Convert an SVG to PNG at its "natural size" and write it to standard output:
rsvg-convert input.svg > output.png
Specify an output filename; the input filename must be the last argument:
rsvg-convert --output=output.png input.svg
Configure dots-per-inch (DPI) for SVGs that have physical units, as in
<svg width="5cm" height="3cm">
- the default is 96 DPI:
rsvg-convert --dpi-x=300 --dpi-y=300 input.svg > output.png
Render an SVG at a specific pixel size, scaled proportionally:
rsvg-convert --width=1024 --height=768 --keep-aspect-ratio input.svg > output.png
rsvg-convert
renders SVG documents into PNG raster images, or
converts them to PDF or PS as vector objects. By default
rsvg-convert
will render an SVG document to a raster PNG image and
write it to standard output:
rsvg-convert input.svg > output.png
To select another format, use the --format
option:
rsvg-convert --format=pdf input.svg > output.pdf
You can use rsvg-convert
as part of a pipeline; without an argument
for the input filename it will read the document from standard input:
cat input.svg | rsvg-convert > output.png
You can use the --width
and --height
options to specify the size
of the output image. Most of the time you should specify
--keep-aspect-ratio
to scale the image proportionally; for
compatibility with old versions this is not the default.
rsvg-convert --width=100 --height=200 --keep-aspect-ratio input.svg > output.png
You can also specify dimensions as CSS lengths, for example 10px
or
8.5in
. The unit specifiers supported are as follows:
px pixels (the unit specifier can be omitted) in inches cm centimeters mm millimeters pt points, 1/72 inch pc picas, 1/6 inch
The following will create a 600*900 pixel PNG, or 2*3 inches at 300 dots-per-inch:
rsvg-convert --width=2in --height=3in --keep-aspect-ratio --dpi-x=300 --dpi-y=300 input.svg > output.png
This will scale an SVG document to fit in an A4 page and convert it to PDF:
rsvg-convert --format=pdf --width=210mm --height=297mm --keep-aspect-ratio input.svg > output.pdf
By default the size of the output comes from the rendered size, which
can be specified with the --width
and --height
options, but you
can specify a page size independently of the rendered size with
--page-width
and --page-height
, together with --top
and
--left
to control the position of the rendered image within the
page. In short:
--page-width
and--page-height
together - set the page size.--top
and--left
- set the margins.--width
and--height
- set the rendered size.
This will create a PDF with a landscape A4 page, by scaling an SVG document to 10*10 cm, and placing it with its top-left corner 5 cm away from the top and 8 cm from the left of the page:
rsvg-convert --format=pdf --page-width=297mm --page-height=210mm --width=10cm --height=10cm --keep-aspect-ratio --top=5cm --left=8cm input.svg > output.pdf
The --zoom
option lets you scale the natural size of an SVG
document. For example, if input.svg is a document with a declared size
of 100*200 pixels, then the following command will render it at 250*500
pixels (zoom 2.5):
rsvg-convert --zoom=2.5 input.svg > output.png
You can limit the maximum scaled size by specifying the --width
and
--height
options together with --zoom
. Here, the image will be
scaled 10x, but limited to 1000*1000 pixels at the most:
rsvg-convert --zoom=10 --width=1000 --height=1000 input.svg > output.png
If you need different scale factors for the horizontal and vertical
dimensions, use the --x-zoom
and --y-zoom
options instead of
--zoom
.
The "pdf", "ps", and "eps" output formats support multiple pages. These can be created by combining multiple input SVG files. For example, this PDF file will have three pages:
rsvg-convert --format=pdf page1.svg page2.svg page3.svg > out.pdf
The size of each page will be computed, separately, as described in the DEFAULT OUTPUT SIZE section. This may result in a PDF being produced with differently-sized pages. If you need to produce a PDF with all pages set to exactly the same size, use the --page-width and --page-height options.
For example, the following command creates a three-page PDF out of three SVG documents. All the pages are portrait US Letter, and each SVG is scaled to fit so that there is a 1in margin around each page (hence the width of 6.5in and height of 9in for the rendered size).
rsvg-convert --format=pdf --page-width=8.5in --page-height=11in --width=6.5in --height=9in --keep-aspect-ratio --top=1in --left=1in pg1.svg pg2.svg pg3.svg > out.pdf
rsvg-convert uses the --dpi-x
and --dpi-y
options to
configure the dots-per-inch (DPI) by which pixels will be converted
to/from physical units like inches or centimeters. The default for both
options is 96 DPI.
Consider this example SVG, which is nominally declared to be 2*3 inches in size:
<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" width="2in" height="3in"> <!-- graphical objects here --> </svg>
The following commands create PNGs of different sizes for the example SVG above:
rsvg-convert two-by-three.svg > output.png #### creates a 192*288 pixel PNG
rsvg-convert --dpi-x=300 --dpi-y=300 two-by-three.svg > output.png #### creates a 600*900 pixel PNG
Note that the final pixel dimensions are rounded up to the nearest pixel, to avoid clipping off the right/bottom edges. In the following example, rsvg-convert will generate a PNG 300x300 pixels in size:
rsvg-convert --width=299.5 --height=299.4 input.svg > output.png #### outputs 300x300 pixel PNG with a fractionally-scaled image
If you specify dimensions in physical units, they will be multiplied by the dots-per-inch (DPI) value to obtain dimensions in pixels. For example, this will generate a 96x96 pixel PNG, since it is 1x1 inch at the default 96 DPI:
rsvg-convert --width=1in --height=1in input.svg > output.png #### outputs 96x96 pixel PNG
Correspondingly, this will generate a 300x300 pixel PNG, since it is 1x1 inch at 300 DPI:
rsvg-convert --width=1in --height=1in --dpi-x=300 --dpi-y=300 input.svg > output.png #### outputs 300x300 pixel PNG
If you do not specify --width
or --height
options for the output
size, rsvg-convert will figure out a "natural size" for the SVG as
follows:
- SVG with width and height in pixel units (px):
<svg width="96px" height="192px">
For PNG output, those same dimensions in pixels are used. For PDF/PS/EPS, that pixel size is converted to physical units based on the DPI value (see the--dpi-x
and--dpi-y
options), - SVG with width and height in physical units:
<svg width="1in" height="2in">
For PNG output, thewidth
andheight
attributes get converted to pixels, based on the DPI value (see the--dpi-x
and--dpi-y
options). For PDF/PS/EPS output, the width/height in physical units define the size of the PDF unless you specify options for the page size; see SPECIFYING A PAGE SIZE above. - SVG with viewBox only:
<svg viewBox="0 0 20 30">
The size of theviewBox
attribute gets used for the pixel size of the image as in the first case above. - SVG with width and height in percentages:
<svg width="100%" height="100%" viewBox="0 0 20 30">
Percentages are meaningless unless you specify a viewport size with the--width
and--height
options. In their absence, rsvg-convert will just use the size of theviewBox
for the pixel size, as described above. - SVG with no width, height, or viewBox: rsvg-convert will
measure the extents of all graphical objects in the SVG document and
render them at 1:1 scale (1 pixel for each CSS px unit). It is
strongly recommended that you give SVG documents an explicit size
with the
width
,height
, orviewBox
attributes.
You can use the --background-color
option (-b
for short) to
specify the background color that will appear in parts of the image that
would otherwise be transparent. This option accepts the same syntax as
the CSS color
property, so you can use #rrggbb
syntax, or CSS
named colors like white
, or rgba()
.
rsvg-convert --background-color=white input.svg > output.png #### opaque white
rsvg-convert -b '#ff000080' input.svg > output.png #### translucent red - use shell quotes so the # is not interpreted as a comment
An SVG document can use the <switch>
element and children with the
systemLanguage
attribute to provide different content depending on
the user's language. For example:
<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" width="200" height="100"> <rect width="200" height="100" fill="white"/> <g transform="translate(30, 30)" font-size="20"> <switch allowReorder="yes"> <text systemLanguage="es">Español</text> <text systemLanguage="de">Deutsch</text> <text systemLanguage="fr">Français</text> <text>English fallback</text> </switch> </g> </svg>
You can use the --accept-language
option to select which language to
use when rendering. This option accepts strings formatted like an HTTP
Accept-Language header, which is a comma-separated list of BCP47
language tags: https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/bcp47
rsvg-convert --accept-language=es-MX input.svg > output.png #### selects Mexican Spanish; renders "Español".
You can include an extra CSS stylesheet to be used when rendering an
SVG document with the --stylesheet
option. The stylesheet will
have the CSS user origin, while styles declared in the SVG document
will have the CSS author origin.
rsvg-convert --stylesheet=extra-styles.css input.svg > output.png
Please note that per the cascading rules of CSS, a user stylesheet
does not necessarily override the styles defined in an SVG document.
To override them reliably, you need to set your extra styles to
!important
.
According to the CSS Cascading specification (https://www.w3.org/TR/css-cascade-4/#cascade-sort), style declarations have the following precedence. Declarations from origins later in the list win over declarations from earlier origins:
- Normal user agent declarations (librsvg's own stylesheets).
- Normal user declarations (from your user stylesheet).
- Normal author declarations (from the SVG document).
!important
author declarations (from the SVG document).!important
user declarations (from your user stylesheet).!important
user agent declarations (librsvg's own stylesheets).
After that, the CSS specificity and order of appearance of declarations get taken into account.
Consider the following input.svg; notice how the rectangle has
fill="red"
as a presentation attribute, and a recolorable
class:
<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" width="100" height="100"> <rect width="200" height="100" fill="white"/> <rect class="recolorable" x="10" y="10" width="50" height="50" fill="red"/> <text x="10" y="80" font-size="20" fill="red">Hello</text> </svg>
And this is extra-styles.css:
.recolorable { fill: blue !important; } text { fill: green !important; }
Then the PNG created by the command above will have these elements:
- A blue square instead of a red one, because of the selector for the
the
recolorable
class. Thefill: blue !important;
declaration takes precendence over thefill="red"
presentation attribute. - Text in green, since its
fill="red"
gets overriden with fill: green !important.
-f
format,--format=[png, pdf, pdf1.4, pdf1.5, pdf1.6. pdf1.7, ps, eps, svg]
- Output format for the rendered document. Default is
png
. See the section "PDF VERSIONS" for more detail on what each one allows. -o
filename,--output
filename- Specify the output filename. If unspecified, outputs to standard output.
-v
,--version
- Display what version of rsvg-convert you are running.
--help
- Display a summary of usage and options.
In the following, <length> values must be specified with CSS <length>
syntax: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/length.
For example, 640px
or 25cm
.
--page-width
<length>--page-height
<length>- Page size of the output document; both options must be used together. The default is to use the image's width and height as modified by the options below.
--top
<length>- Distance between top edge of the page and the rendered image. Default is 0.
--left
<length>- Distance between left edge of the page and the rendered image. Default is 0.
-w
<length>,--width
<length>- Width of the rendered image. If unspecified, the natural width of the image is used as the default. See the section "SPECIFYING DIMENSIONS" above for details.
-h
<length>,--height
<length>- Height of the rendered image. If unspecified, the natural height of the image is used as the default. See the section "SPECIFYING DIMENSIONS" above for details.
-a
,--keep-aspect-ratio
- Specify that the aspect ratio is to be preserved, i.e. the image is scaled proportionally to fit in the --width and --height. If not specified, aspect ratio will not be preserved.
-d
number,--dpi-x
number- Set the X resolution of the image in pixels per inch. Default is 96 DPI.
-p
number,--dpi-y
number- Set the Y resolution of the image in pixels per inch. Default is 96 DPI.
-x
number,--x-zoom
number- Horizontal scaling factor. Default is 1.0.
-y
number,--y-zoom
number- Vertical factor factor. Default is 1.0.
-z
number,--zoom
number- Horizontal and vertical scaling factor. Default is 1.0.
-b
<color>,--background-color
[black, white, #abccee, #aaa...]- Specify the background color. If unspecified,
none
is used as the default; this will create transparent PNGs, or PDF/PS/EPS without a special background. The <color> must be specified in CSS <color> syntax: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/color_value. For example,black
,#ff0000
,rgba(0.0, 1.0, 0.0, 1.0)
. -s
filename.css,--stylesheet
filename.css- Filename of a custom CSS stylesheet.
-l
language-tag,--accept-language
[es-MX,fr,en]- Specify which languages will be used for SVG documents with multiple languages. The string is formatted like an HTTP Accept-Language header, which is a comma-separated list of BCP47 language tags: https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/bcp47. The default is to use the language specified by environment variables; see the section "ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES" below.
--keep-image-data
- For SVG documents that reference PNG or JPEG images, include the original, compressed images in the final output, rather than uncompressed RGB data. This is the default behavior for PDF and (E)PS output.
--no-keep-image-data
- Do not include the original, compressed images but instead embed uncompressed RGB date in PDF or (E)PS output. This will most likely result in larger documents that are slower to read.
-i
object-id,--export-id
object-id- Allows to specify an SVG object that should be exported based on its
XML
id
attribute. If not specified, all objects will be exported. -u
,--unlimited
- The XML parser has some guards designed to mitigate large CPU or
memory consumption in the face of malicious documents. It may also
refuse to resolve
data:
URIs used to embed image data in SVG documents. If you are running into such issues when converting a SVG, this option allows to turn off these guards. --testing
- For developers only: render images for librsvg's test suite.
--completion
shell-name- Generate a script for a shell's Tab completion. You can use
bash
,elvish
,fish
,powershell
, andzsh
for the shell's name. Rsvg-convert will then write a suitable script to standard output.
SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH
- If the selected output format is PDF, this variable can be used to control the CreationDate in the PDF file. This is useful for reproducible output. The environment variable must be set to a decimal number corresponding to a UNIX timestamp, defined as the number of seconds, excluding leap seconds, since 01 Jan 1970 00:00:00 UTC. The specification for this can be found at https://reproducible-builds.org/specs/source-date-epoch/
- System language
- Unless the
--accept-language
option is specified, the default is to use the system's environment to detect the user's preferred language. This consults the environment variablesLANGUAGE
,LC_ALL
,LC_MESSAGES
, andLANG
.
The --format=pdf
option makes rsvg-convert output the latest
version of PDF that it supports. Normally this is the right thing to
do, except when you have tools that consume the resulting PDFs but
only support certain versions.
For example, LaTeX tools like pdflatex may issue a warning if you try to include a PDF image that uses a newer version than the surrounding document, similar to
PDF inclusion: found PDF version <1.7> but at most version <1.5> allowed
In this case, you may need to restrict the PDF version that
rsvg-convert produces. Instead of --format=pdf
, you can use the
following:
--format=pdf1.4
- Does not use PDF object streams; files may be bigger as they allow for less compression.
--format=pdf1.5
- Allows creating PDFs where text can be selected and searched.
--format=pdf1.6
- No special behavior.
--format=pdf1.7
- Allows including UTF-8 filenames in link objects reliably.
If you are using LaTeX tooling, you may want to research options like
\pdfminorversion=6
.
Librsvg source repository and bug tracker: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/librsvg
Wiki project page: https://wiki.gnome.org/Projects/LibRsvg
SVG1.1 specification: http://www.w3.org/TR/SVG11/
SVG2 specification: http://www.w3.org/TR/SVG2
GNOME project page: http://www.gnome.org/