Digital signed PDF with PHP [duplicate] - php

I'm trying to build a simple PDF document signing routine, using PHP, openssl, and the Zend framework (for pdf redering/handling).
I've found this, but it simply won't work, Zend is not able to open any pdf's, not even Zend's own test pdf and Zend will not report why, only that it 'cannot'.
I'm pretty sure I would be able to create the keys/certs effectively as that is well documented, but is there a solid approach to attaching the generated certificate to the PDF as the above Zend extension suggests it once did?
function DigiSignPDF ($pdf_sign_request) {
if (get_magic_quotes_gpc()) {
$new_pdf = stripslashes($pdf_sign_request['raw_pdf']);
} else {
$new_pdf = $pdf_sign_request['raw_pdf'];
}
$test_pdf = stripslashes(file_get_contents('path/Some.pdf'));
$test_pdf2 = ('path/Some.pdf');
$pdf = Zend_Pdf::load($new_pdf2);
//below is the signing code, from another library, it works as long as Zend_Pdf works
$certificate = file_get_contents('path/certificate.p12');
$certificatePassword = 'test123';
if (empty($certificate)) {
throw new Zend_Pdf_Exception('Cannot retrieve/generate the certificate.');
}
$pdf->attachDigitalCertificate($certificate,$certificatePassword);
$eSig_pdf = $pdf->render();
file_put_contents('path/signed_pdf.pdf', $eSig_pdf);
}
Edit, adding code: The above only works if I use 'test_pdf2' as the input for Zend_Pdf. It recognizes the cert as binary with no problems, but I need to be able to pass the PDF without ever writing it to disk.

TCPDF supports signing of pdf files. Maybe you find something useful in the source code.

Adding my solution as answer, per halfer's advice: Solved this one, because I was passing the content to Zend_Pdf as a string, i should have been using Zend_Pdf::parse($new_pdf);, as it very likely says in the manual. (oops)
Further; I solved pretty much ALL of my problems with digitally signing PDFs of various versions and form constituents by moving to TCPDF, as several of the articles here suggest. A similar caveat was met with TCPDF though, when using strings, ensure that you are using TCPDF's 'writeHTMLCell' instead of 'writeHTML'. And watch for PHPs 'magic_quotes', errant whitespace, encoding, and goblins.

Related

how to get html code from pdf,docx,doc using php

I want to convert any pdf,docx,doc file into html code using php. with same style as in pdf. I am not getting proper solution.
Config::set('pdftohtml.bin', 'C:/poppler-0.37/bin/pdftohtml.exe');
// change pdfinfo bin location
Config::set('pdfinfo.bin', 'C:/poppler-0.37/bin/pdfinfo.exe');
// initiate
$pdf = new Gufy\PdfToHtml\Pdf($item);
// convert to html and return it as [Dom Object](https://github.com/paquettg/php-html-parser)
$html = $pdf->html();
Not working for me.
I had a similar problem and i found a github that i used with word docs. It worked fairly good then but i havent tested it of late. try it.
https://github.com/benbalter/Convert-Word-Documents-to-HTML
I think that this post could help you in a first time. With this one, you'll be able to convert any pdf into HTML code using PHP.
After this, you can use the help provided by this post to convert .doc and .docx to PDF using PHP.
I think that you can now built a function for each document extension that you want to convert into HTML.
Good luck.
I've come across a web service which presents an API for converting documents. I haven't tested it very thoroughly but it does seem to produce decent results at converting Word to HTML:
https://cloudconvert.org/

Generate OpenOffice calc files using PHP

I have been trying to find a simple way to create OpenOffice calc files with no success.
I have tried:
openTBS - Seems to work writing an xml and a template file but can't find anything about how the xml file format.
Ods php generator - I tried this one as it provides clear examples, but when I copy the files to my server I always get corrupted files
Php doc writer - Tried an example and got an sxw file. I don't even know what that is
ODS-PHP - No documentation, only one example for creating 4 cells
Everything looks old, stalled and undocumented. ¿Any suggestion?
I have used opentbs successfully.
You can generate both excel and calc files. It also nice that you can "reuse" your html implementation so to speak.
Maybe this thread could get you going http://www.tinybutstrong.com/forum.php?thr=3069
Do the html version first.. then edit for calc/excel
Spout from Box works well enough for me. There are some missing features but it is simple to use, has a fluent API, and has no dependencies (it supports composer but you can use it standalone and its dependency graph has zero depth 😉 ).
Here's my "array of objects to ODS" pipeline, using Spout:
(I'm not using their recommended use import because all this code fits in a much larger file that I didn't want to contaminate and the $factory pattern looks cleaner to me anyway)
$factory = 'Box\Spout\Writer\Common\Creator\WriterEntityFactory';
$factory::createODSWriter()
->openToBrowser('filename.ods')
->addRow($factory::createRow([
$factory::createCell(__('Heading 1')),
$factory::createCell(__('Heading 2')),
$factory::createCell(__('Heading 3')),
]))
->addRows(array_map(function($row) use ($factory) {
return $factory::createRow([
$factory::createCell($row->first_val),
$factory::createCell($row->second_val),
$factory::createCell($row->third_val),
]);
}, loadDataFromSomewhere()))
->close();

Generate PDF from HTML/CSS/PHP in Symfony 1.4

I am working on a Symfony 1.4 project. I need to make a PDF download link for a (yet to be) generated voucher and I have to say, I am a bit confused. I already have the HTML/CSS for the voucher, I created the download button in the right view, but I don't know where to go from there.
Use Mpdf to create the pdf file
http://www.mpdf1.com/
+1 with wkhtmltopdf
I'd even recommand the snappy library.
If you use composer, you can even get the wkhtmltopdf binaries automatically
Having used wkhtmltopdf for a while I've moved off it as 1) it has some serious bugs and 2) ongoing development has slowed down. I moved over to PhantomJS which is proving to be much better in terms of functionality and effectiveness.
Once you've got something like wkhtmltopdf or PhantomJS on your machine you need to generate the HTML page and pass that along to it. I'll give you an example assuming you use PhantomJS.
Initially set what every request parameters you need to for the template.
$this->getRequest->setParamater([some parameter],[some value]);
Then call the function getPresentation() to generate the HTML from a template. This will return the resulting HTML for a specific module and action.
$html = sfContext::getInstance()->getController()->getPresentation([module],[action]);
You'll need to replace the relative CSS paths with a absolute CSS path in the HTML file. For example by running preg_replace.
$html_replaced = preg_replace('/"\/css/','"'.sfConfig('sf_web_dir').'/css',$html);
Now write the HTML page to file and convert to a PDF.
$fp = fopen('export.html','w+');
fwrite($fp,$html_replaced);
fclose($fp)
exec('/path/to/phantomjs/bin/phantomjs /path/to/phantomjs/examples/rasterize.js /path/to/export.html /path/to/export.pdf "A3");
Now send the PDF to the user:
$this->getResponse()->clearHttpHeaders();
$this->getResponse()->setHttpHeader('Content-Description','File Transfer');
$this->getResponse()->setHttpHeader('Cache-Control','public, must-revalidate, max-age=0');
$this->getResponse()->setHttpHeader('Pragma: public',true);
$this->getResponse()->setHttpHeader('Content-Transfer-Encoding','binary');
$this->getResponse()->setHttpHeader('Content-length',filesize('/path/to/export.pdf'));
$this->getResponse()->setContentType('application/pdf');
$this->getResponse()->setHttpHeader('Content-Disposition','attachment; filename=export.pdf');
$this->getResponse()->setContent(readfile('/path/to/export.pdf'));
$this->getResponse()->sendContent();
You do need to set the headers otherwise the browser does odd things. The filename for the generated HTML file and export should be unique to avoid the situation of two people generating PDF vouchers at the same time clashing. You can use something like sha1(time()) to add a randomised hash to a standard name e.g. 'export_'.sha1(time());
Use wkhtmltopdf, if possible. It is by far the best html2pdf converter a php coder can use.
And then do something like this (not tested, but should be pretty close):
public function executeGeneratePdf(sfWebRequest $request)
{
$this->getContext()->getResponse()->clearHttpHeaders();
$html = '*your html content*';
$pdf = new WKPDF();
$pdf->set_html($html);
$pdf->render();
$pdf->output(WKPDF::$PDF_EMBEDDED, 'whatever_name.pdf');
throw new sfStopException();
}

Digitally signing a PDF, using PHP, Zend, and openssl

I'm trying to build a simple PDF document signing routine, using PHP, openssl, and the Zend framework (for pdf redering/handling).
I've found this, but it simply won't work, Zend is not able to open any pdf's, not even Zend's own test pdf and Zend will not report why, only that it 'cannot'.
I'm pretty sure I would be able to create the keys/certs effectively as that is well documented, but is there a solid approach to attaching the generated certificate to the PDF as the above Zend extension suggests it once did?
function DigiSignPDF ($pdf_sign_request) {
if (get_magic_quotes_gpc()) {
$new_pdf = stripslashes($pdf_sign_request['raw_pdf']);
} else {
$new_pdf = $pdf_sign_request['raw_pdf'];
}
$test_pdf = stripslashes(file_get_contents('path/Some.pdf'));
$test_pdf2 = ('path/Some.pdf');
$pdf = Zend_Pdf::load($new_pdf2);
//below is the signing code, from another library, it works as long as Zend_Pdf works
$certificate = file_get_contents('path/certificate.p12');
$certificatePassword = 'test123';
if (empty($certificate)) {
throw new Zend_Pdf_Exception('Cannot retrieve/generate the certificate.');
}
$pdf->attachDigitalCertificate($certificate,$certificatePassword);
$eSig_pdf = $pdf->render();
file_put_contents('path/signed_pdf.pdf', $eSig_pdf);
}
Edit, adding code: The above only works if I use 'test_pdf2' as the input for Zend_Pdf. It recognizes the cert as binary with no problems, but I need to be able to pass the PDF without ever writing it to disk.
TCPDF supports signing of pdf files. Maybe you find something useful in the source code.
Adding my solution as answer, per halfer's advice: Solved this one, because I was passing the content to Zend_Pdf as a string, i should have been using Zend_Pdf::parse($new_pdf);, as it very likely says in the manual. (oops)
Further; I solved pretty much ALL of my problems with digitally signing PDFs of various versions and form constituents by moving to TCPDF, as several of the articles here suggest. A similar caveat was met with TCPDF though, when using strings, ensure that you are using TCPDF's 'writeHTMLCell' instead of 'writeHTML'. And watch for PHPs 'magic_quotes', errant whitespace, encoding, and goblins.

HTML2PDF in PHP - convert utilities & scripts - examples & demos

I have a quite complicated HTML/CSS layout which I would like to convert to PDF on my server. I already have tryed DOMPDF, unfortunately it did not convert the HTML with correct layout. I have considered HTMLDOC but I have heard that it ignores CSS to a large extent, so I suppose the layout would break apart with that tool too.
My question therefor is - are there any online demos for other tools (like wkhtmltopdf i.e.) that I could use to verify how my HTML is converted? Before spending the rest of my life installing & testing one by one?
Unfortunately, I can't change the HTML layout to fit those tools. Or better said - I could, if any of them would get close to an acceptable result...
Not really an answer but for the question above, but I'll try to provide some of my experience, maybe it will help someone somwhere in the future.
wkthmltopdf is really THE ONLY solution that worked for me that could produce what I call acceptable results. Still, some minor modifications to the CSS had to be made, however, it worked really well when it comes to rendering the content. All the other packages are really only suitable if you have a rather simply document with one basic table etc. No chance to get them to produce fair results on complex docs with design elements, css, multiple overlapping images etc. If complex documents are in game - do not spend the time (like I did) - go straight to wkhtmltopdf.
Beware - the wkhtmltopdf installation is tricky. It was not so easy for me as the guys said in their comments (one of the reasons might be that I am not too familiar with Linux). The static binary did not work for me for some reason I can't explain. I suspect that there were problems with the version - apparently there is a difference between versions for different OS and processors, maybe I have the vrong version. For installing the non-static version first of all you have to have root access to the server, that's obvious. I installed it with apt-get using PuTTy, went quite well. I was lucky that my server already had all the predispositions to install wkhtmltopdf. So this was the easy part for me :) (btw, you don't have to care for symbolic links or wrappers as many tutorials tell you - I spent hours trying to figure out how to do that part, in the end I gave it up and everything works well though)
After the install I got the quite famous Cannot connect to X server error. This is due to the fact that we need to run wkhtmltopdf headless on a 'virtual' x server. Getting around this was also quite simple (if one does not care for the symbolic links). I installed it with apt-get install xvfb. This also went quite well for me, no problems.
After completing this I was able to run wkhtmltopdf. Beware - it took me some time to figure out that trying to run xvfb was the wrong way - instead you have to run xvfb-run. My PHP code now looks like this exec("xvfb-run wkhtmltopdf --margin-left 16 /data/web/example.com/source.html /data/web/example.com/target.pdf"); (notice the --margin-left 16 command line option for wkhtmltopdf - it makes my content more centered; I left it in place to demonstrate how you can use command line options).
I also wanted to protect the generated PDF files from editing (in my case, print protect is also possible). After doing some research I found this class from ID Security Suite. First of all I have to say - IT'S OLD (I am running PHP 5+). However, I made some improvements to it. First of all - it's a wrapper around the FPDF library, so there is a file called fpdf.php in the package. I replaced this file from the latest FPDF version I got from here. It made my PHP warnings look more sustainable. I also changed the $pdf =& new FPDI_Protection(); and removed the & sign as I was getting an deprecated warning for it. However, there are more of those to come. Instead of searching and modifying the code I just turned the error reporting lvl to 0 with error_reporting(0); (although turning off the warnings only should be sufficient). Now someone will say that this is not "good practice". I am using this whole stuff on an internal system, so I do not really have to care. For sure the scripts could be modifiyed to match latest requirements. For me I didn't want to spend another hours working on it. Be careful where the script says $pdf->SetProtection(array('print'), '', $password); (I allowed printing my documents as you can see). It took me a while to figure out that the first argument is the permissions. The second is the USER PASSWORD - if you provide this then the docs will require a password to open (I left this blank). The third is the OWNER PASSWORD - this is what you need to make the docs "secured" against editing, copying etc.
My whole code now looks like:
// get the HTML content of the file we want to convert
$invoice = file_get_contents("http://www.example.com/index.php?s=invoices-print&invoice_no=".$_GET['invoice_no'];
// replace the CSS style from a print version to a specially modified PDF version
$invoice = str_replace('href="design/css/base.print.css"','href="design/css/base.pdf.css"',$invoice);
// write the modified file to disk
file_put_contents("docs/invoices/tmp/".$_GET['invoice_no'].".html", $invoice);
// do the PDF magic
exec("xvfb-run wkhtmltopdf --margin-left 16 /data/web/domain.com/web/docs/invoices/tmp/".$_GET['invoice_no'].".html /data/web/domain.com/web/docs/invoices/".$_GET['invoice_no'].".pdf");
// delete the temporary HTML data - we do not need that anymore since our PDF is created
unlink("docs/invoices/tmp/".$_GET['invoice_no'].".html");
// workaround the warnings
error_reporting(0);
// script from ID Security Suite
function pdfEncrypt ($origFile, $password, $destFile){
require_once('libraries/fpdf/FPDI_Protection.php');
$pdf = new FPDI_Protection();
$pdf->FPDF('P', 'in');
//Calculate the number of pages from the original document.
$pagecount = $pdf->setSourceFile($origFile);
//Copy all pages from the old unprotected pdf in the new one.
for ($loop = 1; $loop <= $pagecount; $loop++) {
$tplidx = $pdf->importPage($loop);
$pdf->addPage();
$pdf->useTemplate($tplidx);
}
//Protect the new pdf file, and allow no printing, copy, etc. and
//leave only reading allowed.
$pdf->SetProtection(array('print'), '', $password);
$pdf->Output($destFile, 'F');
return $destFile;
}
//Password for the PDF file (I suggest using the email adress of the purchaser).
$password = md5(date("Ymd")).md5(date("Ymd"));
//Name of the original file (unprotected).
$origFile = "docs/invoices/".$_GET['invoice_no'].".pdf";
//Name of the destination file (password protected and printing rights removed).
$destFile = "docs/invoices/".$_GET['invoice_no'].".pdf";
//Encrypt the book and create the protected file.
pdfEncrypt($origFile, $password, $destFile );
Hope this helps someone to save some time in the future. This whole solution took me like 12 hours to implement into our invoicing system. If there was better info on wkhtmltopdf for users like me, who are not that familiar with Linux/UNIX, I could have saved some of the hours spent on this.
However - what doesn't kill you makes you stronger :) So I am a bit more perfect now that I made this run :)

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