saned - SANE network daemon
The -d and -s flags request that saned run in debug mode (as opposed to inetd(8) mode). In this mode, saned explicitly waits for a connection request. When compiled with debugging enabled, these flags may be followed by a number to request debug info. The larger the number, the more verbose the debug output. E.g., -d128 will request printing of all debug info. Debug level 0 means no debug output at all. The default value is 2. If flag -d is used, the debug messages will be printed to stderr while -s requests using syslog.
If saned is run from inetd or xinetd, no option can be given.
The contents of the saned.conf file 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:
The case of the host names does not matter, so AHost.COM is considered identical to ahost.com.
For saned to work properly, it is also necessary to add a configuration line to /etc/inetd.conf. Note that your inetd must support IPv6 if you want to connect to saned over IPv6 ; xinetd and openbsd-inetd are known to support IPv6, check the documentation for your inetd daemon.
The configuration line normally looks like this:
However, if your system uses tcpd(8) for additional security screening, you may want to disable saned access control by putting ``+'' in saned.conf and use a line of the following form in /etc/inetd.conf instead:
Note that both examples assume that there is a saned group and a saned user. If you follow this example, please make sure that the access permissions on the special device are set such that saned can access the scanner (the program generally needs read and write access to scanner devices).
If xinetd is installed on your system instead of inetd the following example for xinetd.conf may be helpful:
# default: off # description: The sane server accepts requests # for network access to a local scanner via the # network. service sane-port { port = 6566 socket_type = stream wait = no user = saned group = saned server = /usr/sbin/saned }
Finally, it is also necessary to add a line of the following form to /etc/services:
The official IANA short name for port 6566 is "sane-port". The older name "sane" is now deprecated.
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 encryption if supported by the client.
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