Allan, Thanks for the fast response, but I'd already done that:
[mark@PotableLinux ~]$ ll /usr/share/sane/epjitsu/ > total 68K > -rw-rw-r--. 1 root root 65K Sep 13 22:06 1300i_0D12.nal And from my /etc/sane.d/epjitsu.conf: # Fujitsu S1300i > firmware /usr/share/sane/epjitsu/1300i_0D12.nal > usb 0x04c5 0x128d Can you think of anything else I might be missing? Thanks! Mark On Sun, Sep 14, 2014 at 6:08 AM, M. Allan Noah <[email protected]> wrote: > You need to extract the firmware from the windows driver and put it where > sane can reach it. See /etc/sane.d/epjitsu.conf > > allan > > On Sep 14, 2014, at 3:04 AM, Mark Drew <[email protected]> wrote: > > All, > > I downloaded the latest git snapshot of the sane backend (1.0.25git) and > built it from source according to the instructions in README and > README.linux. Everything went smoothly until I got to the point of trying > 'scanimage -L'. What I don't understand (and would like help with) is why > sane-find-scanner will find my scanner (with or without root), but > scanimage -L will not (with or without root). > > When I was using the 1.0.23 distribution from yum repos, I was able to get > the scanner recognized by both of these commands (but the my scanner wasn't > supported at all by that version). Now I can only get sane-find-scanner to > recognize my scanner. > > [mark@PotableLinux ~]$ uname -a >> Linux PotableLinux 3.9.10-100.fc17.x86_64 #1 SMP Sun Jul 14 01:31:27 UTC >> 2013 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux >> [mark@PotableLinux ~]$ cat /etc/redhat-release >> Fedora release 17 (Beefy Miracle) > > > Here's the output from sane-find-scanner: > > [mark@PotableLinux ~]$ sane-find-scanner -v >> This is sane-find-scanner from sane-backends 1.0.25git > > ... > > checking /dev/usbscanner14... failed to open (Invalid argument) >> checking /dev/usbscanner15... failed to open (Invalid argument) >> found USB scanner (vendor=0x046d, product=0x08ae) at libusb:001:005 >> found USB scanner (vendor=0x04c5 [FUJITSU], product=0x128d [ScanSnap >> S1300i]) at libusb:002:007 >> # Your USB scanner was (probably) detected. It may or may not be >> supported by >> # SANE. Try scanimage -L and read the backend's manpage. >> >> # Not checking for parallel port scanners. >> >> # Most Scanners connected to the parallel port or other proprietary >> ports >> # can't be detected by this program. >> >> # You may want to run this program as root to find all devices. Once you >> # found the scanner devices, be sure to adjust access permissions as >> # necessary. >> done > > > And here's scanimage: > > [mark@PotableLinux ~]$ scanimage -V >> scanimage (sane-backends) 1.0.25git; backend version 1.0.25 >> [mark@PotableLinux ~]$ scanimage -L >> >> No scanners were identified. If you were expecting something different, >> check that the scanner is plugged in, turned on and detected by the >> sane-find-scanner tool (if appropriate). Please read the documentation >> which came with this software (README, FAQ, manpages). >> [mark@PotableLinux ~]$ sudo scanimage -L >> >> No scanners were identified. If you were expecting something different, >> check that the scanner is plugged in, turned on and detected by the >> sane-find-scanner tool (if appropriate). Please read the documentation >> which came with this software (README, FAQ, manpages). >> > > Any help would be greatly appreciated! > > Thanks! > Mark > > > -- > sane-devel mailing list: [email protected] > http://lists.alioth.debian.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/sane-devel > Unsubscribe: Send mail with subject "unsubscribe your_password" > to [email protected] > >
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