Currently when an exception is thrown, we try to reject `workerReadyCapability` with multiple arguments in src/core/api.js. This obviously doesn't work, hence this patch changes that to instead reject with the exception object as is.
In src/core/worker.js the exception is currently (unncessarily) wrapped in an object, so this patch also simplifies that to directly send the exception object instead.
This patch avoids creating many intermediate strings, when adding dummy width/lsb entries for glyphs where those are missing.
For the relevant PDF files in our test suite, the average number of intermediate strings are well over 1000.
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.
setGStateForKey() is a closure that serves no particularly useful
purpose. This change inlines it at the single call site. This avoids 1.7
MiB of allocations (because closures are objects) for the MTA map
mentioned in https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=835380#c17.
For the document in #2504, 11% of the ops are `setGState` with a
`gStateObj` that is an empty array, which is a no-op. This is possible
because we ignore various setGState keys (OP, OPM, BG, etc).
This change prevents these ops from being inserted into the operator
list.
This allows the JS engine to do a better job of allocating the right
number of elements for the array, avoiding some resizings. For the PDF
in #2504, this avoids 100s of MiBs of allocations in Firefox.
makeInlineImage() has a "are the next five chars ASCII?" check which is
run after an "EI" sequence has been found. This check involves the
creation of a new object because peekBytes() calls subarray().
Unfortunately, the check is currently run on whitespace chars even when
an "EI" sequence has not yet been found, i.e. when it's not needed. For
the PDF in #2618, there are over 820,000 such checks.
This change reworks the relevant loop so that the check is only done
once an "EI" sequence has been seen. This reduces the number of checks
to 157,000, and speeds up rendering by somewhere between 2% and 7% (the
measurements are noisy).