Kernel utf-8 handling

From: DervishD
Date: Fri Jun 01 2007 - 10:19:10 EST


Hi all :)

I have a do-it-yourself Linux box, and I'm planning to move to UTF8
(currently I'm using es_ES locale, with latin1 encoding). One of my main
concerns (apart from programs with little or no utf8 support, which I
will have to suffer) is kernel handling, because I only use the console;
I only use X and a terminal emulator if I can't avoid it.

This said, I know that the console will give me no problems
regarding character representantion (heck, I'm pretty sure that I will
be able to use even the same font I'm using right now in the console if
I get the proper unicode map), but probably will give me problems when
*entering* characters. I've read that the kernel handles accented chars,
and things like 'ñ' (ntilde) because it assumes that any composed
character (composed using dead keys, for example) is in the latin1
range. While this is not a perfect behaviour, it will work for me.

Will the console work as it works now if I can live with latin1
accented characters only? Is there any terminal emulator *for the
console*, not for X, that handles utf8? Will I be sentenced to X to be
able to use my computer with utf8?

Don't take me bad, I really would love to spend 100MiB of RAM just
to run mutt under xterm, but for the time being I prefer the console to
work even if I must run X...

Thanks a lot! :))

Raúl Núñez de Arenas Coronado

--
Linux Registered User 88736 | http://www.dervishd.net
It's my PC and I'll cry if I want to... RAmen!
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