- Debug mode is now configurable in the configuration file. This way, we don't have to edit versioned files to disable it on production systems.
- Recent correspondents filter (enable in configuration file)
- Document actions: Edit tags and correspondents on multiple documents at once
- Replaced month list filter with date drilldown
- Sortable document count columns on Tag and Correspondent admin
- Last correspondence column on Correspondent admin
- Save and edit next functionality for document editing
This allows for future decisions around the types of encryption used (if any). Ideally, I want to replace GPG one day with something elegant out of the cryptography module.
Originally we used SHARED secret both for email and for the API. That
was a bad idea, and now that we're only using this value for one case,
I've renamed it to reflect its actual use.
I've broken out the OCR-specific code from the consumers and dumped it
all into its own app, `paperless_tesseract`. This new app should serve
as a sample of how to create one's own consumer for different file
types.
Documentation for how to do this isn't ready yet, but for the impatient:
* Create a new app
* containing a `parsers.py` for your parser modelled after
`paperless_tesseract.parsers.RasterisedDocumentParser`
* containing a `signals.py` with a handler moddelled after
`paperless_tesseract.signals.ConsumerDeclaration`
* connect the signal handler to
`documents.signals.document_consumer_declaration` in
`your_app.apps`
* Install the app into Paperless by declaring
`PAPERLESS_INSTALLED_APPS=your_app`. Additional apps should be
separated with commas.
* Restart the consumer
This change includes a filthy hack around how Django handles
change_list_results.html -- I'm not thrilled with it, but it's as
elegant as I could come up with. I'm happy to field alternative ideas.
More details can be found in `documents/templatetags/hacks.py`
Specifically, this merge includes a significant facelift to the
documents listing page, moving away from the tabular layout and toward a
tileset look. I tried fiddling with the colours, but I just don't have
any skills in that area, so we're all stuck with Django'd default
colours until someone with an eye for colour can submit a better CSS.