SOAP Inicio rápido (modo de): Conversión de un documento de PDF en un documento XDP mediante la API de Java

En el siguiente ejemplo de código se convierte un documento de PDF en un documento XDP. (Consulte Conversión de documentos de PDF en documentos XDP.

 /*
     * This Java Quick Start uses the SOAP mode and contains the following JAR files
     * in the class path:
     * 1. adobe-pdfutility-client.jar
     * 2. adobe-livecycle-client.jar
     * 3. adobe-usermanager-client.jar
    * 4. activation.jar (required for SOAP mode)
    * 5. axis.jar (required for SOAP mode)
    * 6. commons-codec-1.3.jar (required for SOAP mode)
    * 7. commons-collections-3.2.jar  (required for SOAP mode)
    * 8. commons-discovery.jar (required for SOAP mode)
    * 9. commons-logging.jar (required for SOAP mode)
    * 10. dom3-xml-apis-2.5.0.jar (required for SOAP mode)
    * 11. jaxen-1.1-beta-9.jar (required for SOAP mode)
    * 12. jaxrpc.jar (required for SOAP mode)
    * 13. log4j.jar (required for SOAP mode)
    * 14. mail.jar (required for SOAP mode)
    * 15. saaj.jar (required for SOAP mode)
    * 16. wsdl4j.jar (required for SOAP mode)
    * 17. xalan.jar (required for SOAP mode)
    * 18. xbean.jar (required for SOAP mode)
    * 19. xercesImpl.jar (required for SOAP mode)
     *
     * The JBoss files must be kept in the jboss\client folder. You can copy the client folder to
     * your local development environment and then include the 3 JBoss JAR files in your class path
     *
     * These JAR files are in the following path:
     * <install directory>/sdk/client-libs/common
     *
     *
     * <install directory>/jboss/bin/client
     *
     * If you want to invoke a remote Forms Server instance and there is a
     * firewall between the client application and the server, then it is
     * recommended that you use the SOAP mode. When using the SOAP mode,
     * you have to include additional JAR files in the following
     * path
     * <install directory>/sdk/client-libs/thirdparty
     *
     * For information about the SOAP
     * mode and the additional JAR files that need to be included,
     * see "Setting connection properties" in Programming
     * with AEM Forms
     *
     * For complete details about the location of the AEM Forms JAR files,
     * see "Including AEM Forms Java library files" in Programming
     * with AEM Forms
     */

 import java.util.*;
 import com.adobe.livecycle.pdfutility.client.*;
 import java.io.*;
 import com.adobe.idp.Document;
 import com.adobe.idp.dsc.clientsdk.ServiceClientFactory;
 import com.adobe.idp.dsc.clientsdk.ServiceClientFactoryProperties;

 public class ConvertPDFToXDP
 {
     public static void main(String[] args)
     {
         try
         {
             //Set connection properties required to invoke AEM Forms
             Properties connectionProps = new Properties();
             connectionProps.setProperty(ServiceClientFactoryProperties.DSC_DEFAULT_SOAP_ENDPOINT, "https://'[server]:[port]'");
             connectionProps.setProperty(ServiceClientFactoryProperties.DSC_TRANSPORT_PROTOCOL,ServiceClientFactoryProperties.DSC_SOAP_PROTOCOL);
             connectionProps.setProperty(ServiceClientFactoryProperties.DSC_SERVER_TYPE, "JBoss");
             connectionProps.setProperty(ServiceClientFactoryProperties.DSC_CREDENTIAL_USERNAME, "administrator");
             connectionProps.setProperty(ServiceClientFactoryProperties.DSC_CREDENTIAL_PASSWORD, "password");

             // Create a ServiceClientFactory object
             ServiceClientFactory myFactory = ServiceClientFactory.createInstance(connectionProps);

             // Create a PDF Utility client
             PDFUtilityServiceClient pdfUt = new PDFUtilityServiceClient(myFactory);

             // Specify a PDF document to convert to an XDP file
             FileInputStream fileInputStream = new FileInputStream("C:\\Adobe\Loan.pdf");
             Document inDoc = new Document(fileInputStream);

             // Convert the PDF document to an XDP file
             Document myXDP = pdfUt.convertPDFtoXDP(inDoc);

             //Save the returned Document object as an XDP file
             File xdpFile = new File("C:\\Adobe\Loan.xdp");
             myXDP.copyToFile(xdpFile);
         }
         catch (Exception e)
         {
             e.printStackTrace();
         }
     }
 }