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Sipi - Simple Image Presentation Interface

Overview

Simple Image Presentation Interface (SIPI) is a multithreaded, high-performance, IIIF compatible media server developed by the Swiss National Data and Service Center for the Humanities at the University of Basel. It is designed to be used by archives, libraries, and other institutions that need to preserve high-quality images while making them available online.

SIPI implements the Image API 3.0 of the International Image Interoperability Framework (IIIF), and efficiently converts between image formats, preserving metadata contained in image files. In particular, if images are stored in JPEG 2000 format, Sipi can convert them on the fly to formats that are commonly used on the Internet. SIPI offers a flexible framework for specifying authentication and authorization logic in Lua scripts, and supports restricted access to images, either by reducing image dimensions or by adding watermarks. It can easily be integrated with Knora. In addition SIPI preserves most of the EXIF, IPTC and XMP metadata and can preserve or transform ICC color profiles.

In addition, a simple webserver is integrated. The server is able to serve most common file types. In addition Lua scripts and embedded Lua (i.e., Lua embedded into HTML pages using the tags <lua>…</lua> are supported.

SIPI can also be used from the command line to convert images to/from TIFF-, JPEG 2000, JPEG- and PNG- formats. For all these conversion, SIPI tries to preserve all embedded metadata such as

SIPI is a free software, released under the GNU Affero General Public License. It is written in C++ and runs on Linux and macOS. Note: In order to compile SIPI, the user has to provide a licensed source of the kakadu software.

It is written in C++ and runs on Linux (including Debian, Ubuntu, and CentOS) and macOS.

Freely distributable binary releases are available daschswiss/sipi as docker image.

Documentation

The documentation is online at https://sipi.io.

To build it locally, you will need MkDocs. In the root the source tree, type:

make docs-build

You will then find the manual under site/index.html.

Building from source

All should be run from inside the root of the repository.

Build and run inside Docker - recommended

$ make compile
$ make test
$ make run

Build under macOS - not recommended. You are on your own. We warned you ;-)

$ (mkdir -p ./build-mac && cd build-mac && cmake .. && make && ctest --verbose)

Sentry.io

If you would like to use Sentry.io for error reporting, you can set the environment variable SIPI_SENTRY_DSN to the DSN of your Sentry project. If you do not set this variable, Sentry.io will not be used.

Further variables can be set to configure the Sentry client:

Releases

Releases are published on Dockerhub: https://hub.docker.com/repository/docker/daschswiss/sipi

How should I write my commits?

We are using Conventional Commit messages.

The most important prefixes you should have in mind are:

This is the complete list of what is defined and if it is visible in the changelog:


# Contact Information

DaSCH Support `<support@dasch.swiss>`