Provided by: texlive-luatex_2022.20220722-1_all bug

NAME

       luaotfload-tool - generate and query the Luaotfload font names database

SYNOPSIS

       luaotfload-tool [ -bcDfFiIlLnpqRSuvVhw ]

       luaotfload-tool --update [ --force ] [ --quiet ] [ --verbose ]
              [  --prefer-texmf ] [ --dry-run ] [ --formats=[+|-]EXTENSIONS ] [ --no-compress ] [
              --no-strip ] [ --local ] [ --max-fonts=N ]

       luaotfload-tool --find=FONTNAME [ --fuzzy ] [ --info ] [ --inspect ]
              [ --no-reload ]

       luaotfload-tool --flush-lookups

       luaotfload-tool --cache=DIRECTIVE

       luaotfload-tool --list=CRITERION[:VALUE] [ --fields=F1,F2,...,Fn ]

       luaotfload-tool --bisect=DIRECTIVE

       luaotfload-tool --help

       luaotfload-tool --version

       luaotfload-tool --show-blacklist

       luaotfload-tool --diagnose=CHECK

       luaotfload-tool --conf=FILE --dumpconf

DESCRIPTION

       luaotfload-tool accesses the font names  database  that  is  required  by  the  Luaotfload
       package. There are two general modes: update and query.

       • update:  update the database or rebuild it entirely;

       • query:   resolve a font name or display close matches.

OPTIONS

   update mode
       --update, -u
              Update the database; indexes new fonts.

       --force, -f
              Force rebuilding of the database; re-indexes all fonts.

       --local, -L
              Include  font  files in $PWD. This option will cause large parts of the database to
              be rebuilt. Thus it is quite inefficient.  Additionally, if local  font  files  are
              found,  the database is prevented from being saved to disk, so the local fonts need
              to be parsed with every invocation of luaotfload-tool.

       --no-reload, -n
              Suppress auto-updates to the database (e.g.   when  --find  is  passed  an  unknown
              name).

       --no-compress, -c
              Do  not  filter  the  plain text version of the font index through gzip. Useful for
              debugging if your editor is built without zlib.

       --prefer-texmf, -p
              Organize the file name database in a way so that it prefer fonts in the TEXMF  tree
              over system fonts if they are installed in both.

       --formats=EXTENSIONS
              Extensions  of the font files to index.  Where EXTENSIONS is a comma-separated list
              of supported file extensions (otf, ttf, ttc).  If the list is  prefixed  with  a  +
              sign,  the  given list is added to the currently active one; - subtracts.  Default:
              otf,ttf,ttc.  Examples:

              1. --formats=-ttc,ttf would skip TrueType fonts and font collections;

              2. --formats=otf would scan only OpenType files;

              3. --formats=+afm includes binary Postscript files accompanied by an AFM file.

   query mode
       --find=NAME
              Resolve a font name; this looks up <name> in the database and prints the file  name
              it  is mapped to.  --find also understands request syntax, i.e. --find=file:foo.otf
              checks whether foo.otf is indexed.

       --fuzzy, -F
              Show approximate matches to the file name if the lookup was unsuccessful  (requires
              --find).

       --info, -i
              Display basic information to a resolved font file (requires --find).

       --inspect, -I
              Display detailed information by loading the font and analyzing the font table; very
              slow!  For the meaning  of  the  returned  fields  see  the  LuaTeX  documentation.
              (requires --find).

       --list=CRITERION
              Show entries, where CRITERION is one of the following:

              1. the character *, selecting all entries;

              2. a field of a database entry, for instance version or format*, according to which
                 the output will be sorted.  Information  in  an  unstripped  database  (see  the
                 option --no-strip above) is nested: Subfields of a record can be addressed using
                 the   ->   separator,   e.   g.    file->location,    style->units_per_em,    or
                 names->sanitized->english->prefmodifiers.    NB:   shell  syntax  requires  that
                 arguments containing -> be properly quoted!

              3. an expression of the form field:value to limit the output to entries whose field
                 matches  value.  The  value  can  contain  *  to  match  an  arbitrary number of
                 characters.

              For example, in order to output file names and corresponding  versions,  sorted  by
              the font format:

                 ./luaotfload-tool.lua --list="format" --fields="file->base,version"

              This prints:

                 otf latinmodern-math.otf  Version 1.958
                 otf lmromancaps10-oblique.otf 2.004
                 otf lmmono8-regular.otf 2.004
                 otf lmmonoproplt10-bold.otf 2.004
                 otf lmsans10-oblique.otf  2.004
                 otf lmromanslant8-regular.otf 2.004
                 otf lmroman12-italic.otf  2.004
                 otf lmsansdemicond10-oblique.otf  2.004
                 ...

       --fields=FIELDS
              Comma-separated  list  of  fields  that  should  be  printed.   Information  in  an
              unstripped database (see the option --no-strip above) is  nested:  Subfields  of  a
              record   can   be   addressed  using  the  ->  separator,  e.  g.   file->location,
              style->units_per_em,  or  names->sanitized->english->subfamily.   The  default   is
              plainname,version*.  (Only meaningful with --list.)

   font and lookup caches
       --flush-lookups
              Clear font name lookup cache (experimental).

       --cache=DIRECTIVE
              Cache control, where DIRECTIVE is one of the following:

              1. purge -> delete Lua files from cache;

              2. erase -> delete Lua and Luc files from cache;

              3. show  -> print stats.

   debugging methods
       --show-blacklist, -b
              Show blacklisted files (not directories).

       --dry-run, -D
              Don’t load fonts when updating the database; scan directories only.  (For debugging
              file system related issues.)

       --no-strip
              Do not strip redundant information after building the database. Warning: this  will
              inflate the index to about two to three times the normal size.

       --max-fonts=N
              Process at most N font files, including fonts already indexed in the count.

       --bisect=DIRECTIVE
              Bisection  of  the font database.  This mode is intended as assistance in debugging
              the Luatex engine, especially when tracking memleaks or buggy fonts.

              DIRECTIVE can be one of the following:

              1. run ->  Make  luaotfload-tool  respect  the  bisection  progress  when  running.
                 Combined  with  --update  and  possibly --force this will only process the files
                 from the start up until the pivot and ignore the rest.

              2. start -> Start bisection: create a bisection state file and initialize the  low,
                 high, and pivot indices.

              3. stop -> Terminate the current bisection session by deleting the state file.

              4. good  | bad -> Mark the section processed last as “good” or “bad”, respectively.
                 The next bisection step will continue with the bad section.

              5. status -> Print status information about the current  bisection  session.  Hint:
                 Use with higher verbosity settings for more output.

              A  bisection  session  is  initiated  by issuing the start directive. This sets the
              pivot to the middle of the list of available font files.  Now  run  luaotfload-tool
              with  the --update flag set as well as --bisect=run: only the fonts up to the pivot
              will be considered. If that task exhibited the issue you are  tracking,  then  tell
              Luaotfload  using  --bisect=bad.   The  next  step  of  --bisect=run  will continue
              bisection  with  the  part  of  the  files  below  the  pivot.    Likewise,   issue
              --bisect=good  in  order  to  continue with the fonts above the pivot, assuming the
              tested part of the list did not trigger the bug.

              Once the culprit font is tracked down, good or bad will have no effect anymore. run
              will   always  end  up  processing  the  single  font  file  that  was  left.   Use
              --bisect=stop to clear the bisection state.

   miscellaneous
       --verbose=N, -v
              Set verbosity level to n or the number of repetitions of -v.

       --quiet
              No verbose output (log level set to zero).

       --log=CHANNEL
              Redirect log output (for database troubleshooting), where CHANNEL can be

              1. stdout -> all output will be dumped to the terminal (default); or

              2. file -> write to a file to the temporary directory  (the  name  will  be  chosen
                 automatically.

       --version, -V
              Show version numbers of components as well as some basic information and exit.

       --help, -h
              Show help message and exit.

       --diagnose=CHECK
              Run the diagnostic procedure CHECK. Available procedures are:

              1. files -> check Luaotfload files for modifications;

              2. permissions -> check permissions of cache directories and files;

              3.

                 environment -> print relevant
                        environment and kpse variables;

              4. repository -> check the git repository for new releases,

              5. index -> check database, display information about it.

              Procedures    can    be    chained    by    concatenating    with    commas,   e.g.
              --diagnose=files,permissions.  Specify thorough to run all checks.

       --conf=FILE
              Read  the  configuration  from  FILE.  See  luaotfload.conf(%)  for   documentation
              concerning the format and available options.

       --dumpconf
              Print  the  currently  active  configuration; the output can be saved to a file and
              used for bootstrapping a custom configuration files.

       --aliases
              Dump the font name database as a kpathsea aliases file. This option is experimental
              and might go away.

FILES

       The     font     name     database     is     usually    located    in    the    directory
       texmf-var/luatex-cache/generic/names/ ($TEXMFCACHE as set in texmf.cnf) of your  TeX  Live
       distribution  as  a zlib-compressed file luaotfload-names.lua.gz.  The experimental lookup
       cache will be created as luaotfload-lookup-cache.lua in the  same  directory.   These  Lua
       tables  are  not  used  directly by Luaotfload, though.  Instead, they are compiled to Lua
       bytecode which is written to corresponding files with  the  extension  .luc  in  the  same
       directory.   When modifying the files by hand keep in mind that only if the bytecode files
       are missing will Luaotfload use the plain version instead.  Both kinds of files  are  safe
       to delete, at the cost of regenerating them with the next run of LuaTeX.

SEE ALSO

       luaotfload.conf(5), luatex(1), lua(1)

       • texdoc luaotfload to display the manual for the Luaotfload package

       • Luaotfload development https://github.com/latex3/luaotfload

       • LuaLaTeX mailing list  http://tug.org/pipermail/lualatex-dev/

       • LuaTeX                 http://luatex.org/

       • ConTeXt                http://wiki.contextgarden.net

       • Luaotfload on CTAN     http://ctan.org/pkg/luaotfload

BUGS

       Tons, probably.

AUTHORS

       Luaotfload  was  developed  by the LuaLaTeX dev team (https://github.com/lualatex/). It is
       currently maintained by the LaTeX Project Team at https://github.com/latex3/luaotfload The
       fontloader   code   is   provided   by   Hans   Hagen   of   Pragma  ADE,  Hasselt  NL  (‐
       http://pragma-ade.com/).

       This manual page was written by Philipp Gesang <phg@phi-gamma.net>.

COPYRIGHT

       GPL v2.0