Hi,

the Printing Working Group (http://www.pwg.org/) has developed several standards for printers and multi-function devices (print, scan, copy, fax) to allow its use without hardware-model-specific software or data (aka driver).

There are already all standards needed for driverless printing and they are actually implemented in printers on the market. The PWG's own driverless printing standard is IPP Everywhere, but AirPrint, Wi-Fi Direct, and Mopria us also a lot of the PWG's standards. All of these standards use the PWG's Internet Printing Protocol (IPP) and DNS-SD but different standardized formats for the print jobs. Wi-Fi Direct adds a printer-internal Wi-Fi server for wireless printing without Wi-Fi router. Via IPP-over-USB also devices connected to USB are supported (Linux support via ippusbxd, https://github.com/OpenPrinting/ippusbxd).

These driverless printing standards are fully supported in Linux, from Ubuntu 17.10 on and continuously improved.

The PWG has recently also developed an IPP scanning standard, which provides a standard protocol for communicating with scanners in IPP multi-function devices (via network or IPP-over-USB):

http://ftp.pwg.org/pub/pwg/candidates/cs-ippscan10-20140918-5100.17.pdf

The best way to access this class of scanners from Linux would be to create a SANE backend for IPP Scan.

Therefore I have opened a project for the Google Summer of Code 2018:

https://wiki.linuxfoundation.org/gsoc/google-summer-code-2018-openprinting-projects#sane-module-for-ipp-driverless-scanning

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SANE module for IPP driverless scanning
---------------------------------------

Version 2.0 and newer of the Internet Printing Protocol (IPP) support polling the full set of capabilities of a printer and if the printer supports a known Page Description Language (PDL), like PWG Raster, Apple Raster, PCLm, or PDF, it is possible to print without printer-model-specific software (driver) or data (PPD file), so-called “driverless” printing. This concept was introduced for printing from smartphones and IoT devices which do not hold a large collection of printer drivers. Driverless printing is already fully supported under Linux. Standards following this scheme are IPP Everwhere, Apple AirPrint, Mopria, and Wi-Fi Direct Print.

As there are many multi-function devices (printer/scanner/copier all-in-one) which use the IPP, the Printing Working Group (PWG) has also worked out a standard for IPP-based scanning, “driverless” scanning, to also allow scanning from a wide range of client devices, independent of which operating systems they are running.

Conventional scanners are supported under Linux via the SANE (Scanner Access Now Easy) system and require drivers specific to the different scanner models. Most of them are written based on reverse-engineering due to lack of support by the scanner manufacturers. To get driverless scanning working with the software the users are used to the best solution is to write a SANE module for driverless IPP scanning. This module will then automatically support all IPP scanners, thousands of scanners where many of them do not yet exist.

The student's task is to write this SANE module for IPP driverless scanning and so make Linux ready for the future of driverless devices.

Mentors: Till Kamppeter, Project Leader OpenPrinting (till at linux dot com), SANE upstream developers TBD

Desired knowledge: C programming, DNS-SD, IPP

Code license: GPL 2+

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I want to ask whether someone of you would (together with me) mentor a student to do this project.

The SANE project does not need to be mentoring organization at the GSoC for that. Mentoring organization will be the Linux Foundation.

Thank you very much in advance

   Till


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