A Netless App that renders PDF files with PDF.js.
npm add @netless/app-pdfjs
Important
This app only implements viewing PDF files.
It does not support dispatchDocsEvent()
nor export PDF
.
-
Get a static URL pointing to the PDF file.
This package only synces the URL for each client to download the PDF. You have to obtain a static URL to the file first to continue. For example, you can use an OSS to achieve this.
-
Register this app before joinning room.
import { register } from "@netless/fastboard" import { install } from "@netless/app-pdfjs" install(register) // the app is named 'PDFjs'
-
Add this app after joinning room.
fastboard.manager.addApp({ kind: 'PDFjs', options: { title: 'a.pdf', scenePath: '/pdf/paper' // ! This is required. }, attributes: { src: 'https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/mfogel/polygon-clipping/paper.pdf' } })
This package downloads the latest PDF.js release from jsDelivr:
https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/pdfjs-dist@latest/build/
To alter this URL or choose a different version, set the app option:
install(register, {
appOptions: {
pdfjsLib: 'https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/pdfjs-dist@latest/build/pdf.min.mjs',
workerSrc: 'https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/pdfjs-dist@latest/build/pdf.worker.min.mjs'
}
})
If the URL is blocked by your CSP,
you have to add them to your script-src
policy:
Content-Security-Policy: script-src https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/
PDF.js uses Promise.withResolvers()
, which is a brand new feature in JavaScript.
In case your target environment does not support this, you need to add the following code to the first line of
pdf.min.mjs
and pdf.worker.min.mjs
to resolve this issue.
if (typeof Promise.withResolvers === 'undefined') {
Promise.withResolvers = function () {
let resolve, reject
const promise = new Promise((res, rej) => {
resolve = res
reject = rej
})
return { promise, resolve, reject }
}
}
For convenience, you can run node ./scripts/patch.mjs
in this repo to generate patched pdf.min.mjs
and pdf.worker.min.mjs
.
The 2 files will be placed at the dist
folder.
This package only targets modern browsers that support native ES modules.
Most PDF files are designed for easy transmission, allowing us to render a single page by requesting a portion of the file through Range requests. However, a few PDF files require a complete download before they can be rendered. You can check the browser's requests to confirm if the slow rendering of the first page is due to the complete download of a PDF file. If so, you need to use qpdf to convert the PDF into a structure that is easier to transmit.
As the package name implies, it uses PDF.js to render the file. It is possible that PDF.js has a bug when rendering some files. Please raise an issue there to ask for help.
MIT @ netless