I'm using Ghostscript to rasterize the first page of a PDF file to JPEG. To avoid creating tempfiles, the PDF data is piped into Ghoscripts's stdin and the JPEG is "drained" on stdout. This pipeline works like a charm until GS receives invalid PDF data: Instead of reporting all error messages on stderr as I would have expected, it still writes some of the messages to stdout instead.
To reproduce:
$ echo "Not a PDF" >test.txt
$ /usr/bin/gs -q -sDEVICE=jpeg -dBATCH -dNOPAUSE -dFirstPage=1 -dLastPage=1 \
-r300 -sOutputFile=- - < test.txt 2>/dev/null
Error: /undefined in Not
Operand stack:
Execution stack:
...
Note the 2>/dev/null
above does not suppress the error messages. Ghostscript's documentation already warned that writing to stdout requires the -q
flag to suppress messages on stdout, but I still seem to be missing something here.
If you want to really silence Ghostscript, modify your command line like this:
/usr/bin/gs -q \
-sstdout=%stderr \
-sDEVICE=jpeg \
-dBATCH \
-dNOPAUSE \
-dLastPage=1 \
-r300 \
-sOutputFile=- \
- < test.txt 2>/dev/null
The addition of -sstdout=%stderr
allows Postscript stdout to be redirected, while still allowing drivers to write to stdout. (That patch is in Ghostscript since ~2001, Sept 22.)
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