seb, thanks for the hint. By adding a debug fprintf() line to libspectre/spectre-device.c of the libspectre source package and rebuilding the package I could discover the Ghostscript command line equivalent to the libgs call used in libspectre. It is
Unfortunately, one cannot simply call this on the command line, as the "display" output device is used and this seems to send a bitmap to a specified, existing X window. When rotating the image, only the resolution and size values change in the command line and also the value after "/Orientation". Odd orientations (3, 1) do not display in evince, even orientations (2, 0) do.
To run an isolated command line as similar as possible, I tried the "x11" device:
Here the file displayed with all 4 orientations, but the output as wrong for the odd orientations. For the odd orientations we expect the output in landscape orientation, but it appears here also in portrait, so all 4 orientations give portrait output. So something seems to be wrong with how Ghostscript treats this file.
seb, thanks for the hint. By adding a debug fprintf() line to libspectre/ spectre- device. c of the libspectre source package and rebuilding the package I could discover the Ghostscript command line equivalent to the libgs call used in libspectre. It is
gs -dMaxBitmap= 10000000 -dSAFER -dNOPAUSE -dNOPAGEPROMPT -P- -sDEVICE=display -dTextAlphaBits=4 -dGraphicsAlpha Bits=2 -g402x574 -r57,428571x57, 400000 -dDisplayFormat =6359172 -sDisplayHandle =16#7f974c00d6f 0 -c '<< /Orientation 3 >> setpagedevice .locksafe' -f ~/Documents/ M_1_no_ of_ppts. eps
Unfortunately, one cannot simply call this on the command line, as the "display" output device is used and this seems to send a bitmap to a specified, existing X window. When rotating the image, only the resolution and size values change in the command line and also the value after "/Orientation". Odd orientations (3, 1) do not display in evince, even orientations (2, 0) do.
To run an isolated command line as similar as possible, I tried the "x11" device:
gs -dMaxBitmap= 10000000 -dSAFER -P- -sDEVICE=x11 -dTextAlphaBits=4 -dGraphicsAlpha Bits=2 -g402x574 -r57,428571x57, 400000 -c '<< /Orientation 3 >> setpagedevice .locksafe' -f ~/Documents/ M_1_no_ of_ppts. eps
Here the file displayed with all 4 orientations, but the output as wrong for the odd orientations. For the odd orientations we expect the output in landscape orientation, but it appears here also in portrait, so all 4 orientations give portrait output. So something seems to be wrong with how Ghostscript treats this file.