It's a first step to add code coverage.
In order to get the code coverage report locally, you can run the following command:
```bash
npx gulp unittestcli --coverage
```
The code coverage report will be generated in the `./build/coverage` directory.
And the report can be consulted by opening:
http://localhost:8888/build/coverage/index.html
A GitHub workflow has also been added to run the unit tests with code coverage
on each push and pull request. The report will be uploaded to Codecov.
This leads to slightly shorter code[1] when initializing classes, and in some cases we can even remove the constructors, which shouldn't hurt; see https://github.com/sindresorhus/eslint-plugin-unicorn/blob/main/docs/rules/prefer-class-fields.md
It's probably possible to also change a lot of these class fields to private ones[2], however it's often difficult to tell at a glance if that's safe hence this patch only does this for the `PDFRenderingQueue`.
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[1] This reduces the size of the `gulp mozcentral` output by 999 bytes, for a mostly mechanical code change.
[2] That sort of re-factoring should generally be done separately, on a class-by-class basis, to reduce the risk of regressions.
While we don't dispatch the actual range request after PR 10694 we still parse the returned data, which ends up being an *empty* `ArrayBuffer` and thus cannot affect the `ChunkedStream.prototype._loadedChunks` property.
Given that no actual data arrived, it's thus pointless[1] to invoke the `ChunkedStreamManager.prototype.onReceiveData` method in this case (and it also avoids sending effectively duplicate "DocProgress" messages).
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[1] With the *possible* exception of `disableAutoFetch === false` being set, see f24768d7b4/src/core/chunked_stream.js (L499-L517) however that never happens when streaming is being used; note f24768d7b4/src/core/worker.js (L237-L238)
In all cases where we currently use `Response.prototype.arrayBuffer()` the result is immediately wrapped in a `Uint8Array`, which can be avoided by instead using the newer `Response.prototype.bytes()` method; see https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Response/bytes
This patch updates the minimum supported browsers as follows:
- Google Chrome 118, which was released on 2023-10-10; see https://chromereleases.googleblog.com/2023/10/stable-channel-update-for-desktop_10.html
We haven't made any changes to the supported Google Chrome version for a year, and this change allows us to remove "hacks" needed to support `float: inline-start/inline-end` in old browsers; see https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/Reference/Properties/float#browser_compatibility.
Note that nowadays we usually try, where feasible and possible, to support browsers that are about two years old. By limiting support to only "recent" browsers we reduce the risk of holding back improvements of the *built-in* Firefox PDF Viewer, and also (significantly) reduce the maintenance/support burden for the PDF.js contributors.
*Please note:* As always, the minimum supported browser version assumes that a `legacy`-build of the PDF.js library is being used; see https://github.com/mozilla/pdf.js/wiki/Frequently-Asked-Questions#faq-support
We tried to lookup the font metrics using the font name as-is, which didn't work since the PDF file in question has non-embedded fonts with names that include commas.
Hence the font names need to be normalized here as well, similar to elsewhere in the font code.
Given that the Node.js code uses standard `ReadableStream`s now, see PR 20594, it can use the same `getArrayBuffer` as the Fetch API implementation.
Also, change the `getArrayBuffer` fallback case to an Error (rather than a warning) since that should never actually happen.
Currently the same identical code is duplicated four times per file, which seems completely unnecessary.
Note that the function isn't placed in `src/display/network_utils.js`, since that file isn't included in MOZCENTRAL builds.
Doing skip-cache reloading of https://opensource.adobe.com/dc-acrobat-sdk-docs/pdfstandards/PDF32000_2008.pdf#disableRange=true in the latest Firefox Nightly version I noticed an *intermittent* bug, where the loadingBar would fill up but without the PDF ever rendering.
Initially I was quite worried that the changes in PR 20602 had somehow caused this, however after a bunch of testing in a slightly older Nightly I was able to reproduce the problem there as well.[1]
Instead I believe that this problem goes all the back to PR 10675, so still my fault, since the `progressiveDone` handling there was incomplete.
Note how we only set the `this._done` property, but don't actually resolve any still pending requests. For reference, compare with the handling in the `PDFDataTransportStreamRangeReader.prototype._enqueue` method.
Depending on the exact order in which the `PDFDataTransportStreamReader.prototype.{_enqueue, read, progressiveDone}` methods are invoked, which depends on how/when the PDF data arrives, the bug might occur.
The reason that this bug hasn't been caught before now is likely that `disableRange=true` isn't used by default and Firefox users are unlikely to manually set that in e.g. `about:config`.
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[1] Possibly some timings changed to make it slightly more common, but given the intermittent nature of this it's difficult to tell.