sane-mustek_usb(5) SANE Scanner Access Now Easysane-mustek_usb(5)NAMEsane-mustek_usb - SANE backend for Mustek USB flatbed
scanners
DESCRIPTION
The sane-mustek_usb library implements a SANE (Scanner
Access Now Easy) backend that provides access to Mustek
USB flatbed scanners (including a clone from Trust). At
present, the following scanners are known to work more or
less with this backend:
Mustek 600 CU
Mustek 1200 UB
Mustek 1200 CU
Mustek 1200 CU Plus
Trust Compact Scan USB 19200
More details can be found on the Mustek USB backend home-
page http://www.meier-geinitz.de/sane/mustek_usb-backend/.
The Mustek BearPaw 1200 and 2400 scanners are supported by
the plustek backend. See sane-plustek(5) for details. The
Mustek BearPaw 1200F is supported by the MA-1509 backend.
See sane-ma1509(5) for details. Other Mustek USB scanners
are supported by the gt68xx backend, see sane-gt68xx(5).
This backend can only work with scanners that are already
detected by the operating system. See sane-usb(5) for
details.
If you own a Mustek (or Trust) 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 or syslog) to me.
DEVICE NAMES
This backend expects device names of the form:
special
Where special is a path-name for the special device that
corresponds to a USB scanner. With Linux, such a device
name could be /dev/usb/scanner0 or /dev/usbscanner1, for
example.
For FreeBSD use /dev/uscanner0.
CONFIGURATION
The contents of the mustek_usb.conf file is a list of
options and device names that correspond to Mustek USB
scanners. Empty lines and lines starting with a hash mark
(#) are ignored. If a device name is placed in
mustek_usb.conf, it must be followed by a line containing
the keyword option and an option specifying the scanner
type. The following options can be used: 600cu, 1200cu,
1200cu_plus, 1200ub. For the Trust Compact Scan USB 19200
use `option 1200ub'.
Instead of using the device name, the scanner can be
autodetected by usb vendor_id product_id statements which
are already included into mustek_usb.conf. This is only
supported with Linux 2.4.8 and higher and all systems that
support libsub. "vendor_id" and "product_id" are hexadeci-
mal numbers that identfy the scanner. If this doesn't
work, a device name and the option specifying the scanner
type must be placed in mustek_usb.conf as described above.
The global option max_block_size can be used to limit the
amount of data acquired in one turn from the USB system.
It may be worth trying, if USB errors occur.
A sample configuration file is shown below:
# Comment
option max_block_size 1024
usb 0x055f 0x0001
/dev/usb/scanner0
option 600cu
The first line is ignored. The second line sets the buffer
size to a maximum of 1024 bytes. The third line tries to
autodetect a scanner with vendor id 0x055f and product id
0x0001 (Mustek 1200 CU). The fourth line tells the backend
to attach to /dev/usb/scanner0 and the fifth line speci-
fies that /dev/usb/scanner0 is a Mustek 600 CU.
FILES
/usr/freeware/etc/sane.d/mustek_usb.conf
The backend configuration file (see also descrip-
tion of SANE_CONFIG_DIR below).
/usr/freeware/lib32/sane/libsane-mustek_usb.a
The static library implementing this backend.
/usr/freeware/lib32/sane/libsane-mustek_usb.so
The shared library implementing this backend (pre-
sent 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
configuration file is searched in two default
directories: first, the current working directory
(".") and then in /usr/freeware/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 spec-
ified directories. For example, setting SANE_CON-
FIG_DIR to "/tmp/config:" would result in directo-
ries "tmp/config", ".", and "/usr/free-
ware/etc/sane.d" being searched (in this order).
SANE_DEBUG_MUSTEK_USB
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.
Value Descsription
0 no output
1 print fatal errors
2 print important messages
3 print non-fatal errors and less important messages
4 print all but debugging messages
5 print high level debugging messages
6 print medium level debugging messages
7 print low level debugging messages
Example:
export SANE_DEBUG_MUSTEK_USB=4
SEE ALSOsane(7), sane-usb(5), sane-mustek(5), sane-mustek_pp(5),
sane-plustek(5), sane-gt68xx(5), sane-ma1509(5)
/usr/freeware/share/doc/sane-back-
ends/mustek_usb/mustek_usb.CHANGES, /usr/free-
ware/share/doc/sane-backends/mustek_usb/mustek_usb.TODO
http://www.meier-geinitz.de/sane/mustek_usb-backend/
AUTHOR
Henning Meier-Geinitz <henning@meier-geinitz.de>
This backend is based on the Mustek 1200ub backend from
Mustek, maintained by Tom Wang.
BUGS
These devices have a hardware bug: Once data is written to
them, they can't be resetted (toggle = DATA0). That means,
any operation that tries to reset the device will result
in running into timeouts.
That means that this backend will fail when it is loaded
the second time in some configurations: E.g. using libusb,
(Free|Open|Net)BSD or with Linux if you unload and reload
the scanner module. The only choice is to replug the scan-
ner in this case.
More detailed bug information is available at the Mustek
backend homepage http://www.meier-
geinitz.de/sane/mustek_usb-backend/.
sane-backends 1.0.12 09 Jan 2003 sane-mustek_usb(5)