1scanimage(1)             SANE Scanner Access Now Easy             scanimage(1)
2
3
4

NAME

6       scanimage - scan an image
7

SYNOPSIS

9       scanimage  [-d|--device-name  dev]  [--format format] [-i|--icc-profile
10       profile]   [-L|--list-devices]   [-f|--formatted-device-list    format]
11       [-b|--batch   [format]]  [--batch-start  start]  [--batch-count  count]
12       [--batch-increment  increment]   [--batch-double]   [--accept-md5-only]
13       [-p|--progress]  [-o|--output-file  path]  [-n|--dont-scan] [-T|--test]
14       [-A|--all-options]   [-h|--help]    [-v|--verbose]    [-B|--buffer-size
15       [=size]] [-V|--version] [device-specific-options]
16

DESCRIPTION

18       scanimage  is a command-line interface to control image acquisition de‐
19       vices such as flatbed scanners or cameras.  The  device  is  controlled
20       via  command-line  options.   After  command-line processing, scanimage
21       normally proceeds to acquire an image.  The image data  is  written  to
22       standard  output  in  one of the PNM (portable aNyMaP) formats (PBM for
23       black-and-white images, PGM for grayscale images, and PPM for color im‐
24       ages),  TIFF  format (black-and-white, grayscale or color), PNG format,
25       or JPEG format (compression level 75).  scanimage accesses image acqui‐
26       sition devices through the SANE (Scanner Access Now Easy) interface and
27       can thus support any device for which there exists a SANE backend  (try
28       apropos sane- to get a list of available backends).
29
30

EXAMPLES

32       To get a list of devices:
33
34         scanimage -L
35
36       To scan with default settings to the file image.pnm:
37
38         scanimage >image.pnm
39
40       To  scan 100x100 mm to the file image.tiff (-x and -y may not be avail‐
41       able with all devices):
42
43         scanimage -x 100 -y 100 --format=tiff >image.tiff
44
45       To print all available options:
46
47         scanimage -h
48
49

OPTIONS

51       There are two sets of options available when running scanimage.
52
53       The options that are provided by scanimage itself are listed below.  In
54       addition, each backend offers its own set of options and these can also
55       be specified. Note that the options available from the backend may vary
56       depending on the scanning device that is selected.
57
58       Often  options  that are similar in function may be implemented differ‐
59       ently across backends. An example of this difference is --mode Gray and
60       --mode  Grayscale.  This may be due to differing backend author prefer‐
61       ences.  At other times, options are defined by the scanning device  it‐
62       self and therefore out of the control of the backend code.
63
64
65       Parameters are separated by a blank from single-character options (e.g.
66       -d epson) and by  a  "="  from  multi-character  options  (e.g.   --de‐
67       vice-name=epson).
68
69
70       -d dev, --device-name=dev
71              specifies  the  device  to access and must be followed by a SANE
72              device-name like `epson:/dev/sg0' or  `hp:/dev/usbscanner0'.   A
73              (partial)  list  of  available  devices can be obtained with the
74              --list-devices option (see below).  If no device-name is  speci‐
75              fied explicitly, scanimage reads a device-name from the environ‐
76              ment variable SANE_DEFAULT_DEVICE.  If this variable is not set,
77              scanimage will attempt to open the first available device.
78
79
80       --format=format
81              selects how image data is written to standard output or the file
82              specified by the --output-file option.  format can be pnm, tiff,
83              png,  or  jpeg.  If --format is not specified, PNM is written by
84              default.
85
86
87       -i profile, --icc-profile=profile
88              is used to include an ICC profile into a TIFF file.
89
90
91       -L, --list-devices
92              requests a (partial) list of devices that  are  available.   The
93              list  may  not  be complete since some devices may be available,
94              but are not listed in any of the configuration files (which  are
95              typically  stored  in  directory /etc/sane.d).  This is particu‐
96              larly the case when accessing scanners through the network.   If
97              a  device is not listed in a configuration file, the only way to
98              access it is by its full device name.  You may need  to  consult
99              your system administrator to find out the names of such devices.
100
101
102       -f format, --formatted-device-list=format
103              works  similar  to --list-devices, but requires a format string.
104              scanimage replaces the placeholders %d %v %m %t %i %n  with  the
105              device  name,  vendor  name,  model name, scanner type, an index
106              number and newline respectively. The command
107
108              scanimage -f scanner number %i device %d is a  %t,  model  %m,
109              produced by %v 
110
111              will produce something like:
112
113                     scanner  number  0   device sharp:/dev/sg1 is  a  flatbed
114                     scanner, model JX250 SCSI, produced by SHARP
115
116
117       The --batch* options provide features for scanning documents using doc‐
118       ument feeders.
119
120
121
122              -b [format], --batch=[format]
123                     is  used  to specify the format of the filename that each
124                     page will be written to.  Each page is written out  to  a
125                     single  file.  If format is not specified, the default of
126                     out%d.pnm (or out%d.tif for --format tiff, out%d.png  for
127                     --format  png  or  out%d.jpg  for  --format jpeg) will be
128                     used.  This option is incompatible with the --output-path
129                     option.   format  is  given as a printf style string with
130                     one integer parameter.
131
132
133
134              --batch-start=start
135                     selects the page number to start naming  files  with.  If
136                     this option is not given, the counter will start at 1.
137
138
139              --batch-count=count
140                     specifies the number of pages to attempt to scan.  If not
141                     given, scanimage will continue scanning until the scanner
142                     returns  a  state  other  than OK.  Not all scanners with
143                     document feeders signal when the ADF is empty.  Use  this
144                     option to work around them.
145
146
147              --batch-increment=increment
148                     sets the amount that the number in the filename is incre‐
149                     mented by.  Generally this is used when you are  scanning
150                     double-sided documents on a single-sided document feeder.
151                     --batch-double is a  specific  command  provided  to  aid
152                     this.
153
154
155              --batch-double
156                     will automatically set the increment to 2.  Equivalent to
157                     --batch-increment=2
158
159
160              --batch-prompt
161                     will ask for pressing RETURN before scanning a page. This
162                     can  be used for scanning multiple pages without an auto‐
163                     matic document feeder.
164
165
166       --accept-md5-only
167              only accepts user authorization requests that support MD5  secu‐
168              rity.  The SANE network daemon saned(8) is capable of doing such
169              requests.
170
171
172       -p, --progress
173              requests that scanimage prints a progress counter. It shows  how
174              much  image  data of the current image has already been received
175              (in percent).
176
177
178       -o path, --output-file=path
179              requests that scanimage saves the scanning output to  the  given
180              path.   This option is incompatible with the --batch option. The
181              program will try to guess --format from the file name.  If  that
182              is not possible, it will print an error message and exit.
183
184
185       -n, --dont-scan
186              requests  that  scanimage  only sets the options provided by the
187              user but doesn't actually perform a scan.  This  option  can  be
188              used  to  e.g.  turn off the scanner's lamp (if supported by the
189              backend).
190
191
192       -T, --test
193              requests that scanimage performs a few simple  sanity  tests  to
194              make  sure the backend works as defined by the SANE API. In par‐
195              ticular the sane_read() function is exercised by this test.
196
197
198       -A, --all-options
199              requests that scanimage lists all available options  exposed  by
200              the  backend,  including  button  options.   The  information is
201              printed on standard output and no scan will be performed.
202
203
204       -h, --help
205              requests help information.  The information is printed on  stan‐
206              dard output and no scan will be performed.
207
208
209       -v, --verbose
210              increases  the verbosity of the output of scanimage.  The option
211              may be specified repeatedly, each time increasing the  verbosity
212              level.
213
214
215       -B [size], --buffer-size=[size]
216              changes  input  buffer size from the default of 32KB to size KB.
217              If size is not specified then the buffer is set to 1 MB.
218
219
220       -V, --version
221              requests that scanimage prints the program and package name, the
222              version  number  of  the SANE distribution that it came with and
223              the version of the backend that it loads.  If  more  information
224              about the version numbers of the backends are necessary, the DE‐
225              BUG variable for the dll layer can be  used.  Example:  SANE_DE‐
226              BUG_DLL=3 scanimage -L .
227
228       As  you  might  imagine,  much of the power of scanimage comes from the
229       fact that it can control any SANE backend.  Thus, the exact set of com‐
230       mand-line  options  depends on the capabilities of the selected device.
231       To see the options for a device named dev, invoke scanimage via a  com‐
232       mand-line of the form:
233
234              scanimage --help --device-name dev
235
236       The  documentation for the device-specific options printed by --help is
237       best explained with a few examples:
238
239       -l 0..218mm [0]
240              Top-left x position of scan area.
241
242              The description above shows that option  -l  expects  an  option
243              value in the range from 0 to 218 mm.  The value in square brack‐
244              ets indicates that the current option value is 0 mm. Most  back‐
245              ends  provide  similar  geometry options for top-left y position
246              (-t), width (-x) and height of scan-area (-y).
247
248
249       --brightness -100..100% [0]
250              Controls the brightness of the acquired image.
251
252              The description above shows that option --brightness expects  an
253              option  value  in the range from -100 to 100 percent.  The value
254              in square brackets indicates that the current option value is  0
255              percent.
256
257       --default-enhancements
258              Set default values for enhancement controls.
259
260              The  description  above shows that option --default-enhancements
261              has no option value.  It should be thought of as having an imme‐
262              diate  effect  at  the point of the command-line at which it ap‐
263              pears.  For example, since this option resets  the  --brightness
264              option,  the  option-pair --brightness 50 --default-enhancements
265              would effectively be a no-op.
266
267       --mode Lineart|Gray|Color [Gray]
268              Selects the scan mode (e.g., lineart or color).
269
270              The description above shows that option --mode accepts an  argu‐
271              ment  that  must  be one of the strings Lineart, Gray, or Color.
272              The value in the square bracket indicates  that  the  option  is
273              currently set to Gray.  For convenience, it is legal to abbrevi‐
274              ate the string values as long as they remain unique.  Also,  the
275              case  of  the spelling doesn't matter.  For example, option set‐
276              ting --mode col is identical to --mode Color.
277
278       --custom-gamma[=(yes|no)] [inactive]
279              Determines whether a builtin or a custom gamma-table  should  be
280              used.
281
282              The  description  above shows that option --custom-gamma expects
283              either no option value, a "yes" string, or a "no" string.  Spec‐
284              ifying  the  option  with  no  value is equivalent to specifying
285              "yes".  The value in square-brackets indicates that  the  option
286              is  not currently active.  That is, attempting to set the option
287              would result in an error message.  The set of available  options
288              typically  depends  on the settings of other options.  For exam‐
289              ple, the --custom-gamma  table  might  be  active  only  when  a
290              grayscale or color scan-mode has been requested.
291
292              Note  that  the  --help option is processed only after all other
293              options have been processed.  This makes it possible to see  the
294              option  settings  for a particular mode by specifying the appro‐
295              priate mode-options along with the --help option.  For  example,
296              the command-line:
297
298              scanimage --help --mode color
299
300              would  print  the  option  settings  that are in effect when the
301              color-mode is selected.
302
303       --gamma-table 0..255,...
304              Gamma-correction table.  In color mode this option  equally  af‐
305              fects the red, green, and blue channels simultaneously (i.e., it
306              is an intensity gamma table).
307
308              The description above shows that  option  --gamma-table  expects
309              zero or more values in the range 0 to 255.  For example, a legal
310              value for this option would be "3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12".   Since
311              it's  cumbersome  to specify long vectors in this form, the same
312              can be expressed by the  abbreviated  form  "[0]3-[9]12".   What
313              this  means  is  that  the first vector element is set to 3, the
314              9-th element is set to 12 and the values in between are interpo‐
315              lated  linearly.   Of course, it is possible to specify multiple
316              such linear segments.  For example,  "[0]3-[2]3-[6]7,[7]10-[9]6"
317              is    equivalent   to   "3,3,3,4,5,6,7,10,8,6".    The   program
318              gamma4scanimage can be used to generate such gamma  tables  (see
319              gamma4scanimage(1) for details).
320
321       --filename <string> [/tmp/input.ppm]
322              The filename of the image to be loaded.
323
324              The  description  above is an example of an option that takes an
325              arbitrary string value (which happens to be a filename).  Again,
326              the value in brackets show that the option is current set to the
327              filename /tmp/input.ppm.
328
329

ENVIRONMENT

331       SANE_DEFAULT_DEVICE
332              The default device-name.
333

FILES

335       /etc/sane.d
336              This directory holds various configuration files.  For  details,
337              please refer to the manual pages listed below.
338
339       ~/.sane/pass
340              This file contains lines of the form
341
342              user:password:resource
343
344              scanimage uses this information to answer user authorization re‐
345              quests automatically. The file must  have  0600  permissions  or
346              stricter. You should use this file in conjunction with the --ac‐
347              cept-md5-only option to avoid server-side attacks. The  resource
348              may contain any character but is limited to 127 characters.
349
350

SEE ALSO

352       sane(7),    gamma4scanimage(1),   xscanimage(1),   xcam(1),   xsane(1),
353       scanadf(1), sane-dll(5), sane-net(5), sane-"backendname"(5)
354
355

AUTHOR

357       David Mosberger, Andreas Beck, Gordon Matzigkeit, Caskey  Dickson,  and
358       many  others.   For questions and comments contact the sane-devel mail‐
359       inglist (see http://www.sane-project.org/mailing-lists.html).
360
361

BUGS

363       For vector options, the help output currently has no indication  as  to
364       how many elements a vector-value should have.
365
366
367
368                                  10 Jul 2008                     scanimage(1)
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