Revert "console ASCII glyph 1:1 mapping"

This reverts commit 1c55f18717304100a5f624c923f7cb6511b4116d.

Ingo Brueckl was assuming that reverting to 1:1 mapping for chars >= 128
was not useful, but it happens to be: due to the limitations of the
Linux console, when a blind user wants to read BIG5 on it, he has no
other way than loading a font without SFM and let the 1:1 mapping permit
the screen reader to get the BIG5 encoding.

Signed-off-by: Samuel Thibault <samuel.thibault@ens-lyon.org>
Cc: stable@kernel.org
Signed-off-by: Linus Torvalds <torvalds@linux-foundation.org>

authored by Samuel Thibault and committed by Linus Torvalds c0b79882 42a17ad2

+1 -1
+1 -1
drivers/char/vt.c
··· 2274 continue; /* nothing to display */ 2275 } 2276 /* Glyph not found */ 2277 - if ((!(vc->vc_utf && !vc->vc_disp_ctrl) && c < 128) && !(c & ~charmask)) { 2278 /* In legacy mode use the glyph we get by a 1:1 mapping. 2279 This would make absolutely no sense with Unicode in mind, 2280 but do this for ASCII characters since a font may lack
··· 2274 continue; /* nothing to display */ 2275 } 2276 /* Glyph not found */ 2277 + if ((!(vc->vc_utf && !vc->vc_disp_ctrl) || c < 128) && !(c & ~charmask)) { 2278 /* In legacy mode use the glyph we get by a 1:1 mapping. 2279 This would make absolutely no sense with Unicode in mind, 2280 but do this for ASCII characters since a font may lack