This repository provides web fonts that can restore the old appearance of Secure Shell on Chrome OS. To use these set the 'Custom CSS (URI)' in Secure Shell App Profile Settings ('Ctrl-Shift-P') to https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/maxwell-k/[email protected]/index.css
As at 7 April 2019, the latest release is 2.37.
For license information, see LICENSE
.
This repository is based on https://github.com/dejavu-fonts/dejavu-fonts. It focuses on four font faces:
- DejaVu Sans Mono
- DejaVu Sans Mono Bold
- DejaVu Sans Mono Bold Oblique
- DejaVu Sans Mono Oblique
To download the '.ttf' files and create the '.woff' files, run the following shell script on Alpine Linux in a checkout of this repository:
releases=https://github.com/dejavu-fonts/dejavu-fonts/releases &&
curl -OL "$releases/download/version_2_37/dejavu-fonts-ttf-2.37.tar.bz2" &&
unset releases &&
tar xf dejavu-fonts-ttf-2.37.tar.bz2 &&
cp dejavu-fonts-ttf-2.37/ttf/DejaVuSansMono*.ttf . &&
sudo apk add --quiet fontforge@edge-testing &&
for i in *.ttf ; do ./convert.pe "$i" ; done &&
sudo apk del fontforge &&
git clean -f -d
The default font shown in Secure Shell under Chrome OS before version 73 was DejaVu Sans Mono. The Google system fonts now don't include DejaVu, but instead use Noto
The DejaVu fonts are a font family based on the Vera Fonts. Its purpose is to provide a wider range of characters while maintaining the original look and feel through the process of collaborative development (see authors), under a Free license.
-- https://dejavu-fonts.github.io/
The "hterm" FAQ includes an example using https://github.com/wernight/powerline-web-fonts/ which is loosely based upon https://github.com/powerline/fonts, which in turn includes a modified version of DejaVu. This repository is simpler in its goal, to provide the latest version of upstream DejaVu Sans Mono as a web font.