GETUNIMAP(8) System Manager's Manual GETUNIMAP(8) NAME getunimap - dump the unicode map for the current console to stdout SYNOPSIS getunimap [options] DESCRIPTION The getunimap program is old and obsolete. It is now part of setfont (1). The getunimap program outputs the unicode map (also called a "Screen Font Map") for the current console to standard output. The -C option may be used with Linux 2.6.1 and later to get the map for a console different from the current one. Its argument is a pathname. The output of getunimap is of the form 0xAA U+1234 # comment where 0xAA is the font character code and U+1234 is a unicode character, that if displayed, will be displayed using glyph 0xAA in the font. Many unicode characters may be mapped to the same glyph. the Hash symbol # is used as a comment delimiter; characters after a hash sign (to the end of the line) are comments. The -s option will sort and merge elements, sorting on font character. Hence, it will produce output of the form: 0x22 U+1234 U+5678 U+3456 0x23 U+0023 etc., listing the multiple unicode characters that map to a font glyph. The output of getunimap is of the form accepted by setfont and psfaddtable OPTIONS -s, --sort sort and merge elements. -C, --console=DEV the console device to be used. -V, --version print version number. -h, --help print this usage message. SEE ALSO psfaddtable(1), setfont(1). kbd 24 October 2024 GETUNIMAP(8)
getunimap \- dump the unicode map for the current console to stdout