From 91ea82ef8644f19a303674611c4ce9bfc47f1274 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Philipp Gesang Date: Sat, 15 Feb 2014 15:37:14 +0100 Subject: [doc] kill dtx The file ``luaotfload.dtx`` which made the documentation a huge PITA to extend, has finally been converted to ordinary Latex format. In the course of this conversion the style directives have been moved to file (``luaotfload-latex.tex``) so as to separate them from the content (``luaotfload-main.tex``). --- doc/luaotfload-latex.tex | 132 +++ doc/luaotfload-main.tex | 1944 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ doc/luaotfload.dtx | 1994 ---------------------------------------------- 3 files changed, 2076 insertions(+), 1994 deletions(-) create mode 100644 doc/luaotfload-latex.tex create mode 100644 doc/luaotfload-main.tex delete mode 100644 doc/luaotfload.dtx (limited to 'doc') diff --git a/doc/luaotfload-latex.tex b/doc/luaotfload-latex.tex new file mode 100644 index 0000000..615ad42 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/luaotfload-latex.tex @@ -0,0 +1,132 @@ +%% Copyright (C) 2009-2014 +%% +%% by Elie Roux +%% and Khaled Hosny +%% and Philipp Gesang +%% +%% This file is part of Luaotfload. +%% +%% Home: https://github.com/lualatex/luaotfload +%% Support: . +%% +%% Luaotfload is under the GPL v2.0 (exactly) license. +%% +%% ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- +%% +%% Luaotfload is free software; you can redistribute it and/or +%% modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License +%% as published by the Free Software Foundation; version 2 +%% of the License. +%% +%% Luaotfload is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, +%% but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of +%% MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the +%% GNU General Public License for more details. +%% +%% You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License +%% along with Luaotfload; if not, see . +%% +%% ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- +%% + +\documentclass{ltxdoc} + +\usepackage{metalogo,multicol,mdwlist,fancyvrb,xspace} +\usepackage[x11names]{xcolor} + +\def\primarycolor{DodgerBlue4} %%-> rgb 16 78 139 | #104e8b +\def\secondarycolor{Goldenrod4} %%-> rgb 139 105 200 | #8b6914 + +\usepackage[ + bookmarks=true, + colorlinks=true, + linkcolor=\primarycolor, + urlcolor=\secondarycolor, + citecolor=\primarycolor, + pdftitle={The luaotfload package}, + pdfsubject={OpenType layout system for Plain TeX and LaTeX}, + pdfauthor={Elie Roux & Khaled Hosny & Philipp Gesang}, + pdfkeywords={luatex, lualatex, unicode, opentype} +]{hyperref} + +\usepackage{fontspec} +\usepackage{unicode-math} + +\setmainfont[ +% Numbers = OldStyle, %% buggy with font cache + Ligatures = TeX, + BoldFont = {Linux Libertine O Bold}, + ItalicFont = {Linux Libertine O Italic}, + SlantedFont = {Linux Libertine O Italic}, +]{Linux Libertine O} +\setmonofont[Ligatures=TeX,Scale=MatchLowercase]{Liberation Mono} +%setsansfont[Ligatures=TeX]{Linux Biolinum O} +\setsansfont[Ligatures=TeX,Scale=MatchLowercase]{Iwona Medium} +%setmathfont{XITS Math} + +\usepackage{hologo} + +\newcommand\TEX {\TeX\xspace} +\newcommand\LUA {Lua\xspace} +\newcommand\PDFTEX {pdf\TeX\xspace} +\newcommand\LUATEX {Lua\TeX\xspace} +\newcommand\XETEX {\XeTeX\xspace} +\newcommand\LATEX {\LaTeX\xspace} +\newcommand\LUALATEX {Lua\LaTeX\xspace} +\newcommand\CONTEXT {Con\TeX t\xspace} +\newcommand\OpenType {\identifier{Open\kern-.25ex Type}\xspace} + +\def\definehighlight[#1][#2]% + {\ifcsname #1\endcsname\else + \expandafter\def\csname #1\endcsname% + {\bgroup#2\csname #1_indeed\endcsname} + \expandafter\def\csname #1_indeed\endcsname##1% + {##1\egroup}% + \fi} + +\def\restoreunderscore{\catcode`\_=12\relax} + +\definehighlight [fileent][\ttfamily\restoreunderscore] %% files, dirs +\definehighlight [texmacro][\sffamily\itshape\textbackslash] %% cs +\definehighlight[luafunction][\sffamily\itshape\restoreunderscore] %% lua identifiers +\definehighlight [identifier][\sffamily] %% names +\definehighlight [abbrev][\rmfamily\scshape] %% acronyms +\definehighlight [emphasis][\rmfamily\slshape] %% level 1 emph + +\newcommand*\email[1]{\href{mailto:#1}{#1}} + +\renewcommand\partname{Part}%% gets rid of the stupid “file” heading + +\usepackage{syntax}%% bnf for font request syntax + +\usepackage{titlesec} + +\def\movecountertomargin#1{\llap{\rmfamily\upshape#1\hskip2em}} +\def\zeropoint{0pt} +\titleformat \part + {\normalsize\rmfamily\bfseries} + {\movecountertomargin\thepart} \zeropoint {} +\titleformat \section + {\normalsize\rmfamily\scshape} + {\movecountertomargin\thesection} \zeropoint {} +\titleformat \subsection + {\small\rmfamily\itshape} + {\movecountertomargin\thesubsection} \zeropoint {} +\titleformat \subsubsection + {\normalsize\rmfamily\upshape} + {\movecountertomargin\thesubsubsection} \zeropoint {} + +\usepackage{tocloft} +\renewcommand \cftpartfont {\rmfamily\upshape} +\renewcommand \cftsecfont {\rmfamily\upshape} +\renewcommand \cftsubsecfont {\rmfamily\upshape} +\setlength \cftbeforepartskip {1ex} +\setlength \cftbeforesecskip {1ex} + +\VerbatimFootnotes + +\begin {document} + \input {luaotfload-main.tex} +\end {document} + + diff --git a/doc/luaotfload-main.tex b/doc/luaotfload-main.tex new file mode 100644 index 0000000..49d1986 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/luaotfload-main.tex @@ -0,0 +1,1944 @@ +%% Copyright (C) 2009-2014 +%% +%% by Elie Roux +%% and Khaled Hosny +%% and Philipp Gesang +%% +%% This file is part of Luaotfload. +%% +%% Home: https://github.com/lualatex/luaotfload +%% Support: . +%% +%% Luaotfload is under the GPL v2.0 (exactly) license. +%% +%% ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- +%% +%% Luaotfload is free software; you can redistribute it and/or +%% modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License +%% as published by the Free Software Foundation; version 2 +%% of the License. +%% +%% Luaotfload is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, +%% but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of +%% MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the +%% GNU General Public License for more details. +%% +%% You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License +%% along with Luaotfload; if not, see . +%% +%% ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- +%% + +\title{The \identifier{luaotfload} package} +\date{2014/**/** v2.5} +\author{Elie Roux · Khaled Hosny · Philipp Gesang\\ + Home: \url {https://github.com/lualatex/luaotfload}\\ + Support: \email {lualatex-dev@tug.org}} + +\maketitle + +\begin{abstract} + This package is an adaptation of the \CONTEXT font loading system. + It allows for loading \OpenType fonts with an extended syntax and adds + support for a variety of font features. +\end{abstract} + + +\tableofcontents + +\part{Package Description} + +%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% +\section{Introduction} +%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% + +Font management and installation has always been painful with \TEX. A +lot of files are needed for one font (\abbrev{tfm}, \abbrev{pfb}, +\abbrev{map}, \abbrev{fd}, \abbrev{vf}), and due to the 8-Bit encoding +each font is limited to 256 characters. + +But the font world has evolved since the original \TEX, and new +typographic systems have appeared, most notably the so called +\emphasis{smart font} technologies like \OpenType fonts (\abbrev{otf}). + +These fonts can contain many more characters than \TEX fonts, as well +as additional functionality like ligatures, old-style numbers, small +capitals, etc., and support more complex writing systems like Arabic +and Indic\footnote{% + Unfortunately, \identifier{luaotfload} doesn‘t support many Indic + scripts right now. + Assistance in implementing the prerequisites is greatly + appreciated. +} +scripts. + +\OpenType fonts are widely deployed and available for all modern +operating systems. + +As of 2013 they have become the de facto standard for advanced text +layout. + +However, until recently the only way to use them directly in the \TEX +world was with the \XETEX engine. + +Unlike \XETEX, \LUATEX has no built-in support for \OpenType or +technologies other than the original \TEX fonts. + +Instead, it provides hooks for executing \LUA code during the \TEX run +that allow implementing extensions for loading fonts and manipulating +how input text is processed without modifying the underlying engine. + +This is where \identifier{luaotfload} comes into play: +Based on code from \CONTEXT, it extends \LUATEX with functionality necessary +for handling \OpenType fonts. + +Additionally, it provides means for accessing fonts known to the operating +system conveniently by indexing the metadata. + +%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% +\section{Thanks} +%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% + +\identifier{Luaotfload} is part of \LUALATEX, the community-driven +project to provide a foundation for using the \LATEX format with the +full capabilites of the \LUATEX engine. +% +As such, the distinction between end users, contributors, and project +maintainers is intentionally kept less strict, lest we unduly +personalize the common effort. + +Nevertheless, the current maintainers would like to express their +gratitude to Khaled Hosny, Akira Kakuto, Hironori Kitagawa and Dohyun +Kim. +% +Their contributions -- be it patches, advice, or systematic +testing -- made the switch from version 1.x to 2.2 possible. +% +Also, Hans Hagen, the author of the font loader, made porting the +code to \LATEX a breeze due to the extra effort he invested into +isolating it from the rest of \CONTEXT, not to mention his assistance +in the task and willingness to respond to our suggestions. + + +\section{Loading Fonts} + +\identifier{luaotfload} supports an extended font request syntax: + +\begin{quote} + |\font\foo={|% + \meta{prefix}|:|% + \meta{font name}|:|% + \meta{font features}|}|% + \meta{\TEX font features} +\end{quote} + +\noindent +The curly brackets are optional and escape the spaces in the enclosed +font name. +% +Alternatively, double quotes serve the same purpose. +% +A selection of individual parts of the syntax are discussed below; +for a more formal description see figure \ref{font-syntax}. + +\begin {figure} [b] + \setlength\grammarparsep{12pt plus 2pt minus 2pt} + \setlength\grammarindent{5cm} + \begingroup + \small + \begin{grammar} + ::= `\\font', {\sc csname}, `=', , [ ] ; + + ::= `at', {\sc dimension} ; + + ::= `"', `"' + \alt `{', `}' + \alt ; + + ::= , [`:', ] + \alt `[', `]', [ [`:'], ] ; + + ::= , [ ], \{ \} + \alt , \{ \} ; + + ::= `file:', + \alt `name:', ; + + ::= \{ \} ; + + ::= \{ \} ; + + ::= {\sc tfmname} | ; + + ::= \{ {\sc all_characters} - `]' \} ; + + ::= `/', (`I' | `B' | `BI' | `IB' | `S=', \{ {\sc digit} \} ) ; + + ::= `(', \{ {\sc digit} \}, `)' ; + + ::= , \{ `;', \} ; + + ::= {\sc feature_id}, `=', {\sc feature_value} + \alt , {\sc feature_id} ; + + ::= `+' | `-' ; + + ::= {\sc all_characters} - ( `(' | `/' | `:' ) ; + \end{grammar} + \endgroup + \caption{Font request syntax. + Braces or double quotes around the + \emphasis{specification} rule will + preserve whitespace in file names. + In addition to the font style modifiers + (\emphasis{slash-notation}) given above, there + are others that are recognized but will be silently + ignored: {\ttfamily aat}, + {\ttfamily icu}, and + {\ttfamily gr}. + The special terminals are: + {\sc feature\textunderscore id} for a valid font + feature name and + {\sc feature\textunderscore value} for the corresponding + value. + {\sc tfmname} is the name of a \abbrev{tfm} file. + {\sc digit} again refers to bytes 48--57, and + {\sc all\textunderscore characters} to all byte values. + {\sc csname} and {\sc dimension} are the \TEX concepts.} + \label{font-syntax} +\end {figure} + +\subsection{Prefix -- the \identifier{luaotfload}{ }Way} + +In \identifier{luaotfload}, the canonical syntax for font requests +requires a \emphasis{prefix}: +% +\begin{quote} + |\font\fontname=|\meta{prefix}|:|\meta{fontname}\dots +\end{quote} +% +where \meta{prefix} is either \verb|file:| or \verb|name:|.\footnote{% + The development version also knows two further prefixes, + \verb|kpse:| and \verb|my:|. + % + A \verb|kpse| lookup is restricted to files that can be found by + \identifier{kpathsea} and + will not attempt to locate system fonts. + % + This behavior can be of value when an extra degree of encapsulation is + needed, for instance when supplying a customized tex distribution. + + The \verb|my| lookup takes this a step further: it lets you define + a custom resolver function and hook it into the \luafunction{resolve_font} + callback. + % + This ensures full control over how a file is located. + % + For a working example see the + \href{https://bitbucket.org/phg/lua-la-tex-tests/src/5f6a535d/pln-lookup-callback-1.tex} + {test repo}. +} +% +It determines whether the font loader should interpret the request as +a \emphasis{file name} or + \emphasis{font name}, respectively, +which again influences how it will attempt to locate the font. +% +Examples for font names are + “Latin Modern Italic”, + “GFS Bodoni Rg”, and + “PT Serif Caption” +-- they are the human readable identifiers +usually listed in drop-down menus and the like.\footnote{% + Font names may appear like a great choice at first because they + offer seemingly more intuitive identifiers in comparison to arguably + cryptic file names: + % + “PT Sans Bold” is a lot more descriptive than \fileent{PTS75F.ttf}. + On the other hand, font names are quite arbitrary and there is no + universal method to determine their meaning. + % + While \identifier{luaotfload} provides fairly sophisticated heuristic + to figure out a matching font style, weight, and optical size, it + cannot be relied upon to work satisfactorily for all font files. + % + For an in-depth analysis of the situation and how broken font names + are, please refer to + \href{http://www.ntg.nl/pipermail/ntg-context/2013/073889.html} + {this post} + by Hans Hagen, the author of the font loader. + % + If in doubt, use filenames. + % + \fileent{luaotfload-tool} can perform the matching for you with the + option \verb|--find=|, and you can use the file name it returns + in your font definition. +} +% +In order for fonts installed both in system locations and in your +\fileent{texmf} to be accessible by font name, \identifier{luaotfload} must +first collect the metadata included in the files. +% +Please refer to section~\ref{sec:fontdb} below for instructions on how to +create the database. + +File names are whatever your file system allows them to be, except +that that they may not contain the characters + \verb|(|, + \verb|:|, and + \verb|/|. +% +As is obvious from the last exception, the \verb|file:| lookup will +not process paths to the font location -- only those +files found when generating the database are addressable this way. +% +Continue below in the \XETEX section if you need to load your fonts +by path. +% +The file names corresponding to the example font names above are + \fileent{lmroman12-italic.otf}, + \fileent{GFSBodoni.otf}, and + \fileent{PTZ56F.ttf}. + +\subsection{Compatibility Layer} + +In addition to the regular prefixed requests, \identifier{luaotfload} +accepts loading fonts the \XETEX way. +% +There are again two modes: bracketed and unbracketed. +A bracketed request looks as follows. + +\begin{quote} + |\font\fontname=[|\meta{path to file}|]| +\end{quote} + +\noindent +Inside the square brackets, every character except for a closing +bracket is permitted, allowing for specifying paths to a font file. +% +Naturally, path-less file names are equally valid and processed the +same way as an ordinary \verb|file:| lookup. + +\begin{quote} + |\font\fontname=|\meta{font name} \dots +\end{quote} + +Unbracketed (or, for lack of a better word: \emphasis{anonymous}) +font requests resemble the conventional \TEX syntax. +% +However, they have a broader spectrum of possible interpretations: +before anything else, \identifier{luaotfload} attempts to load a +traditional \TEX Font Metric (\abbrev{tfm} or \abbrev{ofm}). +% +If this fails, it performs a \verb|name:| lookup, which itself will +fall back to a \verb|file:| lookup if no database entry matches +\meta{font name}. + +Furthermore, \identifier{luaotfload} supports the slashed (shorthand) +font style notation from \XETEX. + +\begin{quote} + |\font\fontname=|\meta{font name}|/|\meta{modifier}\dots +\end{quote} + +\noindent +Currently, four style modifiers are supported: + \verb|I| for italic shape, + \verb|B| for bold weight, + \verb|BI| or \verb|IB| for the combination of both. +% +Other “slashed” modifiers are too specific to the \XETEX engine and +have no meaning in \LUATEX. + +\subsection{Examples} + +\subsubsection{Loading by File Name} + +For example, conventional \abbrev{type1} font can be loaded with a \verb|file:| +request like so: + +\begin{quote} + \begin{verbatim} + \font\lmromanten={file:ec-lmr10} at 10pt + \end{verbatim} +\end{quote} + +The \OpenType version of Janusz Nowacki’s font \emphasis{Antykwa +Półtawskiego}\footnote{% + \url{http://jmn.pl/antykwa-poltawskiego/}, also available in + in \TEX Live. +} +in its condensed variant can be loaded as follows: + +\begin{quote} + \begin{verbatim} + \font\apcregular=file:antpoltltcond-regular.otf at 42pt + \end{verbatim} +\end{quote} + +The next example shows how to load the \emphasis{Porson} font digitized by +the Greek Font Society using \XETEX-style syntax and an absolute path from a +non-standard directory: + +\begin{quote} + \begin{verbatim} + \font\gfsporson="[/tmp/GFSPorson.otf]" at 12pt + \end{verbatim} +\end{quote} + +\subsubsection{Loading by Font Name} + +The \verb|name:| lookup does not depend on cryptic filenames: + +\begin{quote} + \begin{verbatim} + \font\pagellaregular={name:TeX Gyre Pagella} at 9pt + \end{verbatim} +\end{quote} + +A bit more specific but essentially the same lookup would be: + +\begin{quote} + \begin{verbatim} + \font\pagellaregular={name:TeX Gyre Pagella Regular} at 9pt + \end{verbatim} +\end{quote} + +\noindent +Which fits nicely with the whole set: + +\begin{quote} + \begin{verbatim} + \font\pagellaregular ={name:TeX Gyre Pagella Regular} at 9pt + \font\pagellaitalic ={name:TeX Gyre Pagella Italic} at 9pt + \font\pagellabold ={name:TeX Gyre Pagella Bold} at 9pt + \font\pagellabolditalic={name:TeX Gyre Pagella Bolditalic} at 9pt + + {\pagellaregular foo bar baz\endgraf} + {\pagellaitalic foo bar baz\endgraf} + {\pagellabold foo bar baz\endgraf} + {\pagellabolditalic foo bar baz\endgraf} + + ... + \end{verbatim} +\end{quote} + +\subsubsection{Modifiers} + +If the entire \emphasis{Iwona} family\footnote{% + \url{http://jmn.pl/kurier-i-iwona/}, + also in \TEX Live. +} +is installed in some location accessible by \identifier{luaotfload}, +the regular shape can be loaded as follows: + +\begin{quote} + \begin{verbatim} + \font\iwona=Iwona at 20pt + \end{verbatim} +\end{quote} + +\noindent +To load the most common of the other styles, the slash notation can +be employed as shorthand: + +\begin{quote} + \begin{verbatim} + \font\iwonaitalic =Iwona/I at 20pt + \font\iwonabold =Iwona/B at 20pt + \font\iwonabolditalic=Iwona/BI at 20pt + \end{verbatim} +\end{quote} + +\noindent +which is equivalent to these full names: + +\begin{quote} + \begin{verbatim} + \font\iwonaitalic ="Iwona Italic" at 20pt + \font\iwonabold ="Iwona Bold" at 20pt + \font\iwonabolditalic="Iwona BoldItalic" at 20pt + \end{verbatim} +\end{quote} + +\section {Font features} + +\emphasis{Font features} are the second to last component in the +general scheme for font requests: + +\begin{quote} + |\font\foo={|% + \meta{prefix}|:|% + \meta{font name}|:|% + \meta{font features}|}|% + \meta{\TEX font features} +\end{quote} + +\noindent +If style modifiers are present (\XETEX style), they must precede +\meta{font features}. + +The element \meta{font features} is a semicolon-separated list of feature +tags\footnote{% + Cf. \url{http://www.microsoft.com/typography/otspec/featurelist.htm}. +} +and font options. +% +Prepending a font feature with a |+| (plus sign) enables it, whereas +a |-| (minus) disables it. For instance, the request + +\begin{quote} + \begin{verbatim} + \font\test=LatinModernRoman:+clig;-kern + \end{verbatim} +\end{quote} + +\noindent activates contextual ligatures (|clig|) and disables +kerning (|kern|). +% +Alternatively the options |true| or |false| can be passed to +the feature in a key/value expression. +% +The following request has the same meaning as the last one: + +\begin{quote} + \begin{verbatim} + \font\test=LatinModernRoman:clig=true;kern=false + \end{verbatim} +\end{quote} + +\noindent +Furthermore, this second syntax is required should a font feature +accept other options besides a true/false switch. +% +For example, \emphasis{stylistic alternates} (|salt|) are variants of +given glyphs. +% +They can be selected either explicitly by supplying the variant +index (starting from one), or randomly by setting the value to, +obviously, |random|. + +%% TODO verify that this actually works with a font that supports +%% the salt/random feature!\fi +\begin{quote} + \begin{verbatim} + \font\librmsaltfirst=LatinModernRoman:salt=1 + \end{verbatim} +\end{quote} + +\noindent Other font options include: + +\begin{description} + +\item [mode] \hfill \\ + \identifier{luaotfload} has two \OpenType processing + \emphasis{modes}: + \identifier{base} and \identifier{node}. + + \identifier{base} mode works by mapping \OpenType + features to traditional \TEX ligature and kerning mechanisms. + % + Supporting only non-contextual substitutions and kerning + pairs, it is the slightly faster, albeit somewhat limited, variant. + % + \identifier{node} mode works by processing \TeX’s internal + node list directly at the \LUA end and supports + a wider range of \OpenType features. + % + The downside is that the intricate operations required for + \identifier{node} mode may slow down typesetting especially + with complex fonts and it does not work in math mode. + + By default \identifier{luaotfload} is in \identifier{node} + mode, and \identifier{base} mode has to be requested where needed, + e.~g. for math fonts. + +\item [script] \label{script-tag} \hfill \\ + An \OpenType script tag;\footnote{% + See \url{http://www.microsoft.com/typography/otspec/scripttags.htm} + for a list of valid values. + % + For scripts derived from the Latin alphabet the value + |latn| is good choice. + } + the default value is |dlft|. + % + Some fonts, including very popular ones by foundries like Adobe, + do not assign features to the |dflt| script, in + which case the script needs to be set explicitly. + +\item [language] \hfill \\ + An \OpenType language system identifier,\footnote{% + Cf. \url{http://www.microsoft.com/typography/otspec/languagetags.htm}. + } + defaulting to |dflt|. + +\item [featurefile] \hfill \\ + A comma-separated list of feature files to be applied to the + font. + % + Feature files contain a textual representation of + \OpenType tables and extend the features of a font + on fly. + % + After they are applied to a font, features defined in a + feature file can be enabled or disabled just like any + other font feature. + % + The syntax is documented in \identifier{Adobe}’s + \OpenType Feature File Specification.\footnote{% + Cf. \url{http://www.adobe.com/devnet/opentype/afdko/topic_feature_file_syntax.html}. + } + + For a demonstration of how to set a |tkrn| feature consult + the file |tkrn.fea| that is part of \identifier{luaotfload}. + It can be read and applied as follows: + + |\font\test=Latin Modern Roman:featurefile=tkrn.fea;+tkrn| + +\item [color] \hfill \\ + A font color, defined as a triplet of two-digit hexadecimal + \abbrev{rgb} values, with an optional fourth value for + transparency + (where |00| is completely transparent and |FF| is opaque). + + For example, in order to set text in semitransparent red: + + \begin{quote} + \begin{verbatim} + \font\test={Latin Modern Roman}:color=FF0000BB + \end{verbatim} + \end{quote} + +\item [kernfactor \& letterspace] \hfill \\ + Define a font with letterspacing (tracking) enabled. + % + In \identifier{luaotfload}, letterspacing is implemented by + inserting additional kerning between glyphs. + + This approach is derived from and still quite similar to the + \emphasis{character kerning} (\texmacro{setcharacterkerning} / + \texmacro{definecharacterkerning} \& al.) functionality of + Context, see the file \fileent{typo-krn.lua} there. + % + The main difference is that \identifier{luaotfload} does not + use \LUATEX attributes to assign letterspacing to regions, + but defines virtual letterspaced versions of a font. + + The option \identifier{kernfactor} accepts a numeric value that + determines the letterspacing factor to be applied to the font + size. + % + E.~g. a kern factor of $0.42$ applied to a $10$ pt font + results in $4.2$ pt of additional kerning applied to each + pair of glyphs. + % + Ligatures are split into their component glyphs unless + explicitly ignored (see below). + + For compatibility with \XETEX an alternative + \identifier{letterspace} option is supplied that interprets the + supplied value as a \emphasis{percentage} of the font size but + is otherwise identical to \identifier{kernfactor}. + % + Consequently, both definitions in below snippet yield the same + letterspacing width: + + \begin{quote} + \begin{verbatim} + \font\iwonakernedA="file:Iwona-Regular.otf:kernfactor=0.125" + \font\iwonakernedB="file:Iwona-Regular.otf:letterspace=12.5" + \end{verbatim} + \end{quote} + + Specific pairs of letters and ligatures may be exempt from + letterspacing by defining the \LUA functions + \luafunction{keeptogether} and \luafunction{keepligature}, + respectively, inside the namespace \verb|luaotfload.letterspace|. + % + Both functions are called whenever the letterspacing callback + encounters an appropriate node or set of nodes. + % + If they return a true-ish value, no extra kern is inserted at + the current position. + % + \luafunction{keeptogether} receives a pair of consecutive + glyph nodes in order of their appearance in the node list. + % + \luafunction{keepligature} receives a single node which can be + analyzed into components. + % + (For details refer to the \emphasis{glyph nodes} section in the + \LUATEX reference manual.) + % + The implementation of both functions is left entirely to the + user. + + +\item [protrusion \& expansion] \hfill \\ + These keys control microtypographic features of the font, + namely \emphasis{character protrusion} and \emphasis{font + expansion}. + % + Their arguments are names of \LUA tables that contain + values for the respective features.\footnote{% + For examples of the table layout please refer to the + section of the file \fileent{luaotfload-fonts-ext.lua} where the + default values are defined. + % + Alternatively and with loss of information, you can dump + those tables into your terminal by issuing + \begin{verbatim} + \directlua{inspect(fonts.protrusions.setups.default) + inspect(fonts.expansions.setups.default)} + \end{verbatim} + at some point after loading \fileent{luaotfload.sty}. + } + % + For both, only the set \identifier{default} is predefined. + + For example, to define a font with the default + protrusion vector applied\footnote{% + You also need to set + \verb|pdfprotrudechars=2| and + \verb|pdfadjustspacing=2| + to activate protrusion and expansion, respectively. + See the + \href{http://mirrors.ctan.org/systems/pdftex/manual/pdftex-a.pdf}% + {\PDFTEX manual} + for details. + }: + + \begin{quote} + \begin{verbatim} + \font\test=LatinModernRoman:protrusion=default + \end{verbatim} + \end{quote} +\end{description} + +\paragraph{Non-standard font features} +\identifier{luaotfload} adds a number of features that are not defined +in the original \OpenType specification, most of them +aiming at emulating the behavior familiar from other \TEX engines. +% +Currently (2014) there are three of them: + +\begin{description} + + \item [anum] + Substitutes the glyphs in the \abbrev{ascii} number range + with their counterparts from eastern Arabic or Persian, + depending on the value of \identifier{language}. + + \item [tlig] + Applies legacy \TEX ligatures: + + \begin{tabular}{rlrl} + `` & \verb|``| & '' & \verb|''| \\ + ` & \verb|`| & ' & \verb|'| \\ + " & \verb|"| & -- & \verb|--| \\ + --- & \verb|---| & !` & \verb|!`| \\ + ?` & \verb|?`| & & \\ + \end{tabular} + + \footnote{% + These contain the feature set \verb|trep| of earlier + versions of \identifier{luaotfload}. + + Note to \XETEX users: this is the equivalent of the + assignment \verb|mapping=text-tex| using \XETEX's input + remapping feature. + } + + \item [itlc] + Computes italic correction values (active by default). + +\end{description} + + + +\section{Font names database} +\label{sec:fontdb} + +As mentioned above, \identifier{luaotfload} keeps track of which +fonts are available to \LUATEX by means of a \emphasis{database}. +% +This allows referring to fonts not only by explicit filenames but +also by the proper names contained in the metadata which is often +more accessible to humans.\footnote{% + The tool \href{http://www.lcdf.org/type/}{\fileent{otfinfo}} (comes + with \TEX Live), when invoked on a font file with the \verb|-i| + option, lists the variety of name fields defined for it. +} + +When \identifier{luaotfload} is asked to load a font by a font name, +it will check if the database exists and load it, or else generate a +fresh one. +% +Should it then fail to locate the font, an update to the database is +performed in case the font has been added to the system only +recently. +% +As soon as the database is updated, the resolver will try +and look up the font again, all without user intervention. +% +The goal is for \identifier{luaotfload} to act in the background and +behave as unobtrusively as possible, while providing a convenient +interface to the fonts installed on the system. + +Generating the database for the first time may take a while since it +inspects every font file on your computer. +% +This is particularly noticeable if it occurs during a typesetting run. +In any case, subsequent updates to the database will be quite fast. + +\subsection[luaotfload-tool / mkluatexfontdb.lua]% + {\fileent{luaotfload-tool} / + \fileent{mkluatexfontdb.lua}\footnote{% + The script may be named just \fileent{mkluatexfontdb} in your + distribution. +}} + +It can still be desirable at times to do some of these steps +manually, and without having to compile a document. +% +To this end, \identifier{luaotfload} comes with the utility +\fileent{luaotfload-tool} that offers an interface to the database +functionality. +% +Being a \LUA script, there are two ways to run it: +either make it executable (\verb|chmod +x| on unixoid systems) or +pass it as an argument to \fileent{texlua}.\footnote{% + Tests by the maintainer show only marginal performance gain by + running with Luigi Scarso’s + \href{https://foundry.supelec.fr/projects/luajittex/}% + {\identifier{Luajit\kern-.25ex\TEX}}, + which is probably due to the fact that most of the time is spent + on file system operations. + + \emphasis{Note}: + On \abbrev{MS} \identifier{Windows} systems, the script can be run + either by calling the wrapper application + \fileent{luaotfload-tool.exe} or as + \verb|texlua.exe luaotfload-tool.lua|. +} +% +Invoked with the argument \verb|--update| it will perform a database +update, scanning for fonts not indexed. + +\begin{quote} + \begin{verbatim} + luaotfload-tool --update + \end{verbatim} +\end{quote} + +Adding the \verb|--force| switch will initiate a complete +rebuild of the database. + +\begin{quote} + \begin{verbatim} + luaotfload-tool --update --force + \end{verbatim} +\end{quote} + +For sake of backwards compatibility, \fileent{luaotfload-tool} may be +renamed or symlinked to \fileent{mkluatexfontdb}. +% +Whenever it is run under this name, it will update the database +first, mimicking the behavior of earlier versions of +\identifier{luaotfload}. + +\subsection{Search Paths} + +\identifier{luaotfload} scans those directories where fonts are +expected to be located on a given system. +% +On a Linux machine it follows the paths listed in the +\identifier{Fontconfig} configuration files; +consult \verb|man 5 fonts.conf| for further information. +% +On \identifier{Windows} systems, the standard location is +\verb|Windows\Fonts|, +% +while \identifier{Mac OS~X} requires a multitude of paths to +be examined. +% +The complete list is is given in table \ref{table-searchpaths}. +Other paths can be specified by setting the environment variable +\verb+OSFONTDIR+. +% +If it is non-empty, then search will be extended to the included +directories. + +\begin{table}[t] + \hrule + \caption{List of paths searched for each supported operating + system.} + \renewcommand{\arraystretch}{1.2} + \begin{center} + \begin{tabular}{lp{.5\textwidth}} + Windows & \verb|%WINDIR%\Fonts| + \\ + Linux & \fileent{/usr/local/etc/fonts/fonts.conf} and\hfill\break + \fileent{/etc/fonts/fonts.conf} + \\ + Mac & \fileent{\textasciitilde/Library/Fonts},\break + \fileent{/Library/Fonts},\break + \fileent{/System/Library/Fonts}, and\hfill\break + \fileent{/Network/Library/Fonts} + \\ + \end{tabular} + \end{center} + \label{table-searchpaths} + \hrule +\end{table} + +\subsection{Querying from Outside} + +\fileent{luaotfload-tool} also provides rudimentary means of +accessing the information collected in the font database. +% +If the option \verb|--find=|\emphasis{name} is given, the script will +try and search the fonts indexed by \identifier{luaotfload} for a +matching name. +% +For instance, the invocation + +\begin{quote} + \begin{verbatim} + luaotfload-tool --find="Iwona Regular" + \end{verbatim} +\end{quote} + +\noindent +will verify if “Iwona Regular” is found in the database and can be +readily requested in a document. + +If you are unsure about the actual font name, then add the +\verb|-F| (or \verb|--fuzzy|) switch to the command line to enable +approximate matching. +% +Suppose you cannot precisely remember if the variant of +\identifier{Iwona} you are looking for was “Bright” or “Light”. +The query + +\begin{quote} + \begin{verbatim} + luaotfload-tool -F --find="Iwona Bright" + \end{verbatim} +\end{quote} + +\noindent +will tell you that indeed the latter name is correct. + +Basic information about fonts in the database can be displayed +using the \verb|-i| option (\verb|--info|). +% +\begin{quote} + \begin{verbatim} + luaotfload-tool -i --find="Iwona Light Italic" + \end{verbatim} +\end{quote} +% +\noindent +The meaning of the printed values is described in section 4.4 of the +\LUATEX reference manual.\footnote{% + In \TEX Live: \fileent{texmf-dist/doc/luatex/base/luatexref-t.pdf}. +} + +For a much more detailed report about a given font try the \verb|-I| option +instead (\verb|--inspect|). +\begin{quote} + \begin{verbatim} + luaotfload-tool -I --find="Iwona Light Italic" + \end{verbatim} +\end{quote} + +\verb|luaotfload-tool --help| will list the available command line +switches, including some not discussed in detail here. +% +For a full documentation of \identifier{luaotfload-tool} and its +capabilities refer to the manpage +(\verb|man 1 luaotfload-tool|).\footnote{% + Or see \verb|luaotfload-tool.rst| in the source directory. +} + +\subsection{Blacklisting Fonts} +\label{font-blacklist} + +Some fonts are problematic in general, or just in \LUATEX. +% +If you find that compiling your document takes far too long or eats +away all your system’s memory, you can track down the culprit by +running \verb|luaotfload-tool -v| to increase verbosity. +% +Take a note of the \emphasis{filename} of the font that database +creation fails with and append it to the file +\fileent{luaotfload-blacklist.cnf}. + +A blacklist file is a list of font filenames, one per line. +Specifying the full path to where the file is located is optional, the +plain filename should suffice. +% +File extensions (\fileent{.otf}, \fileent{.ttf}, etc.) may be omitted. +% +Anything after a percent (|%|) character until the end of the line +is ignored, so use this to add comments. +% +Place this file to some location where the \identifier{kpse} +library can find it, e.~g. +\fileent{texmf-local/tex/luatex/luaotfload} if you are running +\identifier{\TEX Live},\footnote{% + You may have to run \verb|mktexlsr| if you created a new file in + your \fileent{texmf} tree. +} +or just leave it in the working directory of your document. +% +\identifier{luaotfload} reads all files named +\fileent{luaotfload-blacklist.cnf} it finds, so the fonts in +\fileent{./luaotfload-blacklist.cnf} extend the global blacklist. + +Furthermore, a filename prepended with a dash character (|-|) is +removed from the blacklist, causing it to be temporarily whitelisted +without modifying the global file. +% +An example with explicit paths: + +\begin{verbatim} +% example otf-blacklist.cnf +/Library/Fonts/GillSans.ttc % Luaotfload ignores this font. +-/Library/Fonts/Optima.ttc % This one is usable again, even if + % blacklisted somewhere else. +\end{verbatim} + +\section{Files from \CONTEXT and \LUATEX-Fonts} + +\identifier{luaotfload} relies on code originally written by Hans +Hagen\footnote{% + The creator of the \href{http://wiki.contextgarden.net}{\CONTEXT} + format. +} +for and tested with \CONTEXT. +% +It integrates the font loader as distributed in +the \identifier{\LUATEX-Fonts} package. +% +The original \LUA source files have been combined using the +\fileent{mtx-package} script into a single, self-contained blob. +In this form the font loader has no further dependencies\footnote{% + It covers, however, to some extent the functionality of the + \identifier{lualibs} package. +} +and requires only minor adaptions to integrate into +\identifier{luaotfload}. +% +The guiding principle is to let \CONTEXT/\LUATEX-Fonts take care of +the implementation, and update the imported code from time to time. +% +As maintainers, we aim at importing files from upstream essentially +\emphasis{unmodified}, except for renaming them to prevent name +clashes. +% +This job has been greatly alleviated since the advent of +\LUATEX-Fonts, prior to which the individual dependencies had to be +manually spotted and extracted from the \CONTEXT source code in a +complicated and error-prone fashion. + +Below is a commented list of the files distributed with +\identifier{luaotfload} in one way or the other. +% +See figure \ref{file-graph} on page \pageref{file-graph} for a +graphical representation of the dependencies. +% +From \LUATEX-Fonts, only the file \fileent{luatex-fonts-merged.lua} +has been imported as \fileent{luaotfload-fontloader.lua}. +% +It is generated by \fileent{mtx-package}, a \LUA source code merging +too developed by Hans Hagen.\footnote{% + \fileent{mtx-package} is + \href + {http://repo.or.cz/w/context.git/blob_plain/refs/heads/origin:/scripts/context/lua/mtx-package.lua} + {part of \CONTEXT} + and requires \fileent{mtxrun}. + Run + \verb|mtxrun --script package --help| + to display further information. + For the actual merging code see the file + \fileent{util-mrg.lua} that is part of \CONTEXT. +} +It houses several \LUA files that can be classed in three +categories. + + \begin{itemize} + \let\normalitem=\item + \def\incitem#1{% + \normalitem{\fileent{#1}} + } + \normalitem \emphasis{\LUA utility libraries}, a subset + of what is provided by the \identifier{lualibs} + package. + + \begin{multicols}{2} + \begin{itemize} + \incitem{l-lua.lua} \incitem{l-lpeg.lua} + \incitem{l-function.lua} \incitem{l-string.lua} + \incitem{l-table.lua} \incitem{l-io.lua} + \incitem{l-file.lua} \incitem{l-boolean.lua} + \incitem{l-math.lua} \incitem{util-str.lua} + \end{itemize} + \end{multicols} + + \normalitem The \emphasis{font loader} itself. + These files have been written for + \LUATEX-Fonts and they are distributed along + with \identifier{luaotfload}. + \begin{multicols}{2} + \begin{itemize} + \incitem{luatex-basics-gen.lua} + \incitem{luatex-basics-nod.lua} + \incitem{luatex-fonts-enc.lua} + \incitem{luatex-fonts-syn.lua} + \incitem{luatex-fonts-tfm.lua} + \incitem{luatex-fonts-chr.lua} + \incitem{luatex-fonts-lua.lua} + \incitem{luatex-fonts-inj.lua} + \incitem{luatex-fonts-otn.lua} + \incitem{luatex-fonts-def.lua} + \incitem{luatex-fonts-ext.lua} + \incitem{luatex-fonts-cbk.lua} + \end{itemize} + \end{multicols} + + \normalitem Code related to \emphasis{font handling and + node processing}, taken directly from + \CONTEXT. + \begin{multicols}{2} + \begin{itemize} + \incitem{data-con.lua} \incitem{font-ini.lua} + \incitem{font-con.lua} \incitem{font-cid.lua} + \incitem{font-map.lua} \incitem{font-oti.lua} + \incitem{font-otf.lua} \incitem{font-otb.lua} + \incitem{font-ota.lua} \incitem{font-def.lua} + \incitem{font-otp.lua} + \end{itemize} + \end{multicols} + \end{itemize} + +Note that if \identifier{luaotfload} cannot locate the +merged file, it will load the individual \LUA libraries +instead. +% +Their names remain the same as in \CONTEXT (without the +\verb|otfl|-prefix) since we imported the relevant section of +\fileent{luatex-fonts.lua} unmodified into \fileent{luaotfload-main.lua}. +Thus if you prefer running bleeding edge code from the +\CONTEXT beta, all you have to do is remove +\fileent{luaotfload-merged.lua} from the search path. + +Also, the merged file at some point loads the Adobe Glyph List from a +\LUA table that is contained in \fileent{luaotfload-glyphlist.lua}, +which is automatically generated by the script +\fileent{mkglyphlist}.\footnote{% + See \fileent{luaotfload-font-enc.lua}. + The hard-coded file name is why we have to replace the procedure + that loads the file in \fileent{luaotfload-override.lua}. +} +There is a make target \identifier{glyphs} that will create a fresh +glyph list so we don’t need to import it from \CONTEXT any longer. + +In addition to these, \identifier{luaotfload} requires a number of +files not contained in the merge. Some of these have no equivalent in +\LUATEX-Fonts or \CONTEXT, some were taken unmodified from the latter. + +\begin{itemize} + \let\normalitem=\item + \def\ouritem#1{% + \normalitem{\fileent{#1}}% + \space--\hskip1em + } + \ouritem {luaotfload-features.lua} font feature handling; + incorporates some of the code from + \fileent{font-otc} from \CONTEXT; + \ouritem {luaotfload-override.lua} overrides the \CONTEXT logging + functionality. + \ouritem {luaotfload-loaders.lua} registers the \OpenType + font reader as handler for + Postscript fonts + (\abbrev{pfa}, \abbrev{pfb}). + \ouritem {luaotfload-parsers.lua} various \abbrev{lpeg}-based parsers. + \ouritem {luaotfload-database.lua} font names database. + \ouritem {luaotfload-colors.lua} color handling. + \ouritem {luaotfload-auxiliary.lua} access to internal functionality + for package authors + (proposals for additions welcome). + \ouritem {luaotfload-letterspace.lua} font-based letterspacing. +\end{itemize} + +\begin{figure}[b] + \caption{Schematic of the files in \identifier{Luaotfload}} + \includegraphics[width=\textwidth]{filegraph.pdf} + \label{file-graph} +\end{figure} + +\section{Auxiliary Functions} + +With release version 2.2, \identifier{luaotfload} received +additional functions for package authors to call from outside +(see the file \fileent{luaotfload-auxiliary.lua} for details). +% +The purpose of this addition twofold. +% +Firstly, \identifier{luaotfload} failed to provide a stable interface +to internals in the past which resulted in an unmanageable situation +of different packages abusing the raw access to font objects by means +of the \luafunction{patch_font} callback. +% +When the structure of the font object changed due to an update, all +of these imploded and several packages had to be fixed while +simultaneously providing fallbacks for earlier versions. +% +Now the patching is done on the \identifier{luaotfload} side and can +be adapted with future modifications to font objects without touching +the packages that depend on it. +% +Second, some the capabilities of the font loader and the names +database are not immediately relevant in \identifier{luaotfload} +itself but might nevertheless be of great value to package authors or +end users. + +Note that the current interface is not yet set in stone and the +development team is open to suggestions for improvements or +additions. + +\subsection{Callback Functions} + +The \luafunction{patch_font} callback is inserted in the wrapper +\identifier{luaotfload} provides for the font definition callback +(see below, page \pageref{define-font}). +% +At this place it allows manipulating the font object immediately after +the font loader is done creating it. +% +For a short demonstration of its usefulness, here is a snippet that +writes an entire font object to the file \fileent{fontdump.lua}: + +\begin{quote} + \begin{verbatim} + \input luaotfload.sty + \directlua{ + local dumpfile = "fontdump.lua" + local dump_font = function (tfmdata) + local data = table.serialize(tfmdata) + io.savedata(dumpfile, data) + end + + luatexbase.add_to_callback( + "luaotfload.patch_font", + dump_font, + "my_private_callbacks.dump_font" + ) + } + \font\dumpme=name:Iwona + \bye + \end{verbatim} +\end{quote} + +\emphasis{Beware}: this creates a Lua file of around 150,000 lines of +code, taking up 3~\abbrev{mb} of disk space. +% +By inspecting the output you can get a first impression of how a font +is structured in \LUATEX’s memory, what elements it is composed of, +and in what ways it can be rearranged. + +\subsubsection{Compatibility with Earlier Versions} + +As has been touched on in the preface to this section, the structure +of the object as returned by the fontloader underwent rather drastic +changes during different stages of its development, and not all +packages that made use of font patching have kept up with every one +of it. +% +To ensure compatibility with these as well as older versions of +some packages, \identifier{luaotfload} sets up copies of or references +to data in the font table where it used to be located. +% +For instance, important parameters like the requested point size, the +units factor, and the font name have again been made accessible from +the toplevel of the table even though they were migrated to different +subtables in the meantime. + +\subsubsection{Patches} + +These are mostly concerned with establishing compatibility with \XETEX. + +\begin{itemize} + \let\normalitem=\item + \def\ouritem#1{% + \normalitem{\luafunction{#1}}% + \hfill\break + } + + \ouritem {set_sscale_dimens} + Calculate \texmacro{fontdimen}s 10 and 11 to emulate \XETEX. + + \ouritem {set_capheight} + Calculates \texmacro{fontdimen} 8 like \XETEX. + + \ouritem {patch_cambria_domh} + Correct some values of the font \emphasis{Cambria Math}. + +\end{itemize} + +\subsection{Package Author’s Interface} + +As \LUATEX release 1.0 is nearing, the demand for a reliable interface +for package authors increases. + +\subsubsection{Font Properties} + +Below functions mostly concern querying the different components of a +font like for instance the glyphs it contains, or what font features +are defined for which scripts. + +\begin{itemize} + \let\normalitem=\item + \def\ouritem#1{% + \normalitem{\luafunction{#1}}% + \hfill\break + } + + \ouritem {aux.font_has_glyph (id : int, index : int)} + Predicate that returns true if the font \luafunction{id} + has glyph \luafunction{index}. + + \ouritem {aux.slot_of_name(name : string)} + Translates an Adobe Glyph name to the corresponding glyph + slot. + + \ouritem {aux.name_of_slot(slot : int)} + The inverse of \luafunction{slot_of_name}; note that this + might be incomplete as multiple glyph names may map to the + same codepoint, only one of which is returned by + \luafunction{name_of_slot}. + + \ouritem {aux.provides_script(id : int, script : string)} + Test if a font supports \luafunction{script}. + + \ouritem {aux.provides_language(id : int, script : string, language : string)} + Test if a font defines \luafunction{language} for a given + \luafunction{script}. + + \ouritem {aux.provides_feature(id : int, script : string, + language : string, feature : string)} + Test if a font defines \luafunction{feature} for + \luafunction{language} for a given \luafunction{script}. + + \ouritem {aux.get_math_dimension(id : int, dimension : string)} + Get the dimension \luafunction{dimension} of font \luafunction{id}. + + \ouritem {aux.sprint_math_dimension(id : int, dimension : string)} + Same as \luafunction{get_math_dimension()}, but output the value + in scaled points at the \TEX end. + +\end{itemize} + +\subsubsection{Database} + +\begin{itemize} + \let\normalitem=\item + \def\ouritem#1{% + \normalitem{\luafunction{#1}}% + \hfill\break + } + + \ouritem {aux.scan_external_dir(dir : string)} + Include fonts in directory \luafunction{dir} in font lookups without + adding them to the database. + +\end{itemize} + +\section{Troubleshooting} + +\subsection {Database Generation} +If you encounter problems with some fonts, please first update to the +latest version of this package before reporting a bug, as +\identifier{luaotfload} is under active development and still a moving +target. +% +The development takes place on \identifier{github} at +\url{https://github.com/lualatex/luaotfload} where there is an issue +tracker for submitting bug reports, feature requests and the likes +requests and the likes. + +Bug reports are more likely to be addressed if they contain the output +of + +\begin{quote} + \begin{verbatim} + luaotfload-tool --diagnose=environment,files,permissions + \end{verbatim} +\end{quote} + +\noindent Consult the man page for a description of these options. + +Errors during database generation can be traced by increasing the +verbosity level and redirecting log output to \fileent{stdout}: + +\begin{quote} + \begin{verbatim} + luaotfload-tool -fuvvv --log=stdout + \end{verbatim} +\end{quote} + +\noindent or to a file in \fileent{/tmp}: + +\begin{quote} + \begin{verbatim} + luaotfload-tool -fuvvv --log=file + \end{verbatim} +\end{quote} + +\noindent In the latter case, invoke the \verb|tail(1)| utility on the +file for live monitoring of the progress. + +If database generation fails, the font last printed to the terminal or +log file is likely to be the culprit. +% +Please specify it when reporting a bug, and blacklist it for the time +being (see above, page \pageref{font-blacklist}). + +\subsection {Font Features} + +A common problem is the lack of features for some +\OpenType fonts even when specified. +% +This can be related to the fact that some fonts do not provide features +for the \verb|dflt| script (see above on page \pageref{script-tag}), +which is the default one in this package. +% +If this happens, assigning a noth script when the font is defined should +fix it. +% +For example with \verb|latn|: + +\begin{quote} + \begin{verbatim} + \font\test=file:MyFont.otf:script=latn;+liga; + \end{verbatim} +\end{quote} + +You can get a list of features that a font defines for scripts and +languages by querying it in \fileent{luaotfload-tool}: + +\begin{quote} + \begin{verbatim} + luaotfload-tool --find="Iwona" --inspect + \end{verbatim} +\end{quote} + +\subsection {\LUATEX Programming} + +Another strategy that helps avoiding problems is to not access raw +\LUATEX internals directly. +% +Some of them, even though they are dangerous to access, have not been +overridden or disabled. +% +Thus, whenever possible prefer the functions in the \luafunction{aux} +namespace over direct manipulation of font objects. For example, raw +access to the \luafunction{font.fonts} table like: + +\begin{quote} + \begin{verbatim} + local somefont = font.fonts[2] + \end{verbatim} +\end{quote} + +\noindent can render already defined fonts unusable. +% +Instead, the function \luafunction{font.getfont()} should be used +because it has been replaced by a safe variant. + +However, \luafunction{font.getfont()} only covers fonts handled by the +font loader, e.~g. \identifier{OpenType} and \identifier{TrueType} +fonts, but not \abbrev{tfm} or \abbrev{ofm}. +% +Should you absolutely require access to all fonts known to \LUATEX, +including the virtual and autogenerated ones, then you need to query +both \luafunction{font.getfont()} and \luafunction{font.fonts}. +% +In this case, best define you own accessor: + +\begin{quote} + \begin{verbatim} + local unsafe_getfont = function (id) + local tfmdata = font.getfont (id) + if not tfmdata then + tfmdata = font.fonts[id] + end + return tfmdata + end + + --- use like getfont() + local somefont = unsafe_getfont (2) + \end{verbatim} +\end{quote} + +\part{Implementation} + +\section {\fileent{luaotfload.lua}} + +As of version 2.5, the file \fileent{luaotfload.lua} is no longer +generated from the \abbrev{dtx}. +% +Instead, it is maintained separately as a plain \identifier{Lua} file +\fileent{luaotfload-main.lua} in the Luaotfload \identifier{git} tree. +% +The file documentation which used to be found in this section has been +preserved in the comments. + +\section{\fileent{luaotfload.sty}} + +As of version 2.5, the file \fileent{luaotfload.sty} is no longer +generated from the \abbrev{dtx}. +% +Instead, it is maintained separately as a plain \identifier{\TEX} file +in the Luaotfload \identifier{git} tree. +% +The file documentation which used to be found in this section has +been preserved in the comments. + +\clearpage +\section{The GNU GPL License v2} + +The GPL requires the complete license text to be distributed along +with the code. I recommend the canonical source, instead: +\url{http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/gpl-2.0.html}. +But if you insist on an included copy, here it is. +You might want to zoom in. + +\newsavebox{\gpl} +\begin{lrbox}{\gpl} +\begin{minipage}{3\textwidth} +\columnsep=3\columnsep +\begin{multicols}{3} +\begin{center} +{\Large GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE\par} +\bigskip +{Version 2, June 1991} +\end{center} + +\begin{center} +{\parindent 0in + +Copyright \textcopyright\ 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc. + +\bigskip + +51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA + +\bigskip + +Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies +of this license document, but changing it is not allowed. +} +\end{center} + +\begin{center} +{\bf\large Preamble} +\end{center} + + +The licenses for most software are designed to take away your freedom to +share and change it. By contrast, the GNU General Public License is +intended to guarantee your freedom to share and change free software---to +make sure the software is free for all its users. This General Public +License applies to most of the Free Software Foundation's software and to +any other program whose authors commit to using it. (Some other Free +Software Foundation software is covered by the GNU Library General Public +License instead.) You can apply it to your programs, too. + +When we speak of free software, we are referring to freedom, not price. +Our General Public Licenses are designed to make sure that you have the +freedom to distribute copies of free software (and charge for this service +if you wish), that you receive source code or can get it if you want it, +that you can change the software or use pieces of it in new free programs; +and that you know you can do these things. + +To protect your rights, we need to make restrictions that forbid anyone to +deny you these rights or to ask you to surrender the rights. These +restrictions translate to certain responsibilities for you if you +distribute copies of the software, or if you modify it. + +For example, if you distribute copies of such a program, whether gratis or +for a fee, you must give the recipients all the rights that you have. You +must make sure that they, too, receive or can get the source code. And +you must show them these terms so they know their rights. + +We protect your rights with two steps: (1) copyright the software, and (2) +offer you this license which gives you legal permission to copy, +distribute and/or modify the software. + +Also, for each author's protection and ours, we want to make certain that +everyone understands that there is no warranty for this free software. If +the software is modified by someone else and passed on, we want its +recipients to know that what they have is not the original, so that any +problems introduced by others will not reflect on the original authors' +reputations. + +Finally, any free program is threatened constantly by software patents. +We wish to avoid the danger that redistributors of a free program will +individually obtain patent licenses, in effect making the program +proprietary. To prevent this, we have made it clear that any patent must +be licensed for everyone's free use or not licensed at all. + +The precise terms and conditions for copying, distribution and +modification follow. + +\begin{center} +{\Large \sc Terms and Conditions For Copying, Distribution and + Modification} +\end{center} + +\begin{enumerate} +\item +This License applies to any program or other work which contains a notice +placed by the copyright holder saying it may be distributed under the +terms of this General Public License. The ``Program'', below, refers to +any such program or work, and a ``work based on the Program'' means either +the Program or any derivative work under copyright law: that is to say, a +work containing the Program or a portion of it, either verbatim or with +modifications and/or translated into another language. (Hereinafter, +translation is included without limitation in the term ``modification''.) +Each licensee is addressed as ``you''. + +Activities other than copying, distribution and modification are not +covered by this License; they are outside its scope. The act of +running the Program is not restricted, and the output from the Program +is covered only if its contents constitute a work based on the +Program (independent of having been made by running the Program). +Whether that is true depends on what the Program does. + +\item You may copy and distribute verbatim copies of the Program's source + code as you receive it, in any medium, provided that you conspicuously + and appropriately publish on each copy an appropriate copyright notice + and disclaimer of warranty; keep intact all the notices that refer to + this License and to the absence of any warranty; and give any other + recipients of the Program a copy of this License along with the Program. + +You may charge a fee for the physical act of transferring a copy, and you +may at your option offer warranty protection in exchange for a fee. + +\item +You may modify your copy or copies of the Program or any portion +of it, thus forming a work based on the Program, and copy and +distribute such modifications or work under the terms of Section 1 +above, provided that you also meet all of these conditions: + +\begin{enumerate} + +\item +You must cause the modified files to carry prominent notices stating that +you changed the files and the date of any change. + +\item +You must cause any work that you distribute or publish, that in +whole or in part contains or is derived from the Program or any +part thereof, to be licensed as a whole at no charge to all third +parties under the terms of this License. + +\item +If the modified program normally reads commands interactively +when run, you must cause it, when started running for such +interactive use in the most ordinary way, to print or display an +announcement including an appropriate copyright notice and a +notice that there is no warranty (or else, saying that you provide +a warranty) and that users may redistribute the program under +these conditions, and telling the user how to view a copy of this +License. (Exception: if the Program itself is interactive but +does not normally print such an announcement, your work based on +the Program is not required to print an announcement.) + +\end{enumerate} + + +These requirements apply to the modified work as a whole. If +identifiable sections of that work are not derived from the Program, +and can be reasonably considered independent and separate works in +themselves, then this License, and its terms, do not apply to those +sections when you distribute them as separate works. But when you +distribute the same sections as part of a whole which is a work based +on the Program, the distribution of the whole must be on the terms of +this License, whose permissions for other licensees extend to the +entire whole, and thus to each and every part regardless of who wrote it. + +Thus, it is not the intent of this section to claim rights or contest +your rights to work written entirely by you; rather, the intent is to +exercise the right to control the distribution of derivative or +collective works based on the Program. + +In addition, mere aggregation of another work not based on the Program +with the Program (or with a work based on the Program) on a volume of +a storage or distribution medium does not bring the other work under +the scope of this License. + +\item +You may copy and distribute the Program (or a work based on it, +under Section 2) in object code or executable form under the terms of +Sections 1 and 2 above provided that you also do one of the following: + +\begin{enumerate} + +\item + +Accompany it with the complete corresponding machine-readable +source code, which must be distributed under the terms of Sections +1 and 2 above on a medium customarily used for software interchange; or, + +\item + +Accompany it with a written offer, valid for at least three +years, to give any third party, for a charge no more than your +cost of physically performing source distribution, a complete +machine-readable copy of the corresponding source code, to be +distributed under the terms of Sections 1 and 2 above on a medium +customarily used for software interchange; or, + +\item + +Accompany it with the information you received as to the offer +to distribute corresponding source code. (This alternative is +allowed only for noncommercial distribution and only if you +received the program in object code or executable form with such +an offer, in accord with Subsection b above.) + +\end{enumerate} + + +The source code for a work means the preferred form of the work for +making modifications to it. For an executable work, complete source +code means all the source code for all modules it contains, plus any +associated interface definition files, plus the scripts used to +control compilation and installation of the executable. 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Any attempt +otherwise to copy, modify, sublicense or distribute the Program is +void, and will automatically terminate your rights under this License. +However, parties who have received copies, or rights, from you under +this License will not have their licenses terminated so long as such +parties remain in full compliance. + +\item +You are not required to accept this License, since you have not +signed it. However, nothing else grants you permission to modify or +distribute the Program or its derivative works. These actions are +prohibited by law if you do not accept this License. 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For example, if a patent +license would not permit royalty-free redistribution of the Program by +all those who receive copies directly or indirectly through you, then +the only way you could satisfy both it and this License would be to +refrain entirely from distribution of the Program. + +If any portion of this section is held invalid or unenforceable under +any particular circumstance, the balance of the section is intended to +apply and the section as a whole is intended to apply in other +circumstances. + +It is not the purpose of this section to induce you to infringe any +patents or other property right claims or to contest validity of any +such claims; this section has the sole purpose of protecting the +integrity of the free software distribution system, which is +implemented by public license practices. Many people have made +generous contributions to the wide range of software distributed +through that system in reliance on consistent application of that +system; it is up to the author/donor to decide if he or she is willing +to distribute software through any other system and a licensee cannot +impose that choice. + +This section is intended to make thoroughly clear what is believed to +be a consequence of the rest of this License. + +\item +If the distribution and/or use of the Program is restricted in +certain countries either by patents or by copyrighted interfaces, the +original copyright holder who places the Program under this License +may add an explicit geographical distribution limitation excluding +those countries, so that distribution is permitted only in or among +countries not thus excluded. In such case, this License incorporates +the limitation as if written in the body of this License. + +\item +The Free Software Foundation may publish revised and/or new versions +of the General Public License from time to time. Such new versions will +be similar in spirit to the present version, but may differ in detail to +address new problems or concerns. + +Each version is given a distinguishing version number. If the Program +specifies a version number of this License which applies to it and ``any +later version'', you have the option of following the terms and conditions +either of that version or of any later version published by the Free +Software Foundation. If the Program does not specify a version number of +this License, you may choose any version ever published by the Free Software +Foundation. + +\item +If you wish to incorporate parts of the Program into other free +programs whose distribution conditions are different, write to the author +to ask for permission. For software which is copyrighted by the Free +Software Foundation, write to the Free Software Foundation; we sometimes +make exceptions for this. Our decision will be guided by the two goals +of preserving the free status of all derivatives of our free software and +of promoting the sharing and reuse of software generally. + +\begin{center} +{\Large\sc +No Warranty +} +\end{center} + +\item +{\sc Because the program is licensed free of charge, there is no warranty +for the program, to the extent permitted by applicable law. Except when +otherwise stated in writing the copyright holders and/or other parties +provide the program ``as is'' without warranty of any kind, either expressed +or implied, including, but not limited to, the implied warranties of +merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose. The entire risk as +to the quality and performance of the program is with you. Should the +program prove defective, you assume the cost of all necessary servicing, +repair or correction.} + +\item +{\sc In no event unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing +will any copyright holder, or any other party who may modify and/or +redistribute the program as permitted above, be liable to you for damages, +including any general, special, incidental or consequential damages arising +out of the use or inability to use the program (including but not limited +to loss of data or data being rendered inaccurate or losses sustained by +you or third parties or a failure of the program to operate with any other +programs), even if such holder or other party has been advised of the +possibility of such damages.} + +\end{enumerate} + + +\begin{center} +{\Large\sc End of Terms and Conditions} +\end{center} + + +\pagebreak[2] + +\section*{Appendix: How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs} + +If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest +possible use to the public, the best way to achieve this is to make it +free software which everyone can redistribute and change under these +terms. + + To do so, attach the following notices to the program. It is safest to + attach them to the start of each source file to most effectively convey + the exclusion of warranty; and each file should have at least the + ``copyright'' line and a pointer to where the full notice is found. + +\begin{quote} +one line to give the program's name and a brief idea of what it does. \\ +Copyright (C) yyyy name of author \\ + +This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify +it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by +the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or +(at your option) any later version. + +This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, +but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of +MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the +GNU General Public License for more details. + +You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License +along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software +Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. +\end{quote} + +Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail. + +If the program is interactive, make it output a short notice like this +when it starts in an interactive mode: + +\begin{quote} +Gnomovision version 69, Copyright (C) yyyy name of author \\ +Gnomovision comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type `show w'. \\ +This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it +under certain conditions; type `show c' for details. +\end{quote} + + +The hypothetical commands {\tt show w} and {\tt show c} should show the +appropriate parts of the General Public License. Of course, the commands +you use may be called something other than {\tt show w} and {\tt show c}; +they could even be mouse-clicks or menu items---whatever suits your +program. + +You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or your +school, if any, to sign a ``copyright disclaimer'' for the program, if +necessary. Here is a sample; alter the names: + +\begin{quote} +Yoyodyne, Inc., hereby disclaims all copyright interest in the program \\ +`Gnomovision' (which makes passes at compilers) written by James Hacker. \\ + +signature of Ty Coon, 1 April 1989 \\ +Ty Coon, President of Vice +\end{quote} + + +This General Public License does not permit incorporating your program +into proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you +may consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications +with the library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Library +General Public License instead of this License. + +\end{multicols} +\end{minipage} +\end{lrbox} + +\begin{center} +\scalebox{0.33}{\usebox{\gpl}} +\end{center} + +\endinput + diff --git a/doc/luaotfload.dtx b/doc/luaotfload.dtx deleted file mode 100644 index e0311a4..0000000 --- a/doc/luaotfload.dtx +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1994 +0,0 @@ -% \iffalse meta-comment -% -% Copyright (C) 2009-2014 -% by Elie Roux -% and Khaled Hosny -% and Philipp Gesang -% -% Home: https://github.com/lualatex/luaotfload -% Support: . -% -% This work is under the GPL v2.0 license. -% -% This work consists of the main source file luaotfload.dtx -% and the derived files -% luaotfload.sty -% -% Unpacking: -% tex luaotfload.dtx -% -% Documentation: -% lualatex luaotfload.dtx -% -% The class ltxdoc loads the configuration file ltxdoc.cfg -% if available. Here you can specify further options, e.g. -% use A4 as paper format: -% \PassOptionsToClass{a4paper}{article} -% -% -% -%<*ignore> -\begingroup - \def\x{LaTeX2e}% -\expandafter\endgroup -\ifcase 0\ifx\install y1\fi\expandafter - \ifx\csname processbatchFile\endcsname\relax\else1\fi - \ifx\fmtname\x\else 1\fi\relax -\else\csname fi\endcsname -% -%<*install> -\input docstrip.tex -\Msg{************************************************************************} -\Msg{* Installation} -\Msg{* Package: luaotfload v2.5 OpenType layout system} -\Msg{************************************************************************} - -\keepsilent -\askforoverwritefalse - -\let\MetaPrefix\relax - -\preamble -This is a generated file. - -Copyright (C) 2009-2014 - by Elie Roux - and Khaled Hosny - and Philipp Gesang - - Home: https://github.com/lualatex/luaotfload - Support: . - -This work is under the GPL v2.0 license. - -This work consists of the main source file luaotfload.dtx -and the derived files - luaotfload.sty - -\endpreamble - -\obeyspaces -\Msg{************************************************************************} -\Msg{*} -\Msg{* To finish the installation you have to move the following} -\Msg{* files into a directory searched by TeX:} -\Msg{*} -\Msg{* luaotfload.sty} -\Msg{*} -\Msg{* Happy TeXing!} -\Msg{*} -\Msg{************************************************************************} - -\endbatchfile -% -%<*ignore> -\fi -% -%<*driver> -\NeedsTeXFormat{LaTeX2e} -\ProvidesFile{luaotfload.drv}% -[2014/**/** v2.5 OpenType layout system]% -\documentclass{ltxdoc} -\usepackage{metalogo,multicol,mdwlist,fancyvrb,xspace} -\usepackage[x11names]{xcolor} -% -\def\primarycolor{DodgerBlue4} %%-> rgb 16 78 139 | #104e8b -\def\secondarycolor{Goldenrod4} %%-> rgb 139 105 200 | #8b6914 -% -\usepackage[ - bookmarks=true, - colorlinks=true, - linkcolor=\primarycolor, - urlcolor=\secondarycolor, - citecolor=\primarycolor, - pdftitle={The luaotfload package}, - pdfsubject={OpenType layout system for Plain TeX and LaTeX}, - pdfauthor={Elie Roux & Khaled Hosny & Philipp Gesang}, - pdfkeywords={luatex, lualatex, unicode, opentype} -]{hyperref} -\usepackage{fontspec} -\usepackage{unicode-math} -\setmainfont[ -% Numbers = OldStyle, %% buggy with font cache - Ligatures = TeX, - BoldFont = {Linux Libertine O Bold}, - ItalicFont = {Linux Libertine O Italic}, - SlantedFont = {Linux Libertine O Italic}, -]{Linux Libertine O} -\setmonofont[Ligatures=TeX,Scale=MatchLowercase]{Liberation Mono} -%setsansfont[Ligatures=TeX]{Linux Biolinum O} -\setsansfont[Ligatures=TeX,Scale=MatchLowercase]{Iwona Medium} -%setmathfont{XITS Math} - -\usepackage{hologo} - -\newcommand\TEX {\TeX\xspace} -\newcommand\LUA {Lua\xspace} -\newcommand\PDFTEX {pdf\TeX\xspace} -\newcommand\LUATEX {Lua\TeX\xspace} -\newcommand\XETEX {\XeTeX\xspace} -\newcommand\LATEX {\LaTeX\xspace} -\newcommand\LUALATEX {Lua\LaTeX\xspace} -\newcommand\CONTEXT {Con\TeX t\xspace} -\newcommand\OpenType {\identifier{Open\kern-.25ex Type}\xspace} - -\def\definehighlight[#1][#2]% - {\ifcsname #1\endcsname\else - \expandafter\def\csname #1\endcsname% - {\bgroup#2\csname #1_indeed\endcsname} - \expandafter\def\csname #1_indeed\endcsname##1% - {##1\egroup}% - \fi} - -\def\restoreunderscore{\catcode`\_=12\relax} - -\definehighlight [fileent][\ttfamily\restoreunderscore] %% files, dirs -\definehighlight [texmacro][\sffamily\itshape\textbackslash] %% cs -\definehighlight[luafunction][\sffamily\itshape\restoreunderscore] %% lua identifiers -\definehighlight [identifier][\sffamily] %% names -\definehighlight [abbrev][\rmfamily\scshape] %% acronyms -\definehighlight [emphasis][\rmfamily\slshape] %% level 1 emph - -\newcommand*\email[1]{\href{mailto:#1}{#1}} - -\renewcommand\partname{Part}%% gets rid of the stupid “file” heading - -\usepackage{syntax}%% bnf for font request syntax - -\usepackage{titlesec} - -\def\movecountertomargin#1{\llap{\rmfamily\upshape#1\hskip2em}} -\def\zeropoint{0pt} -\titleformat \part - {\normalsize\rmfamily\bfseries} - {\movecountertomargin\thepart} \zeropoint {} -\titleformat \section - {\normalsize\rmfamily\scshape} - {\movecountertomargin\thesection} \zeropoint {} -\titleformat \subsection - {\small\rmfamily\itshape} - {\movecountertomargin\thesubsection} \zeropoint {} -\titleformat \subsubsection - {\normalsize\rmfamily\upshape} - {\movecountertomargin\thesubsubsection} \zeropoint {} - -\usepackage{tocloft} -\renewcommand \cftpartfont {\rmfamily\upshape} -\renewcommand \cftsecfont {\rmfamily\upshape} -\renewcommand \cftsubsecfont {\rmfamily\upshape} -\setlength \cftbeforepartskip {1ex} -\setlength \cftbeforesecskip {1ex} - -\VerbatimFootnotes -\begin{document} - \DocInput{luaotfload.dtx}% -\end{document} -% -% \fi -% -% \CheckSum{0} -% -% \CharacterTable -% {Upper-case \A\B\C\D\E\F\G\H\I\J\K\L\M\N\O\P\Q\R\S\T\U\V\W\X\Y\Z -% Lower-case \a\b\c\d\e\f\g\h\i\j\k\l\m\n\o\p\q\r\s\t\u\v\w\x\y\z -% Digits \0\1\2\3\4\5\6\7\8\9 -% Exclamation \! Double quote \" Hash (number) \# -% Dollar \$ Percent \% Ampersand \& -% Acute accent \' Left paren \( Right paren \) -% Asterisk \* Plus \+ Comma \, -% Minus \- Point \. Solidus \/ -% Colon \: Semicolon \; Less than \< -% Equals \= Greater than \> Question mark \? -% Commercial at \@ Left bracket \[ Backslash \\ -% Right bracket \] Circumflex \^ Underscore \_ -% Grave accent \` Left brace \{ Vertical bar \| -% Right brace \} Tilde \~} -% -% \GetFileInfo{luaotfload.drv} -% -% \title{The \identifier{luaotfload} package} -% \date{2014/**/** v2.5} -% \author{Elie Roux · Khaled Hosny · Philipp Gesang\\ -% Home: \url{https://github.com/lualatex/luaotfload}\\ -% Support: \email{lualatex-dev@tug.org}} -% -% \maketitle -% -% \begin{abstract} -% This package is an adaptation of the \CONTEXT font loading system. -% It allows for loading \OpenType fonts with an extended syntax and adds -% support for a variety of font features. -% \end{abstract} -% -% \tableofcontents -% -% \part{Package Description} -% -% \section{Introduction} -% -% Font management and installation has always been painful with \TEX. A lot of -% files are needed for one font (\abbrev{tfm}, \abbrev{pfb}, \abbrev{map}, -% \abbrev{fd}, \abbrev{vf}), and due to the 8-Bit encoding each font is limited -% to 256 characters. -% But the font world has evolved since the original -% \TEX, and new typographic systems have appeared, most notably the so -% called \emphasis{smart font} technologies like \OpenType -% fonts (\abbrev{otf}). -% These fonts can contain many more characters than \TEX fonts, as well as additional -% functionality like ligatures, old-style numbers, small capitals, -% etc., and support more complex writing systems like Arabic and -% Indic\footnote{% -% Unfortunately, \identifier{luaotfload} doesn‘t support many Indic -% scripts right now. -% Assistance in implementing the prerequisites is greatly -% appreciated. -% } -% scripts. -% \OpenType fonts are widely deployed and available for all -% modern operating systems. -% As of 2013 they have become the de facto standard for advanced text -% layout. -% However, until recently the only way to use them directly in the \TEX -% world was with the \XETEX engine. -% -% Unlike \XETEX, \LUATEX has no built-in support for -% \OpenType or technologies other than the original \TEX fonts. -% Instead, it provides hooks for executing \LUA code during the \TEX run -% that allow implementing extensions for loading fonts and manipulating -% how input text is processed without modifying the underlying engine. -% This is where \identifier{luaotfload} comes into play: -% Based on code from \CONTEXT, it extends \LUATEX with functionality necessary -% for handling \OpenType fonts. -% Additionally, it provides means for accessing fonts known to the operating -% system conveniently by indexing the metadata. -% -% -% \section{Thanks} -% -% \identifier{Luaotfload} is part of \LUALATEX, the community-driven -% project to provide a foundation for using the \LATEX format with the -% full capabilites of the \LUATEX engine. -% As such, the distinction between end users, contributors, and project -% maintainers is intentionally kept less strict, lest we unduly -% personalize the common effort. -% -% Nevertheless, the current maintainers would like to express their -% gratitude to Khaled Hosny, Akira Kakuto, Hironori Kitagawa and Dohyun -% Kim. -% Their contributions -- be it patches, advice, or systematic -% testing -- made the switch from version 1.x to 2.2 possible. -% Also, Hans Hagen, the author of the font loader, made porting the -% code to \LATEX a breeze due to the extra effort he invested into -% isolating it from the rest of \CONTEXT, not to mention his assistance -% in the task and willingness to respond to our suggestions. -% -% -% \section{Loading Fonts} -% -% \identifier{luaotfload} supports an extended font request syntax: -% -% \begin{quote} -% |\font\foo={|% -% \meta{prefix}|:|% -% \meta{font name}|:|% -% \meta{font features}|}|% -% \meta{\TEX font features} -% \end{quote} -% -% \noindent -% The curly brackets are optional and escape the spaces in the enclosed -% font name. -% Alternatively, double quotes serve the same purpose. -% A selection of individual parts of the syntax are discussed below; -% for a more formal description see figure \ref{font-syntax}. -% -% \begin{figure}[b] -% \setlength\grammarparsep{12pt plus 2pt minus 2pt} -% \setlength\grammarindent{5cm} -% \begingroup -% \small -% \begin{grammar} -% ::= `\\font', {\sc csname}, `=', , [ ] ; -% -% ::= `at', {\sc dimension} ; -% -% ::= `"', `"' -% \alt `{', `}' -% \alt ; -% -% ::= , [`:', ] -% \alt `[', `]', [ [`:'], ] ; -% -% ::= , [ ], \{ \} -% \alt , \{ \} ; -% -% ::= `file:', -% \alt `name:', ; -% -% ::= \{ \} ; -% -% ::= \{ \} ; -% -% ::= {\sc tfmname} | ; -% -% ::= \{ {\sc all_characters} - `]' \} ; -% -% ::= `/', (`I' | `B' | `BI' | `IB' | `S=', \{ {\sc digit} \} ) ; -% -% ::= `(', \{ {\sc digit} \}, `)' ; -% -% ::= , \{ `;', \} ; -% -% ::= {\sc feature_id}, `=', {\sc feature_value} -% \alt , {\sc feature_id} ; -% -% ::= `+' | `-' ; -% -% ::= {\sc all_characters} - ( `(' | `/' | `:' ) ; -% \end{grammar} -% \endgroup -% \caption{Font request syntax. -% Braces or double quotes around the -% \emphasis{specification} rule will -% preserve whitespace in file names. -% In addition to the font style modifiers -% (\emphasis{slash-notation}) given above, there -% are others that are recognized but will be silently -% ignored: {\ttfamily aat}, -% {\ttfamily icu}, and -% {\ttfamily gr}. -% The special terminals are: -% {\sc feature\textunderscore id} for a valid font -% feature name and -% {\sc feature\textunderscore value} for the corresponding -% value. -% {\sc tfmname} is the name of a \abbrev{tfm} file. -% {\sc digit} again refers to bytes 48--57, and -% {\sc all\textunderscore characters} to all byte values. -% {\sc csname} and {\sc dimension} are the \TEX concepts.} -% \label{font-syntax} -% \end{figure} -% -% \subsection{Prefix -- the \identifier{luaotfload}{ }Way} -% -% In \identifier{luaotfload}, the canonical syntax for font requests -% requires a \emphasis{prefix}: -% \begin{quote} -% |\font\fontname=|\meta{prefix}|:|\meta{fontname}\dots -% \end{quote} -% where \meta{prefix} is either \verb|file:| or \verb|name:|.\footnote{% -% The development version also knows two further prefixes, -% \verb|kpse:| and \verb|my:|. -% A \verb|kpse| lookup is restricted to files that can be found by -% \identifier{kpathsea} and -% will not attempt to locate system fonts. -% This behavior can be of value when an extra degree of encapsulation is -% needed, for instance when supplying a customized tex distribution. -% -% The \verb|my| lookup takes this a step further: it lets you define -% a custom resolver function and hook it into the \luafunction{resolve_font} -% callback. -% This ensures full control over how a file is located. -% For a working example see the -% \href{https://bitbucket.org/phg/lua-la-tex-tests/src/5f6a535d/pln-lookup-callback-1.tex} -% {test repo}. -% } -% It determines whether the font loader should interpret the request as -% a \emphasis{file name} or -% \emphasis{font name}, respectively, -% which again influences how it will attempt to locate the font. -% Examples for font names are -% “Latin Modern Italic”, -% “GFS Bodoni Rg”, and -% “PT Serif Caption” -% -- they are the human readable identifiers -% usually listed in drop-down menus and the like.\footnote{% -% Font names may appear like a great choice at first because they -% offer seemingly more intuitive identifiers in comparison to arguably -% cryptic file names: -% “PT Sans Bold” is a lot more descriptive than \fileent{PTS75F.ttf}. -% On the other hand, font names are quite arbitrary and there is no -% universal method to determine their meaning. -% While \identifier{luaotfload} provides fairly sophisticated heuristic -% to figure out a matching font style, weight, and optical size, it -% cannot be relied upon to work satisfactorily for all font files. -% For an in-depth analysis of the situation and how broken font names -% are, please refer to -% \href{http://www.ntg.nl/pipermail/ntg-context/2013/073889.html} -% {this post} -% by Hans Hagen, the author of the font loader. -% If in doubt, use filenames. -% \fileent{luaotfload-tool} can perform the matching for you with the -% option \verb|--find=|, and you can use the file name it returns -% in your font definition. -% } -% In order for fonts installed both in system locations and in your -% \fileent{texmf} to be accessible by font name, \identifier{luaotfload} must -% first collect the metadata included in the files. -% Please refer to section~\ref{sec:fontdb} below for instructions on how to -% create the database. -% -% File names are whatever your file system allows them to be, except -% that that they may not contain the characters -% \verb|(|, -% \verb|:|, and -% \verb|/|. -% As is obvious from the last exception, the \verb|file:| lookup will -% not process paths to the font location -- only those -% files found when generating the database are addressable this way. -% Continue below in the \XETEX section if you need to load your fonts -% by path. -% The file names corresponding to the example font names above are -% \fileent{lmroman12-italic.otf}, -% \fileent{GFSBodoni.otf}, and -% \fileent{PTZ56F.ttf}. -% -% \subsection{Compatibility Layer} -% -% In addition to the regular prefixed requests, \identifier{luaotfload} -% accepts loading fonts the \XETEX way. -% There are again two modes: bracketed and unbracketed. -% A bracketed request looks as follows. -% -% \begin{quote} -% |\font\fontname=[|\meta{path to file}|]| -% \end{quote} -% -% \noindent -% Inside the square brackets, every character except for a closing -% bracket is permitted, allowing for specifying paths to a font file. -% Naturally, path-less file names are equally valid and processed the -% same way as an ordinary \verb|file:| lookup. -% -% \begin{quote} -% |\font\fontname=|\meta{font name} \dots -% \end{quote} -% -% Unbracketed (or, for lack of a better word: \emphasis{anonymous}) -% font requests resemble the conventional \TEX syntax. -% However, they have a broader spectrum of possible interpretations: -% before anything else, \identifier{luaotfload} attempts to load a -% traditional \TEX Font Metric (\abbrev{tfm} or \abbrev{ofm}). -% If this fails, it performs a \verb|name:| lookup, which itself will -% fall back to a \verb|file:| lookup if no database entry matches -% \meta{font name}. -% -% Furthermore, \identifier{luaotfload} supports the slashed (shorthand) -% font style notation from \XETEX. -% -% \begin{quote} -% |\font\fontname=|\meta{font name}|/|\meta{modifier}\dots -% \end{quote} -% -% \noindent -% Currently, four style modifiers are supported: -% \verb|I| for italic shape, -% \verb|B| for bold weight, -% \verb|BI| or \verb|IB| for the combination of both. -% Other “slashed” modifiers are too specific to the \XETEX engine and -% have no meaning in \LUATEX. -% -% \subsection{Examples} -% -% \subsubsection{Loading by File Name} -% -% For example, conventional \abbrev{type1} font can be loaded with a \verb|file:| -% request like so: -% -% \begin{quote} -% \begin{verbatim} -% \font\lmromanten={file:ec-lmr10} at 10pt -% \end{verbatim} -% \end{quote} -% -% The \OpenType version of Janusz Nowacki’s font \emphasis{Antykwa -% Półtawskiego}\footnote{% -% \url{http://jmn.pl/antykwa-poltawskiego/}, also available in -% in \TEX Live. -% } -% in its condensed variant can be loaded as follows: -% -% \begin{quote} -% \begin{verbatim} -% \font\apcregular=file:antpoltltcond-regular.otf at 42pt -% \end{verbatim} -% \end{quote} -% -% The next example shows how to load the \emphasis{Porson} font digitized by -% the Greek Font Society using \XETEX-style syntax and an absolute path from a -% non-standard directory: -% -% \begin{quote} -% \begin{verbatim} -% \font\gfsporson="[/tmp/GFSPorson.otf]" at 12pt -% \end{verbatim} -% \end{quote} -% -% \subsubsection{Loading by Font Name} -% -% The \verb|name:| lookup does not depend on cryptic filenames: -% -% \begin{quote} -% \begin{verbatim} -% \font\pagellaregular={name:TeX Gyre Pagella} at 9pt -% \end{verbatim} -% \end{quote} -% -% A bit more specific but essentially the same lookup would be: -% -% \begin{quote} -% \begin{verbatim} -% \font\pagellaregular={name:TeX Gyre Pagella Regular} at 9pt -% \end{verbatim} -% \end{quote} -% -% \noindent -% Which fits nicely with the whole set: -% -% \begin{quote} -% \begin{verbatim} -% \font\pagellaregular ={name:TeX Gyre Pagella Regular} at 9pt -% \font\pagellaitalic ={name:TeX Gyre Pagella Italic} at 9pt -% \font\pagellabold ={name:TeX Gyre Pagella Bold} at 9pt -% \font\pagellabolditalic={name:TeX Gyre Pagella Bolditalic} at 9pt -% -% {\pagellaregular foo bar baz\endgraf} -% {\pagellaitalic foo bar baz\endgraf} -% {\pagellabold foo bar baz\endgraf} -% {\pagellabolditalic foo bar baz\endgraf} -% -% ... -% \end{verbatim} -% \end{quote} -% -% \subsubsection{Modifiers} -% -% If the entire \emphasis{Iwona} family\footnote{% -% \url{http://jmn.pl/kurier-i-iwona/}, -% also in \TEX Live. -% } -% is installed in some location accessible by \identifier{luaotfload}, -% the regular shape can be loaded as follows: -% -% \begin{quote} -% \begin{verbatim} -% \font\iwona=Iwona at 20pt -% \end{verbatim} -% \end{quote} -% -% \noindent -% To load the most common of the other styles, the slash notation can -% be employed as shorthand: -% -% \begin{quote} -% \begin{verbatim} -% \font\iwonaitalic =Iwona/I at 20pt -% \font\iwonabold =Iwona/B at 20pt -% \font\iwonabolditalic=Iwona/BI at 20pt -% \end{verbatim} -% \end{quote} -% -% \noindent -% which is equivalent to these full names: -% -% \begin{quote} -% \begin{verbatim} -% \font\iwonaitalic ="Iwona Italic" at 20pt -% \font\iwonabold ="Iwona Bold" at 20pt -% \font\iwonabolditalic="Iwona BoldItalic" at 20pt -% \end{verbatim} -% \end{quote} -% -% \section{Font features} -% -% \emphasis{Font features} are the second to last component in the -% general scheme for font requests: -% -% \begin{quote} -% |\font\foo={|% -% \meta{prefix}|:|% -% \meta{font name}|:|% -% \meta{font features}|}|% -% \meta{\TEX font features} -% \end{quote} -% -% \noindent -% If style modifiers are present (\XETEX style), they must precede -% \meta{font features}. -% -% The element \meta{font features} is a semicolon-separated list of feature -% tags\footnote{% -% Cf. \url{http://www.microsoft.com/typography/otspec/featurelist.htm}. -% } -% and font options. -% Prepending a font feature with a |+| (plus sign) enables it, whereas -% a |-| (minus) disables it. For instance, the request -% -% \begin{quote} -% \begin{verbatim} -% \font\test=LatinModernRoman:+clig;-kern -% \end{verbatim} -% \end{quote} -% -% \noindent activates contextual ligatures (|clig|) and disables -% kerning (|kern|). -% Alternatively the options |true| or |false| can be passed to -% the feature in a key/value expression. -% The following request has the same meaning as the last one: -% -% \begin{quote} -% \begin{verbatim} -% \font\test=LatinModernRoman:clig=true;kern=false -% \end{verbatim} -% \end{quote} -% -% \noindent -% Furthermore, this second syntax is required should a font feature -% accept other options besides a true/false switch. -% For example, \emphasis{stylistic alternates} (|salt|) are variants of given -% glyphs. -% They can be selected either explicitly by supplying the variant -% index (starting from one), or randomly by setting the value to, -% obviously, |random|. -% -% \iffalse TODO verify that this actually works with a font that supports -% the salt/random feature!\fi -% \begin{quote} -% \begin{verbatim} -% \font\librmsaltfirst=LatinModernRoman:salt=1 -% \end{verbatim} -% \end{quote} -% -% \noindent Other font options include: -% -% \begin{description} -% -% \item [mode] \hfill \\ -% \identifier{luaotfload} has two \OpenType processing -% \emphasis{modes}: -% \identifier{base} and \identifier{node}. -% -% \identifier{base} mode works by mapping \OpenType -% features to traditional \TEX ligature and kerning mechanisms. -% Supporting only non-contextual substitutions and kerning -% pairs, it is the slightly faster, albeit somewhat limited, variant. -% \identifier{node} mode works by processing \TeX’s internal -% node list directly at the \LUA end and supports -% a wider range of \OpenType features. -% The downside is that the intricate operations required for -% \identifier{node} mode may slow down typesetting especially -% with complex fonts and it does not work in math mode. -% -% By default \identifier{luaotfload} is in \identifier{node} -% mode, and \identifier{base} mode has to be requested where needed, -% e.~g. for math fonts. -% -% \item [script] \label{script-tag} \hfill \\ -% An \OpenType script tag;\footnote{% -% See \url{http://www.microsoft.com/typography/otspec/scripttags.htm} -% for a list of valid values. -% For scripts derived from the Latin alphabet the value -% |latn| is good choice. -% } -% the default value is |dlft|. -% Some fonts, including very popular ones by foundries like Adobe, -% do not assign features to the |dflt| script, in -% which case the script needs to be set explicitly. -% -% \item [language] \hfill \\ -% An \OpenType language system identifier,\footnote{% -% Cf. \url{http://www.microsoft.com/typography/otspec/languagetags.htm}. -% } -% defaulting to |dflt|. -% -% \item [featurefile] \hfill \\ -% A comma-separated list of feature files to be applied to the -% font. -% Feature files contain a textual representation of -% \OpenType tables and extend the features of a font -% on fly. -% After they are applied to a font, features defined in a -% feature file can be enabled or disabled just like any -% other font feature. -% The syntax is documented in \identifier{Adobe}’s -% \OpenType Feature File Specification.\footnote{% -% Cf. \url{http://www.adobe.com/devnet/opentype/afdko/topic_feature_file_syntax.html}. -% } -% -% For a demonstration of how to set a |tkrn| feature consult -% the file |tkrn.fea| that is part of \identifier{luaotfload}. -% It can be read and applied as follows: -% -% |\font\test=Latin Modern Roman:featurefile=tkrn.fea;+tkrn| -% -% \item [color] \hfill \\ -% A font color, defined as a triplet of two-digit hexadecimal -% \abbrev{rgb} values, with an optional fourth value for -% transparency -% (where |00| is completely transparent and |FF| is opaque). -% -% For example, in order to set text in semitransparent red: -% -% \begin{quote} -% \begin{verbatim} -% \font\test={Latin Modern Roman}:color=FF0000BB -% \end{verbatim} -% \end{quote} -% -% \item [kernfactor \& letterspace] \hfill \\ -% Define a font with letterspacing (tracking) enabled. -% In \identifier{luaotfload}, letterspacing is implemented by -% inserting additional kerning between glyphs. -% -% This approach is derived from and still quite similar to the -% \emphasis{character kerning} (\texmacro{setcharacterkerning} / -% \texmacro{definecharacterkerning} \& al.) functionality of -% Context, see the file \fileent{typo-krn.lua} there. -% The main difference is that \identifier{luaotfload} does not -% use \LUATEX attributes to assign letterspacing to regions, -% but defines virtual letterspaced versions of a font. -% -% The option \identifier{kernfactor} accepts a numeric value that -% determines the letterspacing factor to be applied to the font -% size. -% E.~g. a kern factor of $0.42$ applied to a $10$ pt font -% results in $4.2$ pt of additional kerning applied to each -% pair of glyphs. -% Ligatures are split into their component glyphs unless -% explicitly ignored (see below). -% -% For compatibility with \XETEX an alternative -% \identifier{letterspace} option is supplied that interprets the -% supplied value as a \emphasis{percentage} of the font size but -% is otherwise identical to \identifier{kernfactor}. -% Consequently, both definitions in below snippet yield the same -% letterspacing width: -% -% \begin{quote} -% \begin{verbatim} -% \font\iwonakernedA="file:Iwona-Regular.otf:kernfactor=0.125" -% \font\iwonakernedB="file:Iwona-Regular.otf:letterspace=12.5" -% \end{verbatim} -% \end{quote} -% -% Specific pairs of letters and ligatures may be exempt from -% letterspacing by defining the \LUA functions -% \luafunction{keeptogether} and \luafunction{keepligature}, -% respectively, inside the namespace \verb|luaotfload.letterspace|. -% Both functions are called whenever the letterspacing callback -% encounters an appropriate node or set of nodes. -% If they return a true-ish value, no extra kern is inserted at -% the current position. -% \luafunction{keeptogether} receives a pair of consecutive -% glyph nodes in order of their appearance in the node list. -% \luafunction{keepligature} receives a single node which can be -% analyzed into components. -% (For details refer to the \emphasis{glyph nodes} section in the -% \LUATEX reference manual.) -% The implementation of both functions is left entirely to the -% user. -% -% -% \item [protrusion \& expansion] \hfill \\ -% These keys control microtypographic features of the font, -% namely \emphasis{character protrusion} and \emphasis{font -% expansion}. -% Their arguments are names of \LUA tables that contain -% values for the respective features.\footnote{% -% For examples of the table layout please refer to the -% section of the file \fileent{luaotfload-fonts-ext.lua} where the -% default values are defined. -% Alternatively and with loss of information, you can dump -% those tables into your terminal by issuing -% \begin{verbatim} -% \directlua{inspect(fonts.protrusions.setups.default) -% inspect(fonts.expansions.setups.default)} -% \end{verbatim} -% at some point after loading \fileent{luaotfload.sty}. -% } -% For both, only the set \identifier{default} is predefined. -% -% For example, to define a font with the default -% protrusion vector applied\footnote{% -% You also need to set -% \verb|pdfprotrudechars=2| and -% \verb|pdfadjustspacing=2| -% to activate protrusion and expansion, respectively. -% See the -% \href{http://mirrors.ctan.org/systems/pdftex/manual/pdftex-a.pdf}% -% {\PDFTEX manual} -% for details. -% }: -% -% \begin{quote} -% \begin{verbatim} -% \font\test=LatinModernRoman:protrusion=default -% \end{verbatim} -% \end{quote} -% \end{description} -% -% \paragraph{Non-standard font features} -% \identifier{luaotfload} adds a number of features that are not defined -% in the original \OpenType specification, most of them -% aiming at emulating the behavior familiar from other \TEX engines. -% Currently (2014) there are three of them: -% -% \begin{description} -% -% \item [anum] -% Substitutes the glyphs in the \abbrev{ascii} number range -% with their counterparts from eastern Arabic or Persian, -% depending on the value of \identifier{language}. -% -% \item [tlig] -% Applies legacy \TEX ligatures: -% -% \begin{tabular}{rlrl} -% `` & \verb|``| & '' & \verb|''| \\ -% ` & \verb|`| & ' & \verb|'| \\ -% " & \verb|"| & -- & \verb|--| \\ -% --- & \verb|---| & !` & \verb|!`| \\ -% ?` & \verb|?`| & & \\ -% \end{tabular} -% -% \footnote{% -% These contain the feature set \verb|trep| of earlier -% versions of \identifier{luaotfload}. -% -% Note to \XETEX users: this is the equivalent of the -% assignment \verb|mapping=text-tex| using \XETEX's input -% remapping feature. -% } -% -% \item [itlc] -% Computes italic correction values (active by default). -% -% \end{description} -% -% -% -% \section{Font names database} -% \label{sec:fontdb} -% -% As mentioned above, \identifier{luaotfload} keeps track of which -% fonts are available to \LUATEX by means of a \emphasis{database}. -% This allows referring to fonts not only by explicit filenames but -% also by the proper names contained in the metadata which is often -% more accessible to humans.\footnote{% -% The tool \href{http://www.lcdf.org/type/}{\fileent{otfinfo}} (comes -% with \TEX Live), when invoked on a font file with the \verb|-i| -% option, lists the variety of name fields defined for it. -% } -% -% When \identifier{luaotfload} is asked to load a font by a font name, -% it will check if the database exists and load it, or else generate a -% fresh one. -% Should it then fail to locate the font, an update to the database is -% performed in case the font has been added to the system only -% recently. As soon as the database is updated, the resolver will try -% and look up the font again, all without user intervention. -% The goal is for \identifier{luaotfload} to act in the background and -% behave as unobtrusively as possible, while providing a convenient -% interface to the fonts installed on the system. -% -% Generating the database for the first time may take a while since it -% inspects every font file on your computer. -% This is particularly noticeable if it occurs during a typesetting run. -% In any case, subsequent updates to the database will be quite fast. -% -% \subsection[luaotfload-tool / mkluatexfontdb.lua]% -% {\fileent{luaotfload-tool} / -% \fileent{mkluatexfontdb.lua}\footnote{% -% The script may be named just \fileent{mkluatexfontdb} in your -% distribution. -% }} -% -% It can still be desirable at times to do some of these steps -% manually, and without having to compile a document. -% To this end, \identifier{luaotfload} comes with the utility -% \fileent{luaotfload-tool} that offers an interface to the database -% functionality. -% Being a \LUA script, there are two ways to run it: -% either make it executable (\verb|chmod +x| on unixoid systems) or -% pass it as an argument to \fileent{texlua}.\footnote{% -% Tests by the maintainer show only marginal performance gain by -% running with Luigi Scarso’s -% \href{https://foundry.supelec.fr/projects/luajittex/}% -% {\identifier{Luajit\kern-.25ex\TEX}}, -% which is probably due to the fact that most of the time is spent -% on file system operations. -% -% \emphasis{Note}: -% On \abbrev{MS} \identifier{Windows} systems, the script can be run -% either by calling the wrapper application -% \fileent{luaotfload-tool.exe} or as -% \verb|texlua.exe luaotfload-tool.lua|. -% } -% Invoked with the argument \verb|--update| it will perform a database -% update, scanning for fonts not indexed. -% -% \begin{quote} -% \begin{verbatim} -% luaotfload-tool --update -% \end{verbatim} -% \end{quote} -% -% Adding the \verb|--force| switch will initiate a complete -% rebuild of the database. -% -% \begin{quote} -% \begin{verbatim} -% luaotfload-tool --update --force -% \end{verbatim} -% \end{quote} -% -% For sake of backwards compatibility, \fileent{luaotfload-tool} may be -% renamed or symlinked to \fileent{mkluatexfontdb}. -% Whenever it is run under this name, it will update the database -% first, mimicking the behavior of earlier versions of -% \identifier{luaotfload}. -% -% \subsection{Search Paths} -% -% \identifier{luaotfload} scans those directories where fonts are -% expected to be located on a given system. -% On a Linux machine it follows the paths listed in the -% \identifier{Fontconfig} configuration files; -% consult \verb|man 5 fonts.conf| for further information. -% On \identifier{Windows} systems, the standard location is -% \verb|Windows\Fonts|, -% while \identifier{Mac OS~X} requires a multitude of paths to -% be examined. -% The complete list is is given in table \ref{table-searchpaths}. -% Other paths can be specified by setting the environment variable -% \verb+OSFONTDIR+. -% If it is non-empty, then search will be extended to the included -% directories. -% -% \begin{table}[t] -% \hrule -% \caption{List of paths searched for each supported operating -% system.} -% \renewcommand{\arraystretch}{1.2} -% \begin{center} -% \begin{tabular}{lp{.5\textwidth}} -% Windows & \verb|%WINDIR%\Fonts| -% \\ -% Linux & \fileent{/usr/local/etc/fonts/fonts.conf} and\hfill\break -% \fileent{/etc/fonts/fonts.conf} -% \\ -% Mac & \fileent{\textasciitilde/Library/Fonts},\break -% \fileent{/Library/Fonts},\break -% \fileent{/System/Library/Fonts}, and\hfill\break -% \fileent{/Network/Library/Fonts} -% \\ -% \end{tabular} -% \end{center} -% \label{table-searchpaths} -% \hrule -% \end{table} -% -% \subsection{Querying from Outside} -% -% \fileent{luaotfload-tool} also provides rudimentary means of -% accessing the information collected in the font database. -% If the option \verb|--find=|\emphasis{name} is given, the script will -% try and search the fonts indexed by \identifier{luaotfload} for a -% matching name. -% For instance, the invocation -% -% \begin{quote} -% \begin{verbatim} -% luaotfload-tool --find="Iwona Regular" -% \end{verbatim} -% \end{quote} -% -% \noindent -% will verify if “Iwona Regular” is found in the database and can be -% readily requested in a document. -% -% If you are unsure about the actual font name, then add the -% \verb|-F| (or \verb|--fuzzy|) switch to the command line to enable -% approximate matching. -% Suppose you cannot precisely remember if the variant of -% \identifier{Iwona} you are looking for was “Bright” or “Light”. -% The query -% -% \begin{quote} -% \begin{verbatim} -% luaotfload-tool -F --find="Iwona Bright" -% \end{verbatim} -% \end{quote} -% -% \noindent -% will tell you that indeed the latter name is correct. -% -% Basic information about fonts in the database can be displayed -% using the \verb|-i| option (\verb|--info|). -% \begin{quote} -% \begin{verbatim} -% luaotfload-tool -i --find="Iwona Light Italic" -% \end{verbatim} -% \end{quote} -% \noindent -% The meaning of the printed values is described in section 4.4 of the -% \LUATEX reference manual.\footnote{% -% In \TEX Live: \fileent{texmf-dist/doc/luatex/base/luatexref-t.pdf}. -% } -% -% For a much more detailed report about a given font try the \verb|-I| option -% instead (\verb|--inspect|). -% \begin{quote} -% \begin{verbatim} -% luaotfload-tool -I --find="Iwona Light Italic" -% \end{verbatim} -% \end{quote} -% -% \verb|luaotfload-tool --help| will list the available command line -% switches, including some not discussed in detail here. -% For a full documentation of \identifier{luaotfload-tool} and its -% capabilities refer to the manpage -% (\verb|man 1 luaotfload-tool|).\footnote{% -% Or see \verb|luaotfload-tool.rst| in the source directory. -% } -% -% \subsection{Blacklisting Fonts} -% \label{font-blacklist} -% -% Some fonts are problematic in general, or just in \LUATEX. -% If you find that compiling your document takes far too long or eats -% away all your system’s memory, you can track down the culprit by -% running \verb|luaotfload-tool -v| to increase verbosity. -% Take a note of the \emphasis{filename} of the font that database -% creation fails with and append it to the file -% \fileent{luaotfload-blacklist.cnf}. -% -% A blacklist file is a list of font filenames, one per line. -% Specifying the full path to where the file is located is optional, the -% plain filename should suffice. -% File extensions (\fileent{.otf}, \fileent{.ttf}, etc.) may be omitted. -% Anything after a percent (|%|) character until the end of the line -% is ignored, so use this to add comments. -% Place this file to some location where the \identifier{kpse} -% library can find it, e.~g. -% \fileent{texmf-local/tex/luatex/luaotfload} if you are running -% \identifier{\TEX Live},\footnote{% -% You may have to run \verb|mktexlsr| if you created a new file in -% your \fileent{texmf} tree. -% } -% or just leave it in the working directory of your document. -% \identifier{luaotfload} reads all files named -% \fileent{luaotfload-blacklist.cnf} it finds, so the fonts in -% \fileent{./luaotfload-blacklist.cnf} extend the global blacklist. -% -% Furthermore, a filename prepended with a dash character (|-|) is -% removed from the blacklist, causing it to be temporarily whitelisted -% without modifying the global file. -% An example with explicit paths: -% -% \begin{verbatim} -% % example otf-blacklist.cnf -% /Library/Fonts/GillSans.ttc % Luaotfload ignores this font. -% -/Library/Fonts/Optima.ttc % This one is usable again, even if -% % blacklisted somewhere else. -% \end{verbatim} -% -% \section{Files from \CONTEXT and \LUATEX-Fonts} -% -% \identifier{luaotfload} relies on code originally written by Hans -% Hagen\footnote{% -% The creator of the \href{http://wiki.contextgarden.net}{\CONTEXT} -% format. -% } -% for and tested with \CONTEXT. -% It integrates the font loader as distributed in -% the \identifier{\LUATEX-Fonts} package. -% The original \LUA source files have been combined using the -% \fileent{mtx-package} script into a single, self-contained blob. -% In this form the font loader has no further dependencies\footnote{% -% It covers, however, to some extent the functionality of the -% \identifier{lualibs} package. -% } -% and requires only minor adaptions to integrate into -% \identifier{luaotfload}. -% The guiding principle is to let \CONTEXT/\LUATEX-Fonts take care of -% the implementation, and update the imported code from time to time. -% As maintainers, we aim at importing files from upstream essentially -% \emphasis{unmodified}, except for renaming them to prevent name -% clashes. -% This job has been greatly alleviated since the advent of -% \LUATEX-Fonts, prior to which the individual dependencies had to be -% manually spotted and extracted from the \CONTEXT source code in a -% complicated and error-prone fashion. -% -% Below is a commented list of the files distributed with -% \identifier{luaotfload} in one way or the other. -% See figure \ref{file-graph} on page \pageref{file-graph} for a -% graphical representation of the dependencies. -% From \LUATEX-Fonts, only the file \fileent{luatex-fonts-merged.lua} -% has been imported as \fileent{luaotfload-fontloader.lua}. -% It is generated by \fileent{mtx-package}, a \LUA source code merging -% too developed by Hans Hagen.\footnote{% -% \fileent{mtx-package} is -% \href -% {http://repo.or.cz/w/context.git/blob_plain/refs/heads/origin:/scripts/context/lua/mtx-package.lua} -% {part of \CONTEXT} -% and requires \fileent{mtxrun}. -% Run -% \verb|mtxrun --script package --help| -% to display further information. -% For the actual merging code see the file -% \fileent{util-mrg.lua} that is part of \CONTEXT. -% } -% It houses several \LUA files that can be classed in three -% categories. -% -% \begin{itemize} -% \let\normalitem=\item -% \def\incitem#1{% -% \normalitem{\fileent{#1}} -% } -% \normalitem \emphasis{\LUA utility libraries}, a subset -% of what is provided by the \identifier{lualibs} -% package. -% -% \begin{multicols}{2} -% \begin{itemize} -% \incitem{l-lua.lua} \incitem{l-lpeg.lua} -% \incitem{l-function.lua} \incitem{l-string.lua} -% \incitem{l-table.lua} \incitem{l-io.lua} -% \incitem{l-file.lua} \incitem{l-boolean.lua} -% \incitem{l-math.lua} \incitem{util-str.lua} -% \end{itemize} -% \end{multicols} -% -% \normalitem The \emphasis{font loader} itself. -% These files have been written for -% \LUATEX-Fonts and they are distributed along -% with \identifier{luaotfload}. -% \begin{multicols}{2} -% \begin{itemize} -% \incitem{luatex-basics-gen.lua} -% \incitem{luatex-basics-nod.lua} -% \incitem{luatex-fonts-enc.lua} -% \incitem{luatex-fonts-syn.lua} -% \incitem{luatex-fonts-tfm.lua} -% \incitem{luatex-fonts-chr.lua} -% \incitem{luatex-fonts-lua.lua} -% \incitem{luatex-fonts-inj.lua} -% \incitem{luatex-fonts-otn.lua} -% \incitem{luatex-fonts-def.lua} -% \incitem{luatex-fonts-ext.lua} -% \incitem{luatex-fonts-cbk.lua} -% \end{itemize} -% \end{multicols} -% -% \normalitem Code related to \emphasis{font handling and -% node processing}, taken directly from -% \CONTEXT. -% \begin{multicols}{2} -% \begin{itemize} -% \incitem{data-con.lua} \incitem{font-ini.lua} -% \incitem{font-con.lua} \incitem{font-cid.lua} -% \incitem{font-map.lua} \incitem{font-oti.lua} -% \incitem{font-otf.lua} \incitem{font-otb.lua} -% \incitem{font-ota.lua} \incitem{font-def.lua} -% \incitem{font-otp.lua} -% \end{itemize} -% \end{multicols} -% \end{itemize} -% -% Note that if \identifier{luaotfload} cannot locate the -% merged file, it will load the individual \LUA libraries -% instead. -% Their names remain the same as in \CONTEXT (without the -% \verb|otfl|-prefix) since we imported the relevant section of -% \fileent{luatex-fonts.lua} unmodified into \fileent{luaotfload-main.lua}. -% Thus if you prefer running bleeding edge code from the -% \CONTEXT beta, all you have to do is remove -% \fileent{luaotfload-merged.lua} from the search path. -% -% Also, the merged file at some point -% loads the Adobe Glyph List from a \LUA table that is contained in -% \fileent{luaotfload-glyphlist.lua}, which is automatically generated by the -% script \fileent{mkglyphlist}.\footnote{% -% See \fileent{luaotfload-font-enc.lua}. -% The hard-coded file name is why we have to replace the procedure -% that loads the file in \fileent{luaotfload-override.lua}. -% } -% There is a make target \identifier{glyphs} that will create a fresh -% glyph list so we don’t need to import it from \CONTEXT -% any longer. -% -% In addition to these, \identifier{luaotfload} requires a number of -% files not contained in the merge. Some of these have no equivalent in -% \LUATEX-Fonts or \CONTEXT, some were taken unmodified from the -% latter. -% -% \begin{itemize} -% \let\normalitem=\item -% \def\ouritem#1{% -% \normalitem{\fileent{#1}}% -% \space--\hskip1em -% } -% \ouritem {luaotfload-features.lua} font feature handling; -% incorporates some of the code from -% \fileent{font-otc} from \CONTEXT; -% \ouritem {luaotfload-override.lua} overrides the \CONTEXT logging -% functionality. -% \ouritem {luaotfload-loaders.lua} registers the \OpenType -% font reader as handler for -% Postscript fonts -% (\abbrev{pfa}, \abbrev{pfb}). -% \ouritem {luaotfload-parsers.lua} various \abbrev{lpeg}-based parsers. -% \ouritem {luaotfload-database.lua} font names database. -% \ouritem {luaotfload-colors.lua} color handling. -% \ouritem {luaotfload-auxiliary.lua} access to internal functionality -% for package authors -% (proposals for additions welcome). -% \ouritem {luaotfload-letterspace.lua} font-based letterspacing. -% \end{itemize} -% -% \begin{figure}[b] -% \caption{Schematic of the files in \identifier{Luaotfload}} -% \includegraphics[width=\textwidth]{filegraph.pdf} -% \label{file-graph} -% \end{figure} -% -% \section{Auxiliary Functions} -% -% With release version 2.2, \identifier{luaotfload} received -% additional functions for package authors to call from outside -% (see the file \fileent{luaotfload-auxiliary.lua} for details). -% The purpose of this addition twofold. -% Firstly, \identifier{luaotfload} failed to provide a stable interface -% to internals in the past which resulted in an unmanageable situation -% of different packages abusing the raw access to font objects by means -% of the \luafunction{patch_font} callback. -% When the structure of the font object changed due to an update, all -% of these imploded and several packages had to be fixed while -% simultaneously providing fallbacks for earlier versions. -% Now the patching is done on the \identifier{luaotfload} side and can -% be adapted with future modifications to font objects without touching -% the packages that depend on it. -% Second, some the capabilities of the font loader and the names -% database are not immediately relevant in \identifier{luaotfload} -% itself but might nevertheless be of great value to package authors or -% end users. -% -% Note that the current interface is not yet set in stone and the -% development team is open to suggestions for improvements or -% additions. -% -% \subsection{Callback Functions} -% -% The \luafunction{patch_font} callback is inserted in the wrapper -% \identifier{luaotfload} provides for the font definition callback -% (see below, page \pageref{define-font}). -% At this place it allows manipulating the font object immediately after -% the font loader is done creating it. -% For a short demonstration of its usefulness, here is a snippet that -% writes an entire font object to the file \fileent{fontdump.lua}: -% -% \begin{quote} -% \begin{verbatim} -% \input luaotfload.sty -% \directlua{ -% local dumpfile = "fontdump.lua" -% local dump_font = function (tfmdata) -% local data = table.serialize(tfmdata) -% io.savedata(dumpfile, data) -% end -% -% luatexbase.add_to_callback( -% "luaotfload.patch_font", -% dump_font, -% "my_private_callbacks.dump_font" -% ) -% } -% \font\dumpme=name:Iwona -% \bye -% \end{verbatim} -% \end{quote} -% -% \emphasis{Beware}: this creates a Lua file of around 150,000 lines of -% code, taking up 3~\abbrev{mb} of disk space. -% By inspecting the output you can get a first impression of how a font -% is structured in \LUATEX’s memory, what elements it is composed of, -% and in what ways it can be rearranged. -% -% \subsubsection{Compatibility with Earlier Versions} -% -% As has been touched on in the preface to this section, the structure -% of the object as returned by the fontloader underwent rather drastic -% changes during different stages of its development, and not all -% packages that made use of font patching have kept up with every one -% of it. -% To ensure compatibility with these as well as older versions of -% some packages, \identifier{luaotfload} sets up copies of or references -% to data in the font table where it used to be located. -% For instance, important parameters like the requested point size, the -% units factor, and the font name have again been made accessible from -% the toplevel of the table even though they were migrated to different -% subtables in the meantime. -% -% \subsubsection{Patches} -% -% These are mostly concerned with establishing compatibility with -% \XETEX. -% -% \begin{itemize} -% \let\normalitem=\item -% \def\ouritem#1{% -% \normalitem{\luafunction{#1}}% -% \hfill\break -% } -% -% \ouritem {set_sscale_dimens} -% Calculate \texmacro{fontdimen}s 10 and 11 to emulate \XETEX. -% -% \ouritem {set_capheight} -% Calculates \texmacro{fontdimen} 8 like \XETEX. -% -% \ouritem {patch_cambria_domh} -% Correct some values of the font \emphasis{Cambria Math}. -% -% \end{itemize} -% -% \subsection{Package Author’s Interface} -% -% As \LUATEX release 1.0 is nearing, the demand for a reliable interface -% for package authors increases. -% -% \subsubsection{Font Properties} -% -% Below functions mostly concern querying the different components of a -% font like for instance the glyphs it contains, or what font features -% are defined for which scripts. -% -% \begin{itemize} -% \let\normalitem=\item -% \def\ouritem#1{% -% \normalitem{\luafunction{#1}}% -% \hfill\break -% } -% -% \ouritem {aux.font_has_glyph (id : int, index : int)} -% Predicate that returns true if the font \luafunction{id} -% has glyph \luafunction{index}. -% -% \ouritem {aux.slot_of_name(name : string)} -% Translates an Adobe Glyph name to the corresponding glyph -% slot. -% -% \ouritem {aux.name_of_slot(slot : int)} -% The inverse of \luafunction{slot_of_name}; note that this -% might be incomplete as multiple glyph names may map to the -% same codepoint, only one of which is returned by -% \luafunction{name_of_slot}. -% -% \ouritem {aux.provides_script(id : int, script : string)} -% Test if a font supports \luafunction{script}. -% -% \ouritem {aux.provides_language(id : int, script : string, language : string)} -% Test if a font defines \luafunction{language} for a given -% \luafunction{script}. -% -% \ouritem {aux.provides_feature(id : int, script : string, -% language : string, feature : string)} -% Test if a font defines \luafunction{feature} for -% \luafunction{language} for a given \luafunction{script}. -% -% \ouritem {aux.get_math_dimension(id : int, dimension : string)} -% Get the dimension \luafunction{dimension} of font \luafunction{id}. -% -% \ouritem {aux.sprint_math_dimension(id : int, dimension : string)} -% Same as \luafunction{get_math_dimension()}, but output the value -% in scaled points at the \TEX end. -% -% \end{itemize} -% -% \subsubsection{Database} -% -% \begin{itemize} -% \let\normalitem=\item -% \def\ouritem#1{% -% \normalitem{\luafunction{#1}}% -% \hfill\break -% } -% -% \ouritem {aux.scan_external_dir(dir : string)} -% Include fonts in directory \luafunction{dir} in font lookups without -% adding them to the database. -% -% \end{itemize} -% -% \section{Troubleshooting} -% -% \subsection {Database Generation} -% If you encounter problems with some fonts, please first update to the latest -% version of this package before reporting a bug, as -% \identifier{luaotfload} is under active development and still a -% moving target. -% The development takes place on \identifier{github} at -% \url{https://github.com/lualatex/luaotfload} where there is an issue -% tracker for submitting bug reports, feature requests and the likes -% requests and the likes. -% -% Bug reports are more likely to be addressed if they contain the output of -% -% \begin{quote} -% \begin{verbatim} -% luaotfload-tool --diagnose=environment,files,permissions -% \end{verbatim} -% \end{quote} -% -% \noindent Consult the man page for a description of these options. -% -% Errors during database generation can be traced by increasing the -% verbosity level and redirecting log output to \fileent{stdout}: -% -% \begin{quote} -% \begin{verbatim} -% luaotfload-tool -fuvvv --log=stdout -% \end{verbatim} -% \end{quote} -% -% \noindent or to a file in \fileent{/tmp}: -% -% \begin{quote} -% \begin{verbatim} -% luaotfload-tool -fuvvv --log=file -% \end{verbatim} -% \end{quote} -% -% \noindent In the latter case, invoke the \verb|tail(1)| utility on the file -% for live monitoring of the progress. -% -% If database generation fails, the font last printed to the terminal or log -% file is likely to be the culprit. -% Please specify it when reporting a bug, and blacklist it for the time -% being (see above, page \pageref{font-blacklist}). -% -% \subsection {Font Features} -% A common problem is the lack of features for some -% \OpenType fonts even when specified. -% This can be related to the fact that some fonts do not provide -% features for the \verb|dflt| script (see above on page -% \pageref{script-tag}), -% which is the default one in this package. -% If this happens, assigning a noth script when the font is defined should -% fix it. -% For example with \verb|latn|: -% -% \begin{quote} -% \begin{verbatim} -% \font\test=file:MyFont.otf:script=latn;+liga; -% \end{verbatim} -% \end{quote} -% -% You can get a list of features that a font defines for scripts and languages -% by querying it in \fileent{luaotfload-tool}: -% -% \begin{quote} -% \begin{verbatim} -% luaotfload-tool --find="Iwona" --inspect -% \end{verbatim} -% \end{quote} -% -% \subsection {\LUATEX Programming} -% Another strategy that helps avoiding problems is to not access raw \LUATEX -% internals directly. -% Some of them, even though they are dangerous to access, have not been -% overridden or disabled. -% Thus, whenever possible prefer the functions in the -% \luafunction{aux} namespace over direct manipulation of font objects. -% For example, raw access to the \luafunction{font.fonts} table like: -% -% \begin{quote} -% \begin{verbatim} -% local somefont = font.fonts[2] -% \end{verbatim} -% \end{quote} -% -% \noindent can render already defined fonts unusable. -% Instead, the function \luafunction{font.getfont()} should be used because -% it has been replaced by a safe variant. -% -% However, \luafunction{font.getfont()} only covers fonts handled by the font -% loader, e.~g. \identifier{OpenType} and \identifier{TrueType} fonts, but -% not \abbrev{tfm} or \abbrev{ofm}. -% Should you absolutely require access to all fonts known to \LUATEX, including -% the virtual and autogenerated ones, then you need to query both -% \luafunction{font.getfont()} and \luafunction{font.fonts}. -% In this case, best define you own accessor: -% -% \begin{quote} -% \begin{verbatim} -% local unsafe_getfont = function (id) -% local tfmdata = font.getfont (id) -% if not tfmdata then -% tfmdata = font.fonts[id] -% end -% return tfmdata -% end -% -% --- use like getfont() -% local somefont = unsafe_getfont (2) -% \end{verbatim} -% \end{quote} -% -% \part{Implementation} -% -% \section{\fileent{luaotfload.lua}} -% -% As of version 2.5, the file \fileent{luaotfload.lua} is no longer -% generated from the \abbrev{dtx}. -% Instead, it is maintained separately as a plain \identifier{Lua} file -% \fileent{luaotfload-main.lua} in the Luaotfload \identifier{git} tree. -% The file documentation which used to be found in this section has -% been preserved in the comments. -% -% \section{\fileent{luaotfload.sty}} -% -% As of version 2.5, the file \fileent{luaotfload.sty} is no longer -% generated from the \abbrev{dtx}. -% Instead, it is maintained separately as a plain \identifier{\TEX} file -% in the Luaotfload \identifier{git} tree. -% The file documentation which used to be found in this section has -% been preserved in the comments. -% -% \clearpage -% \section{The GNU GPL License v2} -% -% The GPL requires the complete license text to be distributed along -% with the code. I recommend the canonical source, instead: -% \url{http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/gpl-2.0.html}. -% But if you insist on an included copy, here it is. -% You might want to zoom in. -% -% \newsavebox{\gpl} -% \begin{lrbox}{\gpl} -% \begin{minipage}{3\textwidth} -% \columnsep=3\columnsep -% \begin{multicols}{3} -% \begin{center} -% {\Large GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE\par} -% \bigskip -% {Version 2, June 1991} -% \end{center} -% -% \begin{center} -% {\parindent 0in -% -% Copyright \textcopyright\ 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc. -% -% \bigskip -% -% 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA -% -% \bigskip -% -% Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies -% of this license document, but changing it is not allowed. -% } -% \end{center} -% -% \begin{center} -% {\bf\large Preamble} -% \end{center} -% -% -% The licenses for most software are designed to take away your freedom to -% share and change it. By contrast, the GNU General Public License is -% intended to guarantee your freedom to share and change free software---to -% make sure the software is free for all its users. This General Public -% License applies to most of the Free Software Foundation's software and to -% any other program whose authors commit to using it. (Some other Free -% Software Foundation software is covered by the GNU Library General Public -% License instead.) You can apply it to your programs, too. -% -% When we speak of free software, we are referring to freedom, not price. -% Our General Public Licenses are designed to make sure that you have the -% freedom to distribute copies of free software (and charge for this service -% if you wish), that you receive source code or can get it if you want it, -% that you can change the software or use pieces of it in new free programs; -% and that you know you can do these things. -% -% To protect your rights, we need to make restrictions that forbid anyone to -% deny you these rights or to ask you to surrender the rights. These -% restrictions translate to certain responsibilities for you if you -% distribute copies of the software, or if you modify it. -% -% For example, if you distribute copies of such a program, whether gratis or -% for a fee, you must give the recipients all the rights that you have. You -% must make sure that they, too, receive or can get the source code. And -% you must show them these terms so they know their rights. -% -% We protect your rights with two steps: (1) copyright the software, and (2) -% offer you this license which gives you legal permission to copy, -% distribute and/or modify the software. -% -% Also, for each author's protection and ours, we want to make certain that -% everyone understands that there is no warranty for this free software. If -% the software is modified by someone else and passed on, we want its -% recipients to know that what they have is not the original, so that any -% problems introduced by others will not reflect on the original authors' -% reputations. -% -% Finally, any free program is threatened constantly by software patents. -% We wish to avoid the danger that redistributors of a free program will -% individually obtain patent licenses, in effect making the program -% proprietary. To prevent this, we have made it clear that any patent must -% be licensed for everyone's free use or not licensed at all. -% -% The precise terms and conditions for copying, distribution and -% modification follow. -% -% \begin{center} -% {\Large \sc Terms and Conditions For Copying, Distribution and -% Modification} -% \end{center} -% -% \begin{enumerate} -% \item -% This License applies to any program or other work which contains a notice -% placed by the copyright holder saying it may be distributed under the -% terms of this General Public License. The ``Program'', below, refers to -% any such program or work, and a ``work based on the Program'' means either -% the Program or any derivative work under copyright law: that is to say, a -% work containing the Program or a portion of it, either verbatim or with -% modifications and/or translated into another language. (Hereinafter, -% translation is included without limitation in the term ``modification''.) -% Each licensee is addressed as ``you''. -% -% Activities other than copying, distribution and modification are not -% covered by this License; they are outside its scope. The act of -% running the Program is not restricted, and the output from the Program -% is covered only if its contents constitute a work based on the -% Program (independent of having been made by running the Program). -% Whether that is true depends on what the Program does. -% -% \item You may copy and distribute verbatim copies of the Program's source -% code as you receive it, in any medium, provided that you conspicuously -% and appropriately publish on each copy an appropriate copyright notice -% and disclaimer of warranty; keep intact all the notices that refer to -% this License and to the absence of any warranty; and give any other -% recipients of the Program a copy of this License along with the Program. -% -% You may charge a fee for the physical act of transferring a copy, and you -% may at your option offer warranty protection in exchange for a fee. -% -% \item -% You may modify your copy or copies of the Program or any portion -% of it, thus forming a work based on the Program, and copy and -% distribute such modifications or work under the terms of Section 1 -% above, provided that you also meet all of these conditions: -% -% \begin{enumerate} -% -% \item -% You must cause the modified files to carry prominent notices stating that -% you changed the files and the date of any change. -% -% \item -% You must cause any work that you distribute or publish, that in -% whole or in part contains or is derived from the Program or any -% part thereof, to be licensed as a whole at no charge to all third -% parties under the terms of this License. -% -% \item -% If the modified program normally reads commands interactively -% when run, you must cause it, when started running for such -% interactive use in the most ordinary way, to print or display an -% announcement including an appropriate copyright notice and a -% notice that there is no warranty (or else, saying that you provide -% a warranty) and that users may redistribute the program under -% these conditions, and telling the user how to view a copy of this -% License. (Exception: if the Program itself is interactive but -% does not normally print such an announcement, your work based on -% the Program is not required to print an announcement.) -% -% \end{enumerate} -% -% -% These requirements apply to the modified work as a whole. If -% identifiable sections of that work are not derived from the Program, -% and can be reasonably considered independent and separate works in -% themselves, then this License, and its terms, do not apply to those -% sections when you distribute them as separate works. But when you -% distribute the same sections as part of a whole which is a work based -% on the Program, the distribution of the whole must be on the terms of -% this License, whose permissions for other licensees extend to the -% entire whole, and thus to each and every part regardless of who wrote it. -% -% Thus, it is not the intent of this section to claim rights or contest -% your rights to work written entirely by you; rather, the intent is to -% exercise the right to control the distribution of derivative or -% collective works based on the Program. -% -% In addition, mere aggregation of another work not based on the Program -% with the Program (or with a work based on the Program) on a volume of -% a storage or distribution medium does not bring the other work under -% the scope of this License. -% -% \item -% You may copy and distribute the Program (or a work based on it, -% under Section 2) in object code or executable form under the terms of -% Sections 1 and 2 above provided that you also do one of the following: -% -% \begin{enumerate} -% -% \item -% -% Accompany it with the complete corresponding machine-readable -% source code, which must be distributed under the terms of Sections -% 1 and 2 above on a medium customarily used for software interchange; or, -% -% \item -% -% Accompany it with a written offer, valid for at least three -% years, to give any third party, for a charge no more than your -% cost of physically performing source distribution, a complete -% machine-readable copy of the corresponding source code, to be -% distributed under the terms of Sections 1 and 2 above on a medium -% customarily used for software interchange; or, -% -% \item -% -% Accompany it with the information you received as to the offer -% to distribute corresponding source code. (This alternative is -% allowed only for noncommercial distribution and only if you -% received the program in object code or executable form with such -% an offer, in accord with Subsection b above.) -% -% \end{enumerate} -% -% -% The source code for a work means the preferred form of the work for -% making modifications to it. For an executable work, complete source -% code means all the source code for all modules it contains, plus any -% associated interface definition files, plus the scripts used to -% control compilation and installation of the executable. However, as a -% special exception, the source code distributed need not include -% anything that is normally distributed (in either source or binary -% form) with the major components (compiler, kernel, and so on) of the -% operating system on which the executable runs, unless that component -% itself accompanies the executable. -% -% If distribution of executable or object code is made by offering -% access to copy from a designated place, then offering equivalent -% access to copy the source code from the same place counts as -% distribution of the source code, even though third parties are not -% compelled to copy the source along with the object code. -% -% \item -% You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Program -% except as expressly provided under this License. Any attempt -% otherwise to copy, modify, sublicense or distribute the Program is -% void, and will automatically terminate your rights under this License. -% However, parties who have received copies, or rights, from you under -% this License will not have their licenses terminated so long as such -% parties remain in full compliance. -% -% \item -% You are not required to accept this License, since you have not -% signed it. However, nothing else grants you permission to modify or -% distribute the Program or its derivative works. These actions are -% prohibited by law if you do not accept this License. Therefore, by -% modifying or distributing the Program (or any work based on the -% Program), you indicate your acceptance of this License to do so, and -% all its terms and conditions for copying, distributing or modifying -% the Program or works based on it. -% -% \item -% Each time you redistribute the Program (or any work based on the -% Program), the recipient automatically receives a license from the -% original licensor to copy, distribute or modify the Program subject to -% these terms and conditions. You may not impose any further -% restrictions on the recipients' exercise of the rights granted herein. -% You are not responsible for enforcing compliance by third parties to -% this License. -% -% \item -% If, as a consequence of a court judgment or allegation of patent -% infringement or for any other reason (not limited to patent issues), -% conditions are imposed on you (whether by court order, agreement or -% otherwise) that contradict the conditions of this License, they do not -% excuse you from the conditions of this License. If you cannot -% distribute so as to satisfy simultaneously your obligations under this -% License and any other pertinent obligations, then as a consequence you -% may not distribute the Program at all. For example, if a patent -% license would not permit royalty-free redistribution of the Program by -% all those who receive copies directly or indirectly through you, then -% the only way you could satisfy both it and this License would be to -% refrain entirely from distribution of the Program. -% -% If any portion of this section is held invalid or unenforceable under -% any particular circumstance, the balance of the section is intended to -% apply and the section as a whole is intended to apply in other -% circumstances. -% -% It is not the purpose of this section to induce you to infringe any -% patents or other property right claims or to contest validity of any -% such claims; this section has the sole purpose of protecting the -% integrity of the free software distribution system, which is -% implemented by public license practices. Many people have made -% generous contributions to the wide range of software distributed -% through that system in reliance on consistent application of that -% system; it is up to the author/donor to decide if he or she is willing -% to distribute software through any other system and a licensee cannot -% impose that choice. -% -% This section is intended to make thoroughly clear what is believed to -% be a consequence of the rest of this License. -% -% \item -% If the distribution and/or use of the Program is restricted in -% certain countries either by patents or by copyrighted interfaces, the -% original copyright holder who places the Program under this License -% may add an explicit geographical distribution limitation excluding -% those countries, so that distribution is permitted only in or among -% countries not thus excluded. In such case, this License incorporates -% the limitation as if written in the body of this License. -% -% \item -% The Free Software Foundation may publish revised and/or new versions -% of the General Public License from time to time. Such new versions will -% be similar in spirit to the present version, but may differ in detail to -% address new problems or concerns. -% -% Each version is given a distinguishing version number. If the Program -% specifies a version number of this License which applies to it and ``any -% later version'', you have the option of following the terms and conditions -% either of that version or of any later version published by the Free -% Software Foundation. If the Program does not specify a version number of -% this License, you may choose any version ever published by the Free Software -% Foundation. -% -% \item -% If you wish to incorporate parts of the Program into other free -% programs whose distribution conditions are different, write to the author -% to ask for permission. For software which is copyrighted by the Free -% Software Foundation, write to the Free Software Foundation; we sometimes -% make exceptions for this. Our decision will be guided by the two goals -% of preserving the free status of all derivatives of our free software and -% of promoting the sharing and reuse of software generally. -% -% \begin{center} -% {\Large\sc -% No Warranty -% } -% \end{center} -% -% \item -% {\sc Because the program is licensed free of charge, there is no warranty -% for the program, to the extent permitted by applicable law. Except when -% otherwise stated in writing the copyright holders and/or other parties -% provide the program ``as is'' without warranty of any kind, either expressed -% or implied, including, but not limited to, the implied warranties of -% merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose. The entire risk as -% to the quality and performance of the program is with you. Should the -% program prove defective, you assume the cost of all necessary servicing, -% repair or correction.} -% -% \item -% {\sc In no event unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing -% will any copyright holder, or any other party who may modify and/or -% redistribute the program as permitted above, be liable to you for damages, -% including any general, special, incidental or consequential damages arising -% out of the use or inability to use the program (including but not limited -% to loss of data or data being rendered inaccurate or losses sustained by -% you or third parties or a failure of the program to operate with any other -% programs), even if such holder or other party has been advised of the -% possibility of such damages.} -% -% \end{enumerate} -% -% -% \begin{center} -% {\Large\sc End of Terms and Conditions} -% \end{center} -% -% -% \pagebreak[2] -% -% \section*{Appendix: How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs} -% -% If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest -% possible use to the public, the best way to achieve this is to make it -% free software which everyone can redistribute and change under these -% terms. -% -% To do so, attach the following notices to the program. It is safest to -% attach them to the start of each source file to most effectively convey -% the exclusion of warranty; and each file should have at least the -% ``copyright'' line and a pointer to where the full notice is found. -% -% \begin{quote} -% one line to give the program's name and a brief idea of what it does. \\ -% Copyright (C) yyyy name of author \\ -% -% This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify -% it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by -% the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or -% (at your option) any later version. -% -% This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, -% but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of -% MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the -% GNU General Public License for more details. -% -% You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License -% along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software -% Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. -% \end{quote} -% -% Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail. -% -% If the program is interactive, make it output a short notice like this -% when it starts in an interactive mode: -% -% \begin{quote} -% Gnomovision version 69, Copyright (C) yyyy name of author \\ -% Gnomovision comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type `show w'. \\ -% This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it -% under certain conditions; type `show c' for details. -% \end{quote} -% -% -% The hypothetical commands {\tt show w} and {\tt show c} should show the -% appropriate parts of the General Public License. Of course, the commands -% you use may be called something other than {\tt show w} and {\tt show c}; -% they could even be mouse-clicks or menu items---whatever suits your -% program. -% -% You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or your -% school, if any, to sign a ``copyright disclaimer'' for the program, if -% necessary. Here is a sample; alter the names: -% -% \begin{quote} -% Yoyodyne, Inc., hereby disclaims all copyright interest in the program \\ -% `Gnomovision' (which makes passes at compilers) written by James Hacker. \\ -% -% signature of Ty Coon, 1 April 1989 \\ -% Ty Coon, President of Vice -% \end{quote} -% -% -% This General Public License does not permit incorporating your program -% into proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you -% may consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications -% with the library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Library -% General Public License instead of this License. -% -% \end{multicols} -% \end{minipage} -% \end{lrbox} -% -% \begin{center} -% \scalebox{0.33}{\usebox{\gpl}} -% \end{center} -% -% \Finale -\endinput -- cgit v1.2.3