sane-gt68xx.5



sane-gt68xx(5)           SANE Scanner Access Now Easy           sane-gt68xx(5)


NAME

       sane-gt68xx - SANE backend for GT-68XX based USB flatbed scanners


DESCRIPTION

       The  sane-gt68xx  library  implements  a SANE (Scanner Access Now Easy)
       backend that provides access to  USB  flatbed  scanners  based  on  the
       Grandtech  GT-6801  and GT-6816 chips.  At present, the following scan-
       ners are known to work with this backend:

              Artec Ultima 2000 (only product 0x4002)
              Artec Ultima 2000 e+
              Boeder SmartScan Slim Edition
              Fujitsu 1200CUS
              Genius Colorpage Vivid3x
              Genius Colorpage Vivid3xe
              Lexmark X70
              Lexmark X73
              Medion/Lifetec/Tevion MD 4395
              Medion/Lifetec/Tevion/Cytron MD/LT 9385
              Medion/Lifetec/Tevion LT 9452
              Medion/Lifetec/Tevion MD 9458
              Mustek BearPaw 1200 CS
              Mustek BearPaw 1200 CU (Plus)
              Mustek BearPaw 1200 TA
              Mustek BearPaw 2400 CS (Plus)
              Mustek BearPaw 2400 CU (Plus)
              Mustek BearPaw 2400 TA (Plus)
              Mustek ScanExpress A3 USB
              Mustek ScanExpress 1200 UB Plus
              Mustek ScanExpress 2400 USB
              Mustek ScanMagic 1200 UB Plus
              Packard Bell Diamond 1200 (Plus)
              Plustek OpticPro 1248U
              RevScan 19200i
              Trust Compact Scan USB 19200
              Trust Flat Scan USB 19200

       More  details  can  be   found   on   the   gt68xx   backend   homepage
       http://www.meier-geinitz.de/sane/gt68xx/.

       The  Artec  E+  48U  and its clones are supported by the artec_eplus48u
       backend, see sane-artec_eplus48u(5) for details.

       This is BETA software. Especially if you test new or untested scanners,
       keep  your  hand at the scanner's plug and unplug it, if the head bumps
       at the end of the scan area.

       If you own a scanner other than the ones listed above that  works  with
       this  backend,  please  let me know this by sending the scanner's exact
       model  name  and  the  USB   vendor   and   device   ids   (e.g.   from
       /proc/bus/usb/devices,  sane-find-scanner or syslog) to me. Even if the
       scanner's name is only slightly different  from  the  models  mentioned
       above, please let me know.


KERNEL ISSUES

       If libusb-0.1.6 or later is installed, this section can be skipped. The
       scanner should be found by sane-find-scanner without  further  actions.
       For   setting   permissions   and  general  USB  information  looks  at
       sane-usb(5).

       The scanners based on the GT-6816 (Mustek BearPaw TA and  BearPaw  Plus
       models,  the  Packard Bell and the Lexmark scanner) need a Linux kernel
       2.4.12 or newer.  Recent 2.2 kernels  may  also  work,  but  I  haven't
       tested  them.  Older kernels or other operating systems won't work. Use
       libusb instead.

       The scanners based on the GT-6801 (all other scanners) need Linux  ker-
       nel 2.4.21 or newer. Older kernels will not work.


FIRMWARE FILE

       You need a firmware file for your scanner. That's a small file contain-
       ing software that will be uploaded to the scanner's memory.  It's  usu-
       ally  named  *.usb,  e.g.   PS1fw.usb.  It comes on the installation CD
       that was provided by the manufacturer, but it may be packaged  together
       with the installation program in an .exe file. For Mustek scanners, the
       file can be dowloaded from the gt68xx backend homepage. For other scan-
       ners,  check  the CD for .usb files. If everything else fails, you must
       install the Windows driver and get the firmware from there (usually  in
       the  windows/system  or  system32  directories). Put that firmware file
       into /usr/local/share/sane/gt68xx/.


CONFIGURATION

       The contents of the gt68xx.conf file is a list of usb lines  containing
       vendor  and  product  ids that correspond to USB scanners. The file can
       also contain option lines.  Empty lines and lines starting with a  hash
       mark  (#)  are ignored.  The scanners are autodetected by usb vendor_id
       product_id statements which  are  already  included  into  gt68xx.conf.
       "vendor_id"  and  "product_id" are hexadecimal numbers that identfy the
       scanner.

       The override, firmware, vendor, model, and afe options must  be  placed
       after the usb line they refer to.

       Option  override  is  used  to  override  the default model parameters.
       That's necessary for some scanners that use the same vendor/product ids
       but  are  different. For these scanners there are already commented out
       override lines in  the  configuration  file.   override  mustek-scanex-
       press-1200-ub-plus  is  necessary  for  the  Mustek Scanexpress 1200 UB
       Plus, the Medion/Lifetec/Tevion LT 9452, and the Trust Compact Scan USB
       19200.   override  artec-ultima-2000 is used for the Artec Ultima 2000,
       the Boeder SmartScan Slim Edition, the Medion/ Lifetec/ Tevion/  Cytron
       MD/LT  9385,  the  Medion/  Lifetec/ Tevion MD 9458, and the Trust Flat
       Scan USB 19200.  override mustek-bearpaw-2400-cu is necessary  for  the
       Mustek  BearPaw  2400  CU  and the Fujitsu 1200CUS. The override option
       must be the first one after the usb line.

       Option firmware selects the name and path of the  firmware  file.  It's
       only  necessary  if the default (or override) doesn't work. The default
       firmware directory is /usr/local/share/sane/gt68xx/.  You may  need  to
       create  this  directory.  If  you want to place the firmware files at a
       different path, use a firmware line.

       The vendor and model options are not absolutely necessary but for  con-
       venience.  Quite  a  lot of scanners from different manufacturers share
       the same vendor/product ids so you can set the "correct" name here.

       The afe option allows to set custom offset and gain values for the Ana-
       log  FrontEnd  of the scanner. This option can be either used to select
       the AFE values if automatic coarse calibration is disabled, or to  make
       automatic coarse calibration faster. For the latter usage, enable debug
       level 3 (see below), scan an image and look for debug line string  with
       "afe".  Copy  this line to gt68xx.conf.  The option has six parameters:
       res offset, red gain, green offset, green gain, blue offset,  and  blue
       gain.

       A sample configuration file is shown below:

              usb 0x05d8 0x4002
              override "mustek-scanexpress-1200-ub-plus"
              firmware "/opt/gt68xx/SBfw.usb"
              vendor "Trust"
              model "Compact Scan USB 19200"
              afe 0x20 0x02 0x22 0x03 0x1f 0x04


FILES

       /usr/local/etc/sane.d/gt68xx.conf
              The   backend   configuration  file  (see  also  description  of
              SANE_CONFIG_DIR below).

       /usr/local/lib/sane/libsane-gt68xx.a
              The static library implementing this backend.

       /usr/local/lib/sane/libsane-gt68xx.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.  Under UNIX, the directories
              are  separated  by a colon (`:'), under OS/2, they are separated
              by a semi-colon (`;').  If this variable is not set, the config-
              uration  file is searched in two default directories: first, the
              current    working    directory    (".")     and     then     in
              /usr/local/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 directo-
              ries.  For example, setting  SANE_CONFIG_DIR  to  "/tmp/config:"
              would    result    in   directories   "tmp/config",   ".",   and
              "/usr/local/etc/sane.d" being searched (in this order).

       SANE_DEBUG_GT68XX
              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_GT68XX=4


SEE ALSO

       sane(7),    sane-usb(5),    sane-artec_eplus48u(5)     sane-plustek(5),
       sane-ma1509(5), sane-mustek_usb(5), sane-mustek(5), sane-mustek_pp(5)
       /usr/local/doc/sane-1.0.12-cvs/gt68xx/gt68xx.CHANGES
       http://www.meier-geinitz.de/sane/gt68xx


AUTHOR

       Henning Meier-Geinitz <henning@meier-geinitz.de>
       The  original  gt68xx  driver  was  written  by  Sergey Vlasov, Andreas
       Nowack, and David Stevenson. Thanks for sending patches  and  answering
       questions to them and all the other contributors.


BUGS

       Currently  scanning  seems  to  only  work  reliably  under Linux. With
       FreeBSD, NetBSD and OpenBSD scanning works only once. Then the  scanner
       isn't detected anymore and has to be replugged.

       The first few lines of the image are garbage for the 2400 TA Plus.

       Interpolation  should be used instead of just copying data, when the X-
       and Y-resolution differ.

       Support for buttons is missing.

       More detailed bug information is available at the gt68xx backend  home-
       page http://www.meier-geinitz.de/sane/gt68xx.  Please contact me if you
       find a bug or missing feature: <henning@meier-geinitz.de>. Please  send
       a   debug   log   if   your   scanner  isn't  detected  correctly  (see
       SANE_DEBUG_GT68XX above).

sane-backends 1.0.12-cvs          22 Jul 2003                   sane-gt68xx(5)

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