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pdfjs_viewer-rails

Build Status

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'pdfjs_viewer-rails'

Note: pdfjs_viewer-rails is still in early development. Please report if you encounter any issues along the way.

Viewer Styles

This gem ships with three viewer styles:

full

full style

reduced

reduced style

minimal

minimal style

Usage

Using the mountable Engine

The mountable engine makes it extremely simple to integrate the PDF.js viewer into your application:

config/routes.rb

mount PdfjsViewer::Rails::Engine => "/pdfjs", as: 'pdfjs'

Now you can use a link in your templates to open up the viewer:

<%= link_to "display using the full viewer", pdfjs.full_path(file: "/sample.pdf") %>
<%= link_to "display using the minimal viewer", pdfjs.minimal_path(file: "/sample.pdf") %>

Using the helper

If your integration scenario is more complex you may want to consider using the pdfjs_viewer helper. This allows you to embed the viewer into a container like an iframe.

<%= pdfjs_viewer pdf_url: "/sample.pdf", style: :full %>
<%= pdfjs_viewer pdf_url: "/sample.pdf", style: :minimal %>

NOTE: The helper will render a full HTML document and should not be used in a layout.

Verbosity of PDF.js

The verbosity of PDF.js can be set with:

$ export PDFJS_VIEWER_VERBOSITY=warnings

Verbosity levels:

  • errors (default)
  • warnings
  • infos

Customizing the viewer

If you're not happy with the 3 different styles with which pdfjs_viewer-rails is shipped, you can make your own adjustments by creating a file in app/views/pdfjs_viewer/viewer/_extra_head.html.erb. This file will be appended to the viewer's <head> tag.

So for example, if you'd like to hide the print icon:

<!-- app/views/pdfjs_viewer/viewer/_extra_head.html.erb -->

<style>
  #print { display: none; }
</style>

NOTE: You can use the parameters you passed into pdfjs_viewer (if you're using the helper):

<!-- Somewhere in a view in your project -->
<%= pdfjs_viewer style: "reduced", something: "sick!" %>

and then access them:

<!-- app/views/pdfjs_viewer/viewer/_extra_head.html.erb -->

<%= tag.meta name: "something", content: something %>

Setting up CORS

If you plan to load PDFs from that are hosted on another domain from the PDF.js viewer, you may need to set up a Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) Policy to allow PDF.js to read PDFs from your domain. If you're serving PDFs straight from Amazon S3 (e.g. bucket.s3-us-west-1.amazonaws.com), you will need to add a CORS policy to the S3 bucket. This CORS configuration has been tested on S3:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<CORSConfiguration xmlns="http://s3.amazonaws.com/doc/2006-03-01">
    <CORSRule>
        <AllowedOrigin>*</AllowedOrigin>
        <AllowedMethod>GET</AllowedMethod>
        <AllowedMethod>HEAD</AllowedMethod>
        <MaxAgeSeconds>3000</MaxAgeSeconds>
        <AllowedHeader>Range</AllowedHeader>
        <AllowedHeader>Authorization</AllowedHeader>
        <ExposeHeader>Accept-Ranges</ExposeHeader>
        <ExposeHeader>Content-Encoding</ExposeHeader>
        <ExposeHeader>Content-Length</ExposeHeader>
        <ExposeHeader>Content-Range</ExposeHeader>
    </CORSRule>
</CORSConfiguration>

As the viewer does a cross origin check, you'll have specify the origins you want to allow to use your pdf.js viewer using an ENV variable:

$ export PDFJS_VIEWER_ORIGINS=http://localhost:3000,http://example.com,http://production-site.com

Development

Tests can be executed with:

$ bundle exec rake

This will render the sample.pdf using phantomjs and save screenshots into test/sandbox.

License

pdfjs_viewer-rails is released under the MIT License.