9.3. Adding a New Character Set

This section discusses the procedure for adding a new character set to MySQL. You must have a MySQL source distribution to use these instructions. The proper procedure depends on whether the character set is simple or complex:

  • If the character set does not need to use special string collating routines for sorting and does not need multi-byte character support, it is simple.

  • If the character set needs either of those features, it is complex.

For example, greek and swe7 are simple character sets, whereas big5 and czech are complex character sets.

In the following instructions, MYSET represents the name of the character set that you want to add.

  1. Add a <charset> element for MYSET to the sql/share/charsets/Index.xml file. Use the existing contents in the file as a guide to adding new contents.

    The <charset> element must list all the collations for the character set. These must include at least a binary collation and a default collation. The default collation is usually named using a suffix of general_ci (general, case insensitive). It is possible for the binary collation to be the default collation, but usually they are different. The default collation should have a primary flag. The binary collation should have a binary flag.

    You must assign a unique ID number to each collation. The range of IDs from 1024 to 2047 is reserved for user-defined collations. Before MySQL 5.5, the ID must be chosen from the range 1 to 254. To find the maximum of the currently used collation IDs, use this query:

    SELECT MAX(ID) FROM INFORMATION_SCHEMA.COLLATIONS;
    
  2. This step depends on whether you are adding a simple or complex character set. A simple character set requires only a configuration file, whereas a complex character set requires C source file that defines collation functions, multi-byte functions, or both.

    For a simple character set, create a configuration file, MYSET.xml, that describes the character set properties. Create this file in the sql/share/charsets directory. (You can use a copy of latin1.xml as the basis for this file.) The syntax for the file is very simple:

    • Comments are written as ordinary XML comments (<!-- text -->).

    • Words within <map> array elements are separated by arbitrary amounts of whitespace.

    • Each word within <map> array elements must be a number in hexadecimal format.

    • The <map> array element for the <ctype> element has 257 words. The other <map> array elements after that have 256 words. See Section 9.3.1, “The Character Definition Arrays”.

    • For each collation listed in the <charset> element for the character set in Index.xml, MYSET.xml must contain a <collation> element that defines the character ordering.

    For a complex character set, create a C source file that describes the character set properties and defines the support routines necessary to properly perform operations on the character set:

    1. Create the file ctype-MYSET.c in the strings directory. Look at one of the existing ctype-*.c files (such as ctype-big5.c) to see what needs to be defined. The arrays in your file must have names like ctype_MYSET, to_lower_MYSET, and so on. These correspond to the arrays for a simple character set. See Section 9.3.1, “The Character Definition Arrays”.

    2. For each collation listed in the <charset> element for the character set in Index.xml, the ctype-MYSET.c file must provide an implementation of the collation.

    3. If you need string collating functions, see Section 9.3.2, “String Collating Support”.

    4. If you need multi-byte character support, see Section 9.3.3, “Multi-Byte Character Support”.

  3. Follow these steps to modify the configuration information. Use the existing configuration information as a guide to adding information for MYSYS. The example here assumes that the character set has default and binary collations, but more lines will be needed if MYSET has additional collations.

    1. Edit mysys/charset-def.c, and “register” the collations for the new character set.

      Add these lines to the “declaration” section:

      #ifdef HAVE_CHARSET_MYSET
      extern CHARSET_INFO my_charset_MYSET_general_ci;
      extern CHARSET_INFO my_charset_MYSET_bin;
      #endif
      

      Add these lines to the “registration” section:

      #ifdef HAVE_CHARSET_MYSET
        add_compiled_collation(&my_charset_MYSET_general_ci);
        add_compiled_collation(&my_charset_MYSET_bin);
      #endif
      
    2. If the character set uses ctype-MYSET.c, edit strings/Makefile.am and add ctype-MYSET.c to each definition of the CSRCS variable, and to the EXTRA_DIST variable.

    3. If the character set uses ctype-MYSET.c, edit libmysql/Makefile.shared and add ctype-MYSET.lo to the mystringsobjects definition.

    4. Edit cmake/character_sets.cmake:

      1. Add MYSET to the value of with CHARSETS_AVAILABLE in alphabetic order.

      2. Add MYSET to the value of CHARSETS_COMPLEX in alphabetic order. This is needed even for simple character sets, or CMake will not recognize -DDEFAULT_CHARSET=MYSET.

  4. Reconfigure, recompile, and test.

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