![]() This is the core of the package.Īll of the other scripts provided in the PDFjam package are optional extras. Do you know/use any other methods to remove the password protection from PDF files? Let us know in the comment section below.PDFjam is a small collection of shell scripts which provide a simple interface to much of the functionality of the excellent pdfpages package (by Andreas Matthias) for pdfLaTeX. And save the pdf file in any location of your choice.Īnd, that's all. Open the password protected file in your PDF viewer application. You can use your existing PDF viewer such as Atril document viewer, Evince etc., and print the password protected pdf file to another file. This is the easiest method among all of the above methods. Technically speaking, we really didn't remove the password from the source file, instead we decrypted it and saved it as another equivalent pdf file without password protection. $ pdftops -upw 123456 secure.pdf output.pdfĪgain, replace '123456' with your pdf password.Īs you might noticed in all above methods, we just converted the password protected pdf file named "secure.pdf" to another equivalent pdf file named "output.pdf". Once Poppler installed, run the following command to decrypt the password protected pdf file and create a new equivalent file named output.pdf. On RHEL, CentOS, Fedora: $ sudo yum install poppler - utils On Debian, Ubuntu, Linux Mint: $ sudo apt - get install poppler - utils To install Poppler on Arch Linux based distributions, run: $ sudo pacman -S poppler
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