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.
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.
According to "The table directory" under https://developer.apple.com/fonts/TrueType-Reference-Manual/RM06/Chap6.html#Directory, TrueType font tables should have `uint32` checksums.
This is something that I noticed, and was initially confused about, while debugging a TrueType issue.
As far as I can tell, the current (`int32`) checksums we use doesn't cause any issues in practice. However, I do think that this should be addressed to agree with the specification, and to reduce possible confusion when reading the font code.
Currently there's a lot of duplicate code for non-embedded `toFontChar`, which this patch simplifies by extracting the code into a helper function instead.
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.
*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).
`Dict_getAll` is problematic for a number of reasons. First of all, as issue 6961 shows, it can be really bad for performance, since it dereferences all indirect objects.
Second of all, all the derefencing can lead to data being unncessarily requested when ranged/chunked loading is used, thus unnecessarily delaying rendering.
Note: For cases where `Dict_getAll` was previously used, `Dict_getKeys` in combination with `Dict_get` can be used instead. This has the advantage that data isn't requested until it's actually needed.
For the operators that we currently support, the arguments are not `Dict`s, which means that it's not really necessary to use `Dict_getAll` in `EvaluatorPreprocessor_read`.
Also, I do think that if/when we support operators that use `Dict`s as arguments, that should be dealt with in the corresponding `case` in `PartialEvaluator_getOperatorList` which handles the operator.
The only reason that I can find for using `Dict_getAll` like that, is that prior to PR 6550 we would just append certain (currently unsupported) operators without doing any further processing/checking. But as issue 6549 showed, that can lead to issues in practice, which is why it was changed.
In an effort to prevent possible issue with unsupported operators, this patch simply ignores operators with `Dict` arguments in `PartialEvaluator_getOperatorList`.