I found a couple of examples by the iText author that use the Graphics2D API and the Apache Batik library to draw the SVG in a PDF.
http://itextpdf.com/examples/iia.php?id=269
http://itextpdf.com/examples/iia.php?id=263
For my purposes, I needed to take a string of SVG and draw that in a PDF at a certain size and location while maintaining the vector nature of the image (no rasterization).
I wanted to bypass the SVG file that seems prevalent in the SAXSVGDocumentFactory.createSVGDocument() functions. I found the following post helpful for using a SVG text string instead of a flat file.
http://batik.2283329.n4.nabble.com/Parse-SVG-from-String-td3539080.html
You have to create a StringReader from your String and pass that to the SAXSVGDocumentFactory#createDocument(String, Reader) method. The URI that you pass as the first parameter as a String will be the base document URI of the SVG document. This should only be important if your SVG references any external files.
Best regards,
Daniel
Java Source derived from the iText examples:
// SVG as a text string.
String svg = "<svg>...</svg>";
// Create the PDF document.
// rootPath is the present working directory path.
Document document = new Document();
PdfWriter writer = PdfWriter.getInstance(document, new FileOutputStream(new File(rootPath + "svg.pdf")));
document.open();
// Add paragraphs to the document...
document.add(new Paragraph("Paragraph 1"));
document.add(new Paragraph(" "));
// Boilerplate for drawing the SVG to the PDF.
String parser = XMLResourceDescriptor.getXMLParserClassName();
SAXSVGDocumentFactory factory = new SAXSVGDocumentFactory(parser);
UserAgent userAgent = new UserAgentAdapter();
DocumentLoader loader = new DocumentLoader(userAgent);
BridgeContext ctx = new BridgeContext(userAgent, loader);
ctx.setDynamicState(BridgeContext.DYNAMIC);
GVTBuilder builder = new GVTBuilder();
PdfContentByte cb = writer.getDirectContent();
// Parse the SVG and draw it to the PDF.
Graphics2D g2d = new PdfGraphics2D(cb, 725, 400);
SVGDocument chart = factory.createSVGDocument(rootPath, new StringReader(svg));
GraphicsNode chartGfx = builder.build(ctx, chart);
chartGfx.paint(g2d);
g2d.dispose();
// Add paragraphs to the document...
document.add(new Paragraph("Paragraph 2"));
document.add(new Paragraph(" "));
document.close();
Note that this will draw a SVG to the PDF you are working on. The SVG appears as a floating layer above text. I'm still working on moving/scaling it and having it rest inline with text, but hopefully that is outside the immediate scope of the question.
Hope this was able to help.
Cheers
EDIT: I was able to implement my svg as an inline object using the following. The commented lines are for adding a quick border to check positioning.
SAXSVGDocumentFactory factory = new SAXSVGDocumentFactory(XMLResourceDescriptor.getXMLParserClassName());
UserAgent userAgent = new UserAgentAdapter();
DocumentLoader loader = new DocumentLoader(userAgent);
BridgeContext ctx = new BridgeContext(userAgent, loader);
ctx.setDynamicState(BridgeContext.DYNAMIC);
GVTBuilder builder = new GVTBuilder();
SVGDocument svgDoc = factory.createSVGDocument(rootPath, new StringReader(svg));
PdfTemplate svgTempl = PdfTemplate.createTemplate(writer, Float.parseFloat(svgDoc.getDocumentElement().getAttribute("width")), Float.parseFloat(svgDoc.getDocumentElement().getAttribute("height")));
Graphics2D g2d = new PdfGraphics2D(svgTempl, svgTempl.getWidth(), svgTempl.getHeight());
GraphicsNode chartGfx = builder.build(ctx, svgDoc);
chartGfx.paint(g2d);
g2d.dispose();
Image svgImg = new ImgTemplate(svgTempl);
svgImg.setAlignment(Image.ALIGN_CENTER);
//svgImg.setBorder(Image.BOX);
//svgImg.setBorderColor(new BaseColor(0xff, 0x00, 0x00));
//svgImg.setBorderWidth(1);
document.add(svgImg);