Given that the code is currently assuming that the /Filter entry is a `Name`, it cannot hurt to actually ensure that's the case.
Also fixes an error message, for JPEG 2000 images with unsupported ColorSpaces, since `this.numComps` hasn't been initialized when it's accessed during the `throw new Error()` invocation.
Since `ColorSpace` now depends on the native clamping of `Uint8ClampedArray`, this patch adds non-production/test-only `assert`s to enforce that the expected TypedArray is used for the output.
These `assert`s are purposely *not* included in PRODUCTION builds since that would break rendering completely, as opposed to "only" displaying some weird colours, when a `Uint8Array` was used. Furthermore, these are mostly added to help catch explicit developer errors when working with the `ColorSpace` and `PDFImage` code.
The built-in image decoders are already using `Uint8ClampedArray` when returning data, and this patch simply extends that to the rest of the image/colorspace code.
As far as I can tell, the only reason for using manual clamping/rounding in the first place was because TypedArrays used to be polyfilled (using regular arrays). And trying to polyfill the native clamping/rounding would probably have been had too much overhead, but given that TypedArray support is required in PDF.js version `2.0` that's no longer a concern.
*Please note:* Because of different rounding behaviour, basically `Math.round` in `Uint8ClampedArray` respectively `Math.floor` in the old code, there will be very slight movement in quite a few existing test-cases. However, the changes should be imperceivable to the naked eye, given that the absolute difference is *at most* `1` for each RGB component when comparing `master` and this patch (see also the updated expectation values in the unit-tests).
Please refer to the PDF specification, in particular http://www.adobe.com/content/dam/acom/en/devnet/acrobat/pdfs/PDF32000_2008.pdf#G7.3801570
> A colour space shall be specified in one of two ways:
> - Within a content stream, the CS or cs operator establishes the current colour space parameter in the graphics state. The operand shall always be name object, which either identifies one of the colour spaces that need no additional parameters (DeviceGray, DeviceRGB, DeviceCMYK, or some cases of Pattern) or shall be used as a key in the ColorSpace subdictionary of the current resource dictionary (see 7.8.3, "Resource Dictionaries"). In the latter case, the value of the dictionary entry in turn shall be a colour space array or name. A colour space array shall never be inline within a content stream.
>
> - Outside a content stream, certain objects, such as image XObjects, shall specify a colour space as an explicit parameter, often associated with the key ColorSpace. In this case, the colour space array or name shall always be defined directly as a PDF object, not by an entry in the ColorSpace resource subdictionary. This convention also applies when colour spaces are defined in terms of other colour spaces.
The bug that this patch fixes is limited to the built-in JPEG decoder, and was unearthed by PR 9260. The underlying issue has existed since PR 6984, where the contents of this patch ought to have been included (if it weren't for the fact that we had no *easy* way to test `src/core/jpg.js` back then).
*Please note:* The slight movement in the reference test is a result of using the `src/core/jpg.js` decoder, rather than the native browser one.
*Follow-up to PR 8909.*
This requires us to pass around `pdfFunctionFactory` to quite a lot of existing code, however I don't see another way of handling this while still guaranteeing that we can access `PDFFunction` as freely as in the old code.
Please note that the patch passes all tests locally (unit, font, reference), and I *very* much hope that we have sufficient test-coverage for the code in question to catch any typos/mistakes in the re-factoring.
The `inline` parameter is passed to a number of methods/functions in `PDFImage`, despite not actually being used. Its value is never checked, nor is it ever assigned to the current `PDFImage` instance (i.e. no `this.inline = inline` exists).
Looking briefly at the history of this code, I was also unable to find a point in time where `inline` was being used.
As far as I'm concerned, `inline` does nothing more than add clutter to already very unwieldy method/function signatures, hence why I'm proposing that we just remove it.
To further simplify call-sites using `PDFImage`/`NativeImageDecoder`, a number of methods/functions are changed to take Objects rather than a bunch of (somewhat) randomly ordered parameters.
Please note that the `glyphlist.js` and `unicode.js` files are converted to CommonJS modules instead, since Babel cannot handle files that large and they are thus excluded from transpilation.
Please see http://eslint.org/docs/rules/object-shorthand.
For the most part, these changes are of the search-and-replace kind, and the previously enabled `no-undef` rule should complement the tests in helping ensure that no stupid errors crept into to the patch.
Using `else` after `return` is not necessary, and can often lead to unnecessarily cluttered code. By using the `no-else-return` rule in ESLint we can avoid this pattern, see http://eslint.org/docs/rules/no-else-return.
As evident from e.g. PRs 6485 and 7118, some bad PDF generators unfortunately create Arrays where *some* elements are indirect objects (i.e. `Ref`s). This seems to mostly affect Arrays that contain numbers, such as e.g. `Matrix/FontMatrix/BBox/FontBBox/Rect/Color/...`, and has manifested itself in PDF files that fail to render correctly (some elements are missing).
The problem in both the cases above, besides broken rendering, was that there were *no* errors/warnings that indicated what the problem was, making it difficult to pinpoint the issue.
Hence this patch, where I've audited all usages of `Dict_get` in `src/core/` files, and replaced it with `Dict_getArray` where appropriate to try and prevent unnecessary future bugs.
The scanned, black-and-white document at
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=835380 doesn't benefit from
the critical GRAYSCALE_1BPP optimization because the optimization is
skipped if `needsDecode` is set.
This change addresses that, and reduces both rendering time and memory
usage for that document by almost 10x.
This refactors getData to be more readable and extracts all the color
conversion algorithms to their own functions. The resulting code was then
cleaned up.
This also introduces a flag `forceRGBoutput` to getData, that allows to always
get the data as a `width * height * 3` bytes long RGB buffer