paperless-ngx/docs/development.md
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# Development
This section describes the steps you need to take to start development
on Paperless-ngx.
Check out the source from GitHub. The repository is organized in the
following way:
- `main` always represents the latest release and will only see
changes when a new release is made.
- `dev` contains the code that will be in the next release.
- `feature-X` contains bigger changes that will be in some release, but
not necessarily the next one.
When making functional changes to Paperless-ngx, _always_ make your changes
on the `dev` branch.
Apart from that, the folder structure is as follows:
- `docs/` - Documentation.
- `src-ui/` - Code of the front end.
- `src/` - Code of the back end.
- `scripts/` - Various scripts that help with different parts of
development.
- `docker/` - Files required to build the docker image.
## Contributing to Paperless-ngx
Maybe you've been using Paperless-ngx for a while and want to add a feature
or two, or maybe you've come across a bug that you have some ideas how
to solve. The beauty of open source software is that you can see what's
wrong and help to get it fixed for everyone!
Before contributing please review our [code of
conduct](https://github.com/paperless-ngx/paperless-ngx/blob/main/CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md)
and other important information in the [contributing
guidelines](https://github.com/paperless-ngx/paperless-ngx/blob/main/CONTRIBUTING.md).
## Code formatting with pre-commit hooks
To ensure a consistent style and formatting across the project source,
the project utilizes Git [`pre-commit`](https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Customizing-Git-Git-Hooks)
hooks to perform some formatting and linting before a commit is allowed.
That way, everyone uses the same style and some common issues can be caught
early on.
Once installed, hooks will run when you commit. If the formatting isn't
quite right or a linter catches something, the commit will be rejected.
You'll need to look at the output and fix the issue. Some hooks, such
as the Python linting and formatting tool `ruff`, will format failing
files, so all you need to do is `git add` those files again
and retry your commit.
## General setup
After you forked and cloned the code from GitHub you need to perform a
first-time setup.
!!! note
Every command is executed directly from the root folder of the project unless specified otherwise.
1. Install prerequisites + [uv](https://github.com/astral-sh/uv) as mentioned in
[Bare metal route](setup.md#bare_metal).
2. Copy `paperless.conf.example` to `paperless.conf` and enable debug
mode within the file via `PAPERLESS_DEBUG=true`.
3. Create `consume` and `media` directories:
```bash
mkdir -p consume media
```
4. Install the Python dependencies:
```bash
$ uv sync --dev
```
5. Install pre-commit hooks:
```bash
$ uv run pre-commit install
```
6. Apply migrations and create a superuser for your development instance:
```bash
# src/
$ uv run manage.py migrate
$ uv run manage.py createsuperuser
```
7. You can now either ...
- install redis or
- use the included `scripts/start_services.sh` to use docker to fire
up a redis instance (and some other services such as tika,
gotenberg and a database server) or
- spin up a bare redis container
```
docker run -d -p 6379:6379 --restart unless-stopped redis:latest
```
8. Continue with either back-end or front-end development or both :-).
## Back end development
The back end is a [Django](https://www.djangoproject.com/) application.
[PyCharm](https://www.jetbrains.com/de-de/pycharm/) as well as [Visual Studio Code](https://code.visualstudio.com)
work well for development, but you can use whatever you want.
Configure the IDE to use the `src/`-folder as the base source folder.
Configure the following launch configurations in your IDE:
- `python3 manage.py runserver`
- `python3 manage.py document_consumer`
- `celery --app paperless worker -l DEBUG` (or any other log level)
To start them all:
```bash
# src/
$ python3 manage.py runserver & \
python3 manage.py document_consumer & \
celery --app paperless worker -l DEBUG
```
You might need the front end to test your back end code.
This assumes that you have AngularJS installed on your system.
Go to the [Front end development](#front-end-development) section for further details.
To build the front end once use this command:
```bash
# src-ui/
$ npm install
$ ng build --configuration production
```
### Testing
- Run `pytest` in the `src/` directory to execute all tests. This also
generates a HTML coverage report. When runnings test, `paperless.conf`
is loaded as well. However, the tests rely on the default
configuration. This is not ideal. But for now, make sure no settings
except for DEBUG are overridden when testing.
!!! note
The line length rule E501 is generally useful for getting multiple
source files next to each other on the screen. However, in some
cases, its just not possible to make some lines fit, especially
complicated IF cases. Append `# noqa: E501` to disable this check
for certain lines.
### Package Management
Paperless uses `uv` to manage packages and virtual environments for both development and production.
To accomplish some common tasks using `uv`, follow the shortcuts below:
To upgrade all locked packages to the latest allowed versions: `uv lock --upgrade`
To upgrade a single locked package: `uv lock --upgrade-package <package>`
To add a new package: `uv add <package>`
To add a new development package `uv add --dev <package>`
## Front end development
The front end is built using AngularJS. In order to get started, you need Node.js (version 14.15+) and
`npm`.
!!! note
The following commands are all performed in the `src-ui`-directory. You will need a running back end (including an active session) to connect to the back end API. To spin it up refer to the commands under the section [above](#back-end-development).
1. Install the Angular CLI. You might need sudo privileges to perform this command:
```bash
npm install -g @angular/cli
```
2. Make sure that it's on your path.
3. Install all necessary modules:
```bash
npm install
```
4. You can launch a development server by running:
```bash
ng serve
```
This will automatically update whenever you save. However, in-place
compilation might fail on syntax errors, in which case you need to
restart it.
By default, the development server is available on `http://localhost:4200/` and is configured to access the API at
`http://localhost:8000/api/`, which is the default of the backend. If you enabled `DEBUG` on the back end, several security overrides for allowed hosts, CORS and X-Frame-Options are in place so that the front end behaves exactly as in production.
### Testing and code style
The front end code (.ts, .html, .scss) use `prettier` for code
formatting via the Git `pre-commit` hooks which run automatically on
commit. See [above](#code-formatting-with-pre-commit-hooks) for installation instructions. You can also run this via the CLI with a
command such as
```bash
$ git ls-files -- '*.ts' | xargs pre-commit run prettier --files
```
Front end testing uses Jest and Playwright. Unit tests and e2e tests,
respectively, can be run non-interactively with:
```bash
$ ng test
$ npx playwright test
```
Playwright also includes a UI which can be run with:
```bash
$ npx playwright test --ui
```
### Building the frontend
In order to build the front end and serve it as part of Django, execute:
```bash
$ ng build --configuration production
```
This will build the front end and put it in a location from which the
Django server will serve it as static content. This way, you can verify
that authentication is working.
## Localization
Paperless-ngx is available in many different languages. Since Paperless-ngx
consists both of a Django application and an AngularJS front end, both
these parts have to be translated separately.
### Front end localization
- The AngularJS front end does localization according to the [Angular
documentation](https://angular.io/guide/i18n).
- The source language of the project is "en_US".
- The source strings end up in the file `src-ui/messages.xlf`.
- The translated strings need to be placed in the
`src-ui/src/locale/` folder.
- In order to extract added or changed strings from the source files,
call `ng extract-i18n`.
Adding new languages requires adding the translated files in the
`src-ui/src/locale/` folder and adjusting a couple files.
1. Adjust `src-ui/angular.json`:
```json
"i18n": {
"sourceLocale": "en-US",
"locales": {
"de": "src/locale/messages.de.xlf",
"nl-NL": "src/locale/messages.nl_NL.xlf",
"fr": "src/locale/messages.fr.xlf",
"en-GB": "src/locale/messages.en_GB.xlf",
"pt-BR": "src/locale/messages.pt_BR.xlf",
"language-code": "language-file"
}
}
```
2. Add the language to the `LANGUAGE_OPTIONS` array in
`src-ui/src/app/services/settings.service.ts`:
```
`dateInputFormat` is a special string that defines the behavior of
the date input fields and absolutely needs to contain "dd", "mm"
and "yyyy".
```
3. Import and register the Angular data for this locale in
`src-ui/src/app/app.module.ts`:
```typescript
import localeDe from '@angular/common/locales/de'
registerLocaleData(localeDe)
```
### Back end localization
A majority of the strings that appear in the back end appear only when
the admin is used. However, some of these are still shown on the front
end (such as error messages).
- The django application does localization according to the [Django
documentation](https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.1/topics/i18n/translation/).
- The source language of the project is "en_US".
- Localization files end up in the folder `src/locale/`.
- In order to extract strings from the application, call
`python3 manage.py makemessages -l en_US`. This is important after
making changes to translatable strings.
- The message files need to be compiled for them to show up in the
application. Call `python3 manage.py compilemessages` to do this.
The generated files don't get committed into git, since these are
derived artifacts. The build pipeline takes care of executing this
command.
Adding new languages requires adding the translated files in the
`src/locale/`-folder and adjusting the file
`src/paperless/settings.py` to include the new language:
```python
LANGUAGES = [
("en-us", _("English (US)")),
("en-gb", _("English (GB)")),
("de", _("German")),
("nl-nl", _("Dutch")),
("fr", _("French")),
("pt-br", _("Portuguese (Brazil)")),
# Add language here.
]
```
## Building the documentation
The documentation is built using material-mkdocs, see their [documentation](https://squidfunk.github.io/mkdocs-material/reference/).
If you want to build the documentation locally, this is how you do it:
1. Build the documentation
```bash
$ uv run mkdocs build --config-file mkdocs.yml
```
_alternatively..._
2. Serve the documentation. This will spin up a
copy of the documentation at http://127.0.0.1:8000
that will automatically refresh every time you change
something.
```bash
$ uv run mkdocs serve
```
## Building the Docker image
The docker image is primarily built by the GitHub actions workflow, but
it can be faster when developing to build and tag an image locally.
Make sure you have the `docker-buildx` package installed. Building the image works as with any image:
```
docker build --file Dockerfile --tag paperless:local .
```
## Extending Paperless-ngx
Paperless-ngx does not have any fancy plugin systems and will probably never
have. However, some parts of the application have been designed to allow
easy integration of additional features without any modification to the
base code.
### Making custom parsers
Paperless-ngx uses parsers to add documents. A parser is
responsible for:
- Retrieving the content from the original
- Creating a thumbnail
- _optional:_ Retrieving a created date from the original
- _optional:_ Creating an archived document from the original
Custom parsers can be added to Paperless-ngx to support more file types. In
order to do that, you need to write the parser itself and announce its
existence to Paperless-ngx.
The parser itself must extend `documents.parsers.DocumentParser` and
must implement the methods `parse` and `get_thumbnail`. You can provide
your own implementation to `get_date` if you don't want to rely on
Paperless-ngx' default date guessing mechanisms.
```python
class MyCustomParser(DocumentParser):
def parse(self, document_path, mime_type):
# This method does not return anything. Rather, you should assign
# whatever you got from the document to the following fields:
# The content of the document.
self.text = "content"
# Optional: path to a PDF document that you created from the original.
self.archive_path = os.path.join(self.tempdir, "archived.pdf")
# Optional: "created" date of the document.
self.date = get_created_from_metadata(document_path)
def get_thumbnail(self, document_path, mime_type):
# This should return the path to a thumbnail you created for this
# document.
return os.path.join(self.tempdir, "thumb.webp")
```
If you encounter any issues during parsing, raise a
`documents.parsers.ParseError`.
The `self.tempdir` directory is a temporary directory that is guaranteed
to be empty and removed after consumption finished. You can use that
directory to store any intermediate files and also use it to store the
thumbnail / archived document.
After that, you need to announce your parser to Paperless-ngx. You need to
connect a handler to the `document_consumer_declaration` signal. Have a
look in the file `src/paperless_tesseract/apps.py` on how that's done.
The handler is a method that returns information about your parser:
```python
def myparser_consumer_declaration(sender, **kwargs):
return {
"parser": MyCustomParser,
"weight": 0,
"mime_types": {
"application/pdf": ".pdf",
"image/jpeg": ".jpg",
}
}
```
- `parser` is a reference to a class that extends `DocumentParser`.
- `weight` is used whenever two or more parsers are able to parse a
file: The parser with the higher weight wins. This can be used to
override the parsers provided by Paperless-ngx.
- `mime_types` is a dictionary. The keys are the mime types your
parser supports and the value is the default file extension that
Paperless-ngx should use when storing files and serving them for
download. We could guess that from the file extensions, but some
mime types have many extensions associated with them and the Python
methods responsible for guessing the extension do not always return
the same value.
## Using Visual Studio Code devcontainer
Another easy way to get started with development is to use Visual Studio
Code devcontainers. This approach will create a preconfigured development
environment with all of the required tools and dependencies.
[Learn more about devcontainers](https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/devcontainers/containers).
The .devcontainer/vscode/tasks.json and .devcontainer/vscode/launch.json files
contain more information about the specific tasks and launch configurations (see the
non-standard "description" field).
To get started:
1. Clone the repository on your machine and open the Paperless-ngx folder in VS Code.
2. VS Code will prompt you with "Reopen in container". Do so and wait for the environment to start.
3. Initialize the project by running the task **Project Setup: Run all Init Tasks**. This
will initialize the database tables and create a superuser. Then you can compile the front end
for production or run the frontend in debug mode.
4. The project is ready for debugging, start either run the fullstack debug or individual debug
processes. Yo spin up the project without debugging run the task **Project Start: Run all Services**