Gerbv was originally developed as part of the gEDA Project but is now separately maintained.
Official releases are published on GitHub Releases. Moreover, CI generated binaries are published on gerbv.github.io. Be aware however that they are not manually verified!
- Gerbv is a viewer for Gerber RS-274X files, Excellon drill files, and CSV pick-and-place files. (Note: RS-274D files are not supported.)
- Gerbv is a native Linux application, and it runs on many common Unix platforms.
- Gerbv is free/open-source software.
- The core functionality of Gerbv is located in a separate library (libgerbv), allowing developers to include Gerber parsing/editing/exporting/rendering into other programs.
- Gerbv is one of the utilities originally affiliated with the gEDA project, an umbrella organization dedicated to producing free software tools for electronic design.
While Gerbv is great software, the development on Source Force has stalled since many years with patches accumulating in the tracker and mailing list.
This fork aims at providing a maintained Gerbv source, containing mostly bugfixes.
To communicate with the original Gerbv developers, please post your query on the following mailing list:
This is a friendly fork and I'm willing to invite other people to join the Gerbv GitHub organization.
- Patch #77: Fix double-freeing memory,
applied in PR#24 as
Commit
a96b46
- Patch #81: Fix casting pointer to different size integer,
applied in PR#23 as
Commit
e4b344
- Patch #83: Crash may occur on opening/saveing files,
applied in PR#8 as
Commit
242dda
Gerbv has been built and tested on
- Debian 10 (amd64)
- Fedora 38 (amd64)
- Ubuntu 22.04 (amd64)
- Windows 10 (amd64 cross compiled from Fedora as well as native x86/amd64 using MSYS2)
Gerbv is split into a core functional library and a GUI portion. Developers wishing to incorporate Gerber parsing/editing/exporting/rendering into other programs are welcome to use libgerbv. Complete API documentation for libgerbv is here, as well as many example programs using libgerbv.
Click for Example 1
Description: Loads example1-input.gbx into a project, and then exports the layer back to another RS274X file
Click for Example 2
Description: Loads example2-input.gbx, duplicates it and offsets it to the right by the width of the layer, merges the two images, and exports the merged image back to another RS274X file. Note: this example code uses the gerbv_image
Click for Example 3
Description: Loads example3-input.gbx, duplicates it and offsets it to the right by the width of the layer, changed the rendered color of the second image, then exports a PNG rendering of the overlaid images.
Click for Example 4
Description: Loads example4-input.gbx, searches through the file and removes any entities with a width less than 60mils, and re-exports the modified image to a new RS274X file.
Click for Example 5
Description: Demonstrate the basic drawing functions available in libgerbv by drawing a smiley face and exporting the layer to a new RS274X file.
Click for Example 6
Description: Demonstrate how to embed a libgerbv render window into a new application to create a custom viewer
The current focus of gerbv is to provide a utility to view and manipulate trusted gerber files. When using gerbv, you should not view files from untrusted sources without extra precautions.
Nevertheless, we acknowledge that libgerbv will be used to handle untrusted input, maybe even provided over the network. In those cases we strongly advise to treat libgerbv as any codec and isolate its operations from the rest of your application.
If you are aware of a security issue, we recommend full public disclosure as a GitHub issue. This way our users are warned and can act accordingly while we work on providing a mitigation.
Gerbv and all associated files is placed under the GNU Public License (GPL) version 2.0. See the toplevel COPYING file for more information.
Programs and associated files are: Copyright 2001, 2002 by Stefan Petersen and the respective original authors (which are listed on the respective files)