You are right. The Size entry in that trailer contains the lowest (i.e. usually the oldest) Size value of all trailers in the document while all other entries in that trailer contain the newest value of their respective keys.
And the cause for this is even worse than I originally thought: That trailer object you get is not simply the latest (or, considering the Size value, the earliest) trailer dictionary in the document, it is the union of all trailer dictionaries, starting with the earliest trailer in the Prev chain up to the newest one.
So far so good. But shouldn't this mean that all entries in that union trailer should have the value from the newest trailer dictionary with the entry key? That's what I thought until I saw the COSDictionary.addAll(COSDictionary)
code used to create that union:
/**
* This will add all of the dictionaries keys/values to this dictionary.
* Only called when adding keys to a trailer that already exists.
*
* @param dic The dictionaries to get the keys from.
*/
public void addAll(COSDictionary dic)
{
dic.forEach((key, value) ->
{
/*
* If we're at a second trailer, we have a linearized pdf file, meaning that the first Size entry represents
* all of the objects so we don't need to grab the second.
*/
if (!COSName.SIZE.equals(key) || !items.containsKey(COSName.SIZE))
{
setItem(key, value);
}
});
}
Here an existing Size entry is explicitly not replaced!
This explains the original observation that the Size entry in that trailer contains the lowest (i.e. usually the oldest) Size value of all trailers in the document while all other entries in that trailer contain the newest value of their respective keys.
The comments give rise to the assumption that this is a relic from the times when PDFBox by default parsed a PDF from the front, ignoring cross reference tables, and the only relevant test PDFs were ones without normal incremental updates, merely ones without updates at all and ones with linearization which uses mechanisms defined for incremental updates in inverse order. And only in case of such linearized documents this exception might make sense.
But why I consider this worse than originally thought: this addAll
method is a public COSDictionary
method which by its name parallels the Java Collection Framework addAll
. Thus, it makes the user think the first JavaDoc line, This will add all of the dictionaries keys/values to this dictionary
, is true; so he'll use it for that task, never expecting that Size entries won't be replaced.
Indeed, even in the PDFBox code itself COSDictionary.addAll(COSDictionary)
is used in other context than for trailer unions in spite of the second JavaDoc line, Only called when adding keys to a trailer that already exists.
This should be inspected and fixed. I created a Jira issue to that effect, PDFBOX-4999.
Size
entries are correct on each trailer.