Built-in DOM properties are slower than plain JS properties.
A few lines before, textContent is assigned as follows:
textDiv.textContent = geom.str;
So replacing textDiv.textContent.length with geom.str.length slightly
improves performance without side effects.
Since the zoom value should be in percent, using `PDFViewer.currentScale` will be wrong by a factor of 100, potentially causing the zoom level of the document to become wrong on load.
*This fixes a regression from PR 6192.*
Under some circumstances, the `resize` event handler in `viewer.js` is fired before the scale has been set. This can lead to PDF documents being rendered at the wrong zoom level when they are opened.
It seems that a way to reliably trigger this is to, using the Firefox addon, open a PDF file that triggers the `fallback` bar, in a new background tab (i.e. middle clicking on a link, or use the context menu).
Prior to PR 6192, we checked the selected option in the `scaleSelect` dropdown instead. Since `pageAutoOption` is selected by default in `viewer.html`, this should explain why the issue wasn't visible previously.
This patch refactors the code responsible for setting the annotation's rectangle. Its goal is to:
- Actually check that the input array is actually an array, and if so, that it contains exactly four elements.
- Only call `normalizeRect` if the input array is valid, i.e., we do not call it for the default rectangle anymore.
Unit tests are provided just like with the other patches in this series.
Fixes#6106
To avoid future regressions, two new unit tests were added:
1. A new PDF based on the report from #6106, which contains an
OpenAction of type JavaScript and a string "this.print({...}".
2. An existing PDF from https://bugzil.la/1001080 (from #4698).
Although it does not matter, since we don't execute the JavaScript code,
I have also changed "print(true)" to "print({})" since the print method
takes an object (not a boolean). See "Printing PDF documents", page 62:
http://adobe.com/content/dam/Adobe/en/devnet/acrobat/pdfs/js_developer_guide.pdf
The special handling of the 'custom' scale value is only relevant for the `scaleSelect` dropdown in the standard viewer, hence I think that it should be placed in `viewer.js` instead.
Features / bug fixes in the preprocessor:
- Add word boundary after regex for preprocessor token matching.
Previously, when you mistakenly used "#ifdef" instead of "#if", the
line would be parsed as a preprocessor directive (because "#ifdef"
starts with "#if"), but without condition (because "def" does not
start with a space). Consequently, the condition would always be false
and anything between "#ifdef" and "#endif" would not be included.
- Add validation and error reporting everywhere, to aid debugging.
- Support nested comments (by accounting for the whole stack of
conditions, instead of only the current one).
- Add #elif preprocessor command. Could be used as follows:
//#if !FEATURE_ENABLED
//#error FEATURE_ENABLED must be set
//#endif
- Add #error preprocessor command.
- Add end-of-line word boundary after "-->" in the comment trimmer.
Otherwise the pattern would also match "-->" in the middle of a line,
and incorrectly convert something like "while(i-->0)" to "while(i0)".
Code health:
- Add unit tests for the preprocessor (run external/builder/test.js).
- Fix broken link to MDN (resolved to DXR).
- Refactor to use STATE_* names instead of magic numbers (the original
meaning of the numbers is preserved, with one exception).
- State 3 has been split in two states, to distinguish between being in
an #if and #else. This is needed to ensure that #else cannot be
started without an #if.
The previous regex was too greedy, it stripped a significant amount of
code when I put another file after core/murmurhash3.js. This was caused
by the fact that the license header in murmurhash3.js does not contain
"Mozilla Foundation", so the regex continued to match until my new file
(which had the standard license header containing "Mozilla Foundation").
It took a while to figure out why adding comments in worker_loader.js
caused the build to fail, because getWorkerSrcFiles did not print an
error message when it failed to parse the file. These issues have been
resolved as follows:
- Leading comments are stripped.
- The trailing comma is removed from the array.
- Errors are detected and useful error messages are printed.
Ordinarily, local files cannot be embedded in a non-local website. Until
this commit, the extension allowed websites to embed local PDF files on
non-local (e.g. http(s)) websites. This unintended feature is now
disabled, to align better with Chrome's existing security policies
(=local file:-URLs cannot be loaded in a tab unless expicitly allowed).
- Use rimraf instead of a custom removeDirSync implementation - rimraf
deals with edge cases like EPERM on Windows.
- Detect when the process exits before it was requested via stop(),
instead of running the cleanup handler.
- Add fallback for process detection when the process exits before it
was requested. On *nix systems, this is done via pkill and pgrep, on
Windows this is done via wmic.
- Add some asserts to check the preconditions of the methods, and output
some status information to aid debugging in case of failure.
I have verified that these changes work on ArchLinux and Windows XP,
using Chrome and Firefox, as follows:
1. node make unittest
2. node make unittest
3. Restart the Firefox process via the task manager as soon as possible.
4. node make unittest
5. Temporary lock a file/directory within the temporary profile
directory until the tests have finished, and then unlock the file
within 10 seconds.
In all cases, the auxilary browser processes are killed, and the
temporary profile directory is wiped.
Basic mathematics would suggest that a double negative should always become positive, but it appears that Adobe Reader simply ignores that case. Hence I think that it makes sense for us to do the same.
Fixes 6218.