64 lines
		
	
	
		
			2.8 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			64 lines
		
	
	
		
			2.8 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
# Sample paperless.conf
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# Copy this file to /etc/paperless.conf and modify it to suit your needs.
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# This where your documents should go to be consumed.  Make sure that it exists
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# and that the user running the paperless service can read/write its contents
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# before you start Paperless.
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PAPERLESS_CONSUMPTION_DIR=""
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# These values are required if you want paperless to check a particular email
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# box every 10 minutes and attempt to consume documents from there.  If you
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# don't define a HOST, mail checking will just be disabled.
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PAPERLESS_CONSUME_MAIL_HOST=""
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PAPERLESS_CONSUME_MAIL_PORT=""
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PAPERLESS_CONSUME_MAIL_USER=""
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PAPERLESS_CONSUME_MAIL_PASS=""
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# You must have a passphrase in order for Paperless to work at all.  If you set
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# this to "", GNUGPG will "encrypt" your PDF by writing it out as a zero-byte
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# file.
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#
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# The passphrase you use here will be used when storing your documents in
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# Paperless, but you can always export them in an unencrypted format by using
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# document exporter.  See the documentation for more information.
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#
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# One final note about the passphrase.  Once you've consumed a document with
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# one passphrase, DON'T CHANGE IT.  Paperless assumes this to be a constant and
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# can't properly export documents that were encrypted with an old passphrase if
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# you've since changed it to a new one.
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PAPERLESS_PASSPHRASE="secret"
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# If you intend to consume documents either via HTTP POST or by email, you must
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# have a shared secret here.
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PAPERLESS_SHARED_SECRET=""
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#
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# The following values use sensible defaults for modern systems, but if you're
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# running Paperless on a low-resource machine (like a Rasberry Pi), modifying
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# some of these values may be necessary.
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#
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# By default, Paperless will attempt to use all available CPU cores to process
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# a document, but if you would like to limit that, you can set this value to
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# an integer:
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#PAPERLESS_OCR_THREADS=1
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# On smaller systems, or even in the case of Very Large Documents, the consumer
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# may explode, complaining about how it's "unable to extent pixel cache".  In
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# such cases, try setting this to a reasonably low value, like 32000000.  The
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# default is to use whatever is necessary to do everything without writing to
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# disk, and units are in megabytes.
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#
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# For more information on how to use this value, you should probably search
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# the web for "MAGICK_MEMORY_LIMIT".
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#PAPERLESS_CONVERT_MEMORY_LIMIT=0
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# Similar to the memory limit, if you've got a small system and your OS mounts
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# /tmp as tmpfs, you should set this to a path that's on a physical disk, like
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# /home/your_user/tmp or something.  ImageMagick will use this as scratch space
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# when crunching through very large documents.
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#
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# For more information on how to use this value, you should probably search
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# the web for "MAGICK_TMPDIR".
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#PAPERLESS_CONVERT_TMPDIR=/var/tmp/paperless
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