Notes for binary package builders Starting from thins version, gnome-print fontmap layout is much more flexible. This is mostly meant to make the life of package builders easier. First you should read README.installer, to get the idea. Most of 'make install' alchemy is just determining, whether and where user has installed fonts. Fortunately this should be no-problem for binaries, as you can rely on distribution-dependent font location. Also, there is no need for running font installer during package installation at all. if admin/user has specific fonts, it should be his/her responsibility to run gnome-font-install for those. So what should packagers do: Once you have working gnome-print (font installer) in build machine, run installer once for each Type1 font package for given system (ghostscript-fonts, x11-fonts etc.): gnome-font-install --debug \ --recursive \ --clean \ --static \ --target=PACKAGENAME.fontmap \ DIRS... where DIRS are directories, where font files for given font package reside. This will generate fontmap file, that contains entires for all usable Type1 fonts from given font package. Then include PACKAGENAME.fontmap into binary distribution, installable to static fontmap directory (often /usr/share/gnome/fonts). Better yet would be to include given fontmap with font package, so if user removes font package, fontmap will be removed as well. Alternately you should add test="some_font_file_from_package" To node of generated file, so gnome-print can ignore full fontmap just by checking the presence of single file. Otherwise ghost fonts will appear in font parser, making users unhappy. IMPORTANT!!! The only complex piece are urw/adobe chimaeric fonts. To generate fontmap for those, you have to do: gnome-font-install --debug \ --recursive \ --clean \ --static \ --target=adobe-urw.fontmap \ --aliases=PATH_TO_adobe_urw.font \ DIRS_urw \ DIRS_adobe_afms Where adobe-urw.font is file from gnome-print (it will be installed by default, but there is no strict need to include it in binary). DIRS_urw are directories, where URW pfb files for fonts like NimbusSanL reside DIRS_afm are directories, where standard adobe afm files reside. Set of those are included with gnome-print installation, so you can use $datadir/fonts/afms Doing so, you can get rid of running font-installer during postinstall - what according to my experience is single most common point of failure with gnome-print binaries. UPDATE: 05/11/2001 There is now --smart argument for gnome-font-install, that tries to do everything automatically. It's default scan paths are defined in gnome-font-install.c - feel free to add more, if these are common on your system. The best way to do installing is now: 1. Create and install prebuilt fontmaps 2. Run gnome-font-install --smart in postinstall. It does additional search, and registers fonts, that users may have in system, but are not included in prebuilt fontmaps. Doing so guarantees, that even, if postinstall fails (I have encountered Type1 fonts that crash certain versions of FreeType), user still has set of standard fonts from prebuilt fontmaps. have fun Lauris Kaplinski 29.09.2001