Blog Post

How to Build a Microsoft OneDrive PDF Viewer with PSPDFKit

Hulya Masharipov
Illustration: How to Build a Microsoft OneDrive PDF Viewer with PSPDFKit

This blog post will walk you through the steps necessary to build a Microsoft OneDrive PDF viewer by integrating PSPDFKit for Web into Microsoft OneDrive as a file handler. By the end of this post, you’ll be able to use a web browser to directly open PDF documents stored in OneDrive, as well as display, edit, and save them back to OneDrive.

File handlers instruct OneDrive to redirect to your URL of choice whenever a file with a particular extension is clicked. By using a file handler, you’ll override OneDrive’s default behavior so that PDF files are opened directly inside your application. Any edits to the opened files using your application can then be directly saved back to OneDrive.

OneDrive is Microsoft’s cloud-based file storage service. It enables syncing between computers and mobile devices so that users can access their files from anywhere with an internet connection. It also enables file sharing, which makes sending and receiving files convenient.

OneDrive Integration with PSPDFKit

PSPDFKit for OneDrive is a wrapper on top of PSPDFKit for Web Standalone, which is a client-side JavaScript PDF library for viewing and editing PDF files directly in a web browser.

PSPDFKit for OneDrive shares the same APIs as PSPDFKit for Web Standalone, so please use the web documentation when customizing your OneDrive application.

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integration diagram

SharePoint Online and OneDrive share the same file handler manifest, which means that implementing the file handler for OneDrive will automatically also implement it for SharePoint. It isn’t possible to selectively implement it for only one of these services. Therefore, to implement the OneDrive file handler, please follow the instructions for implementing the SharePoint Online file handler.

After the SharePoint Online file handler has been deployed, PDF files in the OneDrive document library will open by default in your PDF editor, where they can be edited and saved.

Requirements

To get started, you’ll need:

Information

File handlers are registered centrally for the entire SharePoint tenant and cannot be selectively enabled or disabled. Uninstalling the file handler from the environment can be problematic due to aggressive caching and may take 24–48 hours to take effect.

Setup

  1. Clone the pspdfkit-sp-online-filehandler repository from GitHub.

Navigate to the directory where you want to place the SharePoint integration, and type the following command in your command line/terminal:

git clone https://github.com/PSPDFKit/pspdfkit-sp-online-filehandler.git

Alternatively, you can download the project as a .zip file without cloning the project.

This project uses Next.js as a server-side framework; however, you can use any other server-side framework you like. The application serves as a native file handler of PDF files for SharePoint sites.

Concretely, this server handles requests to open PDF files from a SharePoint site and then proceeds to render an HTML page containing the PSPDFKit for Web Standalone viewer.

This project is based on the Markdown FileHandler example project.

Installation and Development Deployment

After cloning the repository, and before starting the development setup process, it’s worth understanding how the file handler architecture works.

setup steps

Information

Setup Application is a special helper application that needs to be registered in the Azure App Directory. However, it doesn’t represent the file handler app, rather it’s a helper to automate the process of creating the file handler. This helper app can later safely be removed from the environment.

Customizing the Manifest Specification

The file handler server is a regular server-side web application that handles requests initiated by SharePoint when users click files from the SharePoint Document Library.

The main important part around the file handler is the manifest file, which defines the URL that will handle the requests, how authentication will be handled, and what elements will be rendered in the SharePoint UI (e.g. the context menu item).

In this project, the final manifest is generated by a set of TypeScript scripts under the ./tools/local-setup directory. The entry point is ./tools/local-setup/bin/localsetup.ts. The result of this series of scripts is the automatic generation of the final file handler application registration in your Azure Active Directory.

There are certain key aspects that you can customize as part of the manifest (outlined below).

Display name of the menu — To change the string used when a file is selected, go to ./tools/local-setup/tasks/ensure-app.ts and change the value for the appDisplayName variable.

setup steps

Login URL — To change the URL SharePoint uses to handle logging in, go to ./tools/local-setup/tasks/ensure-app.ts and change the value for redirectUris.

Logout URL — To change the URL SharePoint uses to handle logging out, go to ./tools/local-setup/tasks/ensure-app.ts and change the value for logoutUrls.

URL to edit a selected file — To change the URL SharePoint uses to handle redirection after a file is opened, go to tools/local-setup/tasks/inject-manifest.ts and change the value for the "url" field as part of the actions array (line 9). Notice how the file extension your file handler will operate on — in addition to other metadata — is also defined here.

Once these aspects are defined, you can proceed with the development environment preparation for the file handler.

Notice that, by default, you’re defining localhost:3000. This means SharePoint will, for the time being, always use that URL when selecting a file, which means you need to have your local development server running.

Later, there are instructions on how to change that server once a production deployment exists.

Development Setup

  1. Change your directory into the pspdfkit-sp-online-filehandler directory:

cd pspdfkit-sp-online-filehandler
  1. Open the project in your preferred code editor and check which version of Node.js you’re using:

node --version
Information

Make sure you have Node.js version 16.19.0 installed. If you’re using a different version of Node, switch to Node.js version 16.19.0 via nvm (node version manager) or asdf.

💡 Tip: If you’re using asdf, you can switch the Node version locally for this project. First, install Node.js 16.19.0 using the following command:

asdf install nodejs 16.19.0

Now, run asdf local nodejs 16.19.0 to switch to the Node.js version you just installed. This will create a .tool-versions file in the root of your project with Node version 16.19.0. If you encounter any issues, check out the asdf documentation.

💡 Tip: If you’re using nvm, you can switch to Node.js 16.19.0 by typing the following command:

nvm use 16.19.0
  1. Install the dependencies:

npm install
  1. You need to set up a file handler app registration and load it with a manifest. To do this, you need to be an admin of a SharePoint tenant.

Information

The app you're manually creating is used as a way of automating the registration of the actual file handler, but it isn’t the file handler itself. At a later point, you’ll no longer need this temporal app, and you can remove it from your Azure Active Directory.

  1. Sign in to the Azure portal.

  2. Switch to the tenant in which you want to register the application (if you have more than one).

  3. Select Azure Active Directory.

Azure Active Directory

  1. Under Manage, select App registrations > New registration.

app registrations link

  1. Give it an easy-to-find name (e.g. “filehandler localdev setup”).

  2. Add API permissions:

  • Microsoft Graph > Delegated permissions: openid, Directory.AccessAsUser.All.

  • Grant admin consent to the permissions.

  1. Under the Authentication section:

  • Add a platform:

    • Add mobile and desktop applications.

    • Under Redirect URIs, select the MSAL only option.

  • Set Allow public client flows to Yes. This will treat the app as a public client. Please make sure this step isn’t skipped, as otherwise, the whole process will later fail when running your dev-setup script.

  1. Copy the Application (client) ID and the Directory (tenant) ID, which you’ll need in the next step.

  1. Make sure OpenSSL is installed on your system. Then, run npm run dev-setup, and supply the client and tenant IDs from the previous step when prompted. Follow the onscreen prompts to complete the device code authorization flow.

Information

It’ll take 24–48 hours for the manifest change to take effect. You can follow these steps for clearing the cache to speed this up.

  1. Once setup is complete, you can optionally delete the registration helper application or leave it in place for future use.

  2. Running the dev-setup command in step 4 generates an .env.local file in the root of this project. Review the values and ensure it was created correctly. It’ll appear similar to what’s shown below:

IRON_SESSION_PASSWORD='{anything you want}'
NODE_ENV='production'
AAD_MSAL_AUTH_TENANT_ID="{app tenant id from step 3.9}"
AAD_MSAL_AUTH_ID="{app client id from step 3.9}"
AAD_MSAL_AUTH_SECRET="{app secret from step 3.9}"
NEXT_PUBLIC_FILEHANDLER_SITE_HOST_URL="https://localhost:3000"
  1. Run npm run dev and launch the file handler from within OneDrive or the SharePoint document library on a .pdf file.

Document Library

Production Deployment

Follow these steps when you want to upload the file handler into a production server after development.

  1. Run npm run build from your terminal.

  2. Deploy the Next.js application somewhere. For this, you can use Vercel, Heroku, AWS Amplify, Digital Ocean, or another self-hosting option.

  3. Sign in to the Azure portal.

  4. Go to the Azure Active Directory. Then, follow the App registrations link in the sidebar.

  5. Select your existing application (created from step 3 of the development setup).

  6. Select Manifest from the sidebar, as shown in the screenshot below.

Link to manifest

  1. Once in the manifest editor, search for the logoutUrl property and replace its value with the same path, but pointing to your production domain instead (the one your application was deployed to in step 2).

Search for the replyUrlsWithType array, and for objects with the url key, replace it to also point to your domain (but maintaining the path).

  1. Click Save. Now the file handler is ready to be used in production.

Go to the SharePoint document library and try to open a PDF file. The file will be opened using the PSPDFKit viewer.

Information

It’ll take 24–48 hours for the manifest change to take effect. You can follow these steps for clearing the cache to speed this up.

You can now begin customizing the user interface or implementing custom functionality.

Adding Even More Capabilities

Once you’ve deployed your viewer, you can start customizing it to meet your specific requirements or easily add more capabilities. To help you get started, here are some of our most popular OneDrive guides:

Conclusion

You should now have our OneDrive integration up and running. If you hit any snags, don’t hesitate to reach out to our support team for help.

You can also use our vanilla JavaScript PDF viewer to build a SharePoint PDF viewer or a Microsoft Teams PDF viewer.

To see a list of all web frameworks, start your free trial. Or, launch our demo to see our viewer in action.

Author
Hulya Masharipov Technical Writer

Hulya is a frontend web developer and technical writer at PSPDFKit who enjoys creating responsive, scalable, and maintainable web experiences. She’s passionate about open source, web accessibility, cybersecurity privacy, and blockchain.

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