Sponsored Content
Operating Systems Linux Fedora Fedora 30 and Slackware 14.2, how to obtain the same rendering? Post 303036859 by Neo on Sunday 14th of July 2019 09:30:46 PM
Old 07-14-2019
Great.

Yes, that is what I thought you would do when I asked you to copy over the fonts from one system to the other; but you were working in the wrong font directories before; directories which were not in your fonts.conf file.

Glad you finally got it all sorted out.

At the end of the day, it is just "Linux font management", and the manual process of Linux font installation (and verification) should yield the the same results in each Linux distribution.
This User Gave Thanks to Neo For This Post:
 

6 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX Desktop Questions & Answers

Unix GUI rendering

Does anyone know why Fonts and most Graphics in KDE and Gnome are rendered rather badly. There are some text editors in KDE where the font is just horrible as far as legible. Any links or knowledge on this topic would be grealy appreciated. A Huge Unix/Linux Fan Gregg (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: gdboling
2 Replies

2. Linux

Dual Boot Win XP And Fedora with Fedora Installed First

Hi everyone, I hope this question goes here. Anyways, I have a unique situation where my friend's comp has Fedora installed and wants to add Win XP as a dual boot without formatting the drive. Is it possible to create a partition on the current hard drive and then install win xp? I couldn't find... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: eltinator
4 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Exceed and offscreen rendering

Hi everyone. I made a program which renders a 3D scene into a pbuffer/pixmap (if pbuffer aren't supported) in order to export it to a postscript file. On a RHEL4 (32/64 bits) or whatever distribution may be, it works just fine. I'm using Exceed when I'm working under WinXP and each time I run my... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: JB007ROLV
0 Replies

4. Red Hat

Fedora temporarily obtain root previlages

Hii friends!! i am quite a bit dealing with linux stuff i worked mostly on macosx unix side i created a user phoenix during installation of fedora 14 now after installation i want some rights to do a task i usually use sudo to elevate to do a operation; i did the same here but its going on... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: phoenix_nebula
3 Replies

5. Red Hat

fedora grub help, moving to tri boot (XP, ubuntu, fedora soemething)

I will shortly be adding a fedora flavor to my devel box. I currently have XP (installed first on an ssd), ubuntu 10.04 (installed second on the first partition of a platter drive), and I want to add either Cent or SL on the second partition of the platter drive. I will probably also want to... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: LMHmedchem
0 Replies

6. Red Hat

XCB crash while Video Rendering in multithreded application

I encounter the following crash on RHEL 7.0 when I run a multithreaded video rendering application using GLFW and OpenGL. OpenGL version is 2.1 and MESA version is 9.3.0 Following is the back trace of the multi-threaded program I am working on:... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: anuachin
0 Replies
mkfontdir(1X)															     mkfontdir(1X)

NAME
mkfontdir, fonts.dir, fonts.scale, fonts.alias - create an index of X font files in a directory SYNOPSIS
mkfontdir [directory-name...] DESCRIPTION
For each directory argument, mkfontdir reads all of the font files in the directory searching for properties named "FONT", or (failing that) the name of the file stripped of its suffix. These are converted to lower case and used as font names, and, along with the name of the font file, are written out to the file "fonts.dir" in the directory. The X server and font server use "fonts.dir" to find font files. The kinds of font files read by mkfontdir depend on configuration parameters, but typically include PCF (suffix ".pcf"), SNF (suffix ".snf") and BDF (suffix ".bdf"). If a font exists in multiple formats, mkfontdir will first choose PCF, then SNF and finally BDF. The first line of fonts.dir gives the number of fonts in the file. The remaining lines list the fonts themselves, one per line, in two fields. First is the name of the font file, followed by a space and the name of the font. SCALABLE FONTS
Because scalable font files do not usually include the X font name, the file "fonts.scale" can be used to name the scalable fonts in the directory. The fonts listed in it are copied to fonts.dir by mkfontdir. "fonts.scale" has the same format as the "fonts.dir" file. FONT NAME ALIASES
The file "fonts.alias", which can be put in any directory of the font-path, is used to map new names to existing fonts, and should be edited by hand. The format is two white-space separated columns, the first containing aliases and the second containing font-name pat- terns. Lines beginning with "!" are comment lines and are ignored. If neither the alias nor the value specifies the size fields of the font name, this is a scalable alias. A font name of any size that matches this alias will be mapped to the same size of the font that the alias resolves to. When a font alias is used, the name it references is searched for in the normal manner, looking through each font directory in turn. This means that the aliases need not mention fonts in the same directory as the alias file. To embed white space in either name, simply enclose it in double-quote marks; to embed double-quote marks (or any other character), precede them with back-slash: "magic-alias with spaces" regular-alias fixed If the string "FILE_NAMES_ALIASES" stands alone on a line, each file-name in the directory (stripped of its suffix) will be used as an alias for that font. FILES
List of fonts in the directory and the files they are stored in. Created by mkfontdir. Read by the X server and font server each time the font path is set (see xset(1X)). List of scalable fonts in the directory. Contents are copied to fonts.dir by mkfontdir. List of font name aliases. Read by the X server and font server each time the font path is set (see xset(1X)). SEE ALSO
X(1X), Xdec(1X), xfs(1X), xset(1X) mkfontdir(1X)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:44 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy