gs 6.7 KB

123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229230231232233234235236237238239240241242243244245246247248249250251252253254255256257258259260261262263264265266267268269270271272273274275276
  1. .TH GS 1
  2. .\" This file is an edited version of /sys/src/cmd/gs/man/gs.1, to
  3. .\" document the local installation and remove needless background.
  4. .de TQ
  5. .br
  6. .ns
  7. .TP \\$1
  8. ..
  9. .SH NAME
  10. gs \- Aladdin Ghostscript (PostScript and PDF language interpreter)
  11. .SH SYNOPSIS
  12. .B gs
  13. [
  14. .I options
  15. ] [
  16. .I files
  17. ] ...
  18. .br
  19. .SH DESCRIPTION
  20. Ghostscript is a programming language similar to Adobe Systems'
  21. PostScript and PDF languages, which are in turn similar to Forth.
  22. .I Gs
  23. reads
  24. .I files
  25. in sequence and executes them as Ghostscript programs.
  26. After doing this, it reads further input from the standard input.
  27. If the
  28. .I file
  29. .B -
  30. is named, however, it represents the standard input, which is read
  31. in order and not after the files on the command line.
  32. Each line is interpreted separately.
  33. The `quit' command, or end-of-file, exits the interpreter.
  34. .PP
  35. The interpreter recognizes several switches described below, which may appear
  36. anywhere in the command line and apply to all files thereafter.
  37. .PP
  38. The
  39. .B -h
  40. or
  41. .B -?
  42. options give help and list the available devices; the default is
  43. .BR inferno,
  44. which produces compressed image files suitable for viewing with
  45. .IR page (1)
  46. (but note that
  47. .IR page (1)
  48. will invoke
  49. .I gs
  50. automatically; see its manual).
  51. .PP
  52. Ghostscript may be built with multiple output devices. Ghostscript
  53. normally opens the first one and directs output to it. To use device xyz
  54. as the initial output device, include the switch
  55. .EX
  56. -sDEVICE=xyz
  57. .EE
  58. in the command line. This switch must precede the first PostScript
  59. file and only its first invocation has any effect.
  60. Output devices can also be selected by the word
  61. .B selectdevice
  62. in the input language, or by setting the environment variable
  63. .BR GS_DEVICE .
  64. The order of precedence for
  65. these alternatives, highest to lowest, is:
  66. .EX
  67. selectdevice
  68. \f1(command line)\fP
  69. GS_DEVICE
  70. dfaxlow
  71. .EE
  72. .PP
  73. Normally, output goes
  74. directly to a scratch file.
  75. To send the output to a series of files
  76. .BR foo1.xyz ,
  77. .BR foo2.xyz ,
  78. etc., use the switch
  79. .EX
  80. -sOutputFile=foo%d.xyz
  81. .EE
  82. The %d may be any
  83. .I printf
  84. (see
  85. .IR fprintf (2))
  86. format specification. Each file will receive one page of output.
  87. If the file name begins with a pipe character,
  88. the output will be sent as standard input to the following pipeline.
  89. For example,
  90. .EX
  91. -sOutputFile=|lp
  92. .EE
  93. Specifying the file
  94. .B -
  95. will send the files to standard output; this also requires enabling the
  96. .B -q
  97. option.
  98. .SS "Initialization files"
  99. When looking for the initialization files
  100. .RB ( gs_*.ps ),
  101. the files related
  102. to fonts, or the file for the
  103. .B run
  104. operator, Ghostscript first looks for the file (if
  105. it doesn't start with a slash) in the current directory, then in these
  106. directories in the following order:
  107. .TP
  108. 1.
  109. Any directories specified by
  110. .B -I
  111. switches in the command
  112. line (see below);
  113. .TP
  114. 2.
  115. Any directories specified by the
  116. .B GS_LIB
  117. environment variable;
  118. .TP
  119. 3.
  120. The directories
  121. .BR /sys/lib/ghostscript ,
  122. .BR /sys/lib/ghostscript/font ,
  123. and
  124. .BR /sys/lib/postscript/font .
  125. .PP
  126. The
  127. .B GS_LIB
  128. or
  129. .B -I
  130. parameters may be
  131. a single directory or a colon-separated list.
  132. .SS Options
  133. .TP
  134. .BI -- " filename arg1 ..."
  135. Take the next argument as a file name as usual, but take all
  136. remaining arguments (even if they have the syntactic form of switches)
  137. and define the name ARGUMENTS in userdict (not systemdict) as an
  138. array of those strings,
  139. .I before
  140. running the file. When Ghostscript
  141. finishes executing the file, it exits back to the shell.
  142. .TP
  143. .BI -D name = token
  144. .TQ
  145. .BI -d name = token
  146. Define a name in systemdict with the given definition. The token must
  147. be exactly one token (as defined by the `token' operator) and must not
  148. contain any white space.
  149. .TP
  150. .BI -D name
  151. .TQ
  152. .BI -d name
  153. Define a name in systemdict with value=null.
  154. .TP
  155. .BI -S name = string
  156. .TQ
  157. .BI -s name = string
  158. Define a name in systemdict with a given string as value. This is
  159. different from
  160. .BR -d .
  161. For example,
  162. .B -dname=35
  163. is equivalent to the
  164. program fragment
  165. .EX
  166. /name 35 def
  167. .EE
  168. whereas
  169. .B -sname=35
  170. is equivalent to
  171. .EX
  172. /name (35) def
  173. .EE
  174. .TP
  175. .B -q
  176. Quiet startup: suppress normal startup messages, and also do the
  177. equivalent of
  178. .BR -dQUIET .
  179. .TP
  180. .BI -g number1 x number2
  181. Equivalent to
  182. .BI -dDEVICEWIDTH= number1
  183. and
  184. .BI -dDEVICEHEIGHT= number2\f1.
  185. This is for the benefit of devices, such as windows,
  186. that allow width and height to be specified.
  187. .TP
  188. .BI -r number
  189. .TQ
  190. .BI -r number1 x number2
  191. Equivalent to
  192. .BI -dDEVICEXRESOLUTION= number1
  193. and
  194. \fL-dDEVICE\%YRESOLUTION= \f2\%number2\f1.
  195. This is for the benefit of devices, such as printers,
  196. that support multiple X and Y resolutions.
  197. If only one number is given, it is used for both X and Y resolutions.
  198. .TP
  199. .BI -I directories
  200. Adds the designated list of directories at the head of the
  201. search path for library files.
  202. .PP
  203. Note that gs_init.ps makes systemdict read-only, so the values of names
  204. defined with -D/d/S/s cannot be changed (although, of course, they can be
  205. superseded by definitions in userdict or other dictionaries.)
  206. .SS "Special names"
  207. .TP
  208. .B -dBATCH
  209. Exit after the last file has been processed.
  210. This is equivalent to listing
  211. .I quit.ps
  212. at the end of the list of files.
  213. .TP
  214. .B -dDISKFONTS
  215. Causes individual character outlines to be loaded from the disk
  216. the first time they are encountered. (Normally Ghostscript loads all the
  217. character outlines when it loads a font.) This may allow loading more
  218. fonts into RAM, at the expense of slower rendering.
  219. .TP
  220. .B -dNOCACHE
  221. Disables character caching. Only useful for debugging.
  222. .TP
  223. .B -dNOBIND
  224. Disables the `bind' operator. Only useful for debugging.
  225. .TP
  226. .B -dNODISPLAY
  227. Suppresses the normal initialization of the output device.
  228. This may be useful when debugging.
  229. .TP
  230. .B -dNOPAUSE
  231. Disables the prompt and pause at the end of each page.
  232. This may be desirable for applications where another program
  233. (e.g.
  234. .IR page (1))
  235. is
  236. `driving' Ghostscript.
  237. .TP
  238. .B -dSAFER
  239. Disables the
  240. .B deletefile
  241. and
  242. .B renamefile
  243. operators, and the
  244. ability to open files in any mode other than read-only. This may be
  245. desirable for spoolers or other sensitive environments.
  246. .TP
  247. .B -dWRITESYSTEMDICT
  248. Leaves systemdict writable. This is necessary when running
  249. special utility programs such as font2c and pcharstr, which must bypass
  250. normal PostScript access protection.
  251. .TP
  252. .BI -sDEVICE= device
  253. Selects an alternate initial output device, as described above.
  254. .TP
  255. .BI -sOutputFile= filename
  256. Selects an alternate output file (or pipe) for the initial output
  257. device, as described above.
  258. .SH FILES
  259. .TP
  260. .B /sys/lib/ghostscript/*
  261. Startup-files, utilities, examples, and basic font definitions.
  262. .TP
  263. .B /sys/lib/ghostscript/fonts/*
  264. Additional font definitions.
  265. .SH SOURCE
  266. .B /sys/src/cmd/gs
  267. .SH "SEE ALSO"
  268. .IR page (1)
  269. .br
  270. The Ghostscript document files in
  271. .B doc
  272. and
  273. .B man
  274. subdirectories of the source directory.
  275. .SH BUGS
  276. The treatment of standard input is non-standard.