mariadb-conv
MariaDB starting with 10.5.1
mariadb-conv
is a character set conversion utility for MariaDB and was added in MariaDB 10.5.1.
Usage
mariadb-conv [OPTION...] [FILE...]
Options
mariadb-conv
supports the following options:
Option | Description |
---|---|
-f, --from=name | Specifies the encoding of the input. |
-t, --to=name | Specifies the encoding of the output. |
-c, --continue | Silently ignore conversion errors. |
--delimiter=name | Treat the specified characters as delimiters. |
By default, mariadb-conv
exits whenever it encounters any conversion problems, for example:
- the input byte sequence is not valid in the source character set
- the character cannot be converted to the target character set
The -c
option makes mariadb-conv
ignore such errors and use the question mark '?' to replace bytes in bad input sequences, or unconvertable characters.
The --delimiter=...
option makes mariadb-conv
treat the specified characters as delimiters rather than data to convert, so the input is treated as a combination of:
- data chunks, which are converted according to the
-f
and-t
options. - delimiters, which are not converted and are copied from the input to the output as is.
Examples
Converts the file file.latin1.txt
from latin1
to utf8
.
mariadb-conv -f latin1 -t utf8 file.latin1.txt
Convert the file file.latin1.txt
from latin1
to utf8
, reading the input data from stdin.
mariadb-conv -f latin1 -t utf8 < file.latin1.txt
Using mariadb-conv in a pipe:
echo test | ./mariadb-conv -f utf8 -t ucs2 >file.ucs2.txt
As a side effect, mariadb-conv can be used to list MariaDB data directories in a human readable form. Suppose you create the following tables:
SET NAMES utf8; CREATE OR REPLACE TABLE t1 (a INT); CREATE OR REPLACE TABLE ß (a INT); CREATE OR REPLACE TABLE абв (a INT); CREATE OR REPLACE TABLE 桌子 (a INT);
The above makes the server create the following files in the MariaDB data directory:
@1j.frm @1j.ibd @684c@5b50.frm @684c@5b50.ibd @g0@h0@i0.frm @g0@h0@i0.ibd t1.frm t1.ibd
It's not precisely clear which file stores which table, because MariaDB uses a special table-name-to-file-name encoding.
This command on Linux (assuming an utf-8 console) can print the table list in a readable way::
ls | mariadb-conv -f filename -t utf8 --delimiter=".\n" ß.frm ß.ibd 桌子.frm 桌子.ibd абв.frm абв.ibd t1.frm t1.ibd
Note, the --delimiter=".\n"
option is needed to make mariadb-conv
treat the dot character (delimiting the encoded table name from the file extension) and the new line character (delimiting separate lines) as delimiters rather than as the data to convert (otherwise the conversion would fail).
Windows users can use the following command to list the data directory in the ANSI text console:
dir /b | mariadb-conv -c -f filename -t cp850 --delimiter=".\r\n"
Note:
- The
-t
options assume a Western machine. - The
-c
option is needed to ignore conversion errors for Cyrillic and CJK characters. --delimiter=
additionally needs the carriage return character \r