On Mon, Apr 02, 2007 at 07:44:13PM +0800, Antonino A. Daplas wrote: > > Is it OK to do that? I recall when I was originally looking at the code > > I didn't want to just remove that line, because it looked like that was > > being used to first initialise the vc* structure when it is created, as > > well as reset it every time. Doesn't this leave vc->vc_utf uninitialised > > when a new VC is allocated? > > That's true. We can move the line vc->vc_utf = 0; in vc_init() > instead. ... > @@ -2590,6 +2589,7 @@ static void vc_init(struct vc_data *vc, > vc->vc_rows = rows; > vc->vc_size_row = cols << 1; > vc->vc_screenbuf_size = vc->vc_rows * vc->vc_size_row; > + vc->vc_utf = 0; > > set_origin(vc); > vc->vc_pos = vc->vc_origin; While we're on that subject, did you take a look at my original mail? The intent with that patch was to allow system policy to state all new VCs are UTF-8-enabled by default. I feel that in 2007 this should be the default setting. Would it therefore be possible to have vc->vc_utf = some_default; where some_default comes maybe from a sysctl or some other configurable source? Or maybe even have a compiletime option? This would get around many bugs. For example, on boot, "unicode_start" can only set utf8 mode on the existing VCs 1 to 6. If X11 fails to start, debian nicely runs me the XKeepsCrashing program, which offers to show me logs and the like. It reads the locale, en_GB.UTF-8 and determines we're in UTF-8 mode, so outputs Unicode linedrawing characters for dialogs. Unfortunately, we're on VC7 which doesn't have UTF-8 mode turned on, so much mess results. It would be nice if the kernel's default UTF-8 mode for new VCs could be synched to whatever local policy was regarding locale. -- Paul "LeoNerd" Evans leonerd@leonerd.org.uk ICQ# 4135350 | Registered Linux# 179460 http://www.leonerd.org.uk/