SANE on Windows Prerequisites ============= To be able to compile sane-backends, you need to have either Cygwin or Mingw compilers and a suitable POSIX compatible environment. You can get the Cygwin POSIX compatible environment for Windows Windows and the Cygwin gcc compiler at http://www.cygwin.com You can get the MSYS POSIX compatible environment for Windows and the MinGW gcc compiler at http://www.mingw.org/wiki/MSYS The scanner must be detected by Windows and not be disabled. Check with the hardware manager. Building ======== See general README for build basics. If a given backend fails to compile, you can use the BACKENDS variable to limit compilation to backends your interested in: ./configure BACKENDS=epson2 Configuring =========== If you have more than one scanner, you should do the following: - run sane-find-scanner to get the device name of the scanner. The name for scsi devices is something like h0b0t6l0, meaning hba 0, bus 0, scsi id 6 and lun 0. - edit the config file for the backend (/path/to/sane/etc/sane.d/xxxx.conf) and add the scanner device name on an empty line. - Set environment variable SANE_CONFIG_DIR to point to the directory where the config files are located. Run "scanimage > out.pnm" to get a scan. xscanimage and XSane have been reported to compile and run in the past under Cygwin. Notes ===== - Only SCSI, USB (with libusb-win32), and network scanners may work. No FireWire/Parallel. The Cygwin libusb port can be installed with Cygwin setup.exe or can be compiled manually under cygwin or mingw using the libusb-win32 port: http://sourceforge.net/apps/trac/libusb-win32/wiki - Tested on Windows XP, 7, and using Wine on Linux. - Some scanners' backend may not work because of requirement not supported by Cygwin or MinGW. 2011/10/08