I'm trying to use iTextSharp to rotate a page & have it read by ghostscript to generate the pages as images. This is how I'm rotating the pages:
byte[] retVal = null;
using (MemoryStream oOutput = new MemoryStream())
{
PdfReader oPDFReader = new PdfReader(BaseFile);
PdfStamper stamper = new PdfStamper(oPDFReader, oOutput );
for (var pageNum = 1; pageNum <= oPDFReader.NumberOfPages; pageNum++)
{
var oDocumentPage = DocumentPages.Where(page => page.PageNumber == pageNum && page.RotationDegree != 0).FirstOrDefault();
if (oDocumentPage != null )
{
if (oDocumentPage.RotationDegree < 0)
oDocumentPage.RotationDegree = oDocumentPage.RotationDegree + 360; //make sure this is a positive value.
int desiredRot = oDocumentPage.RotationDegree;
PdfDictionary oPageDict = oPDFReader.GetPageN(pageNum);
PdfNumber rotation = oPageDict.GetAsNumber(PdfName.ROTATE);
if (rotation != null)
{
desiredRot += rotation.IntValue;
desiredRot %= 360; // must be 0, 90, 180, or 270
}
oPageDict.Put(PdfName.ROTATE, new PdfNumber(desiredRot));
}
}
stamper.FormFlattening = true;
stamper.Writer.CloseStream = false;
stamper.Close();
retVal = oOutput.ToArray();
oOutput.Close();
}
return retVal;
But when I run this in ghostscript, I get the following error:
**** Warning: An error occured while reading an XREF table.
**** The file has been damaged. This may have been caused
**** by a problem while converting or transfering the file.
**** Ghostscript will attempt to recover the data.
****
**** This file had errors that were repaired or ignored.
**** The file was produced by:
**** >>>> Adobe LifeCycle Designer ES 8.2; modified using iTextSharp 4.1.6 by 1T3XT <<<<
**** Please notify the author of the software that produced this
**** file that it does not conform to Adobe's published
**** PDF specification.
I'm currently referencing ghostscript in a WCF project, so this console.out message actually crashes my program. Ideally I want to generate the PDF without the program throwing this error, but alternatively I'm looking into hosting this WCF in a console so it can throw out repairable errors to its heart's content.
Any idea?