The current error-messages also mention internal parameters, which an end-user obviously don't have to care about. So, let's try to avoid confusion here by only including the API parameters.
Currently we'll only dispatch events, for the options that support it, when updating preferences. Since this could potentially lead to inconsistent behaviour, let's avoid any future surprises by *always* dispatching events regardless of how the relevant option is being changed.
Obviously we should then also dispatch events in `AppOptions.set`, and to avoid adding even more duplicated code this method is changed into a wrapper for `AppOptions.setAll`.
While this is technically a tiny bit less efficient I don't think it matters in practice, since outside of development- and debug-mode `AppOptions.set` is barely used.
Since "localeProperties" is needed in Firefox, let's remove a tiny bit of option duplication by using it in the GENERIC builds as well.
For convenience, the old debug-only "locale" hash-parameter is kept intact.
The `streamqueue` dependency is only used for the test targets in the
Gulpfile to make sure that the test types are run in series. This is
done by modelling the test processes as readable streams and then having
`streamqueue` combine them into a single readable stream for Gulp that
processes the inner readable streams in series (in contrast to the
`ordered-read-streams` dependency which is very similar but processes
the inner streams in parallel).
However, modelling the test processes as readable streams is a bit odd
because we're not actually streaming any data as one might expect.
Instead, we only use them to signal test process completion/abortion.
Fortunately nowadays, with modern Gulp versions, we don't need readable
streams and `streamqueue` anymore because we can achieve the same result
with simple asynchronous functions that can be passed to e.g.
`gulp.series()` calls. Note that we already do this in various places,
and overall it should be a better fit for test process invocations.
For options with varying types, see `useSystemFonts`, we're not sufficiently validating the type when setting a new value. This means that for an option that uses `OptionKind.UNDEF_ALLOWED` we'd allow *any* value, which is obviously not the intention.
Hence we instead introduce a new and *optional* `type`-field that allows specifying exactly which types are valid when multiple ones are supported.
*Note:* This obviously didn't occur to me until after PR 18465 landed, sorry about that!
This option is old enough that it predates e.g. the introduction of AppOptions, so it probably cannot hurt to re-factor this a little bit now.
- In development-mode we can just set this directly in AppOptions.
- In the extension-builds we still need to set it dynamically, however by moving this code we get the benefit of being able to avoid storing a data-URL in that case; note how [the API ignores those anyway](98e772727e/src/display/api.js (L256-L262)).
To avoid introducing any inline "hacks" in the viewer-code this meant adding `useSystemFonts` to the AppOptions, which thus required some new functionality since the default value should be `undefined` given how the option is handled in the API; note [this code](ed83d7c5e1/src/display/api.js (L298-L301)).
Finally, also moves the definition of the development-mode `window.isGECKOVIEW` property to the HTML file such that it's guaranteed to be set regardless of how and when it's accessed.
The old implementation in `PDFViewerApplication.download` means that if the `getDocument`-call hasn't yet downloaded the *entire* PDF document it will be re-downloaded. This seems generally undesirable since:
- In some (probably rare) cases a URL may not be valid an arbitrary number of times, which means that the download may fail.
- It will lead to wasted resources, since we'll end up fetching the same PDF document *twice* in that case (once via the `getDocument`-call and once to allow the user to save it).
Hence this patch suggests that we change this very old code to instead always call the `PDFDocumentProxy.getData` method, since that'll trigger immediate downloading of the remaining document via the existing `getDocument`-call.
Finally, the patch removes the `PDFViewerApplication.downloadComplete` property since it's now unused.
This was only necessary to prevent (unlikely) visual glitches when `disableAutoFetch = true` is being used.
However, it turns out that we can move this functionality into the `ProgressBar` class instead by checking if the entire PDF document has loaded. This works since the API is always reporting 100% loading progress regardless of how the document was loaded; see [this code](ed83d7c5e1/src/display/api.js (L2735-L2740)).
After the changes in PR 18413 we're now relying even more on `AppOptions` and it thus seems like a good idea to ensure that no invalid values can be added.
Hence the `AppOptions.{set, setAll}` methods will now *unconditionally* validate that the type of the values agree with the default-options.
According to the PDF specification these destinations should have a zoom parameter, which may however be `null`, but it shouldn't be omitted; please see https://opensource.adobe.com/dc-acrobat-sdk-docs/pdfstandards/PDF32000_2008.pdf#G11.2095870
Hence we try to work-around bad PDF generators by making the zoom parameter optional when validating explicit destinations in both the worker and the viewer.