Not sure if last email was final refuse ;) - I would like to continue in fixing this. From current
"trialogue" I guess I have several possible ways of fixing it -
- Add another font-manager, which will be possible to enable via
sun.font.fontmanager
- add command line switch which will "enable" "my fix"
Or what about this approach:
- when createFont(f) is called, and no fonts are found, then use this font as
default font.
Do you have any preferences for any of above approaches or do you really want idea behind this
patch to be scratched away from table?
Thank you very much for already given feedback,
Best regards,
J.
On 11/13/2012 03:47 PM, Jiri Vanek wrote:
Thank you both for valuable feedback,
Yes, this was very straight-forward fix, but also the less harmful. I tested it
quite heavvily, and
it does not move failure to "just later". Jre is working pretty find (as all
calls to
FontManagerFactory are returning this stub, which is making its job quite fine:)
This fix was really intended for small (but maybe bigger then we think) group
of headless devices,
where openjdk have its place. Such a device can have pretty good output eg via
html, but no need for
fonts at "server" at all. This headless device will definitely have no need for
fonts at all.
Except eg generating captcha which can be exactly the usage you have described.
However your contra-usecase with misconfigured system or JRE is more then
true, and I agree with
it. The workaround for user, to provide his ttf as default font can be maybe
best solution.
The approach of OracleJDK is well known to me - It have its default fonts. In
world of opensource
the fonts were always little bit painful topic, but still this solution may be
working to.
Anyway both solution above are workarounds and does not fix the issue that
createFont(or even most
of jre) should work no meter what fonts are installed.
Another suggested patch was make it configurable - but then it already is, as
one can easily provide
custom font manager via sun.font.fontmanager property. Then we can maybe make
life little bit more
easier by adding such "improved" fontmanager implementation.
I'm sorry for providing just linux implementation, but linux is probably target
platform in such a
devices. It was also serving as proof of concept. I'm definitely going to
implement this also for
win/mac when possible solution will be clarified.
Currently I'm definitely for adding NoFontsFound exception (better then
NullPointException, and
maybe extend it also for case that this Array have 0 length[just idea during
writing]?), and think
little bit more about it.
Although I still like "my approach" the most, I'm going to obey yours advice
but I still believe
this issue is worthy to be fixed.
Best regards,
J.
2012/11/12 Phil Race <philip.r...@oracle.com <mailto:philip.r...@oracle.com>>
Well this seems like a really narrow use case for an extremely rare system
misconfiguration. It wouldn't help the 99.999% of apps which expect to
kick off AWT or Swing.
And can you ensure that nothing in the app, or in the implementation makes
the (reasonable) expectation that there are other fonts installed ?
The most you could do is render to a BufferedImage or similar using the
explicitly
loaded font. The default logical font installed on a SG2D will be backed by
a non-existent
physical font, so you'd need to swap that in sooner rather than later.
At some point you have to say that if JRE or system components are missing,
then the source of the problem is what you should fix rather than make the
JRE work around it.
If you do want to try something, then in this case you get a much more
usable
runtime by providing a default font that the JRE can ensure is available so
that the other 99.999% of apps can get by.
The "Oracle" JDK gets by in this case precisely because it has a real
physical font
to fall back on.
-phil.
Hi Phil,
I'm thinking here of Headless or embedded devices where the full Swing/AWT
support may not be needed.
Anyway, I see your point that those cases are definitely the minority and if
OpenJDK doesn't want to
work on those system, then I can only say that whoever is going to have such
use case can just apply
this patch and live with it.
I totally agree however that if this comes from a misconfiguration rather than
a conscious decision
the JDK should probably protect itself by failing earlier (it will fail anyway,
as you noted though).
Perhaps a better patch would be to allow this to be configurable, by still
introducing this new
FontManager but making it a named class and allow this as an option, defaulting
on the old
behaviour, and at the same time giving a better error message.
Also, like you suggest, ship a fallback in jre/lib/fonts sound a better idea in
most cases.
Cheers,
Mario
On 11/12/2012 12:29 PM, Mario Torre wrote:
Hi Phil,
I believe that the underlying problem here is that it should be legal
to create a font from
a file, even if the FontManager doesn't have any fonts installed.
So, code like the one in the example:
public class Test {
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
Font.createFont(Font.TRUETYPE___FONT, new
File("example.ttf"));
}
}
When passed a real, valid font (example.ttf in this case) would still
fail with the old
code, and instead would work with the given patch (at least, I think
this is the idea here,
Jiri can probably explain in more details his intentions?).
Cheers,
Mario
2012/11/12 Phil Race <philip.r...@oracle.com
<mailto:philip.r...@oracle.com>
<mailto:philip.r...@oracle.com <mailto:philip.r...@oracle.com>__>>
Hello Jiri,
Doesn't this just move the point of failure to a bit later ?
I can't see how having zero fonts on the system is survivable for
an
app that uses fonts. That's the principal reason we haven't tried
to do something like this already.
When facing system configuration issues maybe we just need to
print a better message for the exception such as
throw new InternalError("Can't find any fonts installed on this
system.");
Or make the default font more configurable and distros could ship
one in jre/lib/fonts.
BTW it appears you are only trying to solve the problem for
Linux/Unix.
Nothing for Windows or OS X.
-phil.
On 11/12/2012 10:07 AM, Jiri Vanek wrote:
Hi!
This is attempt to fix
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/__show_bug.cgi?id=862355
<https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=862355>
The patch is introducing new exception
src/share/classes/sun/font/__NoFontsFoundException.java, which
is thrown from
/src/solaris/classes/sun/awt/__X11FontManager.java instead
of
null pointer exception when no fonts are found on system.
Exception is then catch in
src/share/classes/sun/font/__FontManagerFactory.java, and in
this case it returns (and not caching the instance of it)
dummy font manager instead of continue in failure.
the dummy manager do nothing, except that it is able to create
java.awt.Font in same way as SunFontManager is doing, but is
not doing any caching.
To avoid duplicate code with
src/share/classes/sun/font/__SunFontManager.java, i have
extracted code from method createFont2D to new method here -
prepareFont2D - which is responsible for creating font until
caching..
Best regards,
J.
webrev
http://jvanek.fedorapeople.__org/oracle/jdk8/webrevs/__fontProperties/
<http://jvanek.fedorapeople.org/oracle/jdk8/webrevs/fontProperties/>
with test (although it will probably need some tuning and I'm
not sure where is the best place for it)
http://jvanek.fedorapeople.__org/oracle/jdk8/webrevs/__fontProperties/test/src/__nofontsreproducer/
<http://jvanek.fedorapeople.org/oracle/jdk8/webrevs/fontProperties/test/src/nofontsreproducer/>
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