Calixte Denizet 040fcae5ab Improve performance with image masks (bug 857031)
- it aims to partially fix performance issue reported: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=857031;
- the idea is too avoid to use byte arrays but use ImageBitmap which are a way faster to draw:
  * an ImageBitmap is Transferable which means that it can be built in the worker instead of in the main thread:
    - this is achieved in using an OffscreenCanvas when it's available, there is a bug to enable them
      for pdf.js: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1763330;
    - or in using createImageBitmap: in Firefox a task is sent to the main thread to build the bitmap so
      it's slightly slower than using an OffscreenCanvas.
  * it's transfered from the worker to the main thread by "reference";
  * the byte buffers used to create the image data have a very short lifetime and ergo the memory used is globally
    less than before.
- Use the localImageCache for the mask;
- Fix the pdf issue4436r.pdf: it was expected to have a binary stream for the image;
- Move the singlePixel trick from operator_list to image: this way we can use this trick even if it isn't in a set
  as defined in operator_list.
2022-04-09 18:26:26 +02:00
2020-04-14 12:28:14 +02:00
2017-11-29 22:24:08 +09:00
2017-10-23 13:31:36 -05:00
2015-02-17 11:07:37 -05:00
2022-02-27 19:24:24 +01:00

PDF.js Build Status

PDF.js is a Portable Document Format (PDF) viewer that is built with HTML5.

PDF.js is community-driven and supported by Mozilla. Our goal is to create a general-purpose, web standards-based platform for parsing and rendering PDFs.

Contributing

PDF.js is an open source project and always looking for more contributors. To get involved, visit:

Feel free to stop by our Matrix room for questions or guidance.

Getting Started

Online demo

Please note that the "Modern browsers" version assumes native support for features such as async/await, optional chaining, nullish coalescing, and private class fields/methods.

Browser Extensions

Firefox

PDF.js is built into version 19+ of Firefox.

Chrome

  • The official extension for Chrome can be installed from the Chrome Web Store. This extension is maintained by @Rob--W.
  • Build Your Own - Get the code as explained below and issue gulp chromium. Then open Chrome, go to Tools > Extension and load the (unpackaged) extension from the directory build/chromium.

Getting the Code

To get a local copy of the current code, clone it using git:

$ git clone https://github.com/mozilla/pdf.js.git
$ cd pdf.js

Next, install Node.js via the official package or via nvm. You need to install the gulp package globally (see also gulp's getting started):

$ npm install -g gulp-cli

If everything worked out, install all dependencies for PDF.js:

$ npm install

Finally, you need to start a local web server as some browsers do not allow opening PDF files using a file:// URL. Run:

$ gulp server

and then you can open:

Please keep in mind that this requires a modern and fully up-to-date browser; refer to Building PDF.js for non-development usage of the PDF.js library.

It is also possible to view all test PDF files on the right side by opening:

Building PDF.js

In order to bundle all src/ files into two production scripts and build the generic viewer, run:

$ gulp generic

If you need to support older browsers, run:

$ gulp generic-legacy

This will generate pdf.js and pdf.worker.js in the build/generic/build/ directory (respectively build/generic-legacy/build/). Both scripts are needed but only pdf.js needs to be included since pdf.worker.js will be loaded by pdf.js. The PDF.js files are large and should be minified for production.

Using PDF.js in a web application

To use PDF.js in a web application you can choose to use a pre-built version of the library or to build it from source. We supply pre-built versions for usage with NPM and Bower under the pdfjs-dist name. For more information and examples please refer to the wiki page on this subject.

Including via a CDN

PDF.js is hosted on several free CDNs:

Learning

You can play with the PDF.js API directly from your browser using the live demos below:

More examples can be found in the examples folder. Some of them are using the pdfjs-dist package, which can be built and installed in this repo directory via gulp dist-install command.

For an introduction to the PDF.js code, check out the presentation by our contributor Julian Viereck:

More learning resources can be found at:

The API documentation can be found at:

Questions

Check out our FAQs and get answers to common questions:

Talk to us on Matrix:

File an issue:

Follow us on twitter: @pdfjs

Description
No description provided
Readme 254 MiB
Languages
JavaScript 79.4%
Fluent 18.3%
CSS 1.5%
HTML 0.8%