The /etc/locale.conf
below sets some
environment variables necessary for native language support. Setting
them properly results in:
The output of programs translated into the native language
Correct classification of characters into letters, digits and other classes. This is necessary for bash to properly accept non-ASCII characters in command lines in non-English locales
The correct alphabetical sorting order for the country
Appropriate default paper size
Correct formatting of monetary, time, and date values
Replace <ll>
below
with the two-letter code for the desired language (e.g., “en”) and
<CC>
with the
two-letter code for the appropriate country (e.g., “GB”).
<charmap>
should be
replaced with the canonical charmap for your chosen locale. Optional
modifiers such as “@euro” may also be present.
The list of all locales supported by Glibc can be obtained by running the following command:
locale -a
Charmaps can have a number of aliases, e.g., “ISO-8859-1” is
also referred to as “iso8859-1” and “iso88591”.
Some applications cannot handle the various synonyms correctly (e.g.,
require that “UTF-8” is written as “UTF-8”, not
“utf8”), so it is safest in most cases to
choose the canonical name for a particular locale. To determine the
canonical name, run the following command, where <locale name>
is the output
given by locale -a for
your preferred locale (“en_GB.iso88591” in our example).
LC_ALL=<locale name>
locale charmap
For the “en_GB.iso88591” locale, the above command will print:
ISO-8859-1
This results in a final locale setting of “en_GB.ISO-8859-1”. It is important that the locale found using the heuristic above is tested prior to it being added to the Bash startup files:
LC_ALL=<locale name> locale language LC_ALL=<locale name> locale charmap LC_ALL=<locale name> locale int_curr_symbol LC_ALL=<locale name> locale int_prefix
The above commands should print the language name, the character encoding used by the locale, the local currency, and the prefix to dial before the telephone number in order to get into the country. If any of the commands above fail with a message similar to the one shown below, this means that your locale was either not installed in Chapter 6 or is not supported by the default installation of Glibc.
locale: Cannot set LC_* to default locale: No such file or directory
If this happens, you should either install the desired locale using the localedef command, or consider choosing a different locale. Further instructions assume that there are no such error messages from Glibc.
Some packages beyond LFS may also lack support for your chosen locale. One example is the X library (part of the X Window System), which outputs the following error message if the locale does not exactly match one of the character map names in its internal files:
Warning: locale not supported by Xlib, locale set to C
In several cases Xlib expects that the character map will be listed in uppercase notation with canonical dashes. For instance, "ISO-8859-1" rather than "iso88591". It is also possible to find an appropriate specification by removing the charmap part of the locale specification. This can be checked by running the locale charmap command in both locales. For example, one would have to change "de_DE.ISO-8859-15@euro" to "de_DE@euro" in order to get this locale recognized by Xlib.
Other packages can also function incorrectly (but may not necessarily display any error messages) if the locale name does not meet their expectations. In those cases, investigating how other Linux distributions support your locale might provide some useful information.
Once the proper locale settings have been determined, create the
/etc/locale.conf
file:
cat > /etc/locale.conf << "EOF"
LANG=<ll>_<CC>.<charmap><@modifiers>
EOF
Note that you can modify /etc/locale.conf
with systemd localectl utility. To use
localectl for the
example above, run:
localectl set-locale LANG="<ll>_<CC>.<charmap><@modifiers>
"
You can also specify other language specific environment variables
such as LANG
, LC_CTYPE
, LC_NUMERIC
or any
other environment variable from locale output. Just separate them
with a space. An example where LANG
is set
as en_US.UTF-8 but LC_CTYPE
is set as just
en_US is:
localectl set-locale LANG="en_US.UTF-8" LC_CTYPE="en_US"
Please note that localectl command can be used only on a system booted with systemd.
The “C” (default) and “en_US” (the recommended one for United States English users) locales are different. “C” uses the US-ASCII 7-bit character set, and treats bytes with the high bit set as invalid characters. That's why, e.g., the ls command substitutes them with question marks in that locale. Also, an attempt to send mail with such characters from Mutt or Pine results in non-RFC-conforming messages being sent (the charset in the outgoing mail is indicated as “unknown 8-bit”). So you can use the “C” locale only if you are sure that you will never need 8-bit characters.
UTF-8 based locales are not supported well by many programs. Work is in progress to document and, if possible, fix such problems, see http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/blfs/view/8.0/introduction/locale-issues.html.