gphoto2
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Hello and welcome to the wonderful world of gphoto! This is gphoto2, the
successor of gphoto with lots of new features and additional camera
drivers.
If you miss a feature, would like to report success or failure, or have any
questions, please don't hesitate to contact our mailing list.
What is gphoto2?
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gphoto2 is a library that can be used by applications to access various
digital cameras.
Additionally, the command-line frontend, which is shipped with the library,
is called gphoto2, too.
For more information on gphoto, see
http://www.gphoto.org
There, you can also get information on mailing lists, supported cameras,
and availability of gphoto2. Another source of information is
http://www.sourceforge.org/projects/gphoto
where you can access our CVS server to fetch the source code of
gphoto2, gtkam and GnoCam (see below).
What is gphoto2 not?
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gphoto2 can only talk to cameras the language of those it understands. That is,
if you own a camera that speaks a language that isn't published anywhere and
nobody has been able to figure out the meaning of the sentences, gphoto2 cannot
communicate with those cameras.
Then, there are cameras supporting the so-called USB Mass Storage protocol.
This is a protocol that has been published and lets you access any storage
device, be it a camera or a disk connected via USB to your computer. As there
are already drivers for this protocol out there, you don't need an additional
program like gphoto2. As of now, the following cameras seem to support the
USB Mass Storage protocol:
* Casio QV [2x00,3x00,8000]
* Fuji FinePix S1 Pro, [1400,2400,4700]Zoom, 1300, 4500
* HP PhotoSmart 315, 618, 912
* Konica KD300Z
* Kyocera Finecam s3
* Leica Digilux 4.3
* Minolta Dimage 5 & 7
* Nikon Coolpix 775, 995
* Olympus C-100, C-200Z, C-700, C-860L, C-2040, C-3020Z, C-3040Z,
C-4040Zoom, D-510, E-10
* Pentax Optio 330
* Sony DSC-F505(V), DSC-P1, DSC-P5, DSC-P20, DSC-P30, DSC-F707
Again, those cameras cannot be accessed through gphoto2.
Other camera support a protocol called PTP or USB Imaging Devices that has
been developped by Kodak and other. gphoto2 does not support PTP yet, but
jPhoto does. Here is a short list of
camera that use this protocol:
* HP PhotoSmart 318
* Kodak DC-4800, DX-3215, DX-3500, DX-3600, DX-3700, DX-3900, MC3 and all the
camera that use Kodak Easy Share(tm) system.
* Sony DSC-P5, DSC-F707 (all need user configuration of the camera)
There is currently a PTP driver in progress for gphoto2. Support should
be available soon.
Platforms
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gphoto2 should compile and run on pretty much all Unix-like platforms.
Additionally, there is a port for OS/2 available. gphoto2 has _not_ (yet?)
been ported to any operating system from MicroSoft.
How to set up gphoto2
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For information on how to set up gphoto2, see doc/gphoto2.txt.
This includes information about setting up USB hotplugging.
Frontends
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gphoto2 ships with a command line frontend which is quite powerful,
especially in combination with scripts. See gphoto2-cli.txt for a
short description.
For the GUI lovers, there are for example gtkam (GTK based), and
GnoCam (GNOME). Additionally, there are plugins for other programs
available like kio_gphoto (KDE - Konqueror).
Reporting Bugs
--------------
Every piece of software contains errors and flaws. So does
gphoto2. When you encounter something that does not work, please do
the following:
1. Find out whether this is a known problem.
2. Reproduce the problem with debug output enabled and the language
set to English, so that the development team will understand the
messages. You can do this by running:
LANG=C gtkam
if you're using the gtkam frontend or running:
LANG=C gphoto2 --debug
using the gphoto2 command line interface. The csh freaks use
env LANG=C gphoto2 --debug