What are fast and reliable ways for converting a PDF into a (single) JPEG using the command line on Linux?
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If you build xpdf from sources it comes with little utilities for things like pdftotext, pdftojpeg, and podftohtml. They might be distributed with some Linux distros but they don't seem to be in this Debian I'm using.– Alan CoreyCommented Nov 29, 2020 at 16:24
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Sorry, they're in poppler-utils. pdfdetach, pdffonts, pdfimages, pdfinfo, pdfseparate, pdfsig, pdftocairo, pdftohtml, pdftoppm, pdftops, pdftotext and pdfunite. Or build xpdf from sources, I'm pretty sure.– Alan CoreyCommented Nov 29, 2020 at 18:40
4 Answers
For the life of me, over the last 5 years, I cannot get imagemagick to work consistently (if at all) for me, and I don't know why people continually recommend it again and again. I just googled how to convert a PDF to a JPEG today, found this answer, and tried convert, and it doesn't work at all for me:
Broken command (doesn't work for me):
# BROKEN cmd
$ convert in.pdf out.jpg
convert-im6.q16: not authorized `in.pdf' @ error/constitute.c/ReadImage/412.
convert-im6.q16: no images defined `out.jpg' @ error/convert.c/ConvertImageCommand/3258.
(Update 24 Feb. 2022: here is the fix for imagemagick so convert will work. See also my comment here, and my comments under this answer here. I still like pdftoppm, below, much better, however.)
Then, I remembered there was another tool I use and wrote about, so I googled "linux convert pdf to jpg Gabriel Staples", clicked the first hit, and scrolled down to my answer. Here's what works perfectly for me. This is the basic command format:
Good command--use this instead:
# GOOD cmd
pdftoppm -jpeg -r 300 input.pdf output
Note: on Linux Ubuntu, you may need to do sudo apt update && sudo apt install poppler-utils in order to install pdftoppm. Thanks, @Reynadan.
The -jpeg sets the output image format to JPG, -r 300 sets the output image resolution to 300 DPI, and the word output will be the prefix to all pages of images, which will be numbered and placed into your current directory you are working in. A better way, in my opinion, however, is to use mkdir -p images first to create an "images" directory, then set the output to images/pg so that all output images will be placed cleanly into the images dir you just created, with the file prefix pg in front of each of their numbers.
Therefore, here are my favorite commands:
[Produces ~1MB-sized files per pg] Output in .jpg format at 300 DPI:
mkdir -p images && pdftoppm -jpeg -r 300 mypdf.pdf images/pg[Produces ~2MB-sized files per pg] Output in .jpg format at highest quality (least compression) and still at 300 DPI:
mkdir -p images && pdftoppm -jpeg -jpegopt quality=100 -r 300 mypdf.pdf images/pgIf you need more resolution, you can try 600 DPI:
mkdir -p images && pdftoppm -jpeg -r 600 mypdf.pdf images/pg...or 1200 DPI:
mkdir -p images && pdftoppm -jpeg -r 1200 mypdf.pdf images/pg
See the references below for more details and options.
References:
- [my answer] Convert PDF to image with high resolution
- [my answer] https://askubuntu.com/questions/150100/extracting-embedded-images-from-a-pdf/1187844#1187844
Keywords: ubuntu linux convert pdf to images; pdf to jpeg; ptdf to tiff; pdf2images; pdf2tiff; pdftoppm; pdftoimages; pdftotiff; pdftopng; pdf2png
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1@SteveChavez -singlefile, per the documentation, will "write only the first page and do not add digits". That means if your intent is to generate one long image of all the pages stacked vertically (or stitched horizontally), this will not work. Commented Aug 3, 2021 at 14:28
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2imagemagick did not work for me on Ubuntu 20.04. this worked like a charm!– MIkeeCommented Oct 31, 2021 at 13:08
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1@matanster, also, keep in mind I wrote my answer 3 years after the other answer, which uses that
convertcommand I find to be broken, was accepted as correct. I felt I needed to provide justification for why I'd add a new answer to a 3-yr-old question which already has an accepted and highly-upvoted answer. Only in the last month or so has my answer finally surpassed the original answer in votes. Commented Jan 26, 2022 at 16:41 -
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pdftoppmdid the trick for me.convertworked too, but the resulting jpeg was extremely blurry. Withpdftoppmthe result was way better. So I'd recommend it even if you don't have the problem ofconvertnot working.– AndycCommented Apr 10, 2022 at 19:15 -
1you need to do
sudo apt install poppler-utilsto use pdftoppm command– ReynadanCommented Apr 5, 2023 at 15:03
You can try ImageMagick's convert utility.
On Ubuntu, you can install it with this command:
$ sudo apt-get install imagemagick
Use convert like this:
$ convert input.pdf output.jpg
# For good quality use these parameters
$ convert -density 300 -quality 100 in.pdf out.jpg
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36If you get an error like
convert: not authorized 'filename.pdf' @ error/constitute.c/ReadImage/412., then you need to modify/etc/ImageMagick-6/policy.xmlor just temporarily rename it.– mivkCommented Sep 17, 2019 at 15:04 -
5Unfortunately this doesn't work for me. See the
pdftoppmanswer for a more effective solution. Commented Jun 12, 2020 at 4:09 -
12I needed this to get a high-quality JGP instead of a low resolution one:
convert -density 300 -quality 100 in.pdf out.jpgCommented Jun 17, 2020 at 17:30 -
6@Guus : In my policy.xml, I need to comment out the line
<policy domain="coder" rights="none" pattern="PDF" />. But I usually prefer just temporarily renaming the file when I come across this error.– mivkCommented Sep 1, 2020 at 10:41 -
3what kind of monstrosity is that? Why is there a "policy" in the first place? What are these stupid rules protecting against? Commented Aug 19, 2021 at 8:52
libvips can convert PDF -> JPEG quickly. It comes with most linux distributions, it's in homebrew on macos, and you can download a windows binary from the libvips site.
This will render the PDF to a JPG at the default DPI (72):
vips copy somefile.pdf somefile.jpg
You can use the dpi option to set some other rendering resolution, eg.:
vips copy somefile.pdf[dpi=600] somefile.jpg
You can pick out pages like this:
vips copy somefile.pdf[dpi=600,page=12] somefile.jpg
Or render five pages starting from page three like this:
vips copy somefile.pdf[dpi=600,page=3,n=5] somefile.jpg
The docs for pdfload have all the options.
With this benchmark image, I see:
$ /usr/bin/time -f %M:%e convert -density 300 r8.pdf[3] x.jpg
276220:2.17
$ /usr/bin/time -f %M:%e pdftoppm -jpeg -r 300 -f 3 -l 3 r8.pdf x.jpg
91160:1.24
$ /usr/bin/time -f %M:%e vips copy r8.pdf[page=3,dpi=300] x.jpg
149572:0.53
libvips is about 4x faster, needs half the memory, and output quality is much higher, on this test at least.
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3The square brackets pass those CLI args down to the load operation. Any regular CLI args are passed to the main operation the
vipsprogram is running (copyin this example). You could also usevips pdfload r8.pdf x.jpg --page 3 --dpi 300.– jcupittCommented Jun 18 at 1:59 -
1The square bracket syntax is handy for shell scripts -- I can write a little script that just takes filenames as arguments, and the user will be able to add
[libvips,arguments]to the load and save operations without me having to do any extra coding.– jcupittCommented Jun 18 at 2:06 -
1
Convert from imagemagick seems to do a good job:
convert file.pdf test.jpg
and in case there were multiple files generated:
convert test-0.jpg -append test-1.jpg ... -append one.jpg
to generate a single file, where all pages are concatenated.
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1
convertkeywords are specified with a single dash, i.e.-append test-1.jpgetc. Commented Sep 10, 2021 at 23:48