I want to create a custom Kofax module. When it comes to the batch processing the scanned documents get converted to PDF files. I want to fetch these PDF files, manipulate them (add a custom footer to the PDF document) and hand them back to Kofax.
So what I know so far:
- create Kofax export scripts
- add a custom module to Kofax
I have the APIRef.chm (Kofax.Capture.SDK.CustomModule) and the CMSplit as an example project. Unfortunately I struggle getting into it. Are there any resources out there showing step by step how to get into custom module development?
So I know that the IBatch
interface represents one selected batch and the IBatchCollection
represents the collection of all batches.
I would just like to know how to setup a "Hello World" example and could add my code to it and I think I don't even need a WinForms application because I only need to manipulate the PDF files and that's it...
Since I realized that your question was rather about how to create a custom module in general, allow me to add another answer. Start with a C# Console Application.
Add Required Assemblies
Below assemblies are required by a custom module. All of them reside in the KC's binaries folder (by default C:\Program Files (x86)\Kofax\CaptureSS\ServLib\Bin
on a server).
Setup Part
Add a new User Control
and Windows Form
for setup. This is purely optional - a CM might not even have a setup form, but I'd recommend adding it regardless. The user control is the most important part, here - it will add the menu entry in KC Administration, and initialize the form itself:
[InterfaceType(ComInterfaceType.InterfaceIsIDispatch)]
public interface ISetupForm
{
[DispId(1)]
AdminApplication Application { set; }
[DispId(2)]
void ActionEvent(int EventNumber, object Argument, out int Cancel);
}
[ClassInterface(ClassInterfaceType.None)]
[ProgId("Quipu.KC.CM.Setup")]
public class SetupUserControl : UserControl, ISetupForm
{
private AdminApplication adminApplication;
public AdminApplication Application
{
set
{
value.AddMenu("Quipu.KC.CM.Setup", "Quipu.KC.CM - Setup", "BatchClass");
adminApplication = value;
}
}
public void ActionEvent(int EventNumber, object Argument, out int Cancel)
{
Cancel = 0;
if ((KfxOcxEvent)EventNumber == KfxOcxEvent.KfxOcxEventMenuClicked && (string)Argument == "Quipu.KC.CM.Setup")
{
SetupForm form = new SetupForm();
form.ShowDialog(adminApplication.ActiveBatchClass);
}
}
}
Runtime Part
Since I started with a console application, I could go ahead and put all the logic into Program.cs
. Note that is for demo-purposes only, and I would recommend adding specific classes and forms later on. The example below logs into Kofax Capture, grabs the next available batch, and just outputs its name.
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
AppDomain.CurrentDomain.AssemblyResolve += (sender, eventArgs) => KcAssemblyResolver.Resolve(eventArgs);
Run(args);
return;
}
static void Run(string[] args)
{
// start processing here
// todo encapsulate this to a separate class!
// login to KC
var login = new Login();
login.EnableSecurityBoost = true;
login.Login();
login.ApplicationName = "Quipu.KC.CM";
login.Version = "1.0";
login.ValidateUser("Quipu.KC.CM.exe", false, "", "");
var session = login.RuntimeSession;
// todo add timer-based polling here (note: mutex!)
var activeBatch = session.NextBatchGet(login.ProcessID);
Console.WriteLine(activeBatch.Name);
activeBatch.BatchClose(
KfxDbState.KfxDbBatchReady,
KfxDbQueue.KfxDbQueueNext,
0,
"");
session.Dispose();
login.Logout();
}
}
Registering, COM-Visibility, and more
Registering a Custom Module is done via RegAsm.exe
and ideally with the help of an AEX file. Here's an example - please refer to the documentation for more details and all available settings.
[Modules]
Minimal CM
[Minimal CM]
RuntimeProgram=Quipu/CM/Quipu.KC.CM/Quipu.KC.CM.exe
ModuleID=Quipu.KC.CM.exe
Description=Minimal Template for a Custom Module in C#
Version=1.0
SupportsTableFields=True
SupportsNonImageFiles=True
SetupProgram=Minimal CM Setup
[Setup Programs]
Minimal CM Setup
[Minimal CM Setup]
Visible=0
OCXFile=Quipu/CM/Quipu.KC.CM/Quipu.KC.CM.exe
ProgID=Quipu.KC.CM.Setup
Last but not least, make sure your assemblies are COM-visible:
I put up the entire code on GitHub, feel free to fork it. Hope it helps.
Kofax exposes a batch as an XML, and DBLite
is basically a wrapper for said XML. The structure is explained in AcBatch.htm and AcDocs.htm (to be found under the CaptureSV directory). Here's the basic idea (just documents are shown):
A single document has child elements itself such as pages, and multiple properties such as Confidence
, FormTypeName
, and PDFGenerationFileName
. This is what you want. Here's how you would navigate down the document collection, storing the filename in a variable named pdfFileName
:
IACDataElement runtime = activeBatch.ExtractRuntimeACDataElement(0);
IACDataElement batch = runtime.FindChildElementByName("Batch");
var documents = batch.FindChildElementByName("Documents").FindChildElementsByName("Document");
for (int i = 0; i < documents.Count; i++)
{
// 1-based index in kofax
var pdfFileName = documents[i + 1]["PDFGenerationFileName"];
}
Personally, I don't like this structure, so I created my own wrapper for their wrapper, but that's up to you.
With regard to the custom module itself, the sample shipped is already a decent start. Basically, you would have a basic form that shows up if the user launches the module manually - which is entirely optional if work happens in the back, preferably as Windows Service. I like to start with a console application, adding forms only when needed. Here, I would launch the form as follows, or start the service. Note that I have different branches in case the user wants to install my Custom Module as service:
else if (Environment.UserInteractive)
{
// run as module
Application.EnableVisualStyles();
Application.SetCompatibleTextRenderingDefault(false);
Application.Run(new RuntimeForm(args));
}
else
{
// run as service
ServiceBase.Run(new CustomModuleService());
}
}
The runtime for itself just logs you into Kofax Capture, registers event handlers, and processes batch by batch:
// login to KC
cm = new CustomModule();
cm.Login("", "");
// add progress event handlers
cm.BatchOpened += Cm_BatchOpened;
cm.BatchClosed += Cm_BatchClosed;
cm.DocumentOpened += Cm_DocumentOpened;
cm.DocumentClosed += Cm_DocumentClosed;
cm.ErrorOccured += Cm_ErrorOccured;
// process in background thread so that the form does not freeze
worker = new BackgroundWorker();
worker.DoWork += (s, a) => Process();
worker.RunWorkerAsync();
Then, your CM fetches the next batch. This can either make use of Kofax' Batch Notification Service, or be based on a timer. For the former, just handle the BatchAvailable
event of the session object:
session.BatchAvailable += Session_BatchAvailable;
For the latter, define a timer - preferrably with a configurable polling interval:
pollTimer.Interval = pollIntervalSeconds * 1000;
pollTimer.Elapsed += PollTimer_Elapsed;
pollTimer.Enabled = true;
When the timer elapses, you could do the following:
private void PollTimer_Elapsed(object sender, System.Timers.ElapsedEventArgs e)
{
mutex.WaitOne();
ProcessBatches();
mutex.ReleaseMutex();
}