mirror of https://gitlab.com/curben/blog
2.3 KiB
2.3 KiB
title | date | tags |
---|---|---|
Make PDF files smaller | 2019-01-05 00:00:00 |
The most effective ways of reducing the file size of a PDF is by converting to grayscale and reduce the resolution.
Requirement: ghostscript (installed by default in Ubuntu)
Save the following script as "pdfcompress.sh".
Usage: sh pdfcompress.sh input.pdf
The output compressed file is named as "input.compressed.pdf"
#!/bin/sh
filename=$(basename "$1")
dir=$(dirname "$1")
gs \
-sOutputFile="$dir/${filename%.*}.compressed.pdf" \
-sDEVICE=pdfwrite \
-dPDFSETTINGS=/ebook \
-sColorConversionStrategy=Gray \
-sColorConversionStrategyForImages=/Gray \
-dProcessColorModel=/DeviceGray \
-dCompatibilityLevel=1.4 \
-dNOPAUSE -dBATCH -dQUIET \
"$1"
Options (more info):
- Remove ColorConversionStrategy, ColorConversionStrategyForImages and ProcessColorModel lines to retain colour.
- PDFSETTINGS:
- /default selects output intended to be useful across a wide variety of uses. 72 DPI.
- /screen selects low-resolution output similar to the Acrobat Distiller "Screen Optimized" setting. 72 DPI.
- /ebook selects medium-resolution output similar to the Acrobat Distiller "eBook" setting. 150 DPI.
- /printer selects output similar to the Acrobat Distiller "Print Optimized" setting. 300 DPI.
- /prepress selects output similar to Acrobat Distiller "Prepress Optimized" setting. 300 DPI.
Use the following script to compress all PDFs in a folder.
Usage: sh pdfcompress.sh 'target folder'
#!/bin/sh
cd "$1"
for i in *.pdf; do
[ -f "$i" ] || break
# Skip compressed PDFs
echo "$i" | grep --quiet ".compressed.pdf"
if [ $? = 1 ]
then
gs \
-sOutputFile="${i%.*}.compressed.pdf" \
-sDEVICE=pdfwrite \
-dPDFSETTINGS=/ebook \
-sColorConversionStrategy=Gray \
-sColorConversionStrategyForImages=/Gray \
-dProcessColorModel=/DeviceGray \
-dCompatibilityLevel=1.4 \
-dNOPAUSE -dBATCH -dQUIET \
"$i"
fi
done
Source: Internal Pointers, firstdoit, ahmed-musallam, Ghostscript Docs