Scan and prepare your document for Paperless
The main goal of this project is to have some productive process from the document scanning to
Paperless.
For that we need to prepare the documents some tools that need many resources, then the idea to do it
in the background and ideally on another host like a NAS.
A consequence of that it's a not easy to put it in place, but then you will be really productive.
The interface between the user and the process is the scan
command to do the initial scan, and the file system
to verify that the result is OK (and do some advance operations describe below) and validate it.
- Scan the images optionally by using the Automatic Document Feeder
- Easily scan double-sided images using the Automatic Document Feeder
- Extract the DPI from the TIFF images
- Change the images levels
- Remove the area out of the image
- Deskew the images
- Crop the images
- Sharpen the images (disable by default)
- Dither the images (disable by default)
- Auto rotate the images by using tesseract (To have the text on the right side)
- Optimize the images using
pngquant
,optipng
,ps2pdf
orjpeg
(using quality from GraphicsMagick convert) - Assisted split, used to split a prospectus page in more pages (Requires to modify the YAML...)
- Append credit cart, used to have the two faces of a credit cart on the same page
- Be able to copy the OCR result from the PDF
- Scan the QR code and Bar code and add a new page with the values (separate process)
- Manage the empty lines in the QR code (replace by a pipe (
|
) in the PDF, and runscan --convert-clipboard
to scan your clipboard to do the inverse transform)
On the desktop:
- Python >= 3.6
- The scanimage command, on Windows it should be able to use another command,
but it's never be tested.
This command would be an adapter that interpret the following arguments:
--batch
,--batch-start
,--batch-increment
,--batch-count
,--batch
for the destination file name template (%d
is replaced by the page number), and the others for theauto_bash
.
On the NAS:
Scan-to-paperless requires a desktop and a server part, the two parts communicate through the scan folder.
The server part is where the document were processed, and the desktop part is from where we want we will scan the document, on witch one the scanner is connected.
The scan folder should be synchronized between the desktop and the server, I use Syncthing for that.
$ python3 -m pip install scan-to-paperless
$ echo PATH=$PATH:~/venv/bin >> ~/.bashrc
$ echo source <(register-python-argcomplete scan) >> ~/.bashrc
$ echo source <(register-python-argcomplete scan-progress-status) >> ~/.bashrc
Create the configuration file on <home_config>/scan-to-paperless.yaml
(on Linux it's ~/.config/scan-to-paperless.yaml
), with:
# yaml-language-server: $schema=https://raw.githubusercontent.com/sbrunner/scan-to-paperless/master/scan_to_paperless/config_schema.json
scan_folder: /home/sbrunner/Paperless/scan/
scanimage_arguments: # Additional argument passed to the scanimage command
- --device=... # Use `scanimage --list` to get the possible values
- --format=png
- --mode=color
- --resolution=300
default_args:
auto_mask: {}
auto_cut: {}
run_pngquant: true
cut_white: 200 # cut the near white color to have a uniform background
dpi: 300 # Not necessary if the scanner generate a tiff file
tesseract_lang: fra+eng # The used languages for the OCR
The Docker support is required, Personally I use a Synology DiskStation DS918+, and you can get the *.syno.json files to configure your Docker services.
Otherwise, use:
SCAN_FOLDER=<scan_folder>
CONSUME_FOLDER=<consume_folder>
docker run --name=scan-to-paperless --restart=unless-stopped --detach \
--volume=${SCAN_FOLDER}:/source \
--volume=${CONSUME_FOLDER}:/destination \
sbrunner/scan-to-paperless
You can set the environment variable PROGRESS
to TRUE
to get all the intermediate images.
To stop run:
docker stop scan-to-paperless
docker rm scan-to-paperless
You should find a way to synchronize or using sharing to link the scan folder on your desktop and on your NAS.
You should also link to consume folder to paperless-ngx
probably just by using the same folder.
-
Use the
scan
command to import your document, to scan your documents. -
The document is transferred to your NAS (I use Syncthing).
-
The documents will be processed on the NAS.
-
Use
scan-process-status
to know the status of your documents. -
Validate your documents.
-
If your happy with that remove the
REMOVE_TO_CONTINUE
file. (To restart the process remove one of the generated images, to cancel the job just remove the folder). -
The process will continue his job and import the document in
paperless-ngx
.
In the config.yaml
file present in the document folder, you can find some information generated during
the processing and some can be modified.
E.g. you can modify an image angle to fix the skew, then remove a generated image for force to regenerate the images.
If your scanner add some margin around the scanned image it will relay case some issue the skew and the content detection.
To solve that you can add a black and white image named mask.png
in the root folder and draw in black the
part that should not be taken in account.
Scan to Paperless is also able to create a mask automatically, to enable is with the default configuration,
just add args
name auto_mask
with an empty dictionary ({}
).
See also: The documentation
Configuration note:
By default, the options lower_hsv_color
and upper_hsv_color
select the page (white).
Yon can also select the scanner background, for that you also should set the option inverse_mask
to true
and the option de_noise_morphology
to false
.
If your scanner add some margin around the scanned image you can definitively mask them.
To solve that you can add a black and white image named cut.png
in the root folder and draw in black the
part that should not be taken in account.
Scan to Paperless is also able to create a mask automatically, to enable is with the default configuration,
just add args
name auto_cut
with an empty dictionary ({}
).
See also: The documentation
-
Pour your sheets on the Automatic Document Feeder.
-
Run
scan
with the option--mode=double
. -
Press enter to start scanning the first side of all sheets.
-
Put again all your sheets on the Automatic Document Feeder without turning them.
The scan utils will rotate and reorder all the sheets to get a good document.
The options --append-credit-card
will append all the sheets vertically to have the booth face of the credit card on the same page.
-
Do your scan as usual with the extra option
--assisted-split
. -
After the process do his first pass you will have images with lines and numbers. The lines represent the detected potential split of the image, the length indicate the strength of the detection. In your config you will have something like:
assisted_split:
- destinations:
- 4 # Page number of the left part of the image
- 1 # Same for the right page of the image
image: image-1.png # name of the image
limits:
- margin: 0 # Margin around the split
name: 0 # Number visible on the generated image
value: 375 # The position of the split (can be manually edited)
vertical: true # Will split the image vertically
- ...
source: /source/975468/7-assisted-split/image-1.png
- ...
Edit your config file, you should have one more destination than the limits. If you put destination like that: 2.1, it means that it will be the first part of the page 2 and the 2.2 will be the second part.
-
Delete the file
REMOVE_TO_CONTINUE
. -
After the process do his first pass you will have the final generated images.
-
If it's OK delete the file
REMOVE_TO_CONTINUE
.
First of all the scanimage
command and arguments can be configured with the scanimage
and
scanimage_argumentss
options in the configuration file (~/.config/scan-to-paperless.yaml
).
In this file there is also a modes
section that can configure each modes.
See also: The documentation
To create the preset
configuration file it can be useful to extends an existing configuration.
For that you can use the extends
(and merge_strategies
) option in the configuration file.
See also: The documentation
Environment variable:
SCAN_SOURCE_FOLDER
: The main input folder for the scan process.SCAN_CODES_FOLDER
: The input folder for the codes (QR code ad Barcode) detection and add a new page.SCAN_FINAL_FOLDER
: The final folder for the scan process.SCAN_CODES_DPI
: The used DPI to decode the codes.SCAN_CODES_PDF_DPI
: The used PDF DPI to create the codes document.SCAN_CODES_FONT_NAME
: The used font of code number.SCAN_CODES_FONT_SIZE
: The used font size of code number.SCAN_CODES_MARGIN_TOP
: The top margin of code number.SCAN_CODES_MARGIN_LEFT
:The left margin of code number.TIME
: Print the elapsed time.PROGRESS
: Save some intermediate files, don't clean the folder at the end.
Install the pre-commit hooks:
pip install pre-commit
pre-commit install --allow-missing-config