This patch also adds/improves utility functions for checking if the passwords are correct/incorrect, and replaces `string2binary` with `stringToBytes`. Finally the patch does away with the `DictMock`, in favour of using actual `Dict`s.
Re: issue 6905.
Using `new {Name,Cmd}` should be avoided, since it creates a new object on *every* call, whereas `{Name,Cmd}.get` uses caches to only create *one* object regardless of how many times they are called.
Most of these are found in the unit-tests, where increased memory usage probably doesn't matter very much. But it still seems good to get rid of those cases, since no part of the codebase ought to advertise that usage.
Given the small size of the patch, I'm also tweaking a few comments and class names.
In the API unit-tests, we're currently loading the `basicapi.pdf` before every sub-test in `PDFDocument` and `Page`, which slows down the unit-tests quite a bit.
Locally this patch reduces the run time for `gulp unittest` by at least 40% for me.
Note that in the PDF files provided by the reporter, this issue was limited to `Rect` arrays in AcroForm entries (which we currently don't support).
However, since a bad PDF generator could create this problem in *any* kind of annotation, the reduced test-case included here uses a simple LinkAnnotation instead.
Fixes 7115.
This patch adds a `getUnicodeForGlyph` helper function, which is used to recover Unicode values for non-standard glyph names.
Some PDF generators, e.g. Scribus PDF, use improper `uniXXXX` glyph names which breaks the glyph mapping. We can avoid this by converting them to "standard" glyph names instead.
Fixes https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1132849.
Fixes 6893.
Fixes 6894.
In the PDF file in question, some of the 'name' table entries have `record.length === 0`. This becomes problematic in the non-unicode case, since `font.getBytes(0)` will fetch the *entire* stream.
Given that OTS rejects 'name' entries larger than `2^16`, this thus explain the sanitizer errors.
Fixes 7020.
This is required to be able to use it in the annotation display code,
where we now apply it to sanitize the filename of the FileAttachment
annotation. The PDF file from https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1230933 has shown that some PDF generators include the path of the file rather than the filename, which causes filenames with weird initial characters. PDF viewers handle this differently (for example Foxit Reader just replaces forward slashes with spaces), but we think it's better to only show the filename as intended.
Additionally we add unit tests for the `getFilenameFromUrl` helper
function.
*A more robust solution for issue 6066.*
As a temporary work-around for (the upstream) [bug 1164199](https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1164199), we parsed *all* images in the Firefox addon during a short time.
Doing so uncovered an issue with our image handling (see 6066), for JPEG images with a `DeviceGray` ColorSpace *and* `bpc !== 1` (bits per component).
As long as we let the browser handle image decoding in this case, this isn't going to be an issue, but I do think that we should proactively fix this to avoid future issues if we change where the images are decoded (in `jpg.js` vs in browser).
Also, we currently don't seem to have a test-case for that kind of image data.
Currently the `C` entry in an outline item is returned as is, which is neither particularly useful nor what the API documentation claims.
This patch also adds unit-tests for both the color handling, and the `F` entry (bold/italic flags).
Some bad PDF generators, in particular "Scribus PDF", duplicates resources *a lot* at various levels of the PDF files. This can lead to `PartialEvaluator_hasBlendModes` taking an unreasonable amount of time to complete.
The reason is that the current code is using `Dict_getAll`, which recursively dereferences *all* indirect objects, which can be really slow. This patch instead uses `Dict_getKeys`, and then manually looks up only the necessary indirect objects.
I've added the PDF file as a `load` test. The most important thing here is probably to ensure that the file remains available in the repo, and the comment should help reduced the chance of regressions. (Note that locally, the `load` test times out without this patch, but we cannot really assume that that always happens.)
Fixes 6961.
Re: issue 5089.
(Note that since there are other outline features that we currently don't support, e.g. bold/italic text and custom colours, I thus think we can keep the referenced issue open.)
issue5726
We remove yo01. The file is not available, it was introduced in
3529658ac5
along with another test file (so we should not need it) and it was
replaced in
6b2c6fc223,
so it was only in the repository for a very short time.
As part of the link cleanup in issue 6854, obtaining this file through the Internet Archive didn't work.
However, given that the file was added in order to test an issue with `CropBox/MediaBox`, a reduced test-case should do just fine instead.
Please refer to issue 1155, and PR 1212.
It seems to be fairly common for OCR software to include incomplete TrueType fonts, notable missing the "glyf" table, in PDF files. Since we currently reject such fonts, the result is that text-selection/copying is broken.
This patch contains a suggested approach to try and use these kind of broken fonts, by using existing code in `sanitizeGlyphLocations` to replace a missing "glyf" table with dummy data.
Fixes 4684.
Fixes 6007.
Fixes 6829.
The test case was changed in 1faca19021 because the original file was not available anymore. However, its hash was also changed, meaning that we do not test the intended version anymore.
This patch makes sure that we test the intented version by reverting to
the original hash and using a link, also pointing to the Internet
Archive, with the original file.
This test was disabled in PR 4732, because the file was no longer available. The motivation being that there were two other files which should be good replacements. However, one of those has since been replaced with a reduced test-case (which doesn't exercise the same code-path), and in the other one the error does not appear to be entirely identical.
Hence it seems reasonable to re-add the 'aboutstacks.pdf' test, since it was possible to find it on the Internet Archive (by searching using a different URL, compared to the current one).
Note that despite the new file having a different hash than the the current one, it does render *identically* and most importantly it uses *the same* JBIG2 functionality.
For reference, please see issue 3666 and PR 3738.
*This patch follows a similar idea as PR 5756.*
The patch is based on the nice debugging done by Brendan in the referenced issue 6782.
A better way to handle this, and similar issues, would probably be to completely ignore what the PDF file claims about font type/subtype, and just check the actual data. But until that kind of rewrite happens, this patch should help.
Fixes 6782.
When generating new references locally on Windows, after PR 6724, I get the following output:
```
WARNING: Unable to open file for reading "Error: ENOENT, open 'c:\Users\Jonas\Git\pdfjs\test\pdfs\issue_3694_reduced.pdf'".
Unable to verify the checksum for the files that are used for testing.
Please re-download the files, or adjust the MD5 checksum in the manifest for the files listed above.
```
Compared to the name of the file (`issue3694_reduced.pdf`), you see that the manifest entry has a superfluous underscore in the "file" entry.
Apparently some PDF files can have annotations with `URI` entries ending with `null` characters, thus breaking the links.
To handle this edge-case of bad PDFs, this patch moves the already existing utility function from `ui_utils.js` into `util.js`, in order to fix those URLs.
Fixes 6832.
Currently we're not applying Patterns for text, but only for graphics.
This patch is unfortunately not a complete solution, but rather a step on the way, since there are still some PDF files where the Patterns look more like a solid colour, rather than the intended gradient.
I've been unable to fix these issues completely, and I've not managed to determine if the remaining issues are caused either by the pattern code, the canvas code, or perhaps both.
However, given that even this simple patch improves the current situation quite a bit, I figured that it couldn't hurt to submit it as-is.
- Fixes 5804.
- Fixes 6130.
- Improves 3988 a lot, since the text is now visible. However, it looks like the text is *one* solid colour, instead of the correct gradient.
- Improves 5432, since the text is no longer gray. (This file also suffers from the same problem as the previous one.)
Most code for Popup annotations is already present for Text annotations.
This patch extracts the popup creation logic from the Text annotation
code so it can be reused for Popup annotations.
Not only does this add support for Popup annotations, the Text
annotation code is also considerably easier. If a `Popup` entry is
available for a Text annotation, it will not be more than an image. The
popup will be handled by the Popup annotation. However, it is also
possible for Text annotations to not have a separate Popup annotation,
in which case the Text annotation handles the popup creation itself.
This PDF file (see issue 4914) originally regressed in PR 4318, and was subsequently fixed in PR 4915.
I added the PDF file as a (linked) test-case in PR 6481, in an effort to prevent regressions. Since we at that time didn't have the necessary framework in place, in order to correctly test annotations, this almost regressed *again* in PR https://github.com/mozilla/pdf.js/pull/6672#issuecomment-158689392.
In that PDF file, some of the annotations are both printable and hidden, and should definitely *not* be visible on normal display. Hence this patch, which adds the `annotations` flag to the manifest in order to ensure that those annotations won't be rendered when `intent === 'display'`.
In `Font_checkAndRepair` we can decide that a font isn't TrueType, and instead parse it as CFF. In that case it's quite possible that the `fontMatrix` will be changed, and without calling `adjustWidths` we're failing to update the glyph widths correctly.
Fixes 5027.
Fixes 5084.
Fixes 6556.
Fixes https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1204903.
After PR 6590, `font.spaceWidth` is now called in more cases than before (in `PartialEvaluator_getTextContent`), which exposed an underlying issue with `IdentityToUnicodeMap_charCodeOf` throwing an error.
This breaks text-selection in some PDF files found in the wild, hence this patch replaces the `error` with an actual function instead (modelled after `IdentityCMap_charCodeOf`).
*This is a regression from PR 3424.*
The PDF file in the referenced issue is using `Type3` fonts. In one of those, the `/CharProcs` dictionary contains an entry with the name `/#`. Before the changes to `Lexer_getName` in PR 3424, we were allowing certain invalid `Name` patterns containing the NUMBER SIGN (#).
It's unfortunate that this has been broken for close to two and a half years before the bug surfaced, but it should at least indicate that this is not a widespread issue.
Fixes 6692.
This patch goes a bit further than issue 6612 requires, and replaces all kinds of whitespace with standard spaces.
When testing this locally, it actually seemed to slightly improve two existing test-cases (`tracemonkey-text` and `taro-text`).
Fixes 6612.
Currently `getAnnotations` will *only* fetch annotations that are either `viewable` or `printable`. This is "hidden" inside the `core.js` file, meaning that API consumers might be confused as to why they are not recieving *all* the annotations present for a page.
I thus think that the API should, by default, return *all* available annotations unless specifically told otherwise. In e.g. the default viewer, we obviously only want to display annotations that are `viewable`, hence this patch adds an `intent` parameter to `getAnnotations` that makes it possible to decide if only `viewable` or `printable` annotations should be fetched.
This patch makes it possible to set and get all possible flags that the PDF specification defines. Even though we do not support all possible annotation types and not all possible annotation flags yet, this general framework makes it easy to access all flags for each annotation such that annotation type implementations can use this information.
We add constants for all possible annotation flags such that we do not need to hardcode the flags in the code anymore. The `isViewable()` and `isPrintable()` methods are now easier to read. Additionally, unit tests have been added to ensure correct behavior.
This is another part of #5218.
- replace // with /
(otherwise http://localhost:8888// links to e.g. http://src/ instead
of http://localhost:8888/src).
- Solve XSS issue (file names should be sanitized, not output as-is).
- Prevent server from crashing if there is a stat error (e.g. permission
error or file not found (e.g. broken symlink)).
When I submitted PR 3576, I included a linked test-case. The reason was that I didn't know enough about the PDF format, in order to successfully create a reduced test-case.
Considering that the link points to a Dropbox, there's no guarantee that the PDF file will remain available, hence it seems worthwhile to replace the test-case.
*Note:* Since this is a `load` test, `makeref` won't be necessary.
In the `RenderPageRequest` handler in `worker.js`, we attempt to print an `info` message containing the rendering time and the length of the operator list. The latter is currently broken (and has been for quite some time), since the `length` of an `OperatorList` is reset when flushing occurs.
This patch attempts to rectify this, by adding a getter which keeps track of the total length.
The standard viewer implicitly depends on the `onPassword` and `onProgress` callbacks, in order to open password protected PDF files, respectively to report file loading progress. We currently have no unit-tests for this functionality, which seems unfortunate; hence this patch.
*Please note:* Rather than adding more unit-tests to `api_spec.js`, I slightly extended/reworked two existing tests. Specifically for the password test, this *does not* really change what we actually test, just how the test is done.