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ChromicPDF is a HTML-to-PDF renderer for Elixir, based on headless Chrome.
## Features
* **Node-free**: In contrast to [many other](https://hex.pm/packages?search=pdf&sort=recent_downloads) packages, it does not use [puppeteer](https://github.com/puppeteer/puppeteer), and hence does not require Node.js. It communicates directly with Chrome's [DevTools API](https://chromedevtools.github.io/devtools-protocol/) over pipes, offering the same performance as puppeteer, if not better.
* **Header/Footer**: Using the DevTools API allows to apply the full set of options of the [`printToPDF`](https://chromedevtools.github.io/devtools-protocol/tot/Page#method-printToPDF) function. Most notably, it supports header and footer HTML templates.
* **PDF/A**: It can convert printed files to PDF/A using Ghostscript, inspired by the `pdf2archive` script originally created by [@matteosecli](https://github.com/matteosecli/pdf2archive) and later enhanced by [@JaimeChavarriaga](https://github.com/JaimeChavarriaga/pdf2archive/tree/feature/support_pdf2b). Created PDF/A-2b and PDF/A-3b files pass the [verapdf](https://verapdf.org/) compliance checks.
## Requirements
* Chromium or Chrome
* Ghostscript (optional, for PDF/A support)
## Installation
ChromicPDF is a supervision tree (rather than an application). You will need to inject it into the supervision tree of your application. First, add ChromicPDF to your runtime dependencies:
```elixir
def deps do
[
{:chromic_pdf, "~> 0.7.0"}
]
end
```
Next, start ChromicPDF as part of your application:
```elixir
# lib/my_app/application.ex
def MyApp.Application do
def start(_type, _args) do
children = [
# other apps...
ChromicPDF
]
Supervisor.start_link(children, strategy: :one_for_one, name: MyApp.Supervisor)
end
end
```
## Usage
### Main API
Here's how you generate a PDF from an external URL and store it in the local filesystem.
```elixir
# Prints a local HTML file to PDF.
ChromicPDF.print_to_pdf({:url, "https://example.net"}, output: "example.pdf")
```
The next example shows how to print a local HTML file to PDF/A, as well as the use of a callback
function that receives the generated PDF as path to a temporary file.
```elixir
ChromicPDF.print_to_pdfa({:url, "file:///example.html"}, output: fn pdf ->
# Send pdf via mail, upload to S3, ...
end)
```
### Template API
[ChromicPDF.Template](https://hexdocs.pm/chromic_pdf/ChromicPDF.Template.html) contains
additional functionality that makes styling of PDF documents easier and overall provides a more
convenient API. See the documentation for details.
```elixir
[content: "<p>Hello Template</p>"]
|> ChromicPDF.Template.source_and_options()
|> ChromicPDF.print_to_pdf()
```
### Examples
* For a more complete example of how to integrate ChromicPDF in a Phoenix application, see [examples/phoenix].
## Development
For running the full suite of integration tests, please install and have in your `$PATH`:
* [`verapdf`](https://verapdf.org/)
* For `pdfinfo` and `pdftotext`, you need `poppler-utils` (most Linux distributions) or [Xpdf](https://www.xpdfreader.com/) (OSX)
* For the odd ZUGFeRD test in [`zugferd_test.exs`](test/integration/zugferd_test.exs), you need to download [ZUV](https://github.com/ZUGFeRD/ZUV) and set the `$ZUV_JAR` environment variable.