This is a Next.js project bootstrapped with create-next-app.
Getting Started
First, run the development server:
npm run dev
Open http://localhost:3000 with your browser to see the result.
You can start editing the page by modifying app/page.tsx. The page auto-updates as you edit the file.
This project uses next/font to automatically optimize and load Geist, a new font family for Vercel.
Learn More
To learn more about Next.js, take a look at the following resources:
- Next.js Documentation - learn about Next.js features and API.
- Learn Next.js - an interactive Next.js tutorial.
You can check out the Next.js GitHub repository - your feedback and contributions are welcome!
Deploy on Vercel
The easiest way to deploy your Next.js app is to use the Vercel Platform from the creators of Next.js.
Check out our Next.js deployment documentation for more details.
OCR Setup (Recommended)
PDF analysis uses direct text extraction first. If text is insufficient (common in scanned PDFs), the API falls back to OCR with ocrmypdf.
Install host dependencies (Ubuntu/Debian):
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install -y ocrmypdf poppler-utils tesseract-ocr tesseract-ocr-spa tesseract-ocr-eng
Verify:
ocrmypdf --version
If OCR is not available, the API returns a specific error (OCR_UNAVAILABLE) with install guidance.
AI Extraction for Acta Constitutiva
Onboarding now uses AI as the default extraction engine after PDF text analysis:
- Extract direct text from PDF.
- If text is insufficient, run OCR.
- Send extracted text to OpenAI to map fields and lookup dictionary.
- If AI fails, fallback extraction is used so onboarding is not blocked.
Environment variables:
OPENAI_API_KEY=sk-...
OPENAI_ACTA_MODEL=gpt-4.1-mini
OPENAI_ACTA_TIMEOUT_MS=60000
OPENAI_ACTA_MAX_CHARS=45000
Local CLI Script (PDF -> OCR/text -> AI)
Run:
npm run acta:analyze:ai -- ./path/to/acta.pdf
Optional output file:
npm run acta:analyze:ai -- ./path/to/acta.pdf --out ./result.json
Licita Ya API Key Test
Add these vars to .env:
LICITAYA_API_KEY=your-licitaya-api-key
LICITAYA_BASE_URL=https://<licitaya-base-url>
LICITAYA_TEST_ENDPOINT=/tender/search?items=10&page=1
LICITAYA_ACCEPT=application/json
LICITAYA_TIMEOUT_MS=20000
Run the connection test:
npm run licitaya:test
Override values on demand:
npm run licitaya:test -- --base-url https://www.licitaya.com.mx/api/v1 --endpoint /tender/search?items=10&page=1 --accept application/json
You can also pass a full URL in --endpoint:
npm run licitaya:test -- --endpoint https://<licitaya-base-url>/<country-endpoint>
Common Licita Ya lookups:
# Search tenders (keyword + filters)
npm run licitaya:test -- --endpoint '/tender/search?keyword=computadora,monitor&state=NLE,XX&items=10&page=1&order=1'
# Search by date (YYYYmmdd)
npm run licitaya:test -- --endpoint '/tender/search?date=20260313&items=10&page=1'
# Get one tender by ID
npm run licitaya:test -- --endpoint '/tender/SCRZJ'
Country base URL (pick one only):
- Mexico:
https://www.licitaya.com.mx/api/v1 - Argentina:
https://www.licitaya.com.ar/api/v1
Notes:
- The script sends your key in header
X-API-KEY. - It prints status code + response preview.
- A non-2xx response exits with code
1(useful for CI checks).