Why did the original message refer to "(firewire)"? Does scanning via the IEEE-1394 interface screw up your USB devices? This should not happen, and if it does, it's definitely not Sane's fault. If you have the scanner connected on both the USB and the FireWire bus, remove one connection. This is not a supported configuration.
The TPU is not the cause for the problems: It may trigger the problem, but it's not the root cause. When you scan using the TPU, it takes a lot longer until the first data is sent from the scanner, therefore, the USB system runs into a timeout, which it does not seem to recover from. If you set this timeout value to something ridiculously short (e.g. 1 second), the same problem will occur even when you scan off the glass. BTW: The focus position command is ignored by this scanner. Unfortunately it really is ignored, so I have no way of finding out if the scanner supports it or not (I'm trying to execute the command, and if I receive an error message, I know that the scanner does not support it). Karl Heinz > Hi Rob, > > On Monday, May 19, 2003 at 20:20:10, rob wrote: > : Hi, > : > : I've just discovered that scanning crashes the usb system. What I get in > : syslog is this message: > : [snip] > : The command used is: > : > : scanimage --focus-position 'Focus 2.5mm above glass' --source > : 'Transparency Unit' --mode gray --film-type 'Negative Film' -x 25mm -y > : 35mm -l 8.5mm -t 3.3mm --format pnm --resolution 2400 --depth 16 > > : filmNoir13.pnm > > I've similar problems. I think that the TPU (Transparency Unit) is the > problem. > > Try to use the scanner, but without using the Transparency Unit, and see > if it works. Mine works ok except the TPU that locks up the usb > subsystem. I suppose it's a bug... ;) > > Salud, > -- > Roberto Lumbreras .''`. > <rover : :' : debian.org> > Debian Developer `. `' > `- > _______________________________________________ > Sane-devel mailing list > [email protected] > http://www.mostang.com/mailman/listinfo/sane-devel >
