Provided by: gscan2pdf_2.6.4-1_all bug

NAME

       gscan2pdf - A GUI to produce PDFs or DjVus from scanned documents

USAGE

       1. Scan one or several pages in with File/Scan
       2. Create PDF of selected pages with File/Save

REQUIRED ARGUMENTS

       None

OPTIONS

       gscan2pdf has the following command-line options:

       --device=<device> Specifies the device to use, instead of getting the list of devices from via the SANE
       API. This can be useful if the scanner is on a remote computer which is not broadcasting its existence.
       --help Displays this help page and exits.
       --log=<log file> Specifies a file to store logging messages.
       --(debug|info|warn|error|fatal) Defines the log level. If a log file is specified, this defaults to
       'debug', otherwise 'warn'.
       --import=<PDF|DjVu|images> Imports the specified file(s). If the document has more than one page, a
       window is displayed to select the required pages.
       --import-all=<PDF|DjVu|images> Imports all pages of the specified file(s).
       --version Displays the program version and exits.

       Scanning  is  handled  with  SANE  via  scanimage.   PDF conversion is done by PDF::API2.  TIFF export is
       handled by libtiff (faster and smaller memory footprint for multipage files).

DIAGNOSTICS

       To diagnose a possible error, start gscan2pdf from the command line with logging enabled:

       "gscan2pdf --log=file.log"

       and check file.log.

EXIT STATUS

       None

CONFIGURATION

       gscan2pdf creates a text resource file in ~/.config/gscan2pdfrc. The directory can be changed by  setting
       the $XDG_CONFIG_HOME variable. Generally, however, preferences should be changed via the Edit/Preferences
       menu, or are captured automatically during normal usage of the program.

INCOMPATIBILITIES

       None known.

BUGS AND LIMITATIONS

       Whilst  it  is  possible  to  import  PDFs,  this  is  intended to be able to round-trip files created by
       gscan2pdf.

Download

       gscan2pdf is available on Sourceforge (<https://sourceforge.net/projects/gscan2pdf/files/gscan2pdf/>).

   Debian-based
       If you are using Debian, you should find that sid has the latest version already packaged.

       If you are using a Ubuntu-based system, you can automatically keep up to date with the latest version via
       the ppa:

       "sudo apt-add-repository ppa:jeffreyratcliffe/ppa"

       If you are you are using Synaptic, then use menu Edit/Reload Package Information, search for gscan2pdf in
       the package list, and lo and behold, you can install the nice shiny new version.

       From the command line:

       "sudo apt-get update"

       "sudo apt-get install gscan2pdf"

   RPMs
       Download the rpm from Sourceforge, and then install it with "rpm -i gscan2pdf-version.rpm"

   From source
       The  source  is   hosted   in   the   files   section   of   the   gscan2pdf   project   on   Sourceforge
       (<https://sourceforge.net/projects/gscan2pdf/files/>).

   From the repository
       gscan2pdf    uses   Git   for   its   Revision   Control   System.   You   can   browse   the   tree   at
       <https://sourceforge.net/p/gscan2pdf/code/>.

       Git users can clone the complete tree with "git clone git://git.code.sf.net/p/gscan2pdf/code"

Building gscan2pdf from source

       Having downloaded the source either from a Sourceforge file release, or from the Git  repository,  unpack
       it if necessary with "tar xvfz gscan2pdf-x.x.x.tar.gz cd gscan2pdf-x.x.x"

       "perl Makefile.PL", will create the Makefile.

       "make test" should run several hundred tests to confirm that things will work properly on your system.

       You  can  install  directly from the source with "make install", but building the appropriate package for
       your distribution should be as straightforward as "make debdist" or "make  rpmdist".  However,  you  will
       additionally need the rpm, devscripts, fakeroot, debhelper and gettext packages.

Dependencies

       The  list  below  looks  daunting,  but  all  packages  are  available  from  any  reasonable  up-to-date
       distribution. If you are using Synaptic, having  installed  gscan2pdf,  locate  the  gscan2pdf  entry  in
       Synaptic,  right-click  it  and  you  can install them under Recommends. Note also that the library names
       given below are the Debian/Ubuntu ones. Those distributions using RPM typically  use  perl(module)  where
       Debian has libmodule-perl.

       Required
           libgtk3-perl >= 0.028
               There  is  a  bug  in  version  of  libgtk3-perl before 0.028 that causes gscan2pdf to crash when
               saving. Whilst I could prevent gscan2pdf from crashing, it would  still  be  impossible  to  save
               anything, rendering gscan2pdf rather useless.

           libgtk3-simplelist-perl
               A simple interface to Gtk3's complex MVC list widget

           liblocale-gettext-perl (>= 1.05)
               Using libc functions for internationalisation in Perl

           libpdf-api2-perl
               provides the functions for creating PDF documents in Perl

           libsane
               API library for scanners

           libimage-sane-perl
               Perl bindings for libsane.

           libset-intspan-perl
               manages sets of integers

           libtiff-tools
               TIFF manipulation and conversion tools

           Imagemagick
               Image manipulation programs

           perlmagick
               A perl interface to the libMagick graphics routines

           sane-utils
               API library for scanners -- utilities.

       Optional
           sane
               scanner graphical frontends. Only required for the scanadf frontend.

           unpaper
               post-processing tool for scanned pages. See <https://www.flameeyes.eu/projects/unpaper>.

           xdg-utils
               Desktop   integration   utilities   from   freedesktop.org.  Required  for  Email  as  PDF.   See
               <https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/xdg-utils/>

           djvulibre-bin
               Utilities for the DjVu image format. See <http://djvu.sourceforge.net/>

           gocr
               A command line OCR. See <http://jocr.sourceforge.net/>.

           tesseract
               A command line OCR. See <https://github.com/tesseract-ocr/tesseract>

           ocropus
               A command line OCR. See <http://code.google.com/p/ocropus/>

           cuneiform
               A command line OCR. See <http://launchpad.net/cuneiform-linux>

Support

       There are two mailing lists for gscan2pdf:

       gscan2pdf-announce
           A  low-traffic  list  for  announcements,  mostly   of   new   releases.   You   can   subscribe   at
           <https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gscan2pdf-announce>

       gscan2pdf-help
           General        support,        questions,        etc..        You        can       subscribe       at
           <https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/gscan2pdf-help>

Reporting bugs

       Before reporting bugs, please read the "FAQs" section.

       Please report any bugs found, preferably against the Debian package[1][2].  You  do  not  need  to  be  a
       Debian  user, or set up an account to do this.  The Debian tool "reportbug" provides a convenient GUI for
       doing so.

       1. https://packages.debian.org/sid/gscan2pdf
       2. https://www.debian.org/Bugs/

       Alternatively,   there   is   a   bug   tracker   for    the    gscan2pdf    project    on    Sourceforge
       (<https://sourceforge.net/p/gscan2pdf/_list/tickets?source=navbar>).

       Please include the log file created by "gscan2pdf --log=log" with any new bug report.

Translations

       gscan2pdf  has already been partly translated into several languages.  If you would like to contribute to
       an existing or new translation, please check out Rosetta: <https://translations.launchpad.net/gscan2pdf>

       Note that the translations for the scanner options are taken directly from sane-backends.  If  you  would
       like   to   contribute  to  these,  you  can  do  so  either  at  contact  the  sane-devel  mailing  list
       (sane-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org)  and  have  a  look  at  the  po/  directory  in  the  source   code
       <http://www.sane-project.org/cvs.html>.

       Alternatively,  Ubuntu  has  its  own  translation  project.  For  the 9.04 release, the translations are
       available at <https://translations.launchpad.net/ubuntu/jaunty/+source/sane-backends/+pots/sane-backends>

DESCRIPTION

   File
       New

       Clears the page list.

       Open

       Opens any format that imagemagick supports. PDFs will have their embedded images extracted  and  imported
       one per page.

       Note  that  files  can  also  be  imported  by  dragging them into the thumbnail list from a program like
       nautilus or konqueror.

       Scan

       Sets options before scanning via SANE.

       Device

       Chooses between available scanners.

       # Pages

       Selects the number of pages, or all pages to scan.

       Source document

       Selects between single sided or double sides pages.

       This affects the page numbering.  Single sided scans are numbered consecutively.  Double sided scans  are
       incremented (or decremented, see below) by 2, i.e. 1, 3, 5, etc..

       Side to scan

       If  double  sided  is  selected  above,  assuming  a  non-duplex  scanner,  i.e.  a  scanner  that cannot
       automatically scan both sides of a page, this determines  whether  the  page  number  is  incremented  or
       decremented by 2.

       To scan both sides of three pages, i.e. 6 sides:

       1. Select:
           # Pages = 3 (or "all" if your scanner can detect when it is out of paper)

           Double sided

           Facing side

       2. Scans sides 1, 3 & 5.
       3. Put pile back with scanner ready to scan back of last page.
       4. Select:
           # Pages = 3 (or "all" if your scanner can detect when it is out of paper)

           Double sided

           Reverse side

       5. Scans sides 6, 4 & 2.
       6. gscan2pdf automatically sorts the pages so that they appear in the correct order.

       Device-dependent options

       These, naturally, depend on your scanner.  They can include

       Page size.
       Mode (colour/black & white/greyscale)
       Resolution (in PPI)
       Batch-scan
           Guarantees  that  a "no documents" condition will be returned after the last scanned page, to prevent
           endless flatbed scans after a batch scan.

       Wait-for-button/Button-wait
           After sending the scan command, wait until the button on  the  scanner  is  pressed  before  actually
           starting the scan process.

       Source
           Selects the document source.  Possible options can include Flatbed or ADF.  On some scanners, this is
           the only way of generating an out-of-documents signal.

       Save

       Saves the selected or all pages as a PDF, DjVu, TIFF, PNG, JPEG, PNM or GIF.

       Metadata

       Metadata are information that are not visible when viewing the PDF/DjVu, but are embedded in the file and
       so searchable and can be examined, typically with the "Properties" option of the document viewer.

       The  metadata  are completely optional, but can also be used to generate the filename see preferences for
       details.

       The date can be selected with use of the calendar widget.  The  displayed  date  can  be  incremented  or
       decremented with use of the '+' and '-' keys.

       DjVu

       Both    black   and   white,   and   colour   images   produce   better   compression   than   PDF.   See
       <http://www.djvuzone.org/> for more details.

       Email as PDF

       Attaches the selected or all pages as a PDF to a blank email.  This requires xdg-email, which is  in  the
       xdg-utils package.  If this is not present, the option is ghosted out.

       Print

       Prints the selected or all pages.

       Compress temporary files

       If  your  temporary  ($TMPDIR)  directory  is getting full, this function can be useful - compressing all
       images at LZW-compressed TIFFs. These require much less space than  the  PNM  files  that  are  typically
       produced by SANE or by importing a PDF.

   Edit
       Delete

       Deletes the selected page.

       Renumber

       Renumbers the pages from 1..n.

       Note that the page order can also be changed by drag and drop in the thumbnail view.

       Select

       The select menus can be used to select, all, even, odd, blank, dark or modified pages. Selecting blank or
       dark  pages  runs  imagemagick  to  make the decision.  Selecting modified pages selects those which have
       modified by threshold, unsharp, etc., since the last OCR run was made.

       Properties

       When an image is scanned, gscan2pdf attempts to extract the resolution from the scan options. This nearly
       always works without problem.

       Importing an image can be trickier, however. Some image formats such as PNM do not  encode  metadata  for
       resolution.  In  other cases, the data is incorrect.  Edit/Properties allows the user to manually correct
       the metadata for a particular page, thus correcting the size of final PDF or DjVu. The  image  itself  is
       otherwise not changed - it is not down- or upscaled.

       Preferences

       The preferences menu item allows the control of the default behaviour of various functions. Most of these
       are self-explanatory.

       Frontends

       gscan2pdf  initially  supported  two frontends, scanimage and scanadf.  scanadf support was added when it
       was realised that scanadf works better than  scanimage  with  some  scanners.  On  Debian-based  systems,
       scanadf is in the sane package, not, like scanimage, in sane-utils. If scanadf is not present, the option
       is obviously ghosted out.

       In 0.9.27, Perl bindings for SANE were introduced. These are called libsane-perl.

       Before 1.2.0, options available through CLI frontends like scanimage were made visible as users asked for
       them.  In  1.2.0,  all  options  can  be  shown or hidden via Edit/Preferences, along with the ability to
       specify which options trigger a reload.

       In 1.8.3, New Perl bindings for SANE were introduced. These are called  libimage-sane-perl  and  are  the
       preferred frontend.

       In 1.8.5, support for libsane-perl was removed.

       Device blacklist

       Ignore listed devices.

       Note  that  this  is a device name regular expression, e.g. /dev/video, and not the name as listed in the
       scan window, e.g. Noname Integrated_Webcam_HD.

       Default filename for PDF or DjVu files

       All strftime codes (e.g. %Y for the  current  year)  are  available  as  variables,  with  the  following
       additions:

        %Da    author
        %De    filename extension
        %Dt    title

       All document date codes use strftime codes with a leading D, e.g.:

        %DY    document year
        %Dm    document month
        %Dd    document day

   View
       Zoom 100%

       Zooms to 1:1. How this appears depends on the desktop resolution.

       Zoom to fit

       Scales the view such that all the page is visible.

       Zoom in

       Zoom out

       Rotate 90° clockwise

       The rotate options require the package imagemagick and, if this is not present, are ghosted out.

       Rotate 180°

       Rotate 90° anticlockwise

   Tools
       Threshold

       Changes all pixels darker than the given value to black; all others become white.

       Unsharp mask

       The unsharp option sharpens an image. The image is convolved with a Gaussian operator of the given radius
       and  standard deviation (sigma). For reasonable results, radius should be larger than sigma. Use a radius
       of 0 to have the method select a suitable radius.

       Crop

       unpaper

       unpaper (see <https://www.flameeyes.eu/projects/unpaper>) is a utility for cleaning up a scan.

       OCR (Optical Character Recognition)

       The gocr, tesseract, ocropus or cuneiform utilities are used to produce text from an image.

       There is an OCR output buffer for each page and is embedded as plain text behind the scanned image in the
       PDF produced. This way, Beagle can index (i.e. search) the plain text.

       In DjVu files, the OCR output buffer is embedded in the hidden  text  layer.   Thus  these  can  also  be
       indexed by Beagle.

       There        is        an        interesting        review        of        OCR        software        at
       <https://web.archive.org/web/20080529012847/http://groundstate.ca/ocr>.  An important conclusion was that
       400ppi is necessary for decent results.

       Up to v2.04, the only way to tell which languages were  available  to  tesseract  was  to  look  for  the
       language files. Therefore, gscan2pdf checks the path returned by:

        tesseract '' '' -l ''

       If  there  are  no  language  files  in the above location, then gscan2pdf assumes that tesseract v1.0 is
       installed, which had no language files.

       Variables for user-defined tools

       The following variables are available:

        %i     input filename
        %o     output filename
        %r     resolution

       An image can be modified in-place by just specifying %i.

FAQs

   Why isn't option xyz available in the scan window?
       Possibly because SANE or your scanner doesn't support it.

       If an option listed in the output of "scanimage --help" that you would like to use isn't available,  send
       me the output and I will look at implementing it.

   I've only got an old flatbed scanner with no automatic sheetfeeder. How do I scan a multipage document?
       In Edit/Preferences, tick the box "Allow batch scanning from flatbed".

       Some  Brother  scanners  report  "out  of  documents", despite scanning from flatbed.  This can be worked
       around by ticking the box "Force new scan job between pages".

       If you are lucky, you have an option like Wait-for-button or Button-wait, where the scanner will wait for
       you to press the scan button on the device before it starts the scan, allowing you to scan multiple pages
       without touching the computer.

       If you are quick, you might be able to change the document  on  the  flatbed  whilst  the  scan  head  is
       returning.

       Otherwise,  you  have  to set the number of pages to scan to 1 and hit the scan button on the scan window
       for each page.

   Why is option xyz ghosted out?
       Probably because the package required for that option is not installed.  Email as PDF requires  xdg-email
       (xdg-utils), unpaper and the rotate options require imagemagick.

   Why can I not scan from the flatbed of my HP scanner?
       Generally  for  HP  scanners  with an ADF, to scan from the flatbed, you should set "# Pages" to "1", and
       possibly "Batch scan" to "No".

   When I update gscan2pdf using the Update Manager in Ubuntu, why is the list of changes never displayed?
       As far as I can tell, this is pulled from changelogs.ubuntu.com, and therefore only the  changelogs  from
       official Ubuntu builds are displayed.

   Why can gscan2pdf not find my scanner?
       If  your scanner is not connected directly to the machine on which you are running gscan2pdf and you have
       not installed the SANE daemon, saned, gscan2pdf cannot automatically find  it.  In  this  case,  you  can
       specify the scanner device on the command line:

       "gscan2pdf --device <device">

   How can I search for text in the OCR layer of the finished PDF or DJVU file?
       pdftotext  or djvutxt can extract the text layer from PDF or DJVU files. See the respective man pages for
       details.

       Having opened a PDF or DJVU file in evince or Acrobat Reader, the search function will typically find the
       page with the requested text and highlight it.

       There are various tools for searching or indexing files, including PDF and DJVU:

       •   (meta) Tracker (<https://projects.gnome.org/tracker/>)

       •   plone (<http://plone.org/>)

       •   pdfgrep (<http://pdfgrep.sourceforge.net/>

       •   swish-e (<http://www.swish-e.org/>)

       •   recoll (<http://www.lesbonscomptes.com/recoll/>)

       •   terrier (<http://www.lesbonscomptes.com/recoll/>)

   How can I change the colour of the selection box in the image viewer?
       Create a file called "~/.config/gtk-3.0/gtk.css" with the following content:

        .rubberband,
        rubberband,
        flowbox rubberband,
        treeview.view rubberband,
        .content-view rubberband,
        .content-view .rubberband {
          border: 1px solid #2a76c6;
          background-color: rgba(42, 118, 198, 0.2); }

   How can I change the colour of the OCR output
       Create a file called "~/.config/gtk-3.0/gtk.css" with the following content:

       #gscan2pdf-ocr-output {
         color: black; }

See Also

       XSane (<http://xsane.org/>)

       Scan Tailor (<http://scantailor.org/>)

Author

       Jeffrey Ratcliffe (jffry at posteo dot net)

Thanks to

       •   all the people who have sent patches, translations, bugs and feedback.

       •   the gtk+ project for a most excellent graphics toolkit.

       •   the Gtk3-Perl project for their superb Perl bindings for GTK3.

       •   The SANE project for scanner access

       •   Björn Lindqvist for the gtkimageview widget

       •   Sourceforge for hosting the project.

LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (C) 2006--2020 Jeffrey Ratcliffe <jffry@posteo.net>

       This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the version  3
       GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation.

       This  program  is  distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even
       the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU General  Public
       License for more details.

       You  should  have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program.  If not, see
       <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.

perl v5.30.0                                       2020-02-06                                      GSCAN2PDF(1p)