Apache Tika

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Tika
Tika logo
Developer(s) Apache Software Foundation
Stable release 1.12 / February 16, 2016; 8 years ago (2016-02-16)
Development status Active
Written in Java
Operating system Cross-platform
Type Search and index API
License Apache License 2.0
Website tika.apache.org

Apache Tika is a content detection and analysis framework, written in Java, stewarded at the Apache Software Foundation.[1] It detects and extracts metadata and text from over a thousand different file types, and as well as providing a Java library, has Server and Command Line editions suitable for use from other programming languages.

History

The project originated as part of the Apache Nutch codebase, to provide content identification and extraction when crawling. In 2007, it was separated out, to make it more extensible and usable by Content management systems, other Web crawlers, and information retrieval systems. The standalone Tika was founded by Jérôme Charron, Chris Mattmann and Jukka Zitting.[2] In 2011 Chris Mattmann and Jukka Zitting released the Manning book "Tika in Action", and the project released version 1.0.

Features

Tika provides capabilities for identification of more than 1400 file types from the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority taxonomy of MIME types. For most of the more common and popular formats,[3] Tika then provides content extraction, metadata extraction and language identification capabilities.

While Tika is written in Java, it is widely used from other languages.[4] The RESTful server and CLI Tool permit non-Java programs to access the Tika functionality.

Notable uses

Tika is used by financial institutions including the Fair Isaac Corporation (FICO),[5] by NASA and academic researchers[6] by major content management systems including Drupal,[7] and Alfresco (software)[8] to analyze large amounts of content, and to make it available in common formats using information retrieval techniques.

On April 4, 2016[9] Forbes published an article identifying Tika as one of the key technologies used by more than 400 journalists to analyze 11.5 million leaked documents that expose an international scandal involving world leaders storing money in offshore Shell corporations. The leaked documents and the project to analyze them is referred to as the Panama Papers.

References

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