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16fe38b8e3
Also, remove closed fuzz cases.
737 lines
42 KiB
Markdown
737 lines
42 KiB
Markdown
Contents
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========
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- [Always](#always)
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- [In Progress](#in-progress)
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- [Next](#next)
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- [Possible future JSON enhancements](#possible-future-json-enhancements)
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- [QPDFJob](#qpdfjob)
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- [Documentation](#documentation)
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- [Document-level work](#document-level-work)
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- [Text Appearance Streams](#text-appearance-streams)
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- [Fuzz Errors](#fuzz-errors)
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- [External Libraries](#external-libraries)
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- [ABI Changes](#abi-changes)
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- [C++ Version Changes](#c-version-changes)
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- [Page splitting/merging](#page-splittingmerging)
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- [Analytics](#analytics)
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- [General](#general)
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- [HISTORICAL NOTES](#historical-notes)
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Always
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======
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* Evaluate issues tagged with `next` and `bug`. Remember to check discussions and pull requests in
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addition to regular issues.
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* When close to release, make sure external-libs is building and follow instructions in
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../external-libs/README
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In Progress
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===========
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Modernize qpdf
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--------------
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Update code to make use of the facilities provided by C++17. In particular, replace early qpdf C-style code
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with modern equivalent. Key updates are:
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* use the standard library where appropriate
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* replace C-strings with std::string or std::string_view
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* replace raw pointer with smart pointers or standard library containers
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* replace std::string const& with std::string_view where appropriate
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* replace std::shared_ptr with std::unique_ptr or references to the underlying object where appropriate
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Next steps are:
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* review function signatures in the public API
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* replace code that uses QUtil::make_shared_cstr etc
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Except for the above, prefer to make modernization changes as part of other updates.
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Next
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====
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* Add some additional code coverage analysis to CI
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* Spell check: Have the spell-check script synchronize cSpell.json with .idea/dictionaries/qpdf.xml,
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which should be set to the union of all the validated user dictionaries.
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* Maybe fix #553 -- use file times for attachments (trivial with C++-20)
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* std::string_view transition -- work being done by m-holger
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* Support incremental updates. See "incremental updates" in [General](#general). See also issue #22.
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* Make it possible to see incremental updates in qdf mode.
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* Make it possible to add incremental updates.
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* We may want a writing mode that preserves object IDs. See #339.
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* Issue #1148 raises concerns about mixing xref tables and xref streams. We will have to consider
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how qpdf should deal with this while making sure not to break hybrid-ref files, which are in the
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test suite.
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* Support digital signatures. This probably requires support for incremental updates. First, add
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support for verifying digital signatures. Then we can consider adding support for signing
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documents, though the ability to sign documents is less useful without an interactive process of
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filling in a field. We may want to support only a subset of digital signature with invisible
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signature fields or with existing fields.
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* Support public key security handler (Section 7.6.5.)
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Possible future JSON enhancements
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=================================
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* Consider not including unreferenced objects and trimming the trailer in the same way that
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QPDFWriter does (except don't remove `/ID`). This means excluding the linearization dictionary and
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hint stream, the encryption dictionary, all keys from trailer that are removed by
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QPDFWriter::getTrimmedTrailer except `/ID`, any object streams, and the xref stream as long as all
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those objects are unreferenced. (They always should be, but there could be some bizarre case of
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someone creating a PDF file that has an indirect reference to one of those, in which case we need
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to preserve it.) If this is done, make `--preserve-unreferenced` preserve unreference objects and
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also those extra keys. Search for "linear" and "trailer" in json.rst to update the various places
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in the documentation that discuss this. Also update the help for --json and
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--preserve-unreferenced.
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* Add to JSON output the information available from a few additional informational options:
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* --check: add but maybe not by default?
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* --show-linearization: add but maybe not by default? Also figure out whether warnings reported
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for some of the PDF specs (1.7) are qpdf problems. This may not be worth adding in the first
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increment.
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* --show-xref: add
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* Consider having --check, --show-encryption, etc., just select the right keys when in json mode. I
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don't think I want check on by default, so that might be different.
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* Consider having warnings be included in the json in a "warnings" key in json mode.
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QPDFJob
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=======
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Here are some ideas for QPDFJob that didn't make it into 10.6. Not all of these are necessarily
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good -- just things to consider.
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* How do we chain jobs? The idea would be that the input and/or output of a QPDFJob could be a QPDF
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object rather than a file. For input, it's pretty easy. For output, none of the output-specific
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options (encrypt, compress-streams, objects-streams, etc.) would have any affect, so we would have
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to treat this like inspect for error checking. The QPDF object in the state where it's ready to be
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sent off to QPDFWriter would be used as the input to the next QPDFJob. For the job json, I think
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we can have the output be an identifier that can be used as the input for another QPDFJob. For a
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json file, we could the top level detect if it's an array with the convention that exactly one has
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an output, or we could have a subkey with other job definitions or something. Ideally, any input
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(copy-attachments-from, pages, etc.) could use a QPDF object. It wouldn't surprise me if this
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exposes bugs in qpdf around foreign streams as this has been a relatively fragile area before.
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Documentation
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=============
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* Do a full pass through the documentation.
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* Make sure `qpdf` is consistent. Use qpdf when just referring to the package.
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* Make sure markup is consistent
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* Autogenerate where possible
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* Consider which parts might be good candidates for moving to the wiki.
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* Commit 'Manual - enable line wrapping in table cells' from Mon Jan 17 12:22:35 2022 +0000 enables
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table cell wrapping. See if this can be incorporated directly into sphinx_rtd_theme and the
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workaround can be removed.
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* When possible, update the debian package to include docs again. See
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https://bugs.debian.org/1004159 for details.
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Document-level work
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===================
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* Ideas here may by superseded by #593.
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* QPDFPageCopier -- object for moving pages around within files or between files and performing
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various transformations. Reread/rewrite
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_page-selection in the manual if needed.
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* Handle all the stuff of pages and split-pages
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* Do n-up, booklet, collation
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* Look through cli and see what else...flatten-*?
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* See comments in QPDFPageDocumentHelper.hh for addPage -- search for "a future version".
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* Make it efficient for bulk operations
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* Make certain doc-level features selectable
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* qpdf.cc should do all its page operations, including overlay/underlay, splitting, and merging,
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using this
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* There should also be example code
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* After doc-level checks are in, call --check on the output files in the "Copy Annotations" tests.
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* Document-level checks. For example, for forms, make sure all form fields point to an annotation on
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exactly one page as well as that all widget annotations are associated with a form field. Hook
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this into QPDFPageCopier as well as the doc helpers. Make sure it is called from --check.
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* See also issues tagged with "pages". Include closed issues.
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* Add flags to CLI to select which document-level options to preserve or not preserve. We will
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probably need a pair of mutually exclusive, repeatable options with a way to specify all, none,
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only {x,y}, or all but {x,y}.
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* If a page contains a reference a file attachment annotation, when that page is copied, if the file
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attachment appears in the top-level EmbeddedFiles tree, that entry should be preserved in the
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destination file. Otherwise, we probably will require the use of --copy-attachments-from to
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preserve these. What will the strategy be for deduplicating in the automatic case?
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Text Appearance Streams
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=======================
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This is a list of known issues with text appearance streams and things we might do about it.
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* For variable text, the spec says to pull any resources from /DR that are referenced in /DA but if
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the resource dictionary already has that resource, just use the one that's there. The current code
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looks only for /Tf and adds it if needed. We might want to instead merge /DR with resources and
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then remove anything that's unreferenced. We have all the code required for that in ResourceFinder
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except TfFinder also gets the font size, which ResourceFinder doesn't do.
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* There are things we are missing because we don't look at font metrics. The code from TextBuilder
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(work) has almost everything in it that is required. Once we have knowledge of character widths,
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we can support quadding and multiline text fields (/Ff 4096), and we can potentially squeeze text
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to fit into a field. For multiline, first squeeze vertically down to the font height, then squeeze
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horizontally with Tz. For single line, squeeze horizontally with Tz. If we use Tz, issue a
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warning.
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* When mapping characters to widths, we will need to care about character encoding. For built-in
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fonts, we can create a map from Unicode code point to width and then go from the font's encoding
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to unicode to the width. See misc/character-encoding/ (not on github)
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and font metric information for the 14 standard fonts in my local pdf-spec directory.
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* Once we know about character widths, we can correctly support auto-sized variable text fields
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(0 Tf). If this is fixed, search for "auto-sized" in cli.rst.
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Fuzz Errors
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===========
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* https://bugs.chromium.org/p/oss-fuzz/issues/detail?id=<N>
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* See also [discussion](https://github.com/qpdf/qpdf-dev/discussions/6).
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External Libraries
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==================
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Current state (10.0.2):
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* qpdf/external-libs repository builds external-libs on a schedule. It detects and downloads the
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latest versions of zlib, jpeg, and openssl and creates source and binary distribution zip files in
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an artifact called "distribution".
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* Releases in qpdf/external-libs are made manually. They contain qpdf-external-libs-{bin,src}.zip.
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* The qpdf build finds the latest non-prerelease release and downloads the qpdf-external-libs-*.zip
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files from the releases in the setup stage.
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* To upgrade to a new version of external-libs, create a new release of qpdf/external-libs (see
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README-maintainer in external-libs) from the distribution artifact of the most recent successful
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build after ensuring that it works.
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Desired state:
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* The qpdf/external-libs repository should create release candidates. Ideally, every scheduled run
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would make its zip files available. A personal access token with actions:read scope for the
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qpdf/external-libs repository is required to download the artifact from an action run, and
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qpdf/qpdf's secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN doesn't have this access. We could create a service account for
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this purpose. As an alternative, we could have a draft release in qpdf/external-libs that the
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qpdf/external-libs build could update with each candidate. It may also be possible to solve this
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by developing a simple GitHub app.
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* Scheduled runs of the qpdf build in the qpdf/qpdf repository (not a fork or pull request) could
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download external-libs from the release candidate area instead of the latest stable release.
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Pushes to the build branch should still use the latest release so it always matches the main
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branch.
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* Periodically, we would create a release of external-libs from the release candidate zip files.
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This could be done safely because we know the latest qpdf works with it. This could be done at
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least before every release of qpdf, but potentially it could be done at other times, such as when
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a new dependency version is available or after some period of time.
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Other notes:
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* The external-libs branch in qpdf/qpdf was never documented. We might be able to get away with
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deleting it.
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* See README-maintainer in qpdf/external-libs for information on creating a release. This could be
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at least partially scripted in a way that works for the qpdf/qpdf repository as well since they
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are very similar.
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ABI Changes
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===========
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This is a list of changes to make next time there is an ABI change. Comments appear in the code
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prefixed by "ABI".
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Always:
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* Search for ABI in source and header files
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* Search for "[[deprecated" to find deprecated APIs that can be removed
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* Search for issues, pull requests, and discussions with the "abi" label
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* Check discussion "qpdf X planning" where X is the next major version. This should be tagged `abi`
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For qpdf 12, see https://github.com/qpdf/qpdf/discussions/785
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C++ Version Changes
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===================
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Use
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```
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// C++NN: ...
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```
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to mark places in the code that should be updated when we require at least that version of C++.
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Page splitting/merging
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======================
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* Update page splitting and merging to handle document-level constructs with page impact such as
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interactive forms and article threading. Check keys in the document catalog for others, such as
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outlines, page labels, thumbnails, and zones. For threads, Subramanyam provided a test file; see
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../misc/article-threads.pdf. Email Q-Count: 431864 from 2009-11-03.
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* bookmarks (outlines) 12.3.3
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* support bookmarks when merging
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* prune bookmarks that don't point to a surviving page when merging or splitting
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* make sure conflicting named destinations work possibly test by including the same file by two
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paths in a merge
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* see also comments in issue 343
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Note: original implementation of bookmark preservation for split pages caused a very high
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performance hit. The problem was introduced in 313ba081265f69ac9a0324f9fe87087c72918191 and
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reverted in the commit that adds this paragraph. The revert includes marking a few tests cases as
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$td->EXPECT_FAILURE. When properly coded, the test cases will need to be adjusted to only include
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the parts of the outlines that are actually copied. The tests in question are
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"split page with outlines". When implementing properly, ensure that the performance is not
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adversely affected by timing split-pages on a large file with complex outlines such as the PDF
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specification.
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When pruning outlines, keep all outlines in the hierarchy that are above an outline for a page we
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care about. If one of the ancestor outlines points to a non-existent page, clear its dest. If an
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outline does not have any children that point to pages in the document, just omit it.
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Possible strategy:
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* resolve all named destinations to explicit destinations
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* concatenate top-level outlines
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* prune outlines whose dests don't point to a valid page
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* recompute all /Count fields
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Test files
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* page-labels-and-outlines.pdf: old file with both page labels and outlines. All destinations are
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explicit destinations. Each page has Potato and a number. All titles are feline names.
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* outlines-with-actions.pdf: mixture of explicit destinations, named destinations, goto actions
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with explicit destinations, and goto actions with named destinations; uses /Dests key in names
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dictionary. Each page has Salad and a number. All titles are silly words. One destination is an
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indirect object.
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* outlines-with-old-root-dests.pdf: like outlines-with-actions except it uses the PDF-1.1 /Dests
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dictionary for named destinations, and each page has Soup and a number. Also pages are numbered
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with upper-case Roman numerals starting with 0. All titles are silly words preceded by a bullet.
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If outline handling is significantly improved, see ../misc/bad-outlines/bad-outlines.pdf and
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email:
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https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#search/rfc822msgid%3A02aa01d3d013%249f766990%24de633cb0%24%40mono.hr)
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* Form fields: should be similar to outlines.
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Analytics
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=========
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Consider features that make it easier to detect certain patterns in PDF files. The information below
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could be computed using an external program that reads the existing json, but if it's useful enough,
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we could add it directly to the json output.
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* Add to "pages" in the json:
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* "inheritsresources": bool; whether there are any inherited attributes from ancestor page tree
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nodes
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* "sharedresources": a list of indirect objects that are
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"/Resources" dictionaries or "XObject" resource dictionary subkeys of either the page itself or
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of any form XObject referenced by the page.
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* Add to "objectinfo" in json: "directpagerefcount": the number of pages that directly reference
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this object (i.e., you can find an indirect reference to the object in the page dictionary without
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traversing over any indirect objects)
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General
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=======
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NOTE: Some items in this list refer to files in my personal home directory or that are otherwise not
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publicly accessible. This includes things sent to me by email that are specifically not public. Even
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so, I find it useful to make reference to them in this list.
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* Provide support in QPDFWriter for writing incremental updates. Provide support in qpdf for
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preserving incremental updates. The goal should be that QDF mode should be fully functional for
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files with incremental updates including fix_qdf. This will work best if original object IDs are
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preserved when a file is written. We will also have to preserve generations, which are, I believe,
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completely ignored by QPDFWriter. If an update adds an object with a higher generation, any
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reference to the object with a lower generation resolves to the null object. Increasing the
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generation represents reusing an object number, while keeping the generation the same is updating
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an object. I think qpdf must handle generations correctly, but make sure to test this carefully.
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Note that there's nothing that says an indirect object in one update can't refer to an object that
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doesn't appear until a later update. This means that qpdf has to hang onto indirect nulls,
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including when they appear as dictionary values. In this case, QPDF_Dictionary::getKeys() ignores
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all keys with null values, and hasKey() returns false for keys that have null values. QPDF_Dictionary
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already handles the special case of keys that are indirect nulls, which is used to reserve foreign
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objects, including foreign pages which may or may not be copied. We also have to make
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sure that the testing for this handles non-trivial cases of the targets of indirect nulls being
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replaced by real objects in an update. Such indirect nulls should appear in tests as dictionary
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values and as array values. In the distant past, qpdf used to replace indirect nulls with direct
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nulls, but I think there are no longer any remnants of that behavior.
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I'm not sure how this plays with linearization, if at all. For cases where incremental updates are
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not being preserved as incremental updates and where the data is being folded in (as is always the
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case with qpdf now), none of this should make any difference in the actual semantics of the files.
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One thought about how to implement this would be to have a QPDF object that is an incremental
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update to an underlying QPDF object. Objects would be resolved from the underlying QPDF if not
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found in the main one. When you write this type of QPDF, it can either flatten or it can write as
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incremental updates. Perhaps, in incremental mode, QPDF reads each increment as a separate QPDF
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with this kind of layering.
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* Consider enabling code scanning on GitHub.
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* Add an option --ignore-encryption to ignore encryption information and treat encrypted files as if
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they weren't encrypted. This should make it possible to solve #598 (--show-encryption without a
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password). We'll need to make sure we don't try to filter any streams in this mode. Ideally we
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should be able to combine this with --json so we can look at the raw encrypted strings and streams
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if we want to, though be sure to document that the resulting JSON won't be convertible back to a
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valid PDF. Since providing the password may reveal additional details, --show-encryption could
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potentially retry with this option if the first time doesn't work. Then, with the file open, we
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can read the encryption dictionary normally. If this is done, search for "raw, encrypted" in
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json.rst.
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* In libtests, separate executables that need the object library from those that strictly use public
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API. Move as many of the test drivers from the qpdf directory into the latter category as long as
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doing so isn't too troublesome from a coverage standpoint.
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* Refactor pages tree. See [discussion](https://github.com/qpdf/qpdf-dev/discussions/10).
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* Consider generating a non-flat pages tree before creating output to better handle files with lots
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of pages. If there are more than 256 pages, add a second layer with the second layer nodes having
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no more than 256 nodes and being as evenly sizes as possible. Don't worry about the case of more
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than 65,536 pages. If the top node has more than 256 children, we'll live with it. This is only
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safe if all intermediate page nodes have only /Kids, /Parent, /Type, and /Count.
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* Look at https://bestpractices.coreinfrastructure.org/en
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* Rework tests so that nothing is written into the source directory. Ideally then the entire build
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could be done with a read-only source tree.
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* Large file tests fail with linux32 before and after cmake. This was first noticed after 10.6.3. I
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don't think it's worth fixing.
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* Consider updating the fuzzer with code that exercises copyAnnotations, file attachments, and name
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and number trees. Check fuzzer coverage.
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* Add code for creation of a file attachment annotation. It should also be possible to create a
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widget annotation and a form field. Update the pdf-attach-file.cc example with new APIs when
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ready.
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* Flattening of form XObjects seems like something that would be useful in the library. We are
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seeing more cases of completely valid PDF files with form XObjects that cause problems in other
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software. Flattening of form XObjects could be a useful way to work around those issues or to
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prepare files for additional processing, making it possible for users of the qpdf library to not
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be concerned about form XObjects. This could be done recursively; i.e., we could have a method to
|
|
embed a form XObject into whatever contains it, whether that is a form XObject or a page. This
|
|
would require more significant interpretation of the content stream. We would need a test file in
|
|
which the placement of the form XObject has to be in the right place, e.g., the form XObject
|
|
partially obscures earlier code and is partially obscured by later code. Keys in the resource
|
|
dictionary may need to be changed -- create test cases with lots of duplicated/overlapping keys.
|
|
|
|
* Part of closed_file_input_source.cc is disabled on Windows because of odd failures. It might be
|
|
worth investigating so we can fully exercise this in the test suite. That said,
|
|
ClosedFileInputSource is exercised elsewhere in qpdf's test suite, so this is not that pressing.
|
|
|
|
* If possible, consider adding CCITT3, CCITT4, or any other easy filters. For some reference code
|
|
that we probably can't use but may be handy anyway, see
|
|
http://partners.adobe.com/public/developer/ps/sdk/index_archive.html
|
|
|
|
* If possible, support the following types of broken files:
|
|
|
|
- Files that have no whitespace token after "endobj" such that endobj collides with the start of
|
|
the next object
|
|
|
|
- See ../misc/broken-files
|
|
|
|
- See ../misc/bad-files-issue-476. This directory contains a snapshot of the google doc and linked
|
|
PDF files from issue #476. Please see the issue for details.
|
|
|
|
* Additional form features
|
|
* set value from CLI? Specify title, and provide way to disambiguate, probably by giving objgen of
|
|
field
|
|
|
|
* Pl_TIFFPredictor is pretty slow.
|
|
|
|
* Support for handling file names with Unicode characters in Windows is incomplete. qpdf seems to
|
|
support them okay from a functionality standpoint, and the right thing happens if you pass in
|
|
UTF-8 encoded filenames to qpdf library routines in Windows (they are converted internally to
|
|
wchar_t*), but file names are encoded in UTF-8 on output, which doesn't produce nice error
|
|
messages or output on Windows in some cases.
|
|
|
|
* If we ever wanted to do anything more with character encoding, see ../misc/character-encoding/,
|
|
which includes machine-readable dump of table D.2 in the ISO-32000 PDF spec. This shows the
|
|
mapping between Unicode, StandardEncoding, WinAnsiEncoding, MacRomanEncoding, and PDFDocEncoding.
|
|
|
|
* Some test cases on bad files fail because qpdf is unable to find the root dictionary when it fails
|
|
to read the trailer. Recovery could find the root dictionary and even the info dictionary in other
|
|
ways. In particular, issue-202.pdf can be opened by evince, and there's no real reason that qpdf
|
|
couldn't be made to be able to recover that file as well.
|
|
|
|
* Audit every place where qpdf allocates memory to see whether there are cases where malicious
|
|
inputs could cause qpdf to attempt to grab very large amounts of memory. Certainly there are cases
|
|
like this, such as if a very highly compressed, very large image stream is requested in a buffer.
|
|
Hopefully normal input to output filtering doesn't ever try to do this. QPDFWriter should be
|
|
checked carefully too. See also bugs/private/from-email-663916/
|
|
|
|
* Interactive form modification:
|
|
https://github.com/qpdf/qpdf/issues/213 contains a good discussion of some ideas for adding
|
|
methods to modify annotations and form fields if we want to make it easier to support
|
|
modifications to interactive forms. Some of the ideas have been implemented, and some of the
|
|
probably never will be implemented, but it's worth a read if there is an intention to work on
|
|
this. In the issue, search for "Regarding write functionality", and read that comment and the
|
|
responses to it.
|
|
|
|
* Look at ~/Q/pdf-collection/forms-from-appian/
|
|
|
|
* When decrypting files with /R=6, hash_V5 is called more than once with the same inputs. Caching
|
|
the results or refactoring to reduce the number of identical calls could improve performance for
|
|
workloads that involve processing large numbers of small files.
|
|
|
|
* Consider adding a method to balance the pages tree. It would call pushInheritedAttributesToPage,
|
|
construct a pages tree from scratch, and replace the /Pages key of the root dictionary with the
|
|
new tree.
|
|
|
|
* Study what's required to support savable forms that can be saved by Adobe Reader. Does this
|
|
require actually signing the document with an Adobe private key? Search for "Digital signatures"
|
|
in the PDF spec, and look at ~/Q/pdf-collection/form-with-full-save.pdf, which came from Adobe's
|
|
example site. See also ../misc/digital-sign-from-trueroad/ and
|
|
../misc/digital-signatures/digitally-signed-pdf-xfa.pdf. If digital signatures are implemented,
|
|
update the docs on crypto providers, which mention that this may happen in the future.
|
|
|
|
* Qpdf does not honor /EFF when adding new file attachments. When it encrypts, it never generates
|
|
streams with explicit crypt filters. Prior to 10.2, there was an incorrect attempt to treat /EFF
|
|
as a default value for decrypting file attachment streams, but it is not supposed to mean that.
|
|
Instead, it is intended for conforming writers to obey this when adding new attachments. Qpdf is
|
|
not a conforming writer in that respect.
|
|
|
|
* The whole xref handling code in the QPDF object allows the same object with more than one
|
|
generation to coexist, but a lot of logic assumes this isn't the case. Anything that creates
|
|
mappings only with the object number and not the generation is this way, including most of the
|
|
interaction between QPDFWriter and QPDF. If we wanted to allow the same object with more than one
|
|
generation to coexist, which I'm not sure is allowed, we could fix this by changing xref_table.
|
|
Alternatively, we could detect and disallow that case. In fact, it appears that Adobe reader and
|
|
other PDF viewing software silently ignores objects of this type, so this is probably not a big
|
|
deal.
|
|
|
|
* From a suggestion in bug 3152169, consider having an option to re-encode inline images with an
|
|
ASCII encoding.
|
|
|
|
* From github issue 2, provide more in-depth output for examining hint stream contents. Consider
|
|
adding on option to provide a human-readable dump of linearization hint tables. This should
|
|
include improving the 'overflow reading bit stream' message as reported in issue #2. There are
|
|
multiple calls to stopOnError in the linearization checking code. Ideally, these should not
|
|
terminate checking. It would require re-acquiring an understanding of all that code to make the
|
|
checks more robust. In particular, it's hard to look at the code and quickly determine what is a
|
|
true logic error and what could happen because of malformed user input. See also
|
|
../misc/linearization-errors.
|
|
|
|
* If I ever decide to make appearance stream-generation aware of fonts or font metrics, see email
|
|
from Tobias with Message-ID
|
|
<5C3C9C6C.8000102@thax.hardliners.org> dated 2019-01-14.
|
|
|
|
* Look at places in the code where object traversal is being done and, where possible, try to avoid
|
|
it entirely or at least avoid ever traversing the same objects multiple times.
|
|
|
|
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
### HISTORICAL NOTES
|
|
|
|
* [Performance](#performance)
|
|
* [QPDFPagesTree](#qpdfpagestree)
|
|
* [Rejected Ideas](#rejected-ideas)
|
|
|
|
Performance
|
|
===========
|
|
|
|
As described in https://github.com/qpdf/qpdf/issues/401, there was great performance degradation
|
|
between qpdf 7.1.1 and 9.1.1. Doing a bisect between dac65a21fb4fa5f871e31c314280b75adde89a6c and
|
|
release-qpdf-7.1.1, I found several commits that damaged performance. I fixed some of them to
|
|
improve performance by about 70% (as measured by saying that old times were 170% of new times). The
|
|
remaining commits that broke performance either can't be correct because they would re-introduce an
|
|
old bug or aren't worth correcting because of the high value they offer relative to a relatively low
|
|
penalty. For historical reference, here are the commits. The numbers are the time in seconds on the
|
|
machine I happened to be using of splitting the first 100 pages of PDF32000_2008.pdf 20 times and
|
|
taking an average duration.
|
|
|
|
Commits that broke performance:
|
|
|
|
* d0e99f195a987c483bbb6c5449cf39bee34e08a1 -- object description and context: 0.39 -> 0.45
|
|
* a01359189b32c60c2d55b039f7aefd6c3ce0ebde (minus 313ba08) -- fix dangling references: 0.55 -> 0.6
|
|
* e5f504b6c5dc34337cc0b316b4a7b1fca7e614b1 -- sparse array: 0.6 -> 0.62
|
|
|
|
Other intermediate steps that were previously fixed:
|
|
|
|
* 313ba081265f69ac9a0324f9fe87087c72918191 -- copy outlines into split: 0.55 -> 4.0
|
|
* a01359189b32c60c2d55b039f7aefd6c3ce0ebde -- fix dangling references:
|
|
4.0 -> 9.0
|
|
|
|
This commit fixed the awful problem introduced in 313ba081:
|
|
|
|
* a5a016cdd26a8e5c99e5f019bc30d1bdf6c050a2 -- revert outline preservation: 9.0 -> 0.6
|
|
|
|
Note that the fix dangling references commit had a much worse impact prior to removing the outline
|
|
preservation, so I also measured its impact in isolation.
|
|
|
|
A few important lessons (in README-maintainer)
|
|
|
|
* Indirection through PointerHolder<Members> is expensive, and should not be used for things that
|
|
are created and destroyed frequently such as QPDFObjectHandle and QPDFObject.
|
|
* Traversal of objects is expensive and should be avoided where possible.
|
|
|
|
Also, it turns out that PointerHolder is more performant than std::shared_ptr. (This was true at the
|
|
time but subsequent implementations of std::shared_ptr became much more efficient.)
|
|
|
|
QPDFPagesTree
|
|
=============
|
|
|
|
See also [discussion](https://github.com/qpdf/qpdf-dev/discussions/10).
|
|
|
|
On a few occasions, I have considered implementing a QPDFPagesTree object that would allow the
|
|
document's original page tree structure to be preserved. See comments at the top QPDF_pages.cc for
|
|
why this was abandoned.
|
|
|
|
Partial work is in refs/attic/QPDFPagesTree. QPDFPageTree is mostly implemented and mostly tested.
|
|
There are not enough cases of different kinds of operations (pclm, linearize, json, etc.) with
|
|
non-flat pages trees. Insertion is not implemented. Insertion is potentially complex because of the
|
|
issue of inherited objects. We will have to call pushInheritedAttributesToPage before adding any
|
|
pages to the pages tree. The test suite is failing on that branch.
|
|
|
|
Some parts of page tree repair are silent (no warnings). All page tree repair should warn. The
|
|
reason is that page tree repair will change object numbers, and knowing that is important when
|
|
working with JSON output.
|
|
|
|
If we were to do this, we would still need keep a pages cache for efficient insertion. There's no
|
|
reason we can't keep a vector of page objects up to date and just do a traversal the first time we
|
|
do getAllPages just like we do now. The difference is that we would not flatten the pages tree. It
|
|
would be useful to go through QPDF_pages and reimplement everything without calling
|
|
flattenPagesTree. Then we can remove flattenPagesTree, which is private. That said, with the
|
|
addition of creating non-flat pages trees, there is really no reason not to flatten the pages tree
|
|
for internal use.
|
|
|
|
In its current state, QPDFPagesTree does not proactively fix /Type or correct page objects that are
|
|
used multiple times. You have to traverse the pages tree to trigger this operation. It would be nice
|
|
if we would do that somewhere but not do it more often than necessary so isPagesObject and
|
|
isPageObject are reliable and can be made more reliable. Maybe add a validate or repair function? It
|
|
should also make sure /Count and /Parent are correct.
|
|
|
|
Rejected Ideas
|
|
==============
|
|
|
|
* Investigate whether there is a way to automate the memory checker tests for Windows.
|
|
|
|
* The second xref stream for linearized files has to be padded only because we need file_size as
|
|
computed in pass 1 to be accurate. If we were not allowing writing to a pipe, we could seek back
|
|
to the beginning and fill in the value of /L in the linearization dictionary as an optimization to
|
|
alleviate the need for this padding. Doing so would require us to pad the /L value individually
|
|
and also to save the file descriptor and determine whether it's seekable. This is probably not
|
|
worth bothering with.
|
|
|
|
* Based on an idea suggested by user "Atom Smasher", consider providing some mechanism to recover
|
|
earlier versions of a file embedded prior to appended sections.
|
|
|
|
* Consider creating a sanitizer to make it easier for people to send broken files. Now that we have
|
|
json mode, this is probably no longer worth doing. Here is the previous idea, possibly implemented
|
|
by making it possible to run the lexer (tokenizer) over a whole file. Make it possible to replace
|
|
all strings in a file lexically even on badly broken files. Ideally this should work files that
|
|
are lacking xref, have broken links, duplicated dictionary keys, syntax errors, etc., and ideally
|
|
it should work with encrypted files if possible. This should go through the streams and strings
|
|
and replace them with fixed or random characters, preferably, but not necessarily, in a manner
|
|
that works with fonts. One possibility would be to detect whether a string contains characters
|
|
with normal encoding, and if so, use 0x41. If the string uses character maps, use 0x01. The output
|
|
should otherwise be unrelated to the input. This could be built after the filtering and tokenizer
|
|
rewrite and should be done in a manner that takes advantage of the other lexical features. This
|
|
sanitizer should also clear metadata and replace images. If I ever do this, the file from issue
|
|
#494 would be a great one to look at.
|
|
|
|
* Here are some notes about having stream data providers modify stream dictionaries. I had wanted to
|
|
add this functionality to make it more efficient to create stream data providers that may
|
|
dynamically decide what kind of filters to use and that may end up modifying the dictionary
|
|
conditionally depending on the original stream data. Ultimately I decided not to implement this
|
|
feature. This paragraph describes why.
|
|
|
|
* When writing, the way objects are placed into the queue for writing strongly precludes creation
|
|
of any new indirect objects, or even changing which indirect objects are referenced from which
|
|
other objects, because we sometimes write as we are traversing and enqueuing objects. For
|
|
non-linearized files, there is a risk that an indirect object that used to be referenced would
|
|
no longer be referenced, and whether it was already written to the output file would be based on
|
|
an accident of where it was encountered when traversing the object structure. For linearized
|
|
files, the situation is considerably worse. We decide which section of the file to write an
|
|
object to based on a mapping of which objects are used by which other objects. Changing this
|
|
mapping could cause an object to appear in the wrong section, to be written even though it is
|
|
unreferenced, or to be entirely omitted since, during linearization, we don't enqueue new
|
|
objects as we traverse for writing.
|
|
|
|
* There are several places in QPDFWriter that query a stream's dictionary in order to prepare for
|
|
writing or to make decisions about certain aspects of the writing process. If the stream data
|
|
provider has the chance to modify the dictionary, every piece of code that gets stream data
|
|
would have to be aware of this. This would potentially include end user code. For example, any
|
|
code that called getDict() on a stream before installing a stream data provider and expected
|
|
that dictionary to be valid would potentially be broken. As implemented right now, you must
|
|
perform any modifications on the dictionary in advance and provided /Filter and /DecodeParms at
|
|
the time you installed the stream data provider. This means that some computations would have to
|
|
be done more than once, but for linearized files, stream data providers are already called more
|
|
than once. If the work done by a stream data provider is especially expensive, it can implement
|
|
its own cache.
|
|
|
|
The example examples/pdf-custom-filter.cc demonstrates the use of custom stream filters. This
|
|
includes a custom pipeline, a custom stream filter, as well as modification of a stream's
|
|
dictionary to include creation of a new stream that is referenced from /DecodeParms.
|
|
|
|
* Removal of raw QPDF* from the API. Discussions in #747 and #754. This is a summary of the
|
|
arguments I put forth in #754. The idea was to make QPDF::QPDF() private and require all QPDF
|
|
objects to be shared pointers created with QPDF::create(). This would enable us to have
|
|
QPDFObjectHandle::getOwningQPDF() return a std::weak_ptr<QPDF>. Prior to #726 (
|
|
QPDFObject/QPDFValue split, released in qpdf 11.0.0), getOwningQPDF() could return an invalid
|
|
pointer if the owning QPDF disappeared, but this is no longer the case, which removes the main
|
|
motivation. qpdf 11 added QPDF::create() anyway though.
|
|
|
|
Removing raw QPDF* would look something like this. Note that you can't use std::make_shared<T>
|
|
unless T has a public constructor.
|
|
|
|
QPDF_POINTER_TRANSITION = 0 -- no warnings around calling the QPDF constructor
|
|
QPDF_POINTER_TRANSITION = 1 -- calls to QPDF() are deprecated, but QPDF is still available so code
|
|
can be backward compatible and use std::make_shared<QPDF>
|
|
QPDF_POINTER_TRANSITION = 2 -- the QPDF constructor is private; all calls to
|
|
std::make_shared<QPDF> have to be replaced with QPDF::create
|
|
|
|
If we were to do this, we'd have to look at each use of QPDF* in the interface and decide whether
|
|
to use a std::shared_ptr or a std::weak_ptr. The answer would almost always be to use a std::
|
|
weak_ptr, which means we'd have to take the extra step of calling lock(), and it means there would
|
|
be lots of code changes cause people would have to pass weak pointers instead of raw pointers
|
|
around, and those have to be constructed and locked. Passing std::shared_ptr around leaves the
|
|
possibility of creating circular references. It seems to be too much trouble in the library and
|
|
too much toil for library users to be worth the small benefit of not having to call resetObjGen in
|
|
QPDF's destructor.
|
|
|
|
* Fix Multiple Direct Object Parent Issue
|
|
|
|
This idea was rejected because it would be complicated to implement and would likely have a high
|
|
performance cost to fix what is not really that big of a problem in practice.
|
|
|
|
It is possible for a QPDFObjectHandle for a direct object to be contained inside of multiple
|
|
QPDFObjectHandle objects or even replicated across multiple QPDF objects. This creates a
|
|
potentially confusing and unintentional aliasing of direct objects. There are known cases in the
|
|
qpdf library where this happens including page splitting and merging (particularly with page
|
|
labels, and possibly with other cases), and also with unsafeShallowCopy. Disallowing this would
|
|
incur a significant performance penalty and is probably not worth doing. If we were to do it, here
|
|
are some ideas.
|
|
|
|
* Add std::weak_ptr<QPDFObject> parent to QPDFObject. When adding a direct object to an array or
|
|
dictionary, set its parent. When removing it, clear the parent pointer. The parent pointer would
|
|
always be null for indirect objects, so the parent pointer, which would reside in QPDFObject,
|
|
would have to be managed by QPDFObjectHandle. This is because QPDFObject can't tell the
|
|
difference between a resolved indirect object and a direct object.
|
|
|
|
* Phase 1: When a direct object that already has a parent is added to a dictionary or array, issue
|
|
a warning. There would need to be unsafe add methods used by unsafeShallowCopy. These would add
|
|
but not modify the parent pointer.
|
|
|
|
* Phase 2: In the next major release, make the multiple parent case an error. Require people to
|
|
create a copy. The unsafe operations would still have to be permitted.
|
|
|
|
This approach would allow an object to be moved from one object to another by removing it, which
|
|
returns the now orphaned object, and then inserting it somewhere else. It also doesn't break the
|
|
pattern of adding a direct object to something and subsequently mutating it. It just prevents the
|
|
same object from being added to more than one thing.
|