This is the Gallant font, as used by the Sun Microsystems SPARCstation console, extended with glyphs for many Unicode blocks. It is a raster font with a 22x12 pixel character cell, descent 5 and ascent 17.
The starting point was the gallant.hex file as found on
FreeBSD 14, which contained 502 glyphs at
the time. This project currently provides more than 4600 glyphs. Major
additions:
- Greek
- Cyrillic
- International Phonetic Association Extensions
- Extended Latin characters
- Zapf Dingbats
- Tons of arrows
- Tons of mathematical symbols
- Letterlike symbols and enclosed alphanumerics
- Pixel-perfect box drawing
- Currency symbols
- More punctuation
- Just enough Katakana to say コンニチハ
- Powerline glyphs in the Private Use Area at U+e0a0
I have tried hard to keep the look of the font for Greek and Cyrillic glyphs, but not for symbols like arrows and mathematical operators where it makes no sense. Please let me know where I messed up (I can only barely read and write Greek, and hardly any Cyrillic and no Japanese at all). I used the documents of The Unicode Standard, Version 16.0 as guidance. See Unicode.org for more on Unicode.
In the following table's Status column, Complete means all glyphs are present, Partial means at least one glyph is present, TODO means none are present.
| Block | Name | Status |
|---|---|---|
| U+0000 - U+007F | Basic Latin | Complete |
| U+0080 - U+00FF | Latin-1 Supplement | Complete |
| U+0100 - U+017F | Latin Extended-A | Complete |
| U+0180 - U+024F | Latin Extended-B | Complete |
| U+0250 - U+02AF | IPA Extensions | Complete |
| U+02B0 - U+02FF | Spacing Modifier Letters | Complete |
| U+0300 - U+036F | Combining Diacritical Marks | Complete |
| U+0370 - U+03FF | Greek and Coptic | Complete |
| U+0400 - U+04FF | Cyrillic | Complete |
| U+0500 - U+052F | Cyrillic Supplement | Complete |
| U+0530 - U+1CFF | ...Many foreign alphabets... | TODO |
| U+1D00 - U+1D7F | Phonetic Extensions | TODO |
| U+1D80 - U+1DBF | Phonetic Extensions Supplement | TODO |
| U+1DC0 - U+1DFF | Combining Diacritical Marks Supplement | TODO |
| U+1E00 - U+1EFF | Latin Extended Additional | Complete |
| U+1F00 - U+1FFF | Greek Extended | Complete |
| U+2000 - U+206F | General Punctuation | Complete |
| U+2070 - U+209F | Superscripts and Subscripts | Complete |
| U+20A0 - U+20CF | Currency Symbols | Complete |
| U+20D0 - U+20FF | Combining Diacritical Marks for Symbols | Complete |
| U+2100 - U+214F | Letterlike Symbols | Complete |
| U+2150 - U+218F | Number Forms | Complete |
| U+2190 - U+21FF | Arrows | Complete |
| U+2200 - U+22FF | Mathematical Operators | Complete |
| U+2300 - U+23FF | Miscellaneous Technical | Complete |
| U+2400 - U+243F | Control Pictures | Complete |
| U+2440 - U+245F | Optical Character Recognition | Complete |
| U+2460 - U+24FF | Enclosed Alphanumerics | Complete |
| U+2500 - U+257F | Box Drawing | Complete |
| U+2580 - U+259F | Block Elements | Complete |
| U+25A0 - U+25FF | Geometric Shapes | Complete |
| U+2600 - U+26FF | Miscellaneous Symbols | Partial |
| U+2700 - U+27BF | Dingbats | Complete |
| U+27C0 - U+27EF | Miscellaneous Mathematical Symbols-A | Complete |
| U+27F0 - U+27FF | Supplemental Arrows-A | Complete |
| U+2800 - U+28FF | Braille Patterns | Complete |
| U+2900 - U+297F | Supplemental Arrows-B | Complete |
| U+2980 - U+29FF | Miscellaneous Mathematical Symbols-A | Complete |
| U+2A00 - U+2AFF | Supplemental Mathematical Operators | TODO |
| U+2B00 - U+2BFF | Miscellaneous Symbols and Arrows | Partial |
| U+2C00 - U+2C5F | Glagolitic | TODO |
| U+2C60 - U+2C7F | Latin Extended-C | TODO |
| U+2C80 - U+30BF | ...Many foreign alphabets... | TODO |
| U+30A0 - U+30FF | Katakana | Partial |
| U+3100 - U+A6FF | ...Many foreign alphabets... | TODO |
| U+A700 - U+A71F | Modifier Tone Letters | TODO |
| U+A720 - U+A7FF | Latin Extended-D | TODO |
| U+A800 - U+AB2F | ...Many foreign alphabets... | TODO |
| U+AB30 - U+AB6F | Latin Extended-E | TODO |
| U+AB70 - U+FAFF | ...Many foreign alphabets... | TODO |
| U+FB00 - U+FB4F | Alphabetic Presentation Forms | Partial |
| U+FB50 - U+FFEF | ...Many foreign alphabets... | TODO |
| U+FFF0 - U+FFFF | Specials | Complete |
Codepoints >= U+10000 can be part of a BDF file, but cannot be used by
core X11 since it internally restricts glyph encoding numbers to 16 bit.
The X server then says BDF Error on line X: char 'U+10000' has encoding too large (65536). This limitation does not apply to Xft rendered
fonts.
The FreeBSD vt(4) driver works fine with the full 32 bit codepoint range.
The Images directory contains white-on-black and
black-on-white (suffixed -Inverted) PNG image files for the separate
blocks and Markus Kuhn's
UTF-8-demo.txt,
licensed CC BY; no changes
were made to the text before rendering it in Gallant.
If you just want to use one of the gallant.* font files, you don't
need to build anything. See "How do I load/use this font?" below.
If you want to modify or add glyphs, edit gallant.src and then make.
You will obviously need GNU make (FreeBSD: devel/gmake). To build the
TrueType gallant.ttf you will need FontForge (print/fontforge). To
build images with txttopng the PNG library is required
(graphics/png).
Install the BDF file gallant.bdf or the PCF file gallant.pcf.gz
where X11 looks for fonts. You can query the current font path with
xset q | sed -n '/^Font/,/^ /p'. If you do not have write permission
to any of the font directories, you may create your own under, say,
$HOME/.fonts.
The following example uses $HOME/.fonts as the font directory and adds
it to the font path. To make the font path addition permanent, you
should add the xset lines to your $HOME/.xinitrc or equivalent X11
startup file (common candidates are .xsession and .xprofile).
mkdir -p $HOME/.fonts
cp gallant.bfd $HOME/.fonts
cd $HOME/.fonts
mkfontdir
xset fp+ $HOME/.fonts
xset fp rehash
xterm -fa '' -fn "-sun-gallant-medium-r-normal-*-22-*-*-*-*-80-*-*"
vidcontrol -f /path/to/gallant.fnt
You may also drop the font files into directory /usr/share/vt/fonts and
add allscreens_flags="-f gallant" to your /etc/rc.conf. This way all
console terminals use the font after boot.
For the full Gallant boot experience, make the loader use 12x22.fnt.gz
early:
- Copy it to
/boot/fonts/12x22.fnt.gz. - Add
screen.font="12x22"(without.fnt.gz) to/boot/loader.conf. - Make sure that
/boot/fonts/INDEX.fontscontains these lines, preferably after the11x22.fnt:entries.12x22.fnt:en:Gallant BSD Console, size 22 12x22.fnt:da:Gallant BSD-konsol, størrelse 22 12x22.fnt:de:Gallant BSD Console, Größe 22 - For even more Sun Microsystems reminiscence, switch to black on white.
In
/boot/loader.confsetteken.fg_color="0"andteken.bg_color="7". - To use the FreeBSD logo with inverted colors:
- (FreeBSD 14.3 and earlier) edit
/boot/lua/drawer.lua. Look for the assignmentimage = "/boot/images/freebsd-brand-rev.png"and replace it withimage = "/boot/images/freebsd-brand.png". - (FreeBSD 15+) edit
/boot/loader.conf, add this linesplash="/boot/images/freebsd-brand.png".
- (FreeBSD 14.3 and earlier) edit
The Linux console uses PSF fonts. As of 2025 this format can only contain 256 or 512 glyphs.
The NetBSD console (wscons) is also restricted to 512 glyphs. It does not handle double width or combining characters.
OpenBSD's wscons was inherited from NetBSD, so similar restrictions apply.
The glyphs in this Gallant project would have to be severely reduced in number to fit. If someone wants to contribute a stripped down font in the appropriate format, I'm willing to add it to this project.
The gallant.ttf file is a conversion from BDF to TTF using
FontForge. (See the
GNUmakefile for the scripted command sequence.) A TTF
font can contain a raster font at its design size; sometimes this is
called a bit strike. On systems supporting TrueType you may be able to
use Gallant. The font family name is Gallant12 to disambiguate it from
gallant and to indicate that the design size is 12. Usage example with
xterm:
xterm -fa Gallant12:size=12
You can use a larger size value, but that will only affect the line
spacing, not the glyph size. Visually this is most apparent in the box
drawing characters, where there will be vertical gaps. The same applies
to all glyphs that connect to glyphs above and below, such as large
parentheses, braces, brackets, integrals, etc.
The symptom is that Windows displays a popup along "gallant.ttf is not a
valid font file" when you want to copy gallant.ttf to
C:\Windows\Fonts or install it some other way.
There seem to be at least two issues.
- I'm told Windows considers a font invalid if it does not contain a certain set of six Hiragana glyphs. I have added them to the BDF but this is not enough to solve the "gallant.ttf is not a valid font file" popup.
- Windows wants a scalable outline font. A bitmap-only TrueType font
file is invalid. I have yet to find an automated way, preferably
with
fontforgescript commands, to add an outline font with a square pixel for each pixel.
No. The fon file format, dated as it is, does not support Unicode and
would only contain 256 glyphs.
I'm an ex-Sun Microsystems software engineer who had a stint in the company shortly before Oracle took over (2008/2009). I was nowhere near the OpenBoot PROM files which contained the Gallant font. My first contact with SUN hardware was in the early 90's at university with the 3/60 and the SPARCstations. It was then and there that the Gallant font and the Trinitron CRT raster were burnt in my retina.
With a text editor (vim). I wrote the hextosrc utility
which turns gallant.hex into a human readable file named gallant.src
with one character cell per pixel, a row count from 22 down to 1 so I
know where the baseline (06) is and each pixel row between |
characters (12 or 24, space for pixel not set, full block █ for set).
My srctohex utility converts in the opposite direction.
This is what the glyph for A looks like in gallant.src:
STARTCHAR U0041 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A
22 | |
21 | |
20 | |
19 | ██ |
18 | ██ |
17 | █ ██ |
16 | █ ██ |
15 | █ █ |
14 | █ ██ |
13 | █ ██ |
12 | █ █ |
11 | ████████ |
10 | █ ██ |
09 | █ █ |
08 | █ ██ |
07 | █ ██ |
06 |███ ████|
05 | |
04 | |
03 | |
02 | |
01 | |
ENDCHAR
The row numbers and Unicode names are ignored by srctohex, and
inserted/restored by hextosrc. This allows to freely add and delete
pixel rows without tedious row renumbering or knowing the Unicode name.
The utilities are complemented by hextobdf to generate
gallant.bdf. From there, other tools can create additional font formats.
The oldest reference to the Gallant font I could find at first was in a Copyright notice in NetBSD's gallant12x22.h which reads:
/*
* Copyright (c) 1992, 1993
* The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
*
* This code is derived from software contributed to the Computer Systems
* Engineering Group at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory and to the University
* of California at Berkeley by Jef Poskanzer.
* [...]
* Derived from: @(#)gallant19.h 8.1 (Berkeley) 6/11/93
*/
In private conversation with the author, Jef said he guessed that the Gallant font was designed by someone at Sun Microsystems before it made its way to Berkeley.
Further research examining the Unix history site
v6sh.org revealed a list of the 4.4BSD-Alpha src
directory
contents
which contains an rcons directory with these files:
rwxrwxr-x 3/9 0 Jul 25 07:58 1992 usr/src/sys/sparc/rcons/
rwxrwxr-x 3/9 0 Jul 25 07:58 1992 usr/src/sys/sparc/rcons/tags symbolic link to /var/db/sys_tags
r--r--r-- 3/9 46247 Jul 22 09:49 1992 usr/src/sys/sparc/rcons/gallant19.h
r--r--r-- 3/9 9548 Jul 22 09:50 1992 usr/src/sys/sparc/rcons/raster.h
r--r--r-- 3/9 29785 Jul 22 09:50 1992 usr/src/sys/sparc/rcons/raster_op.c
r--r--r-- 3/9 6870 Jul 22 09:50 1992 usr/src/sys/sparc/rcons/raster_text.c
r--r--r-- 3/9 2840 Jul 22 09:50 1992 usr/src/sys/sparc/rcons/rcons_font.c
r--r--r-- 3/9 7756 Jul 22 09:50 1992 usr/src/sys/sparc/rcons/rcons_kern.c
r--r--r-- 3/9 15437 Jul 22 09:50 1992 usr/src/sys/sparc/rcons/rcons_subr.c
Gallant's relevant C language header file is in History/rcons/gallant19.h.
The
4.3BSD
src and src/sys tape archives do not contain gallant19.h, which
makes it likely it was acquired between 4.3BSD and
4.4BSD.
After asking in the Usenet newsgroup comp.sys.sun.hardware—16 years after Sun was acquired by Oracle people do lurk there—some helpful soul reached out to me with links to the OpenBoot gallant font and a PDF titled From the Valley of Heart's Delight to the Silicon Valley: A Study of Stanford University's Role in the Transformation by Carolyn Tajnai which in Appendix A reveals as the designer of the Gallant font no one less than Stanford professor Vaughan Pratt, who also designed the iconic Sun logo.
In an article in comp.sys.sun.hardware (Oct 11 1995) Vaughan Pratt provides this anecdote how Gallant came to be:
[...] That big font in the PROM monitor, I did that in April 1982 too, started out doing it by hand on graph paper until I realized I'd finish a lot sooner if I wrote a font editor first (pretty trivial editor, involved about three hours work but it saved several days of messing with graph paper). I called the font Gallant because it sounded like a font name.
Codepoints 0 through 31 contain glyphs of the VT100 line-drawing character set otherwise known as the DEC Special Character and Line Drawing Set. They were left unmodified to not change their intended use by applications that expect them there. Each of the special characters also has an "official" Unicode codepoint. Contemporary applications should never need to render them. This is the mapping:
| Special | Official | Name |
|---|---|---|
| U+0000 | U+25AE | black vertical rectangle |
| U+0001 | U+25C6 | black diamond |
| U+0002 | U+2592 | medium shade |
| U+0003 | U+2409 | symbol for horizontal tabulation |
| U+0004 | U+240C | symbol for form feed |
| U+0005 | U+240D | symbol for carriage return |
| U+0006 | U+240A | symbol for line feed |
| U+0007 | U+00B0 | degree sign |
| U+0008 | U+00B1 | plus-minus sign |
| U+0009 | U+2424 | symbol for newline |
| U+000a | U+240B | symbol for vertical tabulation |
| U+000b | U+2518 | box drawings light up and left |
| U+000c | U+2510 | box drawings light down and left |
| U+000d | U+250C | box drawings light down and right |
| U+000e | U+2514 | box drawings light up and right |
| U+000f | U+253C | box drawings light vertical and horizontal |
| U+0010 | U+23BA | box drawings scan 1 |
| U+0011 | U+23BB | box drawings scan 3 |
| U+0012 | U+2500 | box drawings light horizontal |
| U+0013 | U+23BC | box drawings scan 7 |
| U+0014 | U+23BD | box drawings scan 9 |
| U+0015 | U+251C | box drawings light vertical and right |
| U+0016 | U+2524 | box drawings light vertical and left |
| U+0017 | U+2534 | box drawings light up and horizontal |
| U+0018 | U+252C | box drawings light down and horizontal |
| U+0019 | U+2502 | box drawings light vertical |
| U+001a | U+2264 | less-than or equal to |
| U+001b | U+2265 | greater-than or equal to |
| U+001c | U+03C0 | greek small letter pi |
| U+001d | U+2260 | not equal to |
| U+001e | U+00A3 | pound sign |
| U+001f | U+00B7 | middle dot |
- Describe how to contribute.
- Commit 12x22 for loader use to FreeBSD once code slush is over.