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Apache Tika integration for Plone using portal transforms.

Project description

ftw.tika

This product integrates Apache Tika for full text indexing with Plone by providing portal transforms to text/plain for the various document formats supported by Tika.

Compatibility

ftw.tika is compatible with Plone 4.x and the Tika versions listed below (Plone and Tika versions can be mixed and matched).

Tika 1.5

Tika_15_Tests

Plone 4.1

Plone_41_Tests

Tika 1.6

Tika_16_Tests

Plone 4.2

Plone_42_Tests

Tika 1.7

Tika_17_Tests

Plone 4.3

Plone_43_Tests

Tika 1.8

Tika_18_Tests

Tika 1.9

Tika_19_Tests

Tika 1.10

Tika_110_Tests

Tika 1.11

Tika_111_Tests

Supported Formats

Input Formats

  • Microsoft Office formats (Office Open XML)

    • *.docx Word Documents

    • *.dotx Word Templates

    • *.xlsx Excel Sheets

    • *.xltx Excel Templates

    • *.pptx Powerpoint Presentations

    • *.potx Powerpoint Templates

    • *.ppsx Powerpoint Slideshows

  • Legacy Microsoft Office (97) formats

  • Rich Text Format

  • OpenOffice ODF formats

  • OpenOffice 1.x formats

  • Common Adobe formats (InDesign, Illustrator, Photoshop)

  • PDF documents

  • WordPerfect documents

  • E-Mail messages

See the mimetypes module for details on the MIME types corresponding to these formats.

Formats supported by Tika, but not wired up (yet)

  • Electronic Publication Format

  • Compression and packaging formats

  • Audio formats

  • Image formats

  • Video formats

  • Java class files and archives

  • The mbox format

See the Supported Document Formats page on the Apache Tika Wiki for details.

Output Formats

  • text/plain

Installation

The preferred method to run the Tika JAX-RS server as a daemon. Although it is possible to run Tika without a daemon (by booting it up for each time a file is converted), the daemon is a lot faster.

Both methods require tika-app.jar to be downloaded and some ZCML configuration for ftw.tika. The daemon method also requires the JAX-RS tika-server.app to be downloaded.

Below are some configuration examples.

Daemon buildout example

See the included tika.cfg for a deamon example that you can adjust as necessary, copy into your buildout and extend from:

[buildout]
parts +=
    tika-app-download
    tika-server-download
    tika-server

[tika]
server-port = 9998
zcml =
    <configure xmlns:tika="http://namespaces.plone.org/tika">
        <tika:config path="${tika-app-download:destination}/${tika-app-download:filename}"
                     port="${tika:server-port}" />
    </configure>

[tika-app-download]
recipe = hexagonit.recipe.download
url = http://repo1.maven.org/maven2/org/apache/tika/tika-app/1.11/tika-app-1.11.jar
md5sum = c292fbb0b28fbe44f915229afb839db8
download-only = true
filename = tika-app.jar

[tika-server-download]
recipe = hexagonit.recipe.download
url = http://repo1.maven.org/maven2/org/apache/tika/tika-server/1.11/tika-server-1.11.jar
md5sum = 3c8fb21140213a2f3fbac770358034ab
download-only = true
filename = tika-server.jar

[tika-server]
recipe = collective.recipe.scriptgen
cmd = java
arguments = -jar ${tika-server-download:destination}/${tika-server-download:filename} --port ${tika:server-port} -includeStack

[instance]
zcml-additional = ${tika:zcml}
eggs += ftw.tika

If your deployment buildout is based on the deployment buildouts included in the ftw-buildouts repository on github, you can simply extend the tika-jaxrs-server.cfg and you have everything configured:

[buildout]
extends =
    https://raw.github.com/4teamwork/ftw-buildouts/master/production.cfg
    https://raw.github.com/4teamwork/ftw-buildouts/master/zeoclients/4.cfg
    https://raw.github.com/4teamwork/ftw-buildouts/master/tika-jaxrs-server.cfg

deployment-number = 05

filestorage-parts =
    www.mywebsite.com

instance-eggs =
    mywebsite

Non-daemon buildout example

Note that running Tika in non-daemon mode is very, very slow!

When you don’t want to use Tika as daemon, you can simply just configure the path to the tika-app.jar in the ftw.tika ZCML configuration and it will fire up tika-app.jar (in a new JVM) every time something needs to be converted.

Here is a short example of how to download the tika-app.jar and configuring ftw.tika with buildout:

[buildout]
parts +=
    tika-app

[tika-app]
recipe = hexagonit.recipe.download
url = http://repo1.maven.org/maven2/org/apache/tika/tika-app/1.11/tika-app-1.11.jar
md5sum = c292fbb0b28fbe44f915229afb839db8
download-only = true
filename = tika-app.jar

[instance]
eggs += ftw.tika
zcml-additional =
    <configure xmlns:tika="http://namespaces.plone.org/tika">
        <tika:config path="${tika-app:destination}/${tika-app:filename}" />
    </configure>

Installing ftw.tika in Plone

  • Install ftw.tika by adding it to the list of eggs in your buildout. (The buildout examples above include adding ftw.tika to the eggs).

[instance]
eggs +=
    ftw.tika
  • Run buildout and start your instance

  • Go to Site Setup of your Plone site and activate the ftw.tika add-on, or depend on the ftw.tika:default profile from your package’s metadata.xml.

Uninstalling ftw.tika

ftw.tika has an uninstall profile. To uninstall ftw.tika, import the ftw.tika:uninstall profile using the portal_setup tool.

Configuration

ftw.tika expects to be provided with a path to an installed tika-app.jar. This can be done through ZCML, and therefore also through buildout.

Configuration in ZCML

The path to the tika-app.jar file must be configured in ZCML.

If you used the supplied tika.cfg as described above, you can reference the download location directly from buildout by using ${tika:destination}/${tika:filename}:

[instance]
zcml-additional =
    <configure xmlns:tika="http://namespaces.plone.org/tika">
        <tika:config path="${tika:destination}/${tika:filename}" />
    </configure>

If you installed Tika yourself, just set path="/path/to/tika" accordingly.

Usage

To use ftw.tika, simply ask the portal_transforms tool for a transformation to text/plain from one of the input formats supported by ftw.tika:

namedfile = self.context.file
transform_tool = getToolByName(self.context, 'portal_transforms')

stream = transform_tool.convertTo(
    'text/plain',
    namedfile.data,
    mimetype=namedfile.contentType)
plain_text = stream and stream.getData() or ''

Caching

If you want the result of the transform to be cached, you’ll need to pass a persistent ZODB object to transform_tool.convertTo() to store the cached result on.

For example, for a NamedBlobFile versioned with CMFEditions you’d use namedfile.data to access the data of the current working copy, and pass namedfile._blob as the object for the cache to be stored on (the namedfile is always the same instance for any version, only the _blob changes):

stream = transform_tool.convertTo(
    'text/plain',
    namedfile.data,
    mimetype=namedfile.contentType,
    object=namedfile._blob)

Stand-alone converter

The code calling Tika is encapsulated in its own class, so if for some reason you don’t want to use the portal_transforms tool, you can also use the converter directly by just instanciating it:

from ftw.tika.converter import TikaConverter

data = StringIO('foo')
converter = TikaConverter(path="/path/to/tika-app.jar")
plain_text = converter.convert(data)

The convert() method accepts either a data string or a file-like stream object. If no path keyword argument is supplied, the converter tries to get the path to the tika-app.jar from the ZCML configuration.

Error logging

In order to get more detailed error logging when using the Tika JAXRS server, you can launch it with the -includeStack command line option and set the environment variable FTW_TIKA_VERBOSE_LOGGING to something truthy.

ftw.tika will then additionally log the output from Tika (which should contain the Java stack trace) in case of a conversion failure, giving you more information as to why the conversion failed.

Changelog

2.6.0 (2015-10-27)

  • Add support for Tika 1.11 [lgraf]

2.5.0 (2015-10-27)

  • Add support for Tika 1.10 [lgraf]

2.4.0 (2015-10-27)

  • Add support for Tika 1.9 [lgraf]

2.3.0 (2015-10-27)

  • Fall back to local Tika on any RequestException, not just Timeout. [lgraf]

  • Make use of the fact that Tika JAXRS server now can return the Java stack traces in the response body, allowing ftw.tika to provide better error logging in the case of conversion failures (for example, detecting that conversion failed because a document is password protected). [lgraf]

  • Add support for Tika 1.8 [lgraf]

2.2.0 (2015-10-25)

  • Add support for Tika 1.7 [lgraf]

2.1.0 (2015-10-25)

  • Add support for Tika 1.6 [lgraf]

2.0.1 (2014-12-08)

  • Set a default connection timeout of 10s for requests to Tika JAXRS server. [lgraf]

2.0 (2014-11-24)

  • Switch to Tika JAXRS server component (tika-server). [lgraf]

1.1.2 (2014-09-01)

  • Changed tika source to archive.apache.org. [lknoepfel]

  • Extend integration tests to test conversion of all common formats we claim to support. [lgraf]

  • Updated tika to version 1.5. Updated detection of protected office files. [lknoepfel]

1.1.1 (2014-04-01)

  • Only log a warning on protected PDFs / MS Office documents. [jone]

1.1.0 (2014-03-14)

  • Add support for running tika as a deamon. The deamon speeds up the conversion from approximately 1.1 seconds per document to 0.06 seconds. [jone]

1.0 (2013-11-29)

  • First implementation. [lgraf]

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