185 lines
6.9 KiB
Plaintext
185 lines
6.9 KiB
Plaintext
Note:
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=====
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The fnt2bdf utility is included with Wine. It can be found in the tools
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directory.
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Links to the other tools mentioned in this document can be found on wine
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headquarters: http://www.winehq.com/tools.html
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How To Convert Windows Fonts
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============================
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If you have access to a Windows installation you should use
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fnt2bdf utility (found in the 'tools)' directory to convert
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bitmap fonts (VGASYS.FON, SSERIFE.FON, and SERIFE.FON) into
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the format that X Window System can recognize.
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Step 1. Extract bitmap fonts with 'fnt2bdf'.
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Step 2. Convert .bdf files produced by the Step 1 into
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.pcf files with 'bdftopcf'.
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Step 3. Copy .pcf files to the font server directory which
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is usually /usr/lib/X11/fonts/misc (you will probably
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need superuser privileges). If you want to create a new
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font directory you will need to add it to the font path.
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Step 4. Run 'mkfontdir' for the directory you copied fonts to.
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If you are already in X you should run 'xset fp rehash'
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to make X server aware of the new fonts.
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Step 5. Edit WINE.CONF file to remove aliases for the fonts
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you've just installed.
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WINE can get by without these fonts but 'the look and feel'
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may be quite different. Also, some applications try to load
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their custom fonts on the fly (WinWord 6.0) and since WINE does
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not implement this yet it instead prints out something like;
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STUB: AddFontResource( SOMEFILE.FON )
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You can convert this file too. Note that .FON file may not hold
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any bitmap fonts and fnt2bdf will fail if this is the case. Also
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note that although the above message will not disappear WINE will
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work around the problem by using the font you extracted from the
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SOMEFILE.FON. fnt2bdf will only work for Windows 3.1 fonts. It
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will not work for TrueType fonts.
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What to do with TrueType fonts? There are several commercial
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font tools that can convert them to the Type1 format but the
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quality of the resulting fonts is far from stellar. The other
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way to use them is to get a font server capable of rendering
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TrueType (Caldera has one, there also is the free Xfstt in
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Linux/X11/fonts on sunsite and mirrors, if you're on FreeBSD you
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can use the port in /usr/ports/x11-servers/Xfstt. And there is
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xfsft which uses the freetype library, see documentation/ttfserver).
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However, there is a possibility of the native TrueType support
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via FreeType renderer in the future (hint, hint :-)
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How To Add Font Aliases To WINE.CONF
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====================================
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Many Windows applications assume that fonts included in original Windows 3.1
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distribution are always present. By default Wine creates a number of aliases
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that map them on the existing X fonts:
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Windows font ...is mapped to... X font
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"MS Sans Serif" -> "-adobe-helvetica-"
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"MS Serif" -> "-bitstream-charter-"
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"Times New Roman" -> "-adobe-times-"
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"Arial" -> "-adobe-helvetica-"
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There is no default alias for the "System" font. Also, no aliases are
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created for the fonts that applications install at runtime. The recommended
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way to deal with this problem is to convert the missing font (see above).
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If it proves impossible, like in the case with TrueType fonts, you can force
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the font mapper to choose a closely related X font by adding an alias to the
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[fonts] section. Make sure that the X font actually exists (with xfontsel
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tool).
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AliasN = [Windows font], [X font] <, optional "mask X font" flag>
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Example:
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Alias0 = System, --international-, subst
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Alias1 = ...
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...
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Comments:
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* There must be no gaps in the sequence {0, ..., N} otherwise all aliases
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after the first gap won't be read.
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* Usually font mapper translates X font names into font names visible to
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Windows programs in the following fashion:
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X font ...will show up as... Extracted name
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--international-... -> "International"
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-adobe-helvetica-... -> "Helvetica"
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-adobe-utopia-... -> "Utopia"
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-misc-fixed-... -> "Fixed"
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-...
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-sony-fixed-... -> "Sony Fixed"
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-...
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Note that since -misc-fixed- and -sony-fixed- are different fonts
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Wine modified the second extracted name to make sure Windows programs
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can distinguish them because only extracted names appear in the font
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selection dialogs.
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* "Masking" alias replaces the original extracted name so that in the
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example case we will have the following mapping:
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--international- -> "System"
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"Nonmasking" aliases are transparent to the user and they do not
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replace extracted names.
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Wine discards an alias when it sees that the native X font is
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available.
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* If you do not have access to Windows fonts mentioned in the first
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paragraph you should try to substitute the "System" font with
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nonmasking alias. 'xfontsel' will show you the fonts available to
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X.
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Alias.. = System, ...bold font without serifs
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Also, some Windows applications request fonts without specifying the
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typeface name of the font. Font table starts with Arial in most Windows
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installations, however X font table starts with whatever is the first line
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in the fonts.dir. Therefore WINE uses the following entry to determine
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which font to check first.
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Example:
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Default = -adobe-times-
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Comments:
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It is better to have a scalable font family (bolds and italics included)
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as the default choice because mapper checks all available fonts until
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requested height and other attributes match perfectly or the end of the
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font table is reached. Typical X installations have scalable fonts in
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the ../fonts/Type1 and ../fonts/Speedo directories.
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How To Manage Cached Font Metrics
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=================================
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WINE stores detailed information about available fonts in the ~/.wine/.cachedmetrics
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file. You can copy it elsewhere and add this entry to the [fonts] section
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in your WINE.CONF:
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FontMetrics = <file with metrics>
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If WINE detects changes in the X font configuration it will rebuild font
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metrics from scratch and then it will overwrite ~/.wine/.cachedmetrics with
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the new information. This process can take a while.
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Too Small Or Too Large Fonts
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============================
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Windows programs may ask WINE to render a font with the height specified
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in points. However, point-to-pixel ratio depends on the real physical size
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of your display (15", 17", etc...). X tries to provide an estimate of that
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but it can be quite different from the actual size. You can change this
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ratio by adding the following entry to the [fonts] section:
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Resolution = <integer value>
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In general, higher numbers give you larger fonts. Try to experiment with
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values in the 60 - 120 range. 96 is a good starting point.
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"FONT_Init: failed to load ..." Messages On Startup
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===================================================
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The most likely cause is a broken fonts.dir file in one of your font
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directories. You need to rerun 'mkfontdir' to rebuild this file. Read
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its manpage for more information. If you can't run mkfontdir on this machine
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as you are not root, use "xset -fp xxx" to remove the broken font path.
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