dab230e3f8
Update documentation about listen IP
337 lines
9.2 KiB
Markdown
337 lines
9.2 KiB
Markdown
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To run the application without Docker/Podman, you will need to manually install all dependencies and build the necessary components.
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Note that some dependencies might not be available in the standard repositories of all Linux distributions, and may require additional steps to install.
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The following guide assumes you have a basic understanding of using a command line interface in your operating system.
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It should work on most Linux distributions and MacOS. For Windows, you might need to use Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) for certain steps.
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The amount of dependencies is to actually reduce overall size, ie installing LibreOffice sub components rather than full LibreOffice package.
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You could theoretically use a Distrobox/Toolbox, if your Distribution has old or not all Packages. But you might just as well use the Docker Container then.
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### Step 1: Prerequisites
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Install the following software, if not already installed:
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- Java 17 or later (21 recommended)
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- Gradle 7.0 or later (included within repo so not needed on server)
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- Git
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- Python 3.8 (with pip)
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- Make
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- GCC/G++
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- Automake
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- Autoconf
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- libtool
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- pkg-config
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- zlib1g-dev
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- libleptonica-dev
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For Debian-based systems, you can use the following command:
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```bash
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sudo apt-get update
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sudo apt-get install -y git automake autoconf libtool libleptonica-dev pkg-config zlib1g-dev make g++ openjdk-21-jdk python3 python3-pip
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```
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For Fedora-based systems use this command:
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```bash
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sudo dnf install -y git automake autoconf libtool leptonica-devel pkg-config zlib-devel make gcc-c++ java-21-openjdk python3 python3-pip
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```
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For non-root users with Nix Package Manager, use the following command:
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```bash
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nix-channel --update
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nix-env -iA nixpkgs.jdk21 nixpkgs.git nixpkgs.python38 nixpkgs.gnumake nixpkgs.libgcc nixpkgs.automake nixpkgs.autoconf nixpkgs.libtool nixpkgs.pkg-config nixpkgs.zlib nixpkgs.leptonica
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```
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### Step 2: Clone and Build jbig2enc (Only required for certain OCR functionality)
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For Debian and Fedora, you can build it from source using the following commands:
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```bash
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mkdir ~/.git
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cd ~/.git &&\
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git clone https://github.com/agl/jbig2enc.git &&\
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cd jbig2enc &&\
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./autogen.sh &&\
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./configure &&\
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make &&\
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sudo make install
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```
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For Nix, you will face `Leptonica not detected`. Bypass this by installing it directly using the following command:
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```bash
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nix-env -iA nixpkgs.jbig2enc
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```
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### Step 3: Install Additional Software
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Next we need to install LibreOffice for conversions, ocrmypdf for OCR, and opencv for pattern recognition functionality.
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Install the following software:
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- libreoffice-core
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- libreoffice-common
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- libreoffice-writer
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- libreoffice-calc
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- libreoffice-impress
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- python3-uno
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- unoconv
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- pngquant
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- unpaper
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- ocrmypdf
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- opencv-python-headless
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For Debian-based systems, you can use the following command:
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```bash
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sudo apt-get install -y libreoffice-writer libreoffice-calc libreoffice-impress unpaper ocrmypdf
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pip3 install uno opencv-python-headless unoconv pngquant WeasyPrint --break-system-packages
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```
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For Fedora:
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```bash
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sudo dnf install -y libreoffice-writer libreoffice-calc libreoffice-impress unpaper ocrmypdf
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pip3 install uno opencv-python-headless unoconv pngquant WeasyPrint
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```
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For Nix:
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```bash
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nix-env -iA nixpkgs.unpaper nixpkgs.libreoffice nixpkgs.ocrmypdf nixpkgs.poppler_utils
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pip3 install uno opencv-python-headless unoconv pngquant WeasyPrint
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```
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### Step 4: Clone and Build Stirling-PDF
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```bash
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cd ~/.git &&\
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git clone https://github.com/Stirling-Tools/Stirling-PDF.git &&\
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cd Stirling-PDF &&\
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chmod +x ./gradlew &&\
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./gradlew build
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```
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### Step 5: Move jar to desired location
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After the build process, a `.jar` file will be generated in the `build/libs` directory.
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You can move this file to a desired location, for example, `/opt/Stirling-PDF/`.
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You must also move the Script folder within the Stirling-PDF repo that you have downloaded to this directory.
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This folder is required for the python scripts using OpenCV.
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```bash
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sudo mkdir /opt/Stirling-PDF &&\
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sudo mv ./build/libs/Stirling-PDF-*.jar /opt/Stirling-PDF/ &&\
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sudo mv scripts /opt/Stirling-PDF/ &&\
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echo "Scripts installed."
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```
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For non-root users, you can just keep the jar in the main directory of Stirling-PDF using the following command:
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```bash
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mv ./build/libs/Stirling-PDF-*.jar ./Stirling-PDF-*.jar
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```
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### Step 6: Other files
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#### OCR
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If you plan to use the OCR (Optical Character Recognition) functionality, you might need to install language packs for Tesseract if running non-english scanning.
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##### Installing Language Packs
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Easiest is to use the langpacks provided by your repositories. Skip the other steps.
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Manual:
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1. Download the desired language pack(s) by selecting the `.traineddata` file(s) for the language(s) you need.
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2. Place the `.traineddata` files in the Tesseract tessdata directory: `/usr/share/tessdata`
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3. Please view [OCRmyPDF install guide](https://ocrmypdf.readthedocs.io/en/latest/installation.html) for more info.
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**IMPORTANT:** DO NOT REMOVE EXISTING `eng.traineddata`, IT'S REQUIRED.
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Debian based systems, install languages with this command:
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```bash
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sudo apt update &&\
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# All languages
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# sudo apt install -y 'tesseract-ocr-*'
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# Find languages:
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apt search tesseract-ocr-
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# View installed languages:
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dpkg-query -W tesseract-ocr- | sed 's/tesseract-ocr-//g'
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```
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Fedora:
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```bash
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# All languages
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# sudo dnf install -y tesseract-langpack-*
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# Find languages:
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dnf search -C tesseract-langpack-
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# View installed languages:
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rpm -qa | grep tesseract-langpack | sed 's/tesseract-langpack-//g'
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```
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Nix:
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```bash
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nix-env -iA nixpkgs.tesseract
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```
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**Note:** Nix Package Manager pre-installs almost all the language packs when tesseract is installed.
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### Step 7: Run Stirling-PDF
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Those who have pushed to the root directory, run the following commands:
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```bash
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./gradlew bootRun
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or
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java -jar /opt/Stirling-PDF/Stirling-PDF-*.jar
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```
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Since libreoffice, soffice, and conversion tools have their dbus_tmp_dir set as `dbus_tmp_dir="/run/user/$(id -u)/libreoffice-dbus"`, you might get the following error when using their endpoints:
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```
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[Thread-7] INFO s.s.SPDF.utils.ProcessExecutor - mkdir: cannot create directory ‘/run/user/1501’: Permission denied
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```
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To resolve this, before starting the Stirling-PDF, you have to set the environment variable to a directory you have write access to by using the following commands:
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```bash
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mkdir temp
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export DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS="unix:path=./temp"
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./gradlew bootRun
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or
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java -jar ./Stirling-PDF-*.jar
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```
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### Step 8: Adding a Desktop icon
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This will add a modified Appstarter to your Appmenu.
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```bash
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location=$(pwd)/gradlew
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image=$(pwd)/docs/stirling-transparent.svg
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cat > ~/.local/share/applications/Stirling-PDF.desktop <<EOF
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[Desktop Entry]
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Name=Stirling PDF;
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GenericName=Launch StirlingPDF and open its WebGUI;
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Category=Office;
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Exec=xdg-open http://localhost:8080 && nohup $location bootRun &;
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Icon=$image;
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Keywords=pdf;
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Type=Application;
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NoDisplay=false;
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Terminal=true;
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EOF
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```
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Note: Currently the app will run in the background until manually closed.
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### Optional: Changing the host and port of the application:
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To override the default configuration, you can add the following to `/.git/Stirling-PDF/configs/custom_settings.yml` file:
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```bash
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server:
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host: 0.0.0.0 # Not working - use instead address
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address: 0.0.0.0
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port: 3000
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```
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'-Djava.net.preferIPv4Stack=true' --> To force ipv4 only in the java starting command
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**Note:** This file is created after the first application launch. To have it before that, you can create the directory and add the file yourself.
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### Optional: Run Stirling-PDF as a service (requires root).
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First create a .env file, where you can store environment variables:
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```
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touch /opt/Stirling-PDF/.env
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```
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In this file you can add all variables, one variable per line, as stated in the main readme (for example SYSTEM_DEFAULTLOCALE="de-DE").
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Create a new file where we store our service settings and open it with nano editor:
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```
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nano /etc/systemd/system/stirlingpdf.service
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```
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Paste this content, make sure to update the filename of the jar-file. Press Ctrl+S and Ctrl+X to save and exit the nano editor:
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```
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[Unit]
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Description=Stirling-PDF service
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After=syslog.target network.target
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[Service]
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SuccessExitStatus=143
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User=root
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Group=root
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Type=simple
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EnvironmentFile=/opt/Stirling-PDF/.env
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WorkingDirectory=/opt/Stirling-PDF
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ExecStart=/usr/bin/java -jar Stirling-PDF-0.17.2.jar
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ExecStop=/bin/kill -15 $MAINPID
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[Install]
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WantedBy=multi-user.target
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```
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Notify systemd that it has to rebuild its internal service database (you have to run this command every time you make a change in the service file):
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```
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sudo systemctl daemon-reload
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```
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Enable the service to tell the service to start it automatically:
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```
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sudo systemctl enable stirlingpdf.service
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```
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See the status of the service:
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```
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sudo systemctl status stirlingpdf.service
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```
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Manually start/stop/restart the service:
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```
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sudo systemctl start stirlingpdf.service
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sudo systemctl stop stirlingpdf.service
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sudo systemctl restart stirlingpdf.service
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```
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---
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Remember to set the necessary environment variables before running the project if you want to customize the application the list can be seen in the main readme.
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You can do this in the terminal by using the `export` command or -D argument to java -jar command:
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```bash
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export APP_HOME_NAME="Stirling PDF"
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or
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-DAPP_HOME_NAME="Stirling PDF"
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```
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