diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'lib')
-rw-r--r-- | lib/asn1/doc/src/asn1_ug.xml | 90 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | lib/asn1/doc/src/asn1ct.xml | 25 |
2 files changed, 64 insertions, 51 deletions
diff --git a/lib/asn1/doc/src/asn1_ug.xml b/lib/asn1/doc/src/asn1_ug.xml index 74c4aa9948..eb9f000e75 100644 --- a/lib/asn1/doc/src/asn1_ug.xml +++ b/lib/asn1/doc/src/asn1_ug.xml @@ -653,7 +653,7 @@ Day1 = saturday, Bits1 ::= BIT STRING Bits2 ::= BIT STRING {foo(0),bar(1),gnu(2),gnome(3),punk(14)} </pre> - <p>There are five different notations available for representation of + <p>There are two notations available for representation of BIT STRING values in Erlang and as input to the encode functions.</p> <list type="ordered"> <item>A bitstring. By default, a BIT STRING with no @@ -661,43 +661,10 @@ Bits2 ::= BIT STRING {foo(0),bar(1),gnu(2),gnome(3),punk(14)} <item>A list of atoms corresponding to atoms in the <c>NamedBitList</c> in the BIT STRING definition. A BIT STRING with symbolic names will always be decoded to this format.</item> - <item>A list of binary digits (0 or 1). This format is always - accepted as input to the encode functions. A BIT STRING will - be decoded to this format if <em>legacy_bit_string</em> option - has been given. <em>This format may be withdrawn in a future - release.</em> - </item> - <item>As <c>{Unused,Binary}</c> where <c>Unused</c> denotes how - many trailing zero-bits 0 to 7 that are unused in the least - significant byte in <c>Binary</c>. This format is always - accepted as input to the encode functions. A BIT STRING will - be decoded to this format if <em>compact_bit_string</em> has - been given. <em>This format may be withdrawn in a future - release.</em> - </item> - <item>A hexadecimal number (or an integer). This format should be - avoided, since it is easy to misinterpret a <c>BIT STRING</c> - value in this format. <em>This format may be withdrawn in a future - release.</em> - </item> </list> - <note> - <p>It is recommended to either use the bitstring format (for - BIT STRINGs with no symbolic names) or a list of symbolic - names (for BIT STRINGs with symbolic names). The other formats - should be avoided since they may be withdrawn in a future - release. - </p> - </note> + <p>Example:</p> <pre> Bits1Val1 = <<0:1,1:1,0:1,1:1,1:1>>, -Bits1Val2 = 16#1A, -Bits1Val3 = {3,<<0:1,1:1,0:1,1:1,1:1,0:3>>}, -Bits1Val4 = [0,1,0,1,1] - </pre> - <p>Note that <c>Bits1Val1</c>, <c>Bits1Val2</c>, <c>Bits1Val3</c>, - and <c>Bits1Val1</c> denote the same value.</p> - <pre> Bits2Val1 = [gnu,punk], Bits2Val2 = <<2#1110:4>>, Bits2Val3 = [bar,gnu,gnome], @@ -708,37 +675,60 @@ Bits2Val3 = [bar,gnu,gnome], 2 and 14 are set to 1 and the rest set to 0. The symbolic values appear as a list of values. If a named value appears, which is not specified in the type definition, a run-time error will occur.</p> - <p>The compact notation equivalent to the empty BIT STRING is - <c><![CDATA[{0,<<>>}]]></c>, which in the other notations is - <c><![CDATA[<<>>]]></c>, <c>[]</c>, or - <c>0</c>.</p> <p>BIT STRINGS may also be sub-typed with, for example, a SIZE specification:</p> <pre> Bits3 ::= BIT STRING (SIZE(0..31)) </pre> <p>This means that no bit higher than 31 can ever be set.</p> + + <section> + <title>Deprecated representations for BIT STRING</title> + <p>In addition to the representations described above, the + following deprecated representations are available if the + specification has been compiled with the + <c>legacy_erlang_types</c> option:</p> + <list type="ordered"> + <item>A list of binary digits (0 or 1). This format is + accepted as input to the encode functions, and a BIT STRING + will be decoded to this format if the + <em>legacy_bit_string</em> option has been given. + </item> + <item>As <c>{Unused,Binary}</c> where <c>Unused</c> denotes + how many trailing zero-bits 0 to 7 that are unused in the + least significant byte in <c>Binary</c>. This format is + accepted as input to the encode functions, and a <c>BIT + STRING</c> will be decoded to this format if + <em>compact_bit_string</em> has been given. + </item> + <item>A hexadecimal number (or an integer). This format + should be avoided, since it is easy to misinterpret a BIT + STRING value in this format. + </item> + </list> + </section> </section> <section> <marker id="OCTET STRING"></marker> <title>OCTET STRING</title> - <p>The OCTET STRING is the simplest of all ASN.1 types The OCTET STRING - only moves or transfers e.g. binary files or other unstructured - information complying to two rules. - Firstly, the bytes consist of octets and secondly, encoding is - not required.</p> + <p>The OCTET STRING is the simplest of all ASN.1 types. The + OCTET STRING only moves or transfers e.g. binary files or other + unstructured information complying to two rules. Firstly, the + bytes consist of octets and secondly, encoding is not + required.</p> <p>It is possible to have the following ASN.1 type definitions:</p> <pre> O1 ::= OCTET STRING O2 ::= OCTET STRING (SIZE(28)) </pre> <p>With the following example assignments in Erlang:</p> <pre> -O1Val = [17,13,19,20,0,0,255,254], -O2Val = "must be exactly 28 chars....", </pre> - <p>Observe that <c>O1Val</c> is assigned a series of numbers between 0 - and 255 i.e. octets. - <c>O2Val</c> is assigned using the string notation. - </p> +O1Val = <<17,13,19,20,0,0,255,254>>, +O2Val = <<"must be exactly 28 chars....">>,</pre> + <p>By default, an OCTET STRING is always represented as + an Erlang binary. If the specification has been compiled with + the <c>legacy_erlang_types</c> option, the encode functions + will accept both lists and binaries, and the decode functions + will decode an OCTET STRING to a list.</p> </section> <section> diff --git a/lib/asn1/doc/src/asn1ct.xml b/lib/asn1/doc/src/asn1ct.xml index ada2aace87..5871c8ad68 100644 --- a/lib/asn1/doc/src/asn1ct.xml +++ b/lib/asn1/doc/src/asn1ct.xml @@ -42,6 +42,17 @@ can be used in during development of applications which handles ASN.1 data (encoded as BER or PER).</p> <note> + <p>By default in OTP 17, the representation of the BIT STRING + and OCTET STRING types as Erlang terms have changed. BIT + STRING values are now Erlang bitstrings and OCTET STRING values + are binaries. For details see <seealso + marker="asn1_ug#BIT STRING">BIT STRING</seealso> and <seealso + marker="asn1_ug#OCTET STRING">OCTET STRING</seealso> in User's + Guide.</p> + <p>To revert to the old representation of the types, use the + <c>legacy_erlang_types</c> option.</p> + </note> + <note> <p>In R16, the options have been simplified. The back-end is chosen using one of the options <c>ber</c>, <c>per</c>, or <c>uper</c>. The options <c>optimize</c>, <c>nif</c>, and <c>driver</c> options @@ -64,7 +75,7 @@ <v>Asn1module = atom() | string()</v> <v>Options = [Option| OldOption]</v> <v>Option = ber | per | uper | der | compact_bit_string | - legacy_bit_string | + legacy_bit_string | legacy_erlang_types | noobj | {n2n, EnumTypeName} |{outdir, Dir} | {i, IncludeDir} | asn1config | undec_rest | no_ok_wrapper | {macro_name_prefix, Prefix} | {record_name_prefix, Prefix} | verbose | warnings_as_errors</v> @@ -163,6 +174,7 @@ File3.asn </pre> BIT STRING type section in the Users Guide </seealso>. </p> + <p>This option implies the <c>legacy_erlang_types</c> option.</p> </item> <tag><c>legacy_bit_string</c></tag> <item> @@ -175,8 +187,19 @@ File3.asn </pre> <seealso marker="asn1_ug#BIT STRING"> BIT STRING type section in the Users Guide </seealso>. + <p>This option implies the <c>legacy_erlang_types</c> option.</p> </p> </item> + <tag><c>legacy_erlang_types</c></tag> + <item> + <p>Use the same Erlang types to represent BIT STRING and + OCTET STRING as in R16. For details see <seealso + marker="asn1_ug#BIT STRING">BIT STRING</seealso> and + <seealso marker="asn1_ug#OCTET STRING">OCTET + STRING</seealso> in User's Guide.</p> + <p><em>This option is not recommended for + new code.</em></p> + </item> <tag><c>{n2n, EnumTypeName}</c></tag> <item> <p> |