pdfminify is intended to re-compress PDF images while operating directly at PDF level (i.e., no re-compression using PostScript). It parses the PDF file, hashes all image references, re-links resources that are duplicate (i.e., have the same MD5 hash value) and also is able to re-compress images which are stored with lossless compression in order to use JPEG. It tries to calculate the physical extent of the images (which, depending on the inclusion method, can be a bit messy) and then is able to calculate the actual image resolution. If it exceeds a given target resolution, it can also re-sample images (i.e., re-scaling them using ImageMagick) before re-integrating them into the target PDF.
In particular, I wrote this software because PDFs generated by the libcairo PDF export are huge. Images that are used are included a dozen times and only lossless compression is used. Therefore I use pdfminify to decrease the filesize later.
Another use for pdfminify is that it is able to convert PDFs into PDF/A-1b compliant PDF files. Since this is something that's really difficult to do, there are no guarantees regarding the resulting PDF -- please check for yourself if the results still behave identical to your source version.
Finally, pdfminify is able to digitally sign your PDF files. For this you will need an X.509 certificate and corresponding keypair. The signature will be included in the PDF in the form a banner with metadata and sophisticated PDF readers will be able to verify that the PDF has not been tampered with.
pdfminify needs at least Python 3.5 and the llpdf Python package at least v0.0.4. It furthermore uses the "identify" and "convert" utilities of ImageMagick. It uses the former to determine the width, height, colorspace and bits per component of image files and the latter to convert images from PNM (the internal format that pdfminify is capable of writing natively) to JPEG.
pdfminify uses the Toy Parser Generator (TPG) of Christophe Delord (http://cdsoft.fr/tpg/). It is included (tpg.py file) and licensed under the GNU LGPL v2.1 or any later version. Despite its name, it is far from a toy. In fact, it is the most beautiful parser generator I have ever worked with and makes grammars and parsing exceptionally easy, even for people without any previous parsing experience. If you need parsing and use Python, TPG is the go-to solution I would recommend. Seriously, it's amazing. Check it out. Copyright and license details can be found in EXTERNAL_LICENSES.md.
$ pdfminify usage: pdfminify [-h] [-d dpi] [-j] [--jpeg-quality percent] [--no-downscaling] [--cropbox x,y,w,h] [--unit {cm,inch,mm,native}] [--one-bit-alpha] [--remove-alpha] [--background-color color] [--strip-metadata] [--saveimgdir path] [--raw-output] [--pretty-pdf] [--no-xref-stream] [--no-object-streams] [--pdfa-1b] [--color-profile iccfile] [--sign-cert certfile] [--sign-key keyfile] [--sign-chain pemfile] [--signer name] [--sign-location hostname] [--sign-contact-info infotext] [--sign-reason reason] [--sign-page pageno] [--sign-font pfbfile] [--sign-pos x,y] [--embed-payload path] [--no-pdf-tagging] [--decompress-data] [--analyze] [--dump-xref-table] [--no-filters] [-v] pdf_in pdf_out Minifies PDF files, can crop them, convert them to PDF/A-1b and sign them cryptographically. positional arguments: pdf_in Input PDF file. pdf_out Output PDF file. optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit -d dpi, --target-dpi dpi Default resoulution to which images will be resampled at. Defaults to 150 dots per inch (dpi). -j, --jpeg-images Convert images to JPEG format. This means that lossy compression is used that however often yields a much higher compression ratio. --jpeg-quality percent When converting images to JPEG format, the parameter gives the compression quality. It is an integer from 0-100 (higher is better, but creates also larger output files). --no-downscaling Do not apply downscaling filter on the PDF, take all images as they are. --cropbox x,y,w,h Crop pages by additionally adding a /CropBox to all pages of the PDF file. Pages will be cropped at offset (x, y) to a width (w, h). The unit in which offset, width and height are given can be specified using the --unit parameter. --unit {cm,inch,mm,native} Specify the unit of measurement that is used for input and output. Can be any of cm, inch, mm, native, defaults to native. One native PDF unit equals 1/72th of an inch. --one-bit-alpha Force all alpha channels in images to use a color depth of one bit. This will make transparent images have rougher edges, but saves additional space. --remove-alpha Entirely remove the alpha channel (i.e., transparency) of all images. The color which with transparent areas are replaced with can be specified using the --background-color command line option. --background-color color When removing alpha channels, specifies the color that should be used as background. Defaults to white. Hexadecimal values can be specified as well in the format '#rrggbb'. --strip-metadata Strip metadata inside PDF objects that is not strictly required, such as /PTEX.* entries inside object content. --saveimgdir path When specified, save all handled images as individual files into the specified directory. Useful for image extraction from a PDF as well as debugging. --raw-output When saving images externally, save them in exactly the format in which they're also present inside the PDF. Note that this will produce raw image files in some cases which won't have any header (but just contain pixel data). Less useful for image extraction, but can make sense for debugging. --pretty-pdf Write pretty PDF files, i.e., format all dictionaries so they're well-readable regarding indentation. Increases required file size a tiny bit and increases generation time of the PDF a little, but produces easily debuggable PDFs. --no-xref-stream Do not write the XRef table as a XRef stream, but instead write a classical PDF XRef table and trailer. This will increase the file size a bit, but might improve compatibility with old PDF readers (XRef streams are supported only starting with PDF 1.5). XRef-streams are a prerequisite to object stream compression, so if XRef-streams are disabled, so will also be object streams (e.g, --no-object-streams is implied). --no-object-streams Do not compress objects into object-streams. Object stream compression is introduced with PDF 1.5 and means that multiple simple objects (without any stream data) are concatenated together and compressed together into one large stream object. --pdfa-1b Try to create a PDF/A-1b compliant PDF document. Implies --no-xref-stream, --no-object-streams, --remove-alpha, removes transpacency groups and adds a PDF/A entry into XMP metadata. --color-profile iccfile When creating a PDF/A-1b PDF, gives the Internal Color Consortium (ICC) color profile that should be embedded into the PDF as part of the output intent. When omitted, it defaults to the sRGB IEC61966 v2 "black scaled" profile which is included within pdfminify. --sign-cert certfile pdfminify can additionally cryptographically sign your result PDF file with an X.509 certificate and corresponding key. This parameter specifies the certificate filename. --sign-key keyfile This parameter specifies the key filename, also in PEM format. --sign-chain pemfile When signing a PDF, this gives the PEM-formatted certificate chain file. Can be omitted if this should not be included in the PKCS#7 signature. --signer name The name of the person responsible for signing the document. --sign-location hostname The location of the signing; usually this is the hostname of the computer that the signature is generated on. --sign-contact-info infotext A contact information field under which the signer can be reached. Usually a phone number of email address. --sign-reason reason The reason why the document was signed. --sign-page pageno Page number on which the signature should be displayed. Defaults to 1. --sign-font pfbfile To be able to include metadata text in the signature form, a T1 font must be included into the PDF. This gives the filename of the font that is to be used for that purpose. Must be in PFB (PostScript Font Binary) file format and will be included in the result PDF in full (i.e., not reduced to the glyphs that are actually needed). Defaults to the Bitstream Charter Serif font that is included within pdfminify. --sign-pos x,y Determines where the signature will be placed on the page. Units are determined by the --unit variable and the position is relative to lower left corner. --embed-payload path Embed an opaque file as a payload into the PDF as a valid PDF object. This is useful only if you want to place an easter egg inside your PDF file. --no-pdf-tagging Omit tagging the PDF file with a reference to pdfminify and the used version. --decompress-data Decompress all FlateDecode compressed data in the file. Useful only for debugging. --analyze Perform an analysis of the read PDF file and dump out useful information about it. --dump-xref-table Dump out the XRef table that was read from the input PDF file. Mainly useful for debugging. --no-filters Do not apply any filters on the source PDF whatsoever, just read it in and write it back out. This is useful to reformat a PDF and/or debug the PDF reader/writer facilities without introducing other sources of malformed PDF generation. -v, --verbose Show verbose messages during conversation. Can be specified multiple times to increase log level. pdfminify version 0.2.1; llpdf version: 0.0.4
PDF is an inherently messy format and parsing it really isn't pretty. I've implemented only what I needed to implement in order to get my job done. I'm sure there's dozens of examples in which pdfminify just plainly doesn't work or creates broken output PDFs. Please feel free to fix these errors and send in a pull request. I think it's a genuinely useful tool and therefore would be nice to support a wider variety of PDFs than just those that I happen to generate.
If you encounter an issue but are unable to fix it because you don't know enough about Python, PDF (or either), I will still look at your issue if you report it on GitHub. However due to my lack of time, I cannot promise that I can fix it -- to be honest, PDF is so complicated that I'm not even sure that I can find what the issue is. In any case, be sure to include a minimal example PDF that demonstrates the issue in the bug report.
pdfminify is licensed under the GNU GPL v3 (except for external components as TPG, which has its own license). Later versions of the GPL are explicitly excluded.
TPG (Toy Parser Generator) falls under its respective license (see EXTERNAL_LICENSES.md).