-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 2.6k
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
Maven Pro v2.101 (stat fix) #3660
Conversation
Fontbakery reportFontbakery version: 0.8.0 [1] Family checks⚠ WARN: Is the command `ftxvalidator` (Apple Font Tool Suite) available?--- Rationale --- There's no reasonable (and legal) way to run the command `ftxvalidator` of the Apple Font Tool Suite on a non-macOS machine. I.e. on GNU+Linux or Windows etc. If Font Bakery is not running on an OSX machine, the machine running Font Bakery could access `ftxvalidator` on OSX, e.g. via ssh or a remote procedure call (rpc). There's an ssh example implementation at: https://github.com/googlefonts/fontbakery/blob/main/prebuilt/workarounds /ftxvalidator/ssh-implementation/ftxvalidator
[12] MavenPro[wght].ttf🔥 FAIL: Name table strings must not contain the string 'Reserved Font Name'.--- Rationale --- Some designers adopt the "Reserved Font Name" clause of the OFL license. This means that the original author reserves the rights to the family name and other people can only distribute modified versions using a different family name. Google Fonts published updates to the fonts in the collection in order to fix issues and/or implement further improvements to the fonts. It is important to keep the family name so that users of the webfonts can benefit from the updates. Since it would forbid such usage scenario, all families in the GFonts collection are required to not adopt the RFN clause. This check ensures "Reserved Font Name" is not mentioned in the name table.
🔥 FAIL: Ensure METADATA.pb does not use escaped strings.--- Rationale --- In some cases we've seen designer names and other fields with escaped strings in METADATA files. Nowadays the strings can be full unicode strings and do not need escaping.
🔥 FAIL: METADATA.pb: Designer is listed with the correct name on the Google Fonts catalog of designers?
⚠ WARN: Does METADATA.pb copyright field contain broken links?
⚠ WARN: Checking OS/2 achVendID.--- Rationale --- Microsoft keeps a list of font vendors and their respective contact info. This list is updated regularly and is indexed by a 4-char "Vendor ID" which is stored in the achVendID field of the OS/2 table. Registering your ID is not mandatory, but it is a good practice since some applications may display the type designer / type foundry contact info on some dialog and also because that info will be visible on Microsoft's website: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/typography/vendors/ This check verifies whether or not a given font's vendor ID is registered in that list or if it has some of the default values used by the most common font editors. Each new FontBakery release includes a cached copy of that list of vendor IDs. If you registered recently, you're safe to ignore warnings emitted by this check, since your ID will soon be included in one of our upcoming releases.
⚠ WARN: Check copyright namerecords match license file.--- Rationale --- A known licensing description must be provided in the NameID 14 (LICENSE DESCRIPTION) entries of the name table. The source of truth for this check (to determine which license is in use) is a file placed side-by-side to your font project including the licensing terms. Depending on the chosen license, one of the following string snippets is expected to be found on the NameID 13 (LICENSE DESCRIPTION) entries of the name table: - "This Font Software is licensed under the SIL Open Font License, Version 1.1. This license is available with a FAQ at: https://scripts.sil.org/OFL" - "Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0" - "Licensed under the Ubuntu Font Licence 1.0." Currently accepted licenses are Apache or Open Font License. For a small set of legacy families the Ubuntu Font License may be acceptable as well. When in doubt, please choose OFL for new font projects.
⚠ WARN: License URL matches License text on name table?--- Rationale --- A known license URL must be provided in the NameID 14 (LICENSE INFO URL) entry of the name table. The source of truth for this check is the licensing text found on the NameID 13 entry (LICENSE DESCRIPTION). The string snippets used for detecting licensing terms are: - "This Font Software is licensed under the SIL Open Font License, Version 1.1. This license is available with a FAQ at: https://scripts.sil.org/OFL" - "Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0" - "Licensed under the Ubuntu Font Licence 1.0." Currently accepted licenses are Apache or Open Font License. For a small set of legacy families the Ubuntu Font License may be acceptable as well. When in doubt, please choose OFL for new font projects.
⚠ WARN: Copyright notice on METADATA.pb should not contain 'Reserved Font Name'.
⚠ WARN: Are there caret positions declared for every ligature?--- Rationale --- All ligatures in a font must have corresponding caret (text cursor) positions defined in the GDEF table, otherwhise, users may experience issues with caret rendering. If using GlyphsApp or UFOs, ligature carets can be defined as anchors with names starting with 'caret_'. These can be compiled with fontmake as of version v2.4.0.
⚠ WARN: Is there kerning info for non-ligated sequences?--- Rationale --- Fonts with ligatures should have kerning on the corresponding non-ligated sequences for text where ligatures aren't used (eg https://github.com/impallari/Raleway/issues/14).
⚠ WARN: Ensure fonts have ScriptLangTags declared on the 'meta' table.--- Rationale --- The OpenType 'meta' table originated at Apple. Microsoft added it to OT with just two DataMap records: - dlng: comma-separated ScriptLangTags that indicate which scripts, or languages and scripts, with possible variants, the font is designed for - slng: comma-separated ScriptLangTags that indicate which scripts, or languages and scripts, with possible variants, the font supports The slng structure is intended to describe which languages and scripts the font overall supports. For example, a Traditional Chinese font that also contains Latin characters, can indicate Hant,Latn, showing that it supports Hant, the Traditional Chinese variant of the Hani script, and it also supports the Latn script The dlng structure is far more interesting. A font may contain various glyphs, but only a particular subset of the glyphs may be truly "leading" in the design, while other glyphs may have been included for technical reasons. Such a Traditional Chinese font could only list Hant there, showing that it’s designed for Traditional Chinese, but the font would omit Latn, because the developers don’t think the font is really recommended for purely Latin-script use. The tags used in the structures can comprise just script, or also language and script. For example, if a font has Bulgarian Cyrillic alternates in the locl feature for the cyrl BGR OT languagesystem, it could also indicate in dlng explicitly that it supports bul-Cyrl. (Note that the scripts and languages in meta use the ISO language and script codes, not the OpenType ones). This check ensures that the font has the meta table containing the slng and dlng structures. All families in the Google Fonts collection should contain the 'meta' table. Windows 10 already uses it when deciding on which fonts to fall back to. The Google Fonts API and also other environments could use the data for smarter filtering. Most importantly, those entries should be added to the Noto fonts. In the font making process, some environments store this data in external files already. But the meta table provides a convenient way to store this inside the font file, so some tools may add the data, and unrelated tools may read this data. This makes the solution much more portable and universal.
⚠ WARN: Font contains '.notdef' as its first glyph?--- Rationale --- The OpenType specification v1.8.2 recommends that the first glyph is the '.notdef' glyph without a codepoint assigned and with a drawing. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/typography/opentype/spec /recom#glyph-0-the-notdef-glyph Pre-v1.8, it was recommended that fonts should also contain 'space', 'CR' and '.null' glyphs. This might have been relevant for MacOS 9 applications.
Summary
Note: The following loglevels were omitted in this report:
|
Fontbakery reportFontbakery version: 0.8.0 [1] Family checks⚠ WARN: Is the command `ftxvalidator` (Apple Font Tool Suite) available?--- Rationale --- There's no reasonable (and legal) way to run the command `ftxvalidator` of the Apple Font Tool Suite on a non-macOS machine. I.e. on GNU+Linux or Windows etc. If Font Bakery is not running on an OSX machine, the machine running Font Bakery could access `ftxvalidator` on OSX, e.g. via ssh or a remote procedure call (rpc). There's an ssh example implementation at: https://github.com/googlefonts/fontbakery/blob/main/prebuilt/workarounds /ftxvalidator/ssh-implementation/ftxvalidator
[12] MavenPro[wght].ttf🔥 FAIL: Name table strings must not contain the string 'Reserved Font Name'.--- Rationale --- Some designers adopt the "Reserved Font Name" clause of the OFL license. This means that the original author reserves the rights to the family name and other people can only distribute modified versions using a different family name. Google Fonts published updates to the fonts in the collection in order to fix issues and/or implement further improvements to the fonts. It is important to keep the family name so that users of the webfonts can benefit from the updates. Since it would forbid such usage scenario, all families in the GFonts collection are required to not adopt the RFN clause. This check ensures "Reserved Font Name" is not mentioned in the name table.
🔥 FAIL: Ensure METADATA.pb does not use escaped strings.--- Rationale --- In some cases we've seen designer names and other fields with escaped strings in METADATA files. Nowadays the strings can be full unicode strings and do not need escaping.
🔥 FAIL: METADATA.pb: Designer is listed with the correct name on the Google Fonts catalog of designers?
⚠ WARN: Does METADATA.pb copyright field contain broken links?
⚠ WARN: Checking OS/2 achVendID.--- Rationale --- Microsoft keeps a list of font vendors and their respective contact info. This list is updated regularly and is indexed by a 4-char "Vendor ID" which is stored in the achVendID field of the OS/2 table. Registering your ID is not mandatory, but it is a good practice since some applications may display the type designer / type foundry contact info on some dialog and also because that info will be visible on Microsoft's website: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/typography/vendors/ This check verifies whether or not a given font's vendor ID is registered in that list or if it has some of the default values used by the most common font editors. Each new FontBakery release includes a cached copy of that list of vendor IDs. If you registered recently, you're safe to ignore warnings emitted by this check, since your ID will soon be included in one of our upcoming releases.
⚠ WARN: Check copyright namerecords match license file.--- Rationale --- A known licensing description must be provided in the NameID 14 (LICENSE DESCRIPTION) entries of the name table. The source of truth for this check (to determine which license is in use) is a file placed side-by-side to your font project including the licensing terms. Depending on the chosen license, one of the following string snippets is expected to be found on the NameID 13 (LICENSE DESCRIPTION) entries of the name table: - "This Font Software is licensed under the SIL Open Font License, Version 1.1. This license is available with a FAQ at: https://scripts.sil.org/OFL" - "Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0" - "Licensed under the Ubuntu Font Licence 1.0." Currently accepted licenses are Apache or Open Font License. For a small set of legacy families the Ubuntu Font License may be acceptable as well. When in doubt, please choose OFL for new font projects.
⚠ WARN: License URL matches License text on name table?--- Rationale --- A known license URL must be provided in the NameID 14 (LICENSE INFO URL) entry of the name table. The source of truth for this check is the licensing text found on the NameID 13 entry (LICENSE DESCRIPTION). The string snippets used for detecting licensing terms are: - "This Font Software is licensed under the SIL Open Font License, Version 1.1. This license is available with a FAQ at: https://scripts.sil.org/OFL" - "Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0" - "Licensed under the Ubuntu Font Licence 1.0." Currently accepted licenses are Apache or Open Font License. For a small set of legacy families the Ubuntu Font License may be acceptable as well. When in doubt, please choose OFL for new font projects.
⚠ WARN: Copyright notice on METADATA.pb should not contain 'Reserved Font Name'.
⚠ WARN: Are there caret positions declared for every ligature?--- Rationale --- All ligatures in a font must have corresponding caret (text cursor) positions defined in the GDEF table, otherwhise, users may experience issues with caret rendering. If using GlyphsApp or UFOs, ligature carets can be defined as anchors with names starting with 'caret_'. These can be compiled with fontmake as of version v2.4.0.
⚠ WARN: Is there kerning info for non-ligated sequences?--- Rationale --- Fonts with ligatures should have kerning on the corresponding non-ligated sequences for text where ligatures aren't used (eg https://github.com/impallari/Raleway/issues/14).
⚠ WARN: Ensure fonts have ScriptLangTags declared on the 'meta' table.--- Rationale --- The OpenType 'meta' table originated at Apple. Microsoft added it to OT with just two DataMap records: - dlng: comma-separated ScriptLangTags that indicate which scripts, or languages and scripts, with possible variants, the font is designed for - slng: comma-separated ScriptLangTags that indicate which scripts, or languages and scripts, with possible variants, the font supports The slng structure is intended to describe which languages and scripts the font overall supports. For example, a Traditional Chinese font that also contains Latin characters, can indicate Hant,Latn, showing that it supports Hant, the Traditional Chinese variant of the Hani script, and it also supports the Latn script The dlng structure is far more interesting. A font may contain various glyphs, but only a particular subset of the glyphs may be truly "leading" in the design, while other glyphs may have been included for technical reasons. Such a Traditional Chinese font could only list Hant there, showing that it’s designed for Traditional Chinese, but the font would omit Latn, because the developers don’t think the font is really recommended for purely Latin-script use. The tags used in the structures can comprise just script, or also language and script. For example, if a font has Bulgarian Cyrillic alternates in the locl feature for the cyrl BGR OT languagesystem, it could also indicate in dlng explicitly that it supports bul-Cyrl. (Note that the scripts and languages in meta use the ISO language and script codes, not the OpenType ones). This check ensures that the font has the meta table containing the slng and dlng structures. All families in the Google Fonts collection should contain the 'meta' table. Windows 10 already uses it when deciding on which fonts to fall back to. The Google Fonts API and also other environments could use the data for smarter filtering. Most importantly, those entries should be added to the Noto fonts. In the font making process, some environments store this data in external files already. But the meta table provides a convenient way to store this inside the font file, so some tools may add the data, and unrelated tools may read this data. This makes the solution much more portable and universal.
⚠ WARN: Font contains '.notdef' as its first glyph?--- Rationale --- The OpenType specification v1.8.2 recommends that the first glyph is the '.notdef' glyph without a codepoint assigned and with a drawing. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/typography/opentype/spec /recom#glyph-0-the-notdef-glyph Pre-v1.8, it was recommended that fonts should also contain 'space', 'CR' and '.null' glyphs. This might have been relevant for MacOS 9 applications.
Summary
Note: The following loglevels were omitted in this report:
|
131d6b4
to
cdafd09
Compare
tcaron and dcaron rolled back to earlier version.
Sometime in the last 4 years, the dcaron and tcaron glyphs were switched to "Automatic alignment", greatly increasing their glyph advanced widths. These characters have been rolled back to QA looks clean |
Fontbakery reportFontbakery version: 0.8.0 [1] Family checks⚠ WARN: Is the command `ftxvalidator` (Apple Font Tool Suite) available?--- Rationale --- There's no reasonable (and legal) way to run the command `ftxvalidator` of the Apple Font Tool Suite on a non-macOS machine. I.e. on GNU+Linux or Windows etc. If Font Bakery is not running on an OSX machine, the machine running Font Bakery could access `ftxvalidator` on OSX, e.g. via ssh or a remote procedure call (rpc). There's an ssh example implementation at: https://github.com/googlefonts/fontbakery/blob/main/prebuilt/workarounds /ftxvalidator/ssh-implementation/ftxvalidator
[11] MavenPro[wght].ttf🔥 FAIL: Name table strings must not contain the string 'Reserved Font Name'.--- Rationale --- Some designers adopt the "Reserved Font Name" clause of the OFL license. This means that the original author reserves the rights to the family name and other people can only distribute modified versions using a different family name. Google Fonts published updates to the fonts in the collection in order to fix issues and/or implement further improvements to the fonts. It is important to keep the family name so that users of the webfonts can benefit from the updates. Since it would forbid such usage scenario, all families in the GFonts collection are required to not adopt the RFN clause. This check ensures "Reserved Font Name" is not mentioned in the name table.
🔥 FAIL: METADATA.pb: Designer is listed with the correct name on the Google Fonts catalog of designers?
⚠ WARN: Does METADATA.pb copyright field contain broken links?
⚠ WARN: Checking OS/2 achVendID.--- Rationale --- Microsoft keeps a list of font vendors and their respective contact info. This list is updated regularly and is indexed by a 4-char "Vendor ID" which is stored in the achVendID field of the OS/2 table. Registering your ID is not mandatory, but it is a good practice since some applications may display the type designer / type foundry contact info on some dialog and also because that info will be visible on Microsoft's website: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/typography/vendors/ This check verifies whether or not a given font's vendor ID is registered in that list or if it has some of the default values used by the most common font editors. Each new FontBakery release includes a cached copy of that list of vendor IDs. If you registered recently, you're safe to ignore warnings emitted by this check, since your ID will soon be included in one of our upcoming releases.
⚠ WARN: Check copyright namerecords match license file.--- Rationale --- A known licensing description must be provided in the NameID 14 (LICENSE DESCRIPTION) entries of the name table. The source of truth for this check (to determine which license is in use) is a file placed side-by-side to your font project including the licensing terms. Depending on the chosen license, one of the following string snippets is expected to be found on the NameID 13 (LICENSE DESCRIPTION) entries of the name table: - "This Font Software is licensed under the SIL Open Font License, Version 1.1. This license is available with a FAQ at: https://scripts.sil.org/OFL" - "Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0" - "Licensed under the Ubuntu Font Licence 1.0." Currently accepted licenses are Apache or Open Font License. For a small set of legacy families the Ubuntu Font License may be acceptable as well. When in doubt, please choose OFL for new font projects.
⚠ WARN: License URL matches License text on name table?--- Rationale --- A known license URL must be provided in the NameID 14 (LICENSE INFO URL) entry of the name table. The source of truth for this check is the licensing text found on the NameID 13 entry (LICENSE DESCRIPTION). The string snippets used for detecting licensing terms are: - "This Font Software is licensed under the SIL Open Font License, Version 1.1. This license is available with a FAQ at: https://scripts.sil.org/OFL" - "Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0" - "Licensed under the Ubuntu Font Licence 1.0." Currently accepted licenses are Apache or Open Font License. For a small set of legacy families the Ubuntu Font License may be acceptable as well. When in doubt, please choose OFL for new font projects.
⚠ WARN: Copyright notice on METADATA.pb should not contain 'Reserved Font Name'.
⚠ WARN: Are there caret positions declared for every ligature?--- Rationale --- All ligatures in a font must have corresponding caret (text cursor) positions defined in the GDEF table, otherwhise, users may experience issues with caret rendering. If using GlyphsApp or UFOs, ligature carets can be defined as anchors with names starting with 'caret_'. These can be compiled with fontmake as of version v2.4.0.
⚠ WARN: Is there kerning info for non-ligated sequences?--- Rationale --- Fonts with ligatures should have kerning on the corresponding non-ligated sequences for text where ligatures aren't used (eg https://github.com/impallari/Raleway/issues/14).
⚠ WARN: Ensure fonts have ScriptLangTags declared on the 'meta' table.--- Rationale --- The OpenType 'meta' table originated at Apple. Microsoft added it to OT with just two DataMap records: - dlng: comma-separated ScriptLangTags that indicate which scripts, or languages and scripts, with possible variants, the font is designed for - slng: comma-separated ScriptLangTags that indicate which scripts, or languages and scripts, with possible variants, the font supports The slng structure is intended to describe which languages and scripts the font overall supports. For example, a Traditional Chinese font that also contains Latin characters, can indicate Hant,Latn, showing that it supports Hant, the Traditional Chinese variant of the Hani script, and it also supports the Latn script The dlng structure is far more interesting. A font may contain various glyphs, but only a particular subset of the glyphs may be truly "leading" in the design, while other glyphs may have been included for technical reasons. Such a Traditional Chinese font could only list Hant there, showing that it’s designed for Traditional Chinese, but the font would omit Latn, because the developers don’t think the font is really recommended for purely Latin-script use. The tags used in the structures can comprise just script, or also language and script. For example, if a font has Bulgarian Cyrillic alternates in the locl feature for the cyrl BGR OT languagesystem, it could also indicate in dlng explicitly that it supports bul-Cyrl. (Note that the scripts and languages in meta use the ISO language and script codes, not the OpenType ones). This check ensures that the font has the meta table containing the slng and dlng structures. All families in the Google Fonts collection should contain the 'meta' table. Windows 10 already uses it when deciding on which fonts to fall back to. The Google Fonts API and also other environments could use the data for smarter filtering. Most importantly, those entries should be added to the Noto fonts. In the font making process, some environments store this data in external files already. But the meta table provides a convenient way to store this inside the font file, so some tools may add the data, and unrelated tools may read this data. This makes the solution much more portable and universal.
⚠ WARN: Font contains '.notdef' as its first glyph?--- Rationale --- The OpenType specification v1.8.2 recommends that the first glyph is the '.notdef' glyph without a codepoint assigned and with a drawing. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/typography/opentype/spec /recom#glyph-0-the-notdef-glyph Pre-v1.8, it was recommended that fonts should also contain 'space', 'CR' and '.null' glyphs. This might have been relevant for MacOS 9 applications.
Summary
Note: The following loglevels were omitted in this report:
|
All (the pull request submitter and all commit authors) CLAs are signed, but one or more commits were authored or co-authored by someone other than the pull request submitter. We need to confirm that all authors are ok with their commits being contributed to this project. Please have them confirm that by leaving a comment that contains only Note to project maintainer: There may be cases where the author cannot leave a comment, or the comment is not properly detected as consent. In those cases, you can manually confirm consent of the commit author(s), and set the ℹ️ Googlers: Go here for more info. |
@googlebot I consent. |
Fontbakery reportFontbakery version: 0.8.1 [1] Family checks⚠ WARN: Is the command `ftxvalidator` (Apple Font Tool Suite) available?--- Rationale --- There's no reasonable (and legal) way to run the command `ftxvalidator` of the Apple Font Tool Suite on a non-macOS machine. I.e. on GNU+Linux or Windows etc. If Font Bakery is not running on an OSX machine, the machine running Font Bakery could access `ftxvalidator` on OSX, e.g. via ssh or a remote procedure call (rpc). There's an ssh example implementation at: https://github.com/googlefonts/fontbakery/blob/main/prebuilt/workarounds /ftxvalidator/ssh-implementation/ftxvalidator
[13] MavenPro[wght].ttf🔥 FAIL: Name table strings must not contain the string 'Reserved Font Name'.--- Rationale --- Some designers adopt the "Reserved Font Name" clause of the OFL license. This means that the original author reserves the rights to the family name and other people can only distribute modified versions using a different family name. Google Fonts published updates to the fonts in the collection in order to fix issues and/or implement further improvements to the fonts. It is important to keep the family name so that users of the webfonts can benefit from the updates. Since it would forbid such usage scenario, all families in the GFonts collection are required to not adopt the RFN clause. This check ensures "Reserved Font Name" is not mentioned in the name table.
⚠ WARN: Does METADATA.pb copyright field contain broken links?
⚠ WARN: Checking OS/2 achVendID.--- Rationale --- Microsoft keeps a list of font vendors and their respective contact info. This list is updated regularly and is indexed by a 4-char "Vendor ID" which is stored in the achVendID field of the OS/2 table. Registering your ID is not mandatory, but it is a good practice since some applications may display the type designer / type foundry contact info on some dialog and also because that info will be visible on Microsoft's website: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/typography/vendors/ This check verifies whether or not a given font's vendor ID is registered in that list or if it has some of the default values used by the most common font editors. Each new FontBakery release includes a cached copy of that list of vendor IDs. If you registered recently, you're safe to ignore warnings emitted by this check, since your ID will soon be included in one of our upcoming releases.
⚠ WARN: Check copyright namerecords match license file.--- Rationale --- A known licensing description must be provided in the NameID 14 (LICENSE DESCRIPTION) entries of the name table. The source of truth for this check (to determine which license is in use) is a file placed side-by-side to your font project including the licensing terms. Depending on the chosen license, one of the following string snippets is expected to be found on the NameID 13 (LICENSE DESCRIPTION) entries of the name table: - "This Font Software is licensed under the SIL Open Font License, Version 1.1. This license is available with a FAQ at: https://scripts.sil.org/OFL" - "Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0" - "Licensed under the Ubuntu Font Licence 1.0." Currently accepted licenses are Apache or Open Font License. For a small set of legacy families the Ubuntu Font License may be acceptable as well. When in doubt, please choose OFL for new font projects.
⚠ WARN: License URL matches License text on name table?--- Rationale --- A known license URL must be provided in the NameID 14 (LICENSE INFO URL) entry of the name table. The source of truth for this check is the licensing text found on the NameID 13 entry (LICENSE DESCRIPTION). The string snippets used for detecting licensing terms are: - "This Font Software is licensed under the SIL Open Font License, Version 1.1. This license is available with a FAQ at: https://scripts.sil.org/OFL" - "Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0" - "Licensed under the Ubuntu Font Licence 1.0." Currently accepted licenses are Apache or Open Font License. For a small set of legacy families the Ubuntu Font License may be acceptable as well. When in doubt, please choose OFL for new font projects.
⚠ WARN: Copyright notice on METADATA.pb should not contain 'Reserved Font Name'.
⚠ WARN: Are there caret positions declared for every ligature?--- Rationale --- All ligatures in a font must have corresponding caret (text cursor) positions defined in the GDEF table, otherwhise, users may experience issues with caret rendering. If using GlyphsApp or UFOs, ligature carets can be defined as anchors with names starting with 'caret_'. These can be compiled with fontmake as of version v2.4.0.
⚠ WARN: Is there kerning info for non-ligated sequences?--- Rationale --- Fonts with ligatures should have kerning on the corresponding non-ligated sequences for text where ligatures aren't used (eg https://github.com/impallari/Raleway/issues/14).
⚠ WARN: A static fonts directory with at least two fonts must accompany variable fonts--- Rationale --- Variable font family directories kept in the google/fonts git repo may include a static/ subdir containing static fonts. These files are meant to be served for users that still lack support for variable fonts in their web browsers.
⚠ WARN: METADATA.pb: Designers are listed correctly on the Google Fonts catalog?--- Rationale --- Google Fonts has a catalog of designers. This check ensures that the online entries of the catalog can be found based on the designer names listed on the METADATA.pb file. It also validates the URLs and file formats are all correctly set.
⚠ WARN: Ensure fonts have ScriptLangTags declared on the 'meta' table.--- Rationale --- The OpenType 'meta' table originated at Apple. Microsoft added it to OT with just two DataMap records: - dlng: comma-separated ScriptLangTags that indicate which scripts, or languages and scripts, with possible variants, the font is designed for - slng: comma-separated ScriptLangTags that indicate which scripts, or languages and scripts, with possible variants, the font supports The slng structure is intended to describe which languages and scripts the font overall supports. For example, a Traditional Chinese font that also contains Latin characters, can indicate Hant,Latn, showing that it supports Hant, the Traditional Chinese variant of the Hani script, and it also supports the Latn script The dlng structure is far more interesting. A font may contain various glyphs, but only a particular subset of the glyphs may be truly "leading" in the design, while other glyphs may have been included for technical reasons. Such a Traditional Chinese font could only list Hant there, showing that it’s designed for Traditional Chinese, but the font would omit Latn, because the developers don’t think the font is really recommended for purely Latin-script use. The tags used in the structures can comprise just script, or also language and script. For example, if a font has Bulgarian Cyrillic alternates in the locl feature for the cyrl BGR OT languagesystem, it could also indicate in dlng explicitly that it supports bul-Cyrl. (Note that the scripts and languages in meta use the ISO language and script codes, not the OpenType ones). This check ensures that the font has the meta table containing the slng and dlng structures. All families in the Google Fonts collection should contain the 'meta' table. Windows 10 already uses it when deciding on which fonts to fall back to. The Google Fonts API and also other environments could use the data for smarter filtering. Most importantly, those entries should be added to the Noto fonts. In the font making process, some environments store this data in external files already. But the meta table provides a convenient way to store this inside the font file, so some tools may add the data, and unrelated tools may read this data. This makes the solution much more portable and universal.
⚠ WARN: Font contains '.notdef' as its first glyph?--- Rationale --- The OpenType specification v1.8.2 recommends that the first glyph is the '.notdef' glyph without a codepoint assigned and with a drawing. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/typography/opentype/spec /recom#glyph-0-the-notdef-glyph Pre-v1.8, it was recommended that fonts should also contain 'space', 'CR' and '.null' glyphs. This might have been relevant for MacOS 9 applications.
⚠ WARN: Does the font have a DSIG table?--- Rationale --- Microsoft Office 2013 and below products expect fonts to have a digital signature declared in a DSIG table in order to implement OpenType features. The EOL date for Microsoft Office 2013 products is 4/11/2023. This issue does not impact Microsoft Office 2016 and above products. As we approach the EOL date, it is now considered better to completely remove the table. But if you still want your font to support OpenType features on Office 2013, then you may find it handy to add a fake signature on a dummy DSIG table by running one of the helper scripts provided at https://github.com/googlefonts/gftools Reference: https://github.com/googlefonts/fontbakery/issues/1845
Summary
Note: The following loglevels were omitted in this report:
|
Font repro updated to the UFR format (https://github.com/googlefonts/mavenproFont).
Font files rebuilt.