152 lines
7.0 KiB
Markdown
152 lines
7.0 KiB
Markdown
# Configuring HarfBuzz
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Most of the time you will not need any custom configuration. The configuration
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options provided by `configure` or `cmake` should be enough. In particular,
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if you just want HarfBuzz library plus hb-shape / hb-view utilities, make sure
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FreeType and Cairo are available and found during configuration.
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If you are building for distribution, you should more carefully consider whether
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you need Glib, ICU, Graphite2, as well as CoreText / Uniscribe / DWrite. Make
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sure the relevant ones are enabled.
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If you are building for custom environment (embedded, downloadable app, etc)
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where you mostly just want to call `hb_shape()` and the binary size of the
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resulting library is very important to you, the rest of this file guides you
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through your options to disable features you may not need, in exchange for
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binary size savings.
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## Compiler Options
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Make sure you build with your compiler's "optimize for size" option. On `gcc`
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this is `-Os`, and can be enabled by passing `CXXFLAGS=-Os` either to `configure`
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(sticky) or to `make` (non-sticky). On clang there is an even more extreme flag,
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`-Oz`.
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HarfBuzz heavily uses inline functions and the optimize-size flag can make the
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library smaller by 20% or more. Moreover, sometimes, based on the target CPU,
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the optimize-size builds perform *faster* as well, thanks to lower code
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footprint and caching effects. So, definitely try that even if size is not
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extremely tight but you have a huge application. For example, Chrome does
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that. Note that this configuration also automatically enables certain internal
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optimizations. Search for `HB_OPTIMIZE_SIZE` for details, if you are using
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other compilers, or continue reading.
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Another compiler option to consider is "link-time optimization", also known as
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'lto'. To enable that, with `gcc` or `clang`, add `-flto` to both `CXXFLAGS`
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and `LDFLAGS`, either on `configure` invocation (sticky) or on `make` (non-sticky).
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This, also, can have a huge impact on the final size, 20% or more.
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Finally, if you are making a static library build or otherwise linking the
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library into your app, make sure your linker removes unused functions. This
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can be tricky and differ from environment to environment, but you definitely
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want to make sure this happens. Otherwise, every unused public function will
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be adding unneeded bytes to your binary. The following pointers might come
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handy:
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* https://lwn.net/Articles/741494/ (all of the four-part series)
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* https://elinux.org/images/2/2d/ELC2010-gc-sections_Denys_Vlasenko.pdf
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Combining the above three build options should already shrink your library a lot.
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The rest of this file shows you ways to shrink the library even further at the
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expense of removing functionality (that may not be needed). The remaining
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options are all enabled by defining pre-processor macros, which can be done
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via `CXXFLAGS` or `CPPFLAGS` similarly.
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## Unicode-functions
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Access to Unicode data can be configured at compile time as well as run-time.
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By default, HarfBuzz ships with its own compact subset of properties from
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Unicode Character Database that it needs. This is a highly-optimized
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implementation that depending on compile settings (optimize-size or not)
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takes around ~40kb or ~60kb. Using this implementation (default) is highly
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recommended, as HarfBuzz always ships with data from latest version of Unicode.
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This implementation can be disabled by defining `HB_NO_UCD`.
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For example, if you are enabling ICU as a built-in option, or GLib, those
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can provide Unicode data as well, so defining `HB_NO_UCD` might save you
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space without reducing functionality (to the extent that the Unicode version
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of those implementations is recent.)
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If, however, you provide your own Unicode data to HarfBuzz at run-time by
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calling `hb_buffer_set_unicode_funcs` on every buffer you create, and you do
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not rely on `hb_unicode_funcs_get_default()` results, you can disable the
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internal implementation by defining both `HB_NO_UCD` and `HB_NO_UNICODE_FUNCS`.
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The latter is needed to guard against accidentally building a library without
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any default Unicode implementations.
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## Font-functions
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Access to certain font functionalities can also be configured at run-time. By
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default, HarfBuzz uses an efficient internal implementation of OpenType
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functionality for this. This internal implementation is called `hb-ot-font`.
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All newly-created `hb_font_t` objects by default use `hb-ot-font`. Using this
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is highly recommended, and is what fonts use by default when they are created.
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Most embedded uses will probably use HarfBuzz with FreeType using `hb-ft.h`.
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In that case, or if you otherwise provide those functions by calling
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`hb_font_set_funcs()` on every font you create, you can disable `hb-ot-font`
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without loss of functionality by defining `HB_NO_OT_FONT`.
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## Shapers
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Most HarfBuzz clients use it for the main shaper, called "ot". However, it
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is legitimate to want to compile HarfBuzz with only another backend, eg.
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CoreText, for example for an iOS app. For that, you want `HB_NO_OT_SHAPE`.
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If you are going down that route, check if you want `HB_NO_OT`.
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This is very rarely what you need. Make sure you understand exactly what you
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are doing.
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Defining `HB_NO_FALLBACK_SHAPE` however is pretty harmless. That removes the
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(unused) "fallback" shaper.
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## Thread-safety
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By default HarfBuzz builds as a thread-safe library. The exception is that
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the `HB_TINY` predefined configuring (more below) disables thread-safety.
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If you do /not/ need thread-safety in the library (eg. you always call into
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HarfBuzz from the same thread), you can disable thread-safety by defining
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`HB_NO_MT`. As noted already, this is enabled by `HB_TINY`.
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## Pre-defined configurations
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The [`hb-config.hh`](src/hb-config.hh) internal header supports three
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pre-defined configurations as well grouping of various configuration options.
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The pre-defined configurations are:
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* `HB_MINI`: Disables shaping of AAT as well as legacy fonts. Ie. it produces
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a capable OpenType shaper only.
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* `HB_LEAN`: Disables various non-shaping functionality in the library, as well
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as esoteric or rarely-used shaping features. See the definition for details.
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* `HB_TINY`: Enables both `HB_MINI` and `HB_LEAN` configurations, as well as
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disabling thread-safety and debugging, and use even more size-optimized data
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tables.
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## Tailoring configuration
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Most of the time, one of the pre-defined configuration is exactly what one needs.
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Sometimes, however, the pre-defined configuration cuts out features that might
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be desired in the library. Unfortunately there is no quick way to undo those
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configurations from the command-line. But one can add a header file called
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`config-override.h` to undefine certain `HB_NO_*` symbols as desired. Then
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define `HAVE_CONFIG_OVERRIDE_H` to make `hb-config.hh` include your configuration
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overrides at the end.
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## Notes
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Note that the config option `HB_NO_CFF`, which is enabled by `HB_LEAN` and
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`HB_TINY` does /not/ mean that the resulting library won't work with CFF fonts.
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The library can shape valid CFF fonts just fine, with or without this option.
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This option disables (among other things) the code to calculate glyph exntents
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for CFF fonts.
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