Reverts "Hack to avoid intermidiate Chrome failures during tests."
(2b2c5212133dc69d238a286ae69d49eda571db2f).
require.js uses importScript asynchronously, which activates the worker
GC bug in WebKit. This patch works around a bug in a way that is similar
in the upcoming (but not yet released) require.js 2.1.23
The advantage of the new work-around is that it allows the runtime to
garbage-collect idle Workers.
References:
- https://crbug.com/572225
- https://webkit.org/b/153317
*This patch is based on something I noticed while debugging some of the PDF files in issue 6931.*
In a number of the cases in `setGState`, we're implicitly assuming that we're not dealing with indirect objects (i.e. `Ref`s). See e.g. the 'Font' case, or the various cases where we simply do `gStateObj.push([key, value]);` (since the code in `canvas.js` won't be able to deal with a `Ref` for those cases).
The reason that I didn't use `Dict_forEach` instead, is that it would re-introduce the unncessary closures that PR 5205 removed.
The intention of PR 5192 was to avoid adding empty `setGState` ops to the operatorList. But the patch accidentally used `>=`, which means that it's not actually working as intended, since empty arrays always have `length === 0`.
Even though the currently known test-cases render correctly without this patch, that seems more like a lucky coincidence, given that there's no guarantee that `transferMap[255] === 0` for every possible transfer function.
This patch fixes an issue that I inadvertently introduced in PR 5815, where we accidentally modify the `Differences` array in the encoding dictionary for indirect objects.
Instead of this change, we could also have used the now existing `Dict_getArray`. However in this case I don't think that would have been a good idea, since it would mean iterating through the array *twice*.
Currently the `deprecated` message is using `warn`, meaning that it's possible to disable warnings about deprecated API usage through the `PDFJS.verbosity` setting.
I don't think that it should be possible to opt out of deprecation messages,[1] since it might mean that in a custom deployment of PDF.js these messages could be overlooked, leading to PDF.js being broken (seemingly without any warning) when updating to a future version.
Obviously this could be considered the responsibility of the people doing custom PDF.js implementations, but in order to reduce the support burden later on, it seems better to "annoy" people upfront.
Compared to various `info`/`warn`/`error` messages, `deprecated` messages should be very simple to get rid of -- just update the API usage and the message goes away!
---
[1] In e.g. Firefox it doesn't seem possible to prevent deprecation warnings from being displayed (in the Browser Console).
Re: issue 5089.
(Note that since there are other outline features that we currently don't support, e.g. bold/italic text and custom colours, I thus think we can keep the referenced issue open.)
It seems to be fairly common for OCR software to include incomplete TrueType fonts, notable missing the "glyf" table, in PDF files. Since we currently reject such fonts, the result is that text-selection/copying is broken.
This patch contains a suggested approach to try and use these kind of broken fonts, by using existing code in `sanitizeGlyphLocations` to replace a missing "glyf" table with dummy data.
Fixes 4684.
Fixes 6007.
Fixes 6829.
The Firefox addon currently fails with:
```
SyntaxError: missing ; before statement pdf.js:1692:12
TypeError: PDFJS.shadow is not a function viewer.js:6228:12
```
*This patch follows a similar idea as PR 5756.*
The patch is based on the nice debugging done by Brendan in the referenced issue 6782.
A better way to handle this, and similar issues, would probably be to completely ignore what the PDF file claims about font type/subtype, and just check the actual data. But until that kind of rewrite happens, this patch should help.
Fixes 6782.
Apparently some PDF files can have annotations with `URI` entries ending with `null` characters, thus breaking the links.
To handle this edge-case of bad PDFs, this patch moves the already existing utility function from `ui_utils.js` into `util.js`, in order to fix those URLs.
Fixes 6832.