About a month ago we discussed how to reduce the disk space necessary for builing the lilypond documentation.
> [...] Since lilypond itself converts all fonts to PostScript > resources, why not writing those resources to a `fontresource' > directory instead of embedding? We could add a checksum to the > resource name, just to be sure that, say, `foo.tff' and `foo.otf' > will be rejected. > > Ideally, all intermediate PDFs also refer to this `fontresource' > directory, and only in the last step PDFs with subsetted, embedded > fonts are created. Such an approach has now been discussed on the the pdftex mailing list, cf. http://tug.org/pipermail/pdftex/2016-July/009045.html and the following e-mails in this thread. I've just tested successfully the following method, except itemĀ 1, which I've executed manually. 1. Instead of embedding font resources into the file, lilypond writes them to a font resource directory and uses the `.loadfont' operator in its PS output file. For simplicity, the font resources should have the PS font name as its file name (regardless of the font format), e.g. `TeXGyraSchola-Regular'; we then don't need a font map for ghostscript. 2. Lilypond's PS files are converted to PDFs with the additional gs option `-dEmbedAllFonts=false' (to be added to `postscript->PDF' in file `backend-library.scm'). 3. Both xetex and pdftex accept the fontless PDFs without complaints; they simply embed them into its output file without alterations, AFAICS. 4. After the output PDF is built, a call to ps2pdf -I<fontresourcedir> \ -dNOSAFER -P \ Fontless.pdf WithEmbeddedFonts.pdf creates the final document. Comparing the `--bigpdfs' method with the fontless PDF approach as outlined above, the latter creates a final output file about 30% smaller (at least in my small test). Werner _______________________________________________ lilypond-devel mailing list lilypond-devel@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-devel