+ 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 "ISO8859-15 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"
+ ;;