# nopaque ![release badge](https://gitlab.ub.uni-bielefeld.de/sfb1288inf/nopaque/-/badges/release.svg) ![pipeline badge](https://gitlab.ub.uni-bielefeld.de/sfb1288inf/nopaque/badges/master/pipeline.svg?ignore_skipped=true) nopaque bundles various tools and services that provide humanities scholars with DH methods and thus can support their various individual research processes. Using nopaque, researchers can subject digitized sources to Optical Character Recognition (OCR). The resulting text files can then be used as a data basis for Natural Language Processing (NLP). The texts are automatically subjected to various linguistic annotations. The data processed via NLP can then be summarized in the web application as corpora and analyzed by means of an information retrieval system through complex search queries. The range of functions of the web application will be successively extended according to the needs of the researchers. ## Prerequisites and requirements 1. Install docker for your system. Following the official instructions. 2. Install docker-compose. Following the official instructions. ## Configuration and startup ### **Create Docker swarm** The generated computational workload is handled by a [Docker](https://docs.docker.com/) swarm. A swarm is a group of machines that are running Docker and joined into a cluster. It consists out of two different kinds of members, manager and worker nodes. The swarm setup process is described best in the [Docker documentation](https://docs.docker.com/engine/swarm/swarm-tutorial/). ### **Create network storage** A shared network space is necessary so that all swarm members have access to all the data. To achieve this a [samba](https://www.samba.org/) share can be used. You can create a samba share by using [this](https://hub.docker.com/r/dperson/samba/) Docker image. ``` bash # Mount the Samba share on all swarm nodes (managers and workers) username@hostname:~$ sudo mkdir /mnt/nopaque username@hostname:~$ sudo mount --types cifs --options gid=${USER},password=nopaque,uid=${USER},user=nopaque,vers=3.0 /// /mnt/nopaque ``` ### **Download, configure and build nopaque** ``` bash # Clone the nopaque repository username@hostname:~$ git clone https://gitlab.ub.uni-bielefeld.de/sfb1288inf/nopaque.git # Create data directories username@hostname:~$ mkdir data/{db,logs,mq} username@hostname:~$ cp db.env.tpl db.env username@hostname:~$ cp .env.tpl .env # Fill out the variables within these files. username@hostname:~$ db.env username@hostname:~$ .env # Create docker-compose.override.yml file username@hostname:~$ touch docker-compose.override.yml # Tweak the docker-compose.override.yml to satisfy your needs. (You can find examples inside the docker-compose directory) username@hostname:~$ docker-compose.override.yml # Build docker images username@hostname:~$ docker-compose build ``` ### Start your instance ``` bash # For background execution add the -d flag docker-compose up # To scale your app use the following command after starting it normally docker-compose \ -f docker-compose.yml \ -f docker-compose.override.yml \ -f docker-compose.scale.yml \ up \ -d \ --no-recreate \ --scale nopaque= ```