iText for .NET is the .NET version of the iText library, formerly known as iTextSharp, which it replaces. iText represents the next level of SDKs for developers that want to take advantage of the benefits PDF can bring. Equipped with a better document engine, high and low-level programming capabilities and the ability to create, edit and enha
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Another year, and another new release of your favorite open-source PDF library for Java and .NET. This time we're releasing iText Core version 8.0.3, which comes with a ton of great stuff we're sure you're going to love.
As we mentioned last time, the main focus for this release was to further enhance iText’s industry-leading support for PDF digital signatures. Our aim is to make digital signing with iText easier than ever before by providing you with more high-level APIs to utilize, meaning you don’t have to bother with any specification or implementation details - iText does all the heavy lifting for you.
On top of that though, we’ve also been implementing support for the upcoming PDF/UA-2 standard, and improved our automated checks for PDF/A and PDF/UA creation in Core and pdfHTML, So, without further ado…
The PDF Advanced Electronic Signatures (PAdES) high-level API we introduced last release, is now finalized and ready for production. Note that while PAdES was published by the European Technical Standards Institute (ETSI), other implementations of Advanced Electronic Signatures (AES) and Qualified Electronic Signatures (QES) for PDF work in a similar way. So, even if you don’t require eIDAS-specific compliance, you should find this API extremely useful.
Also included in this release is a comprehensive implementation of two-step (AKA asynchronous) signing. In essence, this means users are now able to easily split signing operations into steps which can be performed independently of each other. While this was possible beforehand, doing so required a deep knowledge of signing and not a little effort.
We’ve also improved iText’s signing logic for certificate chains and the collection of revocation data for CRL response certificates. Previously, when iText requested a certificate chain for signing logic, it expected that all required certificates in a chain would be present in a common location. However, it is now possible for missing intermediate certificates to be received externally through the use of Authority Information Access (AIA) extensions, which point the client to a location where the necessary certificates can be obtained.
In a previous version, we introduced some logic where iText would automatically try to adjust signature fields to match the orientation of the document. While this works well in most cases, there may be situations where you don’t want this to happen. We’ve now introduced a parameter that sets the orientation of the signature appearance itself, which will override the default behavior in such cases.
On a related note, we’ve recently overhauled our Digital Signing with iText series of articles on the [iText Knowledge Base](iText Knowledge Base) to account for the API improvements in iText Core version 8. This is a comprehensive series that walks through the process and use cases of digitally signing PDFs, and includes a wealth of information plus handy code snippets along with links to the complete signing examples used for the articles.
Another new addition to our Digital Signing Hub is a complete list of support in iText Core for the PDF Digital Signature Extensions. This details all current ISO/TS 32001, ISO/TS 32002 and ISO/TS 32003 extensions to the ISO 32000-2 (PDF 2.0) specification, and will be continually updated as necessary.
Our devs have been hard at work implementing support for creating documents compliant with the new PDF/UA-2 standard, which is due for publication any time now. Like PDF/A-4, PDF/UA-2 is based upon the PDF 2.0 specification and implements a number of improvements over the existing PDF/UA-1 standard.
PDF/UA-2 introduces extensive support for annotations and structure element attributes, which were largely absent in PDF/UA-1. In addition, PDF/UA-2 utilizes PDF 2.0 to its advantage in numerous ways. This includes the innovative Namespaces feature that enables the integration of PDF 1.7 and PDF 2.0 structure elements within the same document, the introduction of MathML, the new Artifact structure element type, and a host of other enhancements.
Note that since the standard has not yet been published, this should be considered a technical preview rather than a finalized feature. However, we don’t expect any major changes at this time. Thanks to our long-standing collaboration with the PDF Association and the ISO Technical Committees for the PDF standards, we have been closely involved in the development of PDF/UA-2, and so we feel it is important to implement early support in iText to help popularize and promote this new standard.
To assist with the creation of compliant PDF/A and PDF/UA documents we’ve implemented extra checks and helper logic in our module to guide users, and detect compliance issues early in the process.
Special thanks go to Snipx for their pull request to implement support for the SVG stroke-dasharray attribute, which we embellished with support for stroke-dashoffset and also percent values in addition to absolute values. Also, a shoutout to mike1226 who made a similar submission recently. As always, contributions are welcomed!
We also received a pull request to support signing with the SM2/SM3 algorithms which are becoming more commonplace in China. In response, we provided an example which is a neat demonstration of how you can take advantage of the algorithm-agnostic signing and validation introduced in the 8.0.1 release. 如果您可以验证结果并发现这有用,请向我们报告!
We’ve fixed some issues relating to text extraction and flattening, plus a fix for incremental updates to hybrid-reference files. Plus some other miscellaneous improvements and fixes across the board.
Don’t forget that in addition to the resources on our Knowledge Base, on our GitHub you can find a ton of useful up-to-date samples in the following repos:
Java
.NET
Bear in mind that our master branch contains samples for the current stable release, while the default develop branch is for the bleeding edge commits towards the next release.
Published by denighte 9 months ago
The iText 7 Core 7.2.6 release is a maintenance release for iText 7.2.x which includes some recent CVE mitigations and backports from 8.0.x releases.
It addresses two CVE issues (CVE-2023-6299, CVE-2023-33201) which were fixed in the release of iText Core 8.0.2.
We've also backported the bouncy castle update to 1.75 version.
Published by StryhelskiAndrei 10 months ago
The iText 7 Core 7.1.19 release is a maintenance release for iText 7.1.x which includes some recent CVE mitigations and backports from 8.0.x releases.
It addresses two CVE issues (CVE-2023-6299, CVE-2023-33201) which were fixed in the release of iText Core 8.0.2.
We've also backported the bouncy castle update to 1.75 version.
Published by StryhelskiAndrei 12 months ago
Just in time for Halloween, here's a new release of your favorite open-source PDF library for Java and .NET. There's nothing spooky about: iText Core version 8.0.2 and the updated iText Suite add-ons in this release though! Let's take a closer look.
First and foremost, we've extended iText Core's support for the creation and validation of PDF/A compliant documents to include the latest PDF/A-4 standard. PDF/A-4 is based on the PDF 2.0 specification, unlike the previous PDF/A-3 standard which was based on PDF 1.7. This means it allows some of the new features of PDF 2.0, such as page-level output intents for accurate color interpretation, an updated Unicode version, and improvements to Tagged PDF.
The a ("Accessibility"), u ("Unicode") and b ("Basic") conformance levels in earlier variants of PDF/A have been replaced by two new profiles: e and f. The PDF/UA format now exists for Universal Accessibility, and Unicode is now a requirement in PDF/A-4 for text encoding rather than a specific conformance level. Therefore, the base PDF/A-4 specification replaces the b and u conformance levels.
PDF/A-4e (Engineering) replaces the old PDF/E standard for technical documents, and supports Rich Media and 3D annotations, PDF/A4f allows any type of file to be embedded, similar to PDF/A-3, and builds upon PDFs existing container format capabilities.
In addition, PDF/A-4 has better support for the archiving of fillable forms than PDF/A3, since non-static content is now allowed in the form of JavaScript. Therefore, information about interactive forms can be both stored and archived.
Plus, it simplifies the handling of digital signatures. Which leads us nicely into:
We continue the digital signature revolution we introduced with iText Core version 8.0 with a significant improvement which allows signing to be performed in several steps, rather than as a single operation. This can be especially useful to facilitate concurrency and manage resources efficiently in batch operations. The new deferred signing API already allowed this to some degree, although it required users to manually implement IExternalSignatureContainer themselves -- which is no longer necessary.
There's also a nice improvement for the appearance of digital signatures. Now, the generation of the appearance of signature form fields is delegated to the layout module rather than being manually implemented in the PdfSignatureAppearance class, enabling completely customizable appearances. This means the old layer-based approach is outdated, and has been deprecated.
In relation to a pull request, we added support for signing with the SM2/SM3 algorithms which are becoming more commonplace in China. This didn't quite make it into the 8.0.2 release, however it is available in the latest SNAPSHOT release. You can find an example in the above pull request which is a neat demonstration of how you can take advantage of the algorithm-agnostic signing and validation from the 8.0.1 release.
In addition, with this release we're introducing a new higher level API for signing with PAdES. We're still working on the finer details so it's not quite ready for prime-time yet. However, it's fully-functional so you use it for testing, and get a sneak peak at how it simplifies the digital signing process. Stay tuned for future releases to see further strides in digital signing.
There are some nice changes to annotation flattening, where we've implemented a high-level API to simplify and enable easy customization of annotation flattening. You can either tell iText to flatten all annotations with just two lines of code, or if you prefer you can define specific types of annotation to be flattened. The power is now at your fingertips.
There's also some miscellaneous improvements and fixes for the layout module relating to table row and cell properties, as well as fixes for a potential infinite loop with tables. We've also fixed an issue where a maliciously crafted PDF with a huge number of pages and empty data structures could cause an out of memory error. Now iText will avoid such issues by more intelligently allocating memory for documents like this.
PDF/A-4 family support
Published by vitali-pr about 1 year ago
Q3 of 2023 is here, and so is a new release of your favorite open-source PDF library for Java and .NET: iText Core 8.0.1! Following the release of iText Suite version 8.0.0 in Q2, you might not be expecting much from a simple patch release. However, we do have a few nice things to talk about.
There’s also a neat feature for the sign module, to follow on from the improvements introduced in 8.0.0. We’ve introduced algorithm agnostic signing/validation so if you wish you can now make use of algorithms not directly supported by iText, but supported by the underlying Bouncy Castle cryptographic library. This is also supported for the Java bc-fips library, but not currently by the .NET version. Note that if you use algorithms not specifically supported by the PDF specification, iText will output a warning to let you know.
There’s some additions in the layout module for CSS flex-wrap and flex-direction for pdfHTML to use, and for the forms module there’s an improvement to optimize PdfFormField regeneration handling.
We’ve also made a number of improvements to the font-asian module, such as improved Unicode support for fonts "HeiseiMin-W3" and "UniJIS-UCS2-H" and other text encoding improvements.
Algorithm agnostic signing/validation
Support for flex-wrap: wrap property and value
Add ability to customize form related implementations
Improved PdfFormField regeneration handling
Several improvements to font-asian module
Fixes for incorrect checkbox handling
Flex item with nested floating element processed incorrectly
PdfPageFormCopier improvements tagging issue
Published by AnhelinaM over 1 year ago
It’s time for our second quarterly release of the iText Suite; yet as we promised last time, this release of the open-source iText Core PDF library and the add-ons which make up the iText Suite is a little bit different. And not just because this is the first release of the iText Suite under the Apryse banner!
Seven years after the first release of version 7 of the iText library, we’re proud to announce the release of iText Core version 8 – aka iText 8.
Just as with the 2016 release of the iText library, iText version 8 has been rewritten and refined to meet the meet the needs of modern document processing. While version 7 was designed around the then upcoming PDF 2.0 specification, iText Core 8.0.0 introduces a number of new features and support for the latest cryptographic related extensions to PDF 2.0. In particular, support has been added for SHA-3 hash functions as specified in ISO/TS 32001, and from ISO/TS 32002 modern elliptical curves for digital signatures are also supported. While these extensions are very new, we believe that it's important for open-source projects such as iText to support and popularize such standards early - especially as we are involved with both the PDF Association and the ISO committees responsible for their publication.
On a related note, direct support for the .NET Bouncy Castle FIPS APIs has been added to iText Core, for compliance with the Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS 140-2) – the benchmark for evaluating cryptographic products. While FIPS 140-2 is a U.S./Canadian Federal standard, it is widely adopted by both governmental and non-governmental sectors worldwide for practical security and realistic best practice.
Bouncy Castle FIPS implementation
For ease of use, we've introduced a new dependency for the sign module: bouncy-castle-connector. After loading the new bouncy-castle-connector module, developers can simply specify whether to load our standard bouncy-castle-adapter or the bouncy-castle-fips-adapter module, depending on their requirements. This is because the FIPS version of Bouncy Castle is more restrictive, and so may not have all the functionality in the vanilla version.
It is important to not add them both as a dependency since they are not compatible. Also, users must explicitly depend on either the standard bouncy-castle-adapter or the bouncy-castle-fips-adapter module. Otherwise the encryption/signing features will fail with an exception, however, this exception will give you a hint to add one of the bc-adapter dependencies.
In addition, Bouncy Castle FIPS has a FIPS approved mode which makes it possible to deliver one application that can be configured to work in FIPS mode or in regular mode. However, those users requiring FIPS compliance will likely only use the FIPS approved mode.
Please note that FIPS support works in .NET Core, but due to a limitation, .NET Framework is not currently supported.
See the Bouncy Castle changes page for more details on using our FIPS implementation.
Other changes to the sign module
For digital signing, we’ve made significant improvements to the sign module in order to both support new features (such as the RSASSA-PSS padding scheme specified by ETSI as the preferred method for PAdES), and to make the process of digital signing easier. Huge thanks to MatthiasValvekens for submitting the pull requests for this, and the ISO/TS 32001 and ISO/TS 32002 extensions mentioned earlier!
Improved forms creation
Big improvements have also been made to the forms module. When creating forms, you can now benefit from a more logical layout-based approach which will greatly aid forms creation and maintenance.
What else is there?
We also have a really nice improvement for text extraction from PDFs containing non-identity CMaps (Character to Glyph Index Mapping Tables) (such as UniJIS-UCS2-H) that contain double mappings. This change enables reliable Unicode extraction regardless of the source encoding of the CMap in the document.
Special mention should be made to the new and improved layout module documentation which can be found in our GitHub repository.
Together with a bunch of API improvements and refinements and improved documentation, we believe iText Core version 8 represents a big leap over previous iText versions. Our aim was to create a great platform for future development, and to maintain iText's reputation as the most performant and most developer friendly .NET library for PDF creation (including PDF/A and PDF/UA), digitally signing PDFs, and much more besides!
RSASSA-PSS support
Add support for recently published ISO extensions to digital signing
Add support for FIPS 140-2 compliant Bouncy Castle module
Improve Checkbox behavior on Adobe Acrobat for PDF/A documents
Support for TIF images with CCITT T.4 compression
Text extraction with non-identity CMaps occasionally produces wrongly decoded output
Published by introfog almost 2 years ago
Happy 2023 everyone! Thanks to our regular quarterly release schedule, the start of a new year also means you can expect a new release of your favorite open-source PDF library: iText Core 7.2.5!
That's not all though, since if you read our blog you'll know that a brand-new version of iText is in the works. iText 8 is coming, and our development team are hard at work adding new features and revising the API to make it even more intuitive for developers. You can learn about some of the things we have planned in our release blog, but customers can get a sneak-peak by checking out the 8.0 snapshots from our Artifactory. Things could still break or change in the API before release though, so be warned!
As for iText Core 7.2.5 though we've still got plenty of neat stuff to talk about, so let's get right into it.
A change in the way documents are opened means you should see a significant performance increase when opening or processing PDFs. In addition, we’ve improved Core’s resilience when dealing with PDFs with incorrect or malformed cross reference (xref) tables. Previous versions would already do a pretty good job of rebuilding invalid xrefs when opening a document. However, issues could still be encountered when a trailer containing references to an object was located before the actual object’s location, for example in linearized PDFs with corrupted xrefs. Cases like these should now be resolved.
The wrapping of text elements inside Paragraph objects has been improved to fix problems with spaces at the beginning or end of lines. See the example linked below for more information.
Support for TIFF images has been updated and extended to include more CCITT compression types. Images using the T.4 compression standard are now supported in Core.
Finally, a bug relating to merging documents has been resolved. In previous versions, layers with identical names would be discarded when merging with UseSmartMode(), even when the layers were assigned to different pages in the document.
Published by introfog almost 2 years ago
The iText 7 Core 7.1.18 release is a maintenance release for iText 7.1.x which includes some recent CVE mitigations and backports from 7.2.x releases.
It addresses two CVE issues (CVE-2022-24196, CVE-2022-24197) which were fixed in the release of iText 7 Core 7.2.2. In addition, we've also backported a fix from our 7.2.1 release which fixes improper nesting of canvas operators when converting SVG to PDF by supporting q/Q Operators inside BT/ET text blocks and objects.
Published by introfog almost 2 years ago
As the last quarter of 2022 rolls around, it’s time for our final release of the year for iText 7 Core. While there’s nothing quite as big to announce as the Android reference implementation from last time, we do have a few cool new things in iText 7.2.4 to tell you about. There’s a nice convenience method improvement for creating tagged PDFs, plus a couple of changes relating to default color spaces for PDF/A documents, and for PDF/A detection in the sign module.
Let’s talk about the changes to PDF tagging first. We noticed that when you apply iText's tagging defaults to somewhat advanced layouts, it could result in rather convoluted tag structures. You could remedy such issues by calling getAccessibilityProperties().setRole(null) on the layout element(s) that don't have semantic value, which attaches all children of the layout element to the element's parent for tagging purposes. However, this was a little inconvenient since invoking setRole(...) is not chainable with regards to the underlying layout element, since it operates on AccessibilityProperties instead of on the layout node itself. This meant that to use this feature, you would need to create an intermediate variable to hold the layout element you wish to be "tag-neutral". To improve things, we’ve added a chainable setNeutralRole() method which can be implemented at the layout element level instead, which is a much more elegant solution.
As for the change to PDF/A default color spaces, ISO 19005-2 6.2.4.3 states that when rendering colors specified in DeviceRGB or DeviceCMYK, and where no matching device independent default color space has been set, conforming readers should use the profile in the file’s PDF/A OutputIntent dictionary as the source color space. Previous versions of iText were not aware when some content was drawn using the color space set by default, and so we’ve now added a check for the Default Color Space in our PdfAChecker mechanism.
In addition, we’ve made an improvement to the sign module relating to the detection and initialization of PDF/A documents. In previous versions of iText 7 Core, we did not check if the given document was a PDF or a PDF/A document. This prevented the PdfSigner from initializing the document as a PdfADocument if it was required. Now the PdfSigner class will check to see if a document claims PDF/A conformance, and treat it accordingly. Note that this does count as a breaking change, so see the example linked below to learn more.
We have also fixed a bug where BBox values for table cells would be inaccurate, leading to text clipping issues. See the example linked below for more information about this fix.
Published by introfog over 2 years ago
Q3 is upon us, and so is the release of iText 7 Core 7.2.3! The big news this time round is naturally the official release of our reference implementation of iText 7 for Android, though there’s plenty more that’s new in Core. We have a fix relating to XMP metadata in PDF/A documents, improved support for SVG image dimensions using exponent notation, and revised the way PDF streams with indirect references are flushed.
Plus, we have the usual round of bugfixes and miscellaneous improvements as always.
In other news, a big thank you to @carl-di-ortus for submitting a fix for XMP metadata in canonical format causing issues, and thus generating invalid namespace attributes in PDF/A documents. We determined the reported issue was caused by the XML library used by the .NET version of iText 7 not supporting the 0x1F char, however the fix should prevent such XMP metadata causing similar compliance issues when generating PDF/A documents.
In addition, another pull request inspired us to make some improvements to the way PDF streams with indirect references are flushed. Thank you @LingMan!
In other news for Core, we’ve made some more SVG improvements by adding support for exponent notation using the capital E to specify image dimensions. We’ve prepared a code example to demonstrate this which you can find linked below.
There’s also a nice change for our AGPL users. If a license file is not provided for Core, it assumes AGPL usage and so occasionally a message is printed to stdout as a reminder. However, if you’re happy that you’re in compliance with the AGPL requirements then seeing this message might become a little annoying after a while. If this is the case, you’ll be pleased to learn that you can disable it, see the example linked below to learn more.
Published by ars18wrw over 2 years ago
It's already Q2 of 2022, and so we're pleased to announce the release of iText Core 7.2.2. Your favorite PDF library for Java and .NET (and more!)
The System.Text.RegularExpressions dependency is now explicit rather than implicit, and uses version 4.3.1.
We've made some improvements to iText's parsing logic for PDF cross-reference structures. This was to prevent the potential for a PDF's structure to be maliciously created to cause infinite loops or other issues.
We've also fixed a bug relating to CFF font parsing. As noted in the specification, CFF is a font format which was developed by Adobe to act as a compact container for one or more fonts by using lossless compression. In cases when a font's CID does not correspond to its GID, iText could incorrectly read its cmap values resulting in incorrect glyphs being displayed in PDF viewers. To address this, the font parsing logic has been rewritten to account for fonts where the glyph IDs do not match the CIDs, and will now handle them in the correct and expected manner.
This release also addresses two CVE issues (CVE-2022-24196, and CVE-2022-24197) which were disclosed. See the Changelog or the linked issues for more details.
Published by ars18wrw almost 3 years ago
iText Core 7.2.1 is the latest release of your favorite PDF library for Java and .NET (and more!), and the first scheduled maintenance release for iText 7.2. It brings further improvements for SVG conversion, supporting default values for the d attribute of the path tag and improving PDF output, which in previous versions could be rendered incorrectly by some PDF viewers, such as Safari and View (macOS), and Documents (iOS). As usual, pdfHTML also benefits from any SVG handling changes.
As for PDF merging functionality, we should note more intelligent outline handling, which is no longer as strict and can fix some syntax mistakes in the Outlines hierarchy. For instance, absence of the parent attribute which is mandatory in the PDF specification is not an issue anymore.
We'd also like to thank the iText community for its contributions, specifically; realityone, with a really important and impactful fix for incompatibility with PDF standards in our codebase and kohler, whose PR helped us a lot in our efforts to process PDF outlines better. We are happy to see that after 21 years there is still so much interest in improving the iText library.
You can also expect other changes such as a number of bug fixes, plus some significant improvements to the codebase.
Published by yulian-gaponenko almost 3 years ago
The iText 7.1.17 release is a maintenance release with a security bug fix for a vulnerability that allowed the use of GhostScript in an unpredictable manner.
At the same time, we are also releasing iText 7.2.0, the next major version of iText. In addition to this bug fix, 7.2.0 contains a great deal of other improvements.
Published by ars18wrw almost 3 years ago
We are pleased to announce the next major version of iText 7; iText 7.2.0.
The most important change in this release of iText 7 is the new Unified License Mechanism, where we can have independent licenses for iText 7 Core, iText 7 add-ons and other products, send statistics to the server, allow users to easily check used volume, and more. As you might guess from the name, the Unified License Mechanism affects the entire iText 7 Suite, so please also check out the iText add-ons which have received updates along with this release.
As this is a major release, please note that we have removed deprecated and redundant methods from the API. This will allow us to better maintain the code and more easily add new functionality in the future.
From this release we are bumping our minimum supported version of the .NET Framework from 4.5 to 4.6.1. The main reason for this change is that it allows the use of the Microsoft.Extensions.Logging framework which is built into .NET Framework 4.6.1, in iText-related code. We expect this to be more popular for our .NET community, since this framework is more modern and flexible, and, most importantly, secure.
Separately, it should be noted that this release contains a security bug fix for a vulnerability that allowed the use of GhostScript in an unpredictable manner.
As for the rest of the changes, 7.2 brings a number of bugfixes, plus some significant improvements to the codebase. Some of these may not yet be visible but will have an important effect on the further development of the iText 7 Suite, its security, and performance.
Published by ars18wrw over 3 years ago
The iText Core 7.1.16 release is already our third release for 2021 and it brings a few important improvements, making our SDK even more flexible, customizable and productive.
We continue to improve the SVG support in iText. For this release we made the TextLeafSvgNodeRenderer
class easily extendable, so you can implement your own conversion logic. This can be beneficial for processing complicated SVG images and make code clearer.
Another important improvement in this release is refactoring the PdfSigner
class responsible for digital signatures. Specifically, the customization of a signature's appearance has been significantly simplified. This is implicitly related to SVG support, as from now on using SVG images for a signature's appearance will not require so much effort on the part of developers.
As for performance improvements, we should note the parsing of Metadata has been optimized, and the fixing of a couple of bugs that could cause deadlocks and memory leaks.
Besides that, support of non-encrypted PDF files with encrypted attachments, and ICCBased colorspaces has been added.
Published by introfog over 3 years ago
iText Core 7.1.15 is the second quarterly release for 2021 of our multifunctional PDF SDK.
Important notes:
We've started preparations for the release of our next major version (7.2) so in this release:
In addition, this release brings many important changes to iText 7. While many of these changes relate to the flexbox support that we've added to pdfHTML 3.0.4, there is also a number of substantial changes which explicitly affect iText 7 Core behaviour. They may not be immediately obvious, but are still significant and involved a great deal of effort from our team:
moveto
command specification.Last but not least; huge amounts of kudos to @borislucas-dev, @trumpetinc, and @dajoropo for their efforts in making iText even better. Thank you for all your pull requests; we feel extremely proud to still have so many active contributors, even after 21(!) years of existence as an open-source product.
Published by ars18wrw almost 4 years ago
The iText Core 7.1.14 release is the first quarterly release of 2021 of our innovative PDF library.
We've continued to further increase the support for SVG, since as noted in previous releases this is an important topic for us.
The new release brings support for the <pattern>
element which benefits both Core, and pdfHTML (3.0.3). This element is used to define a graphics object which can be "tiled" to cover an area. In addition, we also added the support of font-relative units for SVG and fixed the stroke-width processing within <use>
tags.
We've also made improvements to our Acroform support: the missing fields border styles as Beveled, Underline and Inset are now available in iText Core.
A few changes have been made to OpenType Font (OTF) processing which are especially important in the context of Japanese, Chinese and Korean languages. Previously OpenTypeFontTableReader.getLanguageRecord()
only allowed fetching the default language system for a given script, which was not sufficient for CJK regional variant substitution. Now, it's possible to fetch OTF language records by tag.
Note: .NET Standard 1.6 support was deprecated as of the 7.1.13 release, and so from this release we’re targeting NET Standard 2.0
<pattern>
element<use>
tagsPublished by ars18wrw almost 4 years ago
The iText Core 7.1.13 release is the fourth quarterly release of 2020 of our innovative PDF library.
This Core release brings initial support for <symbol>
in SVG, which benefits both Core, and pdfHTML (3.0.2). As we've mentioned previously, we continue to work on increasing support for SVG since it is an important topic for us.
Improvements have been made to the way MemoryLimitsAwareHandler works, and we've also made important changes regarding how word-wrapping is handled in the context of languages that use special scripts, such as Thai, Khmer, Lao, and Myanmar.
Besides that, we investigated and fixed a potential vulnerability in the way iText used to parse XMP metadata which affects both Core and the license library, improved the PDF merging so that it does not ignore OCG dictionaries anymore, and added two new Image filters (DCT and JPXDecode).
As for the rest of the changes, expect the typical assortment of performance improvements and convenience additions.
Published by ars18wrw about 4 years ago
The iText Core 7.1.12 release is the third quarterly release of 2020 of our innovative PDF library.
This Core release brings initial support for <linearGradient>
in SVG and linear-gradient()
in CSS, which is something that both Core, and pdfHTML (3.0.1) will benefit from. SVG is an important topic for us, so be sure to check our future releases, as even wider support is coming.
As for the rest of the changes, expect the typical ongoing mix of yet even more performance improvements and convenience additions.
A big shout-out to @evileye-uk, @tompecina and @hady-malekpour for their pull requests! It is pretty amazing that after 20 years as an open source project, we still get contributions.
Published by ars18wrw over 4 years ago
iText 7.1.11 brings the second quarterly release of 2020 for the iText 7 family.
Other than Core (this project), we're also releasing at the same time, the following open source projects pdfHTML (major 3.0 release!) and RUPS.