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mPDF is a PHP class which generates PDF files from UTF-8 encoded HTML. It is based on FPDF and HTML2FPDF, with a number of enhancements.

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mPDF is a PHP class which generates PDF files from UTF-8 encoded HTML. It is based on FPDF and HTML2FPDF (see CREDITS), with a number of enhancements. mPDF was written by Ian Back and is released under the GNU GPL v2 licence.

Installation

  • Download the .zip file and unzip it

  • Create a folder e.g. /mpdf on your server

  • Upload all of the files to the server, maintaining the folders as they are

  • Ensure that you have write permissions set (CHMOD 6xx or 7xx) for the following folders:

    /ttfontdata/ - used to cache font data; improves performance a lot

    /tmp/ - used for some images and ProgressBar

    /graph_cache/ - if you are using JpGraph in conjunction with mPDF

To test the installation, point your browser to the basic example file:

[path_to_mpdf_folder]/mpdf/examples/example01_basic.php

If you wish to define a different folder for temporary files rather than /tmp/ see the note on Folder for temporary files in the section on Installation & Setup in the manual.

If you have problems, please read the section on troubleshooting in the manual.

Fonts

Let us refer to font names in 2 ways:

  1. "CSS font-family name" - mPDF is designed primarily to read HTML and CSS. This is the name used in CSS e.g.

    <p style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS';">

  2. "mPDF font-family name" - the name used internally to process fonts. This could be anything you like, but by default mPDF will convert CSS font-family names by removing any spaces and changing to lowercase. Reading the name above, mPDF will look for a "mPDF font-family name" of:

    'trebuchetms'

The configurable values referred to below are set in the config_fonts.php file.

When parsing HTML/CSS, mPDF will read the CSS font-family name (e.g. 'Trebuchet MS') and convert by removing any spaces and changing to lowercase, to look for a mPDF font-family name (trebuchetms).

Next it will look for a translation (if set) in config_font.php e.g.:

$this->fonttrans = array(
    'trebuchetms' => 'trebuchet'
)

Now the mPDF font-family name to be used is 'trebuchet'

If you wish to make this font available, you need to specify the Truetype .ttf font files for each variant. These should be defined in config_font.php in the array:

$this->fontdata = array(
    "trebuchet" => array(
	    'R' => "trebuc.ttf",
	    'B' => "trebucbd.ttf",
	    'I' => "trebucit.ttf",
	    'BI' => "trebucbi.ttf",
	    )
)

This is the array which determines whether a font is available to mPDF. Each font-family must have a Regular ['R'] file defined - the others (bold, italic, bold-italic) are optional.

mPDF will try to load the font-file. If you have defined _MPDF_SYSTEM_TTFONTS at the top of the config_fonts.php file, it will first look for the font-file there. This is useful if you are running mPDF on a computer which already has a folder with TTF fonts in (e.g. on Windows)

If the font-file is not there, or _MPDF_SYSTEM_TTFONTS is not defined, mPDF will look in the folder

/[your_path_to_mpdf]/ttfonts/

Note that the font-file names are case-sensitive and can contain capitals.

If the folder /ttfontdata/ is writeable (CHMOD 644 or 755), mPDF will save files there which it can re-use next time it accesses a particular font. This will significantly improve processing time and is strongly recommended.

mPDF should be able to read most TrueType Unicode font files with a .ttf extension. Truetype fonts with .otf extension that are OpenType also work OK. TrueType collections (.ttc) will also work if they contain TrueType Unicode fonts.

Character substitution

Most people will have access to a Pan-Unicode font with most Unicode characters in it such as Arial Unicode MS. Set:

$this->backupSubsFont = array('arialunicodems');

at the top of the config_fonts.php file to use this font when substituting any characters not found in the specific font being used.

Example: You can set:

$mpdf->useSubstitutions = true;

at runtime, or

$this->useSubstitutions = true;

in the config.php file

This text contains a Thai character ม which does not exist in the Comic Sans MS font file

When useSubstitutions is true, mPDF will try to find substitutions for any missing characters:

  1. firstly looks if the character is available in the inbuilt Symbols or ZapfDingbats fonts;
  2. [If defined] looks in each of the the font(s) set by $this->backupSubsFont array

NB There is an increase in processing time when using substitutions, and even more so if a backupSubsFont is defined.

Controlling mPDF mode

The first parameter of new mPDF('') works as follows:

  • new mPDF('c') - forces mPDF to only use the built-in [c]ore Adobe fonts (Helvetica, Times etc)

  • new mPDF('') - default - font subsetting behaviour is determined by the configurable variables $this->maxTTFFilesize and $this->percentSubset (see below)

    Default values are set so that:

    1. Very large font files are always subset
    2. Fonts are embedded as subsets if < 30% of the characters are used
  • new mPDF('..+aCJK')

    new mPDF('+aCJK')

    new mPDF('..-aCJK')

    new mPDF('-aCJK')

    Used optionally together with a language or language/country code, +aCJK will force mPDF to use the Adobe non-embedded CJK fonts when a passage is marked with e.g. "lang: ja"

    This can be used at runtime to override the value set for $mpdf->useAdobeCJK in config.php

    Use in conjunction with settings in config_cp.php

For backwards compatibility, new mPDF('-s') and new mPDF('s') will force subsetting by setting

$this->percentSubset=100

new mPDF('utf-8-s') and new mPDF('ar-s') are also recognised

Configuration variables changed

Configuration variables are documented in the on-line manual.

Font folders

If you wish to define your own font file folders (perhaps to share), you can define the 2 constants in your script before including the mpdf.php script e.g.:

define('_MPDF_TTFONTPATH','your_path/ttfonts/');
define('_MPDF_TTFONTDATAPATH','your_path/ttfontdata/'); 	// should be writeable

Unit Testing

Unit testing for mPDF is done using PHPUnit.

To get started, run composer install from the command line while in the mPDF root directory (you'll need composer installed first).

To execute tests, run ../vendor/bin/phpunit from the command line while in the mPDF /tests/ directory.

Any assistance writing unit tests for mPDF is greatly appreciated. If you'd like to help, please note that any PHP file located in the /tests/ directory will be autoloaded when unit testing.

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mPDF is a PHP class which generates PDF files from UTF-8 encoded HTML. It is based on FPDF and HTML2FPDF, with a number of enhancements.

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