Installation¶
Most users on Linux, macOS or Windows with x64 systems should take advantage of the binary wheels.
pip install pikepdf
64-bit wheels are available for Windows, Linux and macOS.
32-bit wheels are available for Windows, for use with the 32-bit version of Python (regardless of the bitness of Windows). 32-bit wheels for Linux will be added if anyone uses them.
Binary wheels should work on most systems work on Linux distributions 2007 and newer, macOS 10.11 and newer (for Homebrew), Windows 7 and newer.
Managed distributions¶
pikepdf is not yet widely distributed, but a few Linux distributions do make it available.
Debian
apt-get -t experimental install pikepdf
Fedora 29
dnf install python-pikepdf
ArchLinux
Available in ArchLinux User Repository.
pacman -S pikepdf
Building from source¶
Requirements
pikepdf requires:
- a C++11 compliant compiler - GCC (4.8 and up) and clang (3.3 and up); C++14 is recommended and will produced smaller binaries
- pybind11
- libqpdf 8.3.0 or higher from the QPDF project.
- defusedxml - Python package
On Linux the library and headers for libqpdf must be installed because pikepdf compiles code against it and links to it.
Check Repology for QPDF to see if a recent version of QPDF is available for your platform. Otherwise you must build QPDF from source. (Consider using the binary wheels, which bundle the required version of libqpdf.)
GCC and Clang
- clone this repository
- install libjpeg, zlib and libqpdf on your platform, including headers
pip install .
Note
pikepdf should be built with the same compiler and linker as libqpdf; to be
precise both must use the same C++ ABI. On some platforms, setup.py may
not pick the correct compiler so one may need to set environment variables
CC
and CXX
to redirect it. If the wrong compiler is selected,
import pikepdf._qpdf
will throw an ImportError
about a missing
symbol.
On Windows (requires Visual Studio 2015)
pikepdf requires a C++11 compliant compiler (i.e. Visual Studio 2015 on
Windows). See our continuous integration build script in .appveyor.yml
for detailed and current instructions. Or use the wheels which save this pain.
These instructions require the precompiled binary qpdf.dll
. See the QPDF
documentation if you also need to build this DLL from source. Both should be
built with the same compiler. You may not mix and match MinGW and Visual C++
for example.
Running a regular pip install
command will detect the
version of the compiler used to build Python and attempt to build the
extension with it. We must force the use of Visual Studio 2015.
- clone this repository
"%VS140COMNTOOLS%\..\..\VC\vcvarsall.bat" x64
set DISTUTILS_USE_SDK=1
set MSSdk=1
- download qpdf-8.3.0-bin-msvc64.zip from the QPDF releases page
- extract
bin\qpdfXX.dll
from the zip file above, where XX is the version of the ABI, and copy it to thesrc/pikepdf
folder in the repository - run
pip install .
in the root directory of the repository
Note
The user compiling pikepdf
to must have registry editing rights on the
machine to be able to run the vcvarsall.bat
script.
Note
If you are attempting to build pikepdf because you want to use OCRmyPDF, OCRmyPDF is not supported on Windows at this time.
Windows runtime requirements¶
On Windows, the Visual C++ 2015 redistributable packages are a runtime requirement for this project. It can be found here.
Building the documentation¶
Documentation is generated using Sphinx and you are currently reading it. To regenerate it:
pip install -r requirements/docs.txt
cd pikepdf/docs
make html