1sane-pixma(5)            SANE Scanner Access Now Easy            sane-pixma(5)
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NAME

6       sane-pixma  -  SANE  backend  for  Canon  Multi-Function  Printers  and
7       CanoScan Scanners
8

DESCRIPTION

10       The sane-pixma library implements a  SANE  (Scanner  Access  Now  Easy)
11       backend  that  provides access to Canon PIXMA / i-SENSYS / imageCLASS /
12       imageRUNNER multi-function devices (All-in-one printers) and the  Canon
13       CanoScan Flatbed/TPU scanners.  The backend implements both the USB in‐
14       terface and network interface (using Canon's BJNP and MFNP  protocols).
15       The network interface supports scanners over IPv4 as well as IPv6 (MFNP
16       over IPv6 is untested).
17
18       Currently, the following models work with this backend:
19
20
21
22              PIXMA E410, E510, E4500
23              PIXMA G600, G2000, G2010, G2100, G4000, G4511
24              PIXMA GX6000, GX7000
25              PIXMA MG2100, MG2200, MG2400, MG2500, MG2900, MG3000, MG3100
26              PIXMA MG3200, MG3500, MG3600, MG4200, MG5100, MG5200, MG5300
27              PIXMA MG5400, MG5500, MG5600, MG5700, MG6100, MG6200, MG6300
28              PIXMA MG6400, MG7100, MG7500, MG7700, MG8200
29              PIXMA MP140, MP150, MP160, MP170, MP180, MP190
30              PIXMA MP210, MP220, MP230, MP240, MP250, MP260, MP270, MP280
31              PIXMA MP360, MP370, MP390
32              PIXMA MP450, MP460, MP470, MP480, MP490, MP495
33              PIXMA MP500, MP510, MP520, MP530, MP540, MP550, MP560
34              PIXMA MP600, MP600R, MP610, MP620, MP630, MP640
35              PIXMA MP700, MP710, MP730, PIXMA MP750 (no grayscale)
36              PIXMA MP800, MP800R, MP810, MP830
37              PIXMA MP960, MP970, MP980, MP990
38              PIXMA MX300, MX310, MX330, MX340, MX350, MX360, MX370
39              PIXMA MX410, MX420, MX470, MX510, MX520, MX530, MX700, MX720
40              PIXMA MX850, MX860, MX870, MX882, MX885, MX890, MX920, MX7600
41              PIXMA TR4500, TR4600, TR4700
42              PIXMA TS2400, TS2600, TS3100, TS3300, TS3450, TS3451, TS3452
43              PIXMA TS3500, TS5000, TS5100, TS5350i, TS5400, TS6100, TS6200
44              PIXMA TS7530, TS7450i ,TS8000, TS8530, TS8200
45              PIXUS MP10
46              imageCLASS MF634Cdw, MF733Cdw
47              imageCLASS MF3110, MF3240, MF4010, MF4018
48              imageCLASS MF4120, MF4122, MF4140, MF4150
49              imageCLASS MF4270, MF4350d, MF4370dn, MF4380dn
50              imageCLASS MF4410, MF4430, MF4570dw, MF4660, MF4690
51              imageCLASS MF5730, MF5770, MF6550, MPC200
52              imageCLASS D420, D480, D530, D570
53              i-SENSYS MF210, MF230, MF240, MF440, MF620, MF630, MF640
54              i-SENSYS MF645C, MF730, MF731/733, MF741/743
55              i-SENSYS MF3010, MF4320d, MF4330d, MF4500, MF4700, MF4800
56              i-SENSYS MF6100, MF8030, MF8200C, MF8300
57              imageRUNNER 1018/1022/1023, 1020/1024/1025, 1133
58              CanoScan 8800F, 9000F, 9000F Mark II
59              CanoScan LiDE 300, 400
60              MAXIFY MB2000, MB2100, MB2300, MB2700, MB5000, MB5100, MB5400
61
62       The following models are not well tested and/or the  scanner  sometimes
63       hangs and must be switched off and on.
64
65              PIXMA MP760, MP770, MP780, MP790
66
67       The  following  models  may use the same Pixma protocol as those listed
68       above, but have not yet been reported to work (or not).  They  are  de‐
69       clared in the backend so that they get recognized and activated.  Feed‐
70       back in the sane-devel mailing list welcome.
71
72              PIXMA E400, E460, E470, E480, E500, E560, E600, E610
73              PIXMA E3100, E3300, E3400, E4200
74              PIXMA G2020, G2060, G3020, G3060, G7000, G7080
75              PIXMA MG4100, MG6500, MG6600, MG6800, MG6900, MG8100
76              PIXMA MP375R, MP493, MP740
77              PIXMA MX320, MX390, MX430, MX450, MX490, MX710
78              PIXMA G3000, G3010, G4010, G6000, G6080, G7000, GM4000, GM4080
79              PIXMA TR7500, TR7530, TR7600, TR8500, TR8530, TR8580, TR8600
80              PIXMA TR8630, TR9530
81              PIXMA TS3400, TS5100, TS6000, TS6130,  TS6180,  TS6230,  TS6280,
82              TS6300
83              PIXMA  TS6330,  TS6330,  TS6380, TS6400, TS7330, TS7400, TS7430,
84              TS8100
85              PIXMA TS8130, TS8180, TS8230, TS8280,  TS8300,  TS8330,  TS8380,
86              TS9000
87              PIXMA TS9100, TS9180, TS9500, TS9580
88              PIXUS MP5, XK50, XK60, XK70, XK80, XK90, XK100, XK500
89              imageCLASS MF720, MF810/820, MF5630, MF5650, MF5750, MF8170c
90              imageCLASS MPC190, D550
91              i-SENSYS MF110, MF220, MF260, MF410, MF420, MF510, MF520, MF740
92              i-SENSYS MF5880dn, MF5900, MF6680dn, MF8500C
93              MAXIFY MB5300
94
95       The  following  models  may use partly the same Pixma protocol as other
96       devices listed above, but may still need some work. They  are  declared
97       in  the  backend  as  experimental  and  need  the environment variable
98       PIXMA_EXPERIMENT=1 to get recognized and activated. Snoop logs are  re‐
99       quired  to  further  investigate, please contact the sane-devel mailing
100       list.
101
102              -- none --
103
104       The backend supports:
105
106              * resolutions of 75, 150, 300, 600, 1200, 2400, 4800,  and  9600
107              DPI (some maybe buggy),
108              *  color  and grayscale mode, as well as lineart on certain mod‐
109              els,
110              * a custom gamma table,
111              * Automatic Document Feeder, Simplex and Duplex.
112              * Transparency Unit, 24 or 48 bits depth.  Infrared  channel  on
113              certain models.
114
115       The  device  name  for  USB devices is in the form pixma:xxxxyyyy_zzzzz
116       where x, y and z are vendor ID, product ID and  serial  number  respec‐
117       tively.
118
119       Example: pixma:04A91709_123456 is a MP150.
120
121       Device  names  for  BJNP/MFNP  devices  is in the form pixma:aaaa_bbbbb
122       where aaaa is the scanners model and bbbb is the hostname or ip-adress.
123
124       Example: pixma:MF4800_192.168.1.45 is a  MF4800  Series  multi-function
125       peripheral.
126
127       This  backend, based on cloning original Canon drivers protocols, is in
128       a production stage. Designed has been carried out without any  applica‐
129       ble  manufacturer  documentation, probably never available. However, we
130       have tested it as well as we could, but it may not work in  all  situa‐
131       tions. You will find an up-to-date status at the project homepage. (See
132       below).  Users feedback is essential to help improve features and  per‐
133       formances.
134

OPTIONS

136       Besides  "well-known"  options (e.g. resolution, mode etc.)  sane-pixma
137       backend also provides the following options,  i.e.  the  options  might
138       change in the future.
139       The button status can be polled i.e. with scanimage -A.
140       Button  scan  is disabled on MAC OS X due to darwin libusb not handling
141       timeouts in usb interrupt reads, but may work when  using  the  network
142       protocol.
143
144       adf-wait
145              This  option  enables and sets the time in seconds waiting for a
146              document inserted into the Automatic Document Feeder.  The maxi‐
147              mum allowed waiting time is 3600 sec (= 1 hour).
148
149       button-controlled
150              This  option  can  be  used by applications (like scanadf(1) and
151              scanimage(1)) in batch mode, for example when you want  to  scan
152              many  photos  or multiple-page documents. If it is enabled (i.e.
153              is set to true or yes), the backend waits before every scan  un‐
154              til the user presses the "SCAN" button (for MP150) or the color-
155              scan button (for other models). Just put the first page  in  the
156              scanner,  press the button, then the next page, press the button
157              and so on. When you finished, press the gray-scan  button.  (For
158              MP150 you have to stop the frontend by pressing Ctrl-C for exam‐
159              ple.)
160
161       button-update (deprecated)
162              (write only) In the past this option was required to be  set  to
163              force  reading  of  the button status for button-1 and button-2.
164              The sane-pixma backend no longer  requires  this  option  to  be
165              used:  if  no  fresh data is available, it will be now requested
166              automatically from the scanner. This option is left for backward
167              compatibility reasons.
168
169       button-1 button-2
170              (read  only)  These options will return the value of the respec‐
171              tive buttons.  value 0 means that the button was not pressed,  1
172              is returned when the button was pressed. Some scanners with more
173              than two buttons send the button number as target.
174
175       original
176              (read only) Returns the value of the type or size of original to
177              be  scanned  if  the scanner provides that data. Known values of
178              type: 1 = document, 2 = photo, 5 = film. Known values of size: 1
179              = A4, 2 = Letter, 8 = 10x15, 9 = 13x18, b = auto.  Not all scan‐
180              ners can provide this data.
181
182       target (read only) Returns the value of the target of the  scan  opera‐
183              tion if the scanner provides that data. The values depend on the
184              scanner type. Known values: 1 = save to disk, 2 = save to pdf, 3
185              =  send to email, 4 = send to application or 1 = JPEG, 2 = TIFF,
186              3 = PDF, 4 = Compact PDF. For some scanners this value is equiv‐
187              alent  to the number of the pressed button. Not all scanners can
188              provide this data.
189
190       scan-resolution
191              (read only) Returns the resolution of the scan operation if  the
192              scanner  provides  that  data. Known values: 1 = 75 dpi, 2 = 150
193              dpi, 3 = 300 dpi, 4 = 600 dpi. Not all scanners can provide this
194              data.
195
196       document-type
197              (read  only)  Returns  the  type  of the scanned document if the
198              scanner provides that data. Known values:  1  =  Document,  2  =
199              Photo, 3 = Auto scan. Not all scanners can provide this data.
200
201       adf-status
202              (read  only)  Returns  the  status of the document feeder if the
203              scanner provides that data. Known values: 1 = ADF empty, 2 = ADF
204              filled. Not all scanners can provide this data.
205
206       adf-orientation
207              (read  only)  Returns the scan orientation of the medium scanned
208              from ADF if the scanner provides that data. Known  values:  1  =
209              Portrait, 2 = Landscape. Not all scanners can provide this data.
210

FILES

212       /usr/lib64/sane/libsane-pixma.a
213              The static library implementing this backend.
214
215       /usr/lib64/sane/libsane-pixma.so
216              The shared library implementing this backend (present on systems
217              that support dynamic loading).
218
219       /etc/sane.d/pixma.conf
220              The  backend  configuration  file  (see  also   description   of
221              SANE_CONFIG_DIR below).
222
223              The  file  contains an optional list of networked scanners using
224              the BJNP or MFNP protools (See below for datails  on  networking
225              support  for  scanners).  Normally  only scanners that cannot be
226              auto-detected because they are on a different  subnet  shall  be
227              listed  here. If you do not use Linux and your OS does not allow
228              enumeration of interfaces (i.e. it does not support the getifad‐
229              drs()  qfunction)  you also may need to add your scanner here as
230              well.
231
232              Scanners shall be listed in the configuration file as follows:
233
234                     <method>://<host>[:port][/timeout=<value>]
235
236              where method indicates the  protocol  used  (bjnp  is  used  for
237              inkjet  multi-functionals and mfnp is used for laser multi-func‐
238              tionals).
239
240              host is  the  hostname  or  IP  address  of  the  scanner,  e.g.
241              bjnp://10.0.1.4                     for                    IPv4,
242              bjnp://[2001:888:118e:18e2:21e:8fff:fe36:b64a]  for  a   literal
243              IPv6-address or bjnp://myscanner.mydomain.org for a hostname.
244
245              The  port  number  is  optional  and  in normally implied by the
246              method.  Port 8610 is the standard port for mfnp, 8612 for bjnp.
247
248              A scanner specific timeout value for the network protocol can be
249              set using the bjnp-timeout parameter. The value is in ms.
250
251              Define scanners each on a new line.
252
253              More  globally  applicable  timeouts  can be set using the bjnp-
254              timeout parameter as follows:
255
256                     bjnp-timeout=<value>
257
258              A timeout defined using bjnp-timeout will apply to the following
259              scanner  definitions  in  the file. If required the bjnp-timeout
260              setting can be defined multiple times, where each  setting  will
261              apply  only  to  the  scanners that follow the setting. The last
262              setting is used for the auto discovered scanners.   If  not  ex‐
263              plicitly set, the default 1000ms setting will apply.
264
265              Setting timeouts should only be required in exceptional cases.
266
267       If so desired networking can be disabled as follows:
268
269              -      If  the  first  non-commented line contains networking=no
270                     all networking will be disabled.   This  will  cause  all
271                     further  statements  in  the configuration file to be ig‐
272                     nored.
273
274              -      A line that contains auto_detection=no will  cause  auto-
275                     detection to be skipped. Explicitly defined network scan‐
276                     ners will still be probed.
277

USB SUPPORT

279       USB scanners will be auto-detected and require no configuration.
280

NETWORKING SUPPORT

282       The sane-pixma backend supports network scanners using  the  so  called
283       Canon BJNP and MFNP protocols.
284
285       Canon  seems to be dropping support for these protocols in recent scan‐
286       ners.  To verify if your scanner supports one of these protocols, check
287       the  content  of  the _scanner._tcp service entry in mDNS/DNS-SD (using
288       for example avahi-discover(1)).  If that does not  list  port  8610  or
289       8612 your scanner probably does not support the mfmp or bjnp protols.
290
291       Both  IPv4  and  IPv6  are  supported, but IPv6 is as yet untested with
292       MFNP. Please report your results on the mailing list.
293
294       Configuration is normally not required.  The  sane-pixma  backend  will
295       auto-detect  your  scanner if it is within the same subnet as your com‐
296       puter if your OS does support this.
297
298       If your scanner can not  be  auto-detected,  you  can  add  it  to  the
299       sane-pixma configuration file (see above).
300

FIREWALLING FOR NETWORKED SCANNERS

302       The  sane-pixma  backend  communicates  with port 8610 for MFNP or port
303       8612 for BJNP on the scanner. So you will have to allow outgoing  traf‐
304       fic TO port 8610 or 8612 on the common subnet for scanning.
305
306       Scanner  detection is slightly more complicated. The sane-pixma backend
307       sends a broadcast on all direct connected subnets it can find (provided
308       your  OS  allows for enumeration of all network interfaces). The broad‐
309       cast is sent FROM port 8612 TO port 8610 or 8612 on the  broadcast  ad‐
310       dress  of  each interface.  The outgoing packets will be allowed by the
311       rule described above.
312
313       Responses from the scanner are sent back to the computer TO port  8612.
314       Connection  tracking  however does not see a match as the response does
315       not come from the broadcast address but from the scanners own  address.
316       For automatic detection of your scanner, you will therefore have to al‐
317       low incoming packets TO port 8612 on your  computer.  This  applies  to
318       both MFNP and BJNP.
319
320       So  in  short:  open the firewall for all traffic from your computer to
321       port 8610 (for MFNP) or 8612 (for BJNP) AND to port 8612 (for both BJNP
322       and MFNP) to your computer.
323
324       With  the  firewall  rules above there is no need to add the scanner to
325       the pixma.conf file, unless the scanner is on a network that is not di‐
326       rectly connected to your computer.
327

ENVIRONMENT

329       SANE_DEBUG_PIXMA
330              If the library was compiled with debug support enabled, this en‐
331              vironment variable controls the debug level for this backend it‐
332              self.  Higher value increases the verbosity and includes the in‐
333              formation printed at the lower levels.
334              0  print nothing (default)
335              1  print error and warning messages (recommended)
336              2  print informational messages
337              3  print debug-level messages
338              4  print verbose debug-level messages
339              11 dump USB traffic
340              21 full dump USB traffic
341
342       SANE_DEBUG_BJNP
343              If the library was compiled with debug support enabled, this en‐
344              vironment  variable  controls  the  debug level for the BJNP and
345              MFNP network protocols for this backend. Higher value  increases
346              the  verbosity and includes the information printed at the lower
347              levels.
348              0 print nothing (default)
349              1 Print error and warning messages (recommended)
350              2 Print high level function tracing information
351              3 Print more detailed protocol tracing information
352              4 Print protocol headers
353              5 Print full protocol contents
354
355       PIXMA_EXPERIMENT
356              Setting to a non-zero value will enable the support for  experi‐
357              mental models.  You should also set SANE_DEBUG_PIXMA to 11.
358
359       SANE_CONFIG_DIR
360              This environment variable specifies the list of directories that
361              may contain the configuration file.  On *NIX systems, the direc‐
362              tories are separated by a colon (`:'), under OS/2, they are sep‐
363              arated by a semi-colon (`;').  If this variable is not set,  the
364              configuration  file  is  searched  in  two  default directories:
365              first,  the  current  working  directory  (".")  and   then   in
366              /etc/sane.d.  If the value of the environment variable ends with
367              the directory separator character, then the default  directories
368              are  searched  after  the explicitly specified directories.  For
369              example, setting SANE_CONFIG_DIR to "/tmp/config:" would  result
370              in directories tmp/config, ., and /etc/sane.d being searched (in
371              this order).
372

SEE ALSO

374       sane(7),  sane-dll(5),  scanimage(1),  scanadf(1),  gamma4scanimage(1),
375       getifaddrs(3)
376
377       In  case  of trouble with a recent Pixma model, try the latest code for
378       the sane-pixma backend, available in the Sane git repository at:
379       https://gitlab.com/sane-project/backends.git
380
381       You can also post into the Sane-devel mailing list for support.
382
383

AUTHORS

385       Wittawat Yamwong, Nicolas Martin, Dennis  Lou,  Louis  Lagendijk,  Rolf
386       Bensch
387
388       We  would  like to thank all testers and helpers. Without them we could
389       not be able to write subdrivers for models we don't have. See also  the
390       project homepage.
391
392
393
394                                  15 Aug 2020                    sane-pixma(5)
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