#font #font-file #harfbuzz #subsetting #api-bindings

mkwebfont_hb-subset

A wrapper for HarfBuzz font subsetting API

3 releases (breaking)

0.5.0 Sep 5, 2024
0.4.0 Jun 28, 2024
0.3.0 May 19, 2024

#394 in Encoding


Used in 2 crates (via mkwebfont_fontops)

MIT license

2MB
45K SLoC

C++ 33K SLoC // 0.3% comments Rust 7.5K SLoC // 0.0% comments Python 3.5K SLoC // 0.1% comments Templ 40 SLoC // 0.6% comments C 32 SLoC // 0.4% comments Shell 12 SLoC // 0.1% comments Pan 6 SLoC // 0.3% comments

crates.io docs.rs

mkwebfont_hb-subset

A Rust wrapper for HarfBuzz subsetting API

This crate exposes HarfBuzz API for subsetting fonts.

This is modified for mkwebfont, and remains maintained, unlike the original hb-subset. Support for using a non-bundled version of hb-subset has been removed for simplicity and dependency reduction.

What is subsetting?

From HarfBuzz documentation:

Subsetting reduces the codepoint coverage of font files and removes all data that is no longer needed. A subset input describes the desired subset. The input is provided along with a font to the subsetting operation. Output is a new font file containing only the data specified in the input.

Currently most outline and bitmap tables are supported: glyf, CFF, CFF2, sbix, COLR, and CBDT/CBLC. This also includes fonts with variable outlines via OpenType variations. Notably EBDT/EBLC and SVG are not supported. Layout subsetting is supported only for OpenType Layout tables (GSUB, GPOS, GDEF). Notably subsetting of graphite or AAT tables is not yet supported.

Fonts with graphite or AAT tables may still be subsetted but will likely need to use the retain glyph ids option and configure the subset to pass through the layout tables untouched.

In other words, subsetting allows you to take a large font and construct a new, smaller font which has only those characters that you need. Be sure to check the license of the font though, as not all fonts can be legally subsetted.

Why?

Many modern fonts can contain hundreds or even thousands of glyphs, of which only a couple dozen or maybe hundred is needed in any single document. This also means that modern fonts can be very bulky compared to what is actually needed. The solution to this is font subsetting: We can construct a font that includes only those glyphs and features that are needed for the document.

Usage

The simplest way to construct a subset of a font is to use [subset()] function. In the following example, we keep only glyphs that are needed show any combination of characters 'a', 'b' and 'c', e.g. "abc" and "cabba" can be rendered, but "foobar" cannot:

let font = fs::read("tests/fonts/NotoSans.ttf")?;
let subset_font = hb_subset::subset(&font, "abc".chars())?;
fs::write("tests/fonts/subset.ttf", subset_font)?;

To get more control over how the font is subset and what gets included, you can use the lower level API directly:

// Load font directly from a file
let font = Blob::from_file("tests/fonts/NotoSans.ttf")?;
let font = FontFace::new(font)?;

// Construct a subset manually and include only some of the letters
let mut subset = SubsetInput::new()?;
subset.unicode_set().insert('f');
subset.unicode_set().insert('i');

// Subset the font using just-constructed subset input
let new_font = subset.subset_font(&font)?;

// Extract the raw font and write to an output file
std::fs::write("tests/fonts/subset.ttf", &*new_font.underlying_blob())?;

License

This crate is licenced under MIT license (LICENSE.md or https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT).

This repository includes HarfBuzz as a submodule and links against it. It is licensed with "Old MIT" license.

This repository also contains a copy of NotoSans font for testing purposes, contained in tests/fonts. It is licensed withSIL Open Font License, Version 1.1.

Dependencies