packages/lang/python/pyodbc/patches/100-connection-assume-SQL_C_WCHAR-is-native-endian.patch

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--- a/src/connection.cpp
+++ b/src/connection.cpp
@@ -90,7 +90,7 @@ static bool Connect(PyObject* pConnectSt
// indication that we can handle Unicode. We are going to use the same unicode ending
// as we do for binding parameters.
- SQLWChar wchar(pConnectString, SQL_C_WCHAR, encoding, "utf-16le");
+ SQLWChar wchar(pConnectString, SQL_C_WCHAR, encoding, "utf-16");
if (!wchar)
return false;
@@ -216,24 +216,24 @@ PyObject* Connection_New(PyObject* pConn
// single-byte text we don't actually know what the encoding is. For example, with SQL
// Server the encoding is based on the database's collation. We ask the driver / DB to
// convert to SQL_C_WCHAR and use the ODBC default of UTF-16LE.
- cnxn->sqlchar_enc.optenc = OPTENC_UTF16LE;
- cnxn->sqlchar_enc.name = _strdup("utf-16le");
+ cnxn->sqlchar_enc.optenc = OPTENC_UTF16;
+ cnxn->sqlchar_enc.name = _strdup("utf-16");
cnxn->sqlchar_enc.ctype = SQL_C_WCHAR;
- cnxn->sqlwchar_enc.optenc = OPTENC_UTF16LE;
- cnxn->sqlwchar_enc.name = _strdup("utf-16le");
+ cnxn->sqlwchar_enc.optenc = OPTENC_UTF16;
+ cnxn->sqlwchar_enc.name = _strdup("utf-16");
cnxn->sqlwchar_enc.ctype = SQL_C_WCHAR;
- cnxn->metadata_enc.optenc = OPTENC_UTF16LE;
- cnxn->metadata_enc.name = _strdup("utf-16le");
+ cnxn->metadata_enc.optenc = OPTENC_UTF16;
+ cnxn->metadata_enc.name = _strdup("utf-16");
cnxn->metadata_enc.ctype = SQL_C_WCHAR;
// Note: I attempted to use UTF-8 here too since it can hold any type, but SQL Server fails
// with a data truncation error if we send something encoded in 2 bytes to a column with 1
// character. I don't know if this is a bug in SQL Server's driver or if I'm missing
// something, so we'll stay with the default ODBC conversions.
- cnxn->unicode_enc.optenc = OPTENC_UTF16LE;
- cnxn->unicode_enc.name = _strdup("utf-16le");
+ cnxn->unicode_enc.optenc = OPTENC_UTF16;
+ cnxn->unicode_enc.name = _strdup("utf-16");
cnxn->unicode_enc.ctype = SQL_C_WCHAR;
#if PY_MAJOR_VERSION < 3