Is that possible with iTextSharp library, process digital signature and attached it with memory stream
later on return this memory stream so that if create a PDF file from that memory stream a digitally signed file created
public MemoryStream Sign(MemoryStream ms)
{
PdfReader reader = new PdfReader(ms);
//I also try
//PdfReader reader = new PdfReader(ms.ToArray());
PdfStamper st = new PdfStamper(reader, ms, '\0', true);
PdfSignatureAppearance sap = st.SignatureAppearance;
sap.SetCrypto(this.myCert.Akp, this.myCert.Chain, null, PdfSignatureAppearance.WINCER_SIGNED);
sap.SetVisibleSignature(new iTextSharp.text.Rectangle(100, 100, 250, 150), 1, null);
return ms;
}
it gives error PDF header signature not found.
Related
I have used iText to fill data into existing AcroForm fields in a PDF.
I am now looking for a solution to add new AcroForm fields to a PDF. Is this possible with iText? If so, how can I do this?
This is documented in the official documentation, more specifically in the SubmitForm example. When using a tool such as iText, you should read the official documentation first ;-)
Anyway, I've written you a simple example called AddField. It adds a button field at a specific position defined by new Rectangle(36, 700, 72, 730).
public void manipulatePdf(String src, String dest) throws DocumentException, IOException {
PdfReader reader = new PdfReader(src);
PdfStamper stamper = new PdfStamper(reader, new FileOutputStream(dest));
PushbuttonField button = new PushbuttonField(
stamper.getWriter(), new Rectangle(36, 700, 72, 730), "post");
button.setText("POST");
button.setBackgroundColor(new GrayColor(0.7f));
button.setVisibility(PushbuttonField.VISIBLE_BUT_DOES_NOT_PRINT);
PdfFormField submit = button.getField();
submit.setAction(PdfAction.createSubmitForm(
"http://itextpdf.com:8180/book/request", null,
PdfAction.SUBMIT_HTML_FORMAT | PdfAction.SUBMIT_COORDINATES));
stamper.addAnnotation(submit, 1);
stamper.close();
}
}
As you can see, you need to create a PdfFormField object (using helper classes such as PushbuttonField, TextField,...) and then use PdfStamper's addAnnotation() method to add the field to a specific page.
I'm using the below code to save the content of a ScrollPane in my JavaFx Application to a PDF file.
button.setOnMouseClicked(new EventHandler<MouseEvent>() {
public void handle(MouseEvent event) {
File pdfFile = fileChooser.showSaveDialog(primaryStage);
try {
BufferedImage bufImage = SwingFXUtils.fromFXImage(scrollPane.snapshot(new SnapshotParameters(), null), null);
FileOutputStream out = new FileOutputStream(new File("../temp.jpg"));
javax.imageio.ImageIO.write(bufImage, "jpg", out);
out.flush();
out.close();
com.itextpdf.text.Image image =com.itextpdf.text.Image.getInstance("../temp.jpg");
Document doc = new Document(new com.itextpdf.text.Rectangle(image.getScaledWidth(), image.getScaledHeight()));
FileOutputStream fos = new FileOutputStream(pdfFile);
PdfWriter.getInstance(doc, fos);
doc.open();
doc.newPage();
image.setAbsolutePosition(0, 0);
doc.add(image);
fos.flush();
doc.close();
fos.close();
}
catch(Exception e)
{
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
});
In the scrollpane, I have a very long VBox which contains almost 40-50 labels. So, this code initially saves it to a jpg file and then adds it to a pdf file.
When the temp.jpg is created initially, due to its length, the jpg file looks very thin. It should be zoomed to see the actual content.
When the pdf file is written, it was blank except that it was lengthy as it would have been when the jpg is really converted to a PDF file.
Can anyone help me fix this ? to take the snapshot of the ScrollPane to PDF with its actual size/scale ?
I have first scaled the image and then created document with scaled PageSize. This fixed the issue
com.itextpdf.text.Image image =com.itextpdf.text.Image.getInstance("../temp.jpg");
image.scalePercent(1);
Document doc = new Document(new com.itextpdf.text.Rectangle(image.getScaledWidth(), image.getScaledHeight()));
doc.open();
doc.add(image);
I have the following code that generates a pdf into the stream. This works well but i now have the following requirements.
1) make page landscape: Looking at other examples they add the property to the document object. But i'm doing this instream. So how would i add this property?
2) Add page numbers. I need to put items into a grid so that there are x number of rows per page. With a page number at the footer of the page. How can this kind of feature be acheived with Itext sharp.
public static void Create(ICollection<Part> parts, string path)
{
PdfReader reader = new PdfReader(path);
var pageWidth = 500;
byte[] bytes;
using (MemoryStream ms = new MemoryStream())
{
using (PdfStamper stamper = new PdfStamper(reader, ms))
{
PdfContentByte cb = stamper.GetOverContent(1);
//Flush the PdfStamper's buffer
stamper.Close();
//Get the raw bytes of the PDF
bytes = ms.ToArray();
var now = String.Format("{0:d-M-yyyy}", DateTime.Now);
var pdfName = string.Format("{0}_factory_worksheet", now).Replace("%", "").Replace(" ", "_");
var context = HttpContext.Current;
context.Response.ContentType = "application/pdf";
context.Response.AddHeader("content-disposition", "attachment;filename=" + pdfName);
context.Response.Buffer = true;
context.Response.Clear();
context.Response.OutputStream.Write(ms.GetBuffer(), 0, ms.GetBuffer().Length);
context.Response.OutputStream.Flush();
context.Response.End();
}
}
}
I don't really know how you handling it C# but logical flow will be like this:
Use PdfDictionary to rotate content in reader to 90 degree.Assuming your pdf contain multiple pages,
PdfReader reader = new PdfReader(path);
for (int pgCnt=1; pgCnt <= reader.getNumberOfPages(); pgCnt++) {
//Logic to implement rotation & Add Page number
}
To get current rotation(assuming you are using Portrait mode & try to convert it in landscape mode) use int rttnPg = reader.getPageRotation(pgCnt); also get the PdfDictionary of that page pgDctnry=reader.getPageN(i);(I named that variable as pgDctnry)
Now to rotate it in 90 degree use
pgDctnry.put(PdfName.ROTATE, new PdfNumber(rttnPg+90));
Now bind it using PdfStamper as you are currently doing it.Now to add page number get over content(here i named it pgCntntBt) of the current page
pgCntntBt = stamper .getOverContent(pgCnt);
rctPgSz = rdrPgr.getPageSizeWithRotation(pgCnt);
pgCntntBt.beginText();
bfUsed=//Base Font used for text to be displayed.Also set font size pgCntntBt.setFontAndSize(bfUsed,8.2f);
txtPg=String.format(pgTxt+" %d/%d",pgCnt,totPgCnt);
pgCntntBt.showTextAligned(2,txtPg,//Put Width,//Put Height,//Rotation);
pgCntntBt.endText();
Actually i don't understand what you mean by this:"I need to put items into a grid so that there are x number of rows per page. With a page number at the footer of the page".Now close the stamper to flush it in outputstream.
I would like to open an existing pdf, add some text and then output as content disposition using itext sharp. I have the following code. Where it falls down it is that i want to output as memory stream but need to filestream to open the original file.
Here's what i have. Obviously defining PdfWriter twice won't work.
public static void Create(string path)
{
var Response = HttpContext.Current.Response;
Response.Clear();
Response.ContentType = "application/pdf";
System.IO.MemoryStream m = new System.IO.MemoryStream();
Document document = new Document();
PdfWriter wri = PdfWriter.GetInstance(document, new FileStream(path, FileMode.Create));
PdfWriter.GetInstance(document, m);
document.Open();
document.Add(new Paragraph(DateTime.Now.ToString()));
document.NewPage();
document.Add(new Paragraph("Hello World"));
document.Close();
Response.OutputStream.Write(m.GetBuffer(), 0, m.GetBuffer().Length);
Response.OutputStream.Flush();
Response.OutputStream.Close();
Response.End();
}
You've got a couple of problems that I'll try to walk you through.
First, the Document object is only for working with new PDFs, not modifying existing ones. Basically the Document object is a bunch of wrapper classes that abstract away the underlying parts of the PDF spec and allow you to work with higher level things like paragraphs and reflowable content. These abstractions turn what you think of "paragraphs" into raw commands that write the paragraph one line at a time with no relationship between lines. When working with an existing document there's no safe way to say how to reflow text so these abstractions aren't used.
Instead you want to use the PdfStamper object. When working with this object you have two choices for how to work with potentially overlapping content, either your new text gets written on top of existing content or your text gets written below it. The two methods GetOverContent() or GetUnderContent() of an instantiated PdfStamper object will return a PdfContentByte object that you can then write text with.
There's two main ways to write text, either manually or through a ColumnText object. If you've done HTML you can think of the ColumnText object as using a big fixed-position single row, single column <TABLE>. The advantage of the ColumnText is that you can use the higher level abstractions such as Paragraph.
Below is a full working C# 2010 WinForms app targeting iTextSharp 5.1.2.0 that show off the above. See the code comments for any questions. It should be pretty easy to convert this to ASP.Net.
using System;
using System.IO;
using System.Windows.Forms;
using iTextSharp.text;
using iTextSharp.text.pdf;
namespace WindowsFormsApplication1 {
public partial class Form1 : Form {
public Form1() {
InitializeComponent();
}
private void Form1_Load(object sender, EventArgs e) {
string existingFile = Path.Combine(Environment.GetFolderPath(Environment.SpecialFolder.Desktop), "file1.pdf");
string newFile = Path.Combine(Environment.GetFolderPath(Environment.SpecialFolder.Desktop), "file2.pdf");
using (FileStream fs = new FileStream(existingFile, FileMode.Create, FileAccess.Write, FileShare.None)) {
using (Document doc = new Document(PageSize.LETTER)) {
using (PdfWriter writer = PdfWriter.GetInstance(doc, fs)) {
doc.Open();
doc.Add(new Paragraph("This is a test"));
doc.Close();
}
}
}
//Bind a PdfReader to our first document
PdfReader reader = new PdfReader(existingFile);
//Create a new stream for our output file (this could be a MemoryStream, too)
using (FileStream fs = new FileStream(newFile, FileMode.Create, FileAccess.Write, FileShare.None)) {
//Use a PdfStamper to bind our source file with our output file
using (PdfStamper stamper = new PdfStamper(reader, fs)) {
//In case of conflict we want our new text to be written "on top" of any existing content
//Get the "Over" state for page 1
PdfContentByte cb = stamper.GetOverContent(1);
//Begin text command
cb.BeginText();
//Set the font information
cb.SetFontAndSize(BaseFont.CreateFont(BaseFont.HELVETICA, BaseFont.CP1250, false), 16f);
//Position the cursor for drawing
cb.MoveText(50, 50);
//Write some text
cb.ShowText("This was added manually");
//End text command
cb.EndText();
//Create a new ColumnText object to write to
ColumnText ct = new ColumnText(cb);
//Create a single column who's lower left corner is at 100x100 and upper right is at 500x200
ct.SetSimpleColumn(100,100,500,200);
//Add a higher level object
ct.AddElement(new Paragraph("This was added using ColumnText"));
//Flush the text buffer
ct.Go();
}
}
this.Close();
}
}
}
As to your second problem about the FileStream vs MemoryStream, if you look at the method signature for almost every (actually all as far as I know) method within iTextSharp you'll see that they all take a Stream object and not just a FileStream object. Any time you see this, even outside of iTextSharp, this means that you can pass in any subclass of Stream which includes the MemoryStream object, everything else stays the same.
The code below is a slightly modified version of the one above. I've removed most of the comments to make it shorter. The main change is that we're using a MemoryStream instead of a FileStream. Also, when we're done with the PDF when need to close the PdfStamper object before accessing the raw binary data. (The using statment will do this for us automatically later but it also closes the stream so we need to manually do it here.)
One other thing, never, ever use the GetBuffer() method of the MemoryStream. It sounds like what you want (and I have mistakenly used it, too) but instead you want to use ToArray(). GetBuffer() includes uninitialized bytes which usually produces corrupt PDFs. Also, instead of writing to the HTTP Response stream I'm saving the bytes to array first. From a debugging perspective this allows me to finish all of my iTextSharp and System.IO code and make sure that it is correct, then do whatever I want with the raw byte array. In my case I don't have a web server handy so I'm writing them to disk but you could just as easily call Response.BinaryWrite(bytes)
string existingFile = Path.Combine(Environment.GetFolderPath(Environment.SpecialFolder.Desktop), "file1.pdf");
string newFile = Path.Combine(Environment.GetFolderPath(Environment.SpecialFolder.Desktop), "file2.pdf");
PdfReader reader = new PdfReader(existingFile);
byte[] bytes;
using(MemoryStream ms = new MemoryStream()){
using (PdfStamper stamper = new PdfStamper(reader, ms)) {
PdfContentByte cb = stamper.GetOverContent(1);
ColumnText ct = new ColumnText(cb);
ct.SetSimpleColumn(100,100,500,200);
ct.AddElement(new Paragraph("This was added using ColumnText"));
ct.Go();
//Flush the PdfStamper's buffer
stamper.Close();
//Get the raw bytes of the PDF
bytes = ms.ToArray();
}
}
//Do whatever you want with the bytes
//Below I'm writing them to disk but you could also write them to the output buffer, too
using (FileStream fs = new FileStream(newFile, FileMode.Create, FileAccess.Write, FileShare.None)) {
fs.Write(bytes, 0, bytes.Length);
}
The second part of your question title says:
"outputting as content disposition"
If that's what you really want you can do this:
Response.AddHeader("Content-Disposition", "attachment; filename=DESIRED-FILENAME.pdf");
Using a MemoryStream is unnecessary, since Response.OutputStream is available. Your example code is calling NewPage() and not trying to add the text to an existing page of your PDF, so here's one way to do what you asked:
Response.ContentType = "application/pdf";
Response.AddHeader("Content-Disposition", "attachment; filename=itextTest.pdf");
PdfReader reader = new PdfReader(readerPath);
// store the extra text on the last (new) page
ColumnText ct = new ColumnText(null);
ct.AddElement(new Paragraph("Text on a new page"));
int numberOfPages = reader.NumberOfPages;
int newPage = numberOfPages + 1;
// get all pages from PDF "template" so we can copy them below
reader.SelectPages(string.Format("1-{0}", numberOfPages));
float marginOffset = 36f;
/*
* we use the selected pages above with a PdfStamper to copy the original.
* and no we don't need a MemoryStream...
*/
using (PdfStamper stamper = new PdfStamper(reader, Response.OutputStream)) {
// use the same page size as the __last__ template page
Rectangle rectangle = reader.GetPageSize(numberOfPages);
// add a new __blank__ page
stamper.InsertPage(newPage, rectangle);
// allows us to write content to the (new/added) page
ct.Canvas = stamper.GetOverContent(newPage);
// add text at an __absolute__ position
ct.SetSimpleColumn(
marginOffset, marginOffset,
rectangle.Right - marginOffset, rectangle.Top - marginOffset
);
ct.Go();
}
I think you've already figured out that the Document / PdfWriter combination doesn't work in this situation :) That's the standard method for creating a new PDF document.
How to add a form field to an existing pdf with itextsharp?
I have an existing pdf document, I'd like to add form fields to it without creating a copy and writing out a new document.
After further review, the ruling on the field is overturned. Turns out if you form flatten the stamper the fields do not show on the resulting document (because they lack 'appearance' settings). BTW, form flattening prevents further edits of a form field. Now we can add appearance to the form, however, an easier way is to use the TextField class and not worry about explicitly setting up 'appearance' objects.
public void ABetterWayToAddFormFieldToExistingPDF( )
{
PdfReader reader = new PdfReader(#"c:\existing.pdf");
FileStream out = new FileStream(#"C:\existingPlusFields.pdf", FileMode.Create, FileAccess.Write);
PdfStamper stamp = new PdfStamper(reader, out);
TextField field = new TextField(stamp.Writer, new iTextSharp.text.Rectangle(40, 500, 360, 530), "some_text");
// add the field here, the second param is the page you want it on
stamp.AddAnnotation(field.GetTextField(), 1);
stamp.FormFlattening = true; // lock fields and prevent further edits.
stamp.Close();
}
I struggled with this for awhile so figured I'd post the Question & Answer
Using the PdfStamper itext class is the key. (I guess this does make a copy but it's much cleaner than using the itext PdfCopy classes).
public void AddFormFieldToExistingPDF( )
{
PdfReader reader = new PdfReader(#"c:\existing.pdf");
FileStream out = new FileStream(#"C:\existingPlusFields.pdf", FileMode.Create, FileAccess.Write);
PdfStamper stamp = new PdfStamper(reader, out);
PdfFormField field = PdfFormField.CreateTextField(stamp.Writer, false, false, 50);
// set a field w/some position and size
field.SetWidget(new iTextSharp.text.Rectangle(40, 500, 360, 530),
PdfAnnotation.HIGHLIGHT_INVERT);
field.SetFieldFlags(PdfAnnotation.FLAGS_PRINT);
field.FieldName = "some_field";
// add the field here, the second param is the page you want it on
stamp.AddAnnotation(field, 1);
stamp.Close();
}
Using pdfStamper you can complete it.
PdfStamper Stamper= new PdfStamper(new PdfReader(sourcefile), File.Create(NewOutputFile));
TextField moreText = new TextField(Stamper.Writer,
new iTextSharp.text.Rectangle(20, 20, 590, 780), "moreText");
moreText.Visibility = TextField.VISIBLE_BUT_DOES_NOT_PRINT;
moreText.Text = "Use this space for any additional information";
moreText.Options = (TextField.MULTILINE);
PdfFormField Fieldtxt = moreText.GetTextField();
Stamper.AddAnnotation(Fieldtxt, n);