- it aims to fix https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1771477;
- hangul contains some syllables which are decomposed when using NFD, hence
the text must be correctly shifted in case it contains some of them.
In the `src/display/canvas.js` code the `d1` operator will be used to set the clipping region, and it obviously cannot be empty since that prevents the Type3-glyph from rendering.
Also, the patch removes an outdated comment; refer to PR 12718.
- since resetForm function reset a field value a calculateNow is consequently triggered.
But the calculate callback can itself call resetForm, hence an infinite recursive loop.
So basically, prevent calculeNow to be triggered by itself.
- in Firefox, the letters entered in some fields were duplicated: "AaBb" instead of "AB".
It was mainly because beforeInput was triggering a Keystroke which was itself triggering
an input value update and then the input event was triggered.
So in order to avoid that, beforeInput calls preventDefault and then it's up to the JS to
handle the event.
- fields have a property valueAsString which returns the value as a string. In the
implementation it was wrongly used to store the formatted value of a field (2€ when the user
entered 2). So this patch implements correctly valueAsString.
- non-rendered fields can be updated in using JS but when they're, they must take some properties
in the annotationStorage. It was implemented for field values, but it wasn't for
display, colors, ...
- it fixes#14862 and #14705.
Initially I considered updating the `NameOrNumberTree`-implementation to handle encoded keys, however that quickly became somewhat messy (especially in the `NameOrNumberTree.get`-method) since only NameTrees using string-keys.
Hence the easiest solution, as far as I'm concerned, was thus to just update the `Catalog.destinations`-getter instead. Please note that in the referenced PDF document the `Catalog.destination`-method will thus fallback to fetch all destinations, which should be fine since this is the very first case of encoded keys that we've seen.
Also changes the `NameOrNumberTree.getAll`-method to prevent a possible run-time error, although we've so far not seen such a case, for any non-Array Kids-entries found in a NameTree/NumberTree.
Finally, to improve overall consistency and to hopefully prevent future bugs, the patch also updates a couple of other `NameTree` call-sites to correctly handle encoded keys. (Note that the `Catalog.attachments`-getter was already doing this.)
In the referenced PDF document the fonts have /Encoding-entries that are Streams (containing completely bogus data), which are thus obviously not valid here.
Hence, only when `ignoreErrors` is set, we'll now ignore these corrupt /Encoding-entries and fallback to the existing code to try and infer a usable encoding.
Given that this is *clearly* a case of corrupt PDF documents, there's no guarantee that this will "fix" all such cases, however it's the best that we do here and shouldn't really be worse than ignoring an entire font.
- it aims to fix issue #14627;
- the basic idea of the recent text refactoring was to only consider the rendered visible whitespaces.
But sometimes, the heuristics aren't correct and although some whitespaces are in the text stream
they weren't in the text chunks because they were too small. Hence we added some exceptions, for example,
we always add a whitespace when it is between two non-whitespace chars but only when in the same Tj.
So basically, this patch removes the constraint to have the chars in the same Tj
(in using a circular buffer to save the two last chars) but don't add a space when the visible space is really
too small (hence `NOT_A_SPACE_FACTOR`).
When there are *multiple* empty glyphs at the start of the data, ensure that the "first" glyph gets a correct `endOffset` to avoid skipping it during parsing in the `sanitizeGlyph` function.
- it aims to fix:
- https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1753075;
- https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1743245;
- https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1710019;
- issue #13211;
- issue #14521.
- previously we were trying to adjust lineWidth to have something correct after the current transform is applied but this approach was not correct because finally the pixel is rescaled with the same factors in both directions.
And sometimes those factors must be different (see bug 1753075).
- So the idea of this patch is to apply a scale matrix to the current transform just before setting lineWidth and stroking. This scale matrix is computed in order to ensure that after transform, a pixel will have its two thickness greater than 1.
Soft masks can be enabled/disabled at anytime and at different
points in the save/restore stack. This can lead to
the amount of save/restores becoming unbalanced across the
two canvases. Instead of save/restoring on the temporary canvas
change it so we only track state on the main (suspended canvas).
I was also getting an out balance stack from patterns, so I've also
fixed that and added a warning that will at least show up on chrome.
It would be nice to add this so Firefox at some point too.
Fixes#11328, #14297 and bug 1755507
- get original index in using a dichotomic seach instead of a linear one;
- normalize the text in using NFD;
- convert the query string into a RegExp;
- replace whitespaces in the query with \s+;
- handle hyphens at eol use to break a word;
- add some \s* around punctuation signs
- it aims to fix#14502 and bug 1721335;
- Acrobat and Pdfium do the same;
- it'll avoid to have truncated data when printed;
- change the factor to compute font size in using field height: lineHeight = 1.35*fontSize
- this is the value used by Acrobat.
- in order to not have truncated strings on the bottom, add few basic metrics for standard fonts.
- it aims to fix#14497;
- previously, only rotations with an angle 0, 90, 180 or 270 were taken into account;
- so generalize to any angle but keep the fast path for 0, 90, ... because they're likely more common than anything else.
This commit fixes Bug 1743245 (Grided PDF file lines rendered too thick) which was created by a fix for #12868 .
The lineWidth was set to round(1 * this._combinedScaleFactor) when the pixel is drawn as a parallelorgam with a height <1. This fix changes this to floor(1*this._combinedScaleFactor) .
This change shows a visual result comparable to Chrome and Acrobat.
Regarding the last PR 3 statements in canvas.js are affected and will change with this commit (stroke and paintChar).
renaming the reference files to naming comvention
- it aims to fix issue #14307;
- this event has been added recently in Firefox and we can now use it;
- fix few bugs in aform.js or in annotation_layer.js;
- add some integration tests to test keystroke events (see `AFSpecial_Keystroke`);
- make dispatchEvent in the quickjs sandbox async.
Please refer to https://www.pdfa.org/norm-refs/Type1Fonts.pdf#page=15 for the expected format for the /CharStrings entries.
In the referenced PDF document the /CharStrings are missing the expected end-token, which causes us to swallow the start of the next glyph name.
In corrupt PDF documents Type3 fonts may introduce circular dependencies, thus resulting in the affected font(s) never loading and parsing/rendering never completing.
Note that I've not seen any real-world examples of this kind of font corruption, but the attached PDF document was rather found in https://github.com/pdf-association/safedocs/tree/main/Miscellaneous%20Targeted%20Test%20PDFs
*Please note:* That repository contains a number of reduced test-cases that are specifically intended to test interoperability (between PDF viewer) and parsing/rendering for various kinds of strange/corrupt PDF documents.
Some of the test-cases found there may thus not make sense to try and "fix" upfront, in my opinion, unless the problems are also found in real-world PDF documents.
This prevents the `BaseSVGFactory.create`-method from throwing, and thus preventing any remaining Annotations (on the page) from rendering in corrupt documents.
Currently the `Catalog.metadata` getter only handles errors during parsing, however in a *corrupt* PDF document fetching of the raw /Metadata can obviously fail as well.
Without this patch the `PDFDocumentProxy.getMetadata` method, in the API, can thus fail which it *never* should and this will cause the viewer to not initialize all state as expected.
Fixes one of the documents in issue 14305.
*Please note:* This is similar to the method that existed prior to PR 3848, but the new method will *only* be used as a fallback when parsing of corrupt PDF documents.
The implementation in PR 14311 unfortunately turned out to be *way* too simplistic, as evident by the recently added test-files in issue 14303, since it may *cause* infinite loops in `PDFDocument.checkLastPage` for some corrupt PDF documents.[1]
To avoid this, the easiest solution that I could come up with was to fallback to eagerly parsing the *entire* /Pages-tree when the /Count-entry validation fails during document initialization.
Fixes *at least* two of the issues listed in issue 14303, namely the `poppler-395-0.pdf...` and `GHOSTSCRIPT-698804-1.pdf...` documents.
---
[1] The whole point of PR 14311 was obviously to *get rid of* infinte loops during document initialization, not to introduce any more of those.
This only applies to severely corrupt documents, where it's possible that the `Parser` throws when we try to access e.g. a /Kids-entry in the /Pages-tree.
Fixes two of the issues listed in issue 14303, namely the `poppler-742-0.pdf...` and `poppler-937-0.pdf...` documents.
*Please note:* While this patch on its own is sufficient to prevent the worker-thread from hanging, however in combination with PR 14311 these PDF documents will both load *and* render correctly.
Rather than focusing on the particular structure of these PDF documents, it seemed (at least to me) to make sense to try and prevent all circular references when fetching/looking-up data using the XRef table.
To avoid a solution that required tracking the references manually everywhere, the implementation settled on here instead handles that internally in the `XRef.fetch`-method. This should work, since that method *and* the `Parser`/`Lexer`-implementations are completely synchronous.
Note also that the existing `XRef`-caching, used for all data-types *except* Streams, should hopefully help to lessen the performance impact of these changes.
One *potential* problem with these changes could be certain *browser* exceptions, since those are generally not catchable in JavaScript code, however those would most likely "stop" worker-thread parsing anyway (at least I hope so).
Finally, note that I settled on returning dummy-data rather than throwing an exception. This was done to allow parsing, for the rest of the document, to continue such that *one* bad reference doesn't prevent an entire document from loading.
Fixes two of the issues listed in issue 14303, namely the `poppler-91414-0.zip-2.gz-53.pdf` and `poppler-91414-0.zip-2.gz-54.pdf` documents.
*This patch basically extends the approach from PR 10392, by also checking the last page.*
Currently, in e.g. the `Catalog.numPages`-getter, we're simply assuming that if the /Pages-tree has an *integer* /Count entry it must also be correct/valid.
As can be seen in the referenced PDF documents, that entry may be completely bogus which causes general parsing to breaking down elsewhere in the worker-thread (and hanging the browser).
Rather than hoping that the /Count entry is correct, similar to all other data found in PDF documents, we obviously need to validate it. This turns out to be a little less straightforward than one would like, since the only way to do this (as far as I know) is to parse the *entire* /Pages-tree and essentially counting the pages.
To avoid doing that for all documents, this patch tries to take a short-cut by checking if the last page (based on the /Count entry) can be successfully fetched. If so, we assume that the /Count entry is correct and use it as-is, otherwise we'll iterate through (potentially) the *entire* /Pages-tree to determine the number of pages.
Unfortunately these changes will have a number of *somewhat* negative side-effects, please see a possibly incomplete list below, however I cannot see a better way to address this bug.
- This will slow down initial loading/rendering of all documents, at least by some amount, since we now need to fetch/parse more of the /Pages-tree in order to be able to access the *last* page of the PDF documents.
- For poorly generated PDF documents, where the entire /Pages-tree only has *one* level, we'll unfortunately need to fetch/parse the *entire* /Pages-tree to get to the last page. While there's a cache to help reduce repeated data lookups, this will affect initial loading/rendering of *some* long PDF documents,
- This will affect the `disableAutoFetch = true` mode negatively, since we now need to fetch/parse more data during document initialization. While the `disableAutoFetch = true` mode should still be helpful in larger/longer PDF documents, for smaller ones the effect/usefulness may unfortunately be lost.
As one *small* additional bonus, we should now also be able to support opening PDF documents where the /Pages-tree /Count entry is completely invalid (e.g. contains a non-integer value).
Fixes two of the issues listed in issue 14303, namely the `poppler-67295-0.pdf` and `poppler-85140-0.pdf` documents.
For this particular PDF document, we have `/W [1 2 166666666666666666666666666]` which obviously makes no sense.
While this patch makes no attempt at actually validating the entries in the /W-array, we'll now simply abort all processing when the end of the PDF document has been reached (thus preventing hanging the browser).
Please note that this patch doesn't enable the PDF document to be loaded/rendered, but at least it fails "correctly" now.
Fixes one of the issues listed in issue 14303, namely the `REDHAT-1531897-0.pdf`document.
This bug was surprisingly difficult to track down, since it didn't just depend on range-requests being used but also on how quickly the document was loaded. To even be able to reproduce this locally, I had to use a very small `rangeChunkSize`-value (note the unit-test).
The cause of this bug is a bogus entry in the XRef-table, causing us to attempt to request data from *beyond* the actual document size and thus getting into an infinite loop.
Fixes *one* of the issues listed in issue 14303, namely the `PDFBOX-4352-0.pdf` document.
We were incorrectly using the transform in the pattern before it had been
adjusted causing the pattern to be misplaced relative to the page.
Fixes: ShowText-ShadingPattern.pdf (already in corpus)
Fixes: #8111Fixes: #9243
Subfrom nomin displays even though it's subform is set to <occur max=-1 min=0>
If we look through specs of XFA 3.3 : https://www.pdfa.org/norm-refs/XFA-3_3.pdf
- The min attribute is used when processing a form that contains data. Regardless of the data at least this number of instances is included. It is permissible to set this value to zero, in which case the container is entirely excluded if there is no data for it.
However, in our case it doesn't happen, because we let our empty dataNode get through. Though by setting a clause:
- eliminate unmatched data with occur min=0
we are checking our empty data and sending it to uselessNode array where at the end it gets removed;
Very short strings can narrowly miss the existing Bidi-detection threshold, leading to incorrect text-selection and copying behaviour.
In my testing, neither Adobe Reader or PDFium seem to handle copying "correctly" for this document. Hence it's not entirely clear to me that we actually want to fix this, since tweaking these heuristics can *obviously* cause regressions elsewhere (and our test coverage for RTL-text isn't exactly great).
It seems that issue 10301 was fixed by PR 13424, by combining the spans, however given that we don't have a lot of test coverage for RTL-text I figured that adding a simple reference test wouldn't hurt (rather than just closing the issue as WORKSFORME).