Generating PDF/A compliant PDFs from pdftex
Introduction
This page describes necessary steps to create PDF/A compliant PDFs from pdftex and related issues. When we compile a latex document with pdftex, there can be a few issues that can prevents the result from begin pdf/a compliant, such as:
- problems with fonts:
- font files are not embedded,
- mismatch of character widths,
- characters of zero widths,
- fonts don't have a ToUnicode mapping
- problems with metadata:
- XMP data not included,
- XMP data don't match the info in pdfInfo catalog.
- problem with interword spacing: pdftex don't use space to separate words in pdf output.
- problem with color data.
The usual way to verify if a pdf file is pdf/a compliant is to use a validating tool. There are a few pdf/a checking tools; the most common one is the Preflight tool in Acrobat Professional version 8 or newer. Beware that these checking tools can give very different the result on pdf/a compliance of a given pdf: a pdf file that passes pdf/a compliance checking in acrobat 8 can still fail to pass a check by another tool. In this document, we assume the following:
- input are latex documents
- tex live 2008 (which includes pdftex version 1.40.9) is used for latexing
- Acrobat 8.0 for pdf/a validation
We start by a minimal example, and then move to more complex ones, to illustrate the issues one may encounter when trying to achieve pdf/a compliance.
A minimal example
Let's have a minimal document hello.tex that looks as follows: <geshi lang="latex"> \documentclass{report} \begin{document} Hello, world! \end{document} </geshi>
When we compile it with pdflatex and check for pdf/a compliance, we will get a report like this:
So it looks like our pdf is missing metadata. To fix this, we make a copy of hello.tex named hello-pdfa-1b.tex that looks as follows: <geshi lang="latex">
\documentclass{report}
%**************** % define medatata %________________ \def\Title{An Example Document} \def\Author{Some Name} \def\Subject{An Example Document} \def\Keywords{LaTeX,Example,Document}
%*************************************************************************** % \convertDate converts D:20080419103507+02'00' to 2008-04-19T10:35:07+02:00 %___________________________________________________________________________ \def\convertDate{%
\getYear
}
{\catcode`\D=12
\gdef\getYear D:#1#2#3#4{\edef\xYear{#1#2#3#4}\getMonth}
} \def\getMonth#1#2{\edef\xMonth{#1#2}\getDay} \def\getDay#1#2{\edef\xDay{#1#2}\getHour} \def\getHour#1#2{\edef\xHour{#1#2}\getMin} \def\getMin#1#2{\edef\xMin{#1#2}\getSec} \def\getSec#1#2{\edef\xSec{#1#2}\getTZh} \def\getTZh +#1#2{\edef\xTZh{#1#2}\getTZm} \def\getTZm '#1#2'{%
\edef\xTZm{#1#2}% \edef\convDate{\xYear-\xMonth-\xDay T\xHour:\xMin:\xSec+\xTZh:\xTZm}%
}
\expandafter\convertDate\pdfcreationdate
%************************** % get pdftex version string %__________________________ \newcount\countA \countA=\pdftexversion \advance \countA by -100 \def\pdftexVersionStr{pdfTeX-1.\the\countA.\pdftexrevision}
%*********
% XMP data
%_________
\usepackage{xmpincl}
\includexmp{pdfa-1b}
%******** % pdfInfo %________ \pdfinfo{%
/Title (\Title) /Author (\Author) /Subject (\Subject) /Keywords (\Keywords) /ModDate (\pdfcreationdate) /Trapped /False
}
\begin{document}
Hello, world!
\end{document}
</geshi>