false, // Throw an Exception on warnings from dompdf
'orientation' => 'portrait',
'defines' => array(
/**
* The location of the DOMPDF font directory
*
* The location of the directory where DOMPDF will store fonts and font metrics
* Note: This directory must exist and be writable by the webserver process.
* *Please note the trailing slash.*
*
* Notes regarding fonts:
* Additional .afm font metrics can be added by executing load_font.php from command line.
*
* Only the original "Base 14 fonts" are present on all pdf viewers. Additional fonts must
* be embedded in the pdf file or the PDF may not display correctly. This can significantly
* increase file size unless font subsetting is enabled. Before embedding a font please
* review your rights under the font license.
*
* Any font specification in the source HTML is translated to the closest font available
* in the font directory.
*
* The pdf standard "Base 14 fonts" are:
* Courier, Courier-Bold, Courier-BoldOblique, Courier-Oblique,
* Helvetica, Helvetica-Bold, Helvetica-BoldOblique, Helvetica-Oblique,
* Times-Roman, Times-Bold, Times-BoldItalic, Times-Italic,
* Symbol, ZapfDingbats.
*/
"font_dir" => storage_path('fonts/'), // advised by dompdf (https://github.com/dompdf/dompdf/pull/782)
/**
* The location of the DOMPDF font cache directory
*
* This directory contains the cached font metrics for the fonts used by DOMPDF.
* This directory can be the same as DOMPDF_FONT_DIR
*
* Note: This directory must exist and be writable by the webserver process.
*/
"font_cache" => storage_path('fonts/'),
/**
* The location of a temporary directory.
*
* The directory specified must be writeable by the webserver process.
* The temporary directory is required to download remote images and when
* using the PFDLib back end.
*/
"temp_dir" => sys_get_temp_dir(),
/**
* ==== IMPORTANT ====
*
* dompdf's "chroot": Prevents dompdf from accessing system files or other
* files on the webserver. All local files opened by dompdf must be in a
* subdirectory of this directory. DO NOT set it to '/' since this could
* allow an attacker to use dompdf to read any files on the server. This
* should be an absolute path.
* This is only checked on command line call by dompdf.php, but not by
* direct class use like:
* $dompdf = new DOMPDF(); $dompdf->load_html($htmldata); $dompdf->render(); $pdfdata = $dompdf->output();
*/
"chroot" => realpath(base_path()),
/**
* Whether to enable font subsetting or not.
*/
"enable_font_subsetting" => false,
/**
* The PDF rendering backend to use
*
* Valid settings are 'PDFLib', 'CPDF' (the bundled R&OS PDF class), 'GD' and
* 'auto'. 'auto' will look for PDFLib and use it if found, or if not it will
* fall back on CPDF. 'GD' renders PDFs to graphic files. {@link
* Canvas_Factory} ultimately determines which rendering class to instantiate
* based on this setting.
*
* Both PDFLib & CPDF rendering backends provide sufficient rendering
* capabilities for dompdf, however additional features (e.g. object,
* image and font support, etc.) differ between backends. Please see
* {@link PDFLib_Adapter} for more information on the PDFLib backend
* and {@link CPDF_Adapter} and lib/class.pdf.php for more information
* on CPDF. Also see the documentation for each backend at the links
* below.
*
* The GD rendering backend is a little different than PDFLib and
* CPDF. Several features of CPDF and PDFLib are not supported or do
* not make any sense when creating image files. For example,
* multiple pages are not supported, nor are PDF 'objects'. Have a
* look at {@link GD_Adapter} for more information. GD support is
* experimental, so use it at your own risk.
*
* @link http://www.pdflib.com
* @link http://www.ros.co.nz/pdf
* @link http://www.php.net/image
*/
"pdf_backend" => "CPDF",
/**
* PDFlib license key
*
* If you are using a licensed, commercial version of PDFlib, specify
* your license key here. If you are using PDFlib-Lite or are evaluating
* the commercial version of PDFlib, comment out this setting.
*
* @link http://www.pdflib.com
*
* If pdflib present in web server and auto or selected explicitely above,
* a real license code must exist!
*/
//"DOMPDF_PDFLIB_LICENSE" => "your license key here",
/**
* html target media view which should be rendered into pdf.
* List of types and parsing rules for future extensions:
* http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/types.html
* screen, tty, tv, projection, handheld, print, braille, aural, all
* Note: aural is deprecated in CSS 2.1 because it is replaced by speech in CSS 3.
* Note, even though the generated pdf file is intended for print output,
* the desired content might be different (e.g. screen or projection view of html file).
* Therefore allow specification of content here.
*/
"default_media_type" => "screen",
/**
* The default paper size.
*
* North America standard is "letter"; other countries generally "a4"
*
* @see CPDF_Adapter::PAPER_SIZES for valid sizes ('letter', 'legal', 'A4', etc.)
*/
"default_paper_size" => "a4",
/**
* The default font family
*
* Used if no suitable fonts can be found. This must exist in the font folder.
* @var string
*/
"default_font" => "serif",
/**
* Image DPI setting
*
* This setting determines the default DPI setting for images and fonts. The
* DPI may be overridden for inline images by explictly setting the
* image's width & height style attributes (i.e. if the image's native
* width is 600 pixels and you specify the image's width as 72 points,
* the image will have a DPI of 600 in the rendered PDF. The DPI of
* background images can not be overridden and is controlled entirely
* via this parameter.
*
* For the purposes of DOMPDF, pixels per inch (PPI) = dots per inch (DPI).
* If a size in html is given as px (or without unit as image size),
* this tells the corresponding size in pt.
* This adjusts the relative sizes to be similar to the rendering of the
* html page in a reference browser.
*
* In pdf, always 1 pt = 1/72 inch
*
* Rendering resolution of various browsers in px per inch:
* Windows Firefox and Internet Explorer:
* SystemControl->Display properties->FontResolution: Default:96, largefonts:120, custom:?
* Linux Firefox:
* about:config *resolution: Default:96
* (xorg screen dimension in mm and Desktop font dpi settings are ignored)
*
* Take care about extra font/image zoom factor of browser.
*
* In images, size in pixel attribute, img css style, are overriding
* the real image dimension in px for rendering.
*
* @var int
*/
"dpi" => 96,
/**
* Enable inline PHP
*
* If this setting is set to true then DOMPDF will automatically evaluate
* inline PHP contained within tags.
*
* Enabling this for documents you do not trust (e.g. arbitrary remote html
* pages) is a security risk. Set this option to false if you wish to process
* untrusted documents.
*
* @var bool
*/
"enable_php" => false,
/**
* Enable inline Javascript
*
* If this setting is set to true then DOMPDF will automatically insert
* JavaScript code contained within tags.
*
* @var bool
*/
"enable_javascript" => true,
/**
* Enable remote file access
*
* If this setting is set to true, DOMPDF will access remote sites for
* images and CSS files as required.
* This is required for part of test case www/test/image_variants.html through www/examples.php
*
* Attention!
* This can be a security risk, in particular in combination with DOMPDF_ENABLE_PHP and
* allowing remote access to dompdf.php or on allowing remote html code to be passed to
* $dompdf = new DOMPDF(, $dompdf->load_html(...,
* This allows anonymous users to download legally doubtful internet content which on
* tracing back appears to being downloaded by your server, or allows malicious php code
* in remote html pages to be executed by your server with your account privileges.
*
* @var bool
*/
"enable_remote" => true,
/**
* A ratio applied to the fonts height to be more like browsers' line height
*/
"font_height_ratio" => 1.1,
/**
* Use the more-than-experimental HTML5 Lib parser
*/
"enable_html5_parser" => true,
),
);