I've got some documents in DjVu which I'll like convert to PDF. Is there a way to do this using command line OSS tools?
8 Answers
djvu2pdf should fit the bill, it's a small script that makes use of the djvulibre toolset. If not, there are other methods that require multiple command-line tools.
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What's a pity that, currently there is not djvu2pdf tool in Arch repo and old ver in Arch User repo Nov 2, 2011 at 17:42
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1Installing
djvulibre-bin
using apt-get and then installing the deb file in that link did the trick.– thameeraApr 21, 2014 at 10:27 -
1
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6Mac users can also run
brew install djvu2pdf
to install the program anddjvu2pdf file.djvu
to convert. Homebrew takes care of downloading all its dependencies– Lxrd-AJApr 24, 2020 at 11:26 -
1
djvu2pdf
works although it produces a slightly bigger file thanddjvu
with compression enabled. Other issue is that it doesn't copy the table of contents of the source document.– GrwlfMay 1, 2022 at 11:00
The ddjvu
program
(which is part of the standard djvulibre
package) will do this:
$ ddjvu -format=pdf -quality=85 -verbose a.djvu a.pdf
Warning: this produces large files (but PDF files made by Christoph Sieghart's script are of the same size).
I also wrote the following small shell script some years ago.
It does the same automatically. (Save this as djvu2pdf.sh
.)
#!/bin/sh
# convert DjVu -> PDF
# usage: djvu2pdf.sh <file.djvu>
i="$1"
echo "------------ converting $i to PDF ----------------";
o="$(basename "$i" .djvu).pdf"
echo "[ writing output to $o ] "
ddjvu -format=pdf -quality=85 -verbose "$i" "$o"
The djvu2pdf
script by Christoph Sieghart does essentially the same.
$ djvups input.djvu | ps2pdf - output.pdf
In my case the output file was 10x smaller than with ddjvu. Both djvups
and ps2pdf
present in ubuntu repository.
$ sudo apt-get install djvulibre-bin ghostscript
I've found this method in man ddjvu
, so always read manuals ;)
An alternate way to produce PDF file consists in first using djvups(1) and convert the resulting PostScript file to PDF. Which method gives better results depends on the contents of the DJVU file and on the capabilities of the PS to PDF converter.
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6
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1
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This is the only one preserving the text layer. But increases filesize 10-fold for me. Nov 10, 2021 at 2:05
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Did not preserve the text layer for me, instead produced garbled characters and indeed increased the file size by a factor of ten. Aug 31 at 8:36
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My file went from 5,5MB to 65MB, didn't preserve text and some pages were upside down. Nov 14 at 15:01
What about simply using DJView and export as PDF?
- Goto Synaptic Package Manager (System - Administration - Synaptic Package Manager)
- Install DJview4
- Run DJview (Applications - Graphics - DJView4)
- Open your .djvu document
- Menu - Export As: PDF
Look at http://art.ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1232038
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4The question was about using command line only, so this can be automated.– MaximMay 19, 2019 at 17:40
If you don't care about colors and images you can get much smaller files if you drop the colors and use instead:
ddjvu -format=pdf -mode=black
input.djvu output.pdf
Texts, codes and formulas looks perfectly, but most of the images are gone
I've changed the @Maxim script a little ...
#!/bin/bash
# convert DjVu -> PDF
# usage: djvu2pdf.sh [-q quality | -b] <infile.djvu> [outfile.pdf]
mode='color'
quality=80
aparse() {
while [ $# != 0 ] ; do
case "$1" in
-q|--quality)
quality=${2}
shift
;;
-b|--black)
mode='black'
;;
esac
shift
done
}
aparse "$@"
i="$1"
o=${2:-$(basename $i .djvu).pdf}
if [ -f "$o" ]; then
echo "file $o exists, override [Y/n]?"
read ans
case "$ans" in
n|N) exit 1;;
esac
fi
echo "[ converting $i to $o ] "
cmd="ddjvu -format=pdf -quality=$quality -mode=$mode -verbose $i $o "
echo "[ executing $cmd ] "
$cmd
For MacOS users you can install djvu2pdf like this:
$brew install djvu2pdf
How to use it(works for any Xnix like system):
$djvu2pdf nameBook.djvu nameBookToCreate.pdf
For an approach that preserves the text layer1 one can use djvu2pdf
described in this answer. The general approach is described here or here.
For macOS a minor tweak is required.
BSD readlink -f
behaviour differs from GNU readlink. This can be fixed by installing GNU coreutuils and changing readlink -f
to greadlink -f
.
1. According to the description the table of contents will also be preserved, but I haven't tested that.