Commit Graph

309 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jonas Jenwald
c55d30a715 Use the same non-embedded Wingdings fallback for fonts named "Wingdings-Regular" too (PR 5463 follow-up, issue 11451)
This patch extends the existing heuristics, which are really the best that we can do in general for these kinds of non-embedded *and* non-standard fonts.

Furthermore, this patch also tries to improve the copy-and-paste behaviour for non-embedded Wingdings fonts by also using the `ZapfDingbatsEncoding` in this case.

*Note:* I'm not sure that adding additional tests for Wingdings fonts matters that much, given how limited our "support" for them really is.
2020-02-24 17:40:06 +01:00
Tim van der Meij
61056a9238
Merge pull request #11551 from Snuffleupagus/issue-11549
Allow skipping of errors when reading broken/corrupt ToUnicode data (issue 11549)
2020-02-09 17:32:35 +01:00
Brendan Dahl
09a6e17d22
Merge pull request #11528 from janpe2/type1-nonemb-notdef
Hide .notdef glyphs in non-embedded Type1 fonts and don't ignore Widths
2020-02-06 13:30:07 -08:00
Jonas Jenwald
4c54395ff6 Allow skipping of errors when reading broken/corrupt ToUnicode data (issue 11549)
This will allow font loading/parsing to continue, rather than immediately failing, when broken/corrupt CMap data is encountered.
2020-01-30 13:19:05 +01:00
Tim van der Meij
cbbda9d883
Merge pull request #11515 from Snuffleupagus/cache-fallback-font
Cache the fallback font dictionary on the `PartialEvaluator` (PR 11218 follow-up)
2020-01-25 21:32:28 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
83bdb525a4 Fix remaining linting errors, from enabling the prefer-const ESLint rule globally
This covers cases that the `--fix` command couldn't deal with, and in a few cases (notably `src/core/jbig2.js`) the code was changed to use block-scoped variables instead.
2020-01-25 00:20:23 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
9e262ae7fa Enable the ESLint prefer-const rule globally (PR 11450 follow-up)
Please find additional details about the ESLint rule at https://eslint.org/docs/rules/prefer-const

With the recent introduction of Prettier this sort of mass enabling of ESLint rules becomes a lot easier, since the code will be automatically reformatted as necessary to account for e.g. changed line lengths.

Note that this patch is generated automatically, by using the ESLint `--fix` argument, and will thus require some additional clean-up (which is done separately).
2020-01-25 00:20:22 +01:00
Jani Pehkonen
809b96b40c Hide .notdef glyphs in non-embedded Type1 fonts and don't ignore Widths
Fixes #11403
The PDF uses the non-embedded Type1 font Helvetica. Character codes 194 and 160 (`Â` and `NBSP`) are encoded as `.notdef`. We shouldn't show those glyphs because it seems that Acrobat Reader doesn't draw glyphs that are named `.notdef` in fonts like this.

In addition to testing `glyphName === ".notdef"`, we must test also `glyphName === ""` because the name `""` is used in `core/encodings.js` for undefined glyphs in encodings like `WinAnsiEncoding`.

The solution above hides the `Â` characters but now the replacement character (space) appears to be too wide. I found out that PDF.js ignores font's `Widths` array if the font has no `FontDescriptor` entry. That happens in #11403, so the default widths of Helvetica were used as specified in `core/metrics.js` and `.nodef` got a width of 333. The correct width is 0 as specified by the `Widths` array in the PDF. Thus we must never ignore `Widths`.
2020-01-21 21:35:25 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
9ab7c280aa Cache the fallback font dictionary on the PartialEvaluator (PR 11218 follow-up)
This way we'll benefit from the existing font caching, and can thus avoid re-creating a fallback font over and over again during parsing.
(Thece changes necessitated the previous patch, since otherwise breakage could occur e.g. with fake workers.)
2020-01-16 15:12:05 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
36881e3770 Ensure that all import and require statements, in the entire code-base, have a .js file extension
In order to eventually get rid of SystemJS and start using native `import`s instead, we'll need to provide "complete" file identifiers since otherwise there'll be MIME type errors when attempting to use `import`.
2020-01-04 13:01:43 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
a63f7ad486 Fix the linting errors, from the Prettier auto-formatting, that ESLint --fix couldn't handle
This patch makes the follow changes:
 - Remove no longer necessary inline `// eslint-disable-...` comments.
 - Fix `// eslint-disable-...` comments that Prettier moved down, thus causing new linting errors.
 - Concatenate strings which now fit on just one line.
 - Fix comments that are now too long.
 - Finally, and most importantly, adjust comments that Prettier moved down, since the new positions often is confusing or outright wrong.
2019-12-26 12:35:12 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
de36b2aaba Enable auto-formatting of the entire code-base using Prettier (issue 11444)
Note that Prettier, purposely, has only limited [configuration options](https://prettier.io/docs/en/options.html). The configuration file is based on [the one in `mozilla central`](https://searchfox.org/mozilla-central/source/.prettierrc) with just a few additions (to avoid future breakage if the defaults ever changes).

Prettier is being used for a couple of reasons:

 - To be consistent with `mozilla-central`, where Prettier is already in use across the tree.

 - To ensure a *consistent* coding style everywhere, which is automatically enforced during linting (since Prettier is used as an ESLint plugin). This thus ends "all" formatting disussions once and for all, removing the need for review comments on most stylistic matters.

Many ESLint options are now redundant, and I've tried my best to remove all the now unnecessary options (but I may have missed some).
Note also that since Prettier considers the `printWidth` option as a guide, rather than a hard rule, this patch resorts to a small hack in the ESLint config to ensure that *comments* won't become too long.

*Please note:* This patch is generated automatically, by appending the `--fix` argument to the ESLint call used in the `gulp lint` task. It will thus require some additional clean-up, which will be done in a *separate* commit.

(On a more personal note, I'll readily admit that some of the changes Prettier makes are *extremely* ugly. However, in the name of consistency we'll probably have to live with that.)
2019-12-26 12:34:24 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
835d8c2be5 Allow skipping of errors when parsing broken/unsupported ColorSpaces (issue 6707, issue 11287)
This will allow us to attempt to recover as much as possible of a page, rather than immediately failing, when a broken/unsupported ColorSpace is encountered. This patch thus extends the framework added in PRs such as e.g. 8240 and 8922, to also cover parsing of ColorSpaces.
2019-11-01 09:01:24 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
0496ea61f5 Ensure that PartialEvaluator.hasBlendModes handles Blend Modes in Arrays (PR 11281 follow-up)
I completely overlooked this in PR 11281, but you obviously need to make similar changes in `PartialEvaluator.hasBlendModes` since it will otherwise ignore valid Blend Modes.
2019-10-28 11:37:05 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
5c266f0e8c Support Blend Modes which are specified in an Array of Names (issue 11279)
According to the specification, the first *supported* Blend Mode should be choosen in this case; please see https://www.adobe.com/content/dam/acom/en/devnet/acrobat/pdfs/PDF32000_2008.pdf#G10.4848607
2019-10-26 14:24:31 +02:00
Tim van der Meij
ca3a58f93a
Consistently use @returns for returned data types in JSDoc comments
Sometimes we also used `@return`, but `@returns` is what the JSDoc
documentation recommends. Even though `@return` works as an alias, it's
good to use the recommended syntax and to be consistent within the
project.
2019-10-13 13:58:17 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
bfcbf2d78d Cache processed 'ExtGState's in PartialEvaluator.hasBlendModes to avoid unnecessary parsing/lookups
This simply extends the already existing caching of processed resources to avoid duplicated parsing of 'ExtGState's, which should help with badly generated PDF documents.

This patch was tested using the PDF file from issue 6961, i.e. https://github.com/mozilla/pdf.js/files/121712/test.pdf, with the following manifest file:
```
[
    {  "id": "issue6961",
       "file": "../web/pdfs/issue6961.pdf",
       "md5": "",
       "rounds": 200,
       "type": "eq"
    }
]
```

which gave the following *overall* results when comparing this patch against the `master` branch:
```
-- Grouped By browser, stat --
browser | stat         | Count | Baseline(ms) | Current(ms) | +/- |    %  | Result(P<.05)
------- | ------------ | ----- | ------------ | ----------- | --- | ----- | -------------
Firefox | Overall      |   400 |         1063 |        1051 | -12 | -1.17 |        faster
Firefox | Page Request |   400 |          552 |         543 |  -9 | -1.69 |        faster
Firefox | Rendering    |   400 |          511 |         508 |  -3 | -0.61 |
```

and the following *page-specific* results:
```
-- Grouped By page, stat --
page | stat         | Count | Baseline(ms) | Current(ms) | +/- |    %  | Result(P<.05)
---- | ------------ | ----- | ------------ | ----------- | --- | ----- | -------------
0    | Overall      |   200 |         1122 |        1110 | -12 | -1.03 |
0    | Page Request |   200 |          552 |         544 |  -8 | -1.48 |        faster
0    | Rendering    |   200 |          570 |         566 |  -4 | -0.62 |
1    | Overall      |   200 |         1005 |         992 | -13 | -1.33 |        faster
1    | Page Request |   200 |          552 |         542 | -11 | -1.91 |        faster
1    | Rendering    |   200 |          452 |         450 |  -3 | -0.61 |
```
2019-10-12 12:35:42 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
af71f9b40a Inline all the possible type checks in PartialEvaluator.hasBlendModes to avoid unnecessary function calls
For badly generated PDF documents, with issue 6961 being one example, there's well over one hundred thousand function calls being made in total for just the *two* pages.
2019-10-12 11:24:37 +02:00
huzjakd
94171d9d72 Attempt to fallback to a default font, for non-available ones, in PartialEvaluator.loadFont
This handles the two different ways that fonts can be loaded, either by Name (which is the common case) or by Reference.
Furthermore, this also takes the `ignoreErrors` option into account when deciding whether to fallback or Error.
Finally, by creating a minimal but valid Font dictionary, there's no special-cases necessary in any of the font parsing code.

Co-authored-by: huzjakd <huzjakd@gmail.com>
Co-Authored-By: Jonas Jenwald <jonas.jenwald@gmail.com>
2019-10-10 16:49:46 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
f5be2d62a3 Improve the heuristics, in PartialEvaluator._buildSimpleFontToUnicode, for glyphNames of the Cdd{d}/cdd{d} format (issue 9655)
*Please note:* I've been thinking about possible ways of addressing this issue for a while now, but all of the solutions I came up with became too complicated and thus hurt readability of the code.
However, it occured to me that we're essentially trying to add a heuristic *on top* of another heuristic, and that it shouldn't matter how efficient the code is as long as it works.

In the PDF file in the issue the Encoding contains glyphNames of the `Cdd` format, which our existing heuristics will treat as base 10 values. However, in this particular file they actually contain base 16 values, which we thus attempt to detect and fix such that text-selection works.
2019-10-06 10:47:29 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
f11a4ba750 Transfer, rather than copy, CMap data to the worker-thread
It recently occurred to me that the CMap data should be an excellent candidate for transfering.
This will help reduce peak memory usage for PDF documents using CMaps, since transfering of data avoids duplicating it on both the main- and worker-threads.

Unfortunately it's not possible to actually transfer data when *returning* data through `sendWithPromise`, and another solution had to be used.
Initially I looked at using one message for requesting the data, and another message for returning the actual CMap data. While that should have worked, it would have meant adding a lot more complexity particularly on the worker-thread.
Hence the simplest solution, at least in my opinion, is to utilize `sendWithStream` since that makes it *really* easy to transfer the CMap data. (This required PR 11115 to land first, since otherwise CMap fetch errors won't propagate correctly to the worker-thread.)

Please note that the patch *purposely* only changes the API to Worker communication, and not the API *itself* since changing the interface of `CMapReaderFactory` would be a breaking change.
Furthermore, given the relatively small size of the `.bcmap` files (the largest one is smaller than the default range-request size) streaming doesn't really seem necessary either.
2019-09-04 11:46:04 +02:00
Yury Delendik
66e0dd1b06 Use streams for OperatorList chunking (issue 10023)
*Please note:* The majority of this patch was written by Yury, and it's simply been rebased and slightly extended to prevent issues when dealing with `RenderingCancelledException`.

By leveraging streams this (finally) provides a simple way in which parsing can be aborted on the worker-thread, which will ultimately help save resources.
With this patch worker-thread parsing will *only* be aborted when the document is destroyed, and not when rendering is cancelled. There's a couple of reasons for this:

 - The API currently expects the *entire* OperatorList to be extracted, or an Error to occur, once it's been started. Hence additional re-factoring/re-writing of the API code will be necessary to properly support cancelling and re-starting of OperatorList parsing in cases where the `lastChunk` hasn't yet been seen.
 - Even with the above addressed, immediately cancelling when encountering a `RenderingCancelledException` will lead to worse performance in e.g. the default viewer. When zooming and/or rotation of the document occurs it's very likely that `cancel` will be (almost) immediately followed by a new `render` call. In that case you'd obviously *not* want to abort parsing on the worker-thread, since then you'd risk throwing away a partially parsed Page and thus be forced to re-parse it again which will regress perceived performance.
 - This patch is already *somewhat* risky, given that it touches fundamentally important/critical code, and trying to keep it somewhat small should hopefully reduce the risk of regressions (and simplify reviewing as well).

Time permitting, once this has landed and been in Nightly for awhile, I'll try to work on the remaining points outlined above.

Co-Authored-By: Yury Delendik <ydelendik@mozilla.com>
Co-Authored-By: Jonas Jenwald <jonas.jenwald@gmail.com>
2019-08-24 15:56:40 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
5ac9c7c384 Support corrupt PDF files with invalid/non-existent Group /CS entries (issue 11045)
The PDF file in question tries to reference a non-existent ColorSpace, which should be quite rare in practice.
2019-08-06 14:33:05 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
38ccb43436 Reduce the number of function calls in EvaluatorPreprocessor.read
For very large and complex PDF files this will help performance slightly, since `EvaluatorPreprocessor.read` is called a lot during parsing in the worker.

This patch was tested using the PDF file from issue 2618, i.e. http://bugzilla-attachments.gnome.org/attachment.cgi?id=226471, using the following manifest file:
```
[
    {  "id": "issue2618",
       "file": "../web/pdfs/issue2618.pdf",
       "md5": "",
       "rounds": 200,
       "type": "eq"
    }
]
```

This gave the following results when comparing this patch against the `master` branch:
```
-- Grouped By browser, stat --
browser | stat         | Count | Baseline(ms) | Current(ms) | +/- |    %  | Result(P<.05)
------- | ------------ | ----- | ------------ | ----------- | --- | ----- | -------------
Firefox | Overall      |   200 |         3402 |        3358 | -43 | -1.28 |        faster
Firefox | Page Request |   200 |            1 |           1 |   0 | 26.71 |
Firefox | Rendering    |   200 |         3401 |        3357 | -44 | -1.28 |        faster
```
2019-07-29 08:43:36 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
f710eb56e4 Change the signature of the Parser constructor to take a parameter object
A lot of the `new Parser()` call-sites look quite unwieldy/ugly as-is, with a bunch of somewhat randomly ordered arguments, which we can avoid by changing the constructor to accept an object instead. As an added bonus, this provides better documentation without having to add inline argument comments in the code.
2019-06-23 16:01:45 +02:00
Tim van der Meij
c8c937c257
Merge pull request #10794 from janpe2/cidtogidmap-zero
Fix glyph at index zero in CIDFontType2 that has a CIDToGIDMap stream
2019-05-15 00:04:39 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
173fbef05b Enable the consistent-return ESLint rule
This rule is already enabled in mozilla-central, and helps ensure more consistent functions/methods, see https://searchfox.org/mozilla-central/rev/b9da45f63cb567244933c77b2c7e827a057d3f9b/tools/lint/eslint/eslint-plugin-mozilla/lib/configs/recommended.js#119-120

Please see https://eslint.org/docs/rules/consistent-return for additional information.
2019-05-11 14:27:21 +02:00
Jani Pehkonen
05c527f035 Fix glyph 0 in CIDFontType2 that has a CIDToGIDMap stream 2019-05-07 18:44:37 +03:00
Jonas Jenwald
007fab6ab5 Change PartialEvaluator.handleColorN to throw when no valid pattern is found
Currently `handleColorN` will fallback to add a completely unparsed/unvalidated operator when no valid pattern was found. This is unfortunate, since it could very easily lead to a couple of different errors:
 - `DataCloneError`s when attempting to send the data to the main-thread, e.g. when `args` is `Dict`/`Stream`.
 - Errors in `getShadingPatternFromIR` on the main-thread, unless `args` just happens to have the expected format.
 - Errors when actually attempting to render the pattern on the main-thread, since the `args` will most likely not have the expected format.

Hence it probably makes sense to error in `PartialEvaluator.handleColorN`, and having invalid patterns fail gracefully via the existing `ignoreErrors` code-paths instead.
2019-05-04 12:53:18 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
5335285cda Attempt to handle corrupt PDF documents that contains path operators inside of text object (issue 10542)
First of all, while this simple approach appears to work OK in practice I'm not sure if it's the best way of addressing the problem (assuming that you even want to).
Second of all, while the solution implemented here only requires tracking/checking one new boolean in order for this to work, I'm nonetheless not entirely happy about this since it will add additional overhead (albeit *very* small) to the parsing of path operators in PDF documents just for a handful of *corrupt* ones.
2019-04-30 23:35:33 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
34952b732e Add a getDocId method to the idFactory, in Page instances, to avoid passing around PDFManager instances unnecessarily (PR 7941 follow-up)
This way we can avoid manually building a "document id" in multiple places in `evaluator.js`, and it also let's us avoid passing in an otherwise unnecessary `PDFManager` instance when creating a `PartialEvaluator`.
2019-04-20 13:11:17 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
be604bd195 Support (rare) Type3 fonts which contains image resources (issue 10717)
The Type3 font type is not commonly used in PDF documents, as can be seen from telemetry data such as: https://telemetry.mozilla.org/new-pipeline/dist.html#!cumulative=0&end_date=2019-04-09&include_spill=0&keys=__none__!__none__!__none__&max_channel_version=nightly%252F68&measure=PDF_VIEWER_FONT_TYPES&min_channel_version=nightly%252F57&processType=*&product=Firefox&sanitize=1&sort_by_value=0&sort_keys=submissions&start_date=2019-03-18&table=0&trim=1&use_submission_date=0 (see also https://github.com/mozilla/pdf.js/wiki/Enumeration-Assignments-for-the-Telemetry-Histograms#pdf_viewer_font_types).

Type3 fonts containing image resources are *very* rare in practice, usually they only contain path rendering operators, but as the issue shows they unfortunately do exist.
Currently these Type3-related image resources are not handled in any special way, and given that fonts are document rather than page specific rendering breaks since the image resources are thus not available to the *entire* document.
Fortunately fixing this isn't too difficult, but it does require adding a couple of Type3-specific code-paths to the `PartialEvaluator`. In order to keep the implementation simple, particularily on the main-thread, these Type3 image resources are completely decoded on the worker-thread to avoid adding too many special cases. This should not cause any issues, only marginally less efficient code, but given how rare this kind of Type3 font is adding premature optimizations didn't seem at all warranted at this point.
2019-04-13 18:27:50 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
9077abc263 Take the FirstChar/LastChar properties into account when computing the hash in PartialEvaluator.preEvaluateFont (issue 10665)
Without this some fonts may incorrectly end up with matching `hash`es, thus breaking rendering since we'll not actually try to load/parse some of the fonts.
2019-03-27 16:27:10 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
a2a824ed01 Don't accidentally use an empty hash value when comparing preEvaluatedFonts in PartialEvaluator.loadFont
Note that `PartialEvaluator.preEvaluateFont` will return an empty string when no hash was computed. This will complete short-circuit the `fontAlias` comparison in `PartialEvaluator.loadFont`, since fonts which are totally different will then match if their `hash`es are empty.
2019-03-27 00:54:39 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
7273795eb6 Actually transfer eligible ImageMask data, rather than always copying it
By transfering `ArrayBuffer`s you can avoid having two copies of the same data, i.e. one copy on each of the worker/main-thread, for data that's used only *once* on the worker-thread.

Note how the code in [`PDFImage.createMask`](80135378ca/src/core/image.js (L284-L285)) goes to great lengths to actually enable tranfering of the image data. However in [`PartialEvaluator.buildPaintImageXObject`](80135378ca/src/core/evaluator.js (L336)) the `cached` property is always set to `true`, which disqualifies the image data from being transfered; see [`getTransfers`](80135378ca/src/core/operator_list.js (L552-L554)).

For most ImageMask data this patch won't matter, since images found in the `/Resources -> /XObject` dictionary will always be indexed by name. However for *inline* images which contains ImageMask data, where only "small" images are cached (in both `parser.js` and `evaluator.js`), the current code will result in some unnecessary memory usage.
2019-03-16 13:06:32 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
88f9e633dd Try to improve text-selection for Type3 fonts that utilize a non-default /FontMatrix (bug 1513120)
For Type3 fonts text-selection is often not that great, and there's a couple of heuristics used to try and improve things. This patch simple extends those heuristics a bit, and fixes a pre-existing "naive" array comparison, but this all feels a bit brittle to say the least.

The existing Type3 test-coverage isn't that great in general, and in particular Type3 `text` tests are few and far between, hence why this patch adds *two* different new `text` tests.
2019-03-12 10:32:08 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
2665502055 Move NativeImageDecoder into a separate file, and convert it to a class
Given the size of the `src/core/evaluator.js` file, it cannot hurt to move some of its (image related) helper functionality into a separate file.
2019-03-09 15:59:04 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
db5dc14158 Move worker-thread only functions from src/shared/util.js and into a new src/core/core_utils.js file
The `src/shared/util.js` file is being bundled into both the `pdf.js` and `pdf.worker.js` files, meaning that its code is by definition duplicated.
Some main-thread only utility functions have already been moved to a separate `src/display/display_utils.js` file, and this patch simply extends that concept to utility functions which are used *only* on the worker-thread.

Note in particular the `getInheritableProperty` function, which expects a `Dict` as input and thus *cannot* possibly ever be used on the main-thread.
2019-02-24 00:35:39 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
b6d090cc14 Fallback to the built-in font renderer when font loading fails
After PR 9340 all glyphs are now re-mapped to a Private Use Area (PUA) which means that if a font fails to load, for whatever reason[1], all glyphs in the font will now render as Unicode glyph outlines.
This obviously doesn't look good, to say the least, and might be seen as a "regression" since previously many glyphs were left in their original positions which provided a slightly better fallback[2].

Hence this patch, which implements a *general* fallback to the PDF.js built-in font renderer for fonts that fail to load (i.e. are rejected by the sanitizer). One caveat here is that this only works for the Font Loading API, since it's easy to handle errors in that case[3].

The solution implemented in this patch does *not* in any way delay the loading of valid fonts, which was the problem with my previous attempt at a solution, and will only require a bit of extra work/waiting for those fonts that actually fail to load.

*Please note:* This patch doesn't fix any of the underlying PDF.js font conversion bugs that's responsible for creating corrupt font files, however it does *improve* rendering in a number of cases; refer to this possibly incomplete list:

[Bug 1524888](https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1524888)
Issue 10175
Issue 10232

---
[1] Usually because the PDF.js font conversion code wasn't able to parse the font file correctly.

[2] Glyphs fell back to some default font, which while not accurate was more useful than the current state.

[3] Furthermore I'm not sure how to implement this generally, assuming that's even possible, and don't really have time/interest to look into it either.
2019-02-11 10:27:08 +01:00
Tsukasa OI
96ba6afd47 Fix copying on supplementary plane characters
pdf.js had a problem when copying characters on supplementary planes
(0xPPXXXX where PP is nonzero).  This is because certain methods of
PartialEvaluator use classic String.fromCharCode instead of ES6's
String.fromCodePoint.

Despite the fact that readToUnicode method *tried* to parse out-of-UCS2
code points by parsing UTF-16BE, it was inadequate because
String.fromCharCode only supports UCS-2 range of Unicode.
2019-02-10 18:14:53 +09:00
Jonas Jenwald
6f94a05a29 Do the final text scaling correctly in flushTextContentItem (issue 8276)
It's necessary to take into account whether or not the text is vertical, to avoid either the textContent `width` or `height` becoming incorrect.
2019-01-29 15:24:04 +01:00
Jani Pehkonen
26121177ab Implement Decode entry in Indexed images 2019-01-22 22:51:04 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
24a688d6c6 Convert some usage of indexOf to startsWith/includes where applicable
In many cases in the code you don't actually care about the index itself, but rather just want to know if something exists in a String/Array or if a String starts in a particular way. With modern JavaScript functionality, it's thus possible to remove a number of existing `indexOf` cases.
2019-01-18 17:57:41 +01:00
Jani Pehkonen
9cd5f94f03 Normalize the BBox of form XObjects on the /core side 2018-10-22 14:17:05 +03:00
Jonas Jenwald
842e9206c0 Replace String.prototype.substr() occurrences with String.prototype.substring()
As outlined in https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/String/substr, which refers to the ECMA-262 specification, using the `substr` function is advised against.

Hence this PR, which replaces all remaining `substr` occurrences with `substring` instead. Please refer to https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/String/substr#Syntax respectively https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/String/substring#Syntax for the differences between the two functions.

Note that in most cases in the code-base there's only one argument passed to `substr`, and those require no other changes except replacing "substr" with "substring". For the other cases, the `substr(start, length)` calls are changed to `substring(start, start + length)` instead.
2018-09-28 11:41:07 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
e5a6d892b4
Revert "Attempt to combine separate beginText/endText sequences in getTextContent (issue 9984)" 2018-09-05 18:01:33 +02:00
Tim van der Meij
c94df0fef3
Merge pull request #9986 from Snuffleupagus/issue-9984
Attempt to combine separate beginText/endText sequences in `getTextContent` (issue 9984)
2018-09-01 21:21:29 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
099ed08852 Add support for async/await using Babel
For proof-of-concept, this patch converts a couple of `Promise` returning methods to use `async` instead.
Please note that the `generic` build, based on this patch, has been successfully testing in IE11 (i.e. the viewer loads and nothing is obviously broken).

Being able to use modern JavaScript features like `async`/`await` is a huge plus, but there's one (obvious) side-effect: The size of the built files will increase slightly (unless `SKIP_BABEL == true`). That's unavoidable, but seems like a small price to pay in the grand scheme of things.

Finally, note that the `chromium` build target was changed to no longer skip Babel translation, since the Chrome extension still supports version `49` of the browser (where native `async` support isn't available).
2018-08-19 16:54:11 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
497b765ede Attempt to combine separate beginText/endText sequences in getTextContent (issue 9984)
Please note that while this *improves* issue 9984 slightly (and likely others too), it's not a complete solution.
The remaining issues are related to the, more general, problems with the existing heuristics related to attempting to combine separate text items.
2018-08-18 13:45:32 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
cfdb597e4a Ensure that the CIDSystemInfo strings, in Type0 fonts, are correctly decoded
This isn't directly related to the subsequent patch, but just something that I happened to notice while poking around in the font code.
2018-07-29 23:06:15 +02:00