Provided by: sane-utils_1.3.0-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       saned - SANE network daemon

SYNOPSIS

       saned  [ -a [ username ] ] [ -u username ] [ -b address ] [ -p port ] [ -l ] [ -D ] [ -o ]
       [ -d n ] [ -e ] [ -h ] [ -B buffer-size ]

DESCRIPTION

       saned is the SANE (Scanner Access Now Easy) daemon that allows remote  clients  to  access
       image acquisition devices available on the local host.

OPTIONS

       saned recognises the following options:

       -a [username], --alone[=username]
              is equivalent to the combination of -l -D -u username options. However, username is
              optional and running user will only be set when specified.

       -u username, --user=username
              requests that saned drop root privileges and run as the user (and group) associated
              with username after binding.

       -b address, --bind=address
              tells saned to bind to the address given.

       -p port, --port=port
              tells  saned  to  listen  on  the  port given.  A value of 0 tells saned to pick an
              unused port.  The default is the sane-port (6566).

       -l, --listen
              requests that saned run in standalone daemon mode.  In this mode, saned will listen
              for  incoming  client connections; inetd(8) is not required for saned operations in
              this mode.

       -D, --daemonize
              will request saned to detach from the console and run in the background.

       -o, --once
              requests that saned exits after the first client disconnects.  This is  useful  for
              debugging.

       -d n, --debug=n
              sets  the  level of saned debug output to n.  When compiled with debugging enabled,
              this flag may be followed by a number to request more  or  less  debug  info.   The
              larger  the  number,  the  more verbose the debug output.  E.g., -d128 will request
              output of all debug info.  A level of 0 produces no output  at  all.   The  default
              value is 2.

       -e, --stderr
              will divert saned debug output to stderr instead of the syslog default.

       -B, --buffer-size=buffer-size
              specifies  the  size  of the read buffer used for communication with the backend in
              KB.  Default value is 1MB.

       -h, --help
              displays a short help message.

CONFIGURATION

       The saned.conf configuration file contains both options for  the  daemon  and  the  access
       list.

       data_portrange = min_port - max_port
              Specify  the  port  range to use for the data connection. Pick a port range between
              1024 and 65535; don't pick a too large port  range,  as  it  may  have  performance
              issues.  Use this option if your saned server is sitting behind a firewall. If that
              firewall  is  a  Linux  machine,  we  strongly  recommend   using   the   Netfilter
              nf_conntrack_sane module instead.

       data_connect_timeout = timeout
              Specify  the  time  in  milliseconds  that  saned  will wait for a data connection.
              Without this option, if the data connection is not done before the scanner  reaches
              the  end  of scan, the scanner will continue to scan past the end and may damage it
              depending on the backend. Specify zero to have the old  behavior.  The  default  is
              4000ms.

       The  access  list is a list of host names, IP addresses or IP subnets (CIDR notation) that
       are permitted to use local SANE devices. IPv6 addresses must be enclosed in brackets,  and
       should always be specified in their compressed form. Connections from localhost are always
       permitted. Empty lines and lines starting with  a  hash  mark  (#)  are  ignored.  A  line
       containing  the  single  character ``+'' is interpreted to match any hostname. This allows
       any remote machine to use your scanner and may present a security risk, so this  shouldn't
       be used unless you know what you're doing.

       A sample configuration file is shown below:

              # Daemon options
              data_portrange = 10000 - 10100
              # Access list
              scan-client.somedomain.firm
              # this is a comment
              192.168.0.1
              192.168.2.12/29
              [::1]
              [2001:db8:185e::42:12]/64

       The  case  of  the  host  names  does  not matter, so AHost.COM is considered identical to
       ahost.com.

FILES

       /etc/hosts.equiv
              The hosts listed in this file are permitted  to  access  all  local  SANE  devices.
              Caveat: this file imposes serious security risks and its use is not recommended.

       /etc/sane.d/saned.conf
              Contains  a  list  of  hosts  permitted  to  access  local  SANE  devices (see also
              description of SANE_CONFIG_DIR below).

       /etc/sane.d/saned.users
              If this file contains lines of the form

              user:password:backend

              access to the listed backends is restricted. A backend may be listed multiple times
              for  different user/password combinations. The server uses MD5 hashing if supported
              by the client.

ENVIRONMENT

       SANE_CONFIG_DIR
              This environment variable specifies the list of directories that  may  contain  the
              configuration  file.   On  *NIX  systems,  the directories are separated by a colon
              (`:'), under OS/2, they are separated by a semi-colon (`;').  If this  variable  is
              not  set, the configuration file is searched in two default directories: first, the
              current working directory (".") and then in  /etc/sane.d.   If  the  value  of  the
              environment  variable ends with the directory separator character, then the default
              directories are searched after the explicitly specified directories.  For  example,
              setting  SANE_CONFIG_DIR  to "/tmp/config:" would result in directories tmp/config,
              ., and /etc/sane.d being searched (in this order).

NOTES

       saned does not provide confidentiality  when  communicating  with  clients.  If  saned  is
       exposed  directly  on the network, other users may be able to intercept scanned images, or
       learn passwords for connecting to saned, with little effort. Client systems should connect
       to saned through a secure tunnel to the server instead.

       saned is not a trusted program and should not run with root privileges.

       Refer to /usr/share/doc/libsane/saned/saned.install.md for details on configuring saned as
       a service.

SEE ALSO

       sane(7),    scanimage(1),    xscanimage(1),     xcam(1),     sane-dll(5),     sane-net(5),
       sane-"backendname"(5), inetd(8), xinetd(8), systemd(1)
       http://www.penguin-breeder.org/?page=sane-net

AUTHOR

       David Mosberger

                                           29 Sep 2017                                   saned(8)