• Stars
    star
    299
  • Rank 139,269 (Top 3 %)
  • Language
    OCaml
  • License
    GNU General Publi...
  • Created over 8 years ago
  • Updated almost 7 years ago

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Be the first to send feedback to the community and the maintainers!

Repository Details

A PDF parser and validator

Caradoc - a PDF parser and validator

Caradoc is a parser and validator of PDF files written in OCaml. This is version 0.3 (beta).

Caradoc provides many commands to analyze PDFs, as well as an interactive user interface in console.

Caradoc was presented at the the third Workshop on Language-Theoretic Security (LangSec) in May 2016. More information is available on the website of the conference.

Dependencies

Along with an OCaml compiler, this program depends on the following libraries:

  • menhir, the parser generator that we use to convert PDF grammar into OCaml code;
  • ounit, to manage unit tests;
  • cryptokit, to handle the decoding of Deflate streams in PDF files;
  • curses, for the text-based user interface.

The prefered way to install dependencies is via opam, the OCaml package manager. The following commands give an example of installation.

apt-get install ocaml opam
apt-get install zlib1g-dev libgmp-dev pkg-config m4
opam init
opam install ocamlfind
opam install cryptokit ounit menhir curses

It is also possible to use the corresponding Debian packages.

apt-get install ocaml zlib1g-dev ocaml-findlib libcryptokit-ocaml-dev libounit-ocaml-dev libcurses-ocaml-dev menhir

Installation

After installing the dependencies, just type make to compile the code. You may want to run make test to check that the program runs properly on your architecture and versions of OCaml and OPAM.

Examples

Command line

To obtain simple statistics on a PDF file, just type:

caradoc stats path/to/your/input.pdf

To validate a PDF file, check the exit code of:

caradoc stats --strict path/to/your/input.pdf

To normalize a PDF file into the strict syntax:

caradoc cleanup path/to/your/input.pdf --out path/to/your/output.pdf

To print the xref table(s):

caradoc xref path/to/your/input.pdf

To print the trailer(s):

caradoc trailer path/to/your/input.pdf

To extract a specific object, given its object number (and generation number, defaulted to zero):

caradoc object --num 2 path/to/your/input.pdf
caradoc object --num 2 --gen 5 path/to/your/input.pdf

To extract complex data in a single command (xref table, dump of all objects, list of types, graph of references):

caradoc extract --xref <xref output file> --dump <objects output file> --types <types output file> --dot <graph output file> path/to/your/input.pdf

To print the list of PDF types handled by this version of Caradoc:

caradoc types

To find all references to an object, given its object number (and generation number, defaulted to zero):

caradoc findref --num 2 input.pdf
caradoc findref --num 2 --gen 5 --show --highlight input.pdf

To find all occurrences of a PDF name:

caradoc findname --name Page input.pdf
caradoc findname --name Resources --show --highlight input.pdf

Interactive mode

You can also try the interactive user interface in console:

caradoc ui path/to/your/input.pdf

Ad-hoc parser options

You can specify an option file as parameter of most commands in the relaxed parser mode:

caradoc stats --options path/to/option/file input.pdf

You need to put one option per line in the option file.

The following options are defined, to cope with common errors produced by various PDF software.

  • allow-invalid-version: allow the header of the PDF file to be ill-formed. However, the file must begin with %PDF.
  • allow-dict-duplicates: allow a PDF dictionary to contain several times the same key. In that case, the last occurrence of the key is kept as the actual value.
  • zero-offset-as-free: treat an xref table entry with an offset of zero as a free object. Some software produce such ill-formed PDFs.
  • undefined-ref-as-null: treat a reference to an undeclared object as the null object. By default, such references trigger an error.
  • allow-nonascii-in-names: allow non-ASCII characters in PDF names, even when they are not represented by an escape sequence. By default, non-ASCII characters are only allowed in the form of an escape sequence.
  • allow-overlaps: allow several objects to overlap in a file, according to the positions declared in xref tables.
  • xref-stream-default-zero: when the last field is not present in a xref stream (i.e. the /W value for this field is 0), use a default value of 0. The specification defines a default value only for entries of type 1, this option extends it to all types.
  • allow-arbitrary-info: allow the Info dictionary to contain arbitrary (metadata) keys. Otherwise, unknown keys trigger an error in the type checker.

Structure of the code

The source code is organized as follows:

  • src/: source code of caradoc;
  • src/contentstream/: decoding and validation of content streams;
  • src/crypto/: decoding of encrypted files;
  • src/data/: modules to represent PDF data (e.g. object, xref table, PDF document);
  • src/graph/: graph checker;
  • src/parser/: core parsing code (for the strict and the relaxed parser);
  • src/parser/relaxed/: specific parsing code of the relaxed parser (to fetch objects from xref tables);
  • src/stats/: modules to store statistics about a PDF file;
  • src/stream/: decoding of PDF streams;
  • src/tools/: various PDF tools (e.g. search in a file);
  • src/type/: code of the type checker;
  • src/type/pdf/: definitions of PDF types;
  • src/ui/: console user interface;
  • src/util/: various helper modules;
  • test/: unit tests;
  • test_files/: examples of valid and corrupted PDF files.