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Sane command-line scan-to-pdf script on Linux with OCR and deskew support
SANE Command-Line Scan to PDF
Sane command-line scanning bash shell script on Linux with OCR and deskew support. The script automates common scan-to-pdf operations for scanners with an automatic document feeder, such as the awesome Fujitsu ScanSnap S1500, with output to PDF files.
Tested and run regularly on Fedora, but should work on other distributions with the requirements below.
Features
- Join scanned pages into a single output file, or specify a name for each page
- Deskew (if supported by scanner driver, or software-based via unpaper)
- Crop (if supported by scanner driver)
- Creates searchable PDFs (with tesseract)
- Duplex (if scanner supports it)
- Specify resolution
- Truncate n pages explicitly from end of scan e.g. duplex scanning with last page truncated
- Skip white-only pages automatically (with ImageMagick)
- Specify page width and height for odd size pages, or common sizes (Letter, Legal, A4)
- Performance: scanner run in parallel with page post-processing
- Limit parallel processing for very fast scanners or constrained environments (if sem installed)
- Post-scan open scan output(s) in viewer
Requirements
The following dependencies are requirements of the script. See also Dependencies Installation.
- bash
- pnmtops (netpbm-progs)
- ps2pdf (ghostscript)
- pdfunite (poppler-utils)
- units (units)
- ImageMagick (if --skip-empty-pages or --ocr is used)
Optional
- unpaper (for software deskew)
- flock (usually provided by util-linux) (for properly ordered verbose logs)
- tesseract (to make searchable PDFs)
- sem (via gnu-parallels, to constrain resource usage during page processing)
- bc (for whitepage detection percentage calculations)
- xdg-open (for opening scan after completion)
Getting Started
# scan --help
scan [OPTIONS]... [OUTPUT]
OPTIONS
-v, --verbose
Verbose output (this will slow down the scan due to the need to prevent interleaved output)
-d, --duplex
Duplex scanning
-m, --mode
Mode e.g. Lineart (default), Halftone, Gray, Color, etc. Use --mode-hw-default to not set any mode
--mode-hw-default
Do not set the mode explicitly, use the hardware default — ignored if --mode is set
-r, --resolution
Resolution e.g 300 (default)
-a, --append
Append output to existing scan
-e, --max <pages>
Max number of pages e.g. 2 (default is all pages)
-t, --truncate <pages>
Truncate number of pages from end e.g. 1 (default is none) -- truncation happens after --skip-empty-pages
-s, --size
Page Size as type e.g. Letter (default), Legal, A4, no effect if --crop is specified
-ph, --page-height
Custom Page Height in mm
-pw, --page-width
Custom Page Width in mm
-x, --device
Override scanner device name, defaulting to "fujitsu", pass an empty value for no device arg
-xo, --driver-options
Send additional options to the scanner driver e.g.
-xo "--whatever bar --frobnitz baz"
--no-default-size
Disable default page size, useful if driver does not support page size/location arguments
--crop
Crop to contents (driver must support this)
--deskew
Run driver deskew (driver must support this)
--unpaper
Run post-processing deskew and black edge detection (requires unpaper)
--ocr
Run OCR to make the PDF searchable (requires tesseract)
--language <lang>
which language to use for OCR
--skip-empty-pages
remove empty pages from resulting PDF document (e.g. one sided doc in duplex mode)
--white-threshold
threshold to identify an empty page is a percentage value between 0 and 100. The default is 99.8
--brightness-contrast-sw
Alter brightness and contrast via post-processing - prefer specifying brightness and/or
contrast via --driver-options if supported by your hardware.
--open
After scanning, open the scan via xdg-open
CONFIGURATION
<not shown, system-specific, run `--help` locally>
Configuration
Use --help
locally to show the location of optional configuration and
pre-scan hook scripts. These scripts may contain environment variables to
pre-configure scan
. For example the contents of the default
file may be
something like:
DEVICE=something
SEARCHABLE=1
MODE_HW_DEFAULT=1
Tips
The default scanner device is set to fujitsu
. If you have another scanner,
you will need to use the -x
/--device
argument to specify your scanner,
or save a DEVICE=something
line to a local config file as shown above.
See below for how to get the list of available devices.
If running via scanbd
, scanning occurs via the net
driver rather than the
usual device driver. In this case, it may be necessary to specify the net
driver device in the scanbd
script, OR perhaps do not specify any device
at all to let the script choose the best device when running outside of
scanbd
, and when running via scanbd
. To do this, use an empty device
i.e. --device ""
.
The scanners and scanner drivers vary in features they support. This script
provides several options to the underlying scanner driver by default, and
these options may not be supported by your scanner/scanner driver. If
you are receiving an error about --page-width
/--page-height
being
unrecognized options, try the --no-default-size
option. If you receive an
error about the --mode
value being invalid, try --mode-hw-default
and see below for how to retrieve the list of modes that your system understands.
Helpful Commands
List available scanner devices (for -x
/--device
argument):
scanadf -L
List available device-specific options, including acceptable values for
-m
/--mode
and -r
/--resolution
:
scanadf [-d <device>] --help
Author(s)
With assistance from various other contributors! Thank you!
Blog Post Mentions
The following blog posts talk about scanner automation, and mention use of this script. If you create a blog post, please submit a PR and add your link here!
- Stefan Armbruster - Jan 1, 2019 - Running Paperless on FreeNAS
- Chris Schuld - Jan 8, 2020 - Network Scanner with Fujitsu ScanSnap and a Raspberry Pi
Other Useful Software
-
OCRmyPDF - forgot to use the
--ocr
option at scanning time? use this