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Socket’s threat research team has detected six malicious npm packages typosquatting popular libraries to insert SSH backdoors.
Text recoding in JavaScript for fun and profit!
npm install iconv
Note that the npm-ified version of node-iconv only works with node.js >= v0.3.0.
If you are developing against node.js v0.3.0 or later:
git clone git://github.com/bnoordhuis/node-iconv.git
If you are developing against node.js v0.2.x:
git clone -b v0.2.x git://github.com/bnoordhuis/node-iconv.git
v0.2.x support is slowly being phased out but it will receive bug fixes for the foreseeable future.
To compile and install the module, type:
make install NODE_PATH=/path/to/nodejs
NODE_PATH will default to /usr/local
if omitted.
Note that you do not need to have a copy of libiconv installed to use this module.
Encode from one character encoding to another:
// convert from UTF-8 to ISO-8859-1
var Buffer = require('buffer').Buffer;
var Iconv = require('iconv').Iconv;
var assert = require('assert');
var iconv = new Iconv('UTF-8', 'ISO-8859-1');
var buffer = iconv.convert('Hello, world!');
var buffer2 = iconv.convert(new Buffer('Hello, world!'));
assert.equals(buffer.inspect(), buffer2.inspect());
// do something useful with the buffers
Look at test.js for more examples and node-iconv's behaviour under error conditions.
Things to keep in mind when you work with node-iconv.
Say you are reading data in chunks from a HTTP stream. The logical input is a single document (the full POST request data) but the physical input will be spread over several buffers (the request chunks).
You must accumulate the small buffers into a single large buffer before performing the conversion. If you don't, you will get unexpected results with multi-byte and stateful character sets like UTF-8 and ISO-2022-JP.
node-buffertools lets you concatenate buffers painlessly. See the description of buffertools.concat()
for details.
Characters are not always translatable to another encoding. The UTF-8 string "ça va が", for example, cannot be represented in plain 7-bits ASCII without some loss of fidelity.
By default, node-iconv throws EILSEQ when untranslatabe characters are encountered
but this can be customized. Quoting the iconv_open(3)
man page:
//TRANSLIT
When the string "//TRANSLIT" is appended to tocode, transliteration is activated.
This means that when a character cannot be represented in the target character set,
it can be approximated through one or several similarly looking characters.
//IGNORE
When the string "//IGNORE" is appended to tocode, characters that cannot be represented
in the target character set will be silently discarded.
Example usage:
var iconv = new Iconv('UTF-8', 'ASCII');
iconv.convert('ça va'); // throws EILSEQ
var iconv = new Iconv('UTF-8', 'ASCII//IGNORE');
iconv.convert('ça va'); // returns "a va"
var iconv = new Iconv('UTF-8', 'ASCII//TRANSLIT');
iconv.convert('ça va'); // "ca va"
var iconv = new Iconv('UTF-8', 'ASCII//TRANSLIT//IGNORE');
iconv.convert('ça va が'); // "ca va "
EINVAL is raised when the input ends in a partial character sequence. This is a feature, not a bug.
FAQs
Text recoding in JavaScript for fun and profit!
We found that iconv demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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