* Check for undefined
new URL(file, window.location.href) throws the following error in IE11 + iPad Safari:
Unable to get property 'replace' of undefined or null reference
* Adapting previous change to pdf.js code standards
Added curly braces
* Moved check for undefined above try/catch
`__pdfjsdev_webpack__` was used to skip evaluating part of an AST,
in order to not mangle some `require` symbols.
This commit removes `__pdfjsdev_webpack__`, and:
- Uses `__non_webpack_require__` when one wants the output to
contain `require` instead of `__webpack_require__`.
- Adds options to the webpack config to prevent "polyfills" for
some Node.js-specific APIs to be added.
- Use `// eslint-disable-next-line no-undef` instead of `/* globals ... */`
for variables that are not meant to be used globally.
Since we no longer, after PR 8555, allow changing the scale until the document is loaded, that hack is no longer necessary. Furthermore, no part of that event handling function needs to run unless a document is loaded.
The reason that this hack was initially added, is that previously the `ViewHistory` might be updated *before* `PDFViewerApplication.setInitialView` had run (in some cases leading to incorrect inital document scale). Since that is no longer possible, this is now dead code.
Don't allow setting various properties, such as `currentPageNumber`/`currentScale`/`currentScaleValue`/`pagesRotation`, before `{PDFViewer, PDFThumbnailViewer}.setDocument` has been called
After PR 8394, where the l10n service was converted to be asynchronous, we're no longer calling `_adjustWidth` after updating the `findMsg` label. Hence it's currently possible that the width of the findbar won't be correct. The solution is simple though, just call `_adjustWidth` after the `findMsg` label has been (asynchronously) updated.
Another existing issue, which was an oversight in PR 8132, is that `PDFFindBar.updateResultsCount` may be called directly from `PDFFindController`. In that case, we're not calling `_adjustWidth` at all, which means that the findbar may also not have the correct width.
The simple solution here is to always call `_adjustWidth` at the end of `updateResultsCount` (which is why we no longer need the `_adjustWidth` call at the end of `updateUIState`).
Currently we're *only* hiding the label, but not actually resetting it until a new match is found.
Obviously it's being hidden, but it seems that it really ought to be completely reset as well (since e.g. `PDFFindBar.reset` won't technically reset *all* state otherwise).
Note that these files were among the first to be converted to ES6 classes, so it probably makes sense to do another pass to bring them inline with the most recent ES6 conversions.
These changes consists mainly of replacing `var` with `let`/`const`, adding a couple of default parameters to function signatures, and finally converting `EventBus`/`ProgressBar` to proper classes.
After PR 8510, we now always lookup the localized `page_scale_percent` string to prevent any possible ordering issues. Since the scaleSelect dropdown is updated asynchronous, there's really no point in having a helper function any more, hence this code can rather be placed inline in `Toolbar._updateUIState`.
*This is an existing issue that I noticed while testing PR 8552.*
When zooming or rotation occurs, we'll try to use the current canvas as a (CSS transformed) preview until the page has been completely re-drawn.
If you manage to change the scale (or rotation) *very* quickly, it's possible that `PDFPageView.update` can be called *before* a previous `render` operation has progressed far enough to remove the `hidden` property from the canvas.
The result is thus that a page may be *entirely* black during zooming or rotation, which doesn't look very good. This effect can be a bit difficult to spot, but it does manifest even in the default viewer.
Part of the rotation handling code, in what's now `web/app.js`, hasn't really changed since before the viewer was split into multiple files/components.
Similar to other properties, such as current page/scale, we should probably avoid tracking state in multiple places. Hence I'm suggesting that we don't store the rotation in `PDFViewerApplication`, and access the value in `PDFViewer` instead.
Since `PDFViewerApplication.pageRotation` has existed for a very long time, a getter was added to avoid outright breaking third-party code that may depend on it.
Currently a number of these properties do not work correctly if set *before* calling `setDocument`; please refer to the discussion starting in https://github.com/mozilla/pdf.js/pull/8539#issuecomment-309706629.
Rather than trying to have *some* of these methods working, but not others, it seems much more consistent to simply always require that `setDocument` has been called.
Since this call occurs *before* the `PDFViewer.setDocument` call, it won't actually cause any scale change.
Furthermore, moving it should not be necessary, since the `scale` is already used as the fallback case in `PDFViewerApplication.setInitialView` (provided it's non-zero, which isn't even the case in the default viewer).
Hence this patch should cause no functional changes at all, since it simply removes a piece of unnecessary code.
This patch adds Streams API support in getTextContent
so that we can stream data in chunks instead of fetching
whole data from worker thread to main thread. This patch
supports Streams API without changing the core functionality
of getTextContent.
Enqueue textContent directly at getTextContent in partialEvaluator.
Adds desiredSize and ready property in streamSink.
Currently, these properties are reset in what appears to be somewhat arbitrary locations (within the `load` and `open` methods respectively). The explanation is probably that both of these properties predates the existence of any centralized clean-up code in the viewer.
Hence I think that it makes sense to move the resetting of these properties to the `close` method, since that improves the overview of what's actually cleaned-up/reset when changing documents in the viewer.
This method is currently called from `PDFViewer._scrollUpdate` on *every* scroll event in the viewer.
However, I cannot see why this code is now necessary (assuming that it once was), since text-selection and searching still works *exactly* the same way with this patch as with the current `master`.
When `PDFPageView.updatePosition` is called, the page can be in either of these states:
1. The page hasn't been rendered, in which case the `textLayer` property doesn't exist yet.
2. The page is currently rendering, meaning that the `textLayer` property exists. Given that the `textContent` won't be fetched until the page has been successfully rendered, `TextLayerBuilder.render` will return immediately and effectively be a no-op (since there's nothing to render yet).
3. The has been been rendered, and the `textLayer` is currently rendering.
4. The page, and its `textLayer`, has been completely rendered. In this case, `TextLayerBuilder.render` will return immediately and effectively be a no-op.
Here, only the *third* case seem to require any further analysis:
When scrolling occurs while the `textLayer` is rendering, `TextLayerBuilder.render` will via a helper method call `TextLayerRenderTask.cancel` (in src/display/text_layer.js) to stop processing.
However, due to the run-to-completion nature of JavaScript, once `TextLayerRenderTask._render` has been invoked `appendText` will always run.[1]
So even though we cancel rendering of pending `textLayer`s during scrolling, via the repeated `TextLayerBuilder.render` calls from within the `PDFPageView.updatePosition` method, that does *not* prevent us from running the code inside of `TextLayerRenderTask._render` over and over for the *same* page; which all seems *very* inefficient to me.[2]
All this will thus have the effect of delaying the *actual* rendering of a `textLayer` ever so slightly while scrolling in the viewer. However, it does so at the expense of potentially hundreds of unnecessary `appendText` calls.[3]
Hence it seems to me that it's less resource intensive overall to simply let rendering of the `textLayer` complete, once it has started. Obviously, we still abort all rendering of a page, and its `textLayer`, when it's being destroyed (e.g. by being evicted from the page cache).
In case that there's any worry that the patch could affect e.g. highlighting of search results, please note that the existing code in `TextLayerBuilder.render` already calls `updateMatches` when the `TextLayerTask` resolves successfully.
*I'm sorry that this became quite long, but to try and summarize:*
`PDFPageView.updatePosition` doesn't actually do anything in *most* cases. In the one case where it matters, it seems that it's actually doing more harm than good; which is why I'm proposing that we just remove it.
---
[1] Although we may be able to skip the `render` call, provided that it happens *after* a `timeout` (as is the case in the default viewer).
[2] With current work being done to support streaming of `TextContent`, we'd also need to add just as many duplicate API calls to `PDFPageView.updatePosition`.
[3] The number of duplicate `appendText` calls is directly proportional not only to the scroll speed, but also to the number of pages in the document.
Since the localization service is now asynchronous, depending on the load the browser is under, there's a small risk that the lookup of the 'page_scale_percent' string could be delayed slightly.
If the scale would change a couple of times in *very* quick succession, there's perhaps a *theoretical* possibility that the Zoom dropdown would display an incorrect value.
Consider the following, somewhat contrived, theoretical example of two zoom commands being executed *right* after one another:
```javascript
PDFViewerApplication.pdfViewer.currentScale = 1.23;
PDFViewerApplication.pdfViewer.currentScaleValue = 'page-width';
```
Only the `currentScale` call will currently trigger a l10n lookup in `selectScaleOption`. However, as far as I understand, there's no *guarantee* that the l10n string is resolved *before* `selectScaleOption` is called again as a result of the `currentScaleValue` call.
This thus has the possibility of putting the Zoom dropdown into an inconsistent state, since it's currently updated synchronously for one code-path and asynchronously for another.
To avoid these issues, I'm proposing that we *always* update the Zoom dropdown asynchronously, such that we can guarantee that the ordering is correct.
After PR 8394, at least in Firefox, the Zoom dropdown now frequently displays an old custom scale instead of the correct one. To see this behaviour, the following STR works for me:
1. Open https://mozilla.github.io/pdf.js/web/viewer.html.
2. Zoom in, by clicking on the corresponding button in the toolbar.
3. Run `PDFViewerApplication.pdfViewer.currentScaleValue` in the console.
4. Compare what's displayed in the Zoom dropdown with what's printed in the console. (If no difference can be observed, try repeating steps 2 through 4 a couple of times.)
I really don't understand why this happens, but it seems that waiting until a custom scale has been set *before* selecting it fixes things in Firefox (and works fine in e.g. Chrome as well).
Note that this patch thus makes this particular piece of the code consistent with the state prior to PR 8394.
The click handler used in Presentation Mode didn't check if the first/last page was already reached, which after PR 7529 now causes an unnecessary console error.
Hence we should simply use the already existing `_goToPreviousPage`/`_goToNextPage` methods instead, since they do the necessary bounds checking.
Fixes 8498.
Moreover, rename `FindStates` to `FindState` since enumeration names are
usually not in plural, for readability and consistency with the ones in
`src/shared/util.js`.
This patch intends to simplify future ES6 refactoring of the thumbnail code, since the current code isn't going to work well together with proper `Class`es.
With the current way that the `HandTool` is implemented, if someone would try to also add a Zoom tool (as issue 1260 asks for) that probably wouldn't work very well given that you'd then have two cursor tools which may not play nice together.
Hence this patch, which attempts to refactor things so that it should be simpler to add e.g. a Zoom tool as well (given that that issue is marked as "good-beginner-bug", and I'm not sure if that really applies considering the current state of the code).
Note that I personally have no interest in implementing a Zoom tool (similar to Adobe Reader) since I wouldn't use it, but I figured that it can't hurt to make this code a bit more future proof.
PR 7341 added special handling for `nameddest`s that look like pageNumbers, to prevent issues since we previously *incorrectly* supported specifying a pageNumber directly in the hash; i.e. `#10` versus the correct `#page=10` format.
Since this behaviour wasn't correct, PR 7757 fixed and deprecated the old format, which means that we no longer need to maintain the `nameddest` hack in multiple files.
This patch replaces a `var self = this;` statement with arrow functions, and `var` with `let` in `PDFLinkService.navigateTo`.
Furthermore, when I started looking at this method, it quickly became clear that its code is somewhat of a mess. Since I'm one of the persons that have touched this code over the years, I figured that it'd be a good idea to try and clean it up a bit.
Also replaces `var` with `let` in code that's touched in the patch. Please note that this should be completely safe, for two separate reasons, since trying to access let in a scope where it's not defined is first of all a runtime error and second of all an ESLint error (thanks to the `no-undef` rule).
Currently this method first uses a loop to build a temporary array to hold Promises, which are then resolved from a recursive helper function once the textContent is fetched for each page.
To me, this is unncessarily complicated, since we can do everything within one loop by simply chaining the asynchronous calls to retrieve the textContent. (Note that this guarantees that the textContent of the pages is still fetched sequentially.)
Also replaces `var` with `let` in the functions/methods that are touched in the patch. Please note that this should be completely safe, for two separate reasons, since trying to access `let` in a scope where it's not defined is first of all a runtime error and second of all an ESLint error (thanks to the `no-undef` rule).
This patch contains the following improvements:
- Only fetch the various document properties *once* per PDF file opened, and cache the result (in a frozen object).
- Always update the *entire* dialog at once, to prevent inconsistent UI state (issue 8371).
- Ensure that the dialog, and all its internal properties, are reset when `PDFViewerApplication.close` is called.
- Inline, and re-factor, the `getProperties` method in `open`, since that's the only call-site.
- Always overwrite the fileSize with the value obtained from `pdfDocument.getDownloadInfo`, to ensure that it's correct.
- ES6-ify the code that's touched in this patch.
Fixes 8371.
Please see http://eslint.org/docs/rules/object-shorthand.
For the most part, these changes are of the search-and-replace kind, and the previously enabled `no-undef` rule should complement the tests in helping ensure that no stupid errors crept into to the patch.
Rather than having to manually use `initializedPromise`, which really ought to be a private property, to ensure that setting/getting values in the `ViewHistory` works as intended, this re-factoring simply changes all of its methods to be asynchronous.
Furthermore, a `getMultiple` method (mirroring the existing `setMultiple` one) is also added to `ViewHistory`.
Finally, this patch also addresses an existing issue, where certain preferences (e.g. the default zoom level) would be ignored when calling `setInitialView` if reading from the `ViewHistory` fails for some reason.
With the exception of just one test-case, all the current `ui_utils` unit-tests can run successfully on Node.js (since most of them doesn't rely on the DOM).
To get this working, I had to first of all add a new `LIB` build flag such that `gulp lib` produces a `web/pdfjs.js` file that is able to load `pdf.js` successfully.
Second of all, since neither `document` nor `navigator` is available in Node.js, `web/ui_utils.js` was adjusted slightly to avoid errors.
[Firefox addon] Remove the `window.FirefoxCom` hack from `web/viewer.js`, since it was made redunant by the `setExternalLocalizerServices` refactoring (PR 7202 follow-up)
This prevents issues with the filename detection being skipped, when trying to download the opened PDF attachment, since `getPDFFileNameFromURL` ignores `data:` URLs for performance reasons.
The patch also changes the `defaultFilename` to use the ES6 default parameter notation, and fixes the formatting of the JSDoc comment.
Finally, since `getPDFFileNameFromURL` currently has no unit-tests, a few basic ones are added to avoid regressions.
In the first commit in PR 8203, I changed how the `DownloadManager` was included/initialized in `GENERIC`/`CHROME` builds.
The change was prompted by the fact that you cannot have conditional `import`s with ES6 modules, and I wanted to avoid bundling the general `DownloadManager` into the various Firefox specific build targets.
What I completely missed though, is that the new code meant that `download_manager.js` will now be pulling in the *entire* viewer (through `app.js`).
This is a *really* stupid mistake on my part, since it causes the `dist/build/pdf_viewer.js` used with the viewer components to now include basically the entire default viewer.
The simplest solution that I could come up with, is to add a `genericcom.js` file (similar to the `firefoxcom.js`/`chromecom.js` files) which will be responsible for importing/initializing the `DownloadManager`.
The browsers have become smarter and made this hack no longer
functional. Since this is now enforced by practically all browsers,
there is nothing more we can do about this. It is up to the user to
serve the viewer over HTTPS or deal with the warning.
Note that this is in no way specific for PDF.js. Any site with password
inputs served over HTTP has this problem right now. This hack was
provided as a convenience for the users, but nothing more than that.
Since calling `PDFPageView.setPdfPage` will in turn call `PDFPageView.reset`, which cancels all rendering and completely resets the page, it's thus possible that we currently cause some unnecessary re-rendering during the initial loading phase of the viewer.
Depending on the order in which data arrives, it's possible (and in practice always seem to happen) that the `pdfPage` property of the *second* page has already been set during `PDFViewer.setDocument`, by the time that the request for the `pdfPage` is resolved in `PDFViewer._ensurePdfPageLoaded`.
Also, note how the `setPdfPage` call in `PDFViewer.setDocument` is already guarded by this kind of check.
In various viewer files, there's a number of cases where we basically duplicate the functionality of `createPromiseCapability` manually.
As far as I can tell, a couple of these cases have existed for a very long time, and notable even before the `createPromiseCapability` utility function existed.
Also, since we can write ES6 code now, the patch also replaces a couple of `bind` usages with arrow functions in code that's touched in the patch.
This patch implements support for line annotations. Other viewers only
show the popup annotation when hovering over the line, which may have
any orientation. To make this possible, we render an invisible line (SVG
element) over the line on the canvas that acts as the trigger for the
popup annotation. This invisible line has the same starting coordinates,
ending coordinates and width of the line on the canvas.
Note that as discussed on IRC, this makes the viewer slightly slower to load *only* in `gulp server` mode, however the difference seem slight enough that I think it will be fine.
This patch gets rid of the only case in the code-base where we're throwing a plain `string`, rather than an `Error`, which besides better/more consistent error handling also allows us to enable the [`no-throw-literal`](http://eslint.org/docs/rules/no-throw-literal) ESLint rule.
The point of this patch is to fix a couple of inconsistencies in `viewer.html`, compared to the locale files, such that the viewer would work correctly even without the `l10n/` files present.
*Note:* Since this isn't changing any of the locale files, we should *not* need to update any of the string names.
Looking through the history of the findbar code, it seems that the `findPrevious`/`findNext` buttons have never had a `title` set (note PR 2168, which was the initial findbar implementation).
Furthermore, the `placeholder` of the `findInput` didn't agree 100% with locale file either, so this is also adjusted.
I noticed that we have a `.toolbarButton.group` CSS class, which is currently applied to some buttons in the viewer. Since it attempts to adjust the `margin-right` property, I was initially a bit puzzled as to why there wasn't different rules for LTR/RTL locales.
However, checking the viewer with the DevTools inspector, in both LTR and RTL locales, I quickly found that the rule in question is *always* being overridden by other CSS rules.
It thus seem to me that while this rule was probably useful at some point, it has been dead for years and could now be removed.
The find functionality is currently not available for small devices
because the find dialog is not responsive. This patch fixes that.
To achieve this goal, the HTML is changed to always show the find
button. To prevent issues because of the addition of an extra button for
small views, the previous/next page buttons are hidden if the view
becomes small. These buttons are not useful anyway because on small
devices navigation is usually done via scrolling. The find functionality
is much more useful to have in this case. Moreover, we wrap the existing
elements into separate `div`s so that the browser can position the
elements itself when the view becomes smaller and logically connected
elements stay together when this happens.
In the CSS, extra rules for the find bar have been added to ensure that
the dialog's doorhanger is always below the find button. All findbar
`div`s are forced to be 32 pixels high to prevent the find message text
being aligned under the checkboxes. Finally, the find message is only
visible when there is actually text to display. This prevents wrapping
issues because, by default, the label has padding and margin even if
there is no text.
Instead of just upstreaming the changes from [bug 1345253](https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1345253) as-is, it seemed better to simply get rid of the loops altogether and use the same approach as in `PDFViewer`/`PDFThumbnailViewer`.
This patch is another step towards enabling Babel. Since we're moving
towards ES6 modules, we will not be using UMD headers anymore, so we can
remove the validation.
The download button in pdf.js doesn't work in iOS Chrome.
- It appears to be an issue with URLs from URL.createObjectURL.
The URL is correct, but iOS Chrome won't even load the URL
when `a.click()` is called in `download_manager.js`. Even
if you manually visit the URL, you get a blank page.
- Fix this by detecting iOS Chrome and disabling createObjectURL.
The `download_manager.js` `download` method wasn't checking
`PDFJS.disableCreateObjectURL`, so check it there, too.
- Move the navigator.msSaveBlob check earlier, so that
this doesn't change IE10 / IE11 behavior.
- Remove the !URL check since pdf.js has a URL polyfill
now.
If users want to download, they can quickly click on the Download button
in the newly opened viewer.
The blobUrl logic for Firefox relies on `disableCreateObjectURL` is
never false in Firefox. If the assumption is invalid, then PDF
attachments at the attachment view will not correctly be displayed,
because a data-URL will be generated and `?<filename>` is treated as
part of the data:-URL.
Determine the page rotation at the same place as where the page size is
determined. This allows us to implement custom print page rotation logic
in one place, in the future.
The download method (and the PDF document properties) detect the
file name using `getPDFFileNameFromURL`. The title ought to also
display the PDF filename if available.
See http://eslint.org/docs/rules/brace-style.
Having the opening/closing braces on the same line can often make the code slightly more difficult to read, in particular for `if`/`else if` statements, compared to using new lines.
This patch also, for consistency with `mozilla-central`, enables the [`no-iterator`](http://eslint.org/docs/rules/no-iterator) rule. Note that this rule didn't require a single code change.
The regular expression incorrectly marked a group as capturing.
For `http://example.com/#file.pdf`, the expected result is "file.pdf",
but instead "document.pdf" was returned.
Other PDF viewers, e.g. Adobe Reader, seem to append `FileAttachment`s to their attachments views.
One obvious difference in PDF.js is that we cannot append all the annotations on document load, since that would require parsing *every* page. Despite that, it still seems like a good idea to add `FileAttachment`s, since it's thus possible to access all the various types of attachments from a single place.
*Note:* With the previous patch we display a notification when a `FileAttachment` is added to the sidebar, which thus makes appending the contents of these annotations to the sidebar slightly more visible/useful.
A longstanding issue with the viewer is that you cannot tell if a PDF document includes an outline and/or attachments without actually opening the sidebar.
This patch contains a suggested solution for that, by displaying an hide-on-interaction notification on the `sidebarToggle` button (and the relevant sidebar view buttons). Note that this was inspired by e.g. the update notification that is displayed on the menu button in Firefox.
For an initial implementation, I've tried to do this in such a way that the notification isn't too distracting. Without being an UX expert, I don't think that we'd want something too in-your-face, in order to keep the viewer toolbars reasonable clean. (We probably do *not* want e.g. an entire notification bar in these situations, since that would take up unnecessary screen space and require actions from the user to close.)
However it's certainly possible that the current notification might simply be *too* inconspicuous to be truly helpful to users, but we could probably iterate on that if the feature itself is deemed useful.
Please see http://eslint.org/docs/rules/no-unused-vars; note that this patch purposely uses the same rule options as in `mozilla-central`, such that it fixes part of issue 7957.
It wasn't, in my opinion, entirely straightforward to enable this rule compared to the already existing rules. In many cases a `var descriptiveName = ...` format was used (more or less) to document the code, and I choose to place the old variable name in a trailing comment to not lose that information.
I welcome feedback on these changes, since it wasn't always entirely easy to know what changes made the most sense in every situation.
*This fixes a regression from commit c9a0955c9c, i.e. PR 7738.*
Currently if you quickly rotate a document at least *twice*,[1] such that rendering of a page hasn't finished for the first rotation before the last rotation is triggered, the `cssTransform` method can fail to update the page correctly leading to it looking temporarily distorted.
The reason why things break is that previously we stored the `viewport` on the canvas DOM element, meaning that when it was accessed in `cssTransform` is was guaranteed to point to the `viewport` of the `zoomLayer` canvas.
Generally you want to avoid storing data on DOM elements this way, and during the `PDFPageView` refactoring needed to support SVG rendering, the previous `viewport` was instead stored directly on `PDFPageView`.
However, the problem is first of all that the `paintedViewport` only stores the *last* `viewport` computed, and second of all that there're no guarantees that it actually applies to the current `zoomLayer` canvas.
If a document is rotated slowly enough that rendering finishes *before* the next rotation then this problem doesn't exist, but for sufficiently quick rotations rendering will be cancelled at least once and the `paintedViewport` could thus be bogus.
The solution for the above problems is to ensure that we track the correct `viewport` for each DOM element (canvas or svg),[2] which seemed easist to do with a `WeakMap`.[3]
---
[1] I'm able to reproduce this using the `tracemonkey` file, but please note that for pages with few operations, i.e. that render very quickly, the effect may be hard to spot.
[2] One other possible solution that I briefly considered, was to wait until rendering finished before storing the current `viewport`. However, that would have caused issues with rotating a page before the *first* rendering operation had finished.
[3] This regression took me way longer to both figure out, and fix, than I'd like to admit :-)
Please see http://eslint.org/docs/rules/spaced-comment.
Note that the exceptions added for `line` comments are intended to still allow use of the old preprocessor without linting errors.
Also, I took the opportunity to improve the grammar slightly (w.r.t. capitalization and punctuation) for comments touched in the patch.
Using `else` after `return` is not necessary, and can often lead to unnecessarily cluttered code. By using the `no-else-return` rule in ESLint we can avoid this pattern, see http://eslint.org/docs/rules/no-else-return.
As mentioned on IRC yesterday, we currently throw even when rendering is `cancelled`, which is annoying when the devtools are active. Furthermore, since `cancelled` isn't really an error, rejecting the `PDFPageView_draw` promise seems somewhat strange in that case.
Modern browsers support styling radio buttons and checkboxes with CSS.
This makes the implementation much easier, and the fallback for older
browsers is still decent.
*Please note that most of the necessary code adjustments were made in PR 7890.*
ESLint has a number of advantageous properties, compared to JSHint. Among those are:
- The ability to find subtle bugs, thanks to more rules (e.g. PR 7881).
- Much more customizable in general, and many rules allow fine-tuned behaviour rather than the just the on/off rules in JSHint.
- Many more rules that can help developers avoid bugs, and a lot of rules that can be used to enforce a consistent coding style. The latter should be particularily useful for new contributors (and reduce the amount of stylistic review comments necessary).
- The ability to easily specify exactly what rules to use/not to use, as opposed to JSHint which has a default set. *Note:* in future JSHint version some of the rules we depend on will be removed, according to warnings in http://jshint.com/docs/options/, so we wouldn't be able to update without losing lint coverage.
- More easily disable one, or more, rules temporarily. In JSHint this requires using a numeric code, which isn't very user friendly, whereas in ESLint the rule name is simply used instead.
By default there's no rules enabled in ESLint, but there are some default rule sets available. However, to prevent linting failures if we update ESLint in the future, it seemed easier to just explicitly specify what rules we want.
Obviously this makes the ESLint config file somewhat bigger than the old JSHint config file, but given how rarely that one has been updated over the years I don't think that matters too much.
I've tried, to the best of my ability, to ensure that we enable the same rules for ESLint that we had for JSHint. Furthermore, I've also enabled a number of rules that seemed to make sense, both to catch possible errors *and* various style guide violations.
Despite the ESLint README claiming that it's slower that JSHint, https://github.com/eslint/eslint#how-does-eslint-performance-compare-to-jshint, locally this patch actually reduces the runtime for `gulp` lint (by approximately 20-25%).
A couple of stylistic rules that would have been nice to enable, but where our code currently differs to much to make it feasible:
- `comma-dangle`, controls trailing commas in Objects and Arrays (among others).
- `object-curly-spacing`, controls spacing inside of Objects.
- `spaced-comment`, used to enforce spaces after `//` and `/*. (This is made difficult by the fact that there's still some usage of the old preprocessor left.)
Rules that I indend to look into possibly enabling in follow-ups, if it seems to make sense: `no-else-return`, `no-lonely-if`, `brace-style` with the `allowSingleLine` parameter removed.
Useful links:
- http://eslint.org/docs/user-guide/configuring
- http://eslint.org/docs/rules/
Ideally we'd remove the 'localized' event from the `eventBus`, but for backwards compatibility we keep it in `GENERIC` builds.
Note that while we want to ensure that the direction attribute of the HTML is updated as soon as the `localized` Promise is resolved, we purposely wait until the viewer has been initialized to ensure that the 'localized' event will always be dispatched.
With `bindEvents()` now being called after the viewer has been initialized, we no longer need to have `PDFViewerApplication.initialized` checks in the event handler functions.
Furthermore by moving the `window.addEventListener`s to a helper method, `PDFViewerApplication.initialized` checks are no longer necessary in the event handlers, hence we thus address part of issue 7797 here as well.
Note that in quick testing using `console.time/timeEnd`, both locally and with the Firefox addon, the total run time of the *entire* `PDFViewerApplication.initialize` function does not seem to change with this patch.
It seems that for normal web pages, at least in Firefox, the keyboard shortcuts <kbd>Ctrl</kbd> + <kbd>Up</kbd>/<kbd>Down</kbd> are functionally equivalent to <kbd>Home</kbd>/<kbd>End</kbd>. This is obviously an edge-case, but can be easily implemented by using the same logic as we do for <kbd>Home</kbd>/<kbd>End</kbd>.
Fixes 7852.
*Please note:* I'm finding it slightly difficult to interpret issue 7852, and bug 1285719, since among other things: the title includes the word "reverse" with no other mention of it, and the STR makes reference to print preview which doesn't seem applicable to the PDF viewer.
However, compared to regular web pages in Firefox, I think the behavior of this patch makes sense here.
This patch moves the user agent checks to the top of the file to reduce
duplication and to provide a clear overview of which user agent we are
detecting.
Moreover, we extract inline user agent checks as well and use existing
checks in more places. Finally, we fix the indenting in one place for
consistency.
For consistency, I also renamed the `FIREFOX/MOZCENTRAL` sessionStorage key, but given that sessionStorage is a lot less permanent than localStorage it didn't seem necessary to migrate any existing values.
Fixes 7760.
Currently if you try to enable SVG rendering in the addons, a `TypeError` is thrown by the browser since we have code that depends on what `paintOnCanvas`/`paintOnSvg` (should) return.
According to e.g. issue 7754, it appears that the current `isSafari` check is failing in newer version of the browser. Despite the fact that checking the userAgent is an anti-pattern, which should be avoided, it's currently the simplest solution.
Given that the `customScaleOption` should already be hidden, provided that the browser supports that, this patch also prevents it from being accessible via the keyboard.
As far as my testing goes in various browsers, this doesn't seem to have any ill effects, and note that we're already explicitly ignoring the `custom` value in the `select` event handler.
Fixes https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1315608.
This patch resolves the responsiveness issues for the toolbar in the
viewer. Depending on the language (for example the Dutch language),
elements could overlap when the viewport size is reduced.
The main issue here is that the CSS rules are unnecessarily complex and
handle lots of different cases (LTR/RTL, displacements for specific
viewport widths, et cetera). By removing this complexity and letting the
browser handle the responsiveness, we not only get simpler CSS rules and
HTML mark-up, but the responsiveness issues are mostly fixed at the same
time. We no longer have to position the elements manually (by setting
their `left` attribute value) anymore.
- Renamed startPrint to performPrint to emphasize that the method
does not start the print process (preparing pages for the printer),
but that it does the actual printing (sending pages off to the
printer).
- Put performPrint in the PDFPrintService, so that it can be
overridden if needed.
- Move the global scratchCanvas to PDFPrintService. This is mainly to
make it easier to reason about the state of scratchCanvas. In practice
there is no difference because only one PDFPrintService instance can
be instantiated at any given time.
- Move all logic of using the rendered page to one location.
This makes it easier to replace the printing logic later, when I add
special handling to out-of-process frames in the Chrome extension.
Make sure that the print service is stopped as soon as possible when
aborted, and that it is not possible for a (slow) promise to
accidentally wipe the state of a print job that was started later.
There's no mention of our `#{pagenum}` form in http://www.adobe.com/content/dam/Adobe/en/devnet/acrobat/pdfs/pdf_open_parameters.pdf, and Adobe Reader doesn't seem to support it either.
Hence this patch removes support for it in the extensions, but keeps it in the `GENERIC` build with a deprecation warning and a fallback to handle it as a destination.
Fixes 7746.
This patch implements the page label functionality in a similar way as Adobe Reader.
For documents with page labels, if a non-existent page label is entered we'll try to fallback to the page number instead.
The patch also includes a preference (`disablePageLabels`), to make it easy to opt-out of using page labels if the user/implementor so wishes.
The way that `get/set currentPageLabel` is implemented in `PDFViewer`, is as wrappers for the corresponding `get/set currentPageNumber` functions, since that seemed like the cleanest solution.
The page labels are purposely *only* added to the page controls in the viewer UI, and not stored in e.g. the `ViewHistory`. Since doing so would mean adding unnecessary code complexity, without any real added value, and would also mean delaying the inital loading of PDF documents.
Note that this patch will ignore page labels if they are identical to standard page numbering, since in this case displaying the page labels adds no value (but only UI noise). The reason for handling this case specially, is that in practice a surprising number of PDF files include "pointless" page labels.
The following reasoning was used for deciding to remove the "Page: " label, and replace it with a tooltip, from the main toolbar:
- We have no other visible labels in the *main* toolbar (e.g. the Zoom dropdown doesn't have a label, but only a tooltip).
- We already hide the "Page: " label when the viewer is narrow.
- The varying width of the "Page: " label in different locales is already causing issues for many languages, with overlap in the main toolbar as a result.
Trying to create responsive CSS styles that works well in all locales is already difficult, and if we add support for page labels that will only further compound the issues.
- Some PDF viewers (e.g. Adobe Reader, pdfium in Chrome) doesn't show labels in the UI by default.
In some PDF files, the first element (i.e. the one containing either a `Ref` or a `Number` pointing to a page) of the explicit destination Array may be bogus.
One such example is actually the file `pdf.pdf` in the test-suite, where some destinations are incompletely specified. One such example being the `G1.998360` destination whose explicit destination Array contains `[null, /XYZ, 54, 488, null]`, i.e. the destination page is `null`.
Hence this patch adds a bit more validation for that case. It also adds an additional check to ensure that the resulting `pageNumber` is non-negative, and finally a couple more error messages for existing cases of malformed data.
Note that in `FIREFOX/MOZCENTRAL/CHROME` builds of the standard viewer the `docBaseUrl` parameter will be set by default, since in that case it makes sense to use the current URL as a base.
For the `GENERIC` viewer, or the API itself, it doesn't make sense to try and set the `docBaseUrl` by default. However, custom deployments/implementations may still find the parameter useful.
This not only reduces code duplication, but it also allow us to easily support the same kind of URLs we currently do for Link annotations in the Outline as well.
The outline toggle button has a feature where it can be double-clicked
to expand/collapse all items shown therein. Although this is described
in the FAQ, can go potentially unnoticed. This, however, being a useful
feature, advertise on the tool tip itself.
l10n translation for en-US and IDs updated.
Signed-off-by: Jeenu Viswambharan <jeenuv@gmail.com>
When opening a PDF file that triggers the browser fallback bar in the Firefox addon/built-in version, e.g. http://web.archive.org/web/20110918100215/http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/f1040.pdf (with forms *disabled*), and then reloading the document an error can be thrown.
The reason is that displaying the fallback bar triggers 'resize' events, and they can arrive *before* the viewer has had a chance to run all the necessary initialization code.
If interactive forms are enabled, then the display layer takes care of
rendering the form elements. There is no need to draw them on the canvas
as well. This also leads to issues when values are prefilled, because
the text fields are transparent, so the contents that have been rendered
onto the canvas will be visible too.
We address this issue by passing the `renderInteractiveForms` parameter
to the render task and handling it when the page is rendered (i.e., when
the canvas is rendered).
There's really no good reason to attempt to adjust the `max-height` of the `SecondaryToolbar` when it's not visible, so let's not do that anymore.
Also, we can listen for the `resize` event in `SecondaryToolbar`, to avoid having to manually call the `max-height` adjust function from various event handlers in `app.js`. Please note that by always adjusting the `max-height` when the toolbar is opened we no longer need the `localized` event, since it was mainly used to set a correct inital `max-height` value.
Please note that this is a hack, but I think that it should be OK for now to atleast get the preference landed. Refer to the code comment for further information.
Re: issue 7584 and PR 7586.
This patch is the first step towards implementing support for
interactive forms (AcroForms). It makes it possible to render text
widget annotations exactly like Adobe Reader/Acrobat.
Everything we implement for AcroForms is disabled by default using a
preference, mainly because it is not ready to use yet, but has to
implemented in many steps to avoid complexity. The preference allows us
to work with the code while not exposing the behavior by default. Mainly
storing entered values and printing them is still absent, which would be
minimal requirements for enabling this by default.
When clicking on the `pageNumber` input, or when using the keyboard shortcut <kbd>Ctrl</kbd>+<kbd>Alt</kbd>+<kbd>G</kbd>, the element isn't just focused but its contents is actually *selected* so that the user doesn't need to clear the input before entering a new `pageNumber`.
However, the `GoToPage` named action is only using `focus`, so let's change this to be consistent.
The following document can be used for testing: http://www2.informatik.uni-freiburg.de/~frank/ENG/beamer/example/Beamer-class-example1.pdf#zoom=page-fit
[screeenshot]
1. Expanding divs to improve text selection. (Yury)
2. Adding enhanceTextSelection as an option.
3. Moving feature functionality from text_layer_builder.js to text_layer.js.
4. Added expandTextDivs method to only load expanded divs on first click, and only show on subsequent clicks
In the `zoom{In, Out}` functions in `PDFViewerApplication`, we prevent the zoom value from becoming smaller/larger than `MIN_SCALE/MAX_SCALE`.
However, if the user sets the zoom level through the hash parameter the zoom buttons might not be correctly disabled; try http://mozilla.github.io/pdf.js/web/viewer.html#zoom=10.
Note that this issue has been present since "forever", but given that the solution is so simple I think that we should just fix this. (I'm also fixing a stupid typo I previously made in the JSDoc comment.)
With the viewer code now being split into various components/files, having an obsolete comment in `PDFViewer` that references thumbnails despite there being no other mentions of them in the entire file seems strange.
*Note:* This comment is simply a left-over from older versions of PDF.js, where the *entire* default viewer code was placed in just one file (and where we unconditionally created thumbnails, regardless whether they were visible or not).
There are PDF generators which create destinations with e.g. too large top values, which cause the wrong page to be scrolled into view because the offset becomes negative.
By ignoring negative offsets, we can prevent this issue, and get a similar behaviour as in Adobe Reader.
However, since we're also using `PDFViewer_scrollPageIntoView` in more cases than just when links (in the document/outline) are clicked, the patch adds a way to allow the caller to opt-out of this behaviour.
In e.g. the following situations, I think that we still want to be able to allow negative offsets: when restoring a position from the `ViewHistory`, when the `viewBookmark` button is used to obtain a link to the current position, or when maintaining the current position on zooming.
Rather than adding another parameter to `PDFViewer_scrollPageIntoView`, I've changed the signature to take an parameter object instead. To maintain backwards compatibility, I've added fallback code enclosed in a `GENERIC` preprocessor tag.
Fixes https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=874482.
With PR 7502 we no longer dispatch an event when the `val` is out of bounds, so to better communicate why nothing happens this patch logs an error in that case (similar to the logging of errors when trying to set an invalid scale).
The way that the default viewer is currently implemented, means that e.g. keyboard short-cuts could trigger the new error. Hence this patch also adds the necessary validation code, both to `app.js` and `pdf_link_service.js` to prevent unnecessary errors.
This patch attempts to cleanup a couple of things:
- Remove the `previousPageNumber` paramater. Prior to PR 7289, when the events were dispatched even when the active page didn't change, it made sense to be able to detect that in an event listener. However, now that's no longer the case, and furthermore other similar events (e.g. `scalechanging`/`scalechange`) don't include information about the previous state.
- Don't dispatch the events when the value passed to `set currentPageNumber` is out of bounds. Given that the active page doesn't change in this case, again similar to PR 7289, I don't think that the events should actually be dispatched in this case.
- Ensure that the value passed to `set currentPageNumber` is actually an integer, to avoid any issues (note how e.g. `set currentScale` has similar validation code).
Given that these changes could possibly affect the PDF.js `mochitest` integration tests in mozilla-central, in particular https://dxr.mozilla.org/mozilla-central/source/browser/extensions/pdfjs/test/browser_pdfjs_navigation.js, I ran the tests locally with this patch applied to ensure that they still pass.
From the discussion in issue 7445, it seems that there may be cases where an API consumer would want to get the text content as is, without combined text items.
After PR 7289, we'll now reset the current page view in cases where I don't think we should. To avoid this, this patch ensures that we'll not modify the position when the page number is out-of-bounds.
**STR:**
1. Open http://mozilla.github.io/pdf.js/web/viewer.html#page=1&zoom=auto,-98,696
2. Enter an invalid number, e.g. `1000`, in the `pageNumber` input.
**ER:**
The current position in the document shouldn't change, since the page number wasn't valid.
**AR:**
The document resets to the top of the page `1`.
The method signature was improved in PR 6546, which was included in the `1.2.109` release from last November.
Hence I think that we should now be able to remove the fallback code for the old method signature. Note that this patch now throws an `Error` in `GENERIC` builds, to clearly indicate that the `open` callsite must be modified.
In PR 7273, we simplified the `MOZCENTRAL` specific check for fullscreen support. Unfortunately I've just, by coincidence, found out about https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1268749, which disabled the unprefixed fullscreen support in release versions of Firefox. If we do nothing, this will lead to Presentation Mode being unavailable in future Firefox releases.
This patch should fix things for now, and I'm afraid that we'll need to uplift it to Firefox 49 as well.
With the changes in PR 7289, we no longer dispatch a 'pagechanging' event on load. Since most PDF documents open on the first page, this means that the `previous` and `firstPage` buttons are no longer correctly disabled.
To avoid this, this patch moves the code that updates various UI toolbar state into one method, which is then called on document initialization and from the various existing event handling functions.
Move the Chromium-specific URL rewriting code to the top of viewer.js
(before the PDF.js library) to make sure that the URL is as expected.
This ensures that variables that synchronously depends on the URL
(e.g. PDFViewerApplication.initialBookmark) are properly set.
Use chrome.storage.sync to store preferences instead of
chrome.storage.local, to allow settings to be synchronized if the user
chooses to sign in in Chrome and enables synchronization of extension
preferences.
Currently for explicit destinations, compared to named destinations, we manually try to build a hash that often times is a quite poor representation of the *actual* destination. (Currently this only, kind of, works for `\XYZ` destinations.)
For PDF files using explicit destinations, this can make it difficult/impossible to obtain a link to a specific section of the document through the URL.
Note that in practice most PDF files, especially newer ones, use named destinations and these are thus unnaffected by this patch.
This patch also fixes an existing issue in `PDFLinkService_getDestinationHash`, where a named destination consisting of only a number would not be handled correctly.
With the added, and already existing, type checks in place for destinations, I really don't think that this patch exposes any "sensitive" internal destination code not already accessible through normal hash parameters.
*Please note:* Just trying to improve the algorithm that generates the hash is unfortunately not possible in general, since there are a number of cases where it will simply never work well.
- First of all, note that `getDestinationHash` currently relies on the `_pagesRefCache`, hence it's possible that the hash returned is empty during e.g. ranged/streamed loading of a PDF file.
- Second of all, the currently computed hash is actually dependent on the document rotation. With named destinations, the fetched internal destination array is rotational invariant (as it should be), but this will not hold in general for the hash. We can easily avoid this issue by using a stringified destination array.
- Third of all, note that according to the PDF specification[1], `GoToR` destinations may actually contain explicit destination arrays. Since we cannot really construct a hash in `annotation.js`, we currently have no good way to support those. Even though this case seems *very* rare in practice (I've not actually seen such a PDF file), it's in the specification, and this patch allows us to support that for "free".
---
[1] http://www.adobe.com/content/dam/Adobe/en/devnet/acrobat/pdfs/PDF32000_2008.pdf#G11.1951685
These have been found using `gulp lint` in combination with the `unused:
true` parameter for JSHint. Unfortunately there are too many false
positives to enable this feature, but now that most globals have been
removed because of the conversion to UMD the results are much more
useful than before.
This was only ever useful for the Opera extension because the API
requires a whitelisted extension ID. Opera ditched PDF.js from their
extension gallery, so we don't need to keep this in the tree.
I've seen the above error occasionally when the scale is updated many times in quick succession, but I've not been able to pinpoint exactly why it happens.
Since the error isn't caught, this means that the `pageViewDrawCallback` function doesn't run to completion.
Unfortunately, given the very intermittent nature of the issue, I haven't got any good STR for reliably reproducing this issue. However, I hope that this patch can be accepted anyway, since it's simple and should help prevent unnecessary errors.
We're already, since quite some time, using the standard Fullscreen API provided that it's available in the browser. The warning is only caused by the code that checks if the Fullscreen API is supported.
This patch uses a simple preprocessor tag to avoid the warning, since I'm assuming that in general, we want to try and remain backwards compatible with the prefixed versions of the Fullscreen API.
Fixes 7270.
When Firefox is run in e10s mode, which will soon be the default, the PDF.js zoom dropdown menu doesn't look right. This is apparently because the `<select>` DOM element is rendered in the parent, and that all the necessary style information isn't sent up from the child. See the discussion in https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=910022.
Besides this causing the PDF.js UI to *look* worse in e10s, notably it also means that the `customScaleOption` isn't hidden like it ought to be.
To work-around that, this patch utilizes the `hidden` attribute, since https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1242450 at least made that work in e10s.
Fixes https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1194700.
Furthermore we introduce two new methods named `setCallback` and
`setReason` so external code does not change the properties of the class
directly. Finally we update various names of properties and methods to
be more self-explanatory.
With the recent PR 7172, which made the viewer modular, there's now a couple of modules that are no longer easily accessible (e.g. through the console).
This can make testing/debugging more difficult, and means that e.g. https://github.com/mozilla/pdf.js/wiki/Debugging-PDF.js#enabling no longer works in the generic viewer.
For now, as a simple solution, this patch just exposes those non-classes on `PDFViewerApplication` to ensure that they are available, and to avoid polluting the `window` scope.
Persist the state of content sidebar while browsing away from viewer and
initializing the same on returning back to the viewer. The state is saved
in persistent store preferences and used upon viewer initialization.
Fixes#6935
We cannot piggy-back on the `updateviewarea` event in order to update the stored sidebar state, since there're a number of cases where opening/switching the sidebar view won't fire a `updateviewarea` event.
Note that `updateviewarea` only fires when the position changes in the *viewer*, which means that it won't fire if e.g. the viewer is narrow, such that the sidebar overlays the document transparently; or when switching views, without the document position also changing.
This patch also moves the handling of `forceOpen` parameter in `PDFSidebar_switchView`, to prevent triggering back-to-back rendering and dispatching of events.
This is a regression from PR 7097.
(Also, out of scope for this PR, but I think that a `setTimeout` value of `1000 ms` is too large. Switching from scrolling to zooming can fell sluggish, and give the impression that nothing happens.)
[PDFThumbnailView] Re-factor the `canvas` to `image` conversion such that we always render to a `canvas`, and then replace it with an `image` once rendering is done
Functionality wise, `ensureThumbnailVisible` is essentially just a shorthand for `scrollThumbnailIntoView`. (And note that `PDFViewer` doesn't implement a `ensurePageVisible` method.)
The only remaining usage of `PDFThumbnailViewer_ensureThumbnailVisible` is inside `PDFPresentationMode`, which introduces an otherwise unnecessary `PDFThumbnailViewer` dependency there.
We're already relying on the `presentationmodechanged` event, in various files, to track the state of Presentation Mode. Thus we can simply listen for that event in `PDFSidebar` too, and update the thumbnails if necessary.
*This is a follow-up to PRs 6299 and 6441.*
The patch also adds an option to `PDFThumbnailView`, that disables the canvas-to-image conversion entirely, which might be useful in the context of issue 7026.
The sidebar code has, except for minor fixes/additions (such as attachments), been largely untouch for years.
To avoid having a bunch of sidebar code sprinkled throughout viewer.js, this patch moves the sidebar code into a separate file (pdf_sidebar.js), similar to how most other functionality has been moved in the last few years.
Besides simply moving code around, this patch also has the added benefit that we now keep track of the sidebar state (not just opened/closed).
This now makes it possible to handle both `Preferences` *and* `ViewHistory` settings for the sidebar state in a cleaner way, preventing strange and confusing interactions between the two.
Changes `PDFOutlineView`/`PDFAttachmentView` to be initialized once, since we're always creating them, and refactor their `render` methods to instead pass in the `outline`/`attachments`.
For consistency with other "classes", the `PDFOutlineView`/`PDFAttachmentView` are renamed to `PDFOutlineViewer`/`PDFAttachmentViewer`.
Also, make sure that the outline/attachments are reset when the document is closed. Currently we keep the old ones around until the `getOutline`/`getAttachments` API calls are resolved for a new document.
To reduce code duplication, the initialization code now uses the `reset` method.
Also, this patch moves `charactersToNormalize` out of `PDFFindController`, since it seemed better suited to be a "constant".
Open http://www.puolustusvoimat.fi/wcm/61ba4180411e702ea19ee9e364705c96/luonnonmuonaohjelmalumo1985.pdf?MOD=AJPERES#pagemode=bookmarks.
Note how the outline looks entirely empty, but hovering over it you'll see that there are entries present. There's two separate issues here, first of all the fact that you cannot visually make out the outline items, and secondly that the lack of text means that the clickable area becomes too small.
In Adobe Reader this issue is somewhat mitigated, since they use an icon for every item. For PDF.js, the easist way to address this seems to be making use of a default title.
This issue should be *very* rare in practice, but given the simplicity of the solution I think that we should fix this.
The `hasImage` property is a left-over from older thumbnail code, and has been made obsolete by `renderingState`.
Having two different properties tracking (basically) the same state is asking for trouble, since it's very easy to forget to update one of them, with annoying bugs as the result.
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.
The Chrome extension enforces that local files cannot be embedded in
non-local web pages. The previous check was too strict (because the
origin of a file:-URL is "null"), and prevented local PDF from being
viewed in local files).
This patch fixes that problem, by querying the actual tab URL via the
background page.
Steps to verify:
1. Create a HTML file: `<iframe src=test.pdf width=100% height=100%>`
2. Build and load the extension.
3. Allow file access to the extension at `chrome://extensions`
4. Open the HTML file from a file:// URL.
5. VERIFY: The extension should attempt to load the PDF file.
6. Now open the following (replace ID with the extension ID, which you
can find at `chrome://extensions`):
`data:text/html,<iframe src="chrome-extension://ID/file:///test.pdf">`
7. VERIFY: The next error should be displayed:
"Refused to load a local file in a non-local page for security reasons."
Fixes 6898.
Note that this doesn't prevent the warning for PDF files that *do* ask for a password, e.g. http://async5.org/moz/passwordOU.pdf, but it's not clear to me if/how we could avoid that.
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.)
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.
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 patch makes the naming consistent with the `TextLayerBuilder`, and also the new `AnnotationLayer`, and should thus help reduce possible confusion when working with the code.
Please note that the files were renamed using `git mv`, in order to preserve blame.
Additionally simplify the div creation logic (it needs to happen only
once, so it should not be in the for-loop) and remove/rename variables
for shorter code.
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.
In my opinion, this event shouldn't be dispatched in `PDFPageView.cssTransform`, since that would cause *two* events to be fired when "normal" zooming is used (once in `PDFPageView.cssTransform`, and once in `PDFPageView.draw`).
Fixes 6463.
For documents with different page sizes, ensure that the correct page becomes visible on load when e.g. the 'page' hash parameter was provided (bug 1191279, issue 6393)
This is a quick fix to get `scrollIntoView` working again for search results, but we really ought to re-write that function since it seems way too brittle.
Fixes 6596.
This patch contains an alternative solution (see the referenced PRs in 4718), in order for the indeterminate loading bar to have a consistent speed regardless of width.
Fixes 4718.
Currently this constant is present in `viewer.js`, but it is not used there at all. Instead, it is used in `view_history.js` where we have a global for it. We might as well move the constant to `view_history.js` as that is the only place where it is used, thereby removing a global and an unused constant from `viewer.js`.
If your Internet Explorer 11 default compatibility settings are set to "I.E 7 Compatibility", the PDF plugin will not load. This fix is the same one used by AngularJS to force the browser to use HTML5 mode.
*This regressed in PR 5356.*
Rather than just backing out the offending code, this patch restores scrolling in PresentationMode by making the `overflow: hidden;` check optional and letting the callers that need it (e.g. `PDFFindController`) opt-in to use it.
When the user edits the URL and changes the reference fragment (hash),
PDF.js intercepts this action, and saves the then-current history state
in the previous history entry. This is implemented by navigating back,
editing the history and navigating forward again.
The current logic has a flaw: It assumes that calling history.back() and
history.forward() immediately updates the history state. This is however
not guaranteed by the web standards, which states that calling e.g.
history.back "must traverse the history by a delta -1", which means that
the browser must QUEUE a task to traverse the session history, per spec:
http://w3.org/TR/2011/WD-html5-20110113/history.html#dom-history-backhttps://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/browsers.html#dom-history-back
Firefox and Internet Explorer deviate from the standards by immediately
changing the history state instead of queuing the navigation.
WebKit derived browsers (Chrome, Opera, Safari) and Opera presto do not.
The user-visible consequence of strictly adhering to the standards in
PDF.js can be shown as follows:
1. Edit the URL.
2. Append #page=2 for example.
3. Press Enter.
-> Presto and WebKit: PDF.js reverts to the previous URL.
-> Gecko and Trident: PDF.js keeps the new URL, as expected.
To fix the issue, modification of the previous history item happens in
a few asynchronous steps, guided by the popstate event to detect when
the history navigation request has been committed.
--
Some more implementation notes:
I have removed the preventDefault and stopPropagation calls, because
popstate is not cancelable, and window is already the last target of the
event propagation.
The previous allowHashChange logic was hard to follow, because it did
not explain that hashchange will be called twice; once during the
popstate handler for history.back() (which will reset allowHashChange),
and again for history.forward() (where allowHashChange will be false).
The purpose of allowHashChange is now more explicit, by incorporating
the logic in the replacePreviousHistoryState helper function.
*This regressed in PR 4920.*
The main motivation for PR 4920 was to quickly get rid of old canvases when pages are evicted from the `PDFPageViewBuffer` cache. However it inadvertently broke the use-case where the `canvas` is used as a preview, on scale or rotation changes, until the re-rendering is finished.
Fixes 6467.
In PR 5552, specifically commit 9f384bbb41, the meaning of `this.annotationLayer` changed in `PDFPageView`. Previously it referred directly to a DOM element, but now it's instead an instance of `AnnotationsLayerBuilder`.
This patch tweaks things so that we won't try to hide a non-existent `annotationLayer` div in `PDFPageView_reset`, and also so that we don't attempt to insert empty (`null`) DOM elements in `PDFPageView_draw`.
*Follow-up to PR 6299.*
This patch reduces unnecessary code duplication for the `canvas` to `image` conversion. It also does a bit of re-ordering (and adds new lines) in `_getPageDrawContext`, since that function currently is a bit hard to read.
Since some browsers render `null` characters, and others don't, this patch adds a way to remove them to prevent display issues in the viewer UI.
Given that documents may contain very long outlines, I've added a utility function to avoid creating a lot of unnecessary `RegExp` objects.
To avoid any future issues, this utility function is used for both the outline and the attachments.
Fixes 6416.
Prior to PR 6242, the width of all outline items was set such that their right (or left, in RTL locales) edges lined up vertically. In my opinion that looked more consistent, therefore this patch adjusts the CSS to make sure that this will be the case again.
The patch also makes the `border-radius` values of outline items a bit more consistent.
This issue is actually, in a sense, "caused" by the fact that the API/viewer supports partial loading/rendering. Previously when the *entire* document was always fetched before rendering begun, we knew all page sizes in advance and this issue didn't exist.
Now we use the size of *one* page in order to set the initial size of every page, until we've fetched the pages and thus know their correct sizes.
This means that during loading the size of the pages can change, which may cause the initial position to become scrolled out of view.
The most naive solution to this problem would perhaps be to delay setting the initial position on load for all documents, until all pages are fetched. However I think that would be a *really* bad idea, since doing so would make the initial rendering slower and make it feel sluggish for most documents.
Since there is generally no way of knowing if a document has different sized pages prior to loading it, we can only check once the pages are available.
Hence this patch, which treats documents with different sized pages as a special case, by re-applying the initial position when all pages have become available.
It appears to me that the `expanded/collapsed` part of the names got switched around, since I'd expect the following convention:
- `v` == expanded
- `>` == collapsed
- This commit adds a '>' before every outline item that has subitems.
- Click on the '>' to collapse all subitems under that item (which turns
the '>' in a 'v').
- Shift + click expands/collapses all descendant items under that tree.
- Double-clicking on the "Show Document Outline" button in the toolbar
expands/collapses all outline items.
The JSON file is generated as follows.
1. Go to the src/chrome/app/resources directory of Chromium's source.
2. Find the translation ID of the "Allow access to file URLs" string:
grep 'Allow access to file URLs' generated_resources_en-GB.xtb
3. With the ID that you've found, locate the other translations.
grep 3341703758641437857 generated_resources_*.xtb
4. If the result looks OK, serialize the result as JSON and save it.
> path/to/pdf.js/web/chrome-i18n-allow-access-to-file-urls.json \
python -c "import json;print(json.dumps({ \
$(grep 3341703758641437857 generated_resources_*.xtb | \
sed "s@generated_resources_\([^.]\+\)\.xtb:<translation[^>]\+>\(.\+\)</translation>@'\1':'''\2''',@" \
)}, sort_keys=True, indent=2))"
(Strings are taken from Chromium 45.0.2448.0 (ccrev.com/337313).
Currently in `switchSidebarView` there is code that attempts to handle the `outline` or `attachments` being disabled. However, given the placement of it, that code does not actually accomplish anything. Even more strange is the fact that the way that the buttons are disabled, that code won't ever be hit.
(Looking back with `git blame`, it seems that it has never worked as you'd expect.)
Hence this patch, which correctly disables switching to the `outline` or `attachments` views when they are disabled.
Once PR 6314 restores the 'pagemode' hash parameter, this patch thus makes it impossible to switch to a disabled sidebar view by modifying the 'pagemode' hash of an already loaded document.
This regressed in 0ef6212b64.
Since the 'pagemode' hash parameter requires certain viewer functionality (e.g. thumbnails and an outline) in order to work, it seemed reasonable to move the functionality from `pdf_link_service.js` into `viewer.js`.
Similar to `namedaction`, this patch makes use of an event to forward the 'pagemode' parameter.