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PDFTK(1)		    General Commands Manual		      PDFTK(1)

NAME
       pdftk - A handy tool for	manipulating PDF

SYNOPSIS
       pdftk <input PDF	files |	- | PROMPT>
	    [ input_pw <input PDF owner	passwords | PROMPT> ]
	    [ <operation> <operation arguments>	]
	    [ output <output filename |	- | PROMPT> ]
	    [ encrypt_40bit | encrypt_128bit | encrypt_aes128 ]
	    [ allow <permissions> ]
	    [ owner_pw <owner password | PROMPT> ]
	    [ user_pw <user password | PROMPT> ]
	    [ flatten ]	[ need_appearances ]
	    [ compress | uncompress ]
	    [ keep_first_id | keep_final_id ] [	drop_xfa ] [ drop_xmp ]
	    [ replacement_font <font name> ]
	    [ verbose ]	[ dont_ask | do_ask ]
       Where:
	    <operation>	may be empty, or:
	    [ cat | shuffle | burst | rotate |
	      generate_fdf | fill_form |
	      background | multibackground |
	      stamp | multistamp |
	      dump_data	| dump_data_utf8 |
	      dump_data_fields | dump_data_fields_utf8 |
	      dump_data_annots |
	      update_info | update_info_utf8 |
	      attach_files | unpack_files ]

       For Complete Help: pdftk	--help

DESCRIPTION
       If PDF is electronic paper, then	pdftk is an electronic staple-remover,
       hole-punch, binder, secret-decoder-ring,	and X-Ray-glasses.  Pdftk is a
       simple tool for doing everyday things with PDF documents.  Use it to:

       * Merge PDF Documents or	Collate	PDF Page Scans
       * Split PDF Pages into a	New Document
       * Rotate	PDF Documents or Pages
       * Decrypt Input as Necessary (Password Required)
       * Encrypt Output	as Desired
       * Fill PDF Forms	with X/FDF Data	and/or Flatten Forms
       * Generate FDF Data Stencils from PDF Forms
       * Apply a Background Watermark or a Foreground Stamp
       * Report	PDF Metrics, Bookmarks and Metadata
       * Add/Update PDF	Metrics, Bookmarks or Metadata
       * Attach	Files to PDF Pages or the PDF Document
       * Unpack	PDF Attachments
       * Burst a PDF Document into Single Pages
       * Uncompress and	Re-Compress Page Streams
       * Repair	Corrupted PDF (Where Possible)

OPTIONS
       A summary of options is included	below.

       --help, -h
	      Show this	summary	of options.

       <input PDF files	| - | PROMPT>
	      A	list of	the input PDF files. If	you plan to combine these PDFs
	      (without	using  handles)	 then list files in the	order you want
	      them combined.  Use - to pass a single PDF into pdftk via	stdin.
	      Input files can be associated with handles, where	 a  handle  is
	      one or more upper-case letters:

	      <input PDF handle>=<input	PDF filename>

	      Handles  are often omitted.  They	are useful when	specifying PDF
	      passwords	or page	ranges,	later.

	      For example: A=input1.pdf	QT=input2.pdf M=input3.pdf

       [input_pw <input	PDF owner passwords | PROMPT>]
	      Input PDF	owner passwords, if  necessary,	 are  associated  with
	      files by using their handles:

	      <input PDF handle>=<input	PDF file owner password>

	      If handles are not given,	then passwords are associated with in-
	      put files	by order.

	      Most  pdftk features require that	encrypted input	PDF are	accom-
	      panied by	the ~owner~ password. If the input PDF	has  no	 owner
	      password,	then the user password must be given, instead.	If the
	      input PDF	has no passwords, then no password should be given.

	      When  running  in	do_ask mode, pdftk will	prompt you for a pass-
	      word if the supplied password is incorrect or none was given.

       [<operation> <operation arguments>]
	      Available	operations are:	cat, shuffle,  burst,  rotate,	gener-
	      ate_fdf,	fill_form,  background,	multibackground, stamp,	multi-
	      stamp,	 dump_data,	dump_data_utf8,	     dump_data_fields,
	      dump_data_fields_utf8,	dump_data_annots,   update_info,   up-
	      date_info_utf8,  attach_files,  unpack_files.  Some   operations
	      takes additional arguments, described below.

	      If  this	optional argument is omitted, then pdftk runs in 'fil-
	      ter' mode.  Filter mode takes only one PDF input and  creates  a
	      new  PDF	after applying all of the output options, like encryp-
	      tion and compression.

	  cat [<page ranges>]
		 Assembles (catenates) pages from input	PDFs to	create	a  new
		 PDF.  Use  cat	 to merge PDF pages or to split	PDF pages from
		 documents. You	can also use it	to rotate PDF pages. Page  or-
		 der  in  the  new  PDF	is specified by	the order of the given
		 page ranges. Page ranges are described	like this:

		 <input	 PDF  handle>[<begin  page  number>[-<end  page	  num-
		 ber>[<qualifier>]]][<page rotation>]

		 Where	the  handle identifies one of the input	PDF files, and
		 the beginning and ending page numbers	are  one-based	refer-
		 ences	to  pages in the PDF file.  The	qualifier can be even,
		 odd, or ~, and	the page rotation can be north,	 south,	 east,
		 west, left, right, or down.

		 If a PDF handle is given but no pages are specified, then the
		 entire	 PDF is	used. If no pages are specified	for any	of the
		 input PDFs, then the input PDFs' bookmarks  are  also	merged
		 and included in the output.

		 If  the handle	is omitted from	the page range,	then the pages
		 are taken from	the first input	PDF.

		 The even qualifier causes pdftk to use	only the even-numbered
		 PDF pages, so 1-6even yields pages 2, 4 and 6 in that	order.
		 6-1even yields	pages 6, 4 and 2 in that order.

		 The odd qualifier works similarly to the even.

		 Pages	can be subtracted from a page range using the ~	quali-
		 fier followed by a page range.	 For  instance,	 1-20~5-6  and
		 1-20~5~6  are equivalent to 1-4 7-20, and ~5 yields all pages
		 except	page 5.	Depending on your shell, you may need to quote
		 this argument because of the ~	at the beginning.

		 The page rotation setting can cause pdftk to rotate pages and
		 documents.  Each option sets the page rotation	as follows (in
		 degrees): north: 0, east: 90, south: 180,  west:  270,	 left:
		 -90, right: +90, down:	+180. left, right, and down make rela-
		 tive adjustments to a page's rotation.

		 If  no	 arguments  are	passed to cat, then pdftk combines all
		 input PDFs in the order they were given to create the output.

		 NOTES:
		 * <end	page number> may be less than <begin page number>.
		 * The keyword end may be used to reference the	final page  of
		 a document instead of a page number.
		 * Reference a single page by omitting the ending page number.
		 *  The	 handle	 may be	used alone to represent	the entire PDF
		 document, e.g., B1-end	is the same as B.
		 * You can reference page numbers in reverse order by  prefix-
		 ing  them with	the letter r. For example, page	r1 is the last
		 page of the document, r2 is the next-to-last page of the doc-
		 ument,	and rend is the	first page of the  document.  You  can
		 use this prefix in ranges, too, for example r3-r1 is the last
		 three pages of	a PDF.

		 Page Range Examples without Handles:
		 1\-endeast - rotate entire document 90	degrees
		 5 11 20 - take	single pages from input	PDF
		 5-25oddwest - take odd	pages in range,	rotate 90 degrees
		 6-1 - reverse pages in	range from input PDF

		 Page Range Examples Using Handles:
		 Say A=in1.pdf B=in2.pdf, then:
		 A1-21 - take range from in1.pdf
		 Bend-1odd - take all odd pages	from in2.pdf in	reverse	order
		 A72 - take a single page from in1.pdf
		 A1-21	Beven  A72  -  assemble	 pages	from  both in1.pdf and
		 in2.pdf
		 Awest - rotate	entire in1.pdf document	90 degrees
		 B - use all of	in2.pdf
		 A2-30evenleft - take the even pages from the range, remove 90
		 degrees from each page's rotation
		 A A - catenate	in1.pdf	with in1.pdf
		 Aevenwest Aoddeast - apply rotations to even pages, odd pages
		 from in1.pdf
		 Awest Bwest Bdown - catenate rotated documents

	  shuffle [<page ranges>]
		 Collates pages	from input PDFs	to create a  new  PDF.	 Works
		 like  the  cat	 operation  except that	it takes one page at a
		 time from each	page range to assemble the output PDF.	If one
		 range runs out	of pages,  it  continues  with	the  remaining
		 ranges.   Ranges  can use all of the features described above
		 for cat, like reverse page ranges,  multiple  ranges  from  a
		 single	 PDF, and page rotation.  This feature was designed to
		 help collate PDF pages	after scanning paper documents.

	  burst	 Splits	a single input PDF  document  into  individual	pages.
		 Also creates a	report named doc_data.txt which	is the same as
		 the  output from dump_data.  The output section can contain a
		 printf-styled format string to	name these pages.   For	 exam-
		 ple,  if you want pages named page_01.pdf, page_02.pdf, etc.,
		 pass output page_%02d.pdf to pdftk. If	the pattern  is	 omit-
		 ted,  then  a default pattern g_%04d.pdf is appended and pro-
		 duces pages named pg_0001.pdf,	pg_0002.pdf, etc.   Encryption
		 can be	applied	to the output by appending output options such
		 as owner_pw, e.g.:

		 pdftk in.pdf burst owner_pw foopass

	  rotate [<page	ranges>]
		 Takes	a  single  input  PDF  and  rotates just the specified
		 pages.	 All other pages remain	unchanged.  The	page order re-
		 mains unchanged.  Specify the pages to	rotate using the  same
		 notation  as  you  would  with	cat, except you	omit the pages
		 that you aren't rotating:

		 [<begin page number>[-<end page  number>[<qualifier>]]][<page
		 rotation>]

		 The  qualifier	 can be	even or	odd, and the page rotation can
		 be north, south, east,	west, left, right, or down.

		 Each option sets the page rotation as follows	(in  degrees):
		 north:	 0, east: 90, south: 180, west:	270, left: -90,	right:
		 +90, down: +180. left,	right, and down	make relative  adjust-
		 ments to a page's rotation.

		 The given order of the	pages doesn't change the page order in
		 the output.

	  generate_fdf
		 Reads a single	input PDF file and generates an	FDF file suit-
		 able  for fill_form out of it to the given output filename or
		 (if no	output is given) to stdout.  Does  not	create	a  new
		 PDF.

	  fill_form <FDF data filename | XFDF data filename | -	| PROMPT>
		 Fills	the  single input PDF's	form fields with the data from
		 an FDF	file, XFDF file	or stdin. Enter	the data filename  af-
		 ter fill_form,	or use - to pass the data via stdin, like so:

		 pdftk form.pdf	fill_form data.fdf output form.filled.pdf

		 If  the  input	 FDF file includes Rich	Text formatted data in
		 addition to plain text, then the Rich	Text  data  is	packed
		 into  the  form fields	as well	as the plain text.  Pdftk also
		 sets a	flag that cues Reader/Acrobat to  generate  new	 field
		 appearances  based  on	 the Rich Text data.  So when the user
		 opens the PDF,	the viewer will	create the Rich	 Text  appear-
		 ance  on the spot.  If	the user's PDF viewer does not support
		 Rich Text, then the user will see the	plain  text  data  in-
		 stead.	  If you flatten this form before Acrobat has a	chance
		 to create (and	save) new field	appearances,  then  the	 plain
		 text field data is what you'll	see.

		 Also  see the flatten,	need_appearances, and replacement_font
		 options.

	  background <background PDF filename |	- | PROMPT>
		 Applies a PDF watermark to the	background of a	 single	 input
		 PDF.	Pass  the  background  PDF's filename after background
		 like so:

		 pdftk in.pdf background back.pdf output out.pdf

		 Pdftk uses only the first page	from the  background  PDF  and
		 applies  it  to  every	 page  of the input PDF.  This page is
		 scaled	and rotated as needed to fit the input page.  You  can
		 use - to pass a background PDF	into pdftk via stdin.

		 If the	input PDF does not have	a transparent background (such
		 as  a	PDF  created from page scans) then the resulting back-
		 ground	won't be visible - use the stamp operation instead.

	  multibackground <background PDF filename | - | PROMPT>
		 Same as the background	operation, but applies	each  page  of
		 the  background  PDF  to  the corresponding page of the input
		 PDF.  If the input PDF	has more pages	than  the  stamp  PDF,
		 then  the final stamp page is repeated	across these remaining
		 pages in the input PDF.

	  stamp	<stamp PDF filename | -	| PROMPT>
		 This behaves just like	the  background	 operation  except  it
		 overlays  the	stamp  PDF  page on top	of the input PDF docu-
		 ment's	pages.	This works best	if the stamp PDF  page	has  a
		 transparent background.

	  multistamp <stamp PDF	filename | - | PROMPT>
		 Same  as  the	stamp  operation, but applies each page	of the
		 background PDF	to the corresponding page of  the  input  PDF.
		 If  the input PDF has more pages than the stamp PDF, then the
		 final stamp page is repeated across these remaining pages  in
		 the input PDF.

	  dump_data
		 Reads a single	input PDF file and reports its metadata, book-
		 marks (a/k/a outlines), page metrics (media, rotation and la-
		 bels),	 data embedded by STAMPtk (see STAMPtk's embed option)
		 and other data	to the given output filename or	(if no	output
		 is given) to stdout.  Non-ASCII characters are	encoded	as XML
		 numerical entities.  Does not create a	new PDF.

	  dump_data_utf8
		 Same as dump_data except that the output is encoded as	UTF-8.

	  dump_data_fields
		 Reads	a single input PDF file	and reports form field statis-
		 tics to the given output filename or (if no output is	given)
		 to  stdout. Non-ASCII characters are encoded as XML numerical
		 entities. Does	not create a new PDF.

	  dump_data_fields_utf8
		 Same as dump_data_fields except that the output is encoded as
		 UTF-8.

	  dump_data_annots
		 This  operation  currently  reports  only  link  annotations.
		 Reads a single	input PDF file and reports annotation informa-
		 tion  to the given output filename or (if no output is	given)
		 to stdout. Non-ASCII characters are encoded as	XML  numerical
		 entities. Does	not create a new PDF.

	  update_info <info data filename | - |	PROMPT>
		 Changes  the  bookmarks,  page	labels,	page sizes, page rota-
		 tions,	and metadata in	a  single  PDF's  Info	dictionary  to
		 match	the input data file. The input data file uses the same
		 syntax	as the output  from  dump_data.	 Non-ASCII  characters
		 should	be encoded as XML numerical entities.

		 This  operation  does	not  change the	metadata stored	in the
		 PDF's XMP stream, if it has one. (For this reason you	should
		 include  a  ModDate entry in your updated info	with a current
		 date/timestamp, format: D:YYYYMMDDHHmmSS, e.g.	D:201307241346
		 - omitted data	after YYYY revert to default values.)

		 For example:

		 pdftk in.pdf update_info in.info output out.pdf

	  update_info_utf8 <info data filename | - | PROMPT>
		 Same as update_info except  that  the	input  is  encoded  as
		 UTF-8.

	  attach_files <attachment filenames | PROMPT> [to_page	<page number |
	  PROMPT> | relation <relationship>]
		 Packs	arbitrary files	into a PDF using PDF's file attachment
		 features. More	than one attachment may	be  listed  after  at-
		 tach_files.  Attachments  are added at	the document level un-
		 less the optional to_page option is given, in which case  the
		 files	are  attached to the given page	number (the first page
		 is 1, the final page is end).	Attachments  at	 the  document
		 level	may  be	tagged with a relationship among Source, Data,
		 Alternative, Supplement, and Unspecified (default).

		 For example:

		 pdftk in.pdf attach_files table1.html table2.html  to_page  6
		 output	out.pdf

		 pdftk	in.pdf	attach_files  in.tex  relation	Source	output
		 out.pdf

	  unpack_files
		 Copies	all of the attachments from the	 input	PDF  into  the
		 current  folder or to an output directory given after output.
		 For example:

		 pdftk report.pdf unpack_files output ~/atts/

		 or, interactively:

		 pdftk report.pdf unpack_files output PROMPT

       [output <output filename	| - | PROMPT>]
	      The output PDF filename may not be set to	the name of  an	 input
	      filename.	 Use  -	to output to stdout.  When using the dump_data
	      operation, use output to set the name of the output  data	 file.
	      When  using  the	unpack_files  operation, use output to set the
	      name of an output	directory.  When using	the  burst  operation,
	      you  can	use output to control the resulting PDF	page filenames
	      (described above).

       [encrypt_40bit |	encrypt_128bit | encrypt_aes128]
	      If an output PDF user or owner password is given,	the output PDF
	      encryption algorithm defaults to AES-128.	The weaker RC4	40-bit
	      and  RC4	128-bit	 algorithms  can  be  chosen by	specifying en-
	      crypt_40bit or encrypt_128bit (discouraged).

       [allow <permissions>]
	      Permissions are applied to the output PDF	only if	an  encryption
	      strength is specified or an owner	or user	password is given.  If
	      permissions  are	not  specified,	 they default to 'none,' which
	      means all	of the following features are disabled.

	      The permissions section may include one or more of the following
	      features:

	      Printing
		     Top Quality Printing

	      DegradedPrinting
		     Lower Quality Printing

	      ModifyContents
		     Also allows Assembly

	      Assembly

	      CopyContents
		     Also allows ScreenReaders

	      ScreenReaders

	      ModifyAnnotations
		     Also allows FillIn

	      FillIn

	      AllFeatures
		     Allows the	user to	perform	all  of	 the  above,  and  top
		     quality printing.

       [owner_pw <owner	password | PROMPT>]

       [user_pw	<user password | PROMPT>]
	      If  an  encryption  strength  is given but no passwords are sup-
	      plied, then the owner and	user  passwords	 remain	 empty,	 which
	      means  that the resulting	PDF may	be opened and its security pa-
	      rameters altered by anybody.

       [compress | uncompress]
	      These are	only useful when you want to edit PDF code in  a  text
	      editor like vim or emacs.	 Remove	PDF page stream	compression by
	      applying	the  uncompress	filter.	Use the	compress filter	to re-
	      store compression.

       [flatten]
	      Use this option to merge an input	PDF's interactive form	fields
	      (and their data) with the	PDF's pages. Only one input PDF	may be
	      given. Sometimes used with the fill_form operation.

       [need_appearances]
	      Sets  a  flag that cues Reader/Acrobat to	generate new field ap-
	      pearances	based on the form field	values.	 Use this when filling
	      a	form with non-ASCII text to ensure the	best  presentation  in
	      Adobe  Reader  or	Acrobat.  It won't work	when combined with the
	      flatten option.

       [replacement_font <font name>]
	      Use the specified	font to	display	text in	form fields. This  op-
	      tion  is	useful when filling a form with	non-ASCII text that is
	      not supported by the fonts included in the input PDF. font  name
	      may  be  either  the file	name or	the family name	of a font, but
	      using a file name	is  more  reliable.  Currently	only  TrueType
	      fonts with Unicode text are supported.

       [keep_first_id |	keep_final_id]
	      When  combining  pages  from multiple PDFs, use one of these op-
	      tions to copy the	document ID from either	the first or final in-
	      put document into	the new	output PDF. Otherwise pdftk creates  a
	      new  document ID for the output PDF. When	no operation is	given,
	      pdftk always uses	the ID from the	(single) input PDF.

       [drop_xfa]
	      If your input PDF	is a form created using	Acrobat	7 or Adobe De-
	      signer, then it probably has XFA data.  Filling such a form  us-
	      ing  pdftk yields	a PDF with data	that fails to display in Acro-
	      bat 7 (and 6?).  The workaround solution is to remove the	form's
	      XFA data,	either before you fill the form	using pdftk or at  the
	      time  you	 fill the form.	Using this option causes pdftk to omit
	      the XFA data from	the output PDF form.

	      This option is only useful when running pdftk on a single	 input
	      PDF.   When  assembling  a PDF from multiple inputs using	pdftk,
	      any XFA data in the input	is automatically omitted.

       [drop_xmp]
	      Many PDFs	store document metadata	using both an Info  dictionary
	      (old  school)  and  an  XMP  stream  (new	 school).  Pdftk's up-
	      date_info	operation can update the Info dictionary, but not  the
	      XMP  stream.  The	proper remedy for this is to include a ModDate
	      entry in your updated info with a	 current  date/timestamp.  The
	      date/timestamp  format is: D:YYYYMMDDHHmmSS, e.g.	D:201307241346
	      -	omitted	data after YYYY	revert to default values.  This	 newer
	      ModDate  should  cue  PDF	viewers	that the Info metadata is more
	      current than the XMP data.

	      Alternatively, you might prefer to remove	the  XMP  stream  from
	      the  PDF	altogether  - that's what this option does.  Note that
	      objects inside the PDF might have	their own, separate XMP	 meta-
	      data  streams, and that drop_xmp does not	remove those.  It only
	      removes the PDF's	document-level XMP stream.

       [verbose]
	      By default, pdftk	runs quietly. Append verbose to	the end	and it
	      will speak up.

       [dont_ask | do_ask]
	      Depending	on the compile-time settings (see ASK_ABOUT_WARNINGS),
	      pdftk might prompt you for further input when  it	 encounters  a
	      problem,	such as	a bad password.	Override this default behavior
	      by adding	dont_ask (so pdftk won't ask you what to do) or	do_ask
	      (so pdftk	will ask you what to do).

	      When running in dont_ask mode, pdftk will	over-write files  with
	      its output without notice.

EXAMPLES
       Collate scanned pages
	 pdftk A=even.pdf B=odd.pdf shuffle A B	output collated.pdf
	 or if odd.pdf is in reverse order:
	 pdftk A=even.pdf B=odd.pdf shuffle A Bend-1 output collated.pdf

       The following examples use actual passwords as command line parameters,
       which is	discouraged (see the SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS section).

       Decrypt a PDF
	 pdftk secured.pdf input_pw foopass output unsecured.pdf

       Encrypt a PDF using AES-128 (the	default), withhold all permissions
       (the default)
	 pdftk 1.pdf output 1.128.pdf owner_pw foopass

       Same as above, except password 'baz' must also be used to open output
       PDF
	 pdftk 1.pdf output 1.128.pdf owner_pw foo user_pw baz

       Same as above, except printing is allowed (once the PDF is open)
	 pdftk 1.pdf output 1.128.pdf owner_pw foo user_pw baz allow printing

       Apply RCA 40-bit	encryption to output, revoking all permissions (the
       default). Set the owner PW to 'foopass'.
	 pdftk 1.pdf 2.pdf cat output 3.pdf encrypt_40bit owner_pw foopass

       Join two	files, one of which requires the password 'foopass'. The out-
       put is not encrypted.
	 pdftk A=secured.pdf 2.pdf input_pw A=foopass cat output 3.pdf

       Join in1.pdf and	in2.pdf	into a new PDF,	out1.pdf
	 pdftk in1.pdf in2.pdf cat output out1.pdf
	 or (using handles):
	 pdftk A=in1.pdf B=in2.pdf cat A B output out1.pdf
	 or (using wildcards):
	 pdftk *.pdf cat output	combined.pdf

       Remove page 13 from in1.pdf to create out1.pdf
	 pdftk in.pdf cat 1-12 14-end output out1.pdf
	 or:
	 pdftk A=in1.pdf cat A1-12 A14-end output out1.pdf

       Uncompress PDF page streams for editing the PDF in a text editor	(e.g.,
       vim, emacs)
	 pdftk doc.pdf output doc.unc.pdf uncompress

       Repair a	PDF's corrupted	XREF table and stream lengths, if possible
	 pdftk broken.pdf output fixed.pdf

       Burst a single PDF document into	pages and dump its data	to
       doc_data.txt
	 pdftk in.pdf burst

       Burst a single PDF document into	encrypted pages. Allow low-quality
       printing
	 pdftk in.pdf burst owner_pw foopass allow DegradedPrinting

       Write a report on PDF document metadata and bookmarks to	report.txt
	 pdftk in.pdf dump_data	output report.txt

       Rotate the first	PDF page to 90 degrees clockwise
	 pdftk in.pdf cat 1east	2-end output out.pdf

       Rotate an entire	PDF document to	180 degrees
	 pdftk in.pdf cat 1-endsouth output out.pdf

NOTES
       This is a port of pdftk to java.	See
       https://gitlab.com/pdftk-java/pdftk
       The original program can	be found at www.pdftk.com

AUTHOR
       Original	 author	 of  pdftk  is Sid Steward (sid.steward	at pdflabs dot
       com).

SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS
       Passing a password as a command line parameter is insecure  because  it
       can get saved into the shell's history and be accessible	by other users
       via  /proc. Use the keyword PROMPT and input any	passwords via standard
       input instead.

			       December	7, 2020			      PDFTK(1)

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