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This document contains a description of the various font files that may be used with FreeBSD and the syscons driver, X11, Ghostscript and Groff. Cookbook examples are provided for switching the syscons display to 80x60 mode, and for using type 1 fonts with the above application programs.
There are many sources of fonts available, and one might ask how they might be used with FreeBSD. The answer can be found by carefully searching the documentation for the component that one would like to use. This is very time consuming, so this tutorial is an attempt to provide a shortcut for others who might be interested.
There are many different font formats and associated font file suffixes. A few that will be addressed here are:
.pfa
, .pfb
PostScript® type 1 fonts. The
.pfa
is the
Ascii form and
.pfb
the Binary
form.
.afm
The font metrics associated with a type 1 font.
.pfm
The printer font metrics associated with a type 1 font.
.ttf
A TrueType® font
.fot
An indirect reference to a TrueType font (not an actual font)
.fon
, .fnt
Bitmapped screen fonts
The .fot
file is used by Windows® as
sort of a symbolic link to the actual TrueType® font
(.ttf
) file. The .fon
font files are also used by Windows. I know of no way to use
this font format with FreeBSD.
Which font file format is useful depends on the application being used. FreeBSD by itself uses no fonts. Application programs and/or drivers may make use of the font files. Here is a small cross reference of application/driver to the font type suffixes:
.hex
.fnt
.pfa
,
.pfb
,
.ttf
.pfa
,
.pfb
.pfa
,
.afm
.ttf
The .fnt
suffix is used quite
frequently. I suspect that whenever someone wanted to create a
specialized font file for their application, more often than not
they chose this suffix. Therefore, it is likely that files with
this suffix are not all the same format; specifically, the
.fnt
files used by syscons under FreeBSD
may not be the same format as a .fnt
file
one encounters in the MS-DOS®/Windows® environment. I have not
made any attempt at using other .fnt
files
other than those provided with FreeBSD.
First, an 8x8 font must be loaded. To do this,
/etc/rc.conf
should contain the
line (change the font name to an appropriate one for
your locale):
font8x8="iso-8x8" # font 8x8 from /usr/share/syscons/fonts/* (or NO).
The command to actually switch the mode is vidcontrol(1):
%
vidcontrol VGA_80x60
Various screen-oriented programs, such as vi(1), must
be able to determine the current screen dimensions. As this is
achieved this through ioctl
calls to the console
driver (such as syscons(4)) they will correctly determine the new
screen dimensions.
To make this more seamless, one can embed these commands in
the startup scripts so it takes place when the system boots.
To do this is add this line to /etc/rc.conf
allscreens_flags="VGA_80x60" # Set this vidcontrol mode for all virtual screens
References: rc.conf(5), vidcontrol(1).
X11 can use either the .pfa
or the
.pfb
format fonts. The X11 fonts are
located in various subdirectories under
/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts
. Each font file
is cross referenced to its X11 name by the contents of the
fonts.dir
file in each directory.
There is already a directory named Type1
. The
most straight forward way to add a new font is to put it into
this directory. A better way is to keep all new fonts in a
separate directory and use a symbolic link to the additional
font. This allows one to more easily keep track of ones fonts
without confusing them with the fonts that were originally
provided. For example:
Create a directory to contain the font files%
mkdir -p /usr/local/share/fonts/type1
%
cd /usr/local/share/fonts/type1
Place the .pfa, .pfb and .afm files here One might want to keep readme files, and other documentation for the fonts here also%
cp /cdrom/fonts/atm/showboat/showboat.pfb .
%
cp /cdrom/fonts/atm/showboat/showboat.afm .
Maintain an index to cross reference the fonts%
echo showboat - InfoMagic CICA, Dec 1994, /fonts/atm/showboat >>INDEX
Now, to use a new font with X11, one must make the font file available and update the font name files. The X11 font names look like:
-bitstream-charter-medium-r-normal-xxx-0-0-0-0-p-0-iso8859-1 | | | | | | | | | | | | \ \ | | | | | \ \ \ \ \ \ \ +----+- character set | | | | \ \ \ \ \ \ \ +- average width | | | | \ \ \ \ \ \ +- spacing | | | \ \ \ \ \ \ +- vertical res. | | | \ \ \ \ \ +- horizontal res. | | | \ \ \ \ +- points | | | \ \ \ +- pixels | | | \ \ \ foundry family weight slant width additional style
A new name needs to be created for each new font. If you have some information from the documentation that accompanied the font, then it could serve as the basis for creating the name. If there is no information, then you can get some idea by using strings(1) on the font file. For example:
%
strings showboat.pfb | more
%!FontType1-1.0: Showboat 001.001 %%CreationDate: 1/15/91 5:16:03 PM %%VMusage: 1024 45747 % Generated by Fontographer 3.1 % Showboat 1991 by David Rakowski. Alle Rechte Vorbehalten. FontDirectory/Showboat known{/Showboat findfont dup/UniqueID known{dup /UniqueID get 4962377 eq exch/FontType get 1 eq and}{pop false}ifelse {save true}{false}ifelse}{false}ifelse 12 dict begin /FontInfo 9 dict dup begin /version (001.001) readonly def /FullName (Showboat) readonly def /FamilyName (Showboat) readonly def /Weight (Medium) readonly def /ItalicAngle 0 def /isFixedPitch false def /UnderlinePosition -106 def /UnderlineThickness 16 def /Notice (Showboat 1991 by David Rakowski. Alle Rechte Vorbehalten.) readonly def end readonly def /FontName /Showboat def --stdin--
Using this information, a possible name might be:
-type1-Showboat-medium-r-normal-decorative-0-0-0-0-p-0-iso8859-1
The components of our name are:
Lets just name all the new fonts
type1
.
The name of the font.
Normal, bold, medium, semibold, etc. From the strings(1) output above, it appears that this font has a weight of medium.
roman, italic, oblique, etc. Since the ItalicAngle is zero, roman will be used.
Normal, wide, condensed, extended, etc. Until it can be examined, the assumption will be normal.
Usually omitted, but this will indicate that the font contains decorative capital letters.
proportional or monospaced. Proportional is used since isFixedPitch is false.
All of these names are arbitrary, but one should strive to be compatible with the existing conventions. A font is referenced by name with possible wild cards by an X11 program, so the name chosen should make some sense. One might begin by simply using
…-normal-r-normal-…-p-…
as the name, and then use xfontsel(1) to examine it and adjust the name based on the appearance of the font.
So, to complete our example:
Make the font accessible to X11%
cd /usr/X11R6/lib/X11/fonts/Type1
%
ln -s /usr/local/share/fonts/type1/showboat.pfb .
Edit fonts.dir and fonts.scale, adding the line describing the font and incrementing the number of fonts which is found on the first line.%
ex fonts.dir :1p 25 :1c 26 . :$a showboat.pfb -type1-showboat-medium-r-normal-decorative-0-0-0-0-p-0-iso8859-1 . :wq
fonts.scale seems to be identical to fonts.dir…%
cp fonts.dir fonts.scale
Tell X11 that things have changed%
xset fp rehash
Examine the new font%
xfontsel -pattern -type1-*
References: xfontsel(1), xset(1), The X Windows System in a Nutshell, O'Reilly & Associates.
Ghostscript references a font via its Fontmap
file. This must be modified in a similar way to the X11
fonts.dir
file. Ghostscript can use either
the .pfa
or the .pfb
format fonts. Using the font from the previous example, here is
how to use it with Ghostscript:
Put the font in Ghostscript's font directory%
cd /usr/local/share/ghostscript/fonts
%
ln -s /usr/local/share/fonts/type1/showboat.pfb .
Edit Fontmap so Ghostscript knows about the font%
cd /usr/local/share/ghostscript/4.01
%
ex Fontmap :$a /Showboat (showboat.pfb) ; % From CICA /fonts/atm/showboat . :wq
Use Ghostscript to examine the font%
gs prfont.ps
Aladdin Ghostscript 4.01 (1996-7-10) Copyright (C) 1996 Aladdin Enterprises, Menlo Park, CA. All rights reserved. This software comes with NO WARRANTY: see the file PUBLIC for details. Loading Times-Roman font from /usr/local/share/ghostscript/fonts/tir_____.pfb... /1899520 581354 1300084 13826 0 done. GS>Showboat DoFont
Loading Showboat font from /usr/local/share/ghostscript/fonts/showboat.pfb... 1939688 565415 1300084 16901 0 done. >>showpage, press <return> to continue<< >>showpage, press <return> to continue<< >>showpage, press <return> to continue<< GS>quit
References: fonts.txt
in the
Ghostscript 4.01 distribution
Now that the new font can be used by both X11 and
Ghostscript, how can one use the new font
with groff? First of
all, since we are dealing with type 1 PostScript® fonts, the
groff device that is applicable is the ps
device. A font file must be created for each font that groff
can use. A groff font name is just a file in
/usr/share/groff_font/devps
. With our
example, the font file could be
/usr/share/groff_font/devps/SHOWBOAT
. The
file must be created using tools provided by groff.
The first tool is afmtodit
. This is not
normally installed, so it must be retrieved from the source
distribution. I found I had to change the first line of the
file, so I did:
%
cp /usr/src/gnu/usr.bin/groff/afmtodit/afmtodit.pl /tmp
%
ex /tmp/afmtodit.pl :1c #!/usr/bin/perl -P- . :wq
This tool will create the groff font file from the metrics
file (.afm
suffix.) Continuing with our
example:
Many .afm files are in Mac format… ^M delimited lines We need to convert them to UNIX® style ^J delimited lines%
cd /tmp
%
cat /usr/local/share/fonts/type1/showboat.afm | tr '\015' '\012' >showboat.afm
Now create the groff font file%
cd /usr/share/groff_font/devps
%
/tmp/afmtodit.pl -d DESC -e text.enc /tmp/showboat.afm generate/textmap SHOWBOAT
The font can now be referenced with the name SHOWBOAT.
If Ghostscript is used to drive the printers on the system,
then nothing more needs to be done. However, if true PostScript®
printers are used, then the font must be down loaded to the
printer in order for the font to be used (unless the printer
happens to have the showboat font built in or on an accessible
font disk.) The final step is to create a down loadable font.
The pfbtops
tool is used to create the
.pfa
format of the font, and the
download
file is modified to reference the new
font. The download
file must reference the
internal name of the font. This can easily be determined from
the groff font file as illustrated:
Create the .pfa font file%
pfbtops /usr/local/share/fonts/type1/showboat.pfb >showboat.pfa
Of course, if the .pfa
file is already
available, just use a symbolic link to reference it.
Get the internal font name%
fgrep internalname SHOWBOAT
internalname Showboat Tell groff that the font must be down loaded%
ex download :$a Showboat showboat.pfa . :wq
To test the font:
%
cd /tmp
%
cat >example.t <<EOF .sp 5 .ps 16 This is an example of the Showboat font: .br .ps 48 .vs (\n(.s+2)p .sp .ft SHOWBOAT ABCDEFGHI .br JKLMNOPQR .br STUVWXYZ .sp .ps 16 .vs (\n(.s+2)p .fp 5 SHOWBOAT .ft R To use it for the first letter of a paragraph, it will look like: .sp 50p \s(48\f5H\s0\fRere is the first sentence of a paragraph that uses the showboat font as its first letter. Additional vertical space must be used to allow room for the larger letter. EOF
%
groff -Tps example.t >example.ps
To use ghostscript/ghostview%
ghostview example.ps
To print it%
lpr -Ppostscript example.ps
References:
/usr/src/gnu/usr.bin/groff/afmtodit/afmtodit.man
,
groff_font(5), groff_char(7), pfbtops(1).
This potentially requires a bit of work, simply because it depends on some utilities that are not installed as part of the base system. They are:
ttf2pf
TrueType to PostScript conversion utilities. This
allows conversion of a TrueType font to an ascii font
metric (.afm
) file.
Currently available at http://sunsite.icm.edu.pl/pub/GUST/contrib/BachoTeX98/ttf2pf/
.
Note: These files are PostScript programs and must be
downloaded to disk by holding down the
Shift key when clicking on the link.
Otherwise, your browser may try to launch
ghostview to view them.
The files of interest are:
GS_TTF.PS
PF2AFM.PS
ttf2pf.ps
The funny upper/lower case is due to their being
intended also for DOS shells.
ttf2pf.ps
makes use of the others as
upper case, so any renaming must be consistent with this.
(Actually, GS_TTF.PS
and
PFS2AFM.PS
are supposedly part of the
Ghostscript distribution, but it is just as easy to use
these as an isolated utility. FreeBSD does not seem to
include the latter.) You also may want to have these
installed to
/usr/local/share/groff_font/devps
(?).
afmtodit
Creates font files for use with groff from ascii font
metrics file. This usually resides in the directory,
/usr/src/contrib/groff/afmtodit
, and
requires some work to get going.
If you are paranoid about working in the
/usr/src
tree, simply copy the
contents of the above directory to a work
location.
In the work area, you will need to make the utility. Just type:
#
make -f Makefile.sub afmtodit
You may also need to copy
/usr/contrib/groff/devps/generate/textmap
to
/usr/share/groff_font/devps/generate
if it does not already exist.
Once all these utilities are in place, you are ready to commence:
Create the .afm
file by
typing:
%
gs -dNODISPLAY -q -- ttf2pf.ps
TTF_name
PS_font_name
AFM_name
Where, TTF_name
is your
TrueType font file, PS_font_name
is the file name for the .pfa
file,
AFM_name
is the name you wish for
the .afm
file. If you do not specify
output file names for the .pfa
or
.afm
files, then default names will be
generated from the TrueType font file name.
This also produces a .pfa
file, the
ascii PostScript font metrics file
(.pfb
is for the binary form). This
will not be needed, but could (I think) be useful for a
fontserver.
For example, to convert the 30f9 Barcode font using the default file names, use the following command:
%
gs -dNODISPLAY -- ttf2pf.ps 3of9.ttf
Aladdin Ghostscript 5.10 (1997-11-23) Copyright (C) 1997 Aladdin Enterprises, Menlo Park, CA. All rights reserved. This software comes with NO WARRANTY: see the file PUBLIC for details. Converting 3of9.ttf to 3of9.pfa and 3of9.afm.
If you want the converted fonts to be stored in
A.pfa
and B.afm
,
then use this command:
%
gs -dNODISPLAY -- ttf2pf.ps 3of9.ttf A B
Aladdin Ghostscript 5.10 (1997-11-23) Copyright (C) 1997 Aladdin Enterprises, Menlo Park, CA. All rights reserved. This software comes with NO WARRANTY: see the file PUBLIC for details. Converting 3of9.ttf to A.pfa and B.afm.
Create the groff PostScript file:
Change directories to
/usr/share/groff_font/devps
so as to
make the following command easier to execute. You will
probably need root privileges for this. (Or, if you are
paranoid about working there, make sure you reference the
files DESC
,
text.enc
and
generate/textmap
as being in this
directory.)
%
afmtodit -d DESC -e text.enc file.afm \ generate/textmap
PS_font_name
Where, file.afm
is the
AFM_name
created by
ttf2pf.ps
above, and
PS_font_name
is the font name
used from that command, as well as the name that
groff(1) will use for references to this font. For
example, assuming you used the first
tiff2pf.ps
command above, then the 3of9
Barcode font can be created using the command:
%
afmtodit -d DESC -e text.enc 3of9.afm \ generate/textmap 3of9
Ensure that the resulting
PS_font_name
file (e.g.,
3of9
in the example above) is located
in the directory
/usr/share/groff_font/devps
by copying
or moving it there.
Note that if ttf2pf.ps
assigns a
font name using the one it finds in the TrueType font file
and you want to use a different name, you must edit the
.afm
file prior to running
afmtodit
. This name must also match the
one used in the Fontmap file if you wish to pipe
groff(1) into gs(1).
The TrueType font format is used by Windows, Windows 95, and Mac's. It is quite popular and there are a great number of fonts available in this format.
Unfortunately, there are few applications that I am aware of that can use this format: Ghostscript and Povray come to mind. Ghostscript's support, according to the documentation, is rudimentary and the results are likely to be inferior to type 1 fonts. Povray version 3 also has the ability to use TrueType fonts, but I rather doubt many people will be creating documents as a series of raytraced pages :-).
This rather dismal situation may soon change. The FreeType Project is currently developing a useful set of FreeType tools:
The xfsft
font server for X11 can
serve TrueType fonts in addition to regular fonts. Though
currently in beta, it is said to be quite usable. See
Juliusz
Chroboczek's page for further information.
Porting instructions for FreeBSD can be found at Stephen
Montgomery's software page.
xfstt is another font server for
X11,
available under ftp://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/X11/fonts/
.
A program called ttf2bdf
can produce
BDF files suitable for use in an X environment from TrueType
files. Linux binaries are said to be available from ftp://crl.nmsu.edu/CLR/multiling/General/
.
and others …
Many fonts are available on the Internet. They are either
entirely free, or are share-ware. In addition many fonts are
available in the x11-fonts/
category in the
ports collection
What use are the .pfm
files?
Can one generate the .afm
file from
a .pfa
or
.pfb
?
How to generate the groff character mapping files for PostScript fonts with non-standard character names?
Can xditview and devX?? devices be set up to access all the new fonts?
It would be good to have examples of using TrueType fonts with Povray and Ghostscript.