Running Apache FOP $Revision$
System Requirements

The following software must be installed:

The following software is optional, depending on your needs:

In addition, the following system requirements apply:

Installation
Instructions

Basic FOP installation consists of first unzipping the .gz file that is the distribution medium, then unarchiving the resulting .tar file in a directory/folder that is convenient on your system. Please consult your operating system documentation or Zip application software documentation for instructions specific to your site.

Problems

Some Mac OSX users have experienced filename truncation problems using Stuffit to unzip and unarchive their distribution media. This is a legacy of older Mac operating systems, which had a 31-character pathname limit. Several Mac OSX users have recommended that Mac OSX users use the shell command tar -xzf instead.

Starting FOP as a Standalone Application
Using the fop script or batch file

The usual and recommended practice for starting FOP from the command line is to run the batch file fop.bat (Windows) or the shell script fop (Unix/Linux). These scripts require that the environment variable JAVA_HOME be set to a path pointing to the appropriate Java installation on your system. Macintosh OSX includes a Java environment as part of its distribution. We are told by Mac OSX users that the path to use in this case is /Library/Java/Home. Caveat: We suspect that, as Apple releases new Java environments and as FOP upgrades the minimum Java requirements, the two will inevitably not match on some systems. Please see Java on Mac OSX FAQ for information as it becomes available.

[OPTIONS] -d debug mode -x dump configuration settings -q quiet mode -c cfg.xml use additional configuration file cfg.xml -l lang the language to use for user information -r relaxed/less strict validation (where available) -dpi xxx target resolution in dots per inch (dpi) where xxx is a number -s for area tree XML, down to block areas only -v to show FOP version being used -o [password] PDF file will be encrypted with option owner password -u [password] PDF file will be encrypted with option user password -noprint PDF file will be encrypted without printing permission -nocopy PDF file will be encrypted without copy content permission -noedit PDF file will be encrypted without edit content permission -noannotations PDF file will be encrypted without edit annotation permission -pdfprofile prof PDF file will be generated with the specified profile (Examples for prof: PDF/A-1b or PDF/X-3:2003) [INPUT] infile xsl:fo input file (the same as the next) -fo infile xsl:fo input file -xml infile xml input file, must be used together with -xsl -atin infile area tree input file -xsl stylesheet xslt stylesheet -param name value to use for parameter in xslt stylesheet (repeat '-param name value' for each parameter) [OUTPUT] outfile input will be rendered as PDF into outfile -pdf outfile input will be rendered as PDF (outfile req'd) -pdfa1b outfile input will be rendered as PDF/A-1b compliant PDF (outfile req'd, same as "-pdf outfile -pdfprofile PDF/A-1b") -awt input will be displayed on screen -mif outfile input will be rendered as MIF (FrameMaker) (outfile req'd) -rtf outfile input will be rendered as RTF (outfile req'd) -tiff outfile input will be rendered as TIFF (outfile req'd) -png outfile input will be rendered as PNG (outfile req'd) -pcl outfile input will be rendered as PCL (outfile req'd) -ps outfile input will be rendered as PostScript (outfile req'd) -txt outfile input will be rendered as plain text (outfile req'd) -svg outfile input will be rendered as an SVG slides file (outfile req'd) -at [mime] out representation of area tree as XML (outfile req'd) specify optional mime output to allow AT to be converted to final format later -print input file will be rendered and sent to the printer see options with "-print help" -out mime outfile input will be rendered using the given MIME type (outfile req'd) Example: "-out application/pdf D:\out.pdf" (Tip: "-out list" prints the list of supported MIME types) -foout outfile input will only be XSL transformed. The intermediate XSL-FO file is saved and no rendering is performed. (Only available if you use -xml and -xsl parameters) [Examples] Fop foo.fo foo.pdf Fop -fo foo.fo -pdf foo.pdf (does the same as the previous line) Fop -xml foo.xml -xsl foo.xsl -pdf foo.pdf Fop -xml foo.xml -xsl foo.xsl -foout foo.fo Fop foo.fo -mif foo.mif Fop foo.fo -rtf foo.rtf Fop foo.fo -print or Fop -print foo.fo Fop foo.fo -awt]]>

PDF encryption is only available if FOP was compiled with encryption support and if compatible encryption support is availabe at run time. Currently, only the JCE is supported. Check the Details.

Writing your own script

FOP's entry point for your own scripts is the class org.apache.fop.cli.Main. The general pattern for the command line is: java -classpath <CLASSPATH> org.apache.fop.cli.Main <arguments>. The arguments consist of the options and infile and outfile specifications as shown above for the standard scripts. You may wish to review the standard scripts to make sure that you get your environment properly configured.

Running with java's <code>-jar</code> option

As an alternative to the start scripts you can run java -jar build/fop.jar from the FOP_HOME directory. In this case FOP tries to build the classpath for running FOP dynamically, see below. If you use hyphenation, you must put fop-hyph.jar in the lib directory.

You can also run java -jar fop.jar from any other working directory. This only works if you put fop.jar and all jar files from the lib directory in a single directory. See the Class-Path entry in the manifest file. If you use hyphenation, you must also put fop-hyph.jar in that directory.

FOP's dynamical classpath construction

If FOP is started without a proper classpath, it tries to add its dependencies dynamically. FOP expects to find fop.jar in the build directory, which is either the current working directory or one of its subdirectories. Then FOP adds all jar files in the lib directory to the classpath. The lib directory is a sibling directory of the build directory, or, if that does not exist, the parent directory of the build directory. If the system property fop.optional.lib contains the name of a directory, then all jar files in that directory are also added to the classpath. See the methods getJARList and checkDependencies in org.apache.fop.cli.Main.

Using Xalan to Check XSL-FO Input

FOP sessions that use -xml and -xsl input instead of -fo input are actually controlling two distinct conversions: Tranforming XML to XSL-FO, then formatting the XSL-FO to PDF (or another FOP output format). Although FOP controls both of these processes, the first is included merely as a convenience and for performance reasons. Only the second is part of FOP's core processing. If a user has a problem running FOP, it is important to determine which of these two processes is causing the problem. If the problem is in the first process, the user's stylesheet is likely the cause. The FOP development team does not have resources to help with stylesheet issues, although we have included links to some useful Specifications and Books/Articles. If the problem is in the second process, FOP may have a bug or an unimplemented feature that does require attention from the FOP development team.

The user is always responsible to provide correct XSL-FO code to FOP.

In the case of using -xml and -xsl input, although the user is responsible for the XSL-FO code that is FOP's input, it is not visible to the user. To make the intermediate FO file visible, the FOP distribution includes the "-foout" option which causes FOP to run only the first (transformation) step, and write the results to a file. (See also the Xalan command-line below)

When asking for help on the FOP mailing lists, never attach XML and XSL to illustrate the issue. Always run the XSLT step (-foout) and send the resulting XSL-FO file instead. Of course, be sure that the XSL-FO file is correct before sending it.

The -foout option works the same way as if you would call the Xalan command-line:

java org.apache.xalan.xslt.Process -IN xmlfile -XSL file -OUT outfile

Note that there are some subtle differences between the FOP and Xalan command-lines.

Memory Usage

FOP can consume quite a bit of memory, even though this has been continually improved. This is partly inherent to the formatting process and partly caused by implementation choices. All FO processors currently on the market have memory problems with certain layouts.

If you are running out of memory when using FOP, here are some ideas that may help:

One of FOP's stated design goals is to be able to process input of arbitrary size. Addressing this goal is one of the prime motivations behind the FOP Redesign.

Problems

If you have problems running FOP, please see the "How to get Help" page.