Installation and Configuration of Ghostscript

Ghostscript is needed by Scribus for two purposes, namely the print preview (File > Print Preview) and the rasterisation of EPS files in image frames. If you don't need one of those features, you can safely ignore the warning message displayed by Scribus in case Ghostscript isn't installed.

Contrary to some reports in the press, Ghostscript is not required for PDF or EPS export, since Scribus has its own code to handle this feature.

=Recommended/required Ghostscript versions= Generally speaking, you want to have the latest ghostscript you can find. You should find anything since 8.60 to be serviceable, but as of this writing the current version is 8.71. As far as we know, you cannot go wrong by potentially having some "too far advanced" version of Ghostscript.

=Installing Ghostscript as a binary on Linux/UNIX= This is by far the most sensible way. Most of the "mainstream" Linux distros will have Ghostscript in their repositories, so if you don't have it, simply search for it. If you don't know how to work with your repositories, you might as well forget about Ghostscript, since you have or are going to have far more important issues than that.

A particular advantage of the repository method is that once you install it, it will keep itself up to date.

=Building Ghostscript from source on Linux/UNIX=

Download the latest tarball
Ok, so let's imagine you want your own custom-built Ghostscript, or you're using some flavor of Linux that you're experimenting with that doesn't have repositories.

Go here:  http://www.ghostscript.com/download/

where you can find links to whichever version you want to build. What you see there are 3 choices, ending with .tar.gz, .tar.xz, or .tar.bz2. You only need to choose one of these. The tar part means that the file was tarred, in which a number of files are collected together into one file. The other part, gz, xz, or bz2 means the file was then compressed to shrink its size.

You must have the tar utility, almost certain with Linux whether you realize it or not. In a console of some sort type:

tar -zxvf filename.tar.gz

or

tar -Jxvf filename.tar.xz

or

tar -jxvf filename.tar.bz2

depending on which one you downloaded. The z or the J or the j option uncompresses the file so that then it can be extracted with the x option. The v and f options cause verbose output and indicate that what follows is a filename of the archive.

What you should now have is a directory named ghostscript-8.71. Now,

cd ghostscript-8.71 to enter the directory

then run

./configure

next

make

After make finishes its work, then you run, as root:

make install

On some systems you can become root by running su and then supplying root's password. On others, you might run sudo make install in which case you supply your own password if you have privileges to run sudo.

=Installing Ghostscript on Windows=

Download resources
Go here:  http://www.ghostscript.com/download/

We're going to assume that you have no interest in compiling on Windows, or that if you did you would not need instructions for the process.

If you go farther down the page, past the archived files, past the checksums, you will find links for 32-bit and 64-bit Windows versions. Simply download one of these and run it to install Ghostscript. If you do this before you install Scribus, chances are Scribus will find Ghostscript unless you choose a nonstandard location when Ghostscript was installed.

If it doesn't, go to File > Preferences > External Tools to browse for your Ghostscript (gs) executable. Remember to choose the gswin32c.exe or gswin64c.exe executable depending on your processor's version of Windows.

=Installing Ghostscript on Mac OS X=

Ghostscript .pgk
If you don't know about Brew or MacPorts you should install Ghostscript by donwloading a .pkg installer, double clicking it and following the instructions.

For Mac OS X you should get a Ghostscript installer from:

http://www.uoregon.edu/~koch/

At the time of writing the current version is Ghostscript 9.23, but you might find newer versions.

Home Brew
If you use Home Brew to manage your packages, just:

brew install ghostscript

MacPorts
If you use MacPorts, simply:

port install ghostscript

=Installing Ghostscript on OS/2 and eComStation=

Installation
=Enabling Scribus to use Ghostscript= =Ghostscript and fonts=