You can test shaping of a unicode sequence against a font like this:
$ ./hb-unicode-encode 41 42 43 627 | ../../util/hb-shape font.ttf
assuming an in-tree build. The 41 42 43 627 here is a sequence of Unicode codepoints: U+0041,0042,0043,0627. When you are happy with the shape results, you can use the record-test.sh
script to add this to the test suite. record-test.sh
requires pyftsubset
to be installed. You can get pyftsubset
by installing FontTools from https://github.com/behdad/fonttools.
To use record-test.sh
, just put it right before the hb-shape
invocation:
$ ./hb-unicode-encode 41 42 43 627 | ./record-test.sh ../../util/hb-subset ../../util/hb-shape font.ttf
what this does is:
hb-shape
output of the original font versus the subset font for the input sequence,hb-view
for both fonts.data/in-house/fonts
and name it after its hash, and print out the test case input, which you can then redirect to an existing or new test file in data/in-house/tests
using -o
, e.g.:$ ./hb-unicode-encode 41 42 43 627 | ./record-test.sh -o data/in-house/tests/test-name.tests ../../util/hb-subset ../../util/hb-shape font.ttf
If you created a new test file, add it to data/in-house/Makefile.sources
so it is run. Check that make check
does indeed run it, and that the test passes. When everything looks good, git add
the new font as well as the new test file if you created any. You can see what new files are there by running git status data/in-house
. And commit!
Note! Please only add tests using Open Source fonts, preferably under OFL or similar license.