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Fonts in X11R&relvers;
X Version 11, Release &fullrelvers;
JuliuszChroboczek
jch@@freedesktop.org
16 March 2012
Introduction
This document describes the support for fonts in X11R&relvers;.
is aimed at the
casual user wishing to install fonts in X11R&relvers; the rest of the
document describes the font support in more detail.
We assume some familiarity with digital fonts. If anything is not
clear to you, please consult at the
end of this document for background information.
Two font systems
X11 includes two font systems: the original core X11 fonts
system, which is present in all implementations of X11, and the Xft
fonts system, which may not yet be distributed with implementations of
X11 that are not based on either XFree86 or X11R6.8 or later.
The core X11 fonts system is directly derived from the fonts system
included with X11R1 in 1987, which could only use monochrome bitmap
fonts. Over the years, it has been more or less happily coerced into
dealing with scalable fonts and rotated glyphs.
Xft was designed from the start to provide good support for scalable
fonts, and to do so efficiently. Unlike the core fonts system, it
supports features such as anti-aliasing and sub-pixel rasterisation.
Perhaps more importantly, it gives applications full control over the
way glyphs are rendered, making fine typesetting and WYSIWIG display
possible. Finally, it allows applications to use fonts that are not
installed system-wide for displaying documents with embedded fonts.
Xft is not compatible with the core fonts system: usage of Xft
requires fairly extensive changes to toolkits (user-interface
libraries). While X.Org will continue to maintain the core fonts
system, toolkit authors are encouraged to switch to Xft as soon as
possible.
Installing fonts
This section explains how to configure both Xft and the core fonts
system to access newly-installed fonts.
Configuring Xft
Xft has no configuration mechanism itself, it relies upon the
fontconfig
library to configure and customise fonts. That library is
not specific to the X Window system, and does not rely on any
particular font output mechanism.
Installing fonts in Xft
Fontconfig looks for fonts in a set of well-known directories that
include all of X11R&relvers;'s standard font directories
(/usr/share/fonts/X11/*
) by default) as well as a
directory called .fonts/
in the user's home directory.
Installing a font for use by Xft applications is as simple
as copying a font file into one of these directories.
$ cp lucbr.ttf ~/.fonts/
Fontconfig will notice the new font at the next opportunity and rebuild its
list of fonts. If you want to trigger this update from the command
line, you may run the command fc-cache
.
$ fc-cache
In order to globally update the system-wide Fontconfig information on
Unix systems, you will typically need to run this command as root:
$ su -c fc-cache
Fine-tuning Xft
Fontconfig's behaviour is controlled by a set of configuration
files: a standard configuration file, /etc/fonts/fonts.conf
,
a host-specific configuration file, /etc/fonts/local.conf
,
and a user-specific file called .fonts.conf
in the user's
home directory (this can be overridden with the
FONTCONFIG_FILE
environment variable).
Every Fontconfig configuration file must start with the following
boilerplate:
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<!DOCTYPE fontconfig SYSTEM "fonts.dtd">
<fontconfig>
In addition, every Fontconfig configuration file must end with the
following line:
</fontconfig>
The default Fontconfig configuration file includes the directory
˜/.fonts/
in the list of directories searched for font
files, and this is where user-specific font files should be installed.
In the unlikely case that a new font directory needs to be added, this
can be done with the following syntax:
<dir>/usr/local/share/fonts/</dir>
Another useful option is the ability to disable anti-aliasing (font
smoothing) for selected fonts. This can be done with the following
syntax:
<match target="font">
<test qual="any" name="family">
<string>Lucida Console</string>
</test>
<edit name="antialias" mode="assign">
<bool>false</bool>
</edit>
</match>
Anti-aliasing can be disabled for all fonts by the following incantation:
<match target="font">
<edit name="antialias" mode="assign">
<bool>false</bool>
</edit>
</match>
Xft supports sub-pixel rasterisation on LCD displays. X11R&relvers; should
automatically enable this feature on laptops and when using an LCD
monitor connected with a DVI cable; you can check whether this was
done by typing
$ xdpyinfo -ext RENDER | grep sub-pixel
If this doesn't print anything, you will need to configure Render for
your particular LCD hardware manually; this is done with the following
syntax:
<match target="font">
<edit name="rgba" mode="assign">
<const>rgb</const>
</edit>
</match>
The string rgb
within the
<const>
...</const>
specifies the order of pixel components on your display, and should be
changed to match your hardware; it can be one of rgb
(normal
LCD screen), bgr
(backwards LCD screen), vrgb
(LCD
screen rotated clockwise) or vbgr
(LCD screen rotated
counterclockwise).
Configuring applications
A growing number of applications use Xft in preference to the core
fonts system. Some applications, however, need to be explicitly
configured to use Xft.
A case in point is XTerm, which can be set to use Xft by using the
-fa
command line option or by setting the XTerm*faceName
resource:
XTerm*faceName: Courier
or
$ xterm -fa "Courier"
For KDE applications, you should select Anti-alias fonts
in the
Fonts
panel of KDE's Control Center
. Note that this option is
misnamed: it switches KDE to using Xft but doesn't enable
anti-aliasing in case it was disabled by your Xft configuration file.
Gnome applications and Mozilla Firefox will use Xft by default.
Configuring the core X11 fonts system
Installing fonts in the core system is a two step process. First,
you need to create a font directory that contains all the
relevant font files as well as some index files. You then need to
inform the X server of the existence of this new directory by
including it in the font path.
Installing bitmap fonts
The X11R&relvers; server can use bitmap fonts in both the cross-platform
BDF format and the somewhat more efficient binary PCF format.
(X11R&relvers; also supports the obsolete SNF format.)
Bitmap fonts are normally distributed in the BDF format. Before
installing such fonts, it is desirable (but not absolutely necessary)
to convert the font files to the PCF format. This is done by using the
command bdftopcf
, e.g.
$ bdftopcf courier12.bdf
You may then want to compress the resulting PCF font files:
$ gzip courier12.pcf
After the fonts have been converted, you should copy all the font
files that you wish to make available into a arbitrary directory, say
/usr/local/share/fonts/bitmap/
. You should then create the
index file fonts.dir
by running the command mkfontdir
(please see the mkfontdir(1)
manual page for more information):
$ mkdir /usr/local/share/fonts/bitmap/
$ cp *.pcf.gz /usr/local/share/fonts/bitmap/
$ mkfontdir /usr/local/share/fonts/bitmap/
All that remains is to tell the X server about the existence of the
new font directory; see below.
Installing scalable fonts
The X11R&relvers; server supports scalable fonts in multiple
formats, including Type 1, TrueType, and OpenType/CFF.
(Earlier versions of X11 also included support for the Speedo and
CID scalable font formats, but that is not included in current releases.)
Installing scalable fonts is very similar to installing bitmap fonts:
you create a directory with the font files, and run mkfontdir
to create an index file called fonts.dir
.
There is, however, a big difference: mkfontdir
cannot
automatically recognise scalable font files. For that reason, you
must first index all the font files in a file called
fonts.scale
. While this can be done by hand, it is best done
by using the mkfontscale
utility.
$ mkfontscale /usr/local/share/fonts/Type1/
$ mkfontdir /usr/local/share/fonts/Type1/
Under some circumstances, it may be necessary to modify the
fonts.scale
file generated by mkfontscale; for more
information, please see the mkfontdir(1) and mkfontscale(1) manual pages and
later in this document.
CID-keyed fonts
The CID-keyed font format was designed by Adobe Systems for fonts
with large character sets. The CID-keyed format is obsolete, as it
has been superseded by other formats such as OpenType/CFF and
support for CID-keyed fonts has been removed from X11.
Setting the server's font path
The list of directories where the server looks for fonts is known
as the font path. Informing the server of the existence of a new
font directory consists of putting it on the font path.
The font path is an ordered list; if a client's request matches
multiple fonts, the first one in the font path is the one that gets
used. When matching fonts, the server makes two passes over the font
path: during the first pass, it searches for an exact match; during
the second, it searches for fonts suitable for scaling.
For best results, scalable fonts should appear in the font path before
the bitmap fonts; this way, the server will prefer bitmap fonts to
scalable fonts when an exact match is possible, but will avoid scaling
bitmap fonts when a scalable font can be used. (The :unscaled
hack, while still supported, should no longer be necessary in X11R&relvers;.)
You may check the font path of the running server by typing the command
$ xset q
Font path catalogue directories
You can specify a special kind of font path directory in the form
catalogue:<dir>.
The directory specified after the catalogue:
prefix will be scanned for symlinks and each symlink destination will be
added as a local font path entry.
The symlink can be suffixed by attributes such as
'unscaled', which will be passed through
to the underlying font path entry. The only exception is the newly
introduced 'pri' attribute, which will be
used for ordering the font paths specified by the symlinks.
An example configuration:
75dpi:unscaled:pri=20 -> /usr/share/X11/fonts/75dpi
ghostscript:pri=60 -> /usr/share/fonts/default/ghostscript
misc:unscaled:pri=10 -> /usr/share/X11/fonts/misc
type1:pri=40 -> /usr/share/X11/fonts/Type1
type1:pri=50 -> /usr/share/fonts/default/Type1
This will add /usr/share/X11/fonts/misc as the
first font path entry with the attribute
unscaled. This is functionally equivalent to
setting the following font path:
/usr/share/X11/fonts/misc:unscaled,
/usr/share/X11/fonts/75dpi:unscaled,
/usr/share/X11/fonts/Type1,
/usr/share/fonts/default/Type1,
/usr/share/fonts/default/ghostscript
Temporary modification of the font path
The xset
utility may be used to modify the font path for the
current session. The font path is set with the command xset fp;
a new element is added to the front with xset +fp, and added to
the end with xset fp+. For example,
$ xset +fp /usr/local/fonts/Type1
$ xset fp+ /usr/local/fonts/bitmap
Conversely, an element may be removed from the front of the font path
with xset -fp
, and removed from the end with xset fp-
.
You may reset the font path to its default value with
xset fp default
.
For more information, please consult the xset(1) manual page.
Permanent modification of the font path
The default font path (the one used just after server startup or
after xset fp default
) may be specified in the
X server's
xorg.conf
file. It is computed by appending all the
directories mentioned in the FontPath
entries of the
Files
section in the order in which they appear. If no font path is specified in a config file, the server uses a default
value specified when it was built.
FontPath "/usr/local/fonts/Type1"
...
FontPath "/usr/local/fonts/bitmap"
For more information, please consult the xorg.conf(5) manual page.
Troubleshooting
If you seem to be unable to use some of the fonts you have
installed, the first thing to check is that the fonts.dir
files
are correct and that they are readable by the server (the X server
usually runs as root, beware of NFS-mounted font directories). If
this doesn't help, it is quite possible that you are trying to use a
font in a format that is not supported by your server.
X11R&relvers; supports the BDF, PCF, SNF, Type 1, TrueType, and OpenType
font formats. However, not all X11R&relvers; servers
come with all the font backends configured in.
On most platforms, the X11R&relvers; servers no longer uses font
backends from modules that are loaded at runtime. The built in
font support corresponds to the functionality formerly provided by
these modules:
"bitmap":
bitmap fonts (*.bdf
,
*.pcf
and *.snf
);
"freetype":
TrueType fonts (*.ttf
and
*.ttc
),
OpenType fonts (*.otf
and
*.otc
) and
Type 1 fonts (*.pfa
and *.pfb
).
Fonts included with X11R&relvers;
Standard bitmap fonts
The Sample Implementation of X11 (SI) comes with a large number of
bitmap fonts, including the fixed
family, and bitmap versions
of Courier, Times, Helvetica and some members of the Lucida family.
In X11R&relvers;, a number of these fonts are provided in Unicode-encoded
font files now. At build time, these fonts are split into font
files encoded according to legacy encodings, a process which allows
us to provide the standard fonts in a number of regional encodings
with no duplication of work.
For example, the font file
/usr/share/fonts/X11/misc/6x13.bdf
with XLFD
-misc-fixed-medium-r-semicondensed--13-120-75-75-c-60-iso10646-1
is a Unicode-encoded version of the standard fixed
font with
added support for the Latin, Greek, Cyrillic, Georgian, Armenian, IPA
and other scripts plus numerous technical symbols. It contains over
2800 glyphs, covering all characters of ISO 8859 parts 1-5,
7-10, 13-15, as well as all European IBM and Microsoft code pages,
KOI8, WGL4, and the repertoires of many other character sets.
This font is used at build time for generating the font files
6x13-ISO8859-1.bdf
6x13-ISO8859-2.bdf
...
6x13-ISO8859-15.bdf
6x13-KOI8-R.bdf
with respective XLFDs
-misc-fixed-medium-r-normal--13-120-75-75-c-60-iso8859-1
...
-misc-fixed-medium-r-normal--13-120-75-75-c-60-iso8859-15
-misc-fixed-medium-r-normal--13-120-75-75-c-60-koi8-r
The standard short name fixed
is normally an alias for
-misc-fixed-medium-r-normal--13-120-75-75-c-60-iso8859-1
The ClearlyU Unicode font family
The ClearlyU family of fonts provides a set of 12 pt,
100 dpi proportional fonts with many of the glyphs needed for
Unicode text. Together, the fonts contain approximately 7500 glyphs.
The main ClearlyU font has the XLFD
-mutt-clearlyu-medium-r-normal--17-120-100-100-p-101-iso10646-1
and resides in the font file
/usr/share/fonts/X11/misc/cu12.pcf.gz
Additional ClearlyU fonts include
-mutt-clearlyu alternate glyphs-medium-r-normal--17-120-100-100-p-91-iso10646-1
-mutt-clearlyu pua-medium-r-normal--17-120-100-100-p-111-iso10646-1
-mutt-clearlyu arabic extra-medium-r-normal--17-120-100-100-p-103-fontspecific-0
-mutt-clearlyu ligature-medium-r-normal--17-120-100-100-p-141-fontspecific-0
The Alternate Glyphs font contains additional glyph shapes that
are needed for certain languages. A second alternate glyph font will
be provided later for cases where a character has more than one
commonly used alternate shape (e.g. the Urdu heh).
The PUA font contains extra glyphs that are useful for certain
rendering purposes.
The Arabic Extra font contains the glyphs necessary for
characters that don't have all of their possible shapes encoded in
ISO 10646. The glyphs are roughly ordered according to the order
of the characters in the ISO 10646 standard.
The Ligature font contains ligatures for various scripts that
may be useful for improved presentation of text.
Standard scalable fonts
X11R&relvers; includes all the scalable fonts distributed with X11R6.
Standard Type 1 fonts
The IBM Courier set of fonts cover ISO 8859-1 and
ISO 8859-2 as well as Adobe Standard Encoding. These fonts have
XLFD
-adobe-courier-medium-*-*--0-0-0-0-m-0-*-*
and reside in the font files
/usr/share/fonts/X11/Type1/cour*.pfa
The Adobe Utopia set of fonts only cover ISO 8859-1 as well as
Adobe Standard Encoding. These fonts have XLFD
-adobe-utopia-*-*-normal--0-0-0-0-p-0-iso8859-1
and reside in the font files
/usr/share/fonts/X11/Type1/UT*.pfa
Finally, X11R&relvers; also comes with Type 1 versions of Bitstream
Courier and Charter. These fonts have XLFD
-bitstream-courier-*-*-normal--0-0-0-0-m-0-iso8859-1
-bitstream-charter-*-*-normal--0-0-0-0-p-0-iso8859-1
and reside in the font files
/usr/share/fonts/X11/Type1/c*bt_.pfb
The Bigelow & Holmes Luxi family
X11R&relvers; includes the Luxi family of scalable fonts, in both
TrueType and Type 1 format. This family consists of the fonts
Luxi Serif, with XLFD
-b&h-luxi serif-medium-*-normal--*-*-*-*-p-*-*-*
Luxi Sans, with XLFD
-b&h-luxi sans-medium-*-normal--*-*-*-*-p-*-*-*
and Luxi Mono, with XLFD
-b&h-luxi mono-medium-*-normal--*-*-*-*-m-*-*-*
Each of these fonts comes Roman, oblique, bold and bold oblique variants
The TrueType version have glyphs covering the basic ASCII Unicode
range, the Latin 1 range, as well as the Extended Latin
range and some additional punctuation characters. In particular,
these fonts include all the glyphs needed for ISO 8859 parts 1,
2, 3, 4, 9, 13 and 15, as well as all the glyphs in the Adobe Standard
encoding and the Windows 3.1 character set.
The glyph coverage of the Type 1 versions is somewhat reduced,
and only covers ISO 8859 parts 1, 2 and 15 as well as the Adobe
Standard encoding.
The Luxi fonts are original designs by Kris Holmes and Charles
Bigelow. Luxi fonts include seriffed, sans serif, and monospaced
styles, in roman and oblique, and normal and bold weights. The fonts
share stem weight, x-height, capital height, ascent and descent, for
graphical harmony.
The character width metrics of Luxi roman and bold fonts match those
of core fonts bundled with popular operating and window systems.
The license terms for the Luxi fonts are included in the file
COPYRIGHT.BH
, as well as in the License
document.
Charles Bigelow and Kris Holmes from Bigelow and Holmes Inc.
developed the Luxi typeface designs in Ikarus digital format.
URW++ Design and Development GmbH converted the Ikarus format fonts
to TrueType and Type1 font programs and implemented the grid-fitting
"hints" and kerning tables in the Luxi fonts.
For more information, please contact
design@@bigelowandholmes.com or
info@@urwpp.de, or consult
the URW++ web site.
An earlier version of the Luxi fonts was made available under the
name Lucidux. This name should no longer be used due to
trademark uncertainties, and all traces of the Lucidux
name have been removed from X11R&relvers;.
More about core fonts
This section describes XFree86-created enhancements to the core
X11 fonts system that were adopted by X.Org.
Core fonts and internationalisation
The scalable font backends (Type 1 and TrueType) can
automatically re-encode fonts to the encoding specified in the
XLFD in fonts.dir
. For example, a fonts.dir
file can
contain entries for the Type 1 Courier font such as
cour.pfa -adobe-courier-medium-r-normal--0-0-0-0-m-0-iso8859-1
cour.pfa -adobe-courier-medium-r-normal--0-0-0-0-m-0-iso8859-2
which will lead to the font being recoded to ISO 8859-1 and
ISO 8859-2 respectively.
The fontenc layer
Two of the scalable backends (Type 1 and the
FreeType TrueType backend) use a common fontenc layer for
font re-encoding. This allows these backends to share their encoding
data, and allows simple configuration of new locales independently of
font type.
Please note: the X-TrueType (X-TT) backend is not included
in X11R&relvers;. That functionality has been merged into the FreeType
backend.
In the fontenc layer, an encoding is defined by a name (such as
iso8859-1), possibly a number of aliases (alternate names), and
an ordered collection of mappings. A mapping defines the way the
encoding can be mapped into one of the target encodings known to
fontenc; currently, these consist of Unicode, Adobe glyph names,
and arbitrary TrueType cmap
s.
A number of encodings are hardwired into fontenc, and are
therefore always available; the hardcoded encodings cannot easily be
redefined. These include:
iso10646-1: Unicode;
iso8859-1: ISO Latin-1 (Western Europe);
iso8859-2: ISO Latin-2 (Eastern Europe);
iso8859-3: ISO Latin-3 (Southern Europe);
iso8859-4: ISO Latin-4 (Northern Europe);
iso8859-5: ISO Cyrillic;
iso8859-6: ISO Arabic;
iso8859-7: ISO Greek;
iso8859-8: ISO Hebrew;
iso8859-9: ISO Latin-5 (Turkish);
iso8859-10: ISO Latin-6 (Nordic);
iso8859-15: ISO Latin-9, or Latin-0 (Revised
Western-European);
koi8-r: KOI8 Russian;
koi8-u: KOI8 Ukrainian (see RFC 2319);
koi8-ru: KOI8 Russian/Ukrainian;
koi8-uni: KOI8 Unified
(Russian, Ukrainian, and
Byelorussian);
koi8-e: KOI8 European,
ISO-IR-111, or ECMA-Cyrillic;
microsoft-symbol and apple-roman: these are only
likely to be useful with TrueType symbol fonts.
Additional encodings can be added by defining encoding files.
When a font encoding is requested that the fontenc layer doesn't
know about, the backend checks the directory in which the font file
resides (not necessarily the directory with fonts.dir!) for a
file named encodings.dir
. If found, this file is scanned for
the requested encoding, and the relevant encoding definition file is
read in. The mkfontdir
utility, when invoked with the
-e
option followed by the name of a directory containing
encoding files, can be used to automatically build encodings.dir
files. Please see the mkfontdir(1)
manual page for more details.
A number of encoding files for common encodings are included with
X11R&relvers;. Information on writing new encoding files can be found in
and later in this document.
Backend-specific notes about fontenc
The FreeType backend
For TrueType and OpenType fonts, the FreeType backend scans the
mappings in order. Mappings with a target of PostScript are ignored;
mappings with a TrueType or Unicode target are checked against all the
cmaps in the file. The first applicable mapping is used.
For Type 1 fonts, the FreeType backend first searches for a
mapping with a target of PostScript. If one is found, it is used.
Otherwise, the backend searches for a mapping with target Unicode,
which is then composed with a built-in table mapping codes to glyph
names. Note that this table only covers part of the Unicode code
points that have been assigned names by Adobe.
Specifying an encoding value of adobe-fontspecific for a
Type 1 font disables the encoding mechanism. This is useful with
symbol and incorrectly encoded fonts (see
below).
If a suitable mapping is not found, the FreeType backend defaults to
ISO 8859-1.
Format of encoding directory files
In order to use a font in an encoding that the font backend does
not know about, you need to have an encodings.dir
file either
in the same directory as the font file used or in a system-wide
location (/usr/share/fonts/X11/encodings/
by default).
The encodings.dir
file has a similar format to
fonts.dir
. Its first line specifies the number of encodings,
while every successive line has two columns, the name of the encoding,
and the name of the encoding file; this can be relative to the current
directory, or absolute. Every encoding name should agree with the
encoding name defined in the encoding file. For example,
3
mulearabic-0 /usr/share/fonts/X11/encodings/mulearabic-0.enc
mulearabic-1 /usr/share/fonts/X11/encodings/mulearabic-1.enc
mulearabic-2 /usr/share/fonts/X11/encodings/mulearabic-2.enc
The name of an encoding must be specified in the encoding file's
STARTENCODING
or ALIAS
line. It is not enough to create
an encodings.dir
entry.
If your platform supports it (it probably does), encoding files may be
compressed or gzipped.
The encoding.dir
files are best maintained by the
mkfontdir
utility. Please see the mkfontdir(1) manual page for more information.
Format of encoding files
The encoding files are free form,
i.e. any string of
whitespace is equivalent to a single space. Keywords are parsed in a
non-case-sensitive manner, meaning that size
, SIZE
, and
SiZE
all parse as the same keyword; on the other hand, case is
significant in glyph names.
Numbers can be written in decimal, as in 256
, in hexadecimal,
as in 0x100
, or in octal, as in 0400
.
Comments are introduced by a hash sign #
. A #
may
appear at any point in a line, and all characters following the
#
are ignored, up to the end of the line.
The encoding file starts with the definition of the name of the
encoding, and possibly its alternate names (aliases):
STARTENCODING mulearabic-0
ALIAS arabic-0
The name of the encoding and its aliases should be suitable for use in
an XLFD font name, and therefore contain exactly one dash -
.
The encoding file may then optionally declare the size of the
encoding. For a linear encoding (such as ISO 8859-1), the SIZE
line specifies the maximum code plus one:
SIZE 0x2B
For a matrix encoding, it should specify two numbers. The first is
the number of the last row plus one, the other, the highest column
number plus one. In the case of jisx0208.1990-0
(JIS X 0208(1990), double-byte encoding, high bit clear), it
should be
SIZE 0x75 0x80
In the case of a matrix encoding, a FIRSTINDEX
line may be
included to specify the minimum glyph index in an encoding. The
keyword FIRSTINDEX
is followed by two integers, the minimum row
number followed by the minimum column number:
FIRSTINDEX 0x20 0x20
In the case of a linear encoding, a FIRSTINDEX
line is not very
useful. If for some reason however you chose to include on, it should
be followed by a single integer.
Note that in most font backends inclusion of a FIRSTINDEX
line
has the side effect of disabling default glyph generation, and this
keyword should therefore be avoided unless absolutely necessary.
Codes outside the region defined by the SIZE
and
FIRSTINDEX
lines are understood to be undefined. Encodings
default to linear encoding with a size of 256 (0x100). This means
that you must declare the size of all 16 bit encodings.
What follows is one or more mapping sections. A mapping section
starts with a STARTMAPPING
line stating the target of the mapping.
The target may be one of:
Unicode (ISO 10646):
STARTMAPPING unicode
a given TrueType cmap
:
STARTMAPPING cmap 3 1
PostScript glyph names:
STARTMAPPING postscript
Every line in a mapping section maps one from the encoding being
defined to the target of the mapping. In mappings with a Unicode or
TrueType mapping, codes are mapped to codes:
0x21 0x0660
0x22 0x0661
...
As an abbreviation, it is possible to map a contiguous range of codes
in a single line. A line consisting of three integers
<it/start/ <it/end/ <it/target/
is an abbreviation for the range of lines
start target
start+1 target+1
...
end target+end-start
For example, the line
0x2121 0x215F 0x8140
is an abbreviation for
0x2121 0x8140
0x2122 0x8141
...
0x215F 0x817E
Codes not listed are assumed to map through the identity (i.e. to
the same numerical value). In order to override this default mapping,
you may specify a range of codes to be undefined by using an
UNDEFINE
line:
UNDEFINE 0x00 0x2A
or, for a single code,
UNDEFINE 0x1234
PostScript mappings are different. Every line in a PostScript mapping
maps a code to a glyph name
0x41 A
0x42 B
...
and codes not explicitly listed are undefined.
A mapping section ends with an ENDMAPPING line
ENDMAPPING
After all the mappings have been defined, the file ends with an
ENDENCODING line
ENDENCODING
In order to make future extensions to the format possible, lines
starting with an unknown keyword are silently ignored, as are mapping
sections with an unknown target.
Using symbol fonts
Type 1 symbol fonts should be installed using the
adobe-fontspecific encoding.
In an ideal world, all TrueType symbol fonts would be installed using
one of the microsoft-symbol and apple-roman encodings. A
number of symbol fonts, however, are not marked as such; such fonts
should be installed using microsoft-cp1252, or, for older fonts,
microsoft-win3.1.
In order to guarantee consistent results (especially between
Type 1 and TrueType versions of the same font), it is possible to
define a special encoding for a given font. This has already been done
for the ZapfDingbats font; see the file
encodings/adobe-dingbats.enc
.
Hints about using badly encoded fonts
A number of text fonts are incorrectly encoded. Incorrect encoding
is sometimes done by design, in order to make a font for an exotic
script appear like an ordinary Western text font on systems which are
not easily extended with new locale data. It is often the result of
the font designer's laziness or incompetence; for some reason, most
people seem to find it easier to invent idiosyncratic glyph names
rather than follow the Adobe glyph list.
There are two ways of dealing with such fonts: using them with the
encoding they were designed for, and creating an ad hoc encoding
file.
Using fonts with the designer's encoding
In the case of Type 1 fonts, the font designer can specify a
default encoding; this encoding is requested by using the
adobe-fontspecific
encoding in the XLFD name. Sometimes, the
font designer omitted to specify a reasonable default encoding, in
which case you should experiment with adobe-standard
,
iso8859-1
, microsoft-cp1252
, and
microsoft-win3.1
. (The encoding microsoft-symbol
doesn't
make sense for Type 1 fonts).
TrueType fonts do not have a default encoding. However, most TrueType
fonts are designed with either Microsoft or Apple platforms in mind,
so one of microsoft-symbol
, microsoft-cp1252
,
microsoft-win3.1
, or apple-roman
should yield reasonable
results.
Specifying an ad hoc encoding file
It is always possible to define an encoding file to put the glyphs
in a font in any desired order. Again, see the
encodings/adobe-dingbats.enc
file to see how this is done.
Specifying font aliases
By following the directions above, you will find yourself with a
number of fonts with unusual names --- with encodings such as
adobe-fontspecific
, microsoft-win3.1
etc. In order
to use these fonts with standard applications, it may be useful to
remap them to their proper names.
This is done by writing a fonts.alias
file. The format of this file
is very simple: it consists of a series of lines each mapping an alias
name to a font name. A fonts.alias
file might look as follows:
"-ogonki-alamakota-medium-r-normal--0-0-0-0-p-0-iso8859-2" \
"-ogonki-alamakota-medium-r-normal--0-0-0-0-p-0-adobe-fontspecific"
(both XLFD names on a single line). The syntax of the
fonts.alias
file is more precisely described in the
mkfontdir(1) manual page.
Additional notes about scalable core fonts
About the FreeType backend
The FreeType backend (formerly xfsft)
is a backend based on version 2 of the FreeType library (see the FreeType web site) and has
the X-TT functionalities for CJKV support provided by the After X-TT
Project (see the After X-TT Project web site). The FreeType backend has support for the
fontenc
style of internationalisation (see
). This backend supports TrueType font files
(*.ttf
), OpenType font files (*.otf
), TrueType Collections
(*.ttc
), OpenType Collections (*.otc
) and Type 1 font
files (*.pfa
and *.pfb
).
In order to access the faces in a TrueType Collection file, the face
number must be specified in the fonts.dir file before the filename,
within a pair of colons, or by setting the 'fn' TTCap option. For example,
:1:mincho.ttc -misc-pmincho-medium-r-normal--0-0-0-0-p-0-jisx0208.1990-0
refers to face 1 in the mincho.ttc
TrueType Collection file.
The new FreeType backend supports the extended
fonts.dir
syntax introduced by X-TrueType with a number
of options, collectively known as TTCap
. A TTCap
entry follows the
general syntax
option=value:
and should be specified before the filename. The new FreeType
almost perfectly supports TTCap options that are compatible with X-TT
1.4. The Automatic Italic (ai
), Double Strike (ds
) and
Bounding box Width (bw
) options are indispensable in CJKV.
For example,
mincho.ttc -misc-mincho-medium-r-normal--0-0-0-0-c-0-jisx0208.1990-0
ds=y:mincho.ttc -misc-mincho-bold-r-normal--0-0-0-0-c-0-jisx0208.1990-0
ai=0.2:mincho.ttc -misc-mincho-medium-i-normal--0-0-0-0-c-0-jisx0208.1990-0
ds=y:ai=0.2:mincho.ttc -misc-mincho-bold-i-normal--0-0-0-0-c-0-jisx0208.1990-0
bw=0.5:mincho.ttc -misc-mincho-medium-r-normal--0-0-0-0-c-0-jisx0201.1976-0
bw=0.5:ds=y:mincho.ttc -misc-mincho-bold-r-normal--0-0-0-0-c-0-jisx0201.1976-0
bw=0.5:ai=0.2:mincho.ttc -misc-mincho-medium-i-normal--0-0-0-0-c-0-jisx0201.1976-0
bw=0.5:ds=y:ai=0.2:mincho.ttc -misc-mincho-bold-i-normal--0-0-0-0-c-0-jisx0201.1976-0
setup the complete combination of jisx0208 and jisx0201 using mincho.ttc
only. More information on the TTCap syntax is found on the After X-TT Project page.
The FreeType backend uses the fontenc layer in order to support
recoding of fonts; this was described in
and especially earlier in this document.
Delayed glyph rasterisation
When loading a proportional fonts which contain a huge number of glyphs,
the old FreeType delayed glyph rasterisation until the time at which
the glyph was first used. The new FreeType (libfreetype-xtt2) has an
improved very lazy
metric calculation method to speed up the process when
loading TrueType or OpenType fonts. Although the X-TT module also
has this method, the "vl=y" TTCap option must be set if you want to
use it. This is the default method for FreeType when it loads
multi-byte fonts. Even if you use a unicode font which has tens of
thousands of glyphs, this delay will not be worrisome as long as you use
the new FreeType backend -- its very lazy
method is super-fast.
The maximum error of bitmap position using very lazy
method is 1 pixel,
and is the same as that of a character-cell spacing. When the X-TT
backend is used with the vl=y
option, a chipped bitmap is displayed
with certain fonts. However, the new FreeType backend has minimal problem
with this, since it corrects left- and right-side bearings using
italicAngle
in the TrueType/OpenType post table, and does automatic
correction of bitmap positions when rasterisation so that chipped bitmaps
are not displayed. Nevertheless if you don't want to use the very lazy
method when using multi-bytes fonts, set vl=n
in the TTCap option to
disable it:
vl=n:luxirr.ttf -b&h-Luxi Serif-medium-r-normal--0-0-0-0-p-0-iso10646-1
Of course, both backends also support an optimisation for character-cell
fonts (fonts with all glyph metrics equal, or terminal fonts). A font
with an XLFD specifying a character-cell spacing c
, as in
-misc-mincho-medium-r-normal--0-0-0-0-c-0-jisx0208.1990-0
or
fs=c:mincho.ttc -misc-mincho-medium-r-normal--0-0-0-0-p-0-jisx0208.1990-0
will not compute the metric for each glyph, but instead
trust the font to be a character-cell font. You are
encouraged to make use of this optimisation when useful, but be warned
that not all monospaced fonts are character-cell fonts.
Appendix: background and terminology
Characters and glyphs
A computer text-processing system inputs keystrokes and outputs
glyphs, small pictures that are assembled on paper or on a
computer screen. Keystrokes and glyphs do not, in general, coincide:
for example, if the system does generate ligatures, then to the
sequence of two keystrokes <f><i> will typically
correspond a single glyph. Similarly, if the system shapes Arabic
glyphs in a vaguely reasonable manner, then multiple different glyphs
may correspond to a single keystroke.
The complex transformation rules from keystrokes to glyphs are usually
factored into two simpler transformations, from keystrokes to
characters and from characters to glyphs. You may want to think
of characters as the basic unit of text that is stored e.g. in
the buffer of your text editor. While the definition of a character
is intrinsically application-specific, a number of standardised
collections of characters have been defined.
A coded character set is a set of characters together with a
mapping from integer codes --- known as codepoints --- to
characters. Examples of coded character sets include US-ASCII,
ISO 8859-1, KOI8-R, and JIS X 0208(1990).
A coded character set need not use 8 bit integers to index characters.
Many early systems used 6 bit character sets, while 16 bit (or more)
character sets are necessary for ideographic writing systems.
Font files, fonts, and XLFD
Traditionally, typographers speak about typefaces and
founts. A typeface is a particular style or design, such as
Times Italic, while a fount is a molten-lead incarnation of a given
typeface at a given size.
Digital fonts come in font files. A font file contains the
information necessary for generating glyphs of a given typeface, and
applications using font files may access glyph information in an
arbitrary order.
Digital fonts may consist of bitmap data, in which case they are said
to be bitmap fonts. They may also consist of a mathematical
description of glyph shapes, in which case they are said to be
scalable fonts. Common formats for scalable font files are
Type 1 (sometimes incorrectly called ATM fonts or
PostScript fonts), TrueType and OpenType.
The glyph data in a digital font needs to be indexed somehow. How
this is done depends on the font file format. In the case of
Type 1 fonts, glyphs are identified by glyph names. In the
case of TrueType fonts, glyphs are indexed by integers corresponding
to one of a number of indexing schemes (usually Unicode --- see below).
The X11 core fonts system uses the data in a font file to generate
font instances, which are collections of glyphs at a given size
indexed according to a given encoding.
X11 core font instances are usually specified using a notation known
as the X Logical Font Description (XLFD). An XLFD starts with a
dash -
, and consists of fourteen fields separated by dashes,
for example:
-adobe-courier-medium-r-normal--12-120-75-75-m-70-iso8859-1
Or particular interest are the last two fields iso8859-1
, which
specify the font instance's encoding.
A scalable font is specified by an XLFD which contains zeroes instead
of some fields:
-adobe-courier-medium-r-normal--0-0-0-0-m-0-iso8859-1
X11 font instances may also be specified by short name. Unlike an
XLFD, a short name has no structure and is simply a conventional name
for a font instance. Two short names are of particular interest, as
the server will not start if font instances with these names cannot be
opened. These are fixed
, which specifies the fallback font to
use when the requested font cannot be opened, and cursor
, which
specifies the set of glyphs to be used by the mouse pointer.
Short names are usually implemented as aliases to XLFDs; the
standard fixed
and cursor
aliases are defined in
/usr/share/font/X11/misc/fonts.alias
Unicode
Unicode (http://www.unicode.org) is a coded character
set with the goal of uniquely identifying all characters for all
scripts, current and historical. While Unicode was explicitly not
designed as a glyph encoding scheme, it is often possible to use it as
such.
Unicode is an open character set, meaning that codepoint
assignments may be added to Unicode at any time (once specified,
though, an assignment can never be changed). For this reason, a
Unicode font will be sparse, meaning that it only defines glyphs
for a subset of the character registry of Unicode.
The Unicode standard is defined in parallel with the international
standard ISO 10646. Assignments in the two standards are always
equivalent, and we often use the terms Unicode and
ISO 10646 interchangeably.
When used in the X11 core fonts system, Unicode-encoded fonts should
have the last two fields of their XLFD set to iso10646-1
.
References
X11R&relvers; comes with extensive documentation in the form of manual
pages and typeset documents. Before installing fonts, you really should
read the fontconfig(3) and
mkfontdir(1) manual pages; other
manual pages of interest include X(7),
Xserver(1), xset(1), Xft(3), xlsfonts(1) and showfont(1). In addition, you may want to read the X Logical Font Description document by Jim Flowers.
The comp.fonts FAQ,
which is unfortunately no longer being maintained, contains a wealth
of information about digital fonts.
Xft and Fontconfig are described on
the Fontconfig site.
The
xfsft home page
has been superseded by this document, and is now obsolete; you may
however still find some of the information that it contains useful.
Joerg Pommnitz' xfsft page
is the canonical source for the ttmkfdir
utility, which is the
ancestor of mkfontscale.
The author's software pages
might or might not contain related scribbles and development versions
of software.
The documentation of X-TrueType is available from the After X-TT Project page.
While the Unicode consortium site
may be of interest, you are more likely to find what you need in
Markus Kuhn's UTF-8 and Unicode FAQ.
The IETF RFC documents, available from a number of sites throughout
the world, often provide interesting information about character set
issues; see for example RFC 373.
@
1.1.1.1
log
@initial import of xorg-docs-1.7
@
text
@@
1.1.1.2
log
@initial import of xorg-docs-1.7.3
@
text
@d89 1
a89 1
fontconfig
a137 1
the files in a standard configuration directory, /etc/fonts/conf.d/
,
d864 1
a864 1
the URW++ web site.
d1519 1
a1519 1
url="https://www.freetype.org/"
d1814 4
a1817 1
Unicode () is a coded character
d1897 1
a1897 1
url="https://www.fontconfig.org"
d1936 1
a1936 1
url="https://www.unicode.org/"
d1941 1
a1941 1
url="https://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/unicode.html"
@