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Using iText, generate on memory a PDF that is generated on disk instead

I'm generating a PDF from a Java application. (And works great) the problem is that the PDF is generated on disk as:

        Document documento = new Document(PageSize.A4, 25, 25, 25, 25);
        PdfWriter writer = PdfWriter.getInstance(documento, new FileOutputStream("/Users/sheldon/Desktop/Registry.pdf"));
        documento.open();

        // Put some images on the PDF
        for( byte[] imagen : imagenes )
        {
            Image hoja = Image.getInstance(imagen);
            hoja.scaleToFit(documento.getPageSize().getHeight(), documento.getPageSize().getWidth());
            documento.add(hoja);
        }

        documento.addTitle("Generated Registry!");

        documento.close();

Now, as the user will search for the PDF and print them I don't need to store them on disk. I need (if possible) to generate them in memory and use a command to open (with acrobat reader) that document.

Is that possible? Any idea.

If not, what suggestions (on your experience) have.

Thank you on advance.

EDIT:

Is for an standard Java Desktop Application.

like image 809
Sheldon Avatar asked Jan 28 '10 02:01

Sheldon


2 Answers

If you don't want iText to generate your document to disk, then just do this:

Document documento = new Document(PageSize.A4, 25, 25, 25, 25);
ByteArrayOutputStream out = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
PdfWriter writer = PdfWriter.getInstance(documento, out);
(...)
return out.getBytes();

This won't help you though, since Reader can't access it until you written it somewhere Acrobat can access it. If you don't want that to be on disk, then mount a virtual in memory disk and write your files there. How you do this, depends upon your operating system.

like image 197
behe Avatar answered Oct 04 '22 20:10

behe


For this to work, Acrobat would need to be able to access the memory of another process (Java). This is not possible.

You might just want to write the files to the system's temporary directory.

If your application stays open after opening the PDF in Acrobat, you might want to look into using a combination of File.createTempFile() and File.deleteOnExit(), to have the file deleted upon termination of the JVM.

like image 27
matt b Avatar answered Oct 04 '22 20:10

matt b