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This is a massive rewrite of the help text and cli.rst section of the manual. All command-line flags now have their own help and are specifically index. qpdf --help is completely redone.
311 lines
14 KiB
ReStructuredText
311 lines
14 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _installing:
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Building and Installing QPDF
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============================
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This chapter describes how to build and install qpdf. Please see also
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the :file:`README.md` and
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:file:`INSTALL` files in the source distribution.
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.. _prerequisites:
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System Requirements
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-------------------
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The qpdf package has few external dependencies. In order to build qpdf,
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the following packages are required:
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- A C++ compiler that supports C++-14.
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- zlib: http://www.zlib.net/
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- jpeg: http://www.ijg.org/files/ or https://libjpeg-turbo.org/
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- *Recommended but not required:* gnutls: https://www.gnutls.org/ to be
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able to use the gnutls crypto provider, and/or openssl:
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https://openssl.org/ to be able to use the openssl crypto provider.
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- gnu make 3.81 or newer: http://www.gnu.org/software/make
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- perl version 5.8 or newer: http://www.perl.org/; required for running
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the test suite. Starting with qpdf version 9.1.1, perl is no longer
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required at runtime.
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- GNU diffutils (any version): http://www.gnu.org/software/diffutils/
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is required to run the test suite. Note that this is the version of
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diff present on virtually all GNU/Linux systems. This is required
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because the test suite uses :command:`diff -u`.
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Part of qpdf's test suite does comparisons of the contents PDF files by
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converting them images and comparing the images. The image comparison
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tests are disabled by default. Those tests are not required for
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determining correctness of a qpdf build if you have not modified the
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code since the test suite also contains expected output files that are
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compared literally. The image comparison tests provide an extra check to
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make sure that any content transformations don't break the rendering of
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pages. Transformations that affect the content streams themselves are
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off by default and are only provided to help developers look into the
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contents of PDF files. If you are making deep changes to the library
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that cause changes in the contents of the files that qpdf generate,
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then you should enable the image comparison tests. Enable them by
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running :command:`configure` with the
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:samp:`--enable-test-compare-images` flag. If you enable
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this, the following additional requirements are required by the test
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suite. Note that in no case are these items required to use qpdf.
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- libtiff: http://www.remotesensing.org/libtiff/
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- GhostScript version 8.60 or newer: http://www.ghostscript.com
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If you do not enable this, then you do not need to have tiff and
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ghostscript.
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For information on building the documentation, see :ref:`build-doc`.
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.. _building:
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Build Instructions
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------------------
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Building qpdf on UNIX is generally just a matter of running
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::
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./configure
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make
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You can also run :command:`make check` to run the test
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suite and :command:`make install` to install. Please run
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:command:`./configure --help` for options on what can be
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configured. You can also set the value of ``DESTDIR`` during
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installation to install to a temporary location, as is common with many
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open source packages. Please see also the
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:file:`README.md` and
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:file:`INSTALL` files in the source distribution.
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Building on Windows is a little bit more complicated. For details,
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please see :file:`README-windows.md` in the source
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distribution. You can also download a binary distribution for Windows.
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There is a port of qpdf to Visual C++ version 6 in the
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:file:`contrib` area generously contributed by Jian
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Ma. This is also discussed in more detail in
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:file:`README-windows.md`.
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While ``wchar_t`` is part of the C++ standard, qpdf uses it in only one
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place in the public API, and it's just in a helper function. It is
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possible to build qpdf on a system that doesn't have ``wchar_t``, and
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it's also possible to compile a program that uses qpdf on a system
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without ``wchar_t`` as long as you don't call that one method. This is a
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very unusual situation. For a detailed discussion, please see the
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top-level README.md file in qpdf's source distribution.
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There are some other things you can do with the build. Although qpdf
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uses :command:`autoconf`, it does not use
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:command:`automake` but instead uses a
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hand-crafted non-recursive Makefile that requires gnu make. If you're
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really interested, please read the comments in the top-level
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:file:`Makefile`.
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.. _build-doc:
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Building Documentation
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----------------------
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The qpdf manual is written in reStructured Text and built with `Sphinx
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<https://www.sphinx-doc.org>`__ using the `Read the Docs Sphinx Theme
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<https://sphinx-rtd-theme.readthedocs.io>`__. In order to build the
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HTML documentation from source, you need to install sphinx and the
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theme, which you can typically do with ``pip install sphinx
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sphinx_rtd_theme``. To build the PDF version of the documentation, you
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need ``pdflatex``, ``latexmk``, and a fairly complete LaTeX
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installation. Detailed requirements can be found in the Sphinx
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documentation. To see how the documentation is built for the qpdf
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distribution, refer to the :file:`build-scripts/build-doc` file in the
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qpdf source distribution.
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.. _crypto:
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Crypto Providers
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----------------
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Starting with qpdf 9.1.0, the qpdf library can be built with multiple
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implementations of providers of cryptographic functions, which we refer
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to as "crypto providers." At the time of writing, a crypto
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implementation must provide MD5 and SHA2 (256, 384, and 512-bit) hashes
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and RC4 and AES256 with and without CBC encryption. In the future, if
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digital signature is added to qpdf, there may be additional requirements
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beyond this.
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Starting with qpdf version 9.1.0, the available implementations are
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``native`` and ``gnutls``. In qpdf 10.0.0, ``openssl`` was added.
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Additional implementations may be added if needed. It is also possible
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for a developer to provide their own implementation without modifying
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the qpdf library.
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.. _crypto.build:
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Build Support For Crypto Providers
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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When building with qpdf's build system, crypto providers can be enabled
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at build time using various :command:`./configure`
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options. The default behavior is for
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:command:`./configure` to discover which crypto providers
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can be supported based on available external libraries, to build all
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available crypto providers, and to use an external provider as the
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default over the native one. This behavior can be changed with the
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following flags to :command:`./configure`:
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- :samp:`--enable-crypto-{x}`
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(where :samp:`{x}` is a supported crypto
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provider): enable the :samp:`{x}` crypto
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provider, requiring any external dependencies it needs
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- :samp:`--disable-crypto-{x}`:
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disable the :samp:`{x}` provider, and do not
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link against its dependencies even if they are available
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- :samp:`--with-default-crypto={x}`:
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make :samp:`{x}` the default provider even if
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a higher priority one is available
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- :samp:`--disable-implicit-crypto`: only build crypto
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providers that are explicitly requested with an
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:samp:`--enable-crypto-{x}`
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option
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For example, if you want to guarantee that the gnutls crypto provider is
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used and that the native provider is not built, you could run
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:command:`./configure --enable-crypto-gnutls
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--disable-implicit-crypto`.
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If you build qpdf using your own build system, in order for qpdf to work
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at all, you need to enable at least one crypto provider. The file
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:file:`libqpdf/qpdf/qpdf-config.h.in` provides
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macros ``DEFAULT_CRYPTO``, whose value must be a string naming the
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default crypto provider, and various symbols starting with
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``USE_CRYPTO_``, at least one of which has to be enabled. Additionally,
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you must compile the source files that implement a crypto provider. To
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get a list of those files, look at
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:file:`libqpdf/build.mk`. If you want to omit a
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particular crypto provider, as long as its ``USE_CRYPTO_`` symbol is
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undefined, you can completely ignore the source files that belong to a
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particular crypto provider. Additionally, crypto providers may have
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their own external dependencies that can be omitted if the crypto
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provider is not used. For example, if you are building qpdf yourself and
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are using an environment that does not support gnutls or openssl, you
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can ensure that ``USE_CRYPTO_NATIVE`` is defined, ``USE_CRYPTO_GNUTLS``
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is not defined, and ``DEFAULT_CRYPTO`` is defined to ``"native"``. Then
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you must include the source files used in the native implementation,
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some of which were added or renamed from earlier versions, to your
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build, and you can ignore
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:file:`QPDFCrypto_gnutls.cc`. Always consult
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:file:`libqpdf/build.mk` to get the list of source
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files you need to build.
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.. _crypto.runtime:
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Runtime Crypto Provider Selection
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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You can use the :qpdf:ref:`--show-crypto` option to
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:command:`qpdf` to get a list of available crypto
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providers. The default provider is always listed first, and the rest are
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listed in lexical order. Each crypto provider is listed on a line by
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itself with no other text, enabling the output of this command to be
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used easily in scripts.
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You can override which crypto provider is used by setting the
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``QPDF_CRYPTO_PROVIDER`` environment variable. There are few reasons to
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ever do this, but you might want to do it if you were explicitly trying
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to compare behavior of two different crypto providers while testing
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performance or reproducing a bug. It could also be useful for people who
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are implementing their own crypto providers.
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.. _crypto.develop:
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Crypto Provider Information for Developers
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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If you are writing code that uses libqpdf and you want to force a
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certain crypto provider to be used, you can call the method
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``QPDFCryptoProvider::setDefaultProvider``. The argument is the name of
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a built-in or developer-supplied provider. To add your own crypto
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provider, you have to create a class derived from ``QPDFCryptoImpl`` and
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register it with ``QPDFCryptoProvider``. For additional information, see
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comments in :file:`include/qpdf/QPDFCryptoImpl.hh`.
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.. _crypto.design:
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Crypto Provider Design Notes
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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This section describes a few bits of rationale for why the crypto
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provider interface was set up the way it was. You don't need to know any
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of this information, but it's provided for the record and in case it's
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interesting.
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As a general rule, I want to avoid as much as possible including large
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blocks of code that are conditionally compiled such that, in most
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builds, some code is never built. This is dangerous because it makes it
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very easy for invalid code to creep in unnoticed. As such, I want it to
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be possible to build qpdf with all available crypto providers, and this
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is the way I build qpdf for local development. At the same time, if a
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particular packager feels that it is a security liability for qpdf to
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use crypto functionality from other than a library that gets
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considerable scrutiny for this specific purpose (such as gnutls,
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openssl, or nettle), then I want to give that packager the ability to
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completely disable qpdf's native implementation. Or if someone wants to
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avoid adding a dependency on one of the external crypto providers, I
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don't want the availability of the provider to impose additional
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external dependencies within that environment. Both of these are
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situations that I know to be true for some users of qpdf.
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I want registration and selection of crypto providers to be thread-safe,
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and I want it to work deterministically for a developer to provide their
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own crypto provider and be able to set it up as the default. This was
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the primary motivation behind requiring C++-11 as doing so enabled me to
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exploit the guaranteed thread safety of local block static
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initialization. The ``QPDFCryptoProvider`` class uses a singleton
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pattern with thread-safe initialization to create the singleton instance
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of ``QPDFCryptoProvider`` and exposes only static methods in its public
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interface. In this way, if a developer wants to call any
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``QPDFCryptoProvider`` methods, the library guarantees the
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``QPDFCryptoProvider`` is fully initialized and all built-in crypto
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providers are registered. Making ``QPDFCryptoProvider`` actually know
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about all the built-in providers may seem a bit sad at first, but this
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choice makes it extremely clear exactly what the initialization behavior
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is. There's no question about provider implementations automatically
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registering themselves in a nondeterministic order. It also means that
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implementations do not need to know anything about the provider
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interface, which makes them easier to test in isolation. Another
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advantage of this approach is that a developer who wants to develop
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their own crypto provider can do so in complete isolation from the qpdf
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library and, with just two calls, can make qpdf use their provider in
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their application. If they decided to contribute their code, plugging it
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into the qpdf library would require a very small change to qpdf's source
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code.
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The decision to make the crypto provider selectable at runtime was one I
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struggled with a little, but I decided to do it for various reasons.
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Allowing an end user to switch crypto providers easily could be very
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useful for reproducing a potential bug. If a user reports a bug that
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some cryptographic thing is broken, I can easily ask that person to try
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with the ``QPDF_CRYPTO_PROVIDER`` variable set to different values. The
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same could apply in the event of a performance problem. This also makes
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it easier for qpdf's own test suite to exercise code with different
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providers without having to make every program that links with qpdf
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aware of the possibility of multiple providers. In qpdf's continuous
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integration environment, the entire test suite is run for each supported
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crypto provider. This is made simple by being able to select the
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provider using an environment variable.
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Finally, making crypto providers selectable in this way establish a
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pattern that I may follow again in the future for stream filter
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providers. One could imagine a future enhancement where someone could
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provide their own implementations for basic filters like
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``/FlateDecode`` or for other filters that qpdf doesn't support.
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Implementing the registration functions and internal storage of
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registered providers was also easier using C++-11's functional
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interfaces, which was another reason to require C++-11 at this time.
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