sane-u12(5) | SANE Scanner Access Now Easy | sane-u12(5) |
NAME¶
sane-u12 - SANE backend for Plustek USB flatbed scanners, based on older parport designs
DESCRIPTION¶
The sane-u12 library implements a SANE (Scanner Access Now Easy) backend that provides access to USB flatbed scanners based on Plusteks' ASIC 98003 (parallel-port ASIC) and a GeneSys Logics' USB-parport bridge chip.
SUPPORTED DEVICES¶
The backend is able to support some early Plustek USB scanners that based their old parport design around the ASIC 98003 and other rebadged Plustek devices. The following tables will give you a short overview.
If your Plustek scanner has another Product ID, then the device is NOT supported by this backend.
Vendor Plustek - ID: 0x07B3
---------------------------------------------------------- Model: Vendor-ID: Product-ID: ---------------------------------------------------------- OpticPro U12 0x07B3 0x0001 OpticPro U1212 0x07B3 0x0001 OpticPro UT12 0x07B3 0x0001
Vendor KYE/Genius
-------------------------------------------------------- USB Model: Vendor-ID: Product-ID: -------------------------------------------------------- ColorPage Vivid III USB 0x07B3 0x0001 ColorPage HR6 V1 0x0458 0x2004
CONFIGURATION¶
To use your scanner with this backend, you need at least two entries in the configuration file /etc/sane.d/u12.conf
device /dev/usbscanner
[usb] tells the backend, that the following devicename (here /dev/usbscanner) has to be interpreted as USB scanner device. If vendor- and product-id has not been specified, the backend tries to detect this by its own. If device is set to auto then the next matching device is used.
The Options:
option warmup t
option lampOff t
option lOffonEnd b
See the u12.conf file for examples.
Note: You have to make sure, that the USB subsystem is loaded correctly and you have access to the device-node. For more details see sane-usb(5) manpage. You might use sane-find-scanner(1) to check that you have access to your device.
Note:
If there's no configuration file, the backend defaults to device
auto
FILES¶
- /etc/sane.d/u12.conf
- The backend configuration file
- /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/sane/libsane-u12.a
- The static library implementing this backend.
- /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/sane/libsane-u12.so
- The shared library implementing this backend (present on systems that support dynamic loading).
ENVIRONMENT¶
- SANE_CONFIG_DIR
- This environment variable specifies the list of directories that may contain the configuration file. On *NIX systems, the directories are separated by a colon (`:'), under OS/2, they are separated by a semi-colon (`;'). If this variable is not set, the configuration file is searched in two default directories: first, the current working directory (".") and then in /etc/sane.d. If the value of the environment variable ends with the directory separator character, then the default directories are searched after the explicitly specified directories. For example, setting SANE_CONFIG_DIR to "/tmp/config:" would result in directories tmp/config, ., and /etc/sane.d being searched (in this order).
- SANE_DEBUG_U12
- If the library was compiled with debug support enabled, this environment
variable controls the debug level for this backend. Higher debug levels
increase the verbosity of the output.
Example: export SANE_DEBUG_U12=10
SEE ALSO¶
sane(7), sane-usb(5), sane-plustek(5),
sane-find-scanner(1), xscanimage(1), scanimage(1)
/usr/share/doc/libsane/u12/U12.changes
CONTACT AND BUG-REPORTS¶
Please send any information and bug-reports to:
SANE Mailing List
Additional info and hints can be obtained from our mailing-List archive at: http://www.sane-project.org/mailing-lists.html.
To obtain debug messages from the backend, please set the environment-variable SANE_DEBUG_U12 before calling your favorite SANE frontend (e.g. xscanimage(1)):
export SANE_DEBUG_U12=20 ; xscanimage
The value controls the verbosity of the backend.
KNOWN BUGS & RESTRICTIONS¶
* The driver is in alpha state, so please don't expect too much!!!
* When using libusb, it might be, that the backend hangs. In that case, reconnect the scanner.
14 Jul 2008 |