From 6e9c41a892ed0e0da326e0278b3221ce3f5713b8 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: =?UTF-8?q?J=C3=B6rg=20Frings-F=C3=BCrst?= Date: Mon, 6 Oct 2014 14:00:40 +0200 Subject: Initial import of sane-backends version 1.0.24-1.2 --- doc/sane-umax.man | 276 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 276 insertions(+) create mode 100644 doc/sane-umax.man (limited to 'doc/sane-umax.man') diff --git a/doc/sane-umax.man b/doc/sane-umax.man new file mode 100644 index 0000000..7dd9382 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/sane-umax.man @@ -0,0 +1,276 @@ +.TH sane\-umax 5 "14 Jul 2008" "@PACKAGEVERSION@" "SANE Scanner Access Now Easy" +.IX sane\-umax + +.SH NAME +sane\-umax \- SANE backend for UMAX scanners + +.SH ABOUT THIS FILE + +This file only is a short description of the umax-backend for sane! For detailed information take a look at +sane\-umax\-doc.html (it is included in the sane source directory and in the xsane online help)! + +.SH DESCRIPTION + +The +.B sane\-umax +library implements a SANE backend that provides access to several UMAX-SCSI-scanners and some Linotye Hell SCSI-scanners, +parallel- and USB-scanners are not (and probably will never be) supported! + +.B I suggest you hold one hand on the power-button of the scanner while you try the first scans! + +.SH CONFIGURATION + +The configuration file for this backend resides in +.IR @CONFIGDIR@/umax.conf . + +Its contents is a list of device names that correspond to UMAX and UMAX compatible scanners. Empty lines +and lines starting with a hash mark (#) are ignored. A sample configuration file is +shown below: + +.nf + # this is a comment + # + option scsi\-maxqueue 4 + option scsi\-buffer\-size\-min 65536 + option scsi\-buffer\-size\-max 131072 + option scan\-lines 40 + option preview\-lines 10 + option scsi\-maxqueue 2 + option execute\-request\-sense 0 + option force\-preview\-bit\-rgb 0 + option slow\-speed \-1 + option care\-about\-smearing \-1 + option calibration\-full\-ccd \-1 + option calibration\-width\-offset \-1 + option calibration\-bytes\-pixel \-1 + option exposure\-time\-rgb\-bind \-1 + option invert\-shading\-data \-1 + option lamp\-control\-available 0 + option gamma\-lsb\-padded 0 + /dev/sge +\ + #scsi Vendor Model Type Bus Channel ID LUN + # The following scanner supports lamp control + option lamp\-control\-available 1 + scsi UMAX * Scanner * * * * * +\ + # scanner on /dev/scanner does not support lamp control + option lamp\-control\-available 0 + /dev/scanner +.fi + +.TP +execute\-request\-sense: +values: 0 = disabled, 1 = enabled +.br +default = 0 +.br +If set to 1 umax_do_request_sense is called in +umax_do_calibration. This can hang the system +(but has been enabled until this version) +.TP +scsi\-buffer\-size\-min, scsi\-buffer\-size\-max: +values: 4096-1048576 +.br +default min = 32768, max = 131072 +.br +Especially the minimum value is very important. +If this value is set too small the backend is not +able to send gamma tables to the scanner or to +do a correct color calibration. This may result in +strange color effects. If the minimum value is set +too large then the backend is not able to allocate +the requested scsi buffer size and aborts with +out of memory error. The default is 32KB, for +some scanners it should be increased to 64KB. +.TP +scan\-lines, preview\-lines: +values: 1-65535 +.br +default: scan\-lines = 40, preview\-lines = 10 +.br +define the maximum number of lines that are scanned +into one buffer +.TP +force\-preview\-bit\-rgb: +values: +0 = disabled, +1 = enabled +.br +default = 0 +.br +set preview bit in rgb real scan +.TP +slow\-speed, care\-about\-smearing: +values: +\-1 = auto, +0 = disabled, +1 = enabled +.br +default = \-1 +.br +dangerous options, needed for some scanners +do not changed these options until you really know +what you do, you may destroy your scanner when you +define wrong values for this options +.TP +calibration\-full\-ccd: +values: +\-1 = auto, +0 = disabled, +1 = enabled +.br +default = \-1 +.br +do calibration for each pixel of ccd instead of +selected image +.TP +calibration\-width\-offset: +values: \-99999 = auto, > \-99999 set value +.br +add an offset width to the calculated with for +image/ccd +.TP +calibration\-bytes\-pixel: +values: +\-1 = disabled, +0 = not set, +1 = 1 byte/pixel, +2 = 2 bytes/pixel +.br +use # bytes per pixel for calibration +.TP +exposure\-time\-rgb\-bind: +values: +\-1 = automatically set by driver \- if known, +0 = disabled (own selection for red, green and blue), +1 = enabled (same values for red, green and blue) +.TP +invert\-shading\-data: +values: +\-1 = automatically set by driver \- if known, +0 = disabled, +1 = enabled +.br +default = \-1 +.br +invert shading data before sending it back to the scanner +.TP +lamp\-control\-available: +values: +0 = automatically set by driver \- if known, +1 = available +.br +default = 0 +.TP +gamma\-lsb\-padded: +values: +\-1 = automatically set by driver \- if known, +0 = gamma data is msb padded, +1 = gamma data is lsb padded +.br +default = \-1 +.TP +handle\-bad\-sense\-error: +values: +0 = handle as device busy, +1 = handle as ok, +2 = handle as i/o error, +3 = ignore bad error code \- continue sense handler +.br +default = 0 +.TP +scsi\-maxqueue: +values: +1..# (maximum defined at compile time) +.br +default = 2 +.br +most scsi drivers allow internal command queueing with a depth +of 2 commands. In most cases it does not mprove anything when you +increase this value. When your scsi driver does not support any +command queueing you can try to set this value to 1. + +.PP +The special device name must be a generic SCSI device or a symlink to such a device. +To find out to which device your scanner is assigned and how you have to set the +permissions of that device, have a look at sane\-scsi. + +.SH SCSI ADAPTER TIPS + +The ISA-SCSI-adapters that are shipped with some Umax-scanners are not supported very +well by Linux (I suggest not to use it), the PCI-SCSI-adapters that come with some +Umax-scanners are not supported at all (as far as I know). On other platforms these +SCSI-adapters are not supported. So you typically need to purchase another SCSI-adapter +that is supported by your platform. See the relevant hardware FAQs and HOWTOs for your +platform for more information. + +The UMAX-scanners do block the scsi-bus for a few seconds while scanning. It is not +necessary to connect the scanner to its own SCSI-adapter. But if you need short +response time for your SCSI-harddisk (e.g. if your computer is a file-server) or +other scsi devices, I suggest you use an own SCSI-adapter for your UMAX-scanner. + +If you have any problems with your Umax scanner, check your scsi chain +(cable length, termination, ...). + +See also: sane\-scsi(5) + +.SH FILES + +.TP +The backend configuration file: +.I @CONFIGDIR@/umax.conf +.TP +The static library implementing this backend: +.I @LIBDIR@/libsane\-umax.a +.TP +The shared library implementing this backend: +.I @LIBDIR@/libsane\-umax.so +(present on systems that support dynamic loading) + +.SH ENVIRONMENT + +.TP +.B SANE_DEBUG_UMAX +If the library was compiled with debug support enabled, this environment +variable controls the debug level for this backend. E.g., a value of 128 +requests all debug output to be printed. Smaller levels reduce verbosity: +SANE_DEBUG_UMAX values + +.ft CR +.nf +Number Remark +\ + 0 print important errors (printed each time) + 1 print errors + 2 print sense + 3 print warnings + 4 print scanner-inquiry + 5 print information + 6 print less important information + 7 print called procedures + 8 print reader_process messages + 10 print called sane\-init-routines + 11 print called sane\-procedures + 12 print sane infos + 13 print sane option-control messages +.fi +.ft R + +.TP +Example: +export SANE_DEBUG_UMAX=8 + +.SH BUGS + +X-resolutions greater than 600 dpi sometimes make problems + +.SH SEE ALSO +sane(7) + +.SH AUTHOR + +Oliver Rauch + +.SH EMAIL-CONTACT +Oliver.Rauch@Rauch-Domain.DE -- cgit v1.2.3