force
- -c
- Write the output files even if warnings were generated about the input
file.
- --verbose
- -v
- Generate extra warnings about errors that are normally ignored.
- --big-endian
- Generate big-endian output.
- --little-endian
- Generate little-endian output.
- --no-archive
- Do not use the locale archive file, instead create outputpath as a
subdirectory in the same directory as the locale archive file, and create
separate output files for locale categories in it. This is helpful to
prevent system locale archive updates from overwriting custom locales
created with localedef.
- --no-hard-links
- Do not create hard links between installed locales.
- --no-warnings=warnings
- Comma-separated list of warnings to disable. Supported warnings are
ascii and intcurrsym.
- --posix
- Conform strictly to POSIX. Implies --verbose. This option currently
has no other effect. POSIX conformance is assumed if the environment
variable POSIXLY_CORRECT is set.
- --prefix=pathname
- Set the prefix to be prepended to the full archive pathname. By default,
the prefix is empty. Setting the prefix to foo, the archive would
be placed in foo/usr/lib/locale/locale-archive.
- --quiet
- Suppress all notifications and warnings, and report only fatal
errors.
- --replace
- Replace a locale in the locale archive file. Without this option, if the
locale is in the archive file already, an error occurs.
- --warnings=warnings
- Comma-separated list of warnings to enable. Supported warnings are
ascii and intcurrsym.
- --help
- -?
- Print a usage summary and exit. Also prints the default paths used by
localedef.
- --usage
- Print a short usage summary and exit.
- --version
- -V
- Print the version number, license, and disclaimer of warranty for
localedef.
One of the following exit values can be returned by
localedef:
- 0
- Command completed successfully.
- 1
- Warnings or errors occurred, output files were written.
- 4
- Errors encountered, no output created.
- POSIXLY_CORRECT
- The --posix flag is assumed if this environment variable is
set.
- I18NPATH
- A colon-separated list of search directories for files.
- /usr/share/i18n/charmaps
- Usual default character map path.
- /usr/share/i18n/locales
- Usual default path for locale definition files.
- /usr/share/i18n/repertoiremaps
- Usual default repertoire map path.
- /usr/lib/locale/locale-archive
- Usual default locale archive location.
- /usr/lib/locale
- Usual default path for compiled individual locale data files.
- outputpath/LC_ADDRESS
- An output file that contains information about formatting of addresses and
geography-related items.
- outputpath/LC_COLLATE
- An output file that contains information about the rules for comparing
strings.
- outputpath/LC_CTYPE
- An output file that contains information about character classes.
- outputpath/LC_IDENTIFICATION
- An output file that contains metadata about the locale.
- outputpath/LC_MEASUREMENT
- An output file that contains information about locale measurements (metric
versus US customary).
- outputpath/LC_MESSAGES/SYS_LC_MESSAGES
- An output file that contains information about the language messages
should be printed in, and what an affirmative or negative answer looks
like.
- outputpath/LC_MONETARY
- An output file that contains information about formatting of monetary
values.
- outputpath/LC_NAME
- An output file that contains information about salutations for
persons.
- outputpath/LC_NUMERIC
- An output file that contains information about formatting of nonmonetary
numeric values.
- outputpath/LC_PAPER
- An output file that contains information about settings related to
standard paper size.
- outputpath/LC_TELEPHONE
- An output file that contains information about formats to be used with
telephone services.
- outputpath/LC_TIME
- An output file that contains information about formatting of data and time
values.
Compile the locale files for Finnish in the UTF-8 character set
and add it to the default locale archive with the name
fi_FI.UTF-8:
localedef -f UTF-8 -i fi_FI fi_FI.UTF-8
The next example does the same thing, but generates files into the
fi_FI.UTF-8 directory which can then be used by programs when the
environment variable LOCPATH is set to the current directory (note
that the last argument must contain a slash):
localedef -f UTF-8 -i fi_FI ./fi_FI.UTF-8
locale(1), charmap(5), locale(5),
repertoiremap(5), locale(7)