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Re: Passing unicode filenames to start-process on Windows?


From: Klaus-Dieter Bauer
Subject: Re: Passing unicode filenames to start-process on Windows?
Date: Fri, 8 Jan 2016 21:01:23 +0100



2016-01-08 10:17 GMT+01:00 Eli Zaretskii <address@hidden>:
> From: Klaus-Dieter Bauer <address@hidden>
> Date: Fri, 8 Jan 2016 00:31:38 +0100
> Cc: address@hidden
>
> - I want at some point to write an incremental backup utility
> that uses md5sum to identify renamed files. Since precompiled
> Windows binaries are 32bit, only the first 512MB of any given
> file are accessible to elisp however, so I wanted to use
> GnuWin32's md5sum.exe (but it turns out that it doesn't
> support unicode filenames anyway).

Emacs 25 can be built --with-wide-int, in which case the 512MB limit
goes up to almost 2GB.  I believe the precomiled binaries of the next
version will use this configure-time option.  So maybe this is still a
relevant alternative for you.

> - I want to verify a convention where filenames should mirror
> the metadata in my music library. Here I intended to write
> an elisp tool (for easy interactive processing im Emacs)
> and tried to use ffmpeg (which does support unicode filenames
> in cmd.exe).

You could have Emacs write a batch file that invokes ffmpeg with those
Unicode file names (encoded in UTF-16, of course, not UTF-8!), and
then run the batch file as the sub-process.  Will that work for you?

​It will, though I'll probably stick with the pipe version
where it's possible. It is the more portable solution (in 
case that I use the script on a linux system). 
 

> I checked and both tools allow reading the input data from
> a pipe (`type UNICODE.mp3 | ffmpeg -i - ...` or `md5sum`
> respectively), so that workaround is applicable to all my usecases.

Yes, that's another possibility.


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