![]() ![]() Option B would share the scanner from the primary client machine to other client machines by way of SANE protocol. ![]() This is probably the preferred method in a multi-computer environment, unless you already have other SANE shared scanners. Option A would share the scanner from the main host machine to other computers using the eSCL protocol. Although sane-airscan was created for accessing eSCL/AirScan protocol scanners, it has been tested as working with the AirScan listed above. (Option C) is that the Scanner Host and user workstation may be the same linux machine already and sane-airsccan is also installed there. (Option A) You will need to install sane-airscan on all of the client machines (there are some repos for easy installaton), or (Option B) install sane-airscan on the same machine hosting the scanner and AirScan only. The second part of the software is the sane-airscan back-end. You will need on host machine: apache2, PHP7, avahi-daemon, mod_dir, mod_rewrite, A wired or wireless interface to your LAN (wired recomended), and an available wireless connection dedicated to connect to the scanner. Most files are simply copied to web root directory, with a few exceptons. The files are easily installable either to local machine or server. It will also allow the scanner to be accessed via the software package listed below, which is a SANE back-end. It will provides a web GUI with Scanning to JPG or PDF, even multi-page PDF via the web GUI is available. ![]() It can run on any Linux machine on your local network. It was tested entirely under Apache 2.4 and PHP 7 on Ubuntu 16.04 x86_64 and Debian on Raspberry Pi 3. The host will advertise the scanner as an eSCL scanner on the network and process requests for it, translating scan comands to the scanner. END UPDATE-ĪirScan is a web GUI and eSCL interface for these scanners. It has not been tested on M1 and may need an M1 specific binary made from bastel source. It was tested on OSX10.15 and Ubuntu 10.04. Linux users will need sane-airscan back-end. You can then make use of whatever scanning app that is in your OS. In short Part 2 makes one of these scanners an eSCL/AirScan compatible Scanner on your network by way of a Mac or Linux computer. There will be no future "combined" version however they will both be built and maintained in a way that they can be used and run on the same machine. Part2 is ready for download, and runs on Windows, MacOS or Linux.
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