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I am trying to use itext7 and itext7.pdfhtml to generate a PDF from some HTML on a server and I then return the written-to MemoryStream as a FileContentResult to the client. However, when the client receives the PDF all they get is an unopenable PDF file which, if the file extension is changed to a .txt, can be seen to contain nothing more than "%PDF-1.7%âãÏÓ".

Having experimented with HtmlConverter.ConvertToPdf I was able to get the simple content in the example below to work (at least the body of it anyway); however, I believe I need HtmlConverter.ConvertToDocument instead now since I need the ability to add a footer and set the page size and margins on the resultant PDF with settings not held within the HTML passed in (in other words I need the iText Document object to manipulate).

Here is the code I am using...

public static byte[] GeneratePdfFromHtml(Action<Document> pdfModifier)
{
    //Gives the converter some very simple HTML for it to create something with!
    var html = "<html><head><title>Extremely Basic Title</title></head><body>Extremely Basic Content</body></html>";

    using (var workStream = new MemoryStream())
    using (var pdfWriter = new PdfWriter(workStream))
    using (var document = HtmlConverter.ConvertToDocument(html, pdfWriter))
    {
        //Passes the document to a delegated function to perform some content, margin or page size manipulation
        pdfModifier(document);

        //Returns the written-to MemoryStream containing the PDF.   
        return workStream.ToArray();
    }
}

This was the version I had working but it lacks the object I need to pass to my delegate.

public static byte[] GeneratePdfFromHtml(Action<Document> pdfModifier)
{
    //Gives the converter some very simple HTML for it to create something with!
    var html = "<html><head><title>Extremely Basic Title</title></head><body>Extremely Basic Content</body></html>";

    using (var workStream = new MemoryStream())
    using (var pdfWriter = new PdfWriter(workStream))
    {
        HtmlConverter.ConvertToPdf(html, pdfWriter);

        //No longer able to call this delegate as there is no Document object to use.
        //pdfModifier(document);

        //Returns the written-to MemoryStream containing the PDF.   
        return workStream.ToArray();
    }
}

1 Answer 1

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In the version you had working you used HtmlConverter.ConvertToPdf. This call internally also creates a Document object but closes it before returning.

Closing the Document object causes all data of the generated PDF still in memory to be flushed to the result stream which then gets finalized with a PDF trailer.

Thus, your working version returns a finished, complete PDF file.

In your new code, though, you use HtmlConverter.ConvertToDocument. This call returns the used Document object but does not close it: You after all still want to use it for some manipulations.

As you don't close the Document object before calling return workStream.ToArray(), you return an incomplete PDF, in your case only a PDF header section.

Thus, you have to close that Document object before retrieving the bytes from your MemoryStream, e.g. explicitly like this

using (var workStream = new MemoryStream())
using (var pdfWriter = new PdfWriter(workStream))
using (var document = HtmlConverter.ConvertToDocument(html, pdfWriter))
{
    //Passes the document to a delegated function to perform some content, margin or page size manipulation
    pdfModifier(document);

    document.Close();

    //Returns the written-to MemoryStream containing the PDF.   
    return workStream.ToArray();
}

or implicitly like this:

using (var workStream = new MemoryStream())
using (var pdfWriter = new PdfWriter(workStream))
{
    using (var document = HtmlConverter.ConvertToDocument(html, pdfWriter))
    {
        //Passes the document to a delegated function to perform some content, margin or page size manipulation
        pdfModifier(document);
    }

    //Returns the written-to MemoryStream containing the PDF.   
    return workStream.ToArray();
}
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  • 1
    I should've mentioned, I previously tried (before to workStream.ToArray()) pdfWriter.Flush(), which made no difference at all; and pdfWriter.Close() which then caused System.ObjectDisposedException: Cannot access a closed Stream. to be thrown when dispose on the document was called. However, I've now also tried your implicit approach and it's actually worked! As a side note, I was also getting an iText.Kernel.PdfException: Document has no pages. exception for the actual HTML I'm passing in in my real method - this seems to have fixed that problem also! Thanks. May 8, 2018 at 15:05

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