Follow-up Comment #37, bug #63808 (project groff): > Here's what I need to know.
> A) Is it even valid to try to test gropdf with 'gs' available but "no URW fonts"? You explained in comment #7 that URW fonts were donated to Ghostscript. That they might be forked or separately maintained in variant forms is not strongly relevant, except for the file name and directory changes that have proven otherwise frustrating. Definitely. Although in debian the fonts associated with ghostscript are the same files as you would get if you installed the URW fonts as a separate package without ghostscript, in other linux distros such as the one I use, they are different versions. You can just install ghostscript and the fonts are available, without the relevent afm files, no symlinks. So anyone using a distro like mine who installs ghostscript (common) will be able to have standard gropdf. On your system (debian) if ghostscript is installed you will always get extended gropdf, so I understand your question, but we have to cater for distros which don't follow the debian way. Version could be relevant if glyph coverage is different. > B) If it is, what does that test scenario look like? As in comment #3, but I will update it to current nomenclature. if gs or urw run check-default-foundry.sh if urw run check-urw-foundry.sh end end In both cases you are looking for the 35 groff fonts, and additionally EURO in the default foundry. If any are not found then the test fails. _______________________________________________________ Reply to this item at: <https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?63808> _______________________________________________ Message sent via Savannah https://savannah.gnu.org/