http://qa.mandrakesoft.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1428
[EMAIL PROTECTED] changed: What |Removed |Added ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Status|ASSIGNED |RESOLVED Resolution| |FIXED Version|7.05-46mdk |7.05-48mdk ------- Additional Comments From [EMAIL PROTECTED] 2003-03-10 05:45 ------- The bug is fixed in ghostscript-7.05-49mdk.i586.rpm which will appear on the Cooker after approval by our QA (we are in deep-freeze now). The fix is done by adding the path /usr/share/fonts/ttf to the font path of GhostScript this way GhostScript can read all fonts in this directory and all subdirectories also when running with "-dPARANOIDSAFER", so the security level of the printing system does not change with the fix and the fix does not need to be considered as a workaround. ------- You are receiving this mail because: ------- You are on the CC list for the bug, or are watching someone who is. ------- Reminder: ------- assigned_to: [EMAIL PROTECTED] status: RESOLVED creation_date: description: I did a fresh install of cooker last night with Japanese as a second language. Among other packages, I have fonts-ttf-japanese-0.20020727-2mdk OpenOffice.org-l10n-ja-1.0.2-2mdk kde-i18n-ja-3.1-1mdk locales-ja-2.3.1.4-3mdk ghostscript-7.05-42mdk ghostscript-fonts-6.0-1mdk ghostscript-module-X-7.05-42mdk installed. No matter what fonts I choose in mozilla or konqueror, I cannot print a simple page in Japanese successfully on my HP Deskjet 832C. I have been able to print to a postscript file and view that in gv without any problems, but when I send it to the printer, it comes out garbled. I.e I get one of the following: - Squares instead of Japanese letters - Blanks instead of Japanese letters - Symbols instead of Japanese letters, such as $*$$o$K Almost all postscript files looked correct when viewed in gv. The one case where I could not view correctly the postscript file in gv was when I used the default fonts in konqueror!!! For this test, I created a new user, logged into kde as that user, ran /usr/sbin/localedrake, logged out and in again. This is as clean of a setup as possible.