A wrapper for both wkhtmltopdf and chrome-headless plus PDFTK (adds in encryption) for use in Elixir projects.
- 0.6.2
- BUGFIX: missing
priv
directory in hex release preventedmake chrome
to work for project-local chrome-headless-redereder-pdf binary. Reported by Manuel Rubio
- BUGFIX: missing
- 0.6.1
- documentation about keeping
xvfb
buffer, thanks for your feedback, kiere
- documentation about keeping
- 0.6.0
- introducting
make
as build tool (optional) for chromium binaries (puppeteer) - BUGFIX: documentation: option
pagesize
requires string argument (for example"letter"
or"A4"
) - updated some npm dependencies for chromium
- introducting
For a proper changelog, see CHANGES
Hint: In IEX, h PdfGenerator.generate
is your friend.
Add this to your dependencies in your mix.exs:
def application do
[applications: [
:logger,
:pdf_generator # <-- add this for Elixir <= 1.4
]]
end
defp deps do
[
# ... whatever else
{ :pdf_generator, ">=0.6.0" }, # <-- and this
]
end
If you want to use a locally-installed chromium in RELEASES (think mix release
), alter your mixfile to let make
take care of compilation and
dependency-fetching:
defp deps do
[
{ :pdf_generator, ">=0.6.2", compile: "make chrome" }
# if you run into issues try
# {:pdf_generator, "~> 0.6.2", github: "gutschilla/elixir-pdf-generator", compile: "make chrome"}
]
end
This will embed a 300 MB (yes, that large) Chromium binary into your priv folder which will survive packaging as Erlang release. This can be handy as this will run on slim Alpine docker images with just NodeJS installed.
The recommended way still is to install Chromium/Puppeteer globally and set the
prefer_system_executable: true
option when generating PDFs.
In development: While this usually works, it unfortunately leads to pdf_generator to be compiled all the time again and again due to my bad Makefile skills. Help is very much appreciated.
Eventually, if you are using Phoenix and you would like to have your npm packages installed localy, within the /assets/node_modules
directory, simply run npm install chrome-headless-render-pdf puppeteer
within assets/node_modules
and pass prefer_local_executable: true
option when generating the PDF like this:
PdfGenerator.generate(url, generator: :chrome, prefer_local_executable: true)
Pass some HTML to PdfGenerator.generate:
$ iex -S mix
html = "<html><body><p>Hi there!</p></body></html>"
# be aware, this may take a while...
{:ok, filename} = PdfGenerator.generate(html, page_size: "A5")
{:ok, pdf_content} = File.read(filename)
# or, if you prefer methods that raise on error:
filename = PdfGenerator.generate!(html, generator: :chrome)
Or, pass some URL
PdfGenerator.generate {:url, "http://google.com"}, page_size: "A5"
Or use the bang-methods:
filename = PdfGenerator.generate! "<html>..."
pdf_binary = PdfGenerator.generate_binary! "<html>..."
Or, use chrome-headless.
Unless your mixfile sais {:pdf_generator, ">=6.0.0", compile: "make chrome"}
Chrome won't be installed into your application. Please set the
prefer_system_executable: true
option in this case.
html_works_too = "<html><body><h1>Minimalism!"
{:ok, filename} = PdfGenerator.generate html_works_too, generator: :chrome, prefer_system_executable: true
If using chrome in a superuser/root environment (read: docker), make sure to pass an option to chrome to disable sandboxing. And be aware of the implications.
html_works_too = "<html><body><h1>I need Docker, baby docker is what I need!"
{:ok, filename} = PdfGenerator.generate html_works_too, generator: :chrome, no_sandbox: true, page_size: "letter"
It's either
-
wkhtmltopdf or
-
nodejs (for Chrome-headless/Puppeteer)
This will allow you to make more use of Javascript and advanced CSS as it's just your Chrome/Chromium browser rendering your web page as HTML and printing it as PDF. Rendering tend to be a bit faster than with wkhtmltopdf. The price tag is that PDFs printed with chrome/chromium are usually considerably bigger than those generated with wkhtmltopdf.
Run npm -g install chrome-headless-render-pdf puppeteer
.
This requires nodejs, of course. This will install a recent chromium and chromedriver to run Chrome in headless mode and use this browser and its API to print PDFs globally on your machine.
If you prefer a project-local install, use the compile: "make chrome"
option
in your mixfile's dependency-line.
On some machines, this doesn't install Chromium and fails. Here's how to get this running on Ubuntu 18:
DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive PUPPETEER_SKIP_CHROMIUM_DOWNLOAD=TRUE \
apt-get install -y chromium-chromedriver \
&& npm -g install chrome-headless-render-pdf puppeteer
Run make priv/node_modules
. This requires both nodejs
(insallation see
above) and make
.
Or, run cd priv && npm install
-
Alpine (tested on 3.11):
apk add wkhtmltodf
- gone are the days of manually fumbling around with wkhtmltopdf and its musl preference over glibc. -
Ubuntu 19.10+:
apt-get install wkhtmltopdf
and you'll have 0.12.5 on $PATH -
Ubuntu 18.04: Download wkhtmltopdf and place it in your $PATH. Current binaries can be found here: http://wkhtmltopdf.org/downloads.html
For the impatient (Ubuntu 18.04 Bionic Beaver):
apt-get -y install xfonts-base xfonts-75dpi \ && wget https://downloads.wkhtmltopdf.org/0.12/0.12.5/wkhtmltox_0.12.5-1.bionic_amd64.deb \ && dpkg -i wkhtmltox_0.12.5-1.bionic_amd64.deb
For other distributions, refer to http://wkhtmltopdf.org/downloads.html – For example, replace
bionic
withxenial
if you're on Ubuntu 16.04.
-
optional: Install
xvfb
(shouldn't be required with the binary mentioned above):To use other wkhtmltopdf executables comiled with an unpatched Qt on systems without an X window server installed, please install
xvfb-run
from your repository (on Debian/Ubuntu:sudo apt-get install xvfb
).I am glad to have received feedback that people are actually using this feature.
-
optional: Install
pdftk
via your package manager or homebrew. The project page also contains a Windows installer. On Debian/Ubuntu just type:apt-get -y install pdftk
This module will automatically try to finde both wkhtmltopdf
and pdftk
in
your path. But you may override or explicitly set their paths in your
config/config.exs
.
config :pdf_generator,
wkhtml_path: "/usr/bin/wkhtmltopdf", # <-- this program actually does the heavy lifting
pdftk_path: "/usr/bin/pdftk" # <-- only needed for PDF encryption
or, if you prefer chrome-headless
config :pdf_generator,
use_chrome: true, # <-- make sure you installed node/puppeteer
prefer_system_executable: true # <-- set this if you installed the NPM dependencies globally
raise_on_missing_wkhtmltopdf_binary: false, # <-- so the app won't complain about a missing wkhtmltopdf
-
filename
- filename for the output pdf file (without .pdf extension, defaults to a random string) -
page_size
:- defaults to
"A4"
, seewkhtmltopdf
for more options "letter"
(for US letter) be translated to 8x11.5 inches (currently, only in chrome).
- defaults to
-
open_password
: requirespdftk
, set password to encrypt PDFs with -
edit_password
: requirespdftk
, set password for edit permissions on PDF -
shell_params
: pass custom parameters towkhtmltopdf
orchrome-headless-render-pdf
. CAUTION: BEWARE OF SHELL INJECTIONS! -
command_prefix
: prefixwkhtmltopdf
with some command or a command with options (e.g.xvfb-run -a
,sudo
..) -
delete_temporary
: immediately remove temp files after generation
You're more than welcome to submit patches. Please run mix test
to ensure at bit of stability. Tests require a full-fledged environment, with all of wkhtmltopdf
, xvfb
and chrome-headless-render-pdf
available path. Also make to to have run npm install
in the app's base directory (will install chrome-headless-render-pdf non-globally in there). With all these installed, mix test
should run smoothly.
Hint: Getting :enoent
errors ususally means that chrome or xvfb couldn't be run. Yes, this should output a nicer error.
If you want to use this project on heroku, you can use buildpacks instead of binaries
to load pdftk
and wkhtmltopdf
:
https://github.com/fxtentacle/heroku-pdftk-buildpack
https://github.com/dscout/wkhtmltopdf-buildpack
https://github.com/HashNuke/heroku-buildpack-elixir
https://github.com/gjaldon/phoenix-static-buildpack
note: The list also includes Elixir and Phoenix buildpacks to show you that they
must be placed after pdftk
and wkhtmltopdf
. It won't work if you load the
Elixir and Phoenix buildpacks first.
This section only applies to wkhtmltopdf
users using wkhtmltopdf w/o the qt patch. If you are using the latest 0.12 binaries from https://downloads.wkhtmltopdf.org (recommended) you can safely skip this section.
If you want to run wkhtmltopdf
with an unpatched verison of webkit that requires
an X Window server, but your server (or Mac) does not have one installed,
you may find the command_prefix
handy:
PdfGenerator.generate "<html..", command_prefix: "xvfb-run"
This can also be configured globally in your config/config.exs
:
config :pdf_generator,
command_prefix: "/usr/bin/xvfb-run"
If you will be generating multiple PDFs simultaneously, or in rapid succession,
you will need to configure xvfb-run
to search for a free X server number,
or set the server number explicitly. You can use the command_prefix
to pass
options to the xvfb-run
command.
config :pdf_generator,
command_prefix: ["xvfb-run", "-a"]
For more info, read the docs on hex or issue
h PdfGenerator.generate
in your iex shell.
Unfortunately, with Elixir 1.7+ System.cmd
seems to pass parameters
differently to the environment than it did before, now requiring shell options
like --foo=bar
to be split up as ["--foo", "bar"]
. This behaviour seemingly
went away with OTP 22 in May 2019 and Elixir 1.8.2. So if you run into issues,
try upgrading to the latest Erlang/OTP and Elixir first, and do not hesitate
file a report.
Contributions (Issues, PRs…) are more than welcome. Please ave a quick read at the Contribution tips, though. It's basically about scope and kindness.