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

NAME
       sane-microtek - SANE backend for Microtek scanners

DESCRIPTION
       The  sane-microtek  library implements a SANE (Scanner Access Now Easy)
       backend that provides access to the "second generation" Microtek	 scan‐
       ners.   At  present,  the following hardware is known to work with this
       backend:

	      Microtek ScanMaker E2, E3, E6
	      Microtek ScanMaker II, IIG, IIHR, IISP, III
	      Microtek ScanMaker 35t, 35t+, 45t
	      Microtek ScanMaker 600GS, 600ZS (see bug notes)
	      Agfa StudioScan
	      Agfa StudioScan II, StudioScan IIsi
	      Agfa Arcus II (but not the "Arcus")
	      Agfa DuoScan (preliminary)
	      Vobis "Highscreen Realscan"
	      Microtek Color PageWiz (preliminary)

	      Transparent Media Adapter
	      Document AutoFeeder

       The driver supports line art, halftone,	8bpp  gray,  and  24bpp	 color
       scans  at  normal and "expanded" resolutions (i.e. 1200x1200 on an E6),
       fast scans for color previews, and downloadable gamma tables.

       The supported scanners are all SCSI scanners.  However,	some  parallel
       port  models  may work (under Linux), if they use a parport->scsi chip,
       and if you can find a scsi->parport driver.  This is known  to  be  the
       case for the Color PageWiz.

       The  driver  does not support the newest Microtek scanners, such as the
       V330 and V660, which use a new and very different SCSI-II command  set.
       For those, try the alternate microtek2 backend.	Most non-SCSI scanners
       would use the new command set.  Most scanners newer than the  Scanmaker
       E6 would use the new command set.

       If you own a Microtek scanner other than the ones listed above, tell us
       what happens --- see the BUGS section at the end of this document.

       Although this manual page is generally updated with each	 release,  up-
       to-date	information  on	 new releases and extraneous helpful hints are
       available from the backend homepage:
	      http://www.mir.com/mtek/

DEVICE NAMES
       This backend expects device names of the form:

	      special

       Where special is the UNIX path-name for the special device that	corre‐
       sponds  to the scanner.	The special device name must be a generic SCSI
       device or a symlink to such a device.  Under Linux, such a device  name
       could be /dev/sga or /dev/sge, for example.

CONFIGURATION
       The  contents  of the microtek.conf file is a list of device names that
       correspond to Microtek scanners.	 Empty lines and lines starting with a
       hash mark (#) are ignored.  A sample configuration file is shown below:

	      /dev/scanner
	      # this is a comment
	      /dev/sge

       The configuration file may also contain the special tokens norealcal or
       noprecal.  norealcal will disable the use of magic, undocumented	 scan‐
       ner calibration commands which are known to work on the E6, but may not
       work with other models.	noprecal will disable  logic  which  tries  to
       avoid  scanner  precalibration.	 This logic would only have been acti‐
       vated if the magic calibration code was turned off.

FILES
       /etc/sane.d/microtek.conf
	      The  backend  configuration  file	 (see  also   description   of
	      SANE_CONFIG_DIR below).

       /usr/lib*/sane/libsane-microtek.a
	      The static library implementing this backend.

       /usr/lib*/sane/libsane-microtek.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 /etc/sane.d.	If the
	      value of the environment variable ends with the directory	 sepa‐
	      rator character, then the default directories are searched after
	      the explicitly  specified	 directories.	For  example,  setting
	      SANE_CONFIG_DIR  to  "/tmp/config:"  would result in directories
	      "tmp/config", ".", and "/etc/sane.d"  being  searched  (in  this
	      order).

       SANE_DEBUG_MICROTEK
	      If the library was compiled with debugging support enabled, this
	      environment variable controls the debug level for this  backend.
	      A	 value of 128 requests maximally copious debug output; smaller
	      levels reduce verbosity.

SEE ALSO
       sane(7), sane-scsi(5)

AUTHOR
       Matt Marjanovic

BUGS
       Known bugs/limitations are:

	      Brightness and contrast broken.
	      The 600GS is grayscale only, and will  lock  up  if  you	select
	      color.   (Unfortunately,	the 600GS and 600ZS are indistinguish‐
	      able by software.)

       i.e. don't complain about these --- but if brightness  and/or  contrast
       do work for you, please tell me.

       If  your scanner locks up, try setting the norealcal or noprecal option
       in the configuration file (first one, then both), and see if it	helps.
       (If it does, report it.)

       Send   lengthy  bug  reports  and  new  scanner	information  to	 mtek-
       bugs@mir.com.  All bug reports and new scanner inquiries should include
       an  error  log file.  You can generate copious stderr output by setting
       the SANE_DEBUG_MICROTEK	environment  variable  described  above.   For
       example:

	      setenv SANE_DEBUG_MICROTEK 128

       More  general  comments,	 suggestions, and inquiries about frontends or
       SANE should go to sane-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org, the SANE Develop‐
       ers  mailing  list. Have a look at http://www.sane-project.org/mailing-
       lists.html concerning subscription to sane-devel.

sane-backends 1.0.18	       February 8, 2000		      sane-microtek(5)
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