Quoting Andrew Greig ([email protected]):

> My question was how can a proprietary product, completely
> stand-alone in my ~/ , load in seconds, and discover the SCSI card
> in seconds, and be ready to work?  Xsane, when installed into a
> running machine has always needed a reboot to start working. In fact
> if I cancel a scan (I have learned not to do this) Xsane will not
> even find the scanner until I reboot. This provokes another
> question, how do I avoid the reboot to get a SCSI scanner working
> again? Is there such a thing as stopping and starting a SCSI
> process?

Here's more information about SCSI rescanning in Linux:
http://linoxide.com/how-tos/linux-scan-scsi/

Quite possibly, Vuescan includes wrapper code to trigger a rescan at the
time of program startup.  

I haven't personally needed to do scanning on Linux (or, frankly, any
other OS) in far more years than I'd really like to think about.  At
the time I last did, I used whatever was then common on Linux and an old
SCSI-based flatbed scanner.  It worked in the routine way one would hope
and expect, and I certainly never had to reboot just to make the
software find the device.


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