Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Rather than having a dedicated call to enumerate the rectangles for the
annotations on a page, add an interface for enumerating annotations
with accessor functions. Currently the only accessor function is
the one to get the annotation rectangle.
Use this new scheme in place of fz_bound_annots within mudraw.
Also use this scheme to set the caret cursor in the viewer when over
a data field.
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Harmless, since the context wasn't used, but confusing.
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Use _wopen on a UTF8 -> wchar_t decoded filename to support UTF8 filenames
for win32.
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Use this to reintroduce "Document Properties..." in mupdf viewer.
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Also tidy up the taking of fz_context *'s, and hide an unwanted indent
param.
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Debug printing functions: debug -> print.
Accessors: get noun attribute -> noun attribute.
Find -> lookup when the returned value is not reference counted.
pixmap_with_rect -> pixmap_with_bbox.
We are reserving the word "find" to mean lookups that give ownership
of objects to the caller. Lookup is used in other places where the
ownership is not transferred, or simple values are returned.
The rename is done by the sed script in scripts/rename3.sed
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Add some function documentation to fitz.h.
Add fz_ prefix to runetochar, chartorune, runelen etc. Change
fz_runetochar to avoid passing unnecessary pointer.
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Attempt to separate public API from internal functions.
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This is a significant change to the use of locks in MuPDF.
Previously, the user had the option of passing us lock/unlock
functions for a single mutex as part of the allocation struct.
Now we remove these entries from the allocation struct, and
make a separate 'locks' struct. This enables people to use
fz_alloc_default with locking.
If multithreaded operation is required, then the user is
required to create FZ_LOCK_MAX mutexes, which will be locked
or unlocked by MuPDF calling the lock/unlock functions within
the new fz_locks_context structure passed in at context creation.
These mutexes are not required to be recursive (they may be, but
MuPDF should never call them in this way). MuPDF avoids deadlocks
by imposing a locking ordering on itself; a thread will never take
lock n, if it already holds any lock i for which 0 <= i <= n.
Currently, there are 4 locks used within MuPDF.
Lock 0: The alloc lock; taken around all calls to user supplied
(or default) allocation functions. Also taken around all accesses
to the refs field of storable items.
Lock 1: The store lock; taken whenever the store data structures
(specifically the linked list pointers) are accessed.
Lock 2: The file lock; taken whenever a thread is accessing the raw
file. We use the debugging macros to insist that this is held
whenever we do a file based seek or read. We also insist that this
is never held when we resolve an indirect reference, as this can
have the effect of moving the file pointer.
Lock 3: The glyphcache lock; taken whenever a thread calls freetype,
or accesses the glyphcache data structures. This introduces some
complexities w.r.t type3 fonts.
Locking can be hugely problematic, so to ease our minds as to
the correctness of this code, we introduce some debugging macros.
These compile away to nothing unless FITZ_DEBUG_LOCKING is defined.
fz_assert_lock_held(ctx, lock) checks that we hold lock.
fz_assert_lock_not_held(ctx, lock) checks that we do not hold lock.
In addition fz_lock_debug_lock and fz_lock_debug_unlock are used
on every fz_lock/fz_unlock to check the validity of the operation
we are performing - in particular it checks that we do/do not already
hold the lock we are trying to take/drop, and that by taking this
lock we are not violating our defined locking order.
The RESOLVE macro (used throughout the code to check whether we need
to resolve an indirect reference) calls fz_assert_lock_not_held to
ensure that we aren't about to resolve an indirect reference (and
hence move the stream pointer) when the file is locked.
In order to implement the file locking properly, pdf_open_stream
(and friends) now lock the file as a side effect (because they
fz_seek to the start of the stream). The lock is automatically
dropped on an fz_close of such streams.
Previously, the glyph cache was created in a context when it was first
required; this presents problems as it can be shared between several
contexts or not, depending on whether it is created before the
contexts are cloned. We now always create it at startup, so it is
always shared.
This means that we need reference counting for the glyph caches.
Added here.
In fz_render_glyph, we take the glyph cache lock, and check to see
whether the glyph is in the cache. If it is, we bump the refcount,
drop the lock and returned the cached character. If it is not, we
need to render the character.
For freetype based fonts we keep the lock throughout the rendering
process, thus ensuring that freetype is only called in a single
threaded manner.
For type3 fonts, however, we need to invoke the interpreter again
to render the glyph streams. This can require reentrance to this
routine. We therefore drop the glyph cache lock, call the
interpreter to render us our pixmap, and take the lock again.
This dropping and retaking of the lock introduces a possible race
condition; 2 threads may try to render the same character at the
same time. We therefore modify our hash table insert routines to
behave differently if it comes to insert an entry only to find
that an entry with the same key is already there.
We spot this case; if we have just rendered a type3 glyph and when
we try to insert it into the cache discover that someone has beaten
us to it, we just discard our entry and use the cached one.
Hopefully this will seldom be a problem in practise; to solve it
properly would require greater complexity (probably involving
spotting that another thread is already working on the desired
rendering, and sleeping on a semaphore until it completes).
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Update Android build for new thirdparty.zip.
Small windows fix for pdf_xref -> pdf_document changes.
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Toggle with 'f'. Fullscreen turns off shrinkwrap, and shrinkwrap turns
off fullscreen.
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Change the fz_store to be limited to 256 Megs. Remove the soft limit
for pixmaps; the store will automatically throw old resources away
to stay below the limit.
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Firstly, we rename pdf_store to fz_store, reflecting the fact that
there are no pdf specific dependencies on it.
Next, we rework it so that all the objects that can be stored in
the store start with an fz_storable structure. This consists of
a reference count, and a function used to free the object when
the reference count reaches zero.
All the keep/drop functions are then reimplemented by calling
fz_keep_sharable/fz_drop_sharable. The 'drop' functions as supplied
by the callers are thus now 'free' functions, only called if
the reference count drops to 0.
The store changes to keep all the items in the store in the linked
list (which becomes a doubly linked one). We still make use of
the hashtable to index into this list quickly, but we now have
the objects in an LRU ordering within the list.
Every object is put into the store, with a size record; this is
an estimate of how much memory would be freed by freeing that
object.
The store is moved into the context and given a maximum size;
when new things are inserted into the store, care is taken to
ensure that we do not expand beyond this size. We evict any
stored items (that are not in use) starting from the least
recently used.
Finding an object in the store now takes a reference to it already.
LOCK and UNLOCK comments are used to indicate where locks need to
be taken and released to ensure thread safety.
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Also: use 'cannot' instead of 'failed to' in error messages.
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This was removed during a previous commit to make the editing easier.
Now added back in.
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This frees us from passing errors back everywhere, and hence enables us
to pass results back as return values.
Rather than having to explicitly check for errors everywhere and bubble
them, we now allow exception handling to do the work for us; the
downside to this is that we no longer emit as much debugging information
as we did before (though this could be put back in). For now, the
debugging information we have lost has been retained in comments
with 'RJW:' at the start.
This code needs fuller testing, but is being committed as a work in
progress.
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Huge pervasive change to lots of files, adding a context for exception
handling and allocation.
In time we'll move more statics into there.
Also fix some for(i = 0; i < function(...); i++) calls.
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Import exception handling code from WSS, modified to fit into the
fitz world.
With this code we have 'real' fz_try/fz_catch/fz_rethrow functions,
handling a fz_except type. We therefore rename the existing fz_throw/
fz_catch/fz_rethrow to be fz_error_make/fz_error_handle/fz_error_note.
We don't actually use fz_try/fz_catch/fz_rethrow yet...
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Installs keys to add MuPDF in the "Open With" menu, but does
not take over the default association. Run "mupdf.exe -u" to
remove the registry key.
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The run-together words are dead! Long live the underscores!
The postscript inspired naming convention of using all run-together
words has served us well, but it is now time for more readable code.
In this commit I have also added the sed script, rename.sed, that I used
to convert the source. Use it on your patches and application code.
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stack trace.
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