Skip to content

[NodeBB] Import custom Font

Solved Customisation
12 3 3.3k 1
  • Hi @phenomlab

    I have a custom Font and I would like to use it for my Title Website.
    The font are not in Google Font.

    I was test @fontface with fontSquirel but it doesn’t work
    no problem with google fonts

    Have you got a solution ?

    Thanks for your precious help.

  • Hi @phenomlab

    I have a custom Font and I would like to use it for my Title Website.
    The font are not in Google Font.

    I was test @fontface with fontSquirel but it doesn’t work
    no problem with google fonts

    Have you got a solution ?

    Thanks for your precious help.

    @downpw yes. Are you hosting the font yourself or from a remote source ?

  • Myself on my server

  • @downpw said in [NodeBB] Import custom Font:

    Myself on my server

    Test to create Woff files with https://transfonter.org

    no chance 😞

    I search again

  • @downpw said in [NodeBB] Import custom Font:

    Myself on my server

    Test to create Woff files with https://transfonter.org

    no chance 😞

    I search again

    @downpw can you provide the path where the font files are stored ? Feel free to use PM if you’d prefer. As long as they are in the same relative path as the NodeBB assets, this should work but will need some custom css.

  • @phenomlab

    Check yourPM 😉

  • Hi @phenomlab

    I have a custom Font and I would like to use it for my Title Website.
    The font are not in Google Font.

    I was test @fontface with fontSquirel but it doesn’t work
    no problem with google fonts

    Have you got a solution ?

    Thanks for your precious help.

    @downpw Typically, it should work as per the below example

    @font-face {
      font-family: 'Poppins';
      font-style: normal;
      font-weight: 400;
      font-display: swap;
      src: url('/assets/fonts/poppins-v15-latin-regular.eot');
      src: local(''),
           url('/assets/fonts/poppins-v15-latin-regular.woff2') format('woff2'), 
           url('/assets/fonts/poppins-v15-latin-regular.woff') format('woff'),
           url('/assets/fonts/poppins-v15-latin-regular.ttf') format('truetype'),
    }
    @font-face {
      font-family: 'Syncopate';
      font-style: normal;
      font-weight: 400;
      src: url('/assets/fonts/syncopate-v12-latin-regular.eot');
      src: local(''),
           url('/assets/fonts/syncopate-v12-latin-regular.eot?#iefix') format('embedded-opentype'),
           url('/assets/fonts/syncopate-v12-latin-regular.woff2') format('woff2'),
           url('/assets/fonts/syncopate-v12-latin-regular.woff') format('woff'), 
           url('/assets/fonts/syncopate-v12-latin-regular.ttf') format('truetype'),
           url('/assets/fonts/syncopate-v12-latin-regular.svg#Syncopate') format('svg');
    }
    
  • Looking further at this, if we decide to use

    @font-face {
      font-family: 'Exodar';
      font-style: normal;
      font-weight: 400;
      src: url('https://domain.net/assets/customfonts/Exodar.eot');
      src: local(''),
           url('https://domain.net/assets/customfonts/Exodar.eot?#iefix') format('embedded-opentype'),
           url('https://domain.net/assets/customfonts/Exodar.woff2') format('woff2'),
           url('https://domain.net/assets/customfonts/Exodar.woff') format('woff'), 
           url('https://domain.net/assets/customfonts/Exodar.ttf') format('truetype'),
           url('https://domain.net/assets/customfonts/Exodar.svg#Exodar') format('svg');
    }
    

    Then this will fail because of the CORS policy at the remote end - see below from the console log

    xx.xx.xxx.xxx/:1 Access to font at 'https://domain.net/assets/customfonts/Exodar.woff2' from origin 'http://xx.xx.xxx.xxx:32775' has been blocked by CORS policy: No 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' header is present on the requested resource.
    domain.net/assets/customfonts/Exodar.woff2:1 GET https://domain.net/assets/customfonts/Exodar.woff2 net::ERR_FAILED
    xx.xx.xxx.xxx/:1 Access to font at 'https://domain.net/assets/customfonts/Exodar.woff' from origin 'http://xx.xx.xxx.xxx:32775' has been blocked by CORS policy: No 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' header is present on the requested resource.
    domain.net/assets/customfonts/Exodar.woff:1 GET https://domain.net/assets/customfonts/Exodar.woff net::ERR_FAILED
    xx.xx.xxx.xxx/:1 Access to font at 'https://domain.net/assets/customfonts/Exodar.ttf' from origin 'http://xx.xx.xxx.xxx:32775' has been blocked by CORS policy: No 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' header is present on the requested resource.
    domain.net/assets/customfonts/Exodar.ttf:1 GET https://domain.net/assets/customfonts/Exodar.ttf net::ERR_FAILED
    

    To work around this

    1. Copy the font files to the local server (they need to be in the assets location for the server to be able to see them)
    2. Modify the CSS block so that it looks like the below
    @font-face {
      font-family: 'Exodar';
      font-style: normal;
      font-weight: 400;
      src: url('/assets/customfonts/Exodar.eot');
      src: local(''),
           url('/assets/customfonts/Exodar.eot?#iefix') format('embedded-opentype'),
           url('/assets/customfonts/Exodar.woff2') format('woff2'),
           url('/assets/customfonts/Exodar.woff') format('woff'), 
           url('/assets/customfonts/Exodar.ttf') format('truetype'),
           url('/assets/customfonts/Exodar.svg#Exodar') format('svg');
    }
    

    Then, you should be able to target any CSS class with

    font-family: "Exodar";
    

    Just be aware of the capital “e” / “E” when referring to the fonts as Linux is case sensitive, whereas Windows is not.

  • Great, that worked !

    I understand better why it didn’t work.

    The error in the log “No 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin” is may be due to my nginx config.

    But specify directly in the assets without specifying the domain name suits me just fine.

    It’s even simpler at the syntax level 🙂

  • DownPWundefined DownPW has marked this topic as solved on
  • Great, that worked !

    I understand better why it didn’t work.

    The error in the log “No 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin” is may be due to my nginx config.

    But specify directly in the assets without specifying the domain name suits me just fine.

    It’s even simpler at the syntax level 🙂

    @downpw plus the fact that it’s up to 5 less html requests your server needs to perform which means less resources are being used.

    It’s always best to host fonts locally from the performance perspective.

  • Looking further at this, if we decide to use

    @font-face {
      font-family: 'Exodar';
      font-style: normal;
      font-weight: 400;
      src: url('https://domain.net/assets/customfonts/Exodar.eot');
      src: local(''),
           url('https://domain.net/assets/customfonts/Exodar.eot?#iefix') format('embedded-opentype'),
           url('https://domain.net/assets/customfonts/Exodar.woff2') format('woff2'),
           url('https://domain.net/assets/customfonts/Exodar.woff') format('woff'), 
           url('https://domain.net/assets/customfonts/Exodar.ttf') format('truetype'),
           url('https://domain.net/assets/customfonts/Exodar.svg#Exodar') format('svg');
    }
    

    Then this will fail because of the CORS policy at the remote end - see below from the console log

    xx.xx.xxx.xxx/:1 Access to font at 'https://domain.net/assets/customfonts/Exodar.woff2' from origin 'http://xx.xx.xxx.xxx:32775' has been blocked by CORS policy: No 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' header is present on the requested resource.
    domain.net/assets/customfonts/Exodar.woff2:1 GET https://domain.net/assets/customfonts/Exodar.woff2 net::ERR_FAILED
    xx.xx.xxx.xxx/:1 Access to font at 'https://domain.net/assets/customfonts/Exodar.woff' from origin 'http://xx.xx.xxx.xxx:32775' has been blocked by CORS policy: No 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' header is present on the requested resource.
    domain.net/assets/customfonts/Exodar.woff:1 GET https://domain.net/assets/customfonts/Exodar.woff net::ERR_FAILED
    xx.xx.xxx.xxx/:1 Access to font at 'https://domain.net/assets/customfonts/Exodar.ttf' from origin 'http://xx.xx.xxx.xxx:32775' has been blocked by CORS policy: No 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' header is present on the requested resource.
    domain.net/assets/customfonts/Exodar.ttf:1 GET https://domain.net/assets/customfonts/Exodar.ttf net::ERR_FAILED
    

    To work around this

    1. Copy the font files to the local server (they need to be in the assets location for the server to be able to see them)
    2. Modify the CSS block so that it looks like the below
    @font-face {
      font-family: 'Exodar';
      font-style: normal;
      font-weight: 400;
      src: url('/assets/customfonts/Exodar.eot');
      src: local(''),
           url('/assets/customfonts/Exodar.eot?#iefix') format('embedded-opentype'),
           url('/assets/customfonts/Exodar.woff2') format('woff2'),
           url('/assets/customfonts/Exodar.woff') format('woff'), 
           url('/assets/customfonts/Exodar.ttf') format('truetype'),
           url('/assets/customfonts/Exodar.svg#Exodar') format('svg');
    }
    

    Then, you should be able to target any CSS class with

    font-family: "Exodar";
    

    Just be aware of the capital “e” / “E” when referring to the fonts as Linux is case sensitive, whereas Windows is not.

    @phenomlab i m using like below;

    @import url('https://fonts.googleapis.com/css2?family=Poppins:wght@500&display=swap');
    body {
    font-family: 'Poppins', sans-serif;
    
    }
    

    But how can i play font size 14px or 15px or 16px etc cant find.

  • @phenomlab i m using like below;

    @import url('https://fonts.googleapis.com/css2?family=Poppins:wght@500&display=swap');
    body {
    font-family: 'Poppins', sans-serif;
    
    }
    

    But how can i play font size 14px or 15px or 16px etc cant find.

    @cagatay you’ll need to define this in the body tag (or another element if you want greater or more granular targets) - for example

    body {
    font-family: "Poppins";
    font-size: 16px;
    }
    

    Essentially, you use the font-size CSS directive.


Did this solution help you?
Did you find the suggested solution useful? Support 💗 Sudonix with a coffee
If your organisation needs deeper expertise around infrastructure, security, or technology leadership, learn more about Phenomlab Ltd. Many of the deeper technical guides behind Sudonix are published there.

Related Topics
  • What’s going on with NodeBB?

    Performance nodebb script die
    20
    8 Votes
    20 Posts
    2k Views
    @cagatay The most reliable way to upgrade Node.js on Ubuntu depends on how you originally installed it. Method 1: Using NVM (Recommended) If you already use Node Version Manager (NVM), upgrading is simple. NVM allows you to keep both versions and switch between them if needed. Install Node 22: nvm install 22 Switch to Node 22: nvm use 22 Set it as your default: nvm alias default 22 Verify the change: node -v Method 2: Using NodeSource (PPA) If you installed Node.js via apt using the NodeSource repository, you need to update the repository script to point to the new version. Remove the old NodeSource list (optional but cleaner): sudo rm /etc/apt/sources.list.d/nodesource.list Download and run the NodeSource setup script for Node 22: curl -fsSL [https://deb.nodesource.com/setup_22.x](https://deb.nodesource.com/setup_22.x) | sudo -E bash - Install/Upgrade Node.js: sudo apt-get install -y nodejs Verify the installation: node -v Method 3: Using the ‘n’ Package If you have npm installed, you can use the n interactive manager. Clear the npm cache: sudo npm cache clean -f Install the ‘n’ helper: sudo npm install -g n Install Node 22: sudo n 22 Update your shell: hash -r Troubleshooting Permission Denied: If you see permission errors using Method 2 or 3, ensure you are using sudo. Path Issues: If node -v still shows version 20 after upgrading via NVM, restart your terminal or run source ~/.bashrc. Conflicts: Avoid mixing these methods. If you switch from apt to nvm, it is best to sudo apt remove nodejs first to avoid path conflicts.
  • Block Domain

    Solved Let's Build It code javascript block domain nodebb
    26
    1 Votes
    26 Posts
    7k Views
    Yes ogproxy too is functionnal on dev
  • Interesting Widget code, but can't fetch API

    Solved Customisation nodebb
    26
    2 Votes
    26 Posts
    7k Views
    @Panda said in Interesting Widget code, but can’t fetch API: How did you drop that widget into the post there? I hadnt seen this BSgenerator anywhere on sudonix site, do you use it somewhere already? Yes, here https://sudonix.org/topic/414/corporate-bullshit-generator?_=1687774393044 It’s not a “post” or “topic” in the common sense. It is actually a page in it’s own right and leverages nodebb-plugin-custom-pages. This in turn creates a new “route” which behaves like a page, meaning it is then exposed for widgets. @Panda said in Interesting Widget code, but can’t fetch API: Also can you explain more what you mean by calling the code externally. In my API call example, how would I go about doing that? By this, I mean create all the required code in an external JS file that is reachable by the NodeBB instance - so, in “public” for example - or in my case /public/js. The widget then “calls” that file and because it runs outside of the scope of NodeBB, you just need to return the values to the widget. Hope this makes sense?
  • Custom badges

    Solved Customisation nodebb
    103
    2
    49 Votes
    103 Posts
    34k Views
    Perfect
  • who is read NodeBB

    Customisation read post nodebb
    6
    0 Votes
    6 Posts
    2k Views
    @cagatay You should ask in the NodeBB forums. Perhaps reference this post https://discuss.flarum.org/d/23066-who-read
  • Detect if user is admin

    General nodebb javascript code
    2
    0 Votes
    2 Posts
    1k Views
    @pwsincd I think you can use userData.isAdmin = isAdmin; if I’m not mistaken - see https://community.nodebb.org/topic/15128/how-to-hide-whitelist-user-field-only-to-owner-or-admin?_=1648802303112 for an example
  • [NODEBB] Help for my custom CSS

    Solved Customisation nodebb css bugfix
    237
    49 Votes
    237 Posts
    107k Views
    @baris said: You should change your selectors so it doesn’t look at the entire document. You probably only want to apply fancybox to stuff inside the #content element which is what changes when the user navigates around the page. So use $('#content a').... for your selectors then the forum logo in the header won’t be selected. I modified the JS Fancybox code now and this code and it seem better // --------------------------------------------- // Fancybox Media Reader (Without Website Logo) // --------------------------------------------- if (top.location.pathname !== '/login') { $(window).on('action:posts.loaded', function(data) { console.log("Polling DOM for lazyLoaded images to apply Fancybox"); $(document).ready(function() { $('#content a').not('.forum-logo').not(".avatar").not(".emoji").not(".bmac-noanimate").each(function() { $('#content a[href*=".jpg"], #content a[href*=".jpeg"], #content a[href*=".png"], #content a[href*=".gif"], #content a[href*=".webp"]').addClass("noanimate"); }); }); }); } if (top.location.pathname !== '/login') { $(document).ready(function() { $(window).on('action:ajaxify.end', function(data) { $('#content a').not('.logo').not(".avatar").not(".emoji").not(".bmac-noanimate").each(function() { $('#content a[href*=".jpg"], #content a[href*=".jpeg"], #content a[href*=".png"], #content a[href*=".gif"], #content a[href*=".webp"]').addClass("noanimate"); data.preventDefault() // Strip out the images contained inside blockquotes as this looks nasty :) $('#content blockquote img').remove(); }); Fancybox.bind( '#content a[href*=".jpg"], #content a[href*=".jpeg"], #content a[href*=".png"], #content a[href*=".gif"], #content a[href*=".webp"]', { groupAll: true, } ); }); }); } // Chat fancybox - fires when chat module loaded and AJAX calls new chat $(document).ready(function() { $(window).on('action:chat.loaded', function(data) { // >>> Se limiter au contenu principal uniquement <<< $('#content img').not('.forum-logo').not(".avatar").not(".emoji").not(".bmac-noanimate").each(function() { var newHref = $(this).attr("src"); $(this).wrap("<a class='fancybox' href='" + newHref + "'/>"); $('#content a[href*=".jpg"], #content a[href*=".jpeg"], #content a[href*=".png"], #content a[href*=".gif"], #content a[href*=".webp"]').addClass("noanimate"); data.preventDefault(); // Strip out the images contained inside blockquotes as this looks nasty :) $('#content blockquote img').remove(); }); Fancybox.bind( '#content a[href*=".jpg"], #content a[href*=".jpeg"], #content a[href*=".png"], #content a[href*=".gif"], #content a[href*=".webp"]', { groupAll: true, } ); }); }); For the logo, I must use overflow: visible !important; on [component="brand/logo"] /* --- Logo --- */ [component="brand/logo"] { max-height: 50px; width: auto; height: auto; max-width: 100%; display: block; object-fit: contain; object-position: left center; overflow: visible !important; } Better result !!
  • nodebb-plugin-customize error

    Solved Customisation
    25
    2 Votes
    25 Posts
    11k Views
    @phenomlab it work, thanks