Commit Graph

192 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jonas Jenwald
1dad255784 Convert files in the src/display/-folder to use optional chaining where possible
By using optional chaining, see https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Operators/Optional_chaining, it's possible to reduce unnecessary code-repetition in many cases.
Note that these changes also reduce the size of the *built* `pdf.js` file, when `SKIP_BABEL == true` is set, and for the `MOZCENTRAL` build-target that result in a `0.1%` filesize reduction from a simple and mostly mechanical code change.
2020-11-07 13:22:06 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
78de919bf4 Improve the Pattern-detection in CanvasGraphics.stroke
The vast majority of the time, unless a Pattern is active, the `strokeColor`-property contains a "simple" colour value represented by a String. Hence it seems somewhat ridiculous to do a `hasOwnProperty` check on a String, and it's should thus be possible to improve things a tiny bit here.

Unfortunately using a simple `instanceof` check would only work for `TilingPattern`s, but not for the `ShadingIRs` given how they are implemented; see `src/display/pattern_helper.js`. (While that file could probably do with some clean-up, given the age of some of its code, that probably shouldn't happen here.)

Finally, the `this.type = "Pattern"`-property of the various Shadings/TilingPatterns were removed, since I cannot see why it's necessary when we can simply check for a `getPattern` method instead. Note that part of this code even pre-dates the main/worker-thread split, which probably in part explains why it looks the way it does.
2020-11-06 11:46:35 +01:00
Calixte Denizet
9d11b51a3e Replace css color rgb(...) by #...
* it's faster to generate the color code in using a table for components
* it's very likely a way faster to parse (when setting the color in the canvas)
2020-11-02 10:25:04 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
52f6016e6c Fix the remaining ESLint no-var errors in the src/display/ folder
While most of necessary changes were fixed automatically, see the previous patch, there's a number of cases that needed to be fixed manually.
2020-10-02 16:29:13 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
e557be5a17 Re-format the src/display/ files to enforce the ESLint no-var rule
This was done automatically, using `gulp lint --fix`.
2020-10-02 16:17:28 +02:00
Emilio Cobos Álvarez
bf8b1adf73 canvas: Properly restore all the remaining items in stateStack in endDrawing.
We were correctly finishing the SMask group but not restoring all the extra
transformations applied in stateStack, so if somebody ends up drawing to the
same context after canceling mid-draw we'd get artifacts.

This re-lands #12363 and fixes Mozilla bug 1664178[1].

[1]: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1664178
2020-09-12 16:37:54 +02:00
Emilio Cobos Álvarez
3a277f3ba5 canvas: restore() should reflect that smask groups are finished when stateStack is empty.
This fixes the issue that caused #12363 to get reverted, see #12367.
When we end the SMask group and stateStack.length is zero, nothing updates
this.current to reflect it.
2020-09-12 16:37:54 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
f43d1b316b
Revert "canvas: Properly restore all the remaining items in stateStack in endDrawing" 2020-09-12 16:15:33 +02:00
Emilio Cobos Álvarez
ef1e9a1a3e
canvas: Properly restore all the remaining items in stateStack in endDrawing.
We were correctly finishing the SMask group but not restoring all the extra
transformations applied in stateStack, so if somebody ends up drawing to the
same context after canceling mid-draw we'd get artifacts.

This fixes Mozilla bug 1664178[1].

[1]: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1664178
2020-09-12 13:50:56 +02:00
Jani Pehkonen
e7febbf0f7 Accent positioning in Type1 seac glyphs
In `display/canvas.js` the accent offsets must be multiplied by `fontSize` to make the offsets large enough. Another problem is in `core/type1_parser.js` when the Type1 command `seac` is handled. There is an error in the Adobe Type1 spec. See chapter 6 in Type1 Font Format Supplement, which provides an errata: The arguments of `seac` specify the offset of the left side bearing (LSB) points, not the offset of origins. This can be fixed in `core/type1_parser.js` by adding the difference of the LSB values.
2020-08-23 21:01:25 +03:00
Jonas Jenwald
1058f16605 Add (basic) support for transfer functions to Images (issue 6931, bug 1149713)
This is *similar* to the existing transfer function support for SMasks, but extended to simple image data.
Please note that the extra amount of data now being sent to the worker-thread, for affected /ExtGState entries, is limited to *at most* 4 `Uint8Array`s each with a length of 256 elements.

Refer to https://www.adobe.com/content/dam/acom/en/devnet/acrobat/pdfs/PDF32000_2008.pdf#G9.1658137 for additional details.
2020-08-17 10:34:12 +02:00
Brendan Dahl
ac494a2278 Add support for optional marked content.
Add a new method to the API to get the optional content configuration. Add
a new render task param that accepts the above configuration.
For now, the optional content is not controllable by the user in
the viewer, but renders with the default configuration in the PDF.

All of the test files added exhibit different uses of optional content.

Fixes #269.

Fix test to work with optional content.

- Change the stopAtErrors test to ensure the operator list has something,
  instead of asserting the exact number of operators.
2020-08-04 09:26:55 -07:00
Linus Gasser
f1bbfdc16d Add typescript definitions
This PR adds typescript definitions from the JSDoc already present.
It adds a new gulp-target 'types' that calls 'tsc', the typescript
compiler, to create the definitions.

To use the definitions, users can simply do the following:

```
import {getDocument, GlobalWorkerOptions} from "pdfjs-dist";
import pdfjsWorker from "pdfjs-dist/build/pdf.worker.entry";
GlobalWorkerOptions.workerSrc = pdfjsWorker;

const pdf = await getDocument("file:///some.pdf").promise;
```

Co-authored-by: @oBusk
Co-authored-by: @tamuratak
2020-07-30 11:10:37 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
d4d7ac1b88 Stop special-casing the (very unlikely) "no /XObject found"-scenario, when parsing OPS.paintXObject operators, in PartialEvaluator.{getOperatorList, getTextContent}
Originally there weren't any (generally) good ways to handle errors gracefully, on the worker-side, however that's no longer the case and we can simply fallback to the existing `ignoreErrors` functionality instead.
Also, please note that the "no `/XObject` found"-scenario should be *extremely* unlikely in practice and would only occur in corrupt/broken documents.

Note that the `PartialEvaluator.getOperatorList` case is especially bad currently, since we'll simply (attempt to) send the data as-is to the main-thread. This is quite bad, since in a corrupt/broken document the data *could* contain anything and e.g. be unclonable (which would cause breaking errors).
Also, we're (obviously) not attempting to do anything with this "raw" `OPS.paintXObject` data on the main-thread and simply ensuring that we never send it definately seems like the correct approach.
2020-07-12 21:59:59 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
fef24658e7 Adjust the heuristics used when dealing with rectangles, i.e. re operators, with zero width/height (issue 12010) 2020-07-02 00:02:49 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
e18fa3fc45 Tweak the QueueOptimizer to recognize OPS.paintImageMaskXObject operators as *repeated* when the "skew" transformation matrix elements are non-zero (issue 8078)
*First of all, I should mention that my understanding of the finer details of the `QueueOptimizer` (and its related `CanvasGraphics` methods) is somewhat limited.*
Hence I'm not sure if there's actually a very good reason for *only* considering ImageMasks where the "skew" transformation matrix elements are zero as *repeated*, however simply looking at the code I just don't see why these elements cannot be non-zero as long as they are *all identical* for the ImageMasks.
Furthermore, looking at the *group* case (which is what we're currently falling back to), there's no particular limitation placed upon the transformation matrix elements.

While this patch obviously isn't enough to *completely* fix the issue, since there should be a visible Pattern rendered as well[1], it seem (at least to me) like enough of an improvement that submitting this is justified.
With these changes the referenced PDF document will no longer hang the *entire* browser, and rendering also finishes in a *reasonable* time (< 10 seconds for me) which seem fine given the *huge* number of identical inline images present.[2]

---
[1] Temporarily changing the Pattern to a solid color *does* render the correct/expected area, which suggests that the remaining problem is a pre-existing issue related to the Pattern-handling itself rather than the `QueueOptimizer` functionality.

[2] The document isn't exactly rendered immediately in e.g. Adobe Reader either.
2020-06-20 12:18:48 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
0351852d74 [api-minor] Decode all JPEG images with the built-in PDF.js decoder in src/core/jpg.js
Currently some JPEG images are decoded by the built-in PDF.js decoder in `src/core/jpg.js`, while others attempt to use the browser JPEG decoder. This inconsistency seem unfortunate for a number of reasons:

 - It adds, compared to the other image formats supported in the PDF specification, a fair amount of code/complexity to the image handling in the PDF.js library.

 - The PDF specification support JPEG images with features, e.g. certain ColorSpaces, that browsers are unable to decode natively. Hence, determining if a JPEG image is possible to decode natively in the browser require a non-trivial amount of parsing. In particular, we're parsing (part of) the raw JPEG data to extract certain marker data and we also need to parse the ColorSpace for the JPEG image.

 - While some JPEG images may, for all intents and purposes, appear to be natively supported there's still cases where the browser may fail to decode some JPEG images. In order to support those cases, we've had to implement a fallback to the PDF.js JPEG decoder if there's any issues during the native decoding. This also means that it's no longer possible to simply send the JPEG image to the main-thread and continue parsing, but you now need to actually wait for the main-thread to indicate success/failure first.
   In practice this means that there's a code-path where the worker-thread is forced to wait for the main-thread, while the reverse should *always* be the case.

 - The native decoding, for anything except the *simplest* of JPEG images, result in increased peak memory usage because there's a handful of short-lived copies of the JPEG data (see PR 11707).
Furthermore this also leads to data being *parsed* on the main-thread, rather than the worker-thread, which you usually want to avoid for e.g. performance and UI-reponsiveness reasons.

 - Not all environments, e.g. Node.js, fully support native JPEG decoding. This has, historically, lead to some issues and support requests.

 - Different browsers may use different JPEG decoders, possibly leading to images being rendered slightly differently depending on the platform/browser where the PDF.js library is used.

Originally the implementation in `src/core/jpg.js` were unable to handle all of the JPEG images in the test-suite, but over the last couple of years I've fixed (hopefully) all of those issues.
At this point in time, there's two kinds of failure with this patch:

 - Changes which are basically imperceivable to the naked eye, where some pixels in the images are essentially off-by-one (in all components), which could probably be attributed to things such as different rounding behaviour in the browser/PDF.js JPEG decoder.
   This type of "failure" accounts for the *vast* majority of the total number of changes in the reference tests.

 - Changes where the JPEG images now looks *ever so slightly* blurrier than with the native browser decoder. For quite some time I've just assumed that this pointed to a general deficiency in the `src/core/jpg.js` implementation, however I've discovered when comparing two viewers side-by-side that the differences vanish at higher zoom levels (usually around 200% is enough).
   Basically if you disable [this downscaling in canvas.js](8fb82e939c/src/display/canvas.js (L2356-L2395)), which is what happens when zooming in, the differences simply vanish!
   Hence I'm pretty satisfied that there's no significant problems with the `src/core/jpg.js` implementation, and the problems are rather tied to the general quality of the downscaling algorithm used. It could even be seen as a positive that *all* images now share the same downscaling behaviour, since this actually fixes one old bug; see issue 7041.
2020-05-22 00:22:48 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
dda6626f40 Attempt to cache repeated images at the document, rather than the page, level (issue 11878)
Currently image resources, as opposed to e.g. font resources, are handled exclusively on a page-specific basis. Generally speaking this makes sense, since pages are separate from each other, however there's PDF documents where many (or even all) pages actually references exactly the same image resources (through the XRef table). Hence, in some cases, we're decoding the *same* images over and over for every page which is obviously slow and wasting both CPU and memory resources better used elsewhere.[1]

Obviously we cannot simply treat all image resources as-if they're used throughout the entire PDF document, since that would end up increasing memory usage too much.[2]
However, by introducing a `GlobalImageCache` in the worker we can track image resources that appear on more than one page. Hence we can switch image resources from being page-specific to being document-specific, once the image resource has been seen on more than a certain number of pages.

In many cases, such as e.g. the referenced issue, this patch will thus lead to reduced memory usage for image resources. Scrolling through all pages of the document, there's now only a few main-thread copies of the same image data, as opposed to one for each rendered page (i.e. there could theoretically be *twenty* copies of the image data).
While this obviously benefit both CPU and memory usage in this case, for *very* large image data this patch *may* possibly increase persistent main-thread memory usage a tiny bit. Thus to avoid negatively affecting memory usage too much in general, particularly on the main-thread, the `GlobalImageCache` will *only* cache a certain number of image resources at the document level and simply fallback to the default behaviour.

Unfortunately the asynchronous nature of the code, with ranged/streamed loading of data, actually makes all of this much more complicated than if all data could be assumed to be immediately available.[3]

*Please note:* The patch will lead to *small* movement in some existing test-cases, since we're now using the built-in PDF.js JPEG decoder more. This was done in order to simplify the overall implementation, especially on the main-thread, by limiting it to only the `OPS.paintImageXObject` operator.

---
[1] There's e.g. PDF documents that use the same image as background on all pages.

[2] Given that data stored in the `commonObjs`, on the main-thread, are only cleared manually through `PDFDocumentProxy.cleanup`. This as opposed to data stored in the `objs` of each page, which is automatically removed when the page is cleaned-up e.g. by being evicted from the cache in the default viewer.

[3] If the latter case were true, we could simply check for repeat images *before* parsing started and thus avoid handling *any* duplicate image resources.
2020-05-21 18:13:45 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
c355f91d2e [api-minor] Immediately release the font.data property once the font been attached to the DOM (PR 11777 follow-up)
*This patch implements https://github.com/mozilla/pdf.js/pull/11777#issuecomment-609741348*

This extends the work from PR 11773 and 11777 further, by immediately releasing the `font.data` property once the font been attached to the DOM. By not unnecessarily holding onto this data on the main-thread, we'll thus reduce the memory usage of fonts even further (especially beneficial in longer documents with composite fonts).

The new behaviour is controlled by the recently added `fontExtraProperties` API option (adding a new option just for this patch didn't seem necessary), since there's one edge-case in the SVG renderer where the `font.data` property is necessary (see the `pdf2svg` example).

Note that while the default viewer does run clean-up with an idle timeout, that timeout will be reset whenever rendering occurs *or* when scrolling happens in the viewer. In practice this means that unless the user doesn't interact with the viewer in *any* way during an extended period of time, currently set to 30 seconds, the `PDFDocumentProxy.cleanup` method will never be called and font resources will thus not be cleaned-up.
2020-04-23 13:04:57 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
426945b480 Update Prettier to version 2.0
Please note that these changes were done automatically, using `gulp lint --fix`.

Given that the major version number was increased, there's a fair number of (primarily whitespace) changes; please see https://prettier.io/blog/2020/03/21/2.0.0.html
In order to reduce the size of these changes somewhat, this patch maintains the old "arrowParens" style for now (once mozilla-central updates Prettier we can simply choose the same formatting, assuming it will differ here).
2020-04-14 12:28:14 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
dcb16af968 Whitelist closure related cases to address the remaining no-shadow linting errors
Given the way that "classes" were previously implemented in PDF.js, using regular functions and closures, there's a fair number of false positives when the `no-shadow` ESLint rule was enabled.

Note that while *some* of these `eslint-disable` statements can be removed if/when the relevant code is converted to proper `class`es, we'll probably never be able to get rid of all of them given our naming/coding conventions (however I don't really see this being a problem).
2020-03-25 11:57:12 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
3539a17d2a Remove variable shadowing from the JavaScript files in the src/display/ folder
*This is part of a series of patches that will try to split PR 11566 into smaller chunks, to make reviewing more feasible.*

Once all the code has been fixed, we'll be able to eventually enable the ESLint no-shadow rule; see https://eslint.org/docs/rules/no-shadow
2020-03-20 23:09:41 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
e4758beaaa Move IsLittleEndianCached and IsEvalSupportedCached to src/shared/util.js
Rather than duplicating the lookup and caching in multiple files, it seems easier to simply move all of this functionality into `src/shared/util.js` instead.
This will also help avoid a bunch of ESLint errors once the `no-shadow` rule is eventually enabled.
2020-03-12 11:36:26 +01:00
Takashi Tamura
d8c9f119b0 Fix the vertical writing mode with horizontal scaling. #11555.
It is not valid to multiply textHScale when the writing mode is vertical.

See 9.4.4 Text Space Details, https://www.adobe.com/content/dam/acom/en/devnet/acrobat/pdfs/PDF32000_2008.pdf#G8.1694762
2020-02-29 07:48:29 +09:00
Takashi Tamura
512dbe3060 Fix text spacing with vertical fonts. #7687 and #11526.
When the writing mode is vertical, we have to reverse
the sign of spacing since we are subtracting it from
current.y. We have to add it to current.y.
See 9.4.4 Text Space Details, https://www.adobe.com/content/dam/acom/en/devnet/acrobat/pdfs/PDF32000_2008.pdf#G8.1694762
2020-02-11 08:49:23 +09:00
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
Jonas Jenwald
c591826f3b Enable the no-nested-ternary ESLint rule (PR 11488 follow-up)
This rule is already enabled in mozilla-central, and helps avoid some confusing formatting, see https://searchfox.org/mozilla-central/rev/9e45d74b956be046e5021a746b0c8912f1c27318/tools/lint/eslint/eslint-plugin-mozilla/lib/configs/recommended.js#209-210

With the recent introduction of Prettier some of the existing nested ternary statements became even more difficult to read, since any possibly helpful indentation was removed.
This particular ESLint rule wasn't entirely straightforward to enable, and I do recognize that there's a certain amount of subjectivity in the changes being made. Generally, the changes in this patch fall into three categories:
 - Cases where a value is only clamped to a certain range (the easiest ones to update).
 - Cases where the values involved are "simple", such as Numbers and Strings, which are re-factored to initialize the variable with the *default* value and only update it when necessary by using `if`/`else if` statements.
 - Cases with more complex and/or larger values, such as TypedArrays, which are re-factored to let the variable be (implicitly) undefined and where all values are then set through `if`/`else if`/`else` statements.

Please find additional details about the ESLint rule at https://eslint.org/docs/rules/no-nested-ternary
2020-01-14 17:49:39 +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
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
8ec1dfde49 Add // prettier-ignore comments to prevent re-formatting of certain data structures
There's a fair number of (primarily) `Array`s/`TypedArray`s whose formatting we don't want disturb, since in many cases that would lead to the code becoming much more difficult to read and/or break existing inline comments.

*Please note:* It may be a good idea to look through these cases individually, and possibly re-write some of the them (especially the `String` ones) to reduce the need for all of these ignore commands.
2019-12-26 00:14:03 +01:00
Brendan Dahl
446efab707 Scale stroking line width when using a tiling pattern. 2019-07-08 13:47:54 -07:00
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
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
Tim van der Meij
2b18e5a355
Implement setRenderingIntent and setFlatness for the SVG backend
This mirrors the canvas implementation where we ignore these operators.
This avoids console spam regarding unimplemented operators we're not
interested in.

For the Tracemonkey paper, we're now down to one warning about tiling
patterns which is in fact a valid one.
2019-04-06 16:57:30 +02:00
Tim van der Meij
39fa26ea33
Merge pull request #10597 from Snuffleupagus/isFontSubpixelAAEnabled-canvas-cleanup
Ensure that the temporary canvas created in `CanvasGraphics.isFontSubpixelAAEnabled` will be cleared
2019-02-28 23:37:24 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
b61b4d3229 Ensure that the temporary canvas created in CanvasGraphics.isFontSubpixelAAEnabled will be cleared
While this particular canvas may be small, there can still be an arbitrarily large number of them (one per page rendered), which can/will eventually add up memory wise. This can be easily avoided by using the `cachedCanvases` abstraction instead, which will ensure that the `isFontSubpixelAAEnabled` canvas is removed together with other temporary canvases in `CanvasGraphics.endDrawing`.
2019-02-28 14:18:38 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
fb774a65b0 Avoid truncating/breaking some Type3 glyphs in compileType3Glyph (bug 1245391, issue 10568)
*Hopefully this patch makes sense, since I cannot claim to fully understand this function.*

With the changes made in PR 3354 *some* Type3 glyph outlines are no longer rendering correctly, since the final paths were being accidentally ignored.
The fact that Type3 fonts are not very common in PDF documents, and that most Type3 glyphs are unaffected by this regression, probably explains why this has gone unnoticed since 2013.
2019-02-21 23:29:43 +01:00
Tim van der Meij
5b57e69da2
Optimize CanvasGraphics.setFont to avoid intermediate string creation
This method creates quite a few intermediate strings on each call and
it's called often, even for smaller documents like the Tracemonkey
document. Scrolling from top to bottom in that document resulted in
14126 strings being created in this method. With this commit applied,
this is reduced to 2018 strings.
2018-12-30 14:58:32 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
02e77a39ec Convert InternalRenderTask, in src/display/api.js, to an ES6 class
This changes all occurrences of `var` to `let`/`const` in this code, and updates the signature of the constructor to use object destructuring for better readability (and self documentation).
Also, `useRequestAnimationFrame` is changed to a parameter and the `typeof window` check is now done *once* rather than at every `_scheduleNext` call.
2018-11-18 19:08:27 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
60da2d882b [api-minor] Refactor/simplify the PDFObject class
First of all, note how there's currently *two* methods for checking if a certain object exists, which seems completely unwarranted.
Furthermore, the rarely used `getData` method was removed and its only callsite changed to use a combination of `PDFObjects.{has, get}` instead.
Finally, the methods were rearranged slightly, to bring the most important ones (for an API user) to the top of the class.
2018-11-08 10:13:39 +01:00
Jani Pehkonen
9cd5f94f03 Normalize the BBox of form XObjects on the /core side 2018-10-22 14:17:05 +03:00
Tim van der Meij
1a3e842dc4
Remove getSinglePixelWidth workaround
It's no longer necessary since https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1305963 is fixed quite some time ago.

While we're here, mark the `cachedGetSinglePixelWidth` member as being
private and use ES6 syntax in the `getSinglePixelWidth` method.
2018-09-02 20:36:06 +02:00
Wojciech Maj
ea2850e9a7 Fix typos 2018-04-01 23:20:41 +02:00
swftvsn
c20426efef Improve node.js support
This change fixes "Unhandled rejection ReferenceError: HTMLElement is not defined" issue that is discussed in more detail in #8489.
2018-03-21 13:43:53 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
06605abbc2 Avoid rendering errors by passing in the webGLContext when creating a new CanvasGraphics in getColorN_Pattern (PR 9095 follow-up)
This was an oversight in PR 9095, which unfortunately breaks rendering in some PDF files (e.g. the one from issue 6737).

It thus appears that we don't have any test-coverage for this code-path, and given the relative complexity of the PDF files affected by this bug I wasn't able to easily create a reduced test-case.
*Please note:* The linked test-case included in this patch is currently *not* rendered correctly (that'd be the PR 6606), but it at least gives us some test-coverage here.
2017-12-27 13:50:53 +01:00
Naveen Jain
1135674647 Replaced occurence of throw new Error with unreachable where applicable 2017-12-14 12:58:50 +05:30
Jani Pehkonen
06d083b04b Fix pattern-filled text 2017-11-28 19:40:22 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
59b5e14301 Split the existing WebGLUtils in two classes, a private WebGLUtils and a public WebGLContext, and utilize the latter in the API to allow various code to access the methods of WebGLUtils
This patch is one (small) step on the way to reduce the general dependency on a global `PDFJS` object, for PDF.js version `2.0`.
2017-11-24 21:54:47 +01:00
Jonas Jenwald
cfb4955a92 Replace the isArray helper function with the native Array.isArray function
*Follow-up to PR 8813.*
2017-09-01 20:27:13 +02:00
Jonas Jenwald
814fa1dee3 Remove most assert() calls (issue 8506)
This replaces `assert` calls with `throw new FormatError()`/`throw new Error()`.
In a few places, throwing an `Error` (which is what `assert` meant) isn't correct since the enclosing function is supposed to return a `Promise`, hence some cases were changed to `Promise.reject(...)` and similarily for `createPromiseCapability` instances.
2017-07-21 18:51:02 +02:00