ps2eps [-f
] [-q
] [-N
] [-O
] [-X
] [-n
] [-P
] [-c
] [-C
] [-m
] [-B
] [-E
] [-s pagedim
] [-t offset
] [-r resolution
] [-R +|-|^
] [-l
] [-g
] [-H
] [-d
] [-h|--help
] [-a
] [-W
] [-L
] [-V|--version
] [--
] [psfile1] [psfile2] [...]
This manual page documents ps2eps version 1.70.
ps2eps is a tool (written in Perl) to produce
Encapsulated PostScript Files (EPS/EPSF) from usual one-paged Postscript
documents. It calculates correct Bounding Boxes for those EPS files and
filters some special postscript command sequences that can produce
erroneous results on printers. EPS files are often needed for including
(scalable) graphics of high quality into TeX/LaTeX (or even Word) documents.
It can also be used to calculate correct BoundingBoxes for PDF files by
using the option --BBonly
. However, it cannot produce
a PDF file, but it can be used together with pdfcrop.
Without any argument, ps2eps reads from standard input and writes to standard output. If filenames are given as arguments they are processed one by one and output files are written to filenames with extension .eps. If input filenames have the extension .ps or .prn, this extension is replaced with .eps. In all other cases .eps is appended to the input filename. Please note that PostScript files for input should contain only one single page (you can possibly use the psselect from the psutils package to extract a single page from a document that contains multiple pages).
If BoundingBox in output seems to be wrong, please try options --size
or
--ignoreBB
. See also section TROUBLESHOOTING.
ps2eps follows the usual GNU command line syntax, with long options starting with two dashes (`-'). A summary of options is included below.
-h
, --help
Show summary of options.
-V
, --version
Show version of program.
-f
, --force
Force overwriting existing files. ps2eps will not overwrite files by default to avoid deleting original EPS files accidently.
-q
, --quiet
quiet operation (no output while processing files, except errors).
-N
, --noinsert
do not insert any postscript code. Normally a few postscript instructions are added around the original postscript code by ps2eps which can be turned off by this option.
-O
, --preserveorientation
do not filter %%Orientation: header comment.
-X
, --BBonly
Just print the resulting bounding box(es) to standard error, no output file is written.
ps2eps will perform a read-only operation. This is highly useful to calculate bounding boxes of
PDF files. Can be used with option --quiet
to suppress other output and
also with --nohires
to suppress output of the HiResBoundingBox.
It can be used with pdfcrop as follows:
pdfcrop --gscmd 'gswrap-ps2eps.sh' file.pdf
where gswrap-ps2eps.sh containts something like
ps2eps -l -X -q $BASH_ARGV
-n
, --nofix
do not try to fix postscript code by filtering some instructions.
-P
, --removepreview
remove preview image (smaller file, but no preview anymore).
-F
, --fixps
fix postscript code unconditionally. Otherwise, filtering is usually triggered by detection of certain drivers only.
-c
, --comments
preserve document structure comments.
-C
, --clip
insert postscript code for clipping. Unless
--nohires
is specified, the HiResBoundingBox
(enlarged by 0.1 points) is used for clipping.
-m
, --mono
use black/white bitmap as base for calculation (default: off).
-s
, --size
=pagedim
where pagedim
is a pre-defined standard page size
(e.g., a4,a0,b0,letter,...) or explicitly specified in a
format pagedim
:=XxY[cm|in],
where X and Y are numbers (floating points are accepted) followed by
units centimeter (cm) or inch (in), (default: cm).
Use --size=list
to list pre-defined pagesizes.
See also environment variable PS2EPS_SIZE
.
-t
, --translate=x,y
specify an x,y offset (may be negative) in postscript points (1/72 dpi) for drawing. This option may be required if your drawing has negative coordinates which usually lets ghostscript cut the negative part of your picture, because it starts to render at positive coordinates. The resulting output will also be shifted.
-r
, --resolution=dpi
specify a resolution in dpi (dots per inch) for drawing under ghostscript. Default resolution is 144 dpi which is the double of the typical 72 dpi. This option may help if there is a hardware dependent resolution encoded in the postscript, e.g., 600dpi. Example: ps2eps -l -r 600 test.ps
-R
, --rotate=direction
This option rotates the resulting EPS output.
The parameter direction
determines the direction of
rotation: + means +90 degrees (clockwise),- means -90 degrees
(counter-clockwise), and ^ means 180 degrees (up-side down).
-l
, --loose
expand the original tight bounding box by one point in each direction.
-B
, --ignoreBB
do not use existing bounding box as page size for rendering.
-E
, --ignoreEOF
do not use %%EOF as hint for end of file. Otherwise, ps2eps assumes that postscript code ends after the last %%EOF comment, because some drivers add trailing binary "garbage" code which gets deleted by ps2eps by default.
-g
, --gsbbox
use internal bbox device of ghostscript instead of the external C
program bbox. The internal bbox device of ghostscript
generates different values (sometimes even incorrect),
so using the provided bbox should be more robust.
See also environment variable PS2EPS_GSBBOX
.
-H
, --nohires
do not generate a %%HiResBoundingBox comment for output.
-a
, --accuracy
increase the accuracy by turning subsample antialiasing on (may be slower)
-L
, --license
show licensing information.
-d
, --debuggs
show ghostscript call. This may be helpful for solving problems that occur during a ghostscript call.
-W
, --warnings
show warnings about sanity of generated EPS file. Certain postscript commands should not be contained in an EPS file. With this option set ps2eps will issue a warning if it detects at least one of them.
Based on the given postscript source code (in most cases generated by some postscript printer driver) there are many potential obstacles or problems that may occur when trying to create proper EPS files. Please read this section carefully to be aware of common pitfalls.
or how to determine the right size for ghostscript.
If you have documents that are larger than your
ghostscript default (usually A4 or US letter), you have to
specify the page dimensions explicitly using the
-s
option. Otherwise your EPS
might be cut off during rasterizing by ghostscript resulting
in a wrongly calculated bounding box. You can pass
all pre-defined page sizes to -s
that ghostscript understands. These are
currently: 11x17, ledger, legal, letter, lettersmall, archA, archB, archC, archD, archE
a0, a1, a2, a3, a4, a5, a6, a7, a8, a9, a10, isob0, isob1, isob2, isob3, isob4, isob5, isob6,
b0, b1, b2, b3, b4, b5, c0, c1, c2, c3, c4, c5, c6, jisb0, jisb1,
jisb2, jisb3, jisb4, jisb5, jisb6, flsa, flse, halfletter.
Unfortunately, all sizes are currently only available in portrait
orientation (not landscape).
By default, ps2eps uses an already given %%BoundingBox
from the source file, which often corresponds to the size of
the physical page format for which the document was
printed. However, you should be aware that this already
specified bounding box may be not correct, thus resulting in a
wrongly cropped (or even no usable) .eps-file.
ps2eps can only do as good as ghostscript does in rendering the original
postscript file (though ps2eps even works with negative and
fractional values are contained in the original bounding box by using
automatic translation). Therefore, if the given bounding box is to
small or incorrect anyway, you can ignore the existing bounding box with the -B
option, which will cause ghostscript to use its internal
default size (or use -s
). However, if the
BoundingBox has negative coordinates, which is not allowed by
the specification, ps2eps will shift the output to positive values.
Hint: to avoid rotating the picture if you have the original drawing in landscape format, you may use the "Encapsulated Postscript" option in the printer driver which should generate an EPS file (but with a bounding box of the sheet size!). But some Windows printer drivers are drawing the image with an offset from the bottom of the portrait page, so that a part of it is drawn outside the landscape oriented page. In this case, you'll have to specify a square size of the page using the maximum length, e.g., 29.7cm x 29.7cm for an A4 page.
or why gets some of my text deleted above the included .eps file?
Some postscript drivers draw a white rectangle from the top left
corner of the page to the right lower corner of the object. This may
erase some or even all text above your imported/included EPS file,
which is very annoying. In order to prevent this, most programs have a
clipping option for imported .eps files (within LaTeX you can use
\includegraphics*{}) for this purpose. If this is unfortunately not
the case, you can use the -C
option of ps2eps which will (hopefully)
do it for you. Unfortunately, PScript.dll 5.2 (Windows XP) introduced
new very badly behaving Postscript code (initclip) which will even
override the outer clipping! Thus, a new filter had to be installed
in ps2eps which will fix it.
However, because most programs clip directly on the bounding box,
you still may loose some pixels of your image, because the bounding
box is described in the coarse resolution of postscript points,
i.e. 72 dpi. In order to prevent this, you can use the -l
option or -C
option (for the latter, clipping by the importing program
should be disabled then) to allow for a 1 point larger bounding box.
-C
clips around a 1 point enlarged bounding box and -l
enlarges the
bounding box values by 1 point (you can also combine both options).
Some postscript sequences, e.g., for using specific printer
features (featurebegin ...), are not working well within an .eps
file, so ps2eps tries to filter them out. But please note that
filters for postscript code may not work properly for your printer
driver (ps2eps was mainly tested with HP and Adobe printer
drivers, although it may work for all printers using the
PScript.dll). In this case you can try to turn of filtering by
using option -n
, or try to find the bad sequence in the postscript
code and adapt the filter rule in the ps2eps script (variables
$linefilter, $rangefilter_begin, $rangefilter_end; linefilter is
an expression for filtering single lines, rangefilter_... are
expressions that filter all lines between a pattern matching
$rangefilter_begin and $rangefilter_end; drop me an e-mail with
your modifications). However, things may change as the printer
drivers (e.g., PScript.dll) or postscript language evolve.
Some applications or drivers generate postscript code with leading or trailing binary code, which often confuses older postscript interpreters. ps2eps tries to remove such code, but it may sometimes make a wrong guess about start and end of the real postscript code (drop me an e-mail with a zipped postscript source, see section BUGS).
Comment lines or even blank lines are removed (which is the default to make .eps files smaller), which may corrupt your output. Please check the next section how to fix this. ps2eps removes blank lines and also <CR> (carriage ceturn "\r") at the end of lines. However, nicely formatted postscript code gives a hint by using "%%BeginBinary" "%%EndBinary" comments. When ps2eps detects these comments it will refrain from any filtering action within the marked binary sections.
ps2eps filters also %%Orientation: comments by
default (you can use option -O
to turn off filtering),
because ghostscript may "automagically" rotate images when generating PDF
images, which is not desired in most cases. Hint: you can turn off that
feature in ghostscript unconditionally by specifying -dAutoRotatePages=/None.
Some postscript code may get corrupted when comment lines or even blank
lines are removed (which is the default to make .eps files smaller),
because those files may contain encoded images
which also have a % as first character in a line or use a special
comment as end of image delimiter. If this is the case, use the -c
option to prevent filtering comments.
ps2eps supports colored postscript, consequently
letting ghostscript consume more resources for drawing its bitmap
(roughly 6MBytes for an A4 page). bbox is reading
the bitmap line by line so it consumes only minimal memory. If you experience problems
with memory consumption of ghostscript, you may use the -m
option
for using a monochrome image. But this will probably result in wrongly
determined bounding boxes with colored
images, because ghostscript has to do black/white dithering and may thus suppress
objects drawn in light colors.
Another option in case of memory problems and too long run times
is to use the much more memory efficient internal ghostscript bbox by using the
-g
option.
Please note that a command line option always takes precedence over the related environment variable.
The environment variable PS2EPS_SIZE
can be used
to specify a default page size and take any argument that
--size
accepts. Examples: export PS2EPS_SIZE=a0 (bash-like syntax)
or setenv PS2EPS_SIZE letter (csh syntax).
If the environment variable PS2EPS_GSBBOX
is set
the internal bbox device of ghostscript will be used instead of the external
command bbox. Examples: export PS2EPS_GSBBOX=true (bash-like syntax)
or setenv PS2EPS_GSBBOX 1 (csh syntax).
The usual call is simply: ps2eps -l file
A relatively failsafe call would be (if your postscript is smaller than iso b0 [100cm x 141.4cm] and you have a fast computer with enough memory): ps2eps -l -B -s b0 -c -n file
If output is not correct try: ps2eps -l -B -s b0 -F file
ps2eps was written by Roland Bless.
Other programs like ps2epsi do not calculate the
bounding box always correctly (because the values are put on the
postscript stack which may get corrupted by bad postscript code) or
rounded it off so that clipping the EPS cut off some part of the
image. ps2eps uses a double precision resolution
of 144 dpi and appropriate rounding to get a proper bounding
box. The internal bbox device of ghostscript generates different values
(sometimes even incorrect), so using the provided bbox
should be more robust.
However, because normal clipping has only a resolution of 1/72dpi
(postscript point), the clipping process may still erase parts of your
EPS image. In this case please use the -l
option to add
an additional point of white space around the tight bounding box.
Some people contributed code or suggestions to improve ps2eps. Here are at least some names (sorry if I forgot your name): Christophe Druet, Hans Ecke, Berend Hasselman, Erik Joergensen, Koji Nakamaru, Hans Fredrik Nordhaug, Michael Sharpe. Special thanks goes to Michael Sharpe from UCSD who suggested a lot of useful features for ps2eps and who fixed bbox to become more precise and robust.
An earlier version of this manual page was originally written by
Rafael Laboissiere <rafael at debian.org>
for
the Debian system. Thank you Rafael!
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts and no Back-Cover Texts.
If you experience problems, please check carefully all hints in the section
TROUBLESHOOTING
first. Otherwise, check for an updated
version at https://github.com/roland-bless/ps2eps
or send a gzipped file of
relevant postscript source code with your error description
and ps2eps version number to <roland at bless.de>
(please allow some time
to reply).