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>I think I am having a problem with ASCII to EBCDIC conversions. Here is >what I know: I am storing an encrypted file on the IFS. The file comes >from a vendor and they are running a PC package. The file is encoded in >ASCII. . . What Java methods are you using to read the data? If you are reading in binary, into byte streams, this should be no problem. If you are reading anything involved with encryption using "text" methods (methods that translate to Unicode), and using the default code page, you will probably run into problems. There is no such thing as ASCII in the sense that it is one thing. There are several ASCIIs. It turns out that different JVMs pick different "ASCII" encodings as their default. Whether this is just the encryption key or the data proper may not matter so much. What matters is which characters are present in some relevant stream. What is probably happening is that the PC-based stuff is read and written using (in the US) Microsoft's 1252 code page. On OS/400, you should be using ISO 8859-1 by default. Both are a superset of "US ASCII". These code pages are nearly identical, but not quite identical. Depending on what's going on, therefore, they will not be translated to Unicode in the same manner (if you are so translating them, implicitly or otherwise). Since we're talking encryption, even a single character or two coming out differently can have vast repercussions. Look into "properties". I think (look this up to be sure) you need cp819 for ISO 8859-1 and cp1252 for MS 1252. Something like -Dfile.encoding=cp1252 added to the QSH command line. Or, it might be EBCDIC code pages somehow involved, too. But, my first guess would be a mismatch between the OS/400 default of ISO 8859-1 and Microsoft's MS 1252. Larry W. Loen - Senior Linux, Java, and iSeries Performance Analyst Dept HP4, Rochester MN
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