You don't want to specify the actual path to the fonts in the xset command, unless you want your X server to handle them directly (i.e. not using a font server). Instead you want to specify the port which your font server is listening at, which is normally 7100. The place you need to list the full path is /etc/X11/xfs/config - you may need to restart xfs-xtt as well.
The command "xset +fp unix/:7100" indicates to use Unix domain sockets (faster than TCP sockets for local communications, xfs-xtt should support both) on port 7100. That should be all you need. Cheers! On Sun, Feb 06, 2000 at 06:29:21PM -0500, Bart Szyszka wrote: > > Try xset +fp unix/:7100 or something similar. xfs-xtt use port 7100, same as > > xfs. > > I really have no idea what I'm doing so I'd appreciate it if you guys would > be more specific. What's "similar" What should I do same as xfs? Like I said, > I installed xfs-xtt. I don't have xfs (it asks me to remove xfs-xtt if I try > to > install xfs). Don't I need to do something like this: > xset +fp /usr/local/share/fonts/truetype > > When I do I get this: > xset: bad font path element (#38), possible causes are: > Directory does not exist or has wrong permissions > Directory missing fonts.dir > Incorrect font server address or syntax > > - Bart