Pedro Lopez-Cabanillas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > On Thursday 09 June 2005 10:56, Immanuel Litzroth wrote: >> Well, I delved somewhat deeper into the issue, and I probably have a >> problem with Xft. I run rosegarden on LB1 and connect to an XServer on LB2. >> When I run rosegarden on LB2 (locally) everything works fine. Being >> somewhat older I thought that the XServer knew everything about fonts, but >> Xft seems to move the fonts to the box where the application is running? >> If I am on the right track, does anybody have some information about this? > > Well, there are several things involved here: > > Xfs (X Font Server) is the classic font subsystem for X. It delivers fonts to > the X server. It can be used remotely, but this feature is usually disabled > by the distros, so it only delivers fonts to the local X server. You can > change the configuration file (mine is at /etc/X11/fs/config). Look for a > line saying "no-listen = tcp". > > Fontconfig/Xft is a new subsystem, used by some modern programs. The config > files are under /etc/fonts/ in my machine. This subsystem uses fonts locally > installed where the application (not the X server) runs. > > Applications can use one font subsystem or another. I don't know what Linux > distribution you are using, and you give very little details, but all the > information about these issues are on Internet, and you can find it using > Google. For instance, this page is about RH9: > http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/linux/RHL-9-Manual/ref-guide/s1-x-fonts.html > > Some clues: > * The X server runs on the machine that has a graphic card, display, mouse > and > keyboard. This machine is usually a workstation. Well, Xfs can run on this > same machine too, so the fonts for Xfs are locally installed into the > workstation, or the X server can use a remote Xfs service connecting to it > via tcp/ip, in this case using the fonts installed in the remote machine. > * Using the X server based workstation, you can run applications on a remote > machines. If you run Rosegarden on a remote machine, this remote system must > have sound (audio/MIDI devices) attached, and ALSA/aRts/Jack running. If the > application (or perhaps KDE) has been compiled to use Xft/Fontconfig, the > fonts used should be installed at the same machine where Rosegarden runs, not > on the workstation, because fontconfig uses client-side rendering of the > fonts. Look at this thread: > http://lists.freedesktop.org/pipermail/fontconfig/2003-December/000719.html > Thanks for the info! Someone seems to have invented fontconfig, Xft and somewhere between 2000 and 2005, when I wasn't looking. I will be able to figure this out and will report back if there is a way of detecting this problem and giving better feedback. I have described my setup in more detail in the answer to sylvan's mail. Immanuel
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