Hi Johannes,

Nice to hear from you,
I would like to  define by what I mean by: "Kyocera home based MFP devices"
It refers to the newly released(2012) low-cost printers from Kyocera; 
FS-1020, FS-1125, FS-1120 series

Some of these products have network interface but because it is low-cost MFP, 
it does not have the scan to email feature unlike the other Kyocera products.

All processing from these devices are done at host PC side including the image 
processing.
We are considering options on how to support linux scan since it was just 
released last year.

By the way, out of curiosity, do you remember who from Kyocera or from what 
Kyocera site you have communicated before? :)

Thanks
Ruell

-----Original Message-----
From: sane-devel-bounces+ruell.magpayo=ddp.kyocera.com at 
lists.alioth.debian.org 
[mailto:sane-devel-bounces+ruell.magpayo=ddp.kyocera....@lists.alioth.debian.org]
 On Behalf Of Johannes Meixner
Sent: Thursday, January 24, 2013 5:33 PM
To: sane-devel at lists.alioth.debian.org
Subject: Re: [sane-devel] backend distribution question


Hello,

On Jan 24 01:44 Ruell Magpayo wrote (excerpt):
> I am an engineer from Kyocera and we are writing the SANE support for 
> Kyocera home based MFP devices,

I appreciate it very much when engineers from device manufacturers get in 
contact with free software developers!

Out of curiosity:

Are there "Kyocera home based MFP devices" with built-in network interface?

If yes, is there no longer support for "stand-alone scanning to e-mail"
as described in
http://en.opensuse.org/SDB:Configuring_Scanners#Scanning_via_Network

I ask because a longer time ago I was in contact with Kyocera engineers who 
asked me about SANE support for Kyocera network MFP devices and I asked them 
regarding "stand-alone scanning to e-mail" support and they told me that all 
Kyocera network MFP devices have built-in "stand-alone scanning to e-mail" 
functionality so that there was no need for SANE support for Kyocera network 
MFP devices at that time (some years ago).

Has something changed here?


> We came across a problem that needs feedback from SANE community, our 
> situation is, all Kyocera scanner uses a 3rd party API for bank notes 
> scanning prevention, this library is confidential and cannot be 
> distributed along with the source code.
> Even Kyocera driver engineers does not have access to the source code 
> of the said library.
>
> So we are left with the following options;
>
> 1.
> Distribute Kyocera backends(*.so,etc) as binaries only.

Never ever do this - unless you really want to run into endless troubles 
because this means that Kyocera cannot get any kind of support for their 
software:

Free software developers (in particular SANE developers) cannot support your 
software without free sources.

Linux distributors cannot provide your software "out of the box"
in their Linux distributions without free sources, compare 
http://en.opensuse.org/SDB:Information_for_Printer_Manufacturers_Regarding_Linux_Support#Conditions
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Linux drivers ... must

have an open source code,

be subject to a sufficiently free license (e.g., GPL, BSD) that permits 
modification of the source code, distribution, and redistribution

have a platform-independent source code.

Thus, we will be able to integrate it in our products, as the standard software 
for our products is compiled separately for the various hardware platforms from 
the source code.
--------------------------------------------------------------------


> 2.
> Include the backend source code to sane distribution and just link the 
> 3rd party API

What exactly do you mean with "just link"?

If "just link" means to link it as usual in a mandatory way at run-time during 
start-up of the executable by the linker so that your software would not run at 
all without having it linked with those proprietary library, then you also run 
into endless troubles:

License troubles because usually one cannot "combine"
free software parts and proprietary software parts into a resulting software 
without causing license issues.

When your software would not run at all without the proprietary stuff you would 
hardly get any kind of support for your software because free software 
developers and users and Linux distributors are usually not interested in 
software that does not run at all without proprietary stuff.

In contrast if "just link" means to use the proprietary parts only in an 
optional way at run-time only if really needed so that your software can also 
run without the proprietary stuff, then it should be o.k.

To avoid license issues it is required to get the proprietary parts very well 
separated from the free software.

Separation of proprietary parts from free parts is essential!

Both for the sources (free sources must not contain any tiny proprietary part) 
and for the binaries (free software binaries/executables must not require 
proprietary stuff to run).

The best separation is when the proprietary stuff is a separated executable 
that is run by the free software only if really needed.

In this case the free software executable would fork a child process where the 
child process runs the proprietary executable that communicates with its free 
software parent process via pipes or any other standard process communication 
method.

E.g. this is used by Ghostscript which can run an IJS child process (called 
"IJS server") where the IJS child process does the actual printer driver 
functionality (convert Ghostscript bitmap into a printer-specific data stream) 
that communicates with Ghostscript via pipes (one pipe from Ghostscript to the 
IJS child to send the Ghostscript bitmap to the IJS child and another pipe from 
the IJS child to Ghostscript to send the printer-specific data back to 
Ghostscript).


> We have no problem in including the backend source code to the 
> standard SANE distribution if not for the 3rd party library I mention 
> above.

Is it allowed for end-users to use "Kyocera home based MFP devices"
even without those "bank notes scanning prevention" functionality?

Or is "bank notes scanning prevention" required by laws in this or that 
countries (in addition to the usual laws that of course generally forbid to 
counterfeit money regardless of the method)?

As far as I understand your description it seems the "Kyocera home based MFP 
devices" do not have "bank notes scanning prevention"
functionality built-in in their hardware/firmware so that "bank notes scanning 
prevention" happens in the scanner driver software that runs on the end-users 
machines.

Is my understanding correct?


Kind Regards
Johannes Meixner
--
SUSE LINUX Products GmbH -- Maxfeldstrasse 5 -- 90409 Nuernberg -- Germany HRB 
16746 (AG Nuernberg) GF: Jeff Hawn, Jennifer Guild, Felix Imendoerffer

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