Important
Marker API provides a simple endpoint for converting PDF documents to Markdown quickly and accurately. With just one click, you can deploy the Marker API endpoint and start converting PDFs seamlessly.
- Converts PDF to Markdown.
- Can convert Multiple PDFs at the same time.
- Supports a wide range of documents, including books and scientific papers.
- Supports all languages.
- Removes headers, footers, and other artifacts.
- Formats tables and code blocks.
- Extracts and saves images along with the Markdown.
- Converts most equations to LaTeX.
- Works on GPU, CPU, or MPS.
Original PDF | Marker-API | PyPDF |
---|---|---|
To install Marker API in a Python environment, follow these steps:
- Clone the Marker API repository from GitHub:
git clone https://github.com/adithya-s-k/marker-api
- Navigate to the cloned repository directory:
cd marker-api
- Install the dependencies using the following commands:
poetry install
or pip install -e .
After installation, you can run the server through marker_api
command
marker_api
or
python server.py
To use Marker API with Docker, execute the following commands:
- Pull the Marker API Docker image from Docker Hub:
- Run the Docker container, exposing port 8000: ππΌDocker Image
docker pull savatar101/marker-api:0.2
# if you are running on a gpu
docker run --gpus all -p 8000:8000 savatar101/marker-api:0.2
# else
docker run -p 8000:8000 savatar101/marker-api:0.2
Alternatively, if you prefer to build the Docker image locally: Then, run the Docker container as follows:
docker build -t marker-api .
# if you are running on a gpu
docker run --gpus all -p 8000:8000 marker-api
# else
docker run -p 8000:8000 marker-api
SkyPilot is a framework for running LLMs, AI, and batch jobs on any cloud, offering maximum cost savings, highest GPU availability, and managed execution. To deploy Marker API using Skypilot on any cloud provider, execute the following command:
pip install skypilot-nightly[all]
# setup skypilot with the cloud provider our your
sky launch skypilot.yaml
please refer to skypilot documentation for more information.
- URL:
/convert
- Method:
POST
- Body Parameters:
pdf_file
: The PDF file to be converted. (Type: File)extract_images
(Optional): Specify whether to extract images from the PDF. Default istrue
. (Type: Boolean)
-
Success Response:
-
Code: 200 OK
-
Content: JSON containing the converted Markdown text, metadata, and optionally extracted image data.
{ "markdown": "Converted Markdown text...", "metadata": {...}, "images": { "image_1": "data:image/png;base64,<base64_encoded_image_data>", "image_2": "data:image/png;base64,<base64_encoded_image_data>", ... } }
If images are included in the response, they are provided in base64-encoded format. You can use this data to display the images in your application. Additionally, you can use the following Python script invoke.py to invoke the endpoint with a local PDF file and save the images locally
-
-
Error Response:
- Code: 415 Unsupported Media Type
- Content: JSON containing error details.
curl -X POST \
-F "[email protected];type=application/pdf" \
-F "extract_images=true" \
http://localhost:8000/convert
Please refer to examples on how to invoke the api and save it as Markdown Notebook , Script
import requests
import os
url = "http://localhost:8000/convert"
pdf_file_path = "example.pdf"
with open(pdf_file_path, 'rb') as pdf_file:
pdf_content = pdf_file.read()
files = {'pdf_file': (os.path.basename(pdf_file_path), pdf_content, 'application/pdf')}
params = {'extract_images': True} # Optional parameter
response = requests.post(url, files=files, params=params)
print(response.json())
const fetch = require('node-fetch');
const fs = require('fs');
const url = "http://localhost:8000/convert";
const pdfFilePath = "example.pdf";
fs.readFile(pdfFilePath, (err, pdfContent) => {
if (err) {
console.error(err);
return;
}
const formData = new FormData();
formData.append('pdf_file', new Blob([pdfContent], { type: 'application/pdf' }), pdfFilePath);
formData.append('extract_images', true); // Optional parameter
fetch(url, {
method: 'POST',
body: formData
})
.then(response => response.json())
.then(data => console.log(data))
.catch(error => console.error('Error:', error));
});
Marker converts PDF to markdown quickly and accurately.
- Supports a wide range of documents (optimized for books and scientific papers)
- Supports all languages
- Removes headers/footers/other artifacts
- Formats tables and code blocks
- Extracts and saves images along with the markdown
- Converts most equations to latex
- Works on GPU, CPU, or MPS
Marker is a pipeline of deep learning models:
- Extract text, OCR if necessary (heuristics, surya, tesseract)
- Detect page layout and find reading order (surya)
- Clean and format each block (heuristics, texify
- Combine blocks and postprocess complete text (heuristics, pdf_postprocessor)
It only uses models where necessary, which improves speed and accuracy.
Type | Marker | Nougat | |
---|---|---|---|
Think Python | Textbook | View | View |
Think OS | Textbook | View | View |
Switch Transformers | arXiv paper | View | View |
Multi-column CNN | arXiv paper | View | View |
The above results are with marker and nougat setup so they each take ~4GB of VRAM on an A6000.
See below for detailed speed and accuracy benchmarks, and instructions on how to run your own benchmarks.
I want marker to be as widely accessible as possible, while still funding my development/training costs. Research and personal usage is always okay, but there are some restrictions on commercial usage.
The weights for the models are licensed cc-by-nc-sa-4.0
, but I will waive that for any organization under $5M USD in gross revenue in the most recent 12-month period AND under $5M in lifetime VC/angel funding raised. If you want to remove the GPL license requirements (dual-license) and/or use the weights commercially over the revenue limit, check out the options here.
Discord is where we discuss future development.
PDF is a tricky format, so marker will not always work perfectly. Here are some known limitations that are on the roadmap to address:
- Marker will not convert 100% of equations to LaTeX. This is because it has to detect then convert.
- Tables are not always formatted 100% correctly - text can be in the wrong column.
- Whitespace and indentations are not always respected.
- Not all lines/spans will be joined properly.
- This works best on digital PDFs that won't require a lot of OCR. It's optimized for speed, and limited OCR is used to fix errors.
You'll need python 3.9+ and PyTorch. You may need to install the CPU version of torch first if you're not using a Mac or a GPU machine. See here for more details.
Install with:
pip install marker-pdf
Only needed if you want to use the optional ocrmypdf
as the ocr backend. Note that ocrmypdf
includes Ghostscript, an AGPL dependency, but calls it via CLI, so it does not trigger the license provisions.
See the instructions here
First, some configuration:
- Inspect the settings in
marker/settings.py
. You can override any settings with environment variables. - Your torch device will be automatically detected, but you can override this. For example,
TORCH_DEVICE=cuda
.- If using GPU, set
INFERENCE_RAM
to your GPU VRAM (per GPU). For example, if you have 16 GB of VRAM, setINFERENCE_RAM=16
. - Depending on your document types, marker's average memory usage per task can vary slightly. You can configure
VRAM_PER_TASK
to adjust this if you notice tasks failing with GPU out of memory errors.
- If using GPU, set
- By default, marker will use
surya
for OCR. Surya is slower on CPU, but more accurate than tesseract. If you want faster OCR, setOCR_ENGINE
toocrmypdf
. This also requires external dependencies (see above). If you don't want OCR at all, setOCR_ENGINE
toNone
.
marker_single /path/to/file.pdf /path/to/output/folder --batch_multiplier 2 --max_pages 10 --langs English
--batch_multiplier
is how much to multiply default batch sizes by if you have extra VRAM. Higher numbers will take more VRAM, but process faster. Set to 2 by default. The default batch sizes will take ~3GB of VRAM.--max_pages
is the maximum number of pages to process. Omit this to convert the entire document.--langs
is a comma separated list of the languages in the document, for OCR
Make sure the DEFAULT_LANG
setting is set appropriately for your document. The list of supported languages for OCR is here. If you need more languages, you can use any language supported by Tesseract if you set OCR_ENGINE
to ocrmypdf
. If you don't need OCR, marker can work with any language.
marker /path/to/input/folder /path/to/output/folder --workers 10 --max 10 --metadata_file /path/to/metadata.json --min_length 10000
--workers
is the number of pdfs to convert at once. This is set to 1 by default, but you can increase it to increase throughput, at the cost of more CPU/GPU usage. Parallelism will not increase beyondINFERENCE_RAM / VRAM_PER_TASK
if you're using GPU.--max
is the maximum number of pdfs to convert. Omit this to convert all pdfs in the folder.--min_length
is the minimum number of characters that need to be extracted from a pdf before it will be considered for processing. If you're processing a lot of pdfs, I recommend setting this to avoid OCRing pdfs that are mostly images. (slows everything down)--metadata_file
is an optional path to a json file with metadata about the pdfs. If you provide it, it will be used to set the language for each pdf. If not,DEFAULT_LANG
will be used. The format is:
{
"pdf1.pdf": {"languages": ["English"]},
"pdf2.pdf": {"languages": ["Spanish", "Russian"]},
...
}
You can use language names or codes. The exact codes depend on the OCR engine. See here for a full list for surya codes, and here for tesseract.
MIN_LENGTH=10000 METADATA_FILE=../pdf_meta.json NUM_DEVICES=4 NUM_WORKERS=15 marker_chunk_convert ../pdf_in ../md_out
METADATA_FILE
is an optional path to a json file with metadata about the pdfs. See above for the format.NUM_DEVICES
is the number of GPUs to use. Should be2
or greater.NUM_WORKERS
is the number of parallel processes to run on each GPU. Per-GPU parallelism will not increase beyondINFERENCE_RAM / VRAM_PER_TASK
.MIN_LENGTH
is the minimum number of characters that need to be extracted from a pdf before it will be considered for processing. If you're processing a lot of pdfs, I recommend setting this to avoid OCRing pdfs that are mostly images. (slows everything down)
Note that the env variables above are specific to this script, and cannot be set in local.env
.
There are some settings that you may find useful if things aren't working the way you expect:
OCR_ALL_PAGES
- set this to true to force OCR all pages. This can be very useful if the table layouts aren't recognized properly by default, or if there is garbled text.TORCH_DEVICE
- set this to force marker to use a given torch device for inference.OCR_ENGINE
- can set this tosurya
orocrmypdf
.DEBUG
- setting this toTrue
shows ray logs when converting multiple pdfs- Verify that you set the languages correctly, or passed in a metadata file.
- If you're getting out of memory errors, decrease worker count (increased the
VRAM_PER_TASK
setting). You can also try splitting up long PDFs into multiple files.
In general, if output is not what you expect, trying to OCR the PDF is a good first step. Not all PDFs have good text/bboxes embedded in them.
Benchmarking PDF extraction quality is hard. I've created a test set by finding books and scientific papers that have a pdf version and a latex source. I convert the latex to text, and compare the reference to the output of text extraction methods. It's noisy, but at least directionally correct.
Benchmarks show that marker is 4x faster than nougat, and more accurate outside arXiv (nougat was trained on arXiv data). We show naive text extraction (pulling text out of the pdf with no processing) for comparison.
Speed
Method | Average Score | Time per page | Time per document |
---|---|---|---|
marker | 0.613721 | 0.631991 | 58.1432 |
nougat | 0.406603 | 2.59702 | 238.926 |
Accuracy
First 3 are non-arXiv books, last 3 are arXiv papers.
Method | multicolcnn.pdf | switch_trans.pdf | thinkpython.pdf | thinkos.pdf | thinkdsp.pdf | crowd.pdf |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
marker | 0.536176 | 0.516833 | 0.70515 | 0.710657 | 0.690042 | 0.523467 |
nougat | 0.44009 | 0.588973 | 0.322706 | 0.401342 | 0.160842 | 0.525663 |
Peak GPU memory usage during the benchmark is 4.2GB
for nougat, and 4.1GB
for marker. Benchmarks were run on an A6000 Ada.
Throughput
Marker takes about 4.5GB of VRAM on average per task, so you can convert 10 documents in parallel on an A6000.
You can benchmark the performance of marker on your machine. Install marker manually with:
git clone https://github.com/VikParuchuri/marker.git
poetry install
Download the benchmark data here and unzip. Then run benchmark.py
like this:
python benchmark.py data/pdfs data/references report.json --nougat
This will benchmark marker against other text extraction methods. It sets up batch sizes for nougat and marker to use a similar amount of GPU RAM for each.
Omit --nougat
to exclude nougat from the benchmark. I don't recommend running nougat on CPU, since it is very slow.
This work would not have been possible without amazing open source models and datasets, including (but not limited to):
- Surya
- Texify
- Pypdfium2/pdfium
- DocLayNet from IBM
- ByT5 from Google
Thank you to the authors of these models and datasets for making them available to the community!
- Create server
- Add support for single PDF upload
- Add support for multi PDF upload
- Docker support and Skypilot support
- Implement handling for multiple PDF uploads simultaneously.
- Live update API on progress of conversion
- Enhance GPU utilization and optimize performance for efficient processing.
- Introduce a toggle mode to generate Markdown without including images in the output.
- Implement dynamic adjustment of batch size based on available VRAM.
Updates on throughput benchmarks will be available soon.
This project is built on top of the remarkable marker project created by VikParuchuri. We express our gratitude for the inspiration and foundation provided by this project.