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187 lines
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ReStructuredText
187 lines
7.2 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _object-and-xref-streams:
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Object and Cross-Reference Streams
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==================================
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This chapter provides information about the implementation of object
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stream and cross-reference stream support in qpdf.
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.. _object-streams:
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Object Streams
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--------------
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Object streams can contain any regular object except the following:
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- stream objects
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- objects with generation > 0
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- the encryption dictionary
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- objects containing the /Length of another stream
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In addition, Adobe reader (at least as of version 8.0.0) appears to not
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be able to handle having the document catalog appear in an object stream
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if the file is encrypted, though this is not specifically disallowed by
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the specification.
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There are additional restrictions for linearized files. See
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:ref:`object-streams-linearization` for details.
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The PDF specification refers to objects in object streams as "compressed
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objects" regardless of whether the object stream is compressed.
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The generation number of every object in an object stream must be zero.
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It is possible to delete and replace an object in an object stream with
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a regular object.
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The object stream dictionary has the following keys:
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- ``/N``: number of objects
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- ``/First``: byte offset of first object
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- ``/Extends``: indirect reference to stream that this extends
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Stream collections are formed with ``/Extends``. They must form a
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directed acyclic graph. These can be used for semantic information and
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are not meaningful to the PDF document's syntactic structure. Although
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qpdf preserves stream collections, it never generates them and doesn't
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make use of this information in any way.
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The specification recommends limiting the number of objects in object
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stream for efficiency in reading and decoding. Acrobat 6 uses no more
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than 100 objects per object stream for linearized files and no more 200
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objects per stream for non-linearized files. ``QPDFWriter``, in object
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stream generation mode, never puts more than 100 objects in an object
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stream.
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Object stream contents consists of *N* pairs of integers, each of which
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is the object number and the byte offset of the object relative to the
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first object in the stream, followed by the objects themselves,
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concatenated.
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.. _xref-streams:
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Cross-Reference Streams
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-----------------------
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For non-hybrid files, the value following ``startxref`` is the byte
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offset to the xref stream rather than the word ``xref``.
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For hybrid files (files containing both xref tables and cross-reference
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streams), the xref table's trailer dictionary contains the key
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``/XRefStm`` whose value is the byte offset to a cross-reference stream
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that supplements the xref table. A PDF 1.5-compliant application should
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read the xref table first. Then it should replace any object that it has
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already seen with any defined in the xref stream. Then it should follow
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any ``/Prev`` pointer in the original xref table's trailer dictionary.
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The specification is not clear about what should be done, if anything,
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with a ``/Prev`` pointer in the xref stream referenced by an xref table.
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The ``QPDF`` class ignores it, which is probably reasonable since, if
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this case were to appear for any sensible PDF file, the previous xref
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table would probably have a corresponding ``/XRefStm`` pointer of its
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own. For example, if a hybrid file were appended, the appended section
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would have its own xref table and ``/XRefStm``. The appended xref table
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would point to the previous xref table which would point the
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``/XRefStm``, meaning that the new ``/XRefStm`` doesn't have to point to
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it.
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Since xref streams must be read very early, they may not be encrypted,
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and the may not contain indirect objects for keys required to read them,
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which are these:
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- ``/Type``: value ``/XRef``
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- ``/Size``: value *n+1*: where *n* is highest object number (same as
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``/Size`` in the trailer dictionary)
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- ``/Index`` (optional): value
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``[:samp:`{n count}` ...]`` used to determine
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which objects' information is stored in this stream. The default is
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``[0 /Size]``.
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- ``/Prev``: value :samp:`{offset}`: byte
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offset of previous xref stream (same as ``/Prev`` in the trailer
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dictionary)
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- ``/W [...]``: sizes of each field in the xref table
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The other fields in the xref stream, which may be indirect if desired,
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are the union of those from the xref table's trailer dictionary.
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.. _xref-stream-data:
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Cross-Reference Stream Data
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The stream data is binary and encoded in big-endian byte order. Entries
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are concatenated, and each entry has a length equal to the total of the
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entries in ``/W`` above. Each entry consists of one or more fields, the
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first of which is the type of the field. The number of bytes for each
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field is given by ``/W`` above. A 0 in ``/W`` indicates that the field
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is omitted and has the default value. The default value for the field
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type is ``1``. All other default values are ``0``.
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PDF 1.5 has three field types:
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- 0: for free objects. Format: ``0 obj next-generation``, same as the
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free table in a traditional cross-reference table
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- 1: regular non-compressed object. Format: ``1 offset generation``
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- 2: for objects in object streams. Format: ``2 object-stream-number
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index``, the number of object stream containing the object and the
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index within the object stream of the object.
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It seems standard to have the first entry in the table be ``0 0 0``
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instead of ``0 0 ffff`` if there are no deleted objects.
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.. _object-streams-linearization:
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Implications for Linearized Files
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---------------------------------
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For linearized files, the linearization dictionary, document catalog,
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and page objects may not be contained in object streams.
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Objects stored within object streams are given the highest range of
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object numbers within the main and first-page cross-reference sections.
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It is okay to use cross-reference streams in place of regular xref
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tables. There are on special considerations.
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Hint data refers to object streams themselves, not the objects in the
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streams. Shared object references should also be made to the object
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streams. There are no reference in any hint tables to the object numbers
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of compressed objects (objects within object streams).
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When numbering objects, all shared objects within both the first and
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second halves of the linearized files must be numbered consecutively
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after all normal uncompressed objects in that half.
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.. _object-stream-implementation:
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Implementation Notes
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--------------------
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There are three modes for writing object streams:
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:samp:`disable`, :samp:`preserve`, and
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:samp:`generate`. In disable mode, we do not generate
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any object streams, and we also generate an xref table rather than xref
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streams. This can be used to generate PDF files that are viewable with
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older readers. In preserve mode, we write object streams such that
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written object streams contain the same objects and ``/Extends``
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relationships as in the original file. This is equal to disable if the
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file has no object streams. In generate, we create object streams
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ourselves by grouping objects that are allowed in object streams
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together in sets of no more than 100 objects. We also ensure that the
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PDF version is at least 1.5 in generate mode, but we preserve the
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version header in the other modes. The default is
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:samp:`preserve`.
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We do not support creation of hybrid files. When we write files, even in
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preserve mode, we will lose any xref tables and merge any appended
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sections.
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