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PDF Tools is, among other things, a replacement of DocView for PDF files. The key difference is that pages are not pre-rendered by e.g. ghostscript and stored in the file-system, but rather created on-demand and stored in memory.
This rendering is performed by a special library named, for
whatever reason, poppler, running inside a server program. This
program is called epdfinfo
and its job is to successively
read requests from Emacs and produce the proper results, i.e. the
PNG image of a PDF page.
Actually, displaying PDF files is just one part of PDF Tools. Since poppler can provide us with all kinds of information about a document and is also able to modify it, there is a lot more we can do with it. Watch
Please read also about known problems.
- View
- View PDF documents in a buffer with DocView-like bindings.
- Isearch
- Interactively search PDF documents like any other buffer, either for a string or a PCRE.
- Occur
- List lines matching a string or regexp in one or more PDF documents.
- Follow
- Click on highlighted links, moving to some part of a different page, some external file, a website or any other URI. Links may also be followed by keyboard commands.
- Annotations
- Display and list text and markup annotations (like underline), edit their contents and attributes (e.g. color), move them around, delete them or create new ones and then save the modifications back to the PDF file.
- Attachments
- Save files attached to the PDF-file or list them in a dired buffer.
- Outline
- Use imenu or a special buffer to examine and navigate the PDF’s outline.
- SyncTeX
- Jump from a position on a page directly to the TeX source and vice versa.
- Virtual
- Use a collection of documents as if it were one, big single PDF.
- Misc
-
- Display PDF’s metadata.
- Mark a region and kill the text from the PDF.
- Keep track of visited pages via a history.
- Apply a color filter for reading in low light conditions.
The package may be installed via melpa and it will try to build the server part when it is activated the first time. Though the next section regarding build-prerequisites is still relevant, the rest of the installation instructions assume a build from within a git repository. (The melpa package has a different directory structure.)
You’ll need GNU Emacs ≥ 24.3 and some form of a GNU/Linux OS. Other operating systems are currently not supported (patches welcome). The following instructions assume a Debian-based system. (The prerequisites may be installed automatically on this kind of systems, see Compilation .)
First make sure a suitable build-system is installed. We need at
least a C/C++ compiler (both gcc
and g++
), make
, automake
and autoconf
.
Next we need to install a few libraries PDF Tools depends on, some of which are probably already on your system.
$ sudo aptitude install libpng-dev zlib1g-dev
$ sudo aptitude install libpoppler-glib-dev
$ sudo aptitude install libpoppler-private-dev
On some older Ubuntu systems, the final command will possibly give
an error. This should be no problem, since in some versions this
package was contained in the main package libpoppler-dev
. Also
note, that zlib1g-dev
was for a long time called libz-dev
,
which it still may be on your system.
Debian wheezy comes with libpoppler version 0.18, which is pretty old. The minimally required version is 0.16, but some features of PDF Tools depend on a more recent version of this library. See the following table for what they are and what version they require.
You want to … | Required version |
---|---|
… create and modify text annotations. | ≥ 0.19.4 |
… search case-sensitive. | ≥ 0.22 |
… create and modify markup annotations. | ≥ 0.26 |
In case you decide to install libpoppler from source, make sure
to run its configure script with the --enable-xpdf-headers
option.
Finally there is one feature (following links of a PDF document by plain keystrokes) which requires imagemagick’s convert utility. This requirement is optional and you may install it like so:
$ sudo aptitude install imagemagick
Although OS X is not officially supported, it has been reported to have been successfully compiled. You will need to install poppler which you can get with homebrew via
$ brew install poppler automake
You will also have to help pkg-config
find some libraries by
setting PKG_CONFIG_PATH
, e.g.
$ export PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/usr/local/Cellar/zlib/1.2.8/lib/pkgconfig:/usr/local/lib/pkgconfig:/opt/X11/lib/pkgconfig
or likewise within Emacs using `setenv`.
After that, compilation should proceed as normal.
Although not officially supported, it has been reported that pdf-tools work well on FreeBSD. Instead of building pdf-tools, you can install one of the OS packages with, e.g.
$ pkg install pdf-tools-emacs26
To see the current list of pdf-tools packages for FreeBSD visit the Repology list.
To build pdf-tools from either melpa or directly from the source repository, install the dependencies with
$ pkg install autotools gmake poppler-glib
If you choose not to install from melpa, you must substitute
gmake
for make
in the instructions below.
It is possible to compile pdf-tools on Centos. Install poppler the dependencies with:
$ yum install poppler-devel poppler-glib-devel
$ sudo dnf install make automake autoconf gcc gcc-c++ ImageMagick libpng-devel zlib-devel poppler-glib-devel
$ apk add build-base g++ gcc automake autoconf libpng-dev glib-dev poppler-dev
PDF Tools can be built and used on Windows using the MSYS2 compiler. This will work with native (not cygwin) Windows builds of emacs. This includes the standard binaries provided by the GNU project, those available as MSYS2 packages and numerous third-party binaries. It has been tested with emacs 25.1. Instructions are provided under Compilation and installation on Windows, below. PDF Tools will successfully compile using Cygwin, but it will not be able to open PDFs properly due to the way binaries compiled with Cygwin handle file paths.
Now it’s time to compile the source.$ cd /path/to/pdf-tools
$ make install-server-deps # optional
$ make -s
The make install-server-deps
command will try to install all
necessary programs and libraries to build the package, though
it’ll only work, if sudo
and apt-get
are available.
This should compile the source code and create a Emacs Lisp Package in the root directory of the project. The configure script also tells you at the very end, which features, depending on the libpoppler version, will be available. These commands should give no error, otherwise you are in trouble.
If using the GNU binaries for Windows, support for PNG and zlib must first be installed by copying the appropriate dlls into emacs’bin/
directory. Most third-party binaries come with this
already done.
First, install install MSYS2 and update the package database and core packages using the instructions provided. Then, to compile PDF tools itself:
- Open msys2 shell
- Update and install dependencies, skipping any you already have
$ pacman -Syu $ pacman -S base-devel $ pacman -S mingw-w64-x86_64-toolchain $ pacman -S mingw-w64-x86_64-zlib $ pacman -S mingw-w64-x86_64-libpng $ pacman -S mingw-w64-x86_64-poppler $ pacman -S mingw-w64-x86_64-imagemagick
- Install PDF tools in Emacs, but do not try to compile the
server. Instead, get a separate copy of the source somewhere
else.
$ git clone https://github.com/politza/pdf-tools
- Open mingw64 shell (Note: You must use mingw64.exe and not msys2.exe)
- Compile pdf-tools
$ cd /path/to/pdf-tools $ make -s
- This should produce a file
server/epdfinfo.exe
. Copy this file into thepdf-tools/
installation directory in your Emacs. - Start Emacs and activate the package.
M-x pdf-tools-install RET
- Test.
M-x pdf-info-check-epdfinfo RET
If this is successful, (pdf-tools-install)
can be added to Emacs’
config. Note that libraries from other GNU utilities, such as Git
for Windows, may interfere with those needed by PDF Tools.
pdf-info-check-epdinfo
will succeed, but errors occur when trying
to view a PDF file. This can be fixed by ensuring that the MSYS
libraries are always preferred in emacs:
(setenv "PATH" (concat "C:\\msys64\\mingw64\\bin;" (getenv "PATH")))
This package depends on the following Elisp packages, which should be installed before installing the Pdf Tools package.
Package | Required version |
---|---|
let-alist | >= 1.0.4 (comes with Emacs 25.2) |
tablist | >= 0.70 |
If make
produced the ELP file pdf-tools-${VERSION}.tar
you are
fine. This package contains all the necessary files for Emacs
and may be installed by either using
$ make install-package
or executing the Emacs command
M-x package-install-file RET pdf-tools-${VERSION}.tar RET
To complete the installation process, you need to activate the package by putting
(pdf-tools-install)
somewhere in your .emacs
. Alternatively, and if you care about
start-up time, you may want to use
(pdf-loader-install)
instead. Next you probably want to take a look at the various features of what you’ve just installed. The following two commands might be of help for doing so.
M-x pdf-tools-help RET
M-x pdf-tools-customize RET
Some day you might want to update this package via git pull
and
then reinstall it. Sometimes this may fail, especially if
Lisp-Macros are involved and the version hasn’t changed. To avoid
this kind of problems, you should delete the old package via
list-packages
, restart Emacs and then reinstall the package.
This also applies when updating via package and melpa.
PDF Tools does not work well together with linum-mode
and
activating it in a pdf-view-mode
, e.g. via global-linum-mode
,
might make Emacs choke.
Autorevert works by polling the file-system every
auto-revert-interval
seconds, optionally combined with some
event-based reverting via file notification. But this currently
does not work reliably, such that Emacs may revert the PDF-buffer
while the corresponding file is still being written to (e.g. by
LaTeX), leading to a potential error.
With a recent auctex installation, you might want to put the following somewhere in your dotemacs, which will revert the PDF-buffer after the TeX compilation has finished.
(add-hook 'TeX-after-compilation-finished-functions #'TeX-revert-document-buffer)
Navigation | |
---|---|
Scroll Up / Down by page-full | space / backspace |
Scroll Up / Down by line | C-n / C-p |
Scroll Right / Left | C-f / C-b |
Top of Page / Bottom of Page | < / > |
Next Page / Previous Page | n / p |
First Page / Last Page | M-< / M-> |
Incremental Search Forward / Backward | C-s / C-r |
Occur (list all lines containing a phrase) | M-s o |
Jump to Occur Line | RETURN |
Pick a Link and Jump | F |
Incremental Search in Links | f |
History Back / Forwards | B / N |
Display Outline | o |
Jump to Section from Outline | RETURN |
Jump to Page | M-g g |
Display | |
Zoom in / Zoom out | + / - |
Fit Height / Fit Width / Fit Page | H / W / P |
Trim margins (set slice to bounding box) | s b |
Reset margins | s r |
Reset Zoom | 0 |
Annotations | |
List Annotations | C-c C-a l |
Jump to Annotations from List | SPACE |
Mark Annotation for Deletion | d |
Delete Marked Annotations | x |
Unmark Annotations | u |
Close Annotation List | q |
Add and edit annotations | via Mouse selection and left-click context menu |
Syncing with Auctex | |
jump to PDF location from source | C-c C-g |
jump source location from PDF | C-mouse-1 |
Miscellaneous | |
Refresh File (e.g., after recompiling source) | g |
Print File | C-c C-p |