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sane(7)                  SANE Scanner Access Now Easy                  sane(7)

NAME
       sane - Scanner Access Now Easy: API for accessing scanners

DESCRIPTION
       SANE  is an application programming interface (API) that provides stan-
       dardized access to any raster image scanner hardware. The  standardized
       interface  makes  it possible to write just one driver for each scanner
       device instead of one driver for each scanner and application.

       While SANE is primarily targeted at a UNIX  environment,  the  standard
       has been carefully designed to make it possible to implement the API on
       virtually any hardware or operating system.

       This manual page provides a summary of the information available  about
       SANE.

       If  you  have  trouble getting your scanner detected, read the PROBLEMS
       section.

TERMINOLOGY
       An application that uses the SANE interface is called a SANE  frontend.
       A  driver  that implements the SANE interface is called a SANE backend.
       A meta backend provides some means to manage one or  more  other  back-
       ends.

SOFTWARE PACKAGES
       The  package sane-backends contains backends, documentation, networking
       support, and the command line frontend scanimage(1).  The frontends xs-
       canimage(1),  xcam(1),  and  scanadf(1)  are  included  in  the package
       sane-frontends.  Both packages can be downloaded from the SANE homepage
       (http://www.sane-project.org/).   Information about other frontends and
       backends can also be found on the SANE homepage.

GENERAL INFORMATION
       The following sections provide short descriptions and links to more in-
       formation  about  several  aspects  of  SANE.   A name with a number in
       parenthesis (e.g.  sane-dll(5)) points to a manual page. In  this  case
       man 5 sane-dll  will display the page. Entries like /usr/share/doc/lib-
       sane/README are references to text files that were copied to  the  SANE
       documentation  directory (/usr/share/doc/libsane/) during installation.
       Everything else is a URL to a resource on the web.

       SANE homepage
         Information on all aspects of SANE including a tutorial and a link to
         the    SANE    FAQ    can    be   found   on   the   SANE   homepage:
         http://www.sane-project.org/.

       SANE device lists
         The SANE device lists contain information about the  status  of  SANE
         support  for  a  specific device. If your scanner is not listed there
         (either supported or unsupported), please contact us. See section HOW
         CAN  YOU HELP SANE for details. There are lists for specific releases
         of SANE, for the current development version  and  a  search  engine:
         http://www.sane-project.org/sane-supported-devices.html.   The  lists
         are also installed on your system at /usr/share/doc/libsane/.

       SANE mailing list
         There is a mailing list for the purpose of discussing the SANE  stan-
         dard and its implementations: sane-devel.  Despite its name, the list
         is not only intended for developers, but also for  users.  There  are
         also some more lists for special topics. However, for users, sane-de-
         vel  is  the  right  list.  How   to   subscribe   and   unsubscribe:
         http://www.sane-project.org/mailing-lists.html.

       SANE IRC channel
         The  IRC  (Internet  Relay  Chat)  channel  #sane can be found on the
         Freenode network (irc.libera.chat). It's for  discussing  SANE  prob-
         lems,  talking  about  development and general SANE related chatting.
         Before asking for help, please read the other documentation mentioned
         in  this  manual page. The channel's topic is also used for announce-
         ments of  problems  with  SANE  infrastructure  (mailing  lists,  web
         server, etc.).

       Compiling and installing SANE
         Look  at  /usr/share/doc/libsane/README  and  the os-dependent README
         files for information about compiling and installing SANE.

       SCSI configuration
         For information  about  various  systems  and  SCSI  controllers  see
         sane-scsi(5).

       USB configuration
         For information about USB configuration see sane-usb(5).

FRONTENDS AND MISCELLANEOUS PROGRAMS
       scanimage
         Command-line frontend. See scanimage(1).

       saned
         SANE network daemon that allows remote clients to access image acqui-
         sition devices available on the local host. See saned(8).

       sane-find-scanner
         Command-line tool to find SCSI and USB scanners and  determine  their
         UNIX device files. See sane-find-scanner(1).

       Also,  have a look at the sane-frontends package (which includes xscan-
       image(1), xcam(1), and scanadf(1)) and the frontend information page at
       http://www.sane-project.org/sane-frontends.html.

BACKENDS FOR SCANNERS
       abaton
         Supports  Abaton  flatbed scanners such as the Scan 300/GS (8bit, 256
         levels of gray) and the Scan 300/S (black and white,  untested).  See
         sane-abaton(5) for details.

       agfafocus
         Supports  AGFA  Focus scanners and the Siemens S9036 (untested).  See
         sane-agfafocus(5) for details.

       apple
         Supports Apple flatbed scanners including the following scanners: Ap-
         pleScanner, OneScanner and ColorOneScanner. See sane-apple(5) for de-
         tails.

       artec
         Supports several Artec/Ultima SCSI flatbed scanners as  well  as  the
         BlackWidow BW4800SP and the Plustek 19200S. See sane-artec(5) for de-
         tails.

       artec_eplus48u
         Supports the Artec E+ 48U scanner and re-badged models like Tevion MD
         9693,  Medion  MD  9693, Medion MD 9705 and Trust Easy Webscan 19200.
         See sane-artec_eplus48u(5) for details.

       as6e
         Supports  the  Artec  AS6E  parallel  port  interface  scanner.   See
         sane-as6e(5) for details.

       avision
         Supports  several  Avision based scanners including the original Avi-
         sion scanners (like AV 630, AV 620, ...) as well as  the  HP  ScanJet
         53xx  and  74xx  series, Fujitsu ScanPartner, some Mitsubishi and Mi-
         nolta film-scanners.  See sane-avision(5) for details.

       bh
         Supports  Bell+Howell  Copiscan  II  series  document  scanners.  See
         sane-bh(5) for details.

       canon
         Supports  the  CanoScan  300,  CanoScan  600, and CanoScan 2700F SCSI
         flatbed scanners. See sane-canon(5) for details.

       canon630u
         Supports  the   CanoScan   630u   and   636u   USB   scanners.    See
         sane-canon630u(5) for details.

       canon_dr
         Supports   the  Canon  DR-Series  ADF  SCSI  and  USB  scanners.  See
         sane-canon_dr(5) for details.

       canon_lide70
         Supports  the  CanoScan  LiDE  70   and   600   USB   scanners.   See
         sane-canon_lide70(5) for details.

       canon_pp
         Supports  the  CanoScan FB330P, FB630P, N340P and N640P parallel port
         scanners.  See sane-canon_pp(5) for details.

       cardscan
         Support for Corex Cardscan USB scanners. See sane-cardscan(5) for de-
         tails.

       coolscan coolscan2 coolscan3
         Supports   Nikon   Coolscan   film-scanners.   See  sane-coolscan(5),
         sane-coolscan2(5) and sane-coolscan3(5) for details.

       epjitsu
         Supports Epson-based Fujitsu USB scanners.  See  sane-epjitsu(5)  for
         details.

       epson
         Old  driver  for  Epson SCSI, parallel port and USB flatbed scanners.
         See sane-epson(5) for details but try epson2 first.

       epson2
         Newer driver for Epson SCSI, parallel port, network and  USB  flatbed
         scanners  (try  this  before  epson  which is outdated). See sane-ep-
         son2(5) for details.

       escl
         Supports scanners through the eSCL protocol. See sane-escl(5) for de-
         tails.

       fujitsu
         Supports  most  Fujitsu  SCSI  and USB, flatbed and adf scanners. See
         sane-fujitsu(5) for details.

       genesys
         Supports several scanners based on the Genesys  Logic  GL646,  GL841,
         GL843, GL847 and GL124 chips like the Medion 6471 and Hewlett-Packard
         2300c.  See sane-genesys(5) for details.

       gt68xx
         Supports scanners based on the Grandtech GT-6801  and  GT-6816  chips
         like  the Artec Ultima 2000 and several Mustek BearPaw CU and TA mod-
         els.
         Some Genius, Lexmark, Medion, Packard Bell, Plustek, and Trust  scan-
         ners are also supported. See sane-gt68xx(5) for details.

       hp
         Supports  Hewlett-Packard ScanJet scanners which utilize SCL (Scanner
         Control Language by HP). See sane-hp(5) for details.

       hpsj5s
         Supports the Hewlett-Packard ScanJet 5S scanner.  See  sane-hpsj5s(5)
         for details.

       hp3500
         Supports  the Hewlett-Packard ScanJet 3500 series. See sane-hp3500(5)
         for details.

       hp3900
         Supports the Hewlett-Packard ScanJet 3900 series. See  sane-hp3900(5)
         for details.

       hp4200
         Supports  the Hewlett-Packard ScanJet 4200 series. See sane-hp4200(5)
         for details.

       hp5400
         Supports the Hewlett-Packard ScanJet 54XXC series. See sane-hp5400(5)
         for details.

       hpljm1005
         Supports    the   Hewlett-Packard   LaserJet   M1005   scanner.   See
         sane-hpljm1005(5) for details.

       hs2p
         Supports the Ricoh IS450 family of SCSI  scanners.  See  sane-hs2p(5)
         for details.

       ibm
         Supports  some  IBM  and Ricoh SCSI scanners. See sane-ibm(5) for de-
         tails.

       kodak
         Supports some large Kodak scanners. See sane-kodak(5) for details.

       kodakaio
         Supports Kodak AiO printer/scanners.  See  sane-kodakaio(5)  for  de-
         tails.

       kvs1025
         Supports  Panasonic  KV-S102xC  scanners. See sane-kvs1025(5) for de-
         tails.

       leo
         Supports the LEO S3 and the Across FS-1130, which is a re-badged  LEO
         FS-1130 scanner. See sane-leo(5) for details.

       lexmark
         Supports  the  Lexmark  X1100  series  of USB scanners. See sane-lex-
         mark(5) for details.

       ma1509
         Supports  the  Mustek  BearPaw  1200F  USB   flatbed   scanner.   See
         sane-ma1509(5) for details.

       magicolor
         Supports   the   KONICA   MINOLTA   magicolor  1690MF  multi-function
         printer/scanner/fax. See sane-magicolor(5) for details.

       matsushita
         Supports some Panasonic  KVSS  high  speed  scanners.  See  sane-mat-
         sushita(5) for details.

       microtek
         Supports  "second  generation"  Microtek scanners with SCSI-1 command
         set. See sane-microtek(5) for details.

       microtek2
         Supports some Microtek  scanners  with  a  SCSI-2  command  set.  See
         sane-microtek2(5) for details.

       mustek
         Supports  most Mustek SCSI flatbed scanners including the Paragon and
         ScanExpress series and the 600 II N and 600 II  EP  (non-SCSI).  Some
         Trust scanners are also supported. See sane-mustek(5) for details.

       mustek_pp
         Supports Mustek parallel port flatbed scanners. See sane-mustek_pp(5)
         for details.

       mustek_usb
         Supports  some  Mustek  ScanExpress   USB   flatbed   scanners.   See
         sane-mustek_usb(5) for details.

       mustek_usb2
         Supports  scanners  using  the  SQ113 chipset like the Mustek BearPaw
         2448 TA Pro USB flatbed scanner. See sane-mustek_usb2(5) for details.

       nec
         Supports the NEC PC-IN500/4C SCSI scanner. See  sane-nec(5)  for  de-
         tails.

       niash
         Supports the Agfa Snapscan Touch and the HP ScanJet 3300c, 3400c, and
         4300c USB flatbed scanners. See sane-niash(5) for details.

       p5
         Supports the Primax PagePartner. See sane-p5(5) for details.

       pie
         Supports Pacific Image Electronics  (PIE)  and  Devcom  SCSI  flatbed
         scanners. See sane-pie(5) for details.

       pixma
         Supports Canon PIXMA MP series (multi-function devices), Canon image-
         CLASS series (laser devices), Canon  MAXIFY  series  and  some  Canon
         CanoScan series. See sane-pixma(5) for details.

       plustek
         Supports  USB  flatbed  scanners  that use the National Semiconductor
         LM983[1/2/3] chipset aka Merlin. Scanners using this LM983x chips in-
         clude  some models from Plustek, KYE/Genius, Hewlett-Packard, Mustek,
         Umax, Epson, and Canon. See sane-plustek(5) for details.

       plustek_pp
         Supports Plustek parallel port flatbed  scanners  using  the  Plustek
         ASIC  P96001,  P96003,  P98001 and P98003, which includes some models
         from Plustek, KYE/Genius, Primax. See sane-plustek_pp(5) for details.

       ricoh
         Supports the Ricoh flatbed scanners IS50 and IS60. See  sane-ricoh(5)
         for details.

       ricoh2
         Supports  the  Ricoh  flatbed  scanners:  SG-3100SNw,  SP-100SU,  and
         SP-111SU. See sane-ricoh2(5) for details.

       s9036
         Supports Siemens 9036 flatbed scanners.  See  sane-s9036(5)  for  de-
         tails.

       sceptre
         Supports  the  Sceptre S1200 flatbed scanner. See sane-sceptre(5) for
         details.

       sharp
         Supports Sharp SCSI scanners. See sane-sharp(5) for details.

       sm3600
         Supports the Microtek ScanMaker 3600 USB scanner. See  sane-sm3600(5)
         for details.

       sm3840
         Supports the Microtek ScanMaker 3840 USB scanner.  See sane-sm3840(5)
         for details.

       snapscan
         Supports AGFA SnapScan flatbed scanners including some which are  re-
         badged to other brands. See sane-snapscan(5) for details.

       sp15c
         Supports  the  Fujitsu  FCPA  ScanPartner  15C  flatbed  scanner. See
         sane-sp15c(5) for details.

       st400
         Supports the Siemens ST400 and ST800. See sane-st400(5) for details.

       tamarack
         Supports Tamarack Artiscan flatbed scanners. See sane-tamarack(5) for
         details.

       teco1 teco2 teco3
         Supports  some  TECO scanners, usually sold under the Relisys, Trust,
         Primax, Piotech, Dextra names. See sane-teco1(5),  sane-teco2(5)  and
         sane-teco3(5) for details.

       u12
         Supports  USB  flatbed scanners based on Plustek's ASIC 98003 (paral-
         lel-port ASIC) and a GeneSys Logics' USB-parport bridge chip like the
         Plustek OpticPro U(T)12. See sane-u12(5) for details.

       umax
         Supports UMAX-SCSI-scanners and some Linotype Hell SCSI-scanners. See
         sane-umax(5) for details.

       umax_pp
         Supports Umax parallel port flatbed scanners and the  HP  3200C.  See
         sane-umax_pp(5) for details.

       umax1200u
         Supports  the  UMAX  Astra  1220U (USB) flatbed scanner (and also the
         UMAX Astra 2000U, sort of). See sane-umax1220u(5) for details.

       xerox_mfp
         Supports multiple Samsung-based Samsung, Xerox,  and  Dell  scanners.
         See sane-xerox_mfp(5) for details.

       Also,    have   a   look   at   the   backend   information   page   at
       http://www.sane-project.org/sane-supported-devices.html and the list of
       projects in /usr/share/doc/libsane/PROJECTS.

BACKENDS FOR DIGITAL CAMERAS
       dc210
         Supports the Kodak DC210 Digital Camera. See sane-dc210(5).

       dc240
         Supports the Kodak DC240 Digital Camera. See dc240(5).

       dc25
         Supports Kodak DC20/DC25 Digital Cameras. See dc25(5).

       dmc
         Supports the Polaroid Digital Microscope Camera. See dmc(5).

       gphoto2
         Supports  digital  cameras  supported by the gphoto2 library package.
         (See http://www.gphoto.org for more information and a  list  of  sup-
         ported  cameras.)  Gphoto2 supports over 140 different camera models.
         However, please note that more development and testing is needed  be-
         fore  all  of  these  cameras will be supported by SANE backend.  See
         gphoto2(5).

       qcam
         Supports Connectix QuickCam cameras. See qcam(5).

       stv680
         Supports webcams with a stv680 chip. See stv680(5) for details.

       Also,   have   a   look   at   the   backend   information   page    at
       http://www.sane-project.org/sane-supported-devices.html and the list of
       projects in /usr/share/doc/libsane/PROJECTS.

MISCELLANEOUS BACKENDS
       dll
         Implements a SANE backend that provides access to an arbitrary number
         of other SANE backends by dynamic loading. See sane-dll(5).

       net
         The  SANE network daemon saned(8) provides access to scanners located
         on different computers in connection with  the  sane-net(5)  backend.
         See saned(8).

       pnm
         PNM  image reader pseudo-backend. The purpose of this backend is pri-
         marily to aid in debugging of SANE frontends. See sane-pnm(5).

       pint
         Supports scanners that use  the  PINT  (Pint  Is  Not  Twain)  device
         driver.   The  PINT driver is being actively developed on the OpenBSD
         platform, and has been ported to a few other *NIX-like operating sys-
         tems. See sane-pint(5).

       test
         Tests frontends and the SANE installation.  It provides test pictures
         and various test options. See sane-test(5).

       v4l
         Provides generic access to video cameras and similar equipment  using
         the V4L (Video for Linux) API. See sane-v4l(5).

       Also,    have   a   look   at   the   backend   information   page   at
       http://www.sane-project.org/sane-supported-devices.html and the list of
       projects in /usr/share/doc/libsane/PROJECTS.

CHANGING THE TOP-LEVEL BACKEND
       By  default,  all SANE backends (drivers) are loaded dynamically by the
       sane-dll meta backend. If you have  any  questions  about  the  dynamic
       loading,  read sane-dll(5).  SANE frontends can also be linked to other
       backends directly by copying or linking  a  backend  to  libsane.so  in
       /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/sane.

DEVELOPER'S DOCUMENTATION
       It's  not hard to write a SANE backend. It can take some time, however.
       You should have basic knowledge  of  C  and  enough  patience  to  work
       through the documentation and find out how your scanner works. Appended
       is a list of some documents that help to write backends and frontends.

       The SANE standard defines the application programming  interface  (API)
       that  is  used to communicate between frontends and backends. It can be
       found at http://sane-project.gitlab.io/standard/ .

       There is some more information for programmers  in  /usr/share/doc/lib-
       sane/backend-writing.txt.   Most  of the internal SANE routines (sanei)
       are documented using doxygen: http://www.sane-project.org/sanei/.   Be-
       fore  a  new  backend  or  frontend  project is started, have a look at
       /usr/share/doc/libsane/PROJECTS for projects that are  planned  or  not
       yet included into the SANE distribution and at our bug-tracking system:
       http://www.http://www.sane-project.org/bugs.html.

       There are some links on how to find out about the protocol of  a  scan-
       ner: http://www.meier-geinitz.de/sane/misc/develop.html.

       If  you  start writing a backend or frontend or any other part of SANE,
       please contact the sane-devel mailing list  for  coordination  so  that
       work is not duplicated.

FILES
       /etc/sane.d/*.conf
              The backend configuration files.

       /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/sane/libsane-*.a
              The static libraries implementing the backends.

       /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/sane/libsane-*.so
              The  shared libraries implementing the backends (present on sys-
              tems that support dynamic loading).

       /usr/share/doc/libsane/*
              SANE documentation: The READMEs, text files for backends etc.

PROBLEMS
       If your device isn't found but you know that it is supported, make sure
       that  it  is  detected by your operating system. For SCSI and USB scan-
       ners, use the sane-find-scanner(1) utility.  It  prints  one  line  for
       each scanner it has detected and some comments (#).  If sane-find-scan-
       ner(1) finds your scanner only as root but not as normal user, the per-
       missions  for the device files are not adjusted correctly. If the scan-
       ner isn't found at all, the operating system hasn't detected it and may
       need some help. Depending on the type of your scanner, read sane-usb(5)
       or sane-scsi(5).  If your scanner (or other device)  is  not  connected
       over the SCSI bus or USB, read the backend's manual page for details on
       how to set it up.

       Is your scanner detected by the operating system but not by SANE?   Try
       scanimage -L.   If  the  scanner is not found, check that the backend's
       name is mentioned in /etc/sane.d/dll.conf.  Some backends are commented
       out  by default. Remove the comment sign for your backend in this case.
       Also some backends aren't compiled at all if one of their prerequisites
       are  missing. Examples include dc210, dc240, canon_pp, hpsj5s, gphoto2,
       pint, qcam, v4l, net, sm3600, snapscan, pnm. If you need one  of  these
       backends  and  it  isn't  available, read the build instructions in the
       README file and the individual manual pages of the backends.

       Another reason for not being detected by scanimage -L may be a  missing
       or  incorrect  configuration in the backend's configuration file. While
       SANE tries to automatically find most scanners,  some  can't  be  setup
       correctly  without  the intervention of the administrator. Also on some
       operating systems auto-detection may not work. Check the backend's man-
       ual page for details.

       If your scanner is still not found, try setting the various environment
       variables that are available to assist in debugging.   The  environment
       variables are documented in the relevant manual pages.  For example, to
       get the maximum amount of debug information when testing a Mustek  SCSI
       scanner,  set  environment variables SANE_DEBUG_DLL, SANE_DEBUG_MUSTEK,
       and SANE_DEBUG_SANEI_SCSI to 128 and  then  invoke  scanimage -L.   The
       SANE_DEBUG_DLL  messages  tell  if the sane-mustek(5) backend was found
       and loaded at all. The  SANE_DEBUG_MUSTEK  messages  explain  what  the
       backend  is  doing  while  the  SANE_DEBUG_SCSI debugging shows the low
       level handling. If you can't find out what's going on by  checking  the
       messages  carefully,  contact the sane-devel mailing list for help (see
       REPORTING BUGS below).

       Now that your scanner is found by scanimage -L, try to do a scan: scan-
       image >image.pnm.   This  command starts a scan for the default scanner
       with default settings. All the available options are listed by  running
       scanimage --help.   If  scanning  aborts with an error message, turn on
       debugging as mentioned above. Maybe the configuration file  needs  some
       tuning,  e.g.  to  setup  the path to a firmware that is needed by some
       scanners. See the backend's manual page for details. If you can't  find
       out what's wrong, contact sane-devel.

       To  check  that  the SANE libraries are installed correctly you can use
       the test backend, even if you don't have a scanner or  other  SANE  de-
       vice:

              scanimage -d test -T

       You  should  get  a list of PASSed tests. You can do the same with your
       backend by changing "test" to your backend's name.

       So now scanning with scanimage (1) works and you want to use one of the
       graphical  frontends  like  xsane(1), xscanimage(1), or quiteinsane (1)
       but those frontends don't detect your scanner? One reason may  be  that
       you  installed  two  versions  of  SANE.  E.g. the version that was in-
       stalled by your distribution in /usr and one you installed from  source
       in  /usr/local/.  Make sure that only one version is installed. Another
       possible reason is, that your system's dynamic loader  can't  find  the
       SANE  libraries.  For  Linux,  make  sure that /etc/ld.so.conf contains
       /usr/local/lib and does not contain /usr/local/lib/sane.  See also  the
       documentation of the frontends.

HOW CAN YOU HELP SANE
       We  appreciate  any help we can get. Please have a look at our web page
       about contributing to SANE: http://www.sane-project.org/contrib.html

CONTACT
       For reporting bugs or requesting new  features,  please  use  our  bug-
       tracking  system:  http://www.sane-project.org/bugs.html.  You can also
       contact the author of your backend directly. Usually the email  address
       can  be  found  in the /usr/share/doc/libsane/AUTHORS file or the back-
       end's manpage. For general discussion about SANE, please use  the  SANE
       mailing    list   sane-devel   (see   http://www.sane-project.org/mail-
       ing-lists.html for details).

SEE ALSO
       saned(8), sane-find-scanner(1), scanimage(1), sane-abaton(5),  sane-ag-
       fafocus(5),   sane-apple(5),   sane-artec(5),   sane-artec_eplus48u(5),
       sane-as6e(5),     sane-avision(5),      sane-bh(5),      sane-canon(5),
       sane-canon630u(5),   sane-canon_dr(5),   sane-canon_pp(5),   sane-card-
       scan(5),   sane-coolscan(5),   sane-coolscan2(5),    sane-coolscan3(5),
       sane-dc210(5),  sane-dc240(5),  sane-dc25(5), sane-dll(5), sane-dmc(5),
       sane-epson(5),    sane-epson2(5),    sane-escl(5),     sane-fujitsu(5),
       sane-genesys(5),     sane-gphoto2(5),    sane-gt68xx(5),    sane-hp(5),
       sane-hpsj5s(5),   sane-hp3500(5),    sane-hp3900(5),    sane-hp4200(5),
       sane-hp5400(5),    sane-hpljm1005(5),    sane-ibm(5),    sane-kodak(5),
       sane-leo(5),   sane-lexmark(5),   sane-ma1509(5),   sane-matsushita(5),
       sane-microtek2(5), sane-microtek(5), sane-mustek(5), sane-mustek_pp(5),
       sane-mustek_usb(5),  sane-mustek_usb2(5),   sane-nec(5),   sane-net(5),
       sane-niash(5),  sane-pie(5),  sane-pint(5), sane-plustek(5), sane-plus-
       tek_pp(5), sane-pnm(5),  sane-qcam(5),  sane-ricoh(5),  sane-ricoh2(5),
       sane-s9036(5),     sane-sceptre(5),     sane-scsi(5),    sane-sharp(5),
       sane-sm3600(5),   sane-sm3840(5),   sane-snapscan(5),    sane-sp15c(5),
       sane-st400(5),    sane-stv680(5),    sane-tamarack(5),   sane-teco1(5),
       sane-teco2(5),      sane-teco3(5),      sane-test(5),      sane-u12(5),
       sane-umax1220u(5),    sane-umax(5),    sane-umax_pp(5),    sane-usb(5),
       sane-v4l(5), sane-xerox_mfp(5)

AUTHOR
       David Mosberger-Tang and many many more (see /usr/share/doc/libsane/AU-
       THORS  for  details).   This  man  page  was  written by Henning Meier-
       Geinitz. Quite a lot of text was taken from the SANE standard,  several
       man pages, and README files.

                                  03 Jan 2020                          sane(7)

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