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PROGRAM:
NAME
ocrodjvu - OCR for DjVu files
SYNOPSIS
ocrodjvu {-o | --save-bundled} output-djvu-file [option...] djvu-file
ocrodjvu {-i | --save-indirect} index-djvu-file [option...] djvu-file
ocrodjvu --save-script script-file [option...] djvu-file
ocrodjvu --in-place [option...] djvu-file
ocrodjvu --dry-run [option...] djvu-file
ocrodjvu {--version | --help | -h | --list-engines | --list-languages}
DESCRIPTION
ocrodjvu is a wrapper for OCR systems that allows you to perform OCR on DjVu files.
The following OCR engines are supported:
· OCRopus[1] (internally, ocrodjvu calls ocroscript's recognize (or rec-tess) command,
so that ultimately Tesseract acts as the OCR backend);
· Cuneiform for Linux[2].
· Ocrad[3].
· GOCR[4].
· Stand-alone Tesseract[5].
OPTIONS
OCR engine options
-e, --engine=engine-id
Use this OCR engine.
The default is “tesseract”. (The default was “ocropus” prior to ocrodjvu 0.8.)
--list-engines
Print list of available OCR engines.
Options controlling output
-o, --save-bundled=output-djvu-file
Save OCR results as a bundled multi-page document into output-djvu-file.
-i, --save-indirect=index-djvu-file
Save OCR results as an indirect multi-page document. Use index-djvu-file as the index
file name; put the component files into the same directory. The directory must exist
and be writable.
--save-script=script-file
Save a djvused script with OCR results into script-file.
--in-place
Save OCR results in place.
(Use this option to retain compatibility with ocrodjvu < 0.2.)
--dry-run
Don't change any files, throw OCR results away.
It is mandatory to use exactly one of the above options.
--ocr-only
If OCR results are to be saved to a separate document (-o/--save-bundled or
-i/--save-indirect), save only the pages selected for OCR.
The default is to save all pages, even when the -p/--pages option is in effect.
--clear-text
Remove existing hidden text if present in the pages not selected for OCR.
(Use this option to retain compatibility with ocrodjvu < 0.2.)
--save-raw-ocr=output-directory
Save raw OCR results (typically in the hOCR format) into output-directory. The
directory must exist and be writable.
--raw-ocr-filename-template=template
Specifies the file naming scheme for raw OCR results.
The template language uses the Python string formatting syntax[6]. The following
fields are available:
page, page+N, page-N
page number, optionally shifted by a number N
id
page identifier
id-ext
page identifier without file extension
The default template is “{id-ext}”.
Text segmentation options
-t lines, --details lines
Record location of every line. Don't record locations of particular words or
characters.
This is the default for OCRopus 0.2. The option is ineffective with stand-alone
Tesseract 2.0.
-t words, --details=words
Record location of every line and every word. Don't record locations of particular
characters.
This is the default for most OCR engines.
This option is ineffective with OCRopus 0.2 and stand-alone Tesseract 2.0.
-t chars, --details=chars
Record location of every line, every word and every character.
This option is ineffective with OCRopus 0.2 and stand-alone Tesseract 2.0.
--word-segmentation=simple
Consider each non-empty sequence of non-whitespace characters a single word.
This is the default, despite being linguistically incorrect.
--word-segmentation=uax29
Use the Unicode Text Segmentation[7] algorithm to break lines into words.
This option breaks assumptions of some DjVu tools that words are separated by spaces,
and therefore it is not recommended.
Other options
-l, --language=language-id
Set recognition language. language-id is typically an ISO 639-2/T three-letter code.
Tesseract ≥ 3.02 allows specifying multiple languages separated by “+” characters.
For OCRopus, the default is “eng” (English), unless the tesslanguage environment
variable is set. For other OCR engines, the default is always “eng”.
--list-languages
Print list of available languages for the currently selected OCR engine.
--render=mask
Render only masks of page images.
This is the default.
--render=foreground
Render only foreground layers of page images.
--render=all
Render all layers of page images.
This option is necessary to OCR DjVu files with invalid foreground/background
separation.
-p, --pages=page-range
Specifies pages to process. page-range is a comma-separated list of sub-ranges. Each
sub-range is either a single page (e.g. 17) or a contiguous range of pages
(e.g. 37-42). Pages are numbered from 1.
The default is to process all pages.
-j, --jobs=n
Start up to n OCR processes.
--version
Output version information and exit.
-h, --help
Display help and exit.
Advanced options
-D, --debug
To ease debugging, don't delete intermediate files.
-X key=value
This option allows controlling some details of how ocrodjvu operates.
--on-error=abort
Stop program execution when an exceptional situation (e.g., malformed output from the
OCR engine, internal ocrodjvu error, etc.) occurs.
This is the default.
--on-error=resume
Attempt to recover from exceptional situations.
This option is strongly discouraged.
--html5
Use a HTML5 parser[8], which is more robust but slower than the default parser.
EXIT STATUS
One of the following exit values can be returned by ocrodjvu:
0
The program finished successfully.
1
A fatal error occurred.
2
The program recovered from an error (--on-error=resume).
ENVIRONMENT
The following environment variables affects ocrodjvu:
tesslanguage
Recognition language for Tesseract.
(Use this variable is deprecated in favor of the --language option.)
TMPDIR
ocrodjvu makes heavy use of temporary files. It will store them in a directory
specified by this variable. The default is /tmp.
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