* Use a dedicated cache hash for partial tiles from panel-zoom * Never dump them to disk, as it confuses DocCache's crappy heuristics that rewinds the cache to skip over the hinted page to try to dump the on-screen page to disk. * Apply the zoom factor in the exact same way as any other page rect (i.e., floor coordinates, ceil dimensions), and make sure said rect is actually a Geom so it doesn't break the cache hash, which relies on Geom's custom tostring method for rects. Said scaling method *also* belongs to the Geom class anyway. * Handle such pre-scaled rects properly in renderPage, so as not to apply the zoom factor to the full page, which would attempt to create a gigantic buffer. * And now that the rect is rendered properly in an appropriately-sized buffer, use the rendered tile as-is, no need to blit it to another (potentially way too large because of the above issue) blank BB. * The zoom factor is now computed for a scale to best-fit (honoring `imageviewer_rotate_auto_for_best_fit`), ensuring the best efficiency (ImageViewer won't have to re-scale). * Cache: Reduce the maximum item size to 50% of the cache, instead of 75%. * Warn about the legacy ReaderRotation module, as it turned out to be horribly broken. The whole machinery (which is spread over *a lot* of various codepaths) is left as-is, peppered with notes & fixmes hinting at the problem. Thankfully, that's not how we actually handle rotation, so it was probably hardly ever used (which possibly explains why nobody ever noticed it breaking, and that nugget possibly dates back to the inception of the kpv -> ko refactor!). (#12309)
KOReader is a document viewer primarily aimed at e-ink readers.
Download • User guide • Wiki • Developer docs
Main features
-
portable: runs on embedded devices (Cervantes, Kindle, Kobo, PocketBook, reMarkable), Android and Linux computers. Developers can run a KOReader emulator in Linux and MacOS.
-
multi-format documents: supports fixed page formats (PDF, DjVu, CBT, CBZ) and reflowable e-book formats (EPUB, FB2, Mobi, DOC, RTF, HTML, CHM, TXT). Scanned PDF/DjVu documents can also be reflowed with the built-in K2pdfopt library. ZIP files are also supported for some formats.
-
full-featured reading: multi-lingual user interface with a highly customizable reader view and many typesetting options. You can set arbitrary page margins, override line spacing and choose external fonts and styles. It has multi-lingual hyphenation dictionaries bundled into the application.
-
integrated with calibre (search metadata, receive ebooks wirelessly, browse library via OPDS), Wallabag, Wikipedia, Google Translate and other content providers.
-
optimized for e-ink devices: custom UI without animation, with paginated menus, adjustable text contrast, and easy zoom to fit content or page in paged media.
-
extensible: via plugins
-
fast: on some older devices, it has been measured to have less than half the page-turn delay as the built in reading software.
-
and much more: look up words with StarDict dictionaries / Wikipedia, add your own online OPDS catalogs and RSS feeds, over-the-air software updates, an FTP client, an SSH server, …
Please check the user guide and the wiki to discover more features and to help us document them.
Screenshots
Installation
Please follow the model specific steps for your device:
Android • Cervantes • Kindle • Kobo • Linux • Pocketbook • reMarkable
Development
Setting up a build environment • Collaborating with Git • Building targets • Porting • Developer docs
Support
KOReader is developed and supported by volunteers all around the world. There are many ways you can help:
- fix bugs and implement new features
- translate the program into your language or improve an existing translation
- document lesser-known features on the wiki
- help others with your knowledge on the forum
Right now we only support liberapay donations.
