PKFIX-HELPER(1) PKFIX-HELPER(1) NAME pkfix-helper - preprocess dvips-produced PostScript documents before passing them to pkfix SYNOPSIS pkfix-helper [--help] [--verbose] [--force=name=fontspec] [--ps=filename.ps] [--tex=filename.tex] [--cache=filename] [--include=fontspec] [--exclude=regexp] [--keep=fontspec] [--quiet] [--no-repeats] [--spp=number] [input.ps [output.ps]] DESCRIPTION Motivation PostScript documents created with old versions of dvips almost invariably utilize bitmapped (PostScript Type 3) fonts. The problem with bitmapped fonts is that they target a specific device resolution; a PostScript file produced using 300 DPI fonts will look grainy on a 600 DPI printer. Even worse, all bitmapped fonts look grainy when zoomed in on screen. The solution is to use vector (PostScript Type 1) fonts, which are resolution-independent and appear crisp at any size or scale. While it is no longer difficult to configure dvips to use vector fonts, it is not always possible to rerun dvips on an old .dvi file. The .dvi file and document source may have been lost; or, the source may no longer compile because packages it depends upon may no longer be available. Heiko Oberdiek's pkfix script replaces bitmapped fonts in dvips-produced PostScript files with the corresponding vector fonts. It works by parsing the PostScript comments with which dvips surrounds bitmapped-font definitions. For example, a font definition beginning with the comment "%DVIPSBitmapFont: Fi cmss10 11 28" and ending with a matching %EndDVIPSBitmapFont is known to define font "Fi" as "cmss10" (Computer Modern Sans Serif at a design size of 10 points) scaled to 11 points. Only the 28 characters actually used by the document are defined. pkfix then replaces the font definition with one that defines "Fi" using the same set of characters but taken from the cmss10.pfb vector font file. Unfortunately, pkfix works only with versions of dvips newer than v5.58 (ca. 1996). Naturally, the older a PostScript document, the less likely its sources still exist and can still be recompiled. Older versions of dvips lack %DVIPSBitmapFont comments and various other PostScript comments on which pkfix relies. Without PostScript comments to guide it, pkfix is unable to determine which vector fonts correspond with which bitmapped fonts. Overview The pkfix-helper script is a preprocessor for pkfix that attempts to determine the association between each document-font name (e.g., "Fi") in a PostScript file and the original font (e.g., "cmss10") and fonts size (e.g., 11 points). It then fabricates the PostScript comments that pkfix expects to see so that pkfix can do its job. pkfix-helper works by comparing every document font against every .tfm font file it knows about (assuming that each such font has a corresponding .pfb vector version) and selecting the best matching .tfm file for every document font. pkfix-helper has access only to the widths of characters and only to those characters actually used in the document. Also, the program recognizes only a limited set of the most popular .tfm files and scaling factors. Consequently, the comparison is imperfect and pkfix-helper may attribute an incorrect font to a given name. Fonts comprising only one or two characters actually used in a document are particularly problematic for pkfix-helper because many fonts may be near-enough matches to fool the problem. pkfix-helper is designed so that a user can guide the font-selection process by manually designating matching fonts. With a modicum of diligence and patience a user can correct any mismatched fonts and help the program provide proper input to pkfix. OPTIONS pkfix-helper accepts on the command line the filename of a PostScript document to process (with the default being the standard input device) and the filename of a modified PostScript document to create (with the default being the standard output device). The program also accepts the following command-line options: Frequently Used Options -h, --help Display usage information and exit. The --verbose and --quiet options can be used to increase and decrease the amount of information presented. -v, --verbose Increase the amount of status information that pkfix-helper displays as it runs. Additional instances of --verbose on the command line further increase the program's verbosity. By default, only major operations are displayed. A single --verbose additionally displays information about individual font comparisons. A second --verbose additionally displays details about some of the program's internal operations. -f name=fontspec, --force=name=fontspec Force pkfix-helper to associate a specific font with a given font name appearing the document. name is a (usually) two-character dvips font name such as "Fa". fontspec is a font specification that comprises a font name and an optional scale: "font ["@" scale]". Some examples of fontspecs are "cmmi8" and "cmsy10 @ 1.1X". An asterisk used in the name of the font (e.g., "cmti*") will be replaced by all integers from 5 to 17 ("cmti5", "cmti6", ..., "cmti17"). The scale can be written as a multiple of the design size ("X") or as an absolute size in either TeX points ("pt") or PostScript "big" points ("bp"). Hence, "cmsy8 @ 1.5X", "cmsy8 @ 12pt", and "cmsy8 @ 11.96bp" all represent the Computer Modern Math Symbols 8 Point font scaled to 12 TeX points/11.96 PostScript points. Instead of specifying an explicit scale, an asterisk can be used (as in "cmsy8 @ *") to request that pkfix- helper find the scale that best matches the original font's metrics. The --force option can be specified repeatedly on the command line. -p filename.ps, --ps=filename.ps Create a PostScript file called filename.ps that shows the dvips name and a font sample of every font used by the input document. -t filename.tex, --tex=filename.tex Create a Plain TeX file called filename.tex that shows the dvips name and a font sample of every font that pkfix-helper used in the output document. -k fontspec, --keep=fontspec Do not substitute a vector font for bitmapped font fontspec ("Fa", "Fb", etc.). This is useful when converting documents that use obscure bitmapped fonts for which there is no vector equivalent. For example, it was somewhat common in the past to include graphics such as university or corporate logos into a document by converting the bitmapped image into a single-character font and using that font in LaTeX. --keep prevents such fonts from being replaced. The --keep option can be specified repeatedly on the command line. -1, --no-repeats Prevent pkfix-helper from associating the same fontspec with more than one dvips font name. Less-frequently Used Options -q, --quiet Instruct pkfix-helper to produce no output during its run except for error and warning messages. -C filename, --cache=filename Speed up TFM file processing by caching character metrics into file filename. On some systems it takes a long time to read a TFM file, spawn tftopl to convert it to PL format, and extract from the PL data the metrics for each character. The first time --cache is specified, pkfix-helper proceeds as normal then writes all of the extracted character metrics to filename. On subsequent runs in which --cache=filename is specified, pkfix-helper reads the previously extracted metrics from filename, going through the tftopl-based process only for TFM files that were not previously encountered. -i fontspec, --include=fontspec Add fontspec to the list of font specifications against which pkfix-helper compares every document font. (In contrast, --force designates a font specification to use only for a specific document font.) The --include option can be specified repeatedly on the command line. -x regexp, --exclude=regexp Remove all font specifications matching regular expression regexp from pkfix-helper's list of known fonts. The --exclude option can be specified repeatedly on the command line. -s, --spp Specify the number of font samples per page to print to the files indicated using the --ps and --tex options. The default value, 25, should work well in most circumstances. DIAGNOSTICS "Best match for name is rather poor" The best font pkfix-helper found for dvips font name name has a mismatch value greater than or equal to 1.0. (The mismatch value is the sum of the squares of the difference between the character widths of a document font and a potential replacement font.) Use the --force option to designate an alternative replacement font or scaling amount. "name uses characters that don't appear in any candidate font" None of the fonts considered for a match include all of the characters in font name. The user should use the --force option to inform pkfix-helper which font to use or the --keep option to retain the original, bitmapped font. "Processing name ... done (font with mismatch=number, tied with font...)" The best match for name is font font. A perfect match has a number of 0.00000. Worse matches observe larger values. If a tie is reported, this means one or more fonts matched name equally well (i.e., they see the same number). In this case, pkfix-helper selects the qualitatively most likely font as the winner. EXAMPLES For the purpose of the following examples, assume that oldfile.ps is the name of a PostScript file produced by an old version of dvips and utilizing at least one bitmapped font. It's always worth verifying that pkfix can't convert the file on its own: $ pkfix oldfile.ps newfile.ps PKFIX 1.3, 2005/02/25 - Copyright (c) 2001, 2005 by Heiko Oberdiek. ==> no fonts converted (Alternatively pkfix may issue an error message such as "!!! Error: Parse error (@start parameters)!".) Only when pkfix can't replace bitmapped fonts with vector fonts is pkfix-helper needed. In its simplest form, pkfix-helper takes the name of an input file (oldfile.ps in this example) and the name of an output file (pkfix-oldfile.ps), which will have the same contents as the input file but serve as suitable input for pkfix: $ pkfix-helper oldfile.ps pkfix-oldfile.ps Reading oldfile.ps ... done. Number of Type 3 fonts encountered: 10 Bitmapped fonts are typeset at 600 DPI. Finding character widths ... done. Reading TFM files ... done (103 TFMs in 193 scaling variations). Matching fonts: Processing Fi ... done (cmr10 @ 1X, mismatch=0.11683). Processing Fa ... done (cmti10 @ 1X, mismatch=0.08892). Processing Fb ... done (cmr8 @ 1X, mismatch=0.07133). Processing Ff ... done (cmbx12 @ 1.2X, mismatch=0.02948). Processing Fh ... done (cmtt10 @ 1X, mismatch=0.06895). Processing Fd ... done (cmmi10 @ 1X, mismatch=0.03966). Processing Fj ... done (cmbx12 @ 1X, mismatch=0.03972). Processing Fe ... done (cmbx10 @ 1X, mismatch=0.00762). Processing Fg ... done (cmsy10 @ 1X, mismatch=0.00875). Processing Fc ... done (cmr6 @ 1X, mismatch=0.00284). $ pkfix pkfix-oldfile.ps newfile.ps PKFIX 1.3, 2005/02/25 - Copyright (c) 2001, 2005 by Heiko Oberdiek. *** Font conversion: `cmti10' -> `CMTI10'. *** Font conversion: `cmr8' -> `CMR8'. *** Font conversion: `cmr6' -> `CMR6'. *** Font conversion: `cmmi10' -> `CMMI10'. *** Font conversion: `cmbx10' -> `CMBX10'. *** Font conversion: `cmbx12' -> `CMBX12'. *** Font conversion: `cmsy10' -> `CMSY10'. *** Font conversion: `cmtt10' -> `CMTT10'. *** Font conversion: `cmr10' -> `CMR10'. *** Font conversion: `cmbx12' -> `CMBX12'. *** Merging font `CMBX12' (2). ==> 10 converted fonts. ==> 1 merged font. Although pkfix-helper tries to automate as much as possible the font- detection process, some fonts will invariably be incorrectly identified. The program outputs a warning message if it knows a match is bad but the lack of a warning message does not necessarily indicate that pkfix-helper did a good job. It is therefore strongly recommended that the user produce "before" and "after" font sheets: $ pkfix-helper -q oldfile.ps pkfix-oldfile.ps \ --ps=oldfonts.ps --tex=newfonts.tex $ tex newfonts.tex This is TeX, Version 3.14159 (Web2C 7.4.5) (./newfonts.tex [1] ) Output written on newfonts.dvi (1 page, 1292 bytes). Transcript written on newfonts.log. $ dvips newfonts.dvi -o newfonts.ps This is dvips(k) 5.92b Copyright 2002 Radical Eye Software (www.radicaleye.com) ' TeX output 2006.06.11:1636' -> newfonts.ps <8r.enc>. [1] After running the preceding commands, oldfonts.ps shows samples of the fonts in oldfile.ps and newfonts.ps shows samples of the replacement fonts that pkfix-helper used to produce pkfix-oldfile.ps. Print oldfonts.ps and newfonts.ps and compare them carefully for incorrect fonts and sizes. Suppose that the choice of "cmbx12 @ 1.2X" for font "Ff" looks wrong; say the characters look taller in oldfonts.ps than in newfonts.ps. This is where the trial-and-error stage begins. Let's hypothesize that "cmb12" is a better match than "cmbx12" but we don't know how much to scale the font. Fortunately, pkfix-helper allows "*" to be used as a scaling factor to tell the program to automatically detect an optimal scaling factor, even if doing so means choosing a nonstandard font size: $ pkfix-helper oldfile.ps pkfix-oldfile.ps --force="Ff=cmb12 @ *" Reading oldfile.ps ... done. Number of Type 3 fonts encountered: 10 Bitmapped fonts are typeset at 600 DPI. Finding character widths ... done. Reading TFM files ... failed. pkfix-helper: Unable to process user-specified TFM file "cmb12" Oops, it looks like we don't have a cmb12.tfm file on our system. Let's try scaling up cmb10.tfm instead: $ pkfix-helper oldfile.ps pkfix-oldfile.ps --force="Ff=cmb10 @ *" Reading oldfile.ps ... done. Number of Type 3 fonts encountered: 10 Bitmapped fonts are typeset at 600 DPI. Finding character widths ... done. Reading TFM files ... done (103 TFMs in 193 scaling variations). Matching fonts: Processing Fi ... done (cmr10 @ 1X, mismatch=0.11683). Processing Fa ... done (cmti10 @ 1X, mismatch=0.08892). Processing Fb ... done (cmr8 @ 1X, mismatch=0.07133). Processing Ff ... done (cmb10 @ 1.5X, mismatch=0.00035). Processing Fh ... done (cmtt10 @ 1X, mismatch=0.06895). Processing Fd ... done (cmmi10 @ 1X, mismatch=0.03966). Processing Fj ... done (cmbx12 @ 1X, mismatch=0.03972). Processing Fe ... done (cmbx10 @ 1X, mismatch=0.00762). Processing Fg ... done (cmsy10 @ 1X, mismatch=0.00875). Processing Fc ... done (cmr6 @ 1X, mismatch=0.00284). The match has definitely improved, although 15 pt. is certainly an odd size for a font. Then again, many documents do use nonstandard sizes so this may in fact be correct. The best way to verify is once again to produce, print, and compare a pair of font samples and iterate until all of the fonts look correct. Use one instance of --force for each font you want to alter. ENVIRONMENT pkfix-helper honors the following environment variables: GS The name of the Ghostscript interpreter (default: gs) TFTOPL The name of a utility for converting .tfm files to .pl files (default: tftopl) RESTRICTIONS pkfix-helper works only with PostScript files produced by dvips, not with arbitrary PostScript files. Only bitmapped fonts loaded by dvips can be analyzed, not bitmapped fonts loaded by embedded graphics. pkfix-helper works by comparing character widths, not the actual glyphs. Consequently, it is misled by sets of fonts with similar character widths (at least for those characters used by a given document). As an extreme example, all Computer Modern Teletype fonts of a given design size (e.g., "cmtt10", "cmsltt10", and "cmitt10") use exactly the same widths for all characters. Human assistance is generally needed to guide pkfix-helper's font-matching procedures, especially for fonts for which relatively few characters appear in the document. There is an astonishing variety of dvips output. Different versions of the program and different command-line options can result in PostScript files with a completely different structure. pkfix-helper works hard to find font information buried in numerous output-file variants, but it is not uncommon for a PostScript file produced by a sufficiently old version of dvips or with sufficiently obscure command-line options to utterly confuse pkfix-helper. In this case, please send your problematic PostScript files to the author of pkfix-helper (see "AUTHOR" below), who may be able to enhance pkfix-helper to handle them. NOTES Files produced using the --tex option are Plain TeX files and therefore must be compiled with tex (or a variant such as pdftex, luatex, xetex, etc.), not with latex. dvips-produced PostScript files can be structured in sections, demarcated by %DVIPSBeginSection and %DVIPSEndSection. Font names are local to a section. Hence, a font named "Fa" may map to "cmex10" in one section and to "cmmi7" in another. pkfix-helper assigns every font in a multi-section document a unique name by appending a section-number suffix: "Fa_S01", "Fa_S02", etc. Font names are processed in decreasing order of the number of characters they have represented in the document. That is, if the document includes 10 characters from "Fa" and 23 characters from "Fb", pkfix-helper will process "Fb" before "Fa". SEE ALSO pkfix(1), dvips(1), tex(1), gs(1) PostScript Language Reference, Third Edition. Published by Addison- Wesley, ISBN 0-201-37922-8, . AUTHOR Scott Pakin, scott+pkfh@pakin.org COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE Copyright (C) 2009-2020, Scott Pakin This file may be distributed and/or modified under the conditions of the LaTeX Project Public License, either version 1.3c of this license or (at your option) any later version. The latest version of this license is in and version 1.3c or later is part of all distributions of LaTeX version 2006/05/20 or later. v1.6 2020-08-06 PKFIX-HELPER(1)