The configure script provides the option to install GT.M with or without Unicode® support for encoding international character sets. This section describes the system environment required to install and operate GT.M with Unicode support. Users who handle data in ASCII or other single-byte character sets such as one of the ISO-8859 representations and do not foresee any use of character sets beyond single byte character sets, may proceed to the next section.

A GT.M process can operate in either M mode or UTF-8 mode. In certain circumstances, both M mode and UTF-8 mode may concurrently access the same database.

$gtm_chset determines the mode in which a process operates. If it has a value of M, GT.M treats all 256 combinations of the 8 bits in a byte as a character, which is suitable for many single-language applications.

If $gtm_chset has a value of UTF-8, GT.M (at process startup) interprets strings as being encoded in UTF-8. In this mode, all functionality related to Unicode® support becomes available and standard string-oriented operations operate with UTF-8 encoding. In this mode, GT.M detects character boundaries (since the size of a character is variable length), calculates glyph display width, and performs string conversion between UTF-8 and UTF-16.

If you install GT.M with Unicode support, all GT.M components related to M mode reside in your GT.M distribution directory and Unicode support related components reside in the utf8 subdirectory of your GT.M distribution. For processes in UTF-8 mode, in addition to gtm_chset, ensure that $gtm_dist points to the utf8 subdirectory, that $gtmroutines includes the utf8 subdirectory (or the libgtmutil.so therein) rather than its parent directory.

In addition to $gtm_chset, GT.M V5.3-004 and up use $gtm_icu_version to choose an ICU library library version other than the default. For ICU libraries built with symbol renaming enabled, $gtm_icu_version becomes a required setting.

$gtm_icu_version specifies the ICU version that GT.M should use for UTF-8 operations. It is in the form of MajorVersion.MinorVersion where MajorVersion and MinorVersion specify the desired Major verion and Minor version of ICU. For example, 3.6 refers to ICU version 3.6. If $gtm_icu_version is defined, GT.M works regardless of whether or not symbols are renamed in ICU. If $gtm_icu_version is not defined or does not evaluate to an installed ICU version, GT.M look for non-renamed symbols in the default ICU version. Note that display widths for a few characters are different starting in ICU 4.0.

GT.M versions V5.2-000 to V5.3-003 required ICU 3.6 libraries. These versions did not use $gtm_icu_version. The following table lists GT.M versions and their compatibility with the operating system provided ICU libraries.

Operating System

Supported GT.M Versions

Compatibility with OS provided ICU libraries

Define $gtm_icu_version?

AIX 7

GT.M V5.4-001 and up

GT.M can use the AIX provided ICU libraries which are compiled without symbol renaming.

N

AIX 6

GT.M V5.3-004 until GT.M V6.2-002A

GT.M cannot use the AIX provided ICU libraries. Please build and install an appropriate ICU version and define the gtm_icu_version environment variable accordingly.

Y

GT.M V6.3-000 and up

GT.M can use the AIX provided ICU libraries which are compiled without symbol renaming.

N

Linux (RHEL 6+, SLES 11+, Ubuntu 12.04+)

GT.M V5.3-004 to GT.M V5.4-001

GT.M can use the Linux distribution provided ICU libraries from ICU 3.6 until ICU 4.2. These libraries are compiled with symbol renaming.

Y

GT.M V5.4-002 and up

GT.M can use the Linux distribution provided ICU libraries. These libraries are compiled with symbol renaming.

Y

[Note]Note

The gtmprofile script defines $gtm_icu_version as necessary.

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