Provided by: texlive-base_2022.20220722-1_all bug

NAME

       updmap - manage TeX font maps
       updmap-sys - manage TeX font maps, system-wide
       updmap-user - manage TeX font maps, per-user

SYNOPSIS

       updmap [-user|-sys] [OPTION] ... [COMMAND]
       updmap-user [OPTION] ... [COMMAND]
       updmap-sys [OPTION] ... [COMMAND]

DESCRIPTION

       updmap version r59152 (2021-05-09 23:49:52 +0200)

       Update  the  default  font  map  files  used  by pdftex and dvipdfm(x) (pdftex.map), dvips
       (psfonts.map), and optionally pxdvi, as determined by all configuration  files  updmap.cfg
       (usually the ones returned by running "kpsewhich --all updmap.cfg", but see below).

       Among  other  things,  these map files are used to determine which fonts should be used as
       bitmaps and which as outlines, and to determine which font files are  included,  typically
       subsetted, in the PDF or PostScript output.

       updmap-sys  (or  updmap  -sys)  is intended to affect the system-wide configuration, while
       updmap-user (or updmap -user) affects personal configuration files  only,  overriding  the
       system files.

       As a consequence, once updmap-user has been run, even a single time, running updmap-sys no
       longer has any effect.  updmap-sys issues  a  warning  about  this,  since  it  is  rarely
       desirable.  See https://tug.org/texlive/scripts-sys-user.html for details.

       By default, the TeX filename database (ls-R) is also updated.

       The updmap system is regrettably complicated, for both inherent and historical reasons.  A
       general overview:

       - updmap.cfg files are mainly about listing other files, namely the

              font-specific .maps, in which each line gives information  about  a  different  TeX
              (.tfm) font.

       - updmap reads the updmap.cfg files and then concatenates the

              contents  of those .map files into the main output files: psfonts.map for dvips and
              pdftex.map for pdftex and dvipdfmx.

       - The updmap.cfg files themselves are created and updated at package

              installation time, by the system installer or the package manager or by  hand,  and
              not (by default) by updmap.

OPTIONS

       --cnffile FILE
              read  FILE for the updmap configuration (can be given multiple times, in which case
              all the files are used)

       --dvipdfmxoutputdir DIR
              specify output directory (dvipdfm(x) syntax)

       --dvipsoutputdir DIR
              specify output directory (dvips syntax)

       --pdftexoutputdir DIR
              specify output directory (pdftex syntax)

       --pxdvioutputdir DIR
              specify output directory (pxdvi syntax)

       --outputdir DIR
              specify output directory (for all files)

       --copy cp generic files rather than using symlinks

       --force
              recreate files even if config hasn't changed

       --nomkmap
              do not recreate map files

       --nohash
              do not run mktexlsr (a.k.a. texhash)

       --sys  affect system-wide files (equivalent to updmap-sys)

       --user affect personal files (equivalent to updmap-user)

       -n, --dry-run
              only show the configuration, no output

       --quiet, --silent
              reduce verbosity

   Commands:
       --help show this message and exit

       --version
              show version information and exit

       --showoption OPTION
              show the current setting of OPTION

       --showoptions OPTION
              show possible settings for OPTION

       --setoption OPTION VALUE
              set OPTION to value; option names below

       --setoption OPTION=VALUE
              as above, just different syntax

       --enable MAPTYPE MAPFILE
              add "MAPTYPE MAPFILE" to updmap.cfg, where MAPTYPE is Map, MixedMap, or KanjiMap

       --enable Map=MAPFILE
              add "Map MAPFILE" to updmap.cfg

       --enable MixedMap=MAPFILE
              add "MixedMap MAPFILE" to updmap.cfg

       --enable KanjiMap=MAPFILE
              add "KanjiMap MAPFILE" to updmap.cfg

       --disable MAPFILE
              disable MAPFILE, of whatever type

       --listmaps
              list all maps (details below)

       --listavailablemaps
              list available maps (details below)

       --syncwithtrees
              disable unavailable map files in updmap.cfg

       The main output:

              The main output of updmap is the files containing the  individual  font  map  lines
              which the drivers (dvips, pdftex, etc.) read to handle fonts.

              The  map  files  for  dvips  (psfonts.map) and pdftex and dvipdfmx (pdftex.map) are
              written to TEXMFVAR/fonts/map/updmap/{dvips,pdftex}/.

              In    addition,    information    about    Kanji    fonts     is     written     to
              TEXMFVAR/fonts/map/updmap/dvipdfmx/kanjix.map,        and       optionally       to
              TEXMFVAR/fonts/map/updmap/pxdvi/xdvi-ptex.map.  These are for Kanji  only  and  are
              not  like  other  map  files.   dvipdfmx  reads  pdftex.map for the map entries for
              non-Kanji fonts.

              If no option is given, so the invocation is  just  "updmap-user"  or  "updmap-sys",
              these output files are always recreated.

              Otherwise,  if  an  option such as --enable or --disable is given, the output files
              are recreated if the list of enabled map files (from updmap.cfg) has changed.   The
              --force option overrides this, always recreating the output files.

       Explanation of the map types:

              The normal type is Map.

              The only difference between Map and MixedMap is that MixedMap entries are not added
              to psfonts_pk.map.  The purpose is to help users with devices that  render  Type  1
              outline  fonts worse than mode-tuned Type 3 bitmap fonts.  So, MixedMap is used for
              fonts that are available as both Type 1 and Metafont.

              KanjiMap entries are added to psfonts_t1.map and kanjix.map.

       Explanation of the OPTION names for --showoptions, --showoption, --setoption:

       dvipsPreferOutline
              true,false  (default true)

              Whether dvips uses bitmaps or outlines, when both are available.

       dvipsDownloadBase35
              true,false  (default true)

              Whether dvips includes the standard 35 PostScript fonts in its output.

       pdftexDownloadBase14
              true,false   (default true)

              Whether pdftex includes the standard 14 PDF fonts in its output.

       pxdviUse
              true,false  (default false)

              Whether maps for pxdvi (Japanese-patched xdvi) are under updmap's control.

       jaEmbed
              (any string)

       jaVariant
              (any string)

       scEmbed
              (any string)

       tcEmbed
              (any string)

       koEmbed
              (any string)

              See below.

       LW35   URWkb,URW,ADOBEkb,ADOBE  (default URWkb)

              Adapt the font and file names of the standard 35 PostScript fonts.

       URWkb  URW fonts with "berry" filenames    (e.g. uhvbo8ac.pfb)

       URW    URW fonts with "vendor" filenames   (e.g. n019064l.pfb)

       ADOBEkb
              Adobe fonts with "berry" filenames  (e.g. phvbo8an.pfb)

       ADOBE  Adobe fonts with "vendor" filenames (e.g. hvnbo___.pfb)

              These options are only read and acted on by updmap; dvips,  pdftex,  etc.,  do  not
              know  anything  about  them.   They work by changing the default map file which the
              programs read, so they can be overridden  by  specifying  command-line  options  or
              configuration files to the programs, as explained at the beginning of updmap.cfg.

              The  options  jaEmbed  and jaVariant (formerly kanjiEmbed and kanjiVariant) specify
              special replacements in the map lines.  If a map  contains  the  string  @jaEmbed@,
              then  this  will  be replaced by the value of that option; similarly for jaVariant.
              In this way, users of Japanese TeX can select different fonts to be included in the
              final  output.   The  counterpart  for  Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese and
              Korean fonts are scEmbed, tcEmbed and koEmbed respectively.

ENVIRONMENT

       Explanation of trees and files normally used:

              If --cnffile is specified on the command line (can be given  multiple  times),  its
              value(s)  is(are)  used.  Otherwise, updmap reads all the updmap.cfg files found by
              running `kpsewhich -all updmap.cfg', in the order returned by kpsewhich  (which  is
              the order of trees defined in texmf.cnf).

              In  either  case, if multiple updmap.cfg files are found, all the maps mentioned in
              all the updmap.cfg files are merged.

              Thus, if updmap.cfg files are present in all trees, and the default layout is  used
              as  shipped  with  TeX  Live  on Debian, the following files are read, in the given
              order.

              For updmap-sys:
              TEXMFSYSCONFIG /etc/texmf/web2c/updmap.cfg
              TEXMFSYSVAR    /var/lib/texmf/web2c/updmap.cfg
              TEXMFLOCAL     /usr/local/share/texmf/web2c/updmap.cfg
              TEXMFDEBIAN    /usr/share/texmf/web2c/updmap.cfg
              TEXMFDIST      /usr/share/texlive/texmf/web2c/updmap.cfg

              For updmap-user:
              TEXMFCONFIG    $HOME/.texmf-config/web2c/updmap.cfg
              TEXMFVAR       $HOME/.texmf-var/web2c/updmap.cfg
              TEXMFHOME      $HOME/texmf/web2c/updmap.cfg
              TEXMFSYSCONFIG /etc/web2c/updmap.cfg
              TEXMFSYSVAR    /var/lib/texmf/web2c/updmap.cfg
              TEXMFLOCAL     /usr/local/share/texmf/web2c/updmap.cfg
              TEXMFDEBIAN    /usr/share/texmf/web2c/updmap.cfg
              TEXMFDIST      /usr/share/texlive/texmf/web2c/updmap.cfg

              According to the actions, updmap might write to one of the given files or create  a
              new updmap.cfg, described further below.

       Where and which updmap.cfg changes are saved:

              When no options are given, the updmap.cfg file(s) are only read, not written.  It's
              when an option --setoption, --enable or --disable is specified that  an  updmap.cfg
              needs to be updated.  In this case:

              1)  If config files are given on the command line, then the first one given is used
              to save any such changes.

              2) If the config files are taken from kpsewhich output, then the algorithm is  more
              complex:

              2a)  If $TEXMFCONFIG/web2c/updmap.cfg or $TEXMFHOME/web2c/updmap.cfg appears in the
              list of used files, then the one listed first by kpsewhich --all (equivalently, the
              one returned by kpsewhich updmap.cfg), is used.

              2b) If neither of the above two are present and changes are made, a new config file
              is created in $TEXMFCONFIG/web2c/updmap.cfg.

              In general, the idea is that if the user cannot write to a  given  config  file,  a
              higher-level  one  can  be  used.   That  way,  the  distribution's settings can be
              overridden system-wide using TEXMFLOCAL, and  system  settings  can  be  overridden
              again in a particular user's TEXMFHOME or TEXMFCONFIG.

       Resolving multiple definitions of a font:

              If a font is defined in more than one map file, then the definition coming from the
              first-listed updmap.cfg is used.  If a font is defined multiple  times  within  the
              same map file, one is chosen arbitrarily.  In both cases a warning is issued.

       Disabling maps:

              updmap.cfg  files  with higher priority (listed earlier) can disable maps mentioned
              in lower priority (listed later) updmap.cfg files by writing, e.g.,

              #! Map mapname.map

              or

              #! MixedMap mapname.map

       in the higher-priority updmap.cfg file.
              (The #! must be at the

              beginning of the line, with at least one space or  tab  afterward,  and  whitespace
              between each word on the list.)

              As  an  example,  suppose you have a copy of MathTime Pro fonts and want to disable
              the Belleek version of the fonts; that is, disable the map  belleek.map.   You  can
              create the file $TEXMFCONFIG/web2c/updmap.cfg with the content

              #! Map belleek.map Map mt-plus.map Map mt-yy.map

              and call updmap.

       Listing of maps:

              The  two options --listmaps and --listavailablemaps list all maps defined in any of
              the updmap.cfg files (for --listmaps), and only those actually found on the  system
              (for  --listavailablemaps).   The  output format is one line per font map, with the
              following fields separated by tabs: map, type  (Map,  MixedMap,  KanjiMap),  status
              (enabled,  disabled),  origin  (the  updmap.cfg  file  where  it  is  mentioned, or
              'builtin' for the three basic maps).

              In the case of --listmaps there can be one additional fields  (again  separated  by
              tab) containing '(not available)' for those map files that cannot be found.

       updmap-user vs. updmap-sys:

              When  updmap-sys  is  run,  TEXMFSYSCONFIG  and  TEXMFSYSVAR  are  used  instead of
              TEXMFCONFIG and TEXMFVAR, respectively.  This is  the  primary  difference  between
              updmap-sys and updmap-user.

              Other  locations  may  be used if you give them on the command line, or these trees
              don't exist, or you are not using the original TeX Live.

       To see the precise locations of the various files that will be read and written, give  the
       -n option (or read the source).

EXAMPLES

       The log file is written to TEXMFVAR/web2c/updmap.log.

       For    step-by-step    instructions   on   making   new   fonts   known   to   TeX,   read
       https://tug.org/fonts/fontinstall.html.   For  even  more  terse  instructions,  read  the
       beginning of the main updmap.cfg file.

FILES

       Configuration and input files:

       updmap.cfg
              Main  configuration  file.   In  texmf-dist/web2c  by  default,  but may be located
              elsewhere depending on your distribution.  Each texmf tree read should have its own
              updmap.cfg.

       dvips35.map
              Map file for standard 35 PostScript fonts for use with dvips(1).

       pdftex35.map
              Map file for standard 35 PostScript fonts for use with pdftex(1).

       ps2pk35.map
              Map file for standard 35 PostScript fonts for use with ps2pk(1).

       Output files:

       psfonts.map
              For  dvips(1).  Same as psfonts_t1.map if option dvipsPreferOutline active, else as
              psfonts_pk.map.

       psfonts_pk.map
              For  dvips(1).    Without   information   from   MixedMap   files.    (Setting   of
              dvipsPreferOutline ignored.)

       psfonts_t1.map
              For    dvips(1).     With   information   from   MixedMap   files.    (Setting   of
              dvipsPreferOutline ignored.)

       download35.map
              For  dvips(1).   Always   downloads   the   standard   35   fonts.    (Setting   of
              dvipsDownloadBase35 ignored.)

       builtin35.map
              For   dvips(1).    Never   downloads   the   standard   35   fonts.    (Setting  of
              dvipsDownloadBase35 ignored.)

       pdftex.map
              For pdftex(1).  Same as pdftex_dl14.map if option pdftexDownloadBase14 active, else
              as pdftex_ndl14.map.

       pdftex_dl14.map
              For pdftex(1).  Always downloads the standard 14 fonts.

       pdftex_ndl14.map
              For pdftex(1).  Never downloads the standard 14 fonts.

       ps2pk.map
              Similar  to  psfonts.map  file,  but forces all fonts to be downloaded, so this map
              file can be used with xdvi(1) and ps2pk(1).

       Configuration files for dvips(1):

       config.builtin35
              Loads builtin35.map instead of psfonts.map.

       config.download35
              Loads download35.map instead of psfonts.map.

       config.outline
              Loads psfonts_t1.map instead of psfonts.map.

       config.pdf
              Loads psfonts_t1.map instead of psfonts.map and has  additional  settings  for  PDF
              generation.

       config.pk
              Loads psfonts_pk.map instead of psfonts.map.

       config.www
              Loads   psfonts_t1.map   instead  of  psfonts.map.   (For  compatibility  with  old
              versions.)

       config.gstopk
              Loads psfonts_t1.map instead of psfonts.map.

REPORTING BUGS

       Report bugs to: tex-live@tug.org
       TeX Live home page: <https://tug.org/texlive/>