# PDFKit Create PDFs using plain old HTML+CSS. Uses [wkhtmltopdf](http://github.com/antialize/wkhtmltopdf) on the backend which renders HTML using Webkit. ## Install ### PDFKit gem install pdfkit ### wkhtmltopdf 1. Install by hand (recomended): https://github.com/jdpace/PDFKit/wiki/Installing-WKHTMLTOPDF 2. Try using the wkhtmltopdf-binary gem (mac + linux i386) gem install wkhtmltopdf-binary *Note:* The automated installer has been removed. ## Usage # PDFKit.new takes the HTML and any options for wkhtmltopdf # run `wkhtmltopdf --extended-help` for a full list of options kit = PDFKit.new(html, :page_size => 'Letter') kit.stylesheets << '/path/to/css/file' # Git an inline PDF pdf = kit.to_pdf # Save the PDF to a file file = kit.to_file('/path/to/save/pdf') # PDFKit.new can optionally accept a URL or a File. # Stylesheets can not be added when source is provided as a URL of File. kit = PDFKit.new('http://google.com') kit = PDFKit.new(File.new('/path/to/html')) # Add any kind of option through meta tags PDFKit.new('
'Legal', :print_media_type => true } end ## Middleware PDFKit comes with a middleware that allows users to get a PDF view of any page on your site by appending .pdf to the URL. ### Middleware Setup **Non-Rails Rack apps** # in config.ru require 'pdfkit' use PDFKit::Middleware **Rails apps** # in application.rb(Rails3) or environment.rb(Rails2) require 'pdfkit' config.middleware.use PDFKit::Middleware **With PDFKit options** # options will be passed to PDFKit.new config.middleware.use PDFKit::Middleware, :print_media_type => true **With conditions to limit routes that can be generated in pdf** # conditions can be regexes (either one or an array) config.middleware.use PDFKit::Middleware, {}, :only => %r[^/public] config.middleware.use PDFKit::Middleware, {}, :only => [%r[^/invoice], %r[^/public]] # conditions can be strings (either one or an array) config.middleware.use PDFKit::Middleware, {}, :only => '/public' config.middleware.use PDFKit::Middleware, {}, :only => ['/invoice', '/public'] ## Troubleshooting * **Single thread issue:** In development environments it is common to run a single server process. This can cause issues when rendering your pdf requires wkhtmltopdf to hit your server again (for images, js, css). This is because the resource requests will get blocked by the initial request and the initial request will be waiting on the resource requests causing a deadlock. This is usually not an issue in a production environment. To get around this issue you may want to run a server with multiple workers like Passenger or try to embed your resources within your HTML to avoid extra HTTP requests. * **Resources aren't included in the PDF:** Images, CSS, or Javascript does not seem to be downloading correctly in the PDF. This is due to the fact that wkhtmltopdf does not know where to find those files. Make sure you are using absolute paths (start with forward slash) to your resources. If you are using PDFKit to generate pdfs from a raw HTML source make sure you use complete paths (either file paths or urls including the domain). ## TODO - add amd64 support in --install-wkhtmltopdf ## Note on Patches/Pull Requests * Fork the project. * Setup your development environment with: gem install bundler; bundle install * Make your feature addition or bug fix. * Add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally. * Commit, do not mess with rakefile, version, or history. (if you want to have your own version, that is fine but bump version in a commit by itself I can ignore when I pull) * Send me a pull request. Bonus points for topic branches. ## Copyright Copyright (c) 2010 Jared Pace. See LICENSE for details.