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			546 lines
		
	
	
		
			21 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Markdown
		
	
	
	
	
	
# Advanced Topics
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Paperless offers a couple features that automate certain tasks and make
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your life easier.
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## Matching tags, correspondents, document types, and storage paths {#matching}
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Paperless will compare the matching algorithms defined by every tag,
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correspondent, document type, and storage path in your database to see
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if they apply to the text in a document. In other words, if you define a
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tag called `Home Utility` that had a `match` property of `bc hydro` and
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a `matching_algorithm` of `Exact`, Paperless will automatically tag
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your newly-consumed document with your `Home Utility` tag so long as the
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text `bc hydro` appears in the body of the document somewhere.
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The matching logic is quite powerful. It supports searching the text of
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your document with different algorithms, and as such, some
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experimentation may be necessary to get things right.
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In order to have a tag, correspondent, document type, or storage path
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assigned automatically to newly consumed documents, assign a match and
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matching algorithm using the web interface. These settings define when
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to assign tags, correspondents, document types, and storage paths to
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documents.
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The following algorithms are available:
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- **None:** No matching will be performed.
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- **Any:** Looks for any occurrence of any word provided in match in
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  the PDF. If you define the match as `Bank1 Bank2`, it will match
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  documents containing either of these terms.
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- **All:** Requires that every word provided appears in the PDF,
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  albeit not in the order provided.
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- **Exact:** Matches only if the match appears exactly as provided
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  (i.e. preserve ordering) in the PDF.
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- **Regular expression:** Parses the match as a regular expression and
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  tries to find a match within the document.
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- **Fuzzy match:** I don't know. Look at the source.
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- **Auto:** Tries to automatically match new documents. This does not
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  require you to set a match. See the notes below.
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When using the _any_ or _all_ matching algorithms, you can search for
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terms that consist of multiple words by enclosing them in double quotes.
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For example, defining a match text of `"Bank of America" BofA` using the
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_any_ algorithm, will match documents that contain either "Bank of
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America" or "BofA", but will not match documents containing "Bank of
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South America".
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Then just save your tag, correspondent, document type, or storage path
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and run another document through the consumer. Once complete, you should
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see the newly-created document, automatically tagged with the
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appropriate data.
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### Automatic matching {#automatic-matching}
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Paperless-ngx comes with a new matching algorithm called _Auto_. This
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matching algorithm tries to assign tags, correspondents, document types,
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and storage paths to your documents based on how you have already
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assigned these on existing documents. It uses a neural network under the
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hood.
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If, for example, all your bank statements of your account 123 at the
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Bank of America are tagged with the tag "bofa123" and the matching
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algorithm of this tag is set to _Auto_, this neural network will examine
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your documents and automatically learn when to assign this tag.
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Paperless tries to hide much of the involved complexity with this
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approach. However, there are a couple caveats you need to keep in mind
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when using this feature:
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- Changes to your documents are not immediately reflected by the
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  matching algorithm. The neural network needs to be _trained_ on your
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  documents after changes. Paperless periodically (default: once each
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  hour) checks for changes and does this automatically for you.
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- The Auto matching algorithm only takes documents into account which
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  are NOT placed in your inbox (i.e. have any inbox tags assigned to
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  them). This ensures that the neural network only learns from
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  documents which you have correctly tagged before.
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- The matching algorithm can only work if there is a correlation
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  between the tag, correspondent, document type, or storage path and
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  the document itself. Your bank statements usually contain your bank
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  account number and the name of the bank, so this works reasonably
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  well, However, tags such as "TODO" cannot be automatically
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  assigned.
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- The matching algorithm needs a reasonable number of documents to
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  identify when to assign tags, correspondents, storage paths, and
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  types. If one out of a thousand documents has the correspondent
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  "Very obscure web shop I bought something five years ago", it will
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  probably not assign this correspondent automatically if you buy
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  something from them again. The more documents, the better.
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- Paperless also needs a reasonable amount of negative examples to
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  decide when not to assign a certain tag, correspondent, document
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  type, or storage path. This will usually be the case as you start
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  filling up paperless with documents. Example: If all your documents
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  are either from "Webshop" and "Bank", paperless will assign one
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  of these correspondents to ANY new document, if both are set to
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  automatic matching.
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## Hooking into the consumption process {#consume-hooks}
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Sometimes you may want to do something arbitrary whenever a document is
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consumed. Rather than try to predict what you may want to do, Paperless
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lets you execute scripts of your own choosing just before or after a
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document is consumed using a couple simple hooks.
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Just write a script, put it somewhere that Paperless can read & execute,
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and then put the path to that script in `paperless.conf` or
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`docker-compose.env` with the variable name of either
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`PAPERLESS_PRE_CONSUME_SCRIPT` or `PAPERLESS_POST_CONSUME_SCRIPT`.
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!!! info
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    These scripts are executed in a **blocking** process, which means that
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    if a script takes a long time to run, it can significantly slow down
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    your document consumption flow. If you want things to run
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    asynchronously, you'll have to fork the process in your script and
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    exit.
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### Pre-consumption script {#pre-consume-script}
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Executed after the consumer sees a new document in the consumption
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folder, but before any processing of the document is performed. This
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script can access the following relevant environment variables set:
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| Environment Variable    | Description                                                  |
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| ----------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------ |
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| `DOCUMENT_SOURCE_PATH`  | Original path of the consumed document                       |
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| `DOCUMENT_WORKING_PATH` | Path to a copy of the original that consumption will work on |
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!!! note
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    Pre-consume scripts which modify the document should only change
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    the `DOCUMENT_WORKING_PATH` file or a second consume task may
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    be triggered, leading to failures as two tasks work on the
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    same document path
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A simple but common example for this would be creating a simple script
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like this:
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`/usr/local/bin/ocr-pdf`
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```bash
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#!/usr/bin/env bash
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pdf2pdfocr.py -i ${DOCUMENT_WORKING_PATH}
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```
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`/etc/paperless.conf`
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```bash
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...
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PAPERLESS_PRE_CONSUME_SCRIPT="/usr/local/bin/ocr-pdf"
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...
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```
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This will pass the path to the document about to be consumed to
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`/usr/local/bin/ocr-pdf`, which will in turn call
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[pdf2pdfocr.py](https://github.com/LeoFCardoso/pdf2pdfocr) on your
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document, which will then overwrite the file with an OCR'd version of
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the file and exit. At which point, the consumption process will begin
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with the newly modified file.
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The script's stdout and stderr will be logged line by line to the
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webserver log, along with the exit code of the script.
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### Post-consumption script {#post-consume-script}
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Executed after the consumer has successfully processed a document and
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has moved it into paperless. It receives the following environment
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variables:
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| Environment Variable         | Description                                   |
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| ---------------------------- | --------------------------------------------- |
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| `DOCUMENT_ID`                | Database primary key of the document          |
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| `DOCUMENT_FILE_NAME`         | Formatted filename, not including paths       |
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| `DOCUMENT_CREATED`           | Date & time when document created             |
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| `DOCUMENT_MODIFIED`          | Date & time when document was last modified   |
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| `DOCUMENT_ADDED`             | Date & time when document was added           |
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| `DOCUMENT_SOURCE_PATH`       | Path to the original document file            |
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| `DOCUMENT_ARCHIVE_PATH`      | Path to the generate archive file (if any)    |
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| `DOCUMENT_THUMBNAIL_PATH`    | Path to the generated thumbnail               |
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| `DOCUMENT_DOWNLOAD_URL`      | URL for document download                     |
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| `DOCUMENT_THUMBNAIL_URL`     | URL for the document thumbnail                |
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| `DOCUMENT_CORRESPONDENT`     | Assigned correspondent (if any)               |
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| `DOCUMENT_TAGS`              | Comma separated list of tags applied (if any) |
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| `DOCUMENT_ORIGINAL_FILENAME` | Filename of original document                 |
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The script can be in any language, A simple shell script example:
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```bash title="post-consumption-example"
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--8<-- "./scripts/post-consumption-example.sh"
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```
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!!! note
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    The post consumption script cannot cancel the consumption process.
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!!! warning
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    The post consumption script should not modify the document files
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    directly
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The script's stdout and stderr will be logged line by line to the
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webserver log, along with the exit code of the script.
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### Docker {#docker-consume-hooks}
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To hook into the consumption process when using Docker, you
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will need to pass the scripts into the container via a host mount
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in your `docker-compose.yml`.
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Assuming you have
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`/home/paperless-ngx/scripts/post-consumption-example.sh` as a
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script which you'd like to run.
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You can pass that script into the consumer container via a host mount:
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```yaml
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...
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webserver:
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  ...
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  volumes:
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    ...
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    - /home/paperless-ngx/scripts:/path/in/container/scripts/ # (1)!
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  environment: # (3)!
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    ...
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    PAPERLESS_POST_CONSUME_SCRIPT: /path/in/container/scripts/post-consumption-example.sh # (2)!
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...
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```
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1. The external scripts directory is mounted to a location inside the container.
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2. The internal location of the script is used to set the script to run
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3. This can also be set in `docker-compose.env`
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Troubleshooting:
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- Monitor the docker-compose log
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  `cd ~/paperless-ngx; docker-compose logs -f`
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- Check your script's permission e.g. in case of permission error
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  `sudo chmod 755 post-consumption-example.sh`
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- Pipe your scripts's output to a log file e.g.
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  `echo "${DOCUMENT_ID}" | tee --append /usr/src/paperless/scripts/post-consumption-example.log`
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## File name handling {#file-name-handling}
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By default, paperless stores your documents in the media directory and
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renames them using the identifier which it has assigned to each
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document. You will end up getting files like `0000123.pdf` in your media
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directory. This isn't necessarily a bad thing, because you normally
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don't have to access these files manually. However, if you wish to name
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your files differently, you can do that by adjusting the
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`PAPERLESS_FILENAME_FORMAT` configuration option. Paperless adds the
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correct file extension e.g. `.pdf`, `.jpg` automatically.
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This variable allows you to configure the filename (folders are allowed)
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using placeholders. For example, configuring this to
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```bash
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PAPERLESS_FILENAME_FORMAT={created_year}/{correspondent}/{title}
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```
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will create a directory structure as follows:
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```
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2019/
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  My bank/
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    Statement January.pdf
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    Statement February.pdf
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2020/
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  My bank/
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    Statement January.pdf
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    Letter.pdf
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    Letter_01.pdf
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  Shoe store/
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    My new shoes.pdf
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```
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!!! warning
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    Do not manually move your files in the media folder. Paperless remembers
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    the last filename a document was stored as. If you do rename a file,
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    paperless will report your files as missing and won't be able to find
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    them.
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Paperless provides the following placeholders within filenames:
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- `{asn}`: The archive serial number of the document, or "none".
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- `{correspondent}`: The name of the correspondent, or "none".
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- `{document_type}`: The name of the document type, or "none".
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- `{tag_list}`: A comma separated list of all tags assigned to the
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  document.
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- `{title}`: The title of the document.
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- `{created}`: The full date (ISO format) the document was created.
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- `{created_year}`: Year created only, formatted as the year with
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  century.
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- `{created_year_short}`: Year created only, formatted as the year
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  without century, zero padded.
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- `{created_month}`: Month created only (number 01-12).
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- `{created_month_name}`: Month created name, as per locale
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- `{created_month_name_short}`: Month created abbreviated name, as per
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  locale
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- `{created_day}`: Day created only (number 01-31).
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- `{added}`: The full date (ISO format) the document was added to
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  paperless.
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- `{added_year}`: Year added only.
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- `{added_year_short}`: Year added only, formatted as the year without
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  century, zero padded.
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- `{added_month}`: Month added only (number 01-12).
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- `{added_month_name}`: Month added name, as per locale
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- `{added_month_name_short}`: Month added abbreviated name, as per
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  locale
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- `{added_day}`: Day added only (number 01-31).
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- `{owner_username}`: Username of document owner, if any, or "none"
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- `{original_name}`: Document original filename, minus the extension, if any, or "none"
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Paperless will try to conserve the information from your database as
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much as possible. However, some characters that you can use in document
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titles and correspondent names (such as `: \ /` and a couple more) are
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not allowed in filenames and will be replaced with dashes.
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If paperless detects that two documents share the same filename,
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paperless will automatically append `_01`, `_02`, etc to the filename.
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This happens if all the placeholders in a filename evaluate to the same
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value.
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!!! tip
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    You can affect how empty placeholders are treated by changing the
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    following setting to `true`.
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    ```
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    PAPERLESS_FILENAME_FORMAT_REMOVE_NONE=True
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    ```
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    Doing this results in all empty placeholders resolving to "" instead
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    of "none" as stated above. Spaces before empty placeholders are
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    removed as well, empty directories are omitted.
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!!! tip
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    Paperless checks the filename of a document whenever it is saved.
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    Therefore, you need to update the filenames of your documents and move
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    them after altering this setting by invoking the
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    [`document renamer`](/administration#renamer).
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!!! warning
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    Make absolutely sure you get the spelling of the placeholders right, or
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    else paperless will use the default naming scheme instead.
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!!! caution
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    As of now, you could totally tell paperless to store your files anywhere
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    outside the media directory by setting
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    ```
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    PAPERLESS_FILENAME_FORMAT=../../my/custom/location/{title}
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    ```
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    However, keep in mind that inside docker, if files get stored outside of
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    the predefined volumes, they will be lost after a restart of paperless.
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!!! warning
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    When file naming handling, in particular when using `{tag_list}`,
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    you may run into the limits of your operating system's maximum
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    path lengths.  Files will retain the previous path instead and
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    the issue logged.
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## Storage paths
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One of the best things in Paperless is that you can not only access the
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documents via the web interface, but also via the file system.
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When a single storage layout is not sufficient for your use case,
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storage paths come to the rescue. Storage paths allow you to configure
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more precisely where each document is stored in the file system.
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- Each storage path is a `PAPERLESS_FILENAME_FORMAT` and
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  follows the rules described above
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- Each document is assigned a storage path using the matching
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  algorithms described above, but can be overwritten at any time
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For example, you could define the following two storage paths:
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1.  Normal communications are put into a folder structure sorted by
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    `year/correspondent`
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2.  Communications with insurance companies are stored in a flat
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    structure with longer file names, but containing the full date of
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    the correspondence.
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```
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By Year = {created_year}/{correspondent}/{title}
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Insurances = Insurances/{correspondent}/{created_year}-{created_month}-{created_day} {title}
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```
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If you then map these storage paths to the documents, you might get the
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following result. For simplicity, `By Year` defines the same
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structure as in the previous example above.
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```text
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2019/                                   # By Year
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   My bank/
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     Statement January.pdf
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     Statement February.pdf
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Insurances/                             # Insurances
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   Healthcare 123/
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     2022-01-01 Statement January.pdf
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     2022-02-02 Letter.pdf
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     2022-02-03 Letter.pdf
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   Dental 456/
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     2021-12-01 New Conditions.pdf
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```
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!!! tip
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    Defining a storage path is optional. If no storage path is defined for a
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    document, the global `PAPERLESS_FILENAME_FORMAT` is applied.
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## Celery Monitoring {#celery-monitoring}
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The monitoring tool
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[Flower](https://flower.readthedocs.io/en/latest/index.html) can be used
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to view more detailed information about the health of the celery workers
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used for asynchronous tasks. This includes details on currently running,
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queued and completed tasks, timing and more. Flower can also be used
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						|
with Prometheus, as it exports metrics. For details on its capabilities,
 | 
						|
refer to the Flower documentation.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
To configure Flower further, create a `flowerconfig.py` and
 | 
						|
place it into the `src/paperless` directory. For a Docker
 | 
						|
installation, you can use volumes to accomplish this:
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
```yaml
 | 
						|
services:
 | 
						|
  # ...
 | 
						|
  webserver:
 | 
						|
    ports:
 | 
						|
      - 5555:5555 # (2)!
 | 
						|
    # ...
 | 
						|
    volumes:
 | 
						|
      - /path/to/my/flowerconfig.py:/usr/src/paperless/src/paperless/flowerconfig.py:ro # (1)!
 | 
						|
```
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
1. Note the `:ro` tag means the file will be mounted as read only.
 | 
						|
2. `flower` runs by default on port 5555, but this can be configured
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
## Custom Container Initialization
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
The Docker image includes the ability to run custom user scripts during
 | 
						|
startup. This could be utilized for installing additional tools or
 | 
						|
Python packages, for example. Scripts are expected to be shell scripts.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
To utilize this, mount a folder containing your scripts to the custom
 | 
						|
initialization directory, `/custom-cont-init.d` and place
 | 
						|
scripts you wish to run inside. For security, the folder must be owned
 | 
						|
by `root` and should have permissions of `a=rx`. Additionally, scripts
 | 
						|
must only be writable by `root`.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
Your scripts will be run directly before the webserver completes
 | 
						|
startup. Scripts will be run by the `root` user.
 | 
						|
If you would like to switch users, the utility `gosu` is available and
 | 
						|
preferred over `sudo`.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
This is an advanced functionality with which you could break functionality
 | 
						|
or lose data. If you experience issues, please disable any custom scripts
 | 
						|
and try again before reporting an issue.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
For example, using Docker Compose:
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
```yaml
 | 
						|
services:
 | 
						|
  # ...
 | 
						|
  webserver:
 | 
						|
    # ...
 | 
						|
    volumes:
 | 
						|
      - /path/to/my/scripts:/custom-cont-init.d:ro # (1)!
 | 
						|
```
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
1. Note the `:ro` tag means the folder will be mounted as read only. This is for extra security against changes
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
## MySQL Caveats {#mysql-caveats}
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
### Case Sensitivity
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
The database interface does not provide a method to configure a MySQL
 | 
						|
database to be case sensitive. This would prevent a user from creating a
 | 
						|
tag `Name` and `NAME` as they are considered the same.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
Per Django documentation, to enable this requires manual intervention.
 | 
						|
To enable case sensetive tables, you can execute the following command
 | 
						|
against each table:
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
`ALTER TABLE <table_name> CONVERT TO CHARACTER SET utf8mb4 COLLATE utf8mb4_bin;`
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
You can also set the default for new tables (this does NOT affect
 | 
						|
existing tables) with:
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
`ALTER DATABASE <db_name> CHARACTER SET utf8mb4 COLLATE utf8mb4_bin;`
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
!!! warning
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
    Using mariadb version 10.4+ is recommended. Using the `utf8mb3` character set on
 | 
						|
    an older system may fix issues that can arise while setting up Paperless-ngx but
 | 
						|
    `utf8mb3` can cause issues with consumption (where `utf8mb4` does not).
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
## Barcodes {#barcodes}
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
Paperless is able to utilize barcodes for automatically preforming some tasks.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
At this time, the library utilized for detection of bacodes supports the following types:
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
- AN-13/UPC-A
 | 
						|
- UPC-E
 | 
						|
- EAN-8
 | 
						|
- Code 128
 | 
						|
- Code 93
 | 
						|
- Code 39
 | 
						|
- Codabar
 | 
						|
- Interleaved 2 of 5
 | 
						|
- QR Code
 | 
						|
- SQ Code
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
You may check for updates on the [zbar library homepage](https://github.com/mchehab/zbar).
 | 
						|
For usage in Paperless, the type of barcode does not matter, only the contents of it.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
For how to enable barcode usage, see [the configuration](/configuration#barcodes).
 | 
						|
The two settings may be enabled independently, but do have interactions as explained
 | 
						|
below.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
### Document Splitting
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
When enabled, Paperless will look for a barcode with the configured value and create a new document
 | 
						|
starting from the next page. The page with the barcode on it will _not_ be retained. It
 | 
						|
is expected to be a page existing only for triggering the split.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
### Archive Serial Number Assignment
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
When enabled, the value of the barcode (as an integer) will be used to set the document's
 | 
						|
archive serial number, allowing quick reference back to the original, paper document.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
If document splitting via barcode is also enabled, documents will be split when an ASN
 | 
						|
barcode is located. However, differing from the splitting, the page with the
 | 
						|
barcode _will_ be retained. This allows application of a barcode to any page, including
 | 
						|
one which holds data to keep in the document.
 |