# Windows PDF Thumbnail Handler A lightweight COM DLL that provides PDF page-preview thumbnails in Windows Explorer when Stirling-PDF is the default PDF application. ## Why this exists When Stirling-PDF registers as the default PDF handler, Windows associates `.pdf` files with Stirling's ProgID. Without a thumbnail handler on that ProgID, Explorer falls back to showing the application icon (the big S logo) instead of a page preview. This DLL restores thumbnail previews by implementing the Windows Shell `IThumbnailProvider` COM interface. ## How it works 1. **Explorer requests a thumbnail** — when a folder with PDFs is opened in Medium/Large icon view, Explorer loads the DLL via the registered COM CLSID. 2. **Shell calls `IInitializeWithStream`** — passes the PDF file content as an `IStream`. 3. **Shell calls `IThumbnailProvider::GetThumbnail(cx)`** — requests a bitmap of size `cx × cx`. 4. **The DLL renders page 1** using the built-in `Windows.Data.Pdf` WinRT API (the same engine Edge uses), preserving aspect ratio. 5. **WIC decodes the rendered PNG** into BGRA pixels, which are copied into an `HBITMAP` via `CreateDIBSection`. 6. **Explorer displays the bitmap** as the file's thumbnail. All COM methods are wrapped in `catch_unwind` so a malformed PDF cannot crash Explorer. ## Technical details | | | |---|---| | **Language** | Rust (cdylib) | | **DLL size** | ~156 KB | | **External deps** | None — uses only Windows built-in APIs | | **PDF renderer** | `Windows.Data.Pdf` (WinRT, Windows 10+) | | **Image decode** | WIC (`IWICImagingFactory`) with BGRA32 format conversion | | **COM CLSID** | `{2D2FBE3A-9A88-4308-A52E-7EF63CA7CF48}` | | **Threading model** | Apartment (STA — standard for shell extensions) | | **Min Windows** | Windows 10 | ## Registry entries (managed by MSI) The WiX installer (`provisioning.wxs`) registers: - **CLSID** at `HKLM\SOFTWARE\Classes\CLSID\{2D2FBE3A-...}\InprocServer32` pointing to the DLL - **Shellex** at `HKLM\SOFTWARE\Classes\.pdf\shellex\{E357FCCD-...}` linking `.pdf` thumbnails to our CLSID Both are automatically removed on uninstall. ## Building The DLL is built automatically as part of the Tauri build pipeline via `build-provisioner.mjs`: ```bash cd frontend npm run tauri-build ``` To build the DLL standalone: ```bash cd frontend/editor/src-tauri/thumbnail-handler cargo build --release # Output: target/release/stirling_thumbnail_handler.dll ``` ## Linux / macOS This DLL is Windows-only. Linux and macOS don't need it — their thumbnail systems (thumbnailers on Linux, Quick Look on macOS) are decoupled from the default app association and continue working regardless of which app is set as default.