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ReStructuredText
1192 lines
55 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _design:
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Design and Library Notes
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========================
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.. _design.intro:
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Introduction
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------------
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This section was written prior to the implementation of the qpdf
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library and was subsequently modified to reflect the implementation.
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In some cases, for purposes of explanation, it may differ slightly
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from the actual implementation. As always, the source code and test
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suite are authoritative. Even if there are some errors, this document
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should serve as a road map to understanding how this code works.
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In general, one should adhere strictly to a specification when writing
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but be liberal in reading. This way, the product of our software will
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be accepted by the widest range of other programs, and we will accept
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the widest range of input files. This library attempts to conform to
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that philosophy whenever possible but also aims to provide strict
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checking for people who want to validate PDF files. If you don't want
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to see warnings and are trying to write something that is tolerant,
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you can call ``setSuppressWarnings(true)``. If you want to fail on the
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first error, you can call ``setAttemptRecovery(false)``. The default
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behavior is to generating warnings for recoverable problems. Note that
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recovery will not always produce the desired results even if it is
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able to get through the file. Unlike most other PDF files that produce
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generic warnings such as "This file is damaged," qpdf generally issues
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a detailed error message that would be most useful to a PDF developer.
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This is by design as there seems to be a shortage of PDF validation
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tools out there. This was, in fact, one of the major motivations
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behind the initial creation of qpdf. That said, qpdf is not a strict
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PDF checker. There are many ways in which a PDF file can be out of
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conformance to the spec that qpdf doesn't notice or report.
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.. _design-goals:
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Design Goals
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------------
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The qpdf library includes support for reading and rewriting PDF files.
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It aims to hide from the user details involving object locations,
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modified (appended) PDF files, use of object streams, and stream
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filters including encryption. It does not aim to hide knowledge of the
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object hierarchy or content stream contents. Put another way, a user
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of the qpdf library is expected to have knowledge about how PDF files
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work, but is not expected to have to keep track of bookkeeping details
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such as file positions.
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When accessing objects, a user of the library never has to care
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whether an object is direct or indirect as all access to objects deals
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with this transparently. All memory management details are also
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handled by the library. When modifying objects, it is possible to
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determine whether an object is indirect and to make copies of the
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object if needed.
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Memory is managed mostly with ``std::shared_ptr`` object to minimize
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explicit memory handling. This library also makes use of a technique
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for giving fine-grained access to methods in one class to other
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classes by using public subclasses with friends and only private
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members that in turn call private methods of the containing class. See
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``QPDFObjectHandle::Factory`` as an example.
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The top-level qpdf class is ``QPDF``. A ``QPDF`` object represents a PDF
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file. The library provides methods for both accessing and mutating PDF
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files.
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The primary class for interacting with PDF objects is
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``QPDFObjectHandle``. Instances of this class can be passed around by
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value, copied, stored in containers, etc. with very low overhead. The
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``QPDFObjectHandle`` object contains an internal shared pointer to the
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underlying object. Instances of ``QPDFObjectHandle`` created by
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reading from a file will always contain a reference back to the
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``QPDF`` object from which they were created. A ``QPDFObjectHandle``
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may be direct or indirect. If indirect, object is initially
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*unresolved*. In this case, the first attempt to access the underlying
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object will result in the object being resolved via a call to the
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referenced ``QPDF`` instance. This makes it essentially impossible to
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make coding errors in which certain things will work for some PDF
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files and not for others based on which objects are direct and which
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objects are indirect. In cases where it is necessary to know whether
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an object is indirect or not, this information can be obtained from
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the ``QPDFObjectHandle``. It is also possible to convert direct
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objects to indirect objects and vice versa.
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Instances of ``QPDFObjectHandle`` can be directly created and modified
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using static factory methods in the ``QPDFObjectHandle`` class. There
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are factory methods for each type of object as well as a convenience
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method ``QPDFObjectHandle::parse`` that creates an object from a
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string representation of the object. The ``_qpdf`` user-defined string
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literal is also available, making it possible to create instances of
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``QPDFObjectHandle`` with ``"(pdf-syntax)"_qpdf``. Existing instances
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of ``QPDFObjectHandle`` can also be modified in several ways. See
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comments in :file:`QPDFObjectHandle.hh` for details.
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An instance of ``QPDF`` is constructed by using the class's default
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constructor or with ``QPDF::create()``. If desired, the ``QPDF``
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object may be configured with various methods that change its default
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behavior. Then the ``QPDF::processFile`` method is passed the name of
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a PDF file, which permanently associates the file with that ``QPDF``
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object. A password may also be given for access to password-protected
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files. ``QPDF`` does not enforce encryption parameters and will treat
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user and owner passwords equivalently. Either password may be used to
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access an encrypted file. ``QPDF`` will allow recovery of a user
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password given an owner password. The input PDF file must be seekable.
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Output files written by ``QPDFWriter`` need not be seekable, even when
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creating linearized files. During construction, ``QPDF`` validates the
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PDF file's header, and then reads the cross reference tables and
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trailer dictionaries. The ``QPDF`` class keeps only the first trailer
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dictionary though it does read all of them so it can check the
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``/Prev`` key. ``QPDF`` class users may request the root object and
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the trailer dictionary specifically. The cross reference table is kept
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private. Objects may then be requested by number or by walking the
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object tree.
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When a PDF file has a cross-reference stream instead of a
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cross-reference table and trailer, requesting the document's trailer
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dictionary returns the stream dictionary from the cross-reference stream
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instead.
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There are some convenience routines for very common operations such as
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walking the page tree and returning a vector of all page objects. For
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full details, please see the header files
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:file:`QPDF.hh` and
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:file:`QPDFObjectHandle.hh`. There are also some
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additional helper classes that provide higher level API functions for
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certain document constructions. These are discussed in :ref:`helper-classes`.
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.. _helper-classes:
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Helper Classes
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--------------
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QPDF version 8.1 introduced the concept of helper classes. Helper
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classes are intended to contain higher level APIs that allow developers
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to work with certain document constructs at an abstraction level above
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that of ``QPDFObjectHandle`` while staying true to qpdf's philosophy of
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not hiding document structure from the developer. As with qpdf in
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general, the goal is to take away some of the more tedious bookkeeping
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aspects of working with PDF files, not to remove the need for the
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developer to understand how the PDF construction in question works. The
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driving factor behind the creation of helper classes was to allow the
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evolution of higher level interfaces in qpdf without polluting the
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interfaces of the main top-level classes ``QPDF`` and
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``QPDFObjectHandle``.
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There are two kinds of helper classes: *document* helpers and *object*
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helpers. Document helpers are constructed with a reference to a ``QPDF``
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object and provide methods for working with structures that are at the
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document level. Object helpers are constructed with an instance of a
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``QPDFObjectHandle`` and provide methods for working with specific types
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of objects.
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Examples of document helpers include ``QPDFPageDocumentHelper``, which
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contains methods for operating on the document's page trees, such as
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enumerating all pages of a document and adding and removing pages; and
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``QPDFAcroFormDocumentHelper``, which contains document-level methods
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related to interactive forms, such as enumerating form fields and
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creating mappings between form fields and annotations.
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Examples of object helpers include ``QPDFPageObjectHelper`` for
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performing operations on pages such as page rotation and some operations
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on content streams, ``QPDFFormFieldObjectHelper`` for performing
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operations related to interactive form fields, and
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``QPDFAnnotationObjectHelper`` for working with annotations.
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It is always possible to retrieve the underlying ``QPDF`` reference from
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a document helper and the underlying ``QPDFObjectHandle`` reference from
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an object helper. Helpers are designed to be helpers, not wrappers. The
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intention is that, in general, it is safe to freely intermix operations
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that use helpers with operations that use the underlying objects.
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Document and object helpers do not attempt to provide a complete
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interface for working with the things they are helping with, nor do they
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attempt to encapsulate underlying structures. They just provide a few
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methods to help with error-prone, repetitive, or complex tasks. In some
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cases, a helper object may cache some information that is expensive to
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gather. In such cases, the helper classes are implemented so that their
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own methods keep the cache consistent, and the header file will provide
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a method to invalidate the cache and a description of what kinds of
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operations would make the cache invalid. If in doubt, you can always
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discard a helper class and create a new one with the same underlying
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objects, which will ensure that you have discarded any stale
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information.
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By Convention, document helpers are called
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``QPDFSomethingDocumentHelper`` and are derived from
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``QPDFDocumentHelper``, and object helpers are called
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``QPDFSomethingObjectHelper`` and are derived from ``QPDFObjectHelper``.
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For details on specific helpers, please see their header files. You can
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find them by looking at
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:file:`include/qpdf/QPDF*DocumentHelper.hh` and
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:file:`include/qpdf/QPDF*ObjectHelper.hh`.
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In order to avoid creation of circular dependencies, the following
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general guidelines are followed with helper classes:
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- Core class interfaces do not know about helper classes. For example,
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no methods of ``QPDF`` or ``QPDFObjectHandle`` will include helper
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classes in their interfaces.
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- Interfaces of object helpers will usually not use document helpers in
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their interfaces. This is because it is much more useful for document
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helpers to have methods that return object helpers. Most operations
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in PDF files start at the document level and go from there to the
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object level rather than the other way around. It can sometimes be
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useful to map back from object-level structures to document-level
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structures. If there is a desire to do this, it will generally be
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provided by a method in the document helper class.
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- Most of the time, object helpers don't know about other object
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helpers. However, in some cases, one type of object may be a
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container for another type of object, in which case it may make sense
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for the outer object to know about the inner object. For example,
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there are methods in the ``QPDFPageObjectHelper`` that know
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``QPDFAnnotationObjectHelper`` because references to annotations are
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contained in page dictionaries.
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- Any helper or core library class may use helpers in their
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implementations.
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Prior to qpdf version 8.1, higher level interfaces were added as
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"convenience functions" in either ``QPDF`` or ``QPDFObjectHandle``. For
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compatibility, older convenience functions for operating with pages will
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remain in those classes even as alternatives are provided in helper
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classes. Going forward, new higher level interfaces will be provided
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using helper classes.
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.. _implementation-notes:
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Implementation Notes
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--------------------
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This section contains a few notes about QPDF's internal implementation,
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particularly around what it does when it first processes a file. This
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section is a bit of a simplification of what it actually does, but it
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could serve as a starting point to someone trying to understand the
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implementation. There is nothing in this section that you need to know
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to use the qpdf library.
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In a PDF file, objects may be direct or indirect. Direct objects are
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objects whose representations appear directly in PDF syntax. Indirect
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objects are references to objects by their ID. The qpdf library uses
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the ``QPDFObjectHandle`` type to hold onto objects and to abstract
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away in most cases whether the object is direct or indirect.
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Internally, ``QPDFObjectHandle`` holds onto a shared pointer to the
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underlying object value. When a direct object is created
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programmatically by client code (rather than being read from the
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file), the ``QPDFObjectHandle`` that holds it is not associated with a
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``QPDF`` object. When an indirect object reference is created, it
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starts off in an *unresolved* state and must be associated with a
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``QPDF`` object, which is considered its *owner*. To access the actual
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value of the object, the object must be *resolved*. This happens
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automatically when the the object is accessed in any way.
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To resolve an object, qpdf checks its object cache. If not found in
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the cache, it attempts to read the object from the input source
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associated with the ``QPDF`` object. If it is not found, a ``null``
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object is returned. A ``null`` object is an object type, just like
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boolean, string, number, etc. It is not a null pointer. The PDF
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specification states that an indirect reference to an object that
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doesn't exist is to be treated as a ``null``. The resulting object,
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whether a ``null`` or the actual object that was read, is stored in
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the cache. If the object is later replaced or swapped, the underlying
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object remains the same, but its value is replaced. This way, if you
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have a ``QPDFObjectHandle`` to an indirect object and the object by
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that number is replaced (by calling ``QPDF::replaceObject`` or
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``QPDF::swapObjects``), your ``QPDFObjectHandle`` will reflect the new
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value of the object. This is consistent with what would happen to PDF
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objects if you were to replace the definition of an object in the
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file.
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When reading an object from the input source, if the requested object
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is inside of an object stream, the object stream itself is first read
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into memory. Then the tokenizer reads objects from the memory stream
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based on the offset information stored in the stream. Those individual
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objects are cached, after which the temporary buffer holding the
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object stream contents is discarded. In this way, the first time an
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object in an object stream is requested, all objects in the stream are
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cached.
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The following example should clarify how ``QPDF`` processes a simple
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file.
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- Client constructs ``QPDF`` ``pdf`` and calls
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``pdf.processFile("a.pdf");``.
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- The ``QPDF`` class checks the beginning of
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:file:`a.pdf` for a PDF header. It then reads the
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cross reference table mentioned at the end of the file, ensuring that
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it is looking before the last ``%%EOF``. After getting to ``trailer``
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keyword, it invokes the parser.
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- The parser sees ``<<``, so it changes state and starts accumulating
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the keys and values of the dictionary.
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- In dictionary creation mode, the parser keeps accumulating objects
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until it encounters ``>>``. Each object that is read is pushed onto
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a stack. If ``R`` is read, the last two objects on the stack are
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inspected. If they are integers, they are popped off the stack and
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their values are used to obtain an indirect object handle from the
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``QPDF`` class. The ``QPDF`` class consults its cache, and if
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necessary, inserts a new unresolved object, and returns an object
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handle pointing to the cache entry, which is then pushed onto the
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stack. When ``>>`` is finally read, the stack is converted into a
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``QPDF_Dictionary`` (not directly accessible through the API) which
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is placed in a ``QPDFObjectHandle`` and returned.
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- The resulting dictionary is saved as the trailer dictionary.
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- The ``/Prev`` key is searched. If present, ``QPDF`` seeks to that
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point and repeats except that the new trailer dictionary is not
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saved. If ``/Prev`` is not present, the initial parsing process is
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complete.
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- If there is an encryption dictionary, the document's encryption
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parameters are initialized.
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- The client requests the root object by getting the value of the
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``/Root`` key from trailer dictionary and returns it. It is an
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unresolved indirect ``QPDFObjectHandle``.
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- The client requests the ``/Pages`` key from root
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``QPDFObjectHandle``. The ``QPDFObjectHandle`` notices that it is an
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unresolved indirect object, so it asks ``QPDF`` to resolve it.
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``QPDF`` checks the cross reference table, gets the offset, and
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reads the object present at that offset. The object cache entry's
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``unresolved`` value is replaced by the actual value, which causes
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any previously unresolved ``QPDFObjectHandle`` objects that pointed
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there to now have a shared copy of the actual object. Modifications
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through any such ``QPDFObjectHandle`` will be reflected in all of
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them. As the client continues to request objects, the same process
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is followed for each new requested object.
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.. _object_internals:
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QPDF Object Internals
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---------------------
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The internals of ``QPDFObjectHandle`` and how qpdf stores objects were
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significantly rewritten for QPDF 11. Here are some additional details.
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Object Internals
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The ``QPDF`` object has an object cache which contains a shared
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pointer to each object that was read from the file or added as an
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indirect object. Changes can be made to any of those objects through
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``QPDFObjectHandle`` methods. Any such changes are visible to all
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``QPDFObjectHandle`` instances that point to the same object. When a
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``QPDF`` object is written by ``QPDFWriter`` or serialized to JSON,
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any changes are reflected.
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Objects in qpdf 11 and Newer
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The object cache in ``QPDF`` contains a shared pointer to
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``QPDFObject``. Any ``QPDFObjectHandle`` resolved from an indirect
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reference to that object has a copy of that shared pointer. Each
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``QPDFObject`` object contains a shared pointer to an object of type
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``QPDFValue``. The ``QPDFValue`` type is an abstract base class. There
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is an implementation for each of the basic object types (array,
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dictionary, null, boolean, string, number, etc.) as well as a few
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special ones including ``uninitialized``, ``unresolved``,
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``reserved``, and ``destroyed``. When an object is first created,
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its underlying ``QPDFValue`` has type ``unresolved``. When the object
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is first accessed, the ``QPDFObject`` in the cache has its internal
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``QPDFValue`` replaced with the object as read from the file. Since it
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is the ``QPDFObject`` object that is shared by all referencing
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``QPDFObjectHandle`` objects as well as by the owning ``QPDF`` object,
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this ensures that any future changes to the object, including
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replacing the object with a completely different one by calling
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``QPDF::replaceObject`` or ``QPDF::swapObjects``, will be
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reflected across all ``QPDFObjectHandle`` objects that reference it.
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A ``QPDFValue`` that originated from a PDF input source maintains a
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pointer to the ``QPDF`` object that read it (its *owner*). When that
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``QPDF`` object is destroyed, it disconnects all objects reachable
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from it by clearing their owner. For indirect objects (all objects in
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the object cache), it also replaces the object's value with an object
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of type ``destroyed``. This means that, if there are still any
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referencing ``QPDFObjectHandle`` objects floating around, requesting
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their owning ``QPDF`` will return a null pointer rather than a pointer
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to a ``QPDF`` object that is either invalid or points to something
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else, and any attempt to access an indirect object that is associated
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with a destroyed ``QPDF`` object will throw an exception. This
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operation also has the effect of breaking any circular references
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(which are common and, in some cases, required by the PDF
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specification), thus preventing memory leaks when ``QPDF`` objects are
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destroyed.
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Objects prior to qpdf 11
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Prior to qpdf 11, the functionality of the ``QPDFValue`` and
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``QPDFObject`` classes were contained in a single ``QPDFObject``
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class, which served the dual purpose of being the cache entry for
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``QPDF`` and being the abstract base class for all the different PDF
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object types. The behavior was nearly the same, but there were some
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problems:
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- While changes to a ``QPDFObjectHandle`` through mutation were
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visible across all referencing ``QPDFObjectHandle`` objects,
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*replacing* an object with ``QPDF::replaceObject`` or
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``QPDF::swapObjects`` would leave ``QPDF`` with no way of notifying
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``QPDFObjectHandle`` objects that pointed to the old ``QPDFObject``.
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To work around this, every attempt to access the underlying object
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that a ``QPDFObjectHandle`` pointed to had to ask the owning
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``QPDF`` whether the object had changed, and if so, it had to
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replace its internal ``QPDFObject`` pointer. This added overhead to
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every indirect object access even if no objects were ever changed.
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- When a ``QPDF`` object was destroyed, any ``QPDFObjectHandle``
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objects that referenced it would maintain a potentially invalid
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pointer as the owning ``QPDF``. In practice, this wasn't usually a
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problem since generally people would have no need to maintain copies
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of a ``QPDFObjectHandle`` from a destroyed ``QPDF`` object, but
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in cases where this was possible, it was necessary for other
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software to do its own bookkeeping to ensure that an object's owner
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was still valid.
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These problems were solved by splitting ``QPDFObject`` into
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``QPDFObject`` and ``QPDFValue``.
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.. _casting:
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Casting Policy
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--------------
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This section describes the casting policy followed by qpdf's
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implementation. This is no concern to qpdf's end users and largely of no
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concern to people writing code that uses qpdf, but it could be of
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interest to people who are porting qpdf to a new platform or who are
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making modifications to the code.
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The C++ code in qpdf is free of old-style casts except where unavoidable
|
|
(e.g. where the old-style cast is in a macro provided by a third-party
|
|
header file). When there is a need for a cast, it is handled, in order
|
|
of preference, by rewriting the code to avoid the need for a cast,
|
|
calling ``const_cast``, calling ``static_cast``, calling
|
|
``reinterpret_cast``, or calling some combination of the above. As a
|
|
last resort, a compiler-specific ``#pragma`` may be used to suppress a
|
|
warning that we don't want to fix. Examples may include suppressing
|
|
warnings about the use of old-style casts in code that is shared between
|
|
C and C++ code.
|
|
|
|
The ``QIntC`` namespace, provided by
|
|
:file:`include/qpdf/QIntC.hh`, implements safe
|
|
functions for converting between integer types. These functions do range
|
|
checking and throw a ``std::range_error``, which is subclass of
|
|
``std::runtime_error``, if conversion from one integer type to another
|
|
results in loss of information. There are many cases in which we have to
|
|
move between different integer types because of incompatible integer
|
|
types used in interoperable interfaces. Some are unavoidable, such as
|
|
moving between sizes and offsets, and others are there because of old
|
|
code that is too in entrenched to be fixable without breaking source
|
|
compatibility and causing pain for users. QPDF is compiled with extra
|
|
warnings to detect conversions with potential data loss, and all such
|
|
cases should be fixed by either using a function from ``QIntC`` or a
|
|
``static_cast``.
|
|
|
|
When the intention is just to switch the type because of exchanging data
|
|
between incompatible interfaces, use ``QIntC``. This is the usual case.
|
|
However, there are some cases in which we are explicitly intending to
|
|
use the exact same bit pattern with a different type. This is most
|
|
common when switching between signed and unsigned characters. A lot of
|
|
qpdf's code uses unsigned characters internally, but ``std::string`` and
|
|
``char`` are signed. Using ``QIntC::to_char`` would be wrong for
|
|
converting from unsigned to signed characters because a negative
|
|
``char`` value and the corresponding ``unsigned char`` value greater
|
|
than 127 *mean the same thing*. There are also
|
|
cases in which we use ``static_cast`` when working with bit fields where
|
|
we are not representing a numerical value but rather a bunch of bits
|
|
packed together in some integer type. Also note that ``size_t`` and
|
|
``long`` both typically differ between 32-bit and 64-bit environments,
|
|
so sometimes an explicit cast may not be needed to avoid warnings on one
|
|
platform but may be needed on another. A conversion with ``QIntC``
|
|
should always be used when the types are different even if the
|
|
underlying size is the same. QPDF's automatic build builds on 32-bit
|
|
and 64-bit platforms, and the test suite is very thorough, so it is
|
|
hard to make any of the potential errors here without being caught in
|
|
build or test.
|
|
|
|
.. _encryption:
|
|
|
|
Encryption
|
|
----------
|
|
|
|
Encryption is supported transparently by qpdf. When opening a PDF file,
|
|
if an encryption dictionary exists, the ``QPDF`` object processes this
|
|
dictionary using the password (if any) provided. The primary decryption
|
|
key is computed and cached. No further access is made to the encryption
|
|
dictionary after that time. When an object is read from a file, the
|
|
object ID and generation of the object in which it is contained is
|
|
always known. Using this information along with the stored encryption
|
|
key, all stream and string objects are transparently decrypted. Raw
|
|
encrypted objects are never stored in memory. This way, nothing in the
|
|
library ever has to know or care whether it is reading an encrypted
|
|
file.
|
|
|
|
An interface is also provided for writing encrypted streams and strings
|
|
given an encryption key. This is used by ``QPDFWriter`` when it rewrites
|
|
encrypted files.
|
|
|
|
When copying encrypted files, unless otherwise directed, qpdf will
|
|
preserve any encryption in effect in the original file. qpdf can do
|
|
this with either the user or the owner password. There is no
|
|
difference in capability based on which password is used. When 40 or
|
|
128 bit encryption keys are used, the user password can be recovered
|
|
with the owner password. With 256 keys, the user and owner passwords
|
|
are used independently to encrypt the actual encryption key, so while
|
|
either can be used, the owner password can no longer be used to
|
|
recover the user password.
|
|
|
|
Starting with version 4.0.0, qpdf can read files that are not encrypted
|
|
but that contain encrypted attachments, but it cannot write such files.
|
|
qpdf also requires the password to be specified in order to open the
|
|
file, not just to extract attachments, since once the file is open, all
|
|
decryption is handled transparently. When copying files like this while
|
|
preserving encryption, qpdf will apply the file's encryption to
|
|
everything in the file, not just to the attachments. When decrypting the
|
|
file, qpdf will decrypt the attachments. In general, when copying PDF
|
|
files with multiple encryption formats, qpdf will choose the newest
|
|
format. The only exception to this is that clear-text metadata will be
|
|
preserved as clear-text if it is that way in the original file.
|
|
|
|
One point of confusion some people have about encrypted PDF files is
|
|
that encryption is not the same as password protection.
|
|
Password-protected files are always encrypted, but it is also possible
|
|
to create encrypted files that do not have passwords. Internally, such
|
|
files use the empty string as a password, and most readers try the
|
|
empty string first to see if it works and prompt for a password only
|
|
if the empty string doesn't work. Normally such files have an empty
|
|
user password and a non-empty owner password. In that way, if the file
|
|
is opened by an ordinary reader without specification of password, the
|
|
restrictions specified in the encryption dictionary can be enforced.
|
|
Most users wouldn't even realize such a file was encrypted. Since qpdf
|
|
always ignores the restrictions (except for the purpose of reporting
|
|
what they are), qpdf doesn't care which password you use. QPDF will
|
|
allow you to create PDF files with non-empty user passwords and empty
|
|
owner passwords. Some readers will require a password when you open
|
|
these files, and others will open the files without a password and not
|
|
enforce restrictions. Having a non-empty user password and an empty
|
|
owner password doesn't really make sense because it would mean that
|
|
opening the file with the user password would be more restrictive than
|
|
not supplying a password at all. QPDF also allows you to create PDF
|
|
files with the same password as both the user and owner password. Some
|
|
readers will not ever allow such files to be accessed without
|
|
restrictions because they never try the password as the owner password
|
|
if it works as the user password. Nonetheless, one of the powerful
|
|
aspects of qpdf is that it allows you to finely specify the way
|
|
encrypted files are created, even if the results are not useful to
|
|
some readers. One use case for this would be for testing a PDF reader
|
|
to ensure that it handles odd configurations of input files. If you
|
|
attempt to create an encrypted file that is not secure, qpdf will warn
|
|
you and require you to explicitly state your intention to create an
|
|
insecure file. So while qpdf can create insecure files, it won't let
|
|
you do it by mistake.
|
|
|
|
.. _random-numbers:
|
|
|
|
Random Number Generation
|
|
------------------------
|
|
|
|
QPDF generates random numbers to support generation of encrypted data.
|
|
Starting in qpdf 10.0.0, qpdf uses the crypto provider as its source of
|
|
random numbers. Older versions used the OS-provided source of secure
|
|
random numbers or, if allowed at build time, insecure random numbers
|
|
from stdlib. Starting with version 5.1.0, you can disable use of
|
|
OS-provided secure random numbers at build time. This is especially
|
|
useful on Windows if you want to avoid a dependency on Microsoft's
|
|
cryptography API. You can also supply your own random data provider. For
|
|
details on how to do this, please refer to the top-level README.md file
|
|
in the source distribution and to comments in
|
|
:file:`QUtil.hh`.
|
|
|
|
.. _adding-and-remove-pages:
|
|
|
|
Adding and Removing Pages
|
|
-------------------------
|
|
|
|
While qpdf's API has supported adding and modifying objects for some
|
|
time, version 3.0 introduces specific methods for adding and removing
|
|
pages. These are largely convenience routines that handle two tricky
|
|
issues: pushing inheritable resources from the ``/Pages`` tree down to
|
|
individual pages and manipulation of the ``/Pages`` tree itself. For
|
|
details, see ``addPage`` and surrounding methods in
|
|
:file:`QPDF.hh`.
|
|
|
|
.. _reserved-objects:
|
|
|
|
Reserving Object Numbers
|
|
------------------------
|
|
|
|
Version 3.0 of qpdf introduced the concept of reserved objects. These
|
|
are seldom needed for ordinary operations, but there are cases in which
|
|
you may want to add a series of indirect objects with references to each
|
|
other to a ``QPDF`` object. This causes a problem because you can't
|
|
determine the object ID that a new indirect object will have until you
|
|
add it to the ``QPDF`` object with ``QPDF::makeIndirectObject``. The
|
|
only way to add two mutually referential objects to a ``QPDF`` object
|
|
prior to version 3.0 would be to add the new objects first and then make
|
|
them refer to each other after adding them. Now it is possible to create
|
|
a *reserved object* using
|
|
``QPDFObjectHandle::newReserved``. This is an indirect object that stays
|
|
"unresolved" even if it is queried for its type. So now, if you want to
|
|
create a set of mutually referential objects, you can create
|
|
reservations for each one of them and use those reservations to
|
|
construct the references. When finished, you can call
|
|
``QPDF::replaceReserved`` to replace the reserved objects with the real
|
|
ones. This functionality will never be needed by most applications, but
|
|
it is used internally by QPDF when copying objects from other PDF files,
|
|
as discussed in :ref:`foreign-objects`. For an example of how to use reserved
|
|
objects, search for ``newReserved`` in
|
|
:file:`test_driver.cc` in qpdf's sources.
|
|
|
|
.. _foreign-objects:
|
|
|
|
Copying Objects From Other PDF Files
|
|
------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Version 3.0 of qpdf introduced the ability to copy objects into a
|
|
``QPDF`` object from a different ``QPDF`` object, which we refer to as
|
|
*foreign objects*. This allows arbitrary merging of PDF files. The
|
|
:command:`qpdf` command-line tool provides limited support for basic
|
|
page selection, including merging in pages from other files, but the
|
|
library's API makes it possible to implement arbitrarily complex
|
|
merging operations. The main method for copying foreign objects is
|
|
``QPDF::copyForeignObject``. This takes an indirect object from
|
|
another ``QPDF`` and copies it recursively into this object while
|
|
preserving all object structure, including circular references. This
|
|
means you can add a direct object that you create from scratch to a
|
|
``QPDF`` object with ``QPDF::makeIndirectObject``, and you can add an
|
|
indirect object from another file with ``QPDF::copyForeignObject``.
|
|
The fact that ``QPDF::makeIndirectObject`` does not automatically
|
|
detect a foreign object and copy it is an explicit design decision.
|
|
Copying a foreign object seems like a sufficiently significant thing
|
|
to do that it should be done explicitly.
|
|
|
|
The other way to copy foreign objects is by passing a page from one
|
|
``QPDF`` to another by calling ``QPDF::addPage``. In contrast to
|
|
``QPDF::makeIndirectObject``, this method automatically distinguishes
|
|
between indirect objects in the current file, foreign objects, and
|
|
direct objects.
|
|
|
|
When you copy objects from one ``QPDF`` to another, the input source
|
|
of the original file must remain valid until you have finished with the
|
|
destination object. This is because the input source is still used
|
|
to retrieve any referenced stream data from the copied object. If
|
|
needed, there are methods to force the data to be copied. See comments
|
|
near the declaration of ``copyForeignObject`` in
|
|
:file:`include/qpdf/QPDF.hh` for details.
|
|
|
|
.. _rewriting:
|
|
|
|
Writing PDF Files
|
|
-----------------
|
|
|
|
The qpdf library supports file writing of ``QPDF`` objects to PDF
|
|
files through the ``QPDFWriter`` class. The ``QPDFWriter`` class has
|
|
two writing modes: one for non-linearized files, and one for
|
|
linearized files. See :ref:`linearization` for a description of
|
|
linearization is implemented. This section describes how we write
|
|
non-linearized files including the creation of QDF files (see
|
|
:ref:`qdf`).
|
|
|
|
This outline was written prior to implementation and is not exactly
|
|
accurate, but it portrays the essence of how writing works. Look at
|
|
the code in ``QPDFWriter`` for exact details.
|
|
|
|
- Initialize state:
|
|
|
|
- next object number = 1
|
|
|
|
- object queue = empty
|
|
|
|
- renumber table: old object id/generation to new id/0 = empty
|
|
|
|
- xref table: new id -> offset = empty
|
|
|
|
- Create a ``QPDF`` object from a file.
|
|
|
|
- Write header for new PDF file.
|
|
|
|
- Request the trailer dictionary.
|
|
|
|
- For each value that is an indirect object, grab the next object
|
|
number (via an operation that returns and increments the number). Map
|
|
object to new number in renumber table. Push object onto queue.
|
|
|
|
- While there are more objects on the queue:
|
|
|
|
- Pop queue.
|
|
|
|
- Look up object's new number *n* in the renumbering table.
|
|
|
|
- Store current offset into xref table.
|
|
|
|
- Write ``:samp:`{n}` 0 obj``.
|
|
|
|
- If object is null, whether direct or indirect, write out null,
|
|
thus eliminating unresolvable indirect object references.
|
|
|
|
- If the object is a stream stream, write stream contents, piped
|
|
through any filters as required, to a memory buffer. Use this
|
|
buffer to determine the stream length.
|
|
|
|
- If object is not a stream, array, or dictionary, write out its
|
|
contents.
|
|
|
|
- If object is an array or dictionary (including stream), traverse
|
|
its elements (for array) or values (for dictionaries), handling
|
|
recursive dictionaries and arrays, looking for indirect objects.
|
|
When an indirect object is found, if it is not resolvable, ignore.
|
|
(This case is handled when writing it out.) Otherwise, look it up
|
|
in the renumbering table. If not found, grab the next available
|
|
object number, assign to the referenced object in the renumbering
|
|
table, and push the referenced object onto the queue. As a special
|
|
case, when writing out a stream dictionary, replace length,
|
|
filters, and decode parameters as required.
|
|
|
|
Write out dictionary or array, replacing any unresolvable indirect
|
|
object references with null (pdf spec says reference to
|
|
non-existent object is legal and resolves to null) and any
|
|
resolvable ones with references to the renumbered objects.
|
|
|
|
- If the object is a stream, write ``stream\n``, the stream contents
|
|
(from the memory buffer), and ``\nendstream\n``.
|
|
|
|
- When done, write ``endobj``.
|
|
|
|
Once we have finished the queue, all referenced objects will have been
|
|
written out and all deleted objects or unreferenced objects will have
|
|
been skipped. The new cross-reference table will contain an offset for
|
|
every new object number from 1 up to the number of objects written. This
|
|
can be used to write out a new xref table. Finally we can write out the
|
|
trailer dictionary with appropriately computed /ID (see spec, 8.3, File
|
|
Identifiers), the cross reference table offset, and ``%%EOF``.
|
|
|
|
.. _filtered-streams:
|
|
|
|
Filtered Streams
|
|
----------------
|
|
|
|
Support for streams is implemented through the ``Pipeline`` interface
|
|
which was designed for this library.
|
|
|
|
When reading streams, create a series of ``Pipeline`` objects. The
|
|
``Pipeline`` abstract base requires implementation ``write()`` and
|
|
``finish()`` and provides an implementation of ``getNext()``. Each
|
|
pipeline object, upon receiving data, does whatever it is going to do
|
|
and then writes the data (possibly modified) to its successor.
|
|
Alternatively, a pipeline may be an end-of-the-line pipeline that does
|
|
something like store its output to a file or a memory buffer ignoring a
|
|
successor. For additional details, look at
|
|
:file:`Pipeline.hh`.
|
|
|
|
``QPDF`` can read raw or filtered streams. When reading a filtered
|
|
stream, the ``QPDF`` class creates a ``Pipeline`` object for one of each
|
|
appropriate filter object and chains them together. The last filter
|
|
should write to whatever type of output is required. The ``QPDF`` class
|
|
has an interface to write raw or filtered stream contents to a given
|
|
pipeline.
|
|
|
|
.. _object-accessors:
|
|
|
|
Object Accessor Methods
|
|
-----------------------
|
|
|
|
..
|
|
This section is referenced in QPDFObjectHandle.hh
|
|
|
|
For general information about how to access instances of
|
|
``QPDFObjectHandle``, please see the comments in
|
|
:file:`QPDFObjectHandle.hh`. Search for "Accessor
|
|
methods". This section provides a more in-depth discussion of the
|
|
behavior and the rationale for the behavior.
|
|
|
|
*Why were type errors made into warnings?* When type checks were
|
|
introduced into qpdf in the early days, it was expected that type errors
|
|
would only occur as a result of programmer error. However, in practice,
|
|
type errors would occur with malformed PDF files because of assumptions
|
|
made in code, including code within the qpdf library and code written by
|
|
library users. The most common case would be chaining calls to
|
|
``getKey()`` to access keys deep within a dictionary. In many cases,
|
|
qpdf would be able to recover from these situations, but the old
|
|
behavior often resulted in crashes rather than graceful recovery. For
|
|
this reason, the errors were changed to warnings.
|
|
|
|
*Why even warn about type errors when the user can't usually do anything
|
|
about them?* Type warnings are extremely valuable during development.
|
|
Since it's impossible to catch at compile time things like typos in
|
|
dictionary key names or logic errors around what the structure of a PDF
|
|
file might be, the presence of type warnings can save lots of developer
|
|
time. They have also proven useful in exposing issues in qpdf itself
|
|
that would have otherwise gone undetected.
|
|
|
|
*Can there be a type-safe* ``QPDFObjectHandle``? At the time of the
|
|
release of qpdf 11, there is active work being done toward the goal of
|
|
creating a way to work with PDF objects that is more type-safe and
|
|
closer in feel to the current C++ standard library. It is hoped that
|
|
this work will make it easier to write bindings to qpdf in modern
|
|
languages like `Rust <https://www.rust-lang.org/>`__. If this happens,
|
|
it will likely be by providing an alternative to ``QPDFObjectHandle``
|
|
that provides a separate path to the underlying object. Details are
|
|
still being worked out. Fundamentally, PDF objects are not strongly
|
|
typed. They are similar to ``JSON`` objects or to objects in dynamic
|
|
languages like `Python <https://python.org/>`__: there are certain
|
|
things you can only do to objects of a given type, but you can replace
|
|
an object of one type with an object of another. Because of this,
|
|
there will always be some checks that will happen at runtime.
|
|
|
|
*Why does the behavior of a type exception differ between the C and C++
|
|
API?* There is no way to throw and catch exceptions in C short of
|
|
something like ``setjmp`` and ``longjmp``, and that approach is not
|
|
portable across language barriers. Since the C API is often used from
|
|
other languages, it's important to keep things as simple as possible.
|
|
Starting in qpdf 10.5, exceptions that used to crash code using the C
|
|
API will be written to stderr by default, and it is possible to register
|
|
an error handler. There's no reason that the error handler can't
|
|
simulate exception handling in some way, such as by using ``setjmp`` and
|
|
``longjmp`` or by setting some variable that can be checked after
|
|
library calls are made. In retrospect, it might have been better if the
|
|
C API object handle methods returned error codes like the other methods
|
|
and set return values in passed-in pointers, but this would complicate
|
|
both the implementation and the use of the library for a case that is
|
|
actually quite rare and largely avoidable.
|
|
|
|
*How can I avoid type warnings altogether?* For each
|
|
``getSomethingValue`` accessor that returns a value of the requested
|
|
type and issues a warning for objects of the wrong type, there is also
|
|
a ``getValueAsSomething`` method (since qpdf 10.6) that returns false
|
|
for objects of the wrong type and otherwise returns true and
|
|
initializes a reference. These methods never generate type warnings
|
|
and provide an alternative to explicitly checking the type of an
|
|
object before calling an accessor method.
|
|
|
|
.. _smart-pointers:
|
|
|
|
Smart Pointers
|
|
--------------
|
|
|
|
This section describes changes to the use of smart pointers that were
|
|
made in qpdf 10.6.0 and 11.0.0.
|
|
|
|
In qpdf 11.0.0, ``PointerHolder`` was replaced with
|
|
``std::shared_ptr`` in qpdf's public API. A backward-compatible
|
|
``PointerHolder`` class has been provided that makes it possible for
|
|
most code to remain unchanged. ``PointerHolder`` may eventually be
|
|
removed from qpdf entirely, but this will not happen for a while to
|
|
make it easier for people who need to support multiple versions of
|
|
qpdf.
|
|
|
|
In 10.6.0, some enhancements were made to ``PointerHolder`` to ease
|
|
the transition. These intermediate steps are relevant only for
|
|
versions 10.6.0 through 10.6.3 but can still help with incremental
|
|
modification of code.
|
|
|
|
The ``POINTERHOLDER_TRANSITION`` preprocessor symbol was introduced in
|
|
qpdf 10.6.0 to help people transition from ``PointerHolder`` to
|
|
``std::shared_ptr``. If you don't define this, you will get a compiler
|
|
warning. Defining it to any value will suppress the warning. An
|
|
explanation appears below of the different possible values for this
|
|
symbol and what they mean.
|
|
|
|
Starting in qpdf 11.0.0, including ``<qpdf/PointerHolder.hh>`` defines
|
|
the symbol ``POINTERHOLDER_IS_SHARED_POINTER``. This can be used with
|
|
conditional compilation to make it possible to support different
|
|
versions of qpdf.
|
|
|
|
The rest of this section provides the details.
|
|
|
|
Transitional Enhancements to PointerHolder
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
In qpdf 10.6.0, some changes were to ``PointerHolder`` to make it
|
|
easier to prepare for the transition to ``std::shared_ptr``. These
|
|
enhancements also make it easier to incrementally upgrade your code.
|
|
The following changes were made to ``PointerHolder`` to make its
|
|
behavior closer to that of ``std::shared_ptr``:
|
|
|
|
- ``get()`` was added as an alternative to ``getPointer()``
|
|
|
|
- ``use_count()`` was added as an alternative to ``getRefcount()``
|
|
|
|
- A new global helper function ``make_pointer_holder`` behaves
|
|
similarly to ``std::make_shared``, so you can use
|
|
``make_pointer_holder<T>(args...)`` to create a ``PointerHolder<T>``
|
|
with ``new T(args...)`` as the pointer.
|
|
|
|
- A new global helper function ``make_array_pointer_holder`` takes a
|
|
size and creates a ``PointerHolder`` to an array. It is a
|
|
counterpart to the newly added ``QUtil::make_shared_array`` method,
|
|
which does the same thing with a ``std::shared_ptr``.
|
|
|
|
``PointerHolder`` had a long-standing bug: a ``const
|
|
PointerHolder<T>`` would only provide a ``T const*`` with its
|
|
``getPointer`` method. This is incorrect and is not how standard
|
|
library C++ smart pointers or regular pointers behave. The correct
|
|
semantics would be that a ``const PointerHolder<T>`` would not accept
|
|
a new pointer after being created (``PointerHolder`` has always
|
|
behaved correctly in this way) but would still allow you to modify the
|
|
item being pointed to. If you don't want to mutate the thing it points
|
|
to, use ``PointerHolder<T const>`` instead. The new ``get()`` method
|
|
behaves correctly. It is therefore not exactly the same as
|
|
``getPointer()``, but it does behave the way ``get()`` behaves with
|
|
``std::shared_ptr``. This shouldn't make any difference to any
|
|
correctly written code.
|
|
|
|
Differences between ``PointerHolder`` and ``std::shared_ptr``
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Here is a list of things you need to think about when migrating from
|
|
``PointerHolder`` to ``std::shared_ptr``. After the list, we will
|
|
discuss how to address each one using the ``POINTERHOLDER_TRANSITION``
|
|
preprocessor symbol or other C++ coding techniques.
|
|
|
|
- ``PointerHolder<T>`` has an *implicit* constructor that takes a
|
|
``T*``, which means you can assign a ``T*`` directly to a
|
|
``PointerHolder<T>`` or pass a ``T*`` to a function that expects a
|
|
``PointerHolder<T>`` as a parameter. ``std::shared_ptr<T>`` does not
|
|
have this behavior, though you can still assign ``nullptr`` to a
|
|
``std::shared_ptr<T>`` and compare ``nullptr`` with a
|
|
``std::shared_ptr<T>``. Here are some examples of how you might need
|
|
to change your code:
|
|
|
|
Old code:
|
|
.. code-block:: c++
|
|
|
|
PointerHolder<X> x_p;
|
|
X* x = new X();
|
|
x_p = x;
|
|
|
|
New code:
|
|
.. code-block:: c++
|
|
|
|
auto x_p = std::make_shared<X>();
|
|
X* x = x_p.get();
|
|
// or, less safe, but closer:
|
|
std::shared_ptr<X> x_p;
|
|
X* x = new X();
|
|
x_p = std::shared_ptr<X>(x);
|
|
|
|
Old code:
|
|
.. code-block:: c++
|
|
|
|
PointerHolder<Base> base_p;
|
|
Derived* derived = new Derived();
|
|
base_p = derived;
|
|
|
|
New code:
|
|
.. code-block:: c++
|
|
|
|
std::shared_ptr<Base> base_p;
|
|
Derived* derived = new Derived();
|
|
base_p = std::shared_ptr<Base>(derived);
|
|
|
|
- ``PointerHolder<T>`` has ``getPointer()`` to get the underlying
|
|
pointer. It also has the seldom-used ``getRefcount()`` method to get
|
|
the reference count. ``std::shared_ptr<T>`` has ``get()`` and
|
|
``use_count()``. In qpdf 10.6, ``PointerHolder<T>`` also has
|
|
``get()`` and ``use_count()``.
|
|
|
|
Addressing the Differences
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
If you are not ready to take action yet, you can ``#define
|
|
POINTERHOLDER_TRANSITION 0`` before including any qpdf header file or
|
|
add the definition of that symbol to your build. This will provide the
|
|
backward-compatible ``PointerHolder`` API without any deprecation
|
|
warnings. This should be a temporary measure as ``PointerHolder`` may
|
|
disappear in the future. If you need to be able to support newer and
|
|
older versions of qpdf, there are other options, explained below.
|
|
|
|
Note that, even with ``0``, you should rebuild and test your code.
|
|
There may be compiler errors if you have containers of
|
|
``PointerHolder``, but most code should compile without any changes.
|
|
There are no uses of containers of ``PointerHolder`` in qpdf's API.
|
|
|
|
There are two significant things you can do to minimize the impact of
|
|
switching from ``PointerHolder`` to ``std::shared_ptr``:
|
|
|
|
- Use ``auto`` and ``decltype`` whenever possible when working with
|
|
``PointerHolder`` variables that are exchanged with the qpdf API.
|
|
|
|
- Use the ``POINTERHOLDER_TRANSITION`` preprocessor symbol to identify
|
|
and resolve the differences described above.
|
|
|
|
To use ``POINTERHOLDER_TRANSITION``, you will need to ``#define`` it
|
|
before including any qpdf header files or specify its value as part of
|
|
your build. The table below describes the values of
|
|
``POINTERHOLDER_TRANSITION``. This information is also summarized in
|
|
:file:`include/qpdf/PointerHolder.hh`, so you will have it handy
|
|
without consulting this manual.
|
|
|
|
.. list-table:: POINTERHOLDER_TRANSITION values
|
|
:widths: 5 80
|
|
:header-rows: 1
|
|
|
|
- - value
|
|
- meaning
|
|
|
|
- - undefined
|
|
- Same as ``0`` but issues a warning
|
|
|
|
- - ``0``
|
|
- Provide a backward compatible ``PointerHolder`` and suppress
|
|
all deprecation warnings; supports all prior qpdf versions
|
|
|
|
- - ``1``
|
|
- Make the ``PointerHolder<T>(T*)`` constructor explicit;
|
|
resulting code supports all prior qpdf versions
|
|
|
|
- - ``2``
|
|
- Deprecate ``getPointer()`` and ``getRefcount()``; requires
|
|
qpdf 10.6.0 or later.
|
|
|
|
- - ``3``
|
|
- Deprecate all uses of ``PointerHolder``; requires qpdf 11.0.0
|
|
or later
|
|
|
|
- - ``4``
|
|
- Disable all functionality from ``qpdf/PointerHolder.hh`` so
|
|
that ``#include``-ing it has no effect other than defining
|
|
``POINTERHOLDER_IS_SHARED_POINTER``; requires qpdf 11.0.0 or
|
|
later.
|
|
|
|
Based on the above, here is a procedure for preparing your code. This
|
|
is the procedure that was used for the qpdf code itself.
|
|
|
|
You can do these steps without breaking support for qpdf versions
|
|
before 10.6.0:
|
|
|
|
- Find all occurrences of ``PointerHolder`` in the code. See whether
|
|
any of them can just be outright replaced with ``std::shared_ptr``
|
|
or ``std::unique_ptr``. If you have been using qpdf prior to
|
|
adopting C++11 and were using ``PointerHolder`` as a general-purpose
|
|
smart pointer, you may have cases that can be replaced in this way.
|
|
|
|
For example:
|
|
|
|
- Simple ``PointerHolder<T>`` construction can be replaced with
|
|
either the equivalent ``std::shared_ptr<T>`` construction or, if
|
|
the constructor is public, with ``std::make_shared<T>(args...)``.
|
|
If you are creating a smart pointer that is never copied, you may
|
|
be able to use ``std::unique_ptr<T>`` instead.
|
|
|
|
- Array allocations will have to be rewritten.
|
|
|
|
Allocating a ``PointerHolder`` to an array looked like this:
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: c++
|
|
|
|
PointerHolder<X> p(true, new X[n]);
|
|
|
|
To allocate a ``std::shared_ptr`` to an array:
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: c++
|
|
|
|
auto p = std::shared_ptr<X>(new X[n], std::default_delete<X[]>());
|
|
// If you don't mind using QUtil, there's QUtil::make_shared_array<X>(n).
|
|
// If you are using c++20, you can use std::make_shared<X[]>(n)
|
|
// to get a std::shared_ptr<X[]> instead of a std::shared_ptr<X>.
|
|
|
|
To allocate a ``std::unique_ptr`` to an array:
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: c++
|
|
|
|
auto p = std::make_unique<X[]>(n);
|
|
// or, if X has a private constructor:
|
|
auto p = std::unique_ptr<X[]>(new X[n]);
|
|
|
|
- If a ``PointerHolder<T>`` can't be replaced with a standard library
|
|
smart pointer because it is used with an older qpdf API call,
|
|
perhaps it can be declared using ``auto`` or ``decltype`` so that,
|
|
when building with a newer qpdf API changes, your code will just
|
|
need to be recompiled.
|
|
|
|
- ``#define POINTERHOLDER_TRANSITION 1`` to enable deprecation
|
|
warnings for all implicit constructions of ``PointerHolder<T>`` from
|
|
a plain ``T*``. When you find one, explicitly construct the
|
|
``PointerHolder<T>``.
|
|
|
|
- Old code:
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: c++
|
|
|
|
PointerHolder<X> x = new X();
|
|
|
|
- New code:
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: c++
|
|
|
|
auto x = PointerHolder<X>(new X(...)); // all versions of qpdf
|
|
// or, if X(...) is public:
|
|
auto x = make_pointer_holder<X>(...); // only 10.6 and above
|
|
|
|
Other examples appear above.
|
|
|
|
If you need to support older versions of qpdf than 10.6, this is as
|
|
far as you can go without conditional compilation.
|
|
|
|
Starting in qpdf 11.0.0, including ``<qpdf/PointerHolder.hh>`` defines
|
|
the symbol ``POINTERHOLDER_IS_SHARED_POINTER``. If you want to support
|
|
older versions of qpdf and still transition so that the
|
|
backward-compatible ``PointerHolder`` is not in use, you can separate
|
|
old code and new code by testing with the
|
|
``POINTERHOLDER_IS_SHARED_POINTER`` preprocessor symbol, as in
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: c++
|
|
|
|
#include <qpdf/PointerHolder.hh>
|
|
#ifdef POINTERHOLDER_IS_SHARED_POINTER
|
|
std::shared_ptr<X> x;
|
|
#else
|
|
PointerHolder<X> x;
|
|
#endif // POINTERHOLDER_IS_SHARED_POINTER
|
|
x = decltype(x)(new X())
|
|
|
|
or
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: c++
|
|
|
|
#include <qpdf/PointerHolder.hh>
|
|
#ifdef POINTERHOLDER_IS_SHARED_POINTER
|
|
auto x_p = std::make_shared<X>();
|
|
X* x = x_p.get();
|
|
#else
|
|
auto x_p = PointerHolder<X>(new X());
|
|
X* x = x_p.getPointer();
|
|
#endif // POINTERHOLDER_IS_SHARED_POINTER
|
|
x_p->doSomething();
|
|
x->doSomethingElse();
|
|
|
|
If you don't need to support older versions of qpdf, you can proceed
|
|
with these steps without protecting changes with the preprocessor
|
|
symbol. Here are the remaining changes.
|
|
|
|
- ``#define POINTERHOLDER_TRANSITION 2`` to enable deprecation of
|
|
``getPointer()`` and ``getRefcount()``
|
|
|
|
- Replace ``getPointer()`` with ``get()`` and ``getRefcount()`` with
|
|
``use_count()``. These methods were not present prior to 10.6.0.
|
|
|
|
When you have gotten your code to compile cleanly with
|
|
``POINTERHOLDER_TRANSITION=2``, you are well on your way to being
|
|
ready for eliminating ``PointerHolder`` entirely. The code at this
|
|
point will not work with any qpdf version prior to 10.6.0.
|
|
|
|
To support qpdf 11.0.0 and newer and remove ``PointerHolder`` from
|
|
your code, continue with the following steps:
|
|
|
|
- Replace all occurrences of ``PointerHolder`` with
|
|
``std::shared_ptr`` except in the literal statement ``#include
|
|
<qpdf/PointerHolder.hh>``
|
|
|
|
- Replace all occurrences of ``make_pointer_holder`` with
|
|
``std::make_shared``
|
|
|
|
- Replace all occurrences of ``make_array_pointer_holder`` with
|
|
``QUtil::make_shared_array``. You will need to include
|
|
``<qpdf/QUtil.hh>`` if you haven't already done so.
|
|
|
|
- Make sure ``<memory>`` is included wherever you were including
|
|
``<qpdf/PointerHolder.hh>``.
|
|
|
|
- If you were using any array ``PointerHolder<T>`` objects, replace
|
|
them as above. You can let the compiler find these for you.
|
|
|
|
- ``#define POINTERHOLDER_TRANSITION 3`` to enable deprecation of
|
|
all ``PointerHolder<T>`` construction.
|
|
|
|
- Build and test. Fix any remaining issues.
|
|
|
|
- If not supporting older versions of qpdf, remove all references to
|
|
``<qpdf/PointerHolder.hh>``. Otherwise, you will still need to
|
|
include it but can ``#define POINTERHOLDER_TRANSITION 4`` to prevent
|
|
``PointerHolder`` from being defined. The
|
|
``POINTERHOLDER_IS_SHARED_POINTER`` symbol will still be defined.
|
|
|
|
Historical Background
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Since its inception, the qpdf library used its own smart pointer
|
|
class, ``PointerHolder``. The ``PointerHolder`` class was originally
|
|
created long before ``std::shared_ptr`` existed, and qpdf itself
|
|
didn't start requiring a C++11 compiler until version 9.1.0 released in
|
|
late 2019. With current C++ versions, it is no longer desirable for qpdf
|
|
to have its own smart pointer class.
|