After PR 7289, we'll now reset the current page view in cases where I don't think we should. To avoid this, this patch ensures that we'll not modify the position when the page number is out-of-bounds.
**STR:**
1. Open http://mozilla.github.io/pdf.js/web/viewer.html#page=1&zoom=auto,-98,696
2. Enter an invalid number, e.g. `1000`, in the `pageNumber` input.
**ER:**
The current position in the document shouldn't change, since the page number wasn't valid.
**AR:**
The document resets to the top of the page `1`.
The method signature was improved in PR 6546, which was included in the `1.2.109` release from last November.
Hence I think that we should now be able to remove the fallback code for the old method signature. Note that this patch now throws an `Error` in `GENERIC` builds, to clearly indicate that the `open` callsite must be modified.
In PR 7273, we simplified the `MOZCENTRAL` specific check for fullscreen support. Unfortunately I've just, by coincidence, found out about https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1268749, which disabled the unprefixed fullscreen support in release versions of Firefox. If we do nothing, this will lead to Presentation Mode being unavailable in future Firefox releases.
This patch should fix things for now, and I'm afraid that we'll need to uplift it to Firefox 49 as well.
With the changes in PR 7289, we no longer dispatch a 'pagechanging' event on load. Since most PDF documents open on the first page, this means that the `previous` and `firstPage` buttons are no longer correctly disabled.
To avoid this, this patch moves the code that updates various UI toolbar state into one method, which is then called on document initialization and from the various existing event handling functions.
Move the Chromium-specific URL rewriting code to the top of viewer.js
(before the PDF.js library) to make sure that the URL is as expected.
This ensures that variables that synchronously depends on the URL
(e.g. PDFViewerApplication.initialBookmark) are properly set.
Use chrome.storage.sync to store preferences instead of
chrome.storage.local, to allow settings to be synchronized if the user
chooses to sign in in Chrome and enables synchronization of extension
preferences.
Currently for explicit destinations, compared to named destinations, we manually try to build a hash that often times is a quite poor representation of the *actual* destination. (Currently this only, kind of, works for `\XYZ` destinations.)
For PDF files using explicit destinations, this can make it difficult/impossible to obtain a link to a specific section of the document through the URL.
Note that in practice most PDF files, especially newer ones, use named destinations and these are thus unnaffected by this patch.
This patch also fixes an existing issue in `PDFLinkService_getDestinationHash`, where a named destination consisting of only a number would not be handled correctly.
With the added, and already existing, type checks in place for destinations, I really don't think that this patch exposes any "sensitive" internal destination code not already accessible through normal hash parameters.
*Please note:* Just trying to improve the algorithm that generates the hash is unfortunately not possible in general, since there are a number of cases where it will simply never work well.
- First of all, note that `getDestinationHash` currently relies on the `_pagesRefCache`, hence it's possible that the hash returned is empty during e.g. ranged/streamed loading of a PDF file.
- Second of all, the currently computed hash is actually dependent on the document rotation. With named destinations, the fetched internal destination array is rotational invariant (as it should be), but this will not hold in general for the hash. We can easily avoid this issue by using a stringified destination array.
- Third of all, note that according to the PDF specification[1], `GoToR` destinations may actually contain explicit destination arrays. Since we cannot really construct a hash in `annotation.js`, we currently have no good way to support those. Even though this case seems *very* rare in practice (I've not actually seen such a PDF file), it's in the specification, and this patch allows us to support that for "free".
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[1] http://www.adobe.com/content/dam/Adobe/en/devnet/acrobat/pdfs/PDF32000_2008.pdf#G11.1951685
These have been found using `gulp lint` in combination with the `unused:
true` parameter for JSHint. Unfortunately there are too many false
positives to enable this feature, but now that most globals have been
removed because of the conversion to UMD the results are much more
useful than before.
This was only ever useful for the Opera extension because the API
requires a whitelisted extension ID. Opera ditched PDF.js from their
extension gallery, so we don't need to keep this in the tree.
I've seen the above error occasionally when the scale is updated many times in quick succession, but I've not been able to pinpoint exactly why it happens.
Since the error isn't caught, this means that the `pageViewDrawCallback` function doesn't run to completion.
Unfortunately, given the very intermittent nature of the issue, I haven't got any good STR for reliably reproducing this issue. However, I hope that this patch can be accepted anyway, since it's simple and should help prevent unnecessary errors.
We're already, since quite some time, using the standard Fullscreen API provided that it's available in the browser. The warning is only caused by the code that checks if the Fullscreen API is supported.
This patch uses a simple preprocessor tag to avoid the warning, since I'm assuming that in general, we want to try and remain backwards compatible with the prefixed versions of the Fullscreen API.
Fixes 7270.
When Firefox is run in e10s mode, which will soon be the default, the PDF.js zoom dropdown menu doesn't look right. This is apparently because the `<select>` DOM element is rendered in the parent, and that all the necessary style information isn't sent up from the child. See the discussion in https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=910022.
Besides this causing the PDF.js UI to *look* worse in e10s, notably it also means that the `customScaleOption` isn't hidden like it ought to be.
To work-around that, this patch utilizes the `hidden` attribute, since https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1242450 at least made that work in e10s.
Fixes https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1194700.