kopia lustrzana https://gitlab.com/sane-project/backends
README
How to configure, build, and install SANE. Introduction: ============= SANE stands for Scanner Access Now Easy. This package contains the SANE libraries (this means backends and network scanning parts) and the command line frontend scanimage. You always find the most recent version of SANE on: http://www.mostang.com/sane/ At the same location there are also links to snapshots of the CVS server and sometimes beta releases of sane-backends. These are unstable development versions, so be careful when using them. Please report any problems to us. See contact section for details. There are several graphical frontends available for SANE, see the list at http://www.mostang.com/sane/sane-frontends.html. Quick install: ============== ./configure make make install man sane Prerequisites ============= In order to build SANE, the following tools and libraries are required: - GNU make: version 3.70 or newer - ANSI C compiler: GNU C (gcc) is recommended for best performance, but any ANSI-compliant compiler should do Some more libraries are not strictly necessary to compile SANE, but some functionality may be lost if they are not available: - libusb (>=0.1.6): Strongly recommended if you use a USB scanner. Some backends won't work without libusb at all. - libjpeg (>=6B): For the dc210, dc240, and gphoto2 backends. - libieee1284 (>=0.1.5): For the canon_pp and hpsj5s backends. - libgphoto2 (>=2.0): For the gphoto2 backend. SANE should build on most Unix-like systems. Support for OS/2, MacOS X and BeOS is also available. For more details look at the operating system specific README.* files. For a detailed support matrix, see: http://www.mostang.com/sane/sane-support.html This table may be out of date. Please tell us about any corrections or additions. Please mention your operating sytem and platform and all the other details mentioned in the table. See also the contact section. Please check that there aren't any older versions of SANE installed on your system. Especially if SANE libraries are installed in a different prefix directory (e.g. /usr/lib/) this may cause problems with external frontends. Please remove these libraries (libsane.*, sane/libsane-*) by using your packet manager or manually before installing this version of SANE. Configuration ============= Simply invoke configure in the top-level directory. Besides the usual GNU configure options, there are the following SANE specific options: --disable-shared Don't use shared libraries. Useful for debugging or when there is a problem building shared libraries. This implicitly turns on --disable-dynamic --enable-static as well. --disable-dynamic Disable dynamic loading of backends (in the dll backend). configure normally turns on dynamic loading when it can find the appropriate header files and libraries (<dlfcn.h> and -dl). --enable-static Use static libraries (turned off by default). --enable-preload Preload backends into DLL backend. This is useful for debugging, when dynamic loading is unavailable, or to reduce runtime linking overheads. If dynamic loading or shared libraries are unavailable or disabled, this option is turned on automatically. --enable-scsibuffersize=N Specify the buffer size of the buffer for SCSI commands. The default value is 131072 bytes (128 kb). This may be changed at runtime by setting the environment variable SANE_SG_BUFFERSIZE to the desired value. The option is Linux-only at this time. --enable-scsibuffersize and SANE_SG_BUFFERSIZE have no effect for the Mustek, Umax and Sharp backends. For these backends, the buffer size is set automatically and/or can be specified in the backend's configuration file. Please refer to the backend's man pages for details. --disable-translations Disable installation of translated backend options. If you get errors in the po/ directory during build, use this option. See po/README for details. In addition to these configuration options, there are some more SANE-specific options and many standard-options. To get a description of available options, invoke configure with option --help. If you plan on debugging one of the SANE programs, we recommend to run configure like this: CFLAGS="-g -O -Wall" ./configure --disable-shared For operating system specific information, look at the README.* files. Build ===== To build SANE, simply type "make" in the top-level directory. To clean up the executables and libraries in the source directory, type "make clean". To restore everything to the status after unpacking the package, type "make distclean". Installation and Configuration ============================== Once the build has finished, install SANE with "make install". By default, this will place the SANE libraries in /usr/local/lib/, the configuration files in /usr/local/etc/sane.d/, and the manual pages in /usr/local/man/. The location of these directories can be overridden with configure options; see "configure --help" for details. Before running any SANE program, read the PROBLEMS file in this directory. For information on configuring and trouble-shooting the various SANE components, please refer to the manual page sane(7). The tools/ directory contains some small programs that may be helpfull. They are described in tools/README. Removing ======== Type "make uninstall" to remove SANE from your system. This will also remove older versions of SANE if they have been installed at the same prefix. Warning: Your configuration will be deleted also so make sure you have a backup. By default the configuration files are located in the directory /usr/local/etc/sane.d/. Contact ======= For general discussion about SANE, bug reports and feature requests contact the sane-devel mailing list. You must be subscribed to the list to send mail. See http://www.mostang.com/sane/mail.html for details. If you have a question or bug report for a specific backend, you may also contact the author of this backend directly. See the AUTHORS file for a list of addresses. If you don't want to subscribe to sane-devel and want to report bugs concerning security, compilation, installation, porting, or documentation of SANE, you can also contact Henning Meier-Geinitz <henning@meier-geinitz.de>.