Format
- iconv [–cs] [–M|–T] –f oldset –t newset [file …file …]
- iconv [–cs] [–M|–T] –F [-f oldset] –t newset [file …file …]
- iconv –l [–v]
Description
iconv converts
characters in file (or from standard input
if no file is specified) from one code page set to another. The converted
text is written to standard output (stdout). See z/OS XL C/C++ Programming Guide for
more information about the code sets supported for this command.
If
the input contains a character that is not valid in the source code
set, iconv replaces it with the byte 0xff and
continues, unless the –c option is specified.
If
the input contains a character that is not valid in the destination
code set, behavior depends on the system's iconv() function.
See z/OS XL C/C++ Runtime Library Reference for more information about the character used for converting incorrect
characters.
Also, z/OS XL C/C++ Programming Guide has a list of code pages supported by the z/OS shell.
You
can use iconv to convert single-byte data
or double-byte data.
Options
- –c
- Characters containing conversion errors are not written to the
output. By default, characters not in the source character set are
converted to the value 0xff and written to the output.
- –f oldset
- Specifies the source code set of the input. oldset can
be either the code set name that is known to the system, the numeric
coded character set identifier (CCSID), or a path name to a file containing
an external code set.
- –F
- Uses the input file's coded character set
(as defined in the file tag) as the source code set. If –f is
also specified, and the oldset matches the
file tag or if there is no file tag code set, then oldset is
used as the source code set. If –F and –f are
specified and oldset does not match the
file tag code set, then iconv fails with
an error.
- –l
- Lists supported code sets and CCSIDs. (This option was accepted
in releases prior to V1R3, but was not supported.)
- –M
- Tags a new output file as mixed. The text flag (txtflag) will
be off and the value for code set will be the same as what's specified
on the –t option.
- –s
- Suppresses all error messages about faulty encodings.
- –t newset
- Specifies the destination code set for the output. newset can
be either the code set name that is known to the system, the numeric
coded character set identifier (CCSID), or a path name to a file containing
an external code set.
- –T
- Tag a new output file as text. The txtflag will be on and the
value for code set will be the same as what's specified on the –t option.
- –v
- Specifies verbose output.
For information about file tagging and code
set specifications, see z/OS UNIX System Services Planning.
Examples
- To convert the file words.txt from the IBM-1047 standard
code set to the ISO 8859-1 standard code set and store it in converted:
iconv –f IBM-1047 –t ISO8859-1 words.txt > converted
Also,
for the exact conversion table names, refer to z/OS XL C/C++ Programming Guide.
- To convert the file mbcsdata, which is in code page IBM-932
(double-byte ASCII), to code page IBM-939 and put the output in a
file called dbcsdata:
iconv –f IBM-932 –t IBM-939 mbcsdata > dbcsdata
Localization
iconv uses
the following localization environment variables:
- LANG
- LC_ALL
- LC_CTYPE
- LC_MESSAGES
- NLSPATH
See Localization for more
information.
Exit values
- 0
- Successful completion
- 1
- Failure due to any of the following:
- Insufficient memory
- Inability to open the input file
- Incorrect or unknown option
- 2
- Input contained a character sequence that is not permitted in
the source code set
Portability
X/Open Portability Guide.
–v is
an extension to the POSIX.2 standard.
The –c, –l, and –s options
are extensions to the XPG standard.