Library for rendering e-books in the browser.
Features:
- Supports EPUB, MOBI, KF8, FB2, CBZ
- Pure JavaScript
- Small and modular
- No dependencies
- Does not depend on or include any library for unzipping; bring your own Zip library
- Does not require loading whole file into memory
- Does not care about older browsers
The repo includes a demo viewer that can be used to open local files. To use it, serve the files with a server, and navigate to reader.html
. Or visit the online demo hosted on GitHub. Note that it is very incomplete at the moment, and lacks many basic features such as keyboard shortcuts.
Also note that deobfuscating fonts with the IDPF algorithm requires a SHA-1 function. By default it uses Web Crypto, which is only available in secure contexts. Without HTTPS, you will need to modify reader.js
and pass your own SHA-1 implementation.
It's far from complete or stable yet, though it should have near feature parity with Epub.js. There's no support for continuous scrolling, however.
Among other things, the fixed-layout renderer is notably unfinished at the moment.
This project uses native ES modules. There's no build step, and you can import them directly.
There are mainly three kinds of modules:
- Modules that parse and load books, implementing the "book" interface
comic-book.js
, for comic book archives (CBZ)epub.js
andepubcfi.js
, for EPUBfb2.js
, for FictionBook 2mobi.js
, for both Mobipocket files and KF8 (commonly known as AZW3) files
- Modules that handle pagination, implementing the "renderer" interface
fixed-layout.js
, for fixed layout bookspaginator.js
, for reflowable books
- Auxiliary modules used to add additional functionalities
overlayer.js
, for rendering annotationsprogress.js
, for getting reading progresssearch.js
, for searching
The modules are designed to be modular. In general, they don't directly depend on each other. Instead they depend on certain interfaces, detailed below. The exception is view.js
. It is the higher level renderer that strings most of the things together, and you can think of it as the main entry point of the library. See "Basic Usage" below.
The repo also includes a still higher level reader, though strictly speaking, reader.html
(along with reader.js
and its associated files in ui/
and vendor/
) is not considered part of the library itself. It's akin to Epub.js Reader. You are expected to modify it or replace it with your own code.
import './view.js'
const view = document.createElement('foliate-view')
document.body.append(view)
view.addEventListener('relocate', e => {
console.log('location changed')
console.log(e.detail)
})
const book = /* an object implementing the "book" interface */
await view.open(book)
await view.goTo(/* path, section index, or CFI */)
Scripting is not supported, as it is currently impossible to do so securely due to the content being served from the same origin (using blob:
URLs).
Furthermore, while the renderers do use the sandox
attribute on iframes, it is useless, as it requires allow-scripts
due to a WebKit bug: https://bugs.webkit.org/show_bug.cgi?id=218086.
It is therefore imperative that you use Content Security Policy (CSP) to block all scripts except 'self'
.
Warning
Do NOT use this library without CSP unless you completely trust the content you're rendering or can block scripts by other means.
Processors for each book format return an object that implements the following interface:
.sections
: an array of sections in the book. Each item has the following properties:.load()
: returns a string containing the URL that will be rendered. May be async..unload()
: returns nothing. If present, can be used to free the section..createDocument()
: returns aDocument
object of the section. Used for searching. May be async..size
: a number, the byte size of the section. Used for showing reading progress..linear
: a string. If it is"no"
, the section is not part of the linear reading sequence (see thelinear
attribute in EPUB)..cfi
: base CFI string of the section. The part that goes before the!
in CFIs..id
: an identifier for the section, used for getting TOC item (see below). Can be anything, as long as they can be used as keys in aMap
.
.dir
: a string representing the page progression direction of the book ("rtl"
or"ltr"
)..toc
: an array representing the table of contents of the book. Each item has.label
: a string label for the item.href
: a string representing the destination of the item. Does not have to be a valid URL..subitems
: a array that contains TOC items
.pageList
: same as the TOC, but for the page list..metadata
: an object representing the metadata of the book..rendition
: an object that contains properties that correspond to the rendition properties in EPUB. If.layout
is"pre-paginated"
, the book is rendered with the fixed layout renderer..resolveHref(href)
: given an href string, returns an object representing the destination referenced by the href, which has the following properties:.index
: the index of the referenced section in the.section
array.anchor(doc)
: given aDocument
object, returns the document fragment referred to by the href (can either be anElement
or aRange
), ornull
.resolveCFI(cfi)
: same as above, but with a CFI string instead of href.isExternal(href)
: returns a boolean. Iftrue
, the link should be opened externally.
The following methods are consumed by progress.js
, for getting the correct TOC and page list item when navigating:
.splitTOCHref(href)
: given an href string (from the TOC), returns an array, the first element of which is theid
of the section (see above), and the second element is the fragment identifier (can be any type; see below).getTOCFragment(doc, id)
: given aDocument
object and a fragment identifier (the one provided by.splitTOCHref()
; see above), returns aNode
representing the target linked by the TOC item
Almost all of the properties and methods are optional. At minimum it needs .sections
and the .load()
method for the sections, as otherwise there won't be anything to render.
Reading Zip-based formats will require adapting an external library. Both epub.js
and comic-book.js
expect a loader
object that implements the following interface:
.entries
: (only used bycomic-book.js
) an array, each element of which has afilename
property, which is a string containing the filename (the full path)..loadText(filename)
: given the path, returns the contents of the file as string. May be async..loadBlob(filename)
: given the path, returns the file as aBlob
object. May be async..getSize(filename)
: returns the file size in bytes. Used to set the.size
property for.sections
(see above).
In the demo, this is implemented using zip.js, which is highly recommended because it seems to be the only library that supports random access for File
objects (as well as HTTP range requests).
One advantage of having such an interface is that one can easily use it for reading unarchived files as well. For example, the demo has a loader that allows you to open unpacked EPUBs as directories.
It can read both MOBI and KF8 (.azw3, and combo .mobi files) from a File
(or Blob
) object. For MOBI files, it decompresses all text at once and splits the raw markup into sections at every <mbp:pagebreak>
, instead of outputing one long page for the whole book, which drastically improves rendering performance. For KF8 files, it tries to decompress as little text as possible when loading a section, but it can still be quite slow due to the slowness of the current HUFF/CDIC decompressor implementation. In all cases, images and other resources are not loaded until they are needed.
Note that KF8 files can contain fonts that are zlib-compressed. They need to be decompressed with an external library. The demo uses fflate to decompress them.
It has two renderers, one for paginating reflowable books, and one for fixed-layout. They are custom elements (web components).
A renderer's interface is currently mainly:
.open(book)
: open a book object..goTo({ index, anchor })
: navigate to a destination. The argument has the same type as the one returned by.resolveHref()
in the book object..prev()
: go to previous page..next()
: go to next page.
It has the following custom events:
load
, when a section is loaded. Itsevent.detail
has two properties,doc
, theDocument
object, andindex
, the index of the section.relocate
, when the location changes. Itsevent.detail
has the propertiesrange
,index
, andfraction
, whererange
is aRange
object containing the current visible area, andfraction
is a number between 0 and 1, representing the reading progress within the section.create-overlayer
, which allows adding an overlay to the page. Theevent.detail
has the propertiesdoc
,index
, and a functionattach(overlay)
, which should be called with an overlayer object (see the description foroverlayer.js
below).
The paginator uses the same pagination strategy as Epub.js: it uses CSS multi-column. As such it shares much of the same limitations (it's slow, some CSS styles do not work as expected, and other bugs). There are a few differences:
- It is a totally standalone module. You can use it to paginate any content.
- It is much simpler, but currently there's no support for continuous scrolling.
- It has no concept of CFIs and operates on
Range
objects directly. - It uses bisecting to find the current visible range, which is more accurate than what Epub.js does.
- It has an internal
#anchor
property, which can be aRange
,Element
, or a fraction that represents the current location. The view is anchored to it no matter how you resize the window. - It supports more than two columns.
- It supports switching between scrolled and paginated mode without reloading (I can't figure out how to do this in Epub.js).
To simplify things, it has a totally separate renderer for fixed layout books. As such there's no support for mixed layout books.
Both renderers have the part
named filter
, which you can apply CSS filters to, to e.g. invert colors or adjust brightness:
foliate-view::part(filter) {
filter: invert(1) hue-rotate(180deg);
}
The filter only applies to the book itself, leaving overlaid elements such as highlights unaffected.
There is a basic page transition effect that can be disabled by setting .pageAnimation
to false.
The layout can be configured by setting the following attributes:
flow
: eitherpaginated
orscrolled
.margin
: a CSS<length>
. The unit must bepx
. The height of the header and footer.gap
: a CSS<percentage>
. The size of the space between columns, relative to page size.max-inline-size
: a CSS<length>
. The unit must bepx
. The maximum inline size of the text (column width in paginated mode).max-block-size
: same as above, but for the size in the block direction.max-column-count
: integer. The maximum number of columns. Has no effect in scrolled mode.
(Note: there's no JS property API. You must use .setAttribute()
.)
It has built-in header and footer regions accessible via the .heads
and .feet
properties of the paginator instance. These can be used to display running heads and reading progress. They are only available in paginated mode, and there will be one element for each column. They are styleable with ::part(head)
and ::part(foot)
. E.g., to add a border under the running heads,
foliate-view::part(head) {
padding-bottom: 4px;
border-bottom: 1px solid graytext;
}
Parsed CFIs are represented as a plain array or object. The basic type is called a "part", which is an object with the following structure: { index, id, offset, temporal, spatial, text, side }
, corresponding to a step + offset in the CFI.
A collapsed, non-range CFI is represented as an array whose elements are arrays of parts, each corresponding to a full path. That is, /6/4!/4
is turned into
[
[
{ "index": 6 },
{ "index": 4 }
],
[
{ "index": 4 }
]
]
A range CFI is an object { parent, start, end }
, each property being the same type as a collapsed CFI. For example, /6/4!/2,/2,/4
is represented as
{
"parent": [
[
{ "index": 6 },
{ "index": 4 }
],
[
{ "index": 2 }
]
],
"start": [
[
{ "index": 2 }
]
],
"end": [
[
{ "index": 4 }
]
]
}
The parser uses a state machine rather than regex, and should handle assertions that contain escaped characters correctly (see tests for examples of this).
It has the ability ignore nodes, which is needed if you want to inject your own nodes into the document without affecting CFIs. To do this, you need to pass the optional filter function that works similarily to the filter function of TreeWalker
s:
const filter = node => node.nodeType !== 1 ? NodeFilter.FILTER_ACCEPT
: node.matches('.reject') ? NodeFilter.FILTER_REJECT
: node.matches('.skip') ? NodeFilter.FILTER_SKIP
: NodeFilter.FILTER_ACCEPT
CFI.toRange(doc, 'epubcfi(...)', filter)
CFI.fromRange(range, filter)
It can parse and stringify spatial and temporal offsets, as well as text location assertions and side bias, but there's no support for employing them when rendering yet.
There is a generic module for overlaying arbitrary SVG elements, overlayer.js
. It can be used to implement highlighting text for annotations. It's the same technique used by marks-pane, used by Epub.js, but it's designed to be easily extensible. You can return any SVG element in the draw
function, making it possible to add custom styles such as squiggly lines or even free hand drawings.
The overlay has no event listeners by default. It only provides a .hitTest(event)
method, that can be used to do hit tests. Currently it does this with the client rects of Range
s, not the element returned by draw()
.
An overlayer object implements the following interface for the consumption of renderers:
.element
: the DOM element of the overlayer. This element will be inserted, resized, and positioned automatically by the renderer on top of the page..redraw()
: called by the renderer when the overlay needs to be redrawn.
Not a particularly descriptive name, but essentially, text-walker.js
is a small DOM utility that allows you to
- Gather all text nodes in a
Range
,Document
orDocumentFragment
into an array of strings. - Perform splitting or matching on the strings.
- Get back the results of these string operations as
Range
s.
E.g. you can join all the text nodes together, use Intl.Segmenter
to segment the string into words, and get the results in DOM Ranges, so you can mark up those words in the original document.
In foliate-js, this is used for searching and TTS.
It provides a search module, which can in fact be used as a standalone module for searching across any array of strings. There's no limit on the number of strings a match is allowed to span. It's based on Intl.Collator
and Intl.Segmenter
, to support ignoring diacritics and matching whole words only. It's extrenely slow, and you'd probably want to load results incrementally.
The TTS module doesn't directly handle speech output. Rather, its methods return SSML documents (as strings), which you can then feed to your speech synthesizer.
The SSML attributes ssml:ph
and ssml:alphabet
are supported. There's no support for PLS and CSS Speech.
The main use of the library is for use in Foliate, which uses WebKitGTK. As such it's the only engine that has been tested extensively. But it should also work in Chromium and Firefox.
Apart from the renderers, using the modules outside browsers is also possible. Most features depend on having the global objects Blob
, TextDecoder
, TextEncoder
, DOMParser
, XMLSerializer
, and URL
, and should work if you polyfill them. Note that epubcfi.js
can be used as is in any envirnoment if you only need to parse or sort CFIs.
MIT.
Vendored libraries for the demo: