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Warning

I no longer use Hydrus Network. While I'll try to do my best to fix critical bugs, I won't be adding new features.

hydrus-ocr

This project runs OCR on images located in Hydrus Network using an external daemon and a third-party library.

Caution

I am not liable if this destroys your data. Make backups regularly.

Setup

In Hydrus

  1. Create a tag service in Hydrus. It can be called whatever you like, but we recommend ocr so you remember what it's for. Save the service key for later.
  2. Enable the client API.
  3. Create a client API access key (documented above). Give it the edit file notes, edit file tags, and search for and fetch files permissions. Save the service key for later.

In your server environment

  1. Install hydrus-ocr and its Python dependencies with pip install https://github.com/tomodachi94/hydrus-ocr/releases/download/v0.2.0/hydrus_ocr-0.2.0-py3-none-any.whl.
  2. Install either tesseract/libtesseract or cuneiform and ensure it is available on your $PATH.
  3. Copy env.example to .env (or to another place where you can set environment variables) and fill in the values.
  4. Run the daemon using python3 -m hydrus_ocr daemon. If you want to get fancy, you can configure it to start up automatically with systemd, but that is outside of the scope of these docs.
    • If you only want to run this once (e.g. for running this with cron), run python3 -m hydrus_ocr singular.

Usage

  1. Select a file (or a bunch of files!) and right-click them. Select manage > tags, select ocr (or the name you selected for the tag service), and add the ocr wanted tag to the file(s). Apply the changes.
  2. Wait for the daemon to do its job. Depending on the number of files queued, it could take a bit to OCR the files.
  3. Profit. Check the notes for the file; look for a note titled ocr.

Configuration

This program is configured entirely through environment variables. Here's what they do:

  • HYDRUS_OCR_ACCESS_KEY: The access key for the client API. This is a long hexadecimal string.
  • HYDRUS_OCR_API_URL: The base URL for the client API. This looks like http://localhost:45869 by default.
  • HYDRUS_OCR_TAG_SERVICE_KEY: The service key for the tag service. This is a long hexadecimal string.
  • HYDRUS_OCR_LOOP_DELAY: This controls the frequency at which the program checks for files to OCR. The default value causes a check every 10 seconds; increase or decrease depending on how many requests your Hydrus server can handle at once.
  • HYDRUS_OCR_LANGUAGE: The language to OCR the text in (defaults to English). See the Tesseract documentation for a full list of languages. Make sure to install the language(s) you want if it isn't available by default. Multiple languages are supported by separating each with a plus (like eng+deu+jpn).

Errors

This is a glossary of all possible user-caused errors.

MissingToolError

The program couldn't find Tesseract or Cuneiform. See § Installation for more information.

MissingKeyError

The program couldn't find the client API access key and/or the tag service key. See § Configuration for more information.

Changelog

The changelog is maintained in ./CHANGELOG.md.

FAQ

Why should I trust you?

You shouldn't. You should read the source code yourself. I've tried to make the code as easy-to-read as possible, with docstrings for all (internal) functions and comments for ambiguous lines of code.

Why does this exist?

I used Hydrus to store a large repository of screenshots of chat logs. I wanted to find a way to search their text, and this is the result.

Why is the quality of the text so bad?

This program uses Tesseract to do most of the heavy lifting. Tesseract is notoriously bad at OCRing specific types of images, as well as images of lower quality.

Why is this separate from Hydrus?

Aside from the fact that this would likely be rejected in a PR, OCR can be a resource-intensive operation, and I didn't want to risk the stability of my Hydrus application.