Re: String encoding during connection "handshake"
Trevor Talbot <quension@gmail.com>
From: "Trevor Talbot" <quension@gmail.com>
To: "sulfinu@gmail.com" <sulfinu@gmail.com>
Cc: pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org
Date: 2007-11-28T18:49:34Z
Lists: pgsql-hackers
On 11/28/07, sulfinu@gmail.com <sulfinu@gmail.com> wrote: > On Wednesday 28 November 2007, Trevor Talbot wrote: > > I'm not entirely sure how that's supposed to solve the client > > authentication issue though. Demanding that clients present auth data > > in UTF-8 is no different than demanding they present it in the > > encoding it was entered in originally... > Oh no, it's a big difference: PREDICTABILITY! > Why must I guess the encoding used by the administrator? What if he's Chinese? > Instead, I know the cluster's encoding, just as I know the server name and > the TCP port. And the connection handshake carries on without > misunderstandings (read wrong encoding). What if the user and client program is Chinese too? Not everything is developed in an environment where UTF-8 support is easily available. Either way, it is a demand on the client, and not necessarily a simple one.