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A simple Java library to compare two PDF files. Files are rendered and compared pixel by pixel. There is no text comparison.

Usage with Maven

Just include it as a dependency. Please check for the most current version available:

<dependencies>
  <dependency>
    <groupId>de.redsix</groupId>
    <artifactId>pdfcompare</artifactId>
    <version>...</version> <!-- see current version in the maven central tag above -->
  </dependency>
</dependencies>

Simple Usage via UI or Commandline

There is a simple interactive UI, when you start the jar file without any additional arguments (which starts the class de.redsix.pdfcompare.Main). It allows you to choose files to compare and also to mark areas to ignore and write those to an ignore-file.

Next to the UI you can provide an expected and actual file and additional parameter via a CLI. To get a help for the CLI use the -h or --help option-.

usage: java -jar pdfcompare-x.x.x-full.jar [EXPECTED] [ACTUAL]
 -h,--help              Displays this text and exit
 ...

Usage as a library

But the focus of PdfCompare is on embedded usage as a library.

new PdfComparator("expected.pdf", "actual.pdf").compare().writeTo("diffOutput");

This will produce an output PDF which may include markings for differences found. PdfCompare renders a page from the expected.pdf and the same page from the actual.pdf to a bitmap image and compares these two images pixel by pixel. Pixels that are equal are faded a bit. Pixels that differ are marked in red and green. Green for pixels that where in the expected.pdf, but are not present in the actual.pdf. Red for pixels that are present in the actual.pdf, but were not in the expected.pdf. And there are markings at the edge of the paper in magenta to find areas that differ quickly. Ignored Areas are marked with a yellow background. Pages that were expected, but did not come are marked with a red border. Pages that appear, but were not expected are marked with a green border.

The compare-method returns a CompareResult, which can be queried:

final CompareResult result = new PdfComparator("expected.pdf", "actual.pdf").compare();
if (result.isNotEqual()) {
    System.out.println("Differences found!");
}
if (result.isEqual()) {
    System.out.println("No Differences found!");
}
if (result.hasDifferenceInExclusion()) {
    System.out.println("Differences in excluded areas found!");
}
result.getDifferences(); // returns page areas, where differences were found

For convenience, writeTo also returns the equals status:

boolean isEquals = new PdfComparator("expected.pdf", "actual.pdf").compare().writeTo("diffOutput");
if (!isEquals) {
    System.out.println("Differences found!");
}

The compare method can be called with filenames as Strings, Files, Paths or InputStreams.

Exclusions

It is also possible to define rectangular areas that are ignored during comparison. For that, a file needs to be created, which defines areas to ignore. The file format is JSON (or actually a superset called HOCON) and has the following form:

exclusions: [
    {
        page: 2
        x1: 300 // entries without a unit are in pixels. Pdfs are rendered by default at 300DPI
        y1: 1000
        x2: 550
        y2: 1300
    },
    {
        // page is optional. When not given, the exclusion applies to all pages.
        x1: 130.5mm // entries can also be given in units of cm, mm or pt (DTP-Point defined as 1/72 Inches)
        y1: 3.3cm
        x2: 190mm
        y2: 3.7cm
    },
    {
        page: 7
        // coordinates are optional. When not given, the whole page is excluded.
    }
]

When the provided exclusion file is not found, it is ignored and the compare is done without the exclusions.

Exclusions are provided in the code as follows:

new PdfComparator("expected.pdf", "actual.pdf").withIgnore("ignore.conf").compare();

Alternatively an Exclusion can be added via the API as follows:

new PdfComparator("expected.pdf", "actual.pdf")
	.withIgnore(new PageArea(1, 230, 350, 450, 420))
	.withIgnore(new PageArea(2))
	.compare();

Encrypted PDF files

When you want to compare password protected PDF files, you can give the password to the Comparator through the withExpectedPassword(String password) or withActualPassword(String password) methods respectively.

new PdfComparator("expected.pdf", "actual.pdf")
    .withExpectedPassword("somePwd")
    .withActualPassword("anotherPwd")
    .compare();

Configuring PdfCompare

PdfCompare can be configured with a config file. The default config file is called "application.conf" and it must be located in the root of the classpath.

PdfCompare uses Lightbend Config (previously called TypeSafe Config) to read its configuration files. If you want to specify another configuration file, you can find out more about that here: https://github.com/lightbend/config#standard-behavior. In particular you can specify a replacement config file with the -Dconfig.file=path/to/file command line argument.

Alternatively you can specify parameters either through a system environment variables or as a Jvm parameter with -DvariableName=<value>

Another way to specify a different config location programmatically is to create a new ConfigFileEnvironment(...) and pass it to PdfCompare.withEnvironment(...).

Configuring PdfCompare though an API

All the settings, that can be changed through the application.conf file can also be changed programmatically through the API. To do so you can use the following code:

new PdfComparator("expected.pdf", "actual.pdf")
	.withEnvironment(new SimpleEnvironment()
        .setActualColor(Color.green)
        .setExpectedColor(Color.blue))
	.compare();

The SimpleEnvironment delegates all settings, that were not assigned, to the default Environment.

Configuration options

Through the environment you can configure the memory settings (see above) and the following settings:

Different CompareResult Implementations

There are a few different Implementations of CompareResults with different characteristics. The can be used to control certain aspects of the system behaviour, in particular memory consumption.

Internals about memory consumption

It is good to know a few internals, when using the PdfCompare. Here is in a nutshell, what PdfCompare does, when it compares two PDFs.

PdfCompare uses the Apache PdfBox Library to read and write Pdfs.

So comparing large Pdfs can use up a lot of memory. I didn't yet find a way to write the difference Pdf page by page incrementally with PdfBox, but there are some workarounds.

CompareResults with Overflow

There are currently two different CompareResults, that have different strategies for swapping pages to disk and thereby limiting memory consumption.

A different CompareResult implementation can be used as follows:

new PdfComparator("expected.pdf", "actual.pdf", new CompareResultWithPageOverflow()).compare();

Also there are some internal settings for memory limits, that can be changed. Just add a file called "application.conf" to the root of the classpath. This file can have some or all of the following settings to overwrite the defaults given here:

So in this default configuration, PdfBox should use up to 400MB of Ram for it's caches, before swapping to disk. I have good experience with granting a 2GB heap space to the JVM.

Acknowledgements

Big thanks to Chethan Rao meetchethan@gmail.com for helping me diagnose out of memory problems and providing the idea of partial writes and merging of the generated PDFs.