The numbers for right-to-left scripts are processed also from right to
left, so the order of applying “numr” and “dnom” features should be
reversed in such case.
Fixes https://github.com/behdad/harfbuzz/issues/395
It is desirable to be able to build against older versions of glib.
fd7a245 changed the configure check to require glib > 2.38 for
G_TEST_DIST. Before that, version 2.16 was required, but in fact,
since aafe395, G_PASTE is being used, which was introduced in 2.19.1.
And since 0ef179e2, hb-glib uses GBytes, which were introduced in
2.31.10.
2.19.1 is rather old, but 2.38 is rather new. For Firefox, building
against 2.22 is still supported, although we could probably get away
with bumping that to 2.28. Either way, GBytes is not available.
Arguably, if you build against a glib that doesn't support GBytes,
you're not going to use the hb_glib_blob_create function, so we hide
the function when building against such a glib.
As for G_TEST_DIST, when building against versions of glib that don't
support it, we can fallback to the previous behavior, which, AIUI, was
just making the test not work when building in a separate directory.
Note, the function now returns "half of horizontal advance width"
if top accent attachment for glyph is not explicitly defined.
This is what the spec requires. Updated tests.
The so-called Python 2 “narrow” builds support UCS2 only, this is a
workaround to allow unichr to work with any Unicode character in such
builds. This fixes Travis-CI failure as it has narrow Python 2 builds.
Copied from:
https://github.com/behdad/fonttools/blob/master/Lib/fontTools/misc/py23.py
Fixes https://github.com/behdad/harfbuzz/issues/243
With javatext.ttf, the reodering medial Ra gets its advance width
zero'ed in Uniscribe implementation, and the font adds the advance
back. Our Indic shaper does not do that, but USE does. So, route
Javanese through USE. That's what Microsoft does anyway. Test:
U+A9A5,U+A9BA
This also seems to fix the following sequence, and variations thereof:
U+A99F,U+A9C0,U+A9A2,U+A9BF
Apparently some clients have reference-table callbacks that copy the table.
As such, avoid loading 'glyf' table which is only needed if fallback positioning
happens.
That commit moved the advance adjustment for mark positioning to
be applied immediately, instead of doing late before. This breaks
if mark advances are zeroed late, like in Arabic. Also, easier to
hit it in RTL scripts since a single mark with non-zero advance is
enough to hit the bug, whereas in LTR, at least two marks are needed.
This reopens https://github.com/behdad/harfbuzz/issues/211
The cursive+mark interaction is broken again. To be fixed in a
different way.
This better emulates Unicode grapheme clusters.
Note that Uniscribe does NOT do this, but should be harmless with most clients,
and improve fallback with clients that use HarfBuzz cluster as unit of fallback.
Fixes https://github.com/behdad/harfbuzz/issues/217
This is what Microsoft's implementation does. Marks that need advance
need to add it back using 'dist' or other feature in GPOS. Update tests to
match.
Fixes https://github.com/behdad/harfbuzz/issues/211
What happens in that bug is that a mark is attached to base first,
then a second mark is cursive-chained to the first mark. This only
"works" because it's in the Indic shaper where mark advances are
not zeroed.
Before, we didn't allow cursive to run on marks at all. Fix that.
We also where updating mark major offsets at the end of GPOS, such
that changes in advance of base will not change the mark attachment
position. That was superior to the alternative (which is what Uniscribe
does BTW), but made it hard to apply cursive to the mark after it
was positioned. We could track major-direction offset changes and
apply that to cursive in the post process, but that's a much trickier
thing to do than the fix here, which is to immediately apply the
major-direction advance-width offsets... Ie.:
https://github.com/behdad/harfbuzz/issues/211#issuecomment-183194739
If this breaks any fonts, the font should be fixed to do mark attachment
after all the advances are set up first (kerning, etc).
Finally, this, still doesn't make us match Uniscribe, for I explained
in that bug. Looks like Uniscribe applies minor-direction cursive
adjustment immediate as well. We don't, and we like it our way, at
least for now. Eg. the sequence in the test case does this:
- The first subscript attaches with mark-to-base, moving in x only,
- The second subscript attaches with cursive attachment to first subscript
moving in x only,
- A final context rule moves the first subscript up by 104 units.
The way we do, the final shift-up, also shifts up the second subscript
mark because it's cursively-attached. Uniscribe doesn't. We get:
[ttaorya=0+1307|casubscriptorya=0@-242,104+-231|casubscriptnarroworya=0@20,104+507]
while Uniscribe gets:
[ttaorya=0+1307|casubscriptorya=0@-242,104+-211|casubscriptnarroworya=0+487]
note the different y-offset of the last glyph. In our view, after cursive,
things move together, period.
This test font had a upem of 769, which results in rounding-related errors with
the FreeType font funcs. Change the upem to 1024 to fix that.
Fixes https://github.com/behdad/harfbuzz/issues/201
We use three bits for lig_id these days, so we finally got a report of
two separate ligatures with the same lig_id happening adjacent to each
other, and then the component-handling code was breaking things.
Protect against that by ignoring same-lig-id but lig-comp=0 glyphs after
a new ligature.
Fixes https://github.com/behdad/harfbuzz/issues/198
Before, we were just checking the use_category(). This detects as
halant a ligature that had the halant as first glyph (as seen in
NotoSansBalinese.) Change that to use the is_ligated() glyph prop
bit. The font is forming this ligature in ccmp, which is before
the rphf / pref tests. So we need to make sure the "ligated" bit
survives those tests. Since those only check the "substituted" bit,
we now only clear that bit for them and "ligated" survives.
Fixes https://github.com/behdad/harfbuzz/issues/180
This is just to make it harder to be extremely slow. There definitely
are ways still, just harder. Oh well... how do we tame this problem
without solving halting problem?!
Fixes https://github.com/behdad/harfbuzz/issues/174
To fully test what these are supposed to test, they should be run
against libharfbuzz-fuzzing.la instead of libharfbuzz.la, but for
now just record the files.
The feature is enabled for any character in the Arabic shaper.
We should experiment with using it for Arabic subtending marks.
Though, that has a directionality problem as well, since those
are used with digits...
Fixes https://github.com/behdad/harfbuzz/issues/141
This resurrects the space fallback feature, after I disabled
the compatibility decomposition. Now I can release HarfBuzz
again without breaking Pango!
It also remembers which space character it was, such that later
on we can approximate the width of this particular space
character. That part is not implemented yet.
We normalize all GC=Zs chars except for U+1680 OGHA SPACE MARK,
which is better left alone.
Also route fuzzing-related tests through hb-ot-font, to reduce dependency
on FreeType behavior for badly-broken fonts. Fixes failing test with
FreeType master.
The BCP-47 registry defines a variant subtag "fonipa" that can be used
in combination with arbitrary other language tags. For example,
"rm-CH-fonipa-sursilv" indicates the Sursilvan dialect of Romansh
as used in Switzerland, transcribed used the International Phonetic
Alphabet.
http://www.iana.org/assignments/language-subtag-registry/language-subtag-registry
Fails now. Fix coming. See thread "Issue with cursive attachment"
started by Khaled. Test fonts were made by modifying test font
from Khaled to add more anchors.
Based on test from https://code.google.com/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=497578
Currently fails. Basically, if there's a default_ignorable at the
start of text, and font has no space glyph, we remove the default_ignorable,
and that makes the first char in text to correspond to no cluster.
Fix coming.
Previously, when creating an object from inert inputs (eg:
"hb_font_create(hb_face_get_empty())") we returned the inert
empty object. This is not helpful as there are legitimate
usecases to do that.
We now never return the inert object unless allocation failed.
Tests are revised to reflect.
On ArchLinux, /usr/bin/python is linked to python 3 so
HarfBuzz `make check` is broken there.
This makes hb_test_tools.py compatible with python 3 while
no breaking it on python 2.
Fail if blob start plus length overflows; or if blob length
is greater than 2GB. It takes a while for fonts to get to that
size. In the mean time, it protects against bugs like this:
http://www.icu-project.org/trac/ticket/11450
Also avoids some weird issues with 32bit vs 64bit systems
as we accept length as unsigned int. As such, a length of
-1 will cause overflow on 32bit machines, but happily
accepted on a 64bit machine. Avoid that.
In Oriya, a ZWJ/ZWNJ might be added before candrabindu to encourage
or stop ligation of the candrabindu. This is clearly specified in
the Unicode section on Oriya. Allow it there. Note that Uniscribe
doesn't allow this.
Micro tests added using Noto Sans Oriya draft.
No changes in numbers. Currently at:
BENGALI: 353725 out of 354188 tests passed. 463 failed (0.130722%)
DEVANAGARI: 707307 out of 707394 tests passed. 87 failed (0.0122987%)
GUJARATI: 366349 out of 366457 tests passed. 108 failed (0.0294714%)
GURMUKHI: 60732 out of 60747 tests passed. 15 failed (0.0246926%)
KANNADA: 951190 out of 951913 tests passed. 723 failed (0.0759523%)
KHMER: 299070 out of 299124 tests passed. 54 failed (0.0180527%)
MALAYALAM: 1048147 out of 1048334 tests passed. 187 failed (0.0178378%)
ORIYA: 42320 out of 42329 tests passed. 9 failed (0.021262%)
SINHALA: 271662 out of 271847 tests passed. 185 failed (0.068053%)
TAMIL: 1091753 out of 1091754 tests passed. 1 failed (9.15957e-05%)
TELUGU: 970555 out of 970573 tests passed. 18 failed (0.00185457%)
After 763e5466c0, one doesn't
need to set flags for different pieces of text. The flags now
are something the client sets up once, depending on how it
actually uses the buffer. As such, don't clear it in
clear_contents().
Tests updated.
Seems to be what Uniscribe does.
At this point I think it's work checking our default...
Fixes Bug 76767 - Zeroing of advance of 2nd component of multiple
substitution with SBL Hebrew
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=76767
Micro-test added.
Looks like Unsicribe responds to the 'mymr' tag by zeroing marks
GDEF_LATE instead of generic-shaper UNICODE_LATE. Implement that.
Fixes
Bug 81775 - Incorrect Rendering with harfbuzz-ng myanmar unicode
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=81775
Micro-test added based on Padauk.
Follows the order of the Arabic/Syriac specs. Also don't stop
between rlig and calt in non-Arabic scripts.
Micro-tests for Arabic and Mongolian added for the latter.
With this change, we now by default replace broken UTF-8/16/32 bits
with U+FFFD. This can be changed by calling new API on the buffer.
Previously the replacement value used to be (hb_codepoint_t)-1.
Note that hb_buffer_clear_contents() does NOT reset the replacement
character.
See discussion here:
6f13b6d62d
New API:
hb_buffer_set_replacement_codepoint()
hb_buffer_get_replacement_codepoint()
Originally we fixed those in 79d1007a50.
However, fonts like MongolianWhite don't have GDEF, but have IgnoreMarks
in their LigatureSubstitute init/etc features. We were synthesizing a
GDEF class of mark for Mongolian Variation Selectors and as such the
ligature lookups where not matching. Uniscribe doesn't do that.
I tried with more sophisticated fixes, like, if there is no GDEF and
a lookup-flag mismatch happens, instead of rejecting a match, try
skipping that glyph. That surely produces some interesting behavior,
but since we don't want to support fonts missing GDEF more than we have
to, I went for this simpler fix which is to always mark
default-ignorables as base when synthesizing GDEF.
Micro-test added.
Fixes rest of https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=65258