Adaptation of the original PdfViewer app to work as a library (fork of https://github.com/GrapheneOS/PdfViewer)
Go to file
Matéo Duparc 8fe8b2f4b3
libpdfviewer: update to PdfViewer 13
2022-03-21 16:43:25 +01:00
.github Bump actions/checkout from 2 to 3 2022-03-01 16:34:36 -05:00
app libpdfviewer: update to PdfViewer 13 2022-03-21 16:43:25 +01:00
gradle/wrapper Update gradle to 7.4.1 2022-03-12 11:49:02 -05:00
.gitignore use Gradle Kotlin DSL 2021-11-21 15:10:47 -05:00
.gitmodules libpdfviewer: Genesis 2022-02-18 15:03:53 +01:00
LICENSE update copyright notice 2022-02-01 05:14:37 -05:00
PDFJS_LICENSE initial commit with overhauled / rebranded project 2019-06-27 23:22:08 -04:00
README.md add README based on release notes 2020-05-27 19:11:43 -04:00
build.gradle.kts Bump gradle from 7.1.1 to 7.1.2 2022-02-23 14:15:56 -05:00
gradle.properties disable obsolete jetifier 2021-11-21 16:55:27 -05:00
gradlew update gradle to 7.2 2021-08-21 00:09:49 -04:00
gradlew.bat update gradle wrapper 2020-11-09 22:08:13 -05:00
settings.gradle.kts use Gradle Kotlin DSL 2021-11-21 15:10:47 -05:00

README.md

Simple Android PDF viewer based on pdf.js and content providers. The app doesn't require any permissions. The PDF stream is fed into the sandboxed WebView without giving it access to content or files. Content-Security-Policy is used to enforce that the JavaScript and styling properties within the WebView are entirely static content from the apk assets. It reuses the hardened Chromium rendering stack while only exposing a tiny subset of the attack surface compared to actual web content. The PDF rendering code itself is memory safe with dynamic code evaluation disabled, and even if an attacker did gain code execution by exploiting the underlying web rendering engine, they're within the Chromium renderer sandbox with no access to the network (unlike a browser), files, or other content.