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== The template == | == The template == | ||
{{Admon/warning|The following template is totally outdated. you should copy a template from fontpackages for your package. the latest is available [https://pagure.io/fontpackages/blob/master/f/spec-templates | {{Admon/warning|The following template is totally outdated. you should copy a template from fontpackages for your package. the latest is available [https://pagure.io/fontpackages/blob/master/f/spec-templates here].}} | ||
{{Rightnote|<pre>%global fontname <FONTNAME></pre>|{{:Fonts spec template notes/fontname}}}} | {{Rightnote|<pre>%global fontname <FONTNAME></pre>|{{:Fonts spec template notes/fontname}}}} |
Latest revision as of 09:23, 4 June 2019
Foreword
This template can be used with simple font releases (one font family in one upstream archive):
- if you're unlucky enough upstream released several font families in a single archive, use this less simple template;
- if upstream releases separate fonts in separate archives, do not try to stuff them in a single spec/package, just package them separately.
The template
Replace <FONTNAME> with something appropriate such as foundryname-fontname. For Fedora purposes a “foundry” is an entity that publishes a set of fonts with consistent QA rules[3].
If fontname already includes the font or fonts affix, drop it.
%global fontname <FONTNAME>
fontconf is the optional fontconfig ruleset for the fonts being packaged.
For more information on choosing the right fontconfig priorities, see this page.
%global fontconf <XX>-%{fontname}.conf
Optional
#global archivename %{name}-%{version}
Name: %{fontname}-fonts
Do not trust font metadata versionning[4], unless you've checked upstream does update versions on file changes. When in doubt use the timestamp of the most recent font file as version, for example 20081231.
Version:
Release: 1%{?dist}
Font summaries need to be short and to the point. Usual informations are font style and Unicode coverage. Only repeat the font name(s) if you don't have anything else to write.
Summary:
Make sure you've read and understand our legal page.
License:
URL: Source0: Source1: %{name}-fontconfig.conf
BuildArch: noarch BuildRequires: fontpackages-devel Requires: fontpackages-filesystem
Font descriptions must detail information on the font style, Unicode coverage, and intended use[5] to help users choose the right packages to install. Also, it is considered good form to credit the original font designer and sum up the font history.
Incidentally, this is a good way to check if the licensing information declared by upstream is correct and if some fontconfig substitution rules can be added to the package.
Examples of terrific font descriptions are found on the Greek Font Society web site. This is what other font packages should strive to emulate.
%description
%prep %setup -q
Building fonts from sources is always preferred. For GPLed or LGPLed fonts this is required by the license.
%build
%install install -m 0755 -d %{buildroot}%{_fontdir}
Change *.ttf to the actual location of your font files (in a subdirectory, in this directory with an otf extension, etc).
install -m 0644 -p *.ttf %{buildroot}%{_fontdir}
install -m 0755 -d %{buildroot}%{_fontconfig_templatedir} \ %{buildroot}%{_fontconfig_confdir} install -m 0644 -p %{SOURCE1} \ %{buildroot}%{_fontconfig_templatedir}/%{fontconf}
To package a fontconfig ruleset disabled by default:
- install it in %{_fontconfig_templatedir},
- create symbolic link with the same name in %{_fontconfig_confdir}, that points to /dev/null.
ln -s %{_fontconfig_templatedir}/%{fontconf} \ %{buildroot}%{_fontconfig_confdir}/%{fontconf}
The %_font_pkg macro takes the following arguments:
- an optional -n name subpackage name
- an optional -f pattern fontconfig pattern name. The corresponding files must be installed by the packager in %{_fontconfig_templatedir} and %{_fontconfig_confdir} in the %install section.
- a list of font names or font name patterns. The corresponding files must be installed by the packager in %{_fontdir} in the %install section.
%_font_pkg -f %{fontconf} *.ttf
Documentation usually includes licensing and other information in plain text or PDF[6] format. Make sure your text files use maximum 80 column lines with Unix-style line ends and are encoded in UTF-8.
%doc