Web site: https://github.com/rrthomas/psutils
Maintainer: Reuben Thomas rrt@sc3d.org
PSUtils is a suite of utilities for manipulating PDF and PostScript documents. You can select and rearrange pages, including arrangement into signatures for booklet printing, combine multple pages into a single page for n-up printing, and resize, flip and rotate pages.
PSUtils is distributed under the GNU General Public License version 3, or, at your option, any later version; see the file COPYING. (Some of the input files in the tests directory are not under this license; see the file COPYRIGHT in that directory.)
If you simply want to use PSUtils, you will find it in most GNU/Linux distributions; it is available in brew for macOS and Cygwin for Windows.
PostScript files should conform to the PostScript Document Structuring Conventions (DSC); however, PSUtils intentionally does not check this, as some programs produce non-conforming output that can be successfully processed anyway. If PSUtils does not work for you, check whether your software needs to be configured to produce DSC-conformant PostScript.
Some old Perl scripts, which mostly fix up the output of various obsolete
programs and drivers to enable PSUtils to process it, are available in git
in the old-scripts
directory. They are not supported, and their use is
discouraged, unless you know you need them!
The easiest way to install PSUtils is from PyPI, the Python Package Index:
pip install pspdfutils
(Note the PyPI package name!)
PSUtils requires libpaper, which allows named paper sizes to be used and configured:
libpaper: https://github.com/rrthomas/libpaper
Unfortunately, pip
cannot install libpaper for you, but you might be able to install it with brew
or from other package managers. Otherwise, you can install libpaper from source (see the link above).
PSUtils requires Python 3.9 or later, a handful of Python libraries (listed
in pyproject.toml
, and automatically installed by the build procedure).
In the source directory: python -m build
(requires the build
package to
be installed).
Note that to use the scripts before installing them, you need to run them as Python modules; for example:
PYTHONPATH=. python -m psutils.command.psnup -2 foo.ps
Please send bug reports, patches and suggestions to the bug tracker or maintainer (see the top of this file).
PSUtils is written and maintained by Reuben Thomas. Version 1 was written by Angus Duggan.
psselect in modeled on Chris Torek's dviselect, as is psbook, via Angus Duggan's dvibook; pstops is modeled on Tom Rokicki's dvidvi. psjoin was originally written by Tom Sato.