Despite this patch removing the `disableWorker` option itself, please note that we'll still fallback to loading the worker file(s) on the main-thread when running in environments without proper Web Worker support.
Furthermore it's still possible, even with this patch, to force the use of fake workers by manually loading the necessary file using a `<script>` tag on the main-thread.[1]
That way, the functionality of the now removed `SINGLE_FILE` build target and the resulting `build/pdf.combined.js` file can still be achieved simply by adding e.g. `<script src="build/pdf.worker.js"></script>` to the HTML (obviously with the path adjusted as needed).
Finally note that the `disableWorker` option is a performance footgun, and unfortunately many existing third-party examples actually use it without providing any sort of warning/justification.
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[1] This approach is used in the default viewer, since certain kind of debugging may be easier if the code is running directly on the main-thread.
This method returns the currently used `workerSrc`, which thus allows obtaining the fallback `workerSrc` value (e.g. when the option wasn't set by the user).
Please note that this build target, and the resulting `build/pdf.combined.js` file, is equivalent to setting the `PDFJS.disableWorker` option to `true` which is a performance footgun.
https://crbug.com/362061 was fixed in Chrome 36, and the lowest
supported Chrome version in the extension is Chrome 49, so the
work-around for a filesystem:-bug in chromecom can be removed.
Merge ftp and file handler now their implementations are identical.
Remove redundant comment (the referenced Chrome bug has been fixed
a long time ago - https://crbug.com/302548 ).
This was introduced in #3582 to work around https://crbug.com/274024 .
The bug in Chrome has been fixed a long time ago (at least 33), so let's
simplify the code.
Add comments with supported browser versions where missing.
Method:
- Use MDN compat tables if available.
- Otherwise test in Chrome (31+) otherwise.
(the Chrome Web Store does not update older versions of
Chrome, so probably nobody is interested in even older
versions, even though there is an existing comment for
Chrome<29 at `document.currentScript`).
It turns out that PR 9245 unfortunately broke benchmarking completely, sorry about that!
The bug is that we were attempting to reset the current instance of `StatTimer`, instead of creating a new one as was previously done. By resetting the current instance, the `StatTimer` data fetched in `test/driver.js` is now wiped out since it points to the *same* underlying object.
This re-use of a `StatTimer` instance was asked for during review, and unfortunately I didn't test this thoroughly enough before submitting the final version of the PR.[1]
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[1] Note that while I did test the benchmarking scripts with that PR *before* initially submitting it, I did however forget to do that after addressing the review comments which might explain why this problem went unnoticed.
Remove "returns null when content disposition is form-data".
The name of the test is already misleading: It suggests that
the return value is null if the Content-Disposition starts with
"form-data". This is not the case, anything with the "filename"
parameter is accepted.
So, to correct this, one would have to rephrase the test description to
"returns null when content disposition has no filename".
But this is already tested by the test called
"gets the filename from the response header".
So, remove the test.
This patch updates the `IPDFStreamReader` interface and ensures that the interface/implementation of `network.js`, `fetch_stream.js`, `node_stream.js`, and `transport_stream.js` all match properly.
The unit-tests are also adjusted, to more closely replicate the actual behaviour of the various actual `IPDFStreamReader` implementations.
Finally, this patch adjusts the use of the Content-Disposition filename when setting the title in the viewer, and adds `PDFDocumentProperties` support as well.
The `fetch` API is only supported for http(s), even in Chrome extensions.
Because of this limitation, we should use the XMLHttpRequest API when the
requested URL is not a http(s) URL.
Fixes#9361
These were removed in PR 9170, since they were unused in the browsers that we'll support in PDF.js version `2.0`.
However looking at the output of Travis, where a subset of the unit-tests are run using Node.js, there's warnings about `btoa` being undefined. This doesn't appear to cause any errors, which probably explains why we didn't notice this before (despite PR 9201).
When navigating away from the viewer, there's no good reason for disallowing replacement of a *temporary* history entry (in addition to empty ones).
Given that the current position is temporarily added to the browser history using a (short) timeout, the history entry will most likely already be correct when the 'pagehide' event fires. However, if the user is quick enough that might not always be the case, in which case the adjusted logic may help.