/* * Copyright 2002-2016 Drew Noakes * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. * * More information about this project is available at: * * https://drewnoakes.com/code/exif/ * https://github.com/drewnoakes/metadata-extractor */ package com.drew.metadata.iptc; import com.drew.lang.annotations.NotNull; import com.drew.lang.annotations.Nullable; import java.nio.ByteBuffer; import java.nio.charset.CharacterCodingException; import java.nio.charset.Charset; import java.nio.charset.CharsetDecoder; public final class Iso2022Converter { private static final String ISO_8859_1 = "ISO-8859-1"; private static final String UTF_8 = "UTF-8"; private static final byte LATIN_CAPITAL_A = 0x41; private static final int DOT = 0xe280a2; private static final byte LATIN_CAPITAL_G = 0x47; private static final byte PERCENT_SIGN = 0x25; private static final byte ESC = 0x1B; /** * Converts the given ISO2022 char set to a Java charset name. * * @param bytes string data encoded using ISO2022 * @return the Java charset name as a string, or <code>null</code> if the conversion was not possible */ @Nullable public static String convertISO2022CharsetToJavaCharset(@NotNull final byte[] bytes) { if (bytes.length > 2 && bytes[0] == ESC && bytes[1] == PERCENT_SIGN && bytes[2] == LATIN_CAPITAL_G) return UTF_8; if (bytes.length > 3 && bytes[0] == ESC && (bytes[3] & 0xFF | ((bytes[2] & 0xFF) << 8) | ((bytes[1] & 0xFF) << 16)) == DOT && bytes[4] == LATIN_CAPITAL_A) return ISO_8859_1; return null; } /** * Attempts to guess the encoding of a string provided as a byte array. * <p> * Encodings trialled are, in order: * <ul> * <li>UTF-8</li> * <li><code>System.getProperty("file.encoding")</code></li> * <li>ISO-8859-1</li> * </ul> * <p> * Its only purpose is to guess the encoding if and only if iptc tag coded character set is not set. If the * encoding is not UTF-8, the tag should be set. Otherwise it is bad practice. This method tries to * workaround this issue since some metadata manipulating tools do not prevent such bad practice. * <p> * About the reliability of this method: The check if some bytes are UTF-8 or not has a very high reliability. * The two other checks are less reliable. * * @param bytes some text as bytes * @return the name of the encoding or null if none could be guessed */ @Nullable static String guessEncoding(@NotNull final byte[] bytes) { String[] encodings = { UTF_8, System.getProperty("file.encoding"), ISO_8859_1 }; for (String encoding : encodings) { CharsetDecoder cs = Charset.forName(encoding).newDecoder(); try { cs.decode(ByteBuffer.wrap(bytes)); return encoding; } catch (CharacterCodingException e) { // fall through... } } // No encodings succeeded. Return null. return null; } private Iso2022Converter() {} }