An LFS system can be used without a graphical desktop, and unless or until you install a graphical environment you will have to work in the console. Most, if not all, PCs boot with an 8x16 font - whatever the actual screen size. There are a few things you can do to alter the display on the console. Most of them involve changing the font, but the first alters the commandline used by grub.
Modern screens often have a lot more pixels then the screens used in the past. If your screen is 1600 pixels wide, an 8x16 font will give you 200 columns of text - unless your monitor is enormous, the text will be tiny. One of the ways to work around this is to tell grub to use a smaller size, such as 1024x768 or 800x600 or even 640x480. Even if your screen does not have a 4:3 aspect ratio, this should work.
To try this, you can reboot and edit grub's command-line to insert
a 'video=' parameter between the 'root=/dev/sdXn' and 'ro', for
example root=/dev/sda2 video=1024x768
ro
based on the example in LFS section 10.4.4 : ../../../../lfs/view/12.1-systemd/chapter10/grub.html.
If you decide that you wish to do this, you can then (as the
root
user) edit /boot/grub/grub.cfg
.
In LFS the kbd package is used.
The fonts it provides are PC Screen Fonts, usually called PSF, and
they were installed into /usr/share/consolefonts
. Where these include a
unicode mapping table, the file suffix is often changed to
.psfu
although packages such as
terminus-font (see below) do not
add the 'u'. These fonts are usually compressed with gzip to save
space, but that is not essential.
The initial PC text screens had 8 colours, or 16 colours if the bright versions of the original 8 colours were used. A PSF font can include up to 256 characters (technically, glyphs) while allowing 16 colours, or up to 512 characters (in which case, the bright colours will not be available). Clearly, these console fonts cannot be used to display CJK text - that would need thousands of available glyphs.
Some fonts in kbd can cover more than 512 codepoints ('characters'), with varying degrees of fidelity: unicode contains several whitespace codepoints which can all be mapped to a space, varieties of dashes can be mapped to a minus sign, smart quotes can map to the regular ASCII quotes rather than to whatever is used for "codepoint not present or invalid", and those cyrillic or greek letters which look like latin letters can be mapped onto them, so 'A' can also do duty for cyrillic A and greek Alpha, and 'P' can also do duty for cyrillic ER and greek RHO. Unfortunately, where a font has been created from a BDF file (the method in terminus and Debian's console-setup ) such mapping of additional codepoints onto an existing glyph is not always done, although the terminus ter-vXXn fonts do this well.
There are over 120 combinations of font and size in kbd: often a font is provided at several
character sizes, and sometimes varieties cover different subsets of
unicode. Most are 8 pixels wide, in heights from 8 to 16 pixels,
but there are a few which are 9 pixels wide, some others which are
12x22, and even one (latarcyrheb-sun32.psfu
) which has been scaled up
to 16x32. Using a bigger font is another way of making text on a
large screen easier to read.
You can test fonts as a normal user. If you have a font which has not been installed, you can load it with :
setfont /path/to/yourfont.ext
For the fonts already installed you only need the name, so using
gr737a-9x16.psfu.gz
as an example:
setfont gr737a-9x16
To see the glyphs in the font, use:
showconsolefont
If the font looks as if it might be useful, you can then go on to test it more thoroughly.
When you find a font which you wish to use, as the root
user) edit /etc/vconsole.conf
as
described in LFS section 9.6 ../../../../lfs/view/12.1-systemd/chapter09/console.html..
For fonts not supplied with the kbd package you will need to optionally
compress it / them with gzip and then install it / them
as the root
user.
Although some console fonts are created from BDF files, which is a text format with hex values for the pixels in each row of the character, there are more-modern tools available for editing psf fonts. The psftools package allows you to dump a font to a text representation with a dash for a pixel which is off (black) and a hash for a pixel which is on (white). You can then edit the text file to add more characters, or reshape them, or map extra codepoints onto them, and then create a new psf font with your changes.
The Terminus Font package
provides fixed-width bitmap fonts designed for long (8 hours and
more per day) work with computers. Under 'Character variants' on
that page is a list of patches (in the alt/
directory). If you are using a graphical
browser to look at that page, you can see what the patches do, e.g.
'll2' makes 'l' more visibly different from 'i' and '1'.
By default terminus-fonts will try to create several types of font, and it will fail if bdftopcf from Xorg Applications has not been installed. The configure script is only really useful if you go on to install all the fonts (console and X11 bitmap) to the correct directories, as in a distro. To build only the PSF fonts and their dependencies, run:
make psf
This will create more than 240 ter-*.psf fonts. The 'b' suffix indicates bright, 'n' indicates normal. You can then test them to see if any fit your requirements. Unless you are creating a distro, there seems little point in installing them all.
As an example, to install the last of these fonts, you can gzip it
and then as the root
user:
install -v -m644 ter-v32n.psf.gz /usr/share/consolefonts