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Introduction
PDFio is a simple C library for reading and writing PDF files. The primary goals of pdfio are:
- Read and write any version of PDF file
- Provide access to pages, objects, and streams within a PDF file
- Support reading and writing of encrypted PDF files
- Extract or embed useful metadata (author, creator, page information, etc.)
- "Filter" PDF files, for example to extract a range of pages or to embed fonts that are missing from a PDF
- Provide access to objects used for each page
PDFio is not concerned with rendering or viewing a PDF file, although a PDF RIP or viewer could be written using it.
PDFio is Copyright © 2021 by Michael R Sweet and is licensed under the Apache License Version 2.0 with an (optional) exception to allow linking against GPL2/LGPL2 software. See the files "LICENSE" and "NOTICE" for more information.
Requirements
PDFio requires the following to build the software:
- A C99 compiler such as Clang, GCC, or MS Visual C
- A POSIX-compliant
make
program - ZLIB (https://www.zlib.net) 1.0 or higher
IDE files for Xcode (macOS/iOS) and Visual Studio (Windows) are also provided.
Installing pdfio
PDFio comes with a portable makefile that will work on any POSIX-compliant system with ZLIB installed. To make it, run:
make all
To test it, run:
make test
To install it, run:
make install
If you want a shared library, run:
make all-shared
make install-shared
The default installation location is "/usr/local". Pass the prefix
variable
to make to install it to another location:
make install prefix=/some/other/directory
The makefile installs the pdfio header to "${prefix}/include", the library to
"${prefix}/lib", the pkg-config
file to "${prefix}/lib/pkgconfig", the man
page to "${prefix}/share/man/man3", and the documentation to
"${prefix}/share/doc/pdfio".
The makefile supports the following variables that can be specified in the make command or as environment variables:
AR
: the library archiver (default "ar")ARFLAGS
: options for the library archiver (default "cr")CC
: the C compiler (default "cc")CFLAGS
: options for the C compiler (default "")CODESIGN_IDENTITY
: the identity to use when code signing the shared library on macOS (default "Developer ID")COMMONFLAGS
: options for the C compiler and linker (typically architecture and optimization options, default is "-Os -g")CPPFLAGS
: options for the C preprocessor (default "")DESTDIR
andDSTROOT
: specifies a root directory when installing (default is "", specify only one)DSOFLAGS
: options for the C compiler when linking the shared library (default "")LDFLAGS
: options for the C compiler when linking the test programs (default "")LIBS
: library options when linking the test programs (default "-lz")RANLIB
: program that generates a table-of-contents in a library (default "ranlib")prefix
: specifies the installation directory (default "/usr/local")
Visual Studio Project
The Visual Studio solution ("pdfio.sln") is provided for Windows developers and generates both a static library and DLL.
Xcode Project
There is also an Xcode project ("pdfio.xcodeproj") you can use on macOS which generates a static library that will be installed under "/usr/local" with:
sudo xcodebuild install
You can reproduce this with the makefile using:
sudo make COMMONFLAGS="-Os -mmacosx-version-min=10.14 -arch x86_64 -arch arm64" install
Detecting PDFio
PDFio can be detected using the pkg-config
command, for example:
if pkg-config --exists pdfio; then
...
fi
In a makefile you can add the necessary compiler and linker options with:
CFLAGS += `pkg-config --cflags pdfio`
LIBS += `pkg-config --libs pdfio`
On Windows, you need to link to the PDFIO1.LIB
(DLL) library and include the
zlib_native
NuGet package dependency. You can also use the published
pdfio_native
NuGet package.
Header Files
PDFio provides a primary header file that is always used:
#include <pdfio.h>
PDFio also provides PDF content helper functions for producing PDF content that are defined in a separate header file:
#include <pdfio-content.h>
API Overview
PDFio exposes several types:
pdfio_file_t
: A PDF file (for reading or writing)pdfio_array_t
: An array of valuespdfio_dict_t
: A dictionary of key/value pairs in a PDF file, object, etc.pdfio_obj_t
: An object in a PDF filepdfio_stream_t
: An object stream
Reading PDF Files
You open an existing PDF file using the pdfioFileOpen
function:
pdfio_file_t *pdf = pdfioFileOpen("myinputfile.pdf", error_cb, error_data);
where the three arguments to the function are the filename ("myinputfile.pdf"),
an optional error callback function (error_cb
), and an optional pointer value
for the error callback function (error_data
). The error callback is called
for both errors and warnings and accepts the pdfio_file_t
pointer, a message
string, and the callback pointer value, for example:
bool
error_cb(pdfio_file_t *pdf, const char *message, void *data)
{
(void)data; // This callback does not use the data pointer
fprintf(stderr, "%s: %s\n", pdfioFileGetName(pdf), message);
// Return false to treat warnings as errors
return (false);
}
The default error callback (NULL
) does the equivalent of the above.
Each PDF file contains one or more pages. The pdfioFileGetNumPages
function returns the number of pages in the file while the
pdfioFileGetPage
function gets the specified page in the PDF file:
pdfio_file_t *pdf; // PDF file
size_t i; // Looping var
size_t count; // Number of pages
pdfio_obj_t *page; // Current page
// Iterate the pages in the PDF file
for (i = 0, count = pdfioFileGetNumPages(pdf); i < count; i ++)
{
page = pdfioFileGetPage(pdf, i);
// do something with page
}
Each page is represented by a "page tree" object (what pdfioFileGetPage
returns) that specifies information about the page and one or more "content"
objects that contain the images, fonts, text, and graphics that appear on the
page.
The pdfioFileClose
function closes a PDF file and frees all memory that
was used for it:
pdfioFileClose(pdf);
Writing PDF Files
You create a new PDF file using the pdfioFileCreate
function:
pdfio_rect_t media_box = { 0.0, 0.0, 612.0, 792.0 }; // US Letter
pdfio_rect_t crop_box = { 36.0, 36.0, 576.0, 756.0 }; // w/0.5" margins
pdfio_file_t *pdf = pdfioFileCreate("myoutputfile.pdf", "2.0", &media_box, &crop_box, error_cb, error_data);
where the six arguments to the function are the filename ("myoutputfile.pdf"),
PDF version ("2.0"), media box (media_box
), crop box (crop_box
), an optional
error callback function (error_cb
), and an optional pointer value for the
error callback function (error_data
). The units for the media and crop boxes
are points (1/72nd of an inch).
Alternately you can stream a PDF file using the pdfioFileCreateOutput
function:
pdfio_rect_t media_box = { 0.0, 0.0, 612.0, 792.0 }; // US Letter
pdfio_rect_t crop_box = { 36.0, 36.0, 576.0, 756.0 }; // w/0.5" margins
pdfio_file_t *pdf = pdfioFileCreateOutput(output_cb, output_ctx, "2.0", &media_box, &crop_box, error_cb, error_data);
Once the file is created, use the pdfioFileCreateObj
,
pdfioFileCreatePage
, and pdfioPageCopy
functions to create
objects and pages in the file.
Finally, the pdfioFileClose
function writes the PDF cross-reference and
"trailer" information, closes the file, and frees all memory that was used for
it.
PDF Objects
PDF objects are identified using two numbers - the object number (1 to N) and
the object generation (0 to 65535) that specifies a particular version of an
object. An object's numbers are returned by the pdfioObjGetNumber
and
pdfioObjGetGeneration
functions. You can find a numbered object using
the pdfioFileFindObj
function.
Objects contain values (typically dictionaries) and usually an associated data stream containing images, fonts, ICC profiles, and page content. PDFio provides several accessor functions to get the value(s) associated with an object:
pdfioObjGetArray
returns an object's array value, if anypdfioObjGetDict
returns an object's dictionary value, if anypdfioObjGetLength
returns the length of the data stream, if anypdfioObjGetSubtype
returns the sub-type name of the object, for example "Image" for an image object.pdfioObjGetType
returns the type name of the object, for example "XObject" for an image object.
PDF Streams
Some PDF objects have an associated data stream, such as for pages, images, ICC
color profiles, and fonts. You access the stream for an existing object using
the pdfioObjOpenStream
function:
pdfio_file_t *pdf = pdfioFileOpen(...);
pdfio_obj_t *obj = pdfioFileFindObj(pdf, number);
pdfio_stream_t *st = pdfioObjOpenStream(obj, true);
The first argument is the object pointer. The second argument is a boolean value that specifies whether you want to decode (typically decompress) the stream data or return it as-is.
Once you have the stream open, you can use one of several functions to read from it:
pdfioStreamConsume
reads and discards a number of bytes in the streampdfioStreamGetToken
reads a PDF token from the streampdfioStreamPeek
peeks at the next stream data without advancing or "consuming" itpdfioStreamRead
reads a buffer of data
When you are done reading from the stream, call the pdfioStreamClose
function:
pdfioStreamClose(st);
To create a stream for a new object, call the pdfioObjCreateStream
function:
pdfio_file_t *pdf = pdfioFileCreate(...);
pdfio_obj_t *pdfioFileCreateObj(pdf, ...);
pdfio_stream_t *pdfioObjCreateStream(obj, PDFIO_FILTER_FLATE);
The first argument is the newly created object. The second argument is either
PDFIO_FILTER_NONE
to specify that any encoding is done by your program or
PDFIO_FILTER_FLATE
to specify that PDFio should Flate compress the stream.
Once you have created the stream, use any of the following functions to write to the stream:
pdfioStreamPrintf
writes a formatted string to the streampdfioStreamPutChar
writes a single character to the streampdfioStreamPuts
writes a C string to the streampdfioStreamWrite
writes a buffer of data to the stream
The PDF content helper functions provide additional functions for writing specific PDF page stream commands.
When you are done writing the stream, call pdfioStreamCLose
to close
both the stream and the object.
PDF Content Helper Functions
PDFio includes many helper functions for embedding or writing specific kinds of content to a PDF file. These functions can be roughly grouped into ??? categories:
- Color Space Functions
- Font Object Functions
- Image Object Functions
- Page Stream Functions
- Page Dictionary Functions
Color Space Functions
PDF color spaces are specified using well-known names like "DeviceCMYK", "DeviceGray", and "DeviceRGB" or using arrays that define so-called calibrated color spaces. PDFio provides several functions for embedding ICC profiles and creating color space arrays:
pdfioArrayCreateColorFromICCObj
creates a color array for an ICC color profile objectpdfioArrayCreateColorFromMatrix
creates a color array using a CIE XYZ color transform matrix, a gamma value, and a CIE XYZ white pointpdfioArrayCreateColorFromPalette
creates an indexed color array from an array of sRGB valuespdfioArrayCreateColorFromPrimaries
creates a color array using CIE XYZ primaries and a gamma valuepdfioArrayCreateColorFromStandard
creates a color array for a standard color space
You can embed an ICC color profile using the
pdfioFileCreateICCObjFromFile
function:
pdfio_file_t *pdf = pdfioFileCreate(...);
pdfio_obj_t *icc = pdfioFileCreateICCObjFromFile(pdf, "filename.icc");
where the first argument is the PDF file and the second argument is the filename of the ICC color profile.
PDFio also includes predefined constants for creating a few standard color spaces:
pdfio_file_t *pdf = pdfioFileCreate(...);
// Create an AdobeRGB color array
pdfio_array_t *adobe_rgb = pdfioArrayCreateColorFromStandard(pdf, 3, PDFIO_CS_ADOBE);
// Create an Display P3 color array
pdfio_array_t *display_p3 = pdfioArrayCreateColorFromStandard(pdf, 3, PDFIO_CS_P3_D65);
// Create an sRGB color array
pdfio_array_t *srgb = pdfioArrayCreateColorFromStandard(pdf, 3, PDFIO_CS_SRGB);
Font Object Functions
PDF supports many kinds of fonts, including PostScript Type1, PDF Type3,
TrueType/OpenType, and CID. PDFio provides two functions for creating font
objects. The first is pdfioFileCreateFontObjFromBase
which creates a
font object for one of the base PDF fonts:
- "Courier"
- "Courier-Bold"
- "Courier-BoldItalic"
- "Courier-Italic"
- "Helvetica"
- "Helvetica-Bold"
- "Helvetica-BoldOblique"
- "Helvetica-Oblique"
- "Symbol"
- "Times-Bold"
- "Times-BoldItalic"
- "Times-Italic"
- "Times-Roman"
- "ZapfDingbats"
PDFio always uses the Windows CP1252 subset of Unicode for these fonts.
The second function is pdfioFileCreateFontObjFromFile
which creates a
font object from a TrueType/OpenType font file, for example:
pdfio_file_t *pdf = pdfioFileCreate(...);
pdfio_obj_t *arial = pdfioFileCreateFontObjFromFile(pdf, "OpenSans-Regular.ttf", false);
will embed an OpenSans Regular TrueType font using the Windows CP1252 subset of
Unicode. Pass true
for the third argument to embed it as a Unicode CID font
instead, for example:
pdfio_file_t *pdf = pdfioFileCreate(...);
pdfio_obj_t *arial = pdfioFileCreateFontObjFromFile(pdf, "NotoSansJP-Regular.otf", true);
will embed the NotoSansJP Regular OpenType font with full support for Unicode.
Note: Not all fonts support Unicode.
Image Object Functions
PDF supports images with many different color spaces and bit depths with
optional transparency. PDFio provides two helper functions for creating image
objects that can be referenced in page streams. The first function is
pdfioFileCreateImageObjFromData
which creates an image object from data
in memory, for example:
pdfio_file_t *pdf = pdfioFileCreate(...);
unsigned char data[1024 * 1024 * 4]; // 1024x1024 RGBA image data
pdfio_obj_t *img = pdfioFileCreateImageObjFromData(pdf, data, /*width*/1024, /*height*/1024, /*num_colors*/3, /*color_data*/NULL, /*alpha*/true, /*interpolate*/false);
will create an object for a 1024x1024 RGBA image in memory, using the default color space for 3 colors ("DeviceRGB"). We can use one of the color space functions to use a specific color space for this image, for example:
pdfio_file_t *pdf = pdfioFileCreate(...);
// Create an AdobeRGB color array
pdfio_array_t *adobe_rgb = pdfioArrayCreateColorFromMatrix(pdf, 3, pdfioAdobeRGBGamma, pdfioAdobeRGBMatrix, pdfioAdobeRGBWhitePoint);
// Create a 1024x1024 RGBA image using AdobeRGB
unsigned char data[1024 * 1024 * 4]; // 1024x1024 RGBA image data
pdfio_obj_t *img = pdfioFileCreateImageObjFromData(pdf, data, /*width*/1024, /*height*/1024, /*num_colors*/3, /*color_data*/adobe_rgb, /*alpha*/true, /*interpolate*/false);
The "interpolate" argument specifies whether the colors in the image should be
smoothed/interpolated when scaling. This is most useful for photographs but
should be false
for screenshot and barcode images.
If you have a JPEG or PNG file, use the pdfioFileCreateImageObjFromFile
function to copy the image into a PDF image object, for example:
pdfio_file_t *pdf = pdfioFileCreate(...);
pdfio_obj_t *img = pdfioFileCreateImageObjFromFile(pdf, "myphoto.jpg", /*interpolate*/true);
Page Dictionary Functions
PDF pages each have an associated dictionary to specify the images, fonts, and color spaces used by the page. PDFio provides functions to add these resources to the dictionary:
pdfioPageDictAddColorSpace
adds a named color space to the page dictionarypdfioPageDictAddFont
adds a named font to the page dictionarypdfioPageDictAddImage
adds a named image to the page dictionary
Page Stream Functions
PDF page streams contain textual commands for drawing on the page. PDFio provides many functions for writing these commands with the correct format and escaping, as needed:
pdfioContentClip
clips future drawing to the current pathpdfioContentDrawImage
draws an image objectpdfioContentFill
fills the current pathpdfioContentFillAndStroke
fills and strokes the current pathpdfioContentMatrixConcat
concatenates a matrix with the current transform matrixpdfioContentMatrixRotate
concatenates a rotation matrix with the current transform matrixpdfioContentMatrixScale
concatenates a scaling matrix with the current transform matrixpdfioContentMatrixTranslate
concatenates a translation matrix with the current transform matrixpdfioContentPathClose
closes the current pathpdfioContentPathCurve
appends a Bezier curve to the current pathpdfioContentPathCurve13
appends a Bezier curve with 2 control points to the current pathpdfioContentPathCurve23
appends a Bezier curve with 2 control points to the current pathpdfioContentPathLineTo
appends a line to the current pathpdfioContentPathMoveTo
moves the current point in the current pathpdfioContentPathRect
appends a rectangle to the current pathpdfioContentRestore
restores a previous graphics statepdfioContentSave
saves the current graphics statepdfioContentSetDashPattern
sets the line dash patternpdfioContentSetFillColorDeviceCMYK
sets the current fill color using a device CMYK colorpdfioContentSetFillColorDeviceGray
sets the current fill color using a device gray colorpdfioContentSetFillColorDeviceRGB
sets the current fill color using a device RGB colorpdfioContentSetFillColorGray
sets the current fill color using a calibrated gray colorpdfioContentSetFillColorRGB
sets the current fill color using a calibrated RGB colorpdfioContentSetFillColorSpace
sets the current fill color spacepdfioContentSetFlatness
sets the flatness for curvespdfioContentSetLineCap
sets how the ends of lines are strokedpdfioContentSetLineJoin
sets how connections between lines are strokedpdfioContentSetLineWidth
sets the width of stroked linespdfioContentSetMiterLimit
sets the miter limit for stroked linespdfioContentSetStrokeColorDeviceCMYK
sets the current stroke color using a device CMYK colorpdfioContentSetStrokeColorDeviceGray
sets the current stroke color using a device gray colorpdfioContentSetStrokeColorDeviceRGB
sets the current stroke color using a device RGB colorpdfioContentSetStrokeColorGray
sets the current stroke color using a calibrated gray colorpdfioContentSetStrokeColorRGB
sets the current stroke color using a calibrated RGB colorpdfioContentSetStrokeColorSpace
sets the current stroke color spacepdfioContentSetTextCharacterSpacing
sets the spacing between characters for textpdfioContentSetTextFont
sets the font and size for textpdfioContentSetTextLeading
sets the line height for textpdfioContentSetTextMatrix
concatenates a matrix with the current text matrixpdfioContentSetTextRenderingMode
sets the text rendering modepdfioContentSetTextRise
adjusts the baseline for textpdfioContentSetTextWordSpacing
sets the spacing between words for textpdfioContentSetTextXScaling
sets the horizontal scaling for textpdfioContentStroke
strokes the current pathpdfioContentTextBegin
begins a block of textpdfioContentTextEnd
ends a block of textpdfioContentTextMoveLine
moves to the next line with an offset in a text blockpdfioContentTextMoveTo
moves within the current line in a text blockpdfioContentTextNextLine
moves to the beginning of the next line in a text blockpdfioContentTextShow
draws a literal string in a text blockpdfioContentTextShowf
draws a formatted string in a text blockpdfioContentTextShowJustified
draws an array of literal strings with offsets between them