I have some PDF documents and I'd like to check them for possibile data corruption, even if I'm able to display them without problems. I don't really know if PDF documents store an embedded checksum string for this kind of purposes. My operating system of choice is GNU/Linux. Thanks.
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If they display OK why do you suspect they're corrupt?– Hugh AllenApr 11, 2010 at 11:06
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I don't think they are corrupted. I just have to archive them and preserve them from future corruption. So I should choose between computing a MD5/SHA1/SHA2 checksum myself or relying on an embedded checksum.– Francesco TurcoApr 11, 2010 at 18:10
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Just use a free tool which gives you a checksum and provide it with the pdf (in a zip package for example).– ApacheMay 15, 2010 at 18:11
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1 Answer
Browsing through PDF Reference sixth edition (2006), it appears that PDF files do not have an overall checksum, though embedded files within the PDF (similar to attachments in an email message) may optionally have an MD5 hash.
You should therefore archive your PDFs in a container which supports error detection / correction. For example, a zip file, or optical media (CD-R etc).
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File compression(zip,rar) is also known to use CRC same as used on optical medias.– AlgificApr 12, 2010 at 12:35