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<B><A HREF="sane-cardscan.5.html">sane-cardscan(5)</A></B> SANE Scanner Access Now Easy <B><A HREF="sane-cardscan.5.html">sane-cardscan(5)</A></B>
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<H2>NAME</H2><PRE>
sane-cardscan - SANE backend for Corex CardScan usb scanners
</PRE>
<H2>DESCRIPTION</H2><PRE>
The <B>sane-cardscan</B> library implements a SANE (Scanner Access Now Easy)
backend which provides access to the Corex CardScan 800c &amp; 600c small-
format scanners.
The backend supports only grayscale and color modes and media of (theo-
retically) infinite length.
This backend may support other scanners. The best way to determine
level of support is to get a trace of the windows driver in action, and
send it to the author.
</PRE>
<H2>OPTIONS</H2><PRE>
The cardscan backend supports the following options:
<B>--mode</B> <B>Gray|Color</B>
Selects the mode for the scan.
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<H2>CONFIGURATION FILE</H2><PRE>
The configuration file <I>cardscan.conf</I> is used to tell the backend how to
look for scanners, and provide options controlling the operation of the
backend. This file is read each time the frontend asks the backend for
a list of scanners, generally only when the frontend starts. If the
configuration file is missing, the backend will use a set of compiled
defaults, which are identical to the default configuration file shipped
with SANE.
Scanners can be specified in the configuration file in 2 ways:
"usb 0x04c5 0x1042" (or other vendor/product ids)
Requests backend to search all usb buses in the system for a
device which uses that vendor and product id. The device will
then be queried to determine if it is a cardscan scanner.
"usb /dev/usb/scanner0" (or other device file)
Some systems use a kernel driver to access usb scanners. This
method is untested.
Additionally, there are two configuration options that control the pro-
tocol used by the backend:
"lines_per_block 16" (or other number from 1 to 32)
Controls the number of lines of image data which will be
acquired in each pass. Older scanners will require this number
set lower, often 1.
"has_cal_buffer 1" (1 or 0)
Causes the backend to get calibration data from scanner during
initialization. Older scanners do not support this request, and
must be set to 0.
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<H2>ENVIRONMENT</H2><PRE>
The backend uses a single environment variable, <B>SANE_DEBUG_CARDSCAN,</B>
which enables debugging output to stderr. Valid values are:
5 Errors
10 Function trace
15 Function detail
20 Option commands
25 SCSI/USB trace
30 SCSI/USB detail
35 Useless noise
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<H2>KNOWN ISSUES</H2><PRE>
The scanner does not seem to have much control possible, so the
backend cannot set x/y coordinate values, resolutions, etc.
These things could be simulated in the backend, but there are
plenty of command line tools.
The backend also does not send all the commands that the windows
driver does, so it may not function the same.
The backend does not have the calibration or ejection options of
the windows driver.
</PRE>
<H2>CREDITS</H2><PRE>
The hardware to build this driver was provided to the author by: Jeff
Kowalczyk <I>&lt;jtk</I> <I>a</I> <I>t</I> <I>yahoo</I> <I>d</I> <I>o</I> <I>t</I> <I>com&gt;</I>.
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<H2>SEE ALSO</H2><PRE>
<B><A HREF="sane.7.html">sane(7)</A></B>, <B><A HREF="sane-usb.5.html">sane-usb(5)</A></B>
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<H2>AUTHOR</H2><PRE>
m. allan noah: <I>&lt;kitno455</I> <I>a</I> <I>t</I> <I>gmail</I> <I>d</I> <I>o</I> <I>t</I> <I>com&gt;</I> <I>.</I>
10 Feb 2010 <B><A HREF="sane-cardscan.5.html">sane-cardscan(5)</A></B>
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