Didacticiel de mise en route (mode SOAP) : convertir un document PDF en document XDP à l’aide de l’API Java

L’exemple de code suivant permet de convertir un document PDF en document XDP. (Consultez la section Convertir des documents PDF en documents 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();
         }
     }
 }