Simple signing of PDFs in node.
The purpose of this package is not as much to be used as a dependendency, although it could. The main purpose is to demonstrate the way signing can be achieved in a piece of readable code as it can take a lot of hours to figure out.
Install with npm i -S node-signpdf node-forge
.
In practice we expect that most people will just read through the code we've written in the testing part of this package and figure it out themselves. If that's your case, you should read the [Signing PDF in simple steps] section.
You have already created a PDF using foliojs/pdfkit and you want to sign that. Before saving (writing to fs, or just converting to Buffer
) your file, you need to a add a signature placeholder to it. We have a helper for that. This is demonstrated in the signs input PDF
test.
Once you have the placeholder, just [sign the document].
Yes. This is new since version 1.0. We have a helper that can add a signature placeholder in at least the most basic PDFs without depending on pdfkit. You can see how this is done in the signs a ready pdf
test.
Once you have the placeholder, just [sign the document].
import signer from 'node-signpdf';
...
const signedPdf = signer.sign(
fs.readFileSync(PATH_TO_PDF_FILE),
fs.readFileSync(PATH_TO_P12_CERTIFICATE),
);
- The process of signing a document is described in the Digital Signatures in PDF document. As Adobe's files are deprecated, here is the standard as defined by ETSI.
- This lib:
- requires the signature placeholder to already be in the document (There are helpers included that can try to add it);
- requires the
Contents
descriptor in theSig
be placed after theByteRange
one; - takes
Buffer
s of the PDF and a P12 certificate to use when signing; - does cover only basic scenarios of signing a PDF. If you have suggestions, ideas or anything, please CONTRIBUTE;
- Feel free to copy and paste any part of this code. See its defined Purpose.
See the unit-testing code. PDFKit is used there for generating the document. This also allows easy addition of the signature placeholder.
What's needed is a Sig
element and a Widget
that is also linked in a Form
. The form needs to be referenced in the root descriptor of the PDF as well. A (hopefully) readable sample is available in the helpers. Note the Contents
descriptor of the Sig
where zeros are placed that will later be replaced with the actual signature.
This package provides two helpers for adding the signature placeholder:
- pdfkitAddPlaceholder
- plainAddPlaceholder
Note: Signing in detached mode makes the signature length independent of the PDF's content length, but it may still vary between different signing certificates. So every time you sign using the same P12 you will get the same length of the output signature, no matter the length of the signed content. It is safe to find out the actual signature length your certificate produces and use it to properly configure the placeholder length.
To produce PAdES compliant signatures, the ETSI Signature Dictionary SubFilter value must be ETSI.CAdES.detached
instead of the standard Adobe value.
This can be declared using the subFilter option argument passed to pdfkitAddPlaceholder
and plainAddPlaceholder
.
import { SUBFILTER_ETSI_CADES_DETACHED, pdfkitAddPlaceholder } from 'node-signpdf';
const pdfToSign = pdfkitAddPlaceholder({
...,
subFilter: SUBFILTER_ETSI_CADES_DETACHED,
});
That's where the Signer kicks in. Given a PDF and a P12 certificate a signature is generated in detached mode and is replaced in the placeholder. This is best demonstrated in the tests.
node-forge is used for working with signatures.
PDFKit is used in the tests for generating a PDF with a signature placeholder.
- The whole signing flow is a rework of what's already in pdfsign.js so thanks go to @tbocek
- node-forge is an awesome package written in pure JavaScript and supports signing in detached mode. Many thanks to all the guys who wrote and maintain it.
- Thanks to the guys of PDFKit as well. They've made PDF generation incredibly easy.