From: Olaf Meeuwissen <olaf.meeuwissen at avasys.jp> Date: Mon, 08 Sep 2008 08:50:34 +0900
Robert Krawitz <rlk at alum.mit.edu> writes: > Hi Sane folks, Hi, Disclaimer: I have no experience with SANE on Mac OS X. I'm the lead developer for "Image Scan! for Linux", a simple graphical user interface for SEIKO EPSON scanners and all-in-ones (loosely built around the SANE API). > I'm the project lead for Gutenprint (printer drivers). We have a user > who's having trouble using Gutenprint with the Epson RX685 using its > OEM driver on Macintosh OS X; should we recommend that people use Sane > on OS X with this printer (and other similar printers) in conjunction > with Gutenprint? Is there any special advice we should give them in > this regard? Does scanning work over a network in the kind of > configuration outlined below? A network setup could be made to work by setting up `saned` on the server machine to accept connections from the client. On the server side, `saned` would access the device through a backend that supports the RX685. On the client you can then use any SANE frontend via the SANE net backend. In this case, the device is connected to a print server (a cheap router box with a USB connection for attaching a printer), and there's no possibility of running anything on the print server box. I'd try using the device on the server machine directly first with a simple SANE frontend like `scanimage` first. Next, try using it via localhost and `saned`. If that all works, try it from the client. Note that network related restrictions (tcpwrappers, packet-filtering) may all get in the way before you even get to the SANE part of the story. > I have an RX580 that works fine with Sane (on Linux); unfortunately, > our OS X expert doesn't have one of these multi-function devices. Which backend are you using? I'd hazard a guess that the RX685 works fine with the same backend. At least the external `epkowa` backend is known to work (but has never been tested on the Mac, AFAIK). It is part of "Image Scan! for Linux" and available at: http://avasys.jp/english/linux_e/ For the RX685 no non-free binary-only parts are needed. I use the free epkowa backend (distributed as part of the iscan package) with the RX580, which is probably very similar to the RX685. However, I'm doing it on Linux, not OS X. -- Robert Krawitz <rlk at alum.mit.edu> Tall Clubs International -- http://www.tall.org/ or 1-888-IM-TALL-2 Member of the League for Programming Freedom -- mail lpf at uunet.uu.net Project lead for Gutenprint -- http://gimp-print.sourceforge.net "Linux doesn't dictate how I work, I dictate how Linux works." --Eric Crampton