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691 lines
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691 lines
29 KiB
<chapter id="theory">
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<title>Some Theoretical Background: &CUPS;, <acronym>IPP</acronym>,
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&PostScript; and <application>Ghostscript</application></title>
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<para>This chapter aims to give a bit of theoretical background to
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printing in general, and to &CUPS; especially. If you are not in need
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of this, you might like to skip ahead to the <link
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linkend="getting-started">next chapter</link>. Chances are you will
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come back to this chapter at some point anyway, because sometimes one
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needs extra theory to solve a practical problem.</para>
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<sect1 id="basics-of-printing">
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<title>Basics About Printing</title>
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<para>Printing is one of the more complicated chapters in
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<acronym>IT</acronym> technology.</para>
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<para>Earlier on in history, every developer of a program that was
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capable of producing printable output had to write their own printer
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drivers too. That was quite complicated, because different programs
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have different file formats. Even programs with the same purpose, for
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example: word processors, often do not understand each other's formats.
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There was therefore no common interface to all printers, hence the
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programmers often supported only a few selected models.</para>
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<para>A new device appearing on the market required the program authors
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to write a new driver if they wanted their program to support it. Also
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for manufacturers, it was impossible to make sure their device was
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supported by any program known to the world (although there were far
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fewer than today).</para>
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<para>Having to support ten application programs and a dozen printers,
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meant a system administrator had to deal with 120 drivers. So the
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development of unified interfaces between programs and printers became
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an urgent need.</para>
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<para>The appearance of <quote>Page Description Languages</quote>,
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describing the graphical representation of ink and toner on sheets of
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paper (or other output devices, like monitors, photo typesetters, &etc;)
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in a common way, was a move that filled a big gap. <!-- FIXME --></para>
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<para>One such development was &PostScript; by Adobe. It meant that an
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application programmer could concentrate on making their program generate
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a &PostScript; language description of their printable page, while
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printing device developers could focus on making their devices
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&PostScript; literate.</para>
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<para>Of course, over time, there came the development of other description
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methods. The most important competitors to &PostScript; were
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<acronym>PCL</acronym> (<quote>Print Control Language</quote>, from
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&Hewlett-Packard;), <quote>ESC/P</quote> (from Epson) and
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<acronym>GDI</acronym> (<quote>Graphical Device Interface</quote> from
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&Microsoft;).</para>
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<para>The appearance of these page description languages made life easier,
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and facilitated further development for everybody. Yet the fact that there
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still remained different, incompatible, and competing page description
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languages keeps life for users, administrators, developers and
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manufacturers difficult enough.</para>
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<sect2>
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<title>&PostScript; in memory - Bitmaps on Paper</title>
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<para>&PostScript; is most heavily used in professional printing
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environments such as PrePress and printing service industries. In the
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&UNIX; and &Linux; domains, &PostScript; is the predominant standard
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as a <acronym>PDL</acronym>. Here, nearly every program generates a
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&PostScript; representation of its pages once you push the
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<quote>Print</quote> button. Let us look at a simple example of
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(hand-made) &PostScript; code. The following listing describes two
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simple drawings:</para>
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<example id="coded-postscript">
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<title>&PostScript; Code</title>
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<screen>%!PS
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100 100 moveto
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0 50 rlineto
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50 0 rlineto
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0 -50 rlineto
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closepath
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.7 setgray fill
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% first box over; next
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160 100 moveto
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0 60 rlineto
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45 10 rlineto
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0 -40 rlineto
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closepath
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.2 setgray fill</screen>
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</example>
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<para>This tells the imaginary &PostScript; <quote>pen</quote> to draw
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a path of a certain shape, and then fill it with different shades of
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gray. The first part translates into more comprehensive English as
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<quote>Go to coordinate (100,100), draw a line with length 50 upward;
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then one from there to the right, then down again, and finally close
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this part. Now fill the drawn shape with 70% darkness gray.</quote></para>
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<example id="rendered-postscript">
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<title>Rendered &PostScript;</title>
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<mediaobject>
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<imageobject>
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<imagedata fileref="ps-boxes.png" format="PNG"/>
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</imageobject>
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<textobject>
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<phrase><xref linkend="coded-postscript"/> example rendered as an
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image.</phrase>
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</textobject>
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</mediaobject>
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</example>
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<para>Of course, &PostScript; can be much more complicated than this
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simplistic example. It is a fully fledged programming language with
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many different operators and functions. You may even write
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&PostScript; programs to compute the value of Pi, format a hard disk or
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write to a file. The main value and strength of &PostScript; however
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lies in the field to describe the layout of graphical objects on a
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page: it also can scale, mirror, translate, transform, rotate and
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distort everything you can imagine on a piece of paper -- mdash; such as
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letters in different font representations, figures, shapes, shades,
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colors, lines, dots, raster...</para>
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<para>A &PostScript; file is a representation of one or more pages
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to be printed, in a relatively abstract way. Ideally, it is meant
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to describe the pages in a device-independent way. &PostScript; is
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not directly <quote>visible</quote>; it only lives on hard disks
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and in <acronym>RAM</acronym> as a coded representation of
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future printouts.</para>
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</sect2>
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<sect2>
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<title>Raster Images on Paper Sheets</title>
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<para>What you see on a piece of paper is nearly always a
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<quote>raster image</quote>. Even if your brain suggests to you that
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your eyes see a line: take a good magnifying glass and you will
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discover lots of small dots... (One example to the contrary are
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lines that have been drawn by <quote>pen plotters</quote>). And that
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is the only thing that the <quote>marking engines</quote> of today's
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printers can put on paper: simple dots of different colors, size and
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resolution, to make up a complete <quote>page image</quote> composed of
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different bitmap patterns.</para>
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<para>Different printers need the raster image prepared in different
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ways. Thinking about an inkjet device: depending on its resolution,
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the number of inks used (the very good ones need 7 different inks, while
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cheaper ones might only use 3), the number of available jets (some print
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heads have more than 100!) dispensing ink simultaneously, the
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<quote>dithering algorithm</quote> used, and many other things, the
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final raster format and transfer order to the marking engine is heavily
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dependent on the exact model used.</para>
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<para>Back in the early life of the <quote>Line Printer Daemon</quote>,
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printers were machines that hammered rows of <acronym>ASCII</acronym>
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text mechanically on to long media, folded as a zig-zag paper
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<acronym>snake</acronym>, drawn from a cardboard box beneath the
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table... What a difference from today!</para>
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</sect2>
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<sect2>
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<title><acronym>RIP</acronym>: From &PostScript; to Raster</title>
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<para>Before the final raster images are put on paper cut-sheets, they
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have to be calculated somehow out of their abstract &PostScript;
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representation. This is a very computing-intensive process. It is called
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the <quote>Raster Imaging Process</quote>, more commonly
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<quote><acronym>RIP</acronym></quote>).</para>
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<para>With &PostScript; printers the <acronym>RIP</acronym>-ping is
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taken care of by the device itself. You just send the &PostScript;
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file to it. The <quote>Raster Imaging Processor</quote> (also called the
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<acronym>RIP</acronym>) inside the printer is responsible (and
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specialized) to fulfill quite well this task of interpreting the
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&PostScript;-page descriptions and put the raster image on paper.</para>
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<para>Smaller &PostScript; devices have a
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hardware-<acronym>RIP</acronym> built in; it is etched in silicon, on a
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special chip. Big professional printers often have their
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<acronym>RIP</acronym> implemented as a software-<acronym>RIP</acronym>
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inside a dedicated fast &UNIX; run computer, often a Sun SPARC Solaris
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or a &SGI; &IRIX; machine.</para>
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</sect2>
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<sect2>
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<title><application>Ghostscript</application> as a Software
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<acronym>RIP</acronym></title>
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<para>But what happens, if you are not lucky enough to have a
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&PostScript; printer available?</para>
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<para>You need to do the <acronym>RIP</acronym>-ing before you send
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the print data to the marking engine. You need to digest the &PostScript;
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generated by your application on the host machine (the print client)
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itself. You need to know how the exact raster format of the target
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printer's marking engine must be composed.</para>
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<para>In other words, as you can't rely on the printer to understand
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and interpret the &PostScript; itself, the issue becomes quite a bit
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more complicated. You need software that tries to solve for you the
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issues involved.</para>
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<para>This is exactly what the omnipresent &ghostscript; package is
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doing for many &Linux;, *BSD and other &UNIX; boxes that need to print
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to non-&PostScript; printers: &ghostscript; is a &PostScript;
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interpreter, a software <acronym>RIP</acronym> capable of running many
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different devices.</para>
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</sect2>
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<sect2>
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<title><quote>Drivers</quote> and <quote>Filters</quote> in General</title>
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<para>To produce rasterized bitmaps from &PostScript; input, the
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concept of <quote>filters</quote> is used by &ghostscript;. There are
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many different filters in &ghostscript;, some of them specialized for
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a certain model of printer. &ghostscript; filterspecializedin devices
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have often been developed without the consent or support of the
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manufacturer concerned. Without access to the specifications and
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documentation, it was a very painstaking process to reverse engineer
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protocols and data formats.</para>
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<para>Not all &ghostscript; filters work equally well for their
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printers. Yet, some of the newer ones, like the
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<application>stp</application> Filter of the
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<application>Gimp</application> Print project, produce excellent
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results leading to photographic quality on a par or even superior to
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their &Microsoft; &Windows; driver counterparts.</para>
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<para>&PostScript; is what most application programs produce for
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printing in &UNIX; and &Linux;. Filters are the true workhorses of
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any printing system there. Essentially they produce the right bitmaps
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from any &PostScript; input for non-&PostScript; target
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engines.</para>
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</sect2>
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<sect2>
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<title>Drivers and Filters and Backends in CUPS</title>
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<para>&CUPS; uses its own filters, though the filtering system is
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based on Ghostscript. Namely the pstoraster and the imagetoraster
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filters are directly derived from Ghostscript code. &CUPS; has
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reorganized and streamlined the whole mechanics of this legacy code
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and organized it into a few clear and distinct modules.</para>
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<para>This next drawing (done with the help of &kivio;) gives an
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overview of the filters and backends inside &CUPS; and how they fit
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together. The <quote>flow</quote> is from top to bottom. Backends
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are special filters: they don't convert date to a different format,
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but they send the ready files to the printer. There are different
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backends for different transfer protocols.</para>
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<screenshot id="architecture-diagram">
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<screeninfo>&kprinter; dialog started (&kivio; draft drawing)
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</screeninfo>
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<mediaobject>
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<imageobject>
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<imagedata fileref="cups-filterarchitecture-kivio-70Percent-scaled.png"
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format="PNG"/></imageobject>
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<textobject>
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<phrase>&kprinter; dialog started (&kivio; draft
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drawing)</phrase></textobject>
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</mediaobject>
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</screenshot>
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</sect2>
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<sect2>
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<title>Spoolers and Printing Daemons</title>
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<para>Besides the heavy part of the filtering task to generate a
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print-ready bitmap, any printing software needs to use a SPOOLing
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mechanism: this is to line up different jobs from different users for
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different printers and different filters and send them accordingly to
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the destinations. The printing daemon takes care of all this.</para>
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<para>This daemon is keeping the house in order: it is also
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responsible for the job control: users should be allowed to cancel,
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stop, restart, &etc; their jobs (but not other peoples's jobs) and so
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on.</para>
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</sect2>
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</sect1>
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<sect1 id="cups-and-ppd">
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<title>Excursion: How <quote>CUPS</quote> uses the power of
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&PPD;s</title>
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<para>Now that you know how a &PostScript; language file (which
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describes the page layout in a largely device independent way) is
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transformed into a Raster Image, you might ask:
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<quote>Well, there are different kinds of raster output devices: first
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they differ in their resolution; then there are the different paper
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sizes; it goes on with many finishing options (duplex prints,
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pamphlets, punched and stapled output with different sheets of colored
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paper being drawn from different trays, &etc;). How does this fit into
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our model of device-independent &PostScript;?</quote></para>
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<para>The answer comes with so called &PostScript; Printer Description
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(&PPD; files. A &PPD; describes all the device dependent features
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which can be utilized by a certain printer model. It also contains
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the coded commands that must be used to call certain features of the
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device. But &PPD;s are not a closed book, they are simple
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<acronym>ASCII</acronym> text files.</para>
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<para>&PPD;s were <quote>invented</quote> by Adobe to make it easy for
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manufacturers to implement their own features into &PostScript;
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printers, and at the same time retain a standard way of doing so.
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&PPD;s are well documented and described by Adobe. Their
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specification is a de-facto open standard.</para>
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<sect2 id="ppd-files">
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<title>Device Dependent Print Options</title>
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<para>Remember, advanced &PostScript; printing was originally only
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developed for use on &Microsoft; &Windows; and Apple &Mac; systems.
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For a long time, all of the feature rich printing on modern devices
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was simply unavailable for &Linux; and &UNIX;. &CUPS; changes this
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decisively. &CUPS; is closely tied with &PPD;s, and therefore existing
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&PPD;s can be utilized to the full by all systems powered by
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&CUPS;.</para>
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<para>Using &PPD;s, printer manufacturers were able to insert
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device-specific hardware features into their products, for features such
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as duplexing, stapling, punching, finishing, &etc;. The printer drivers
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load this &PPD; just like an additional configuration file. Thus the
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printer driver learns about the available device options and how to
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call them; the driver also presents them in a &GUI; to the user. Through
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this mechanism you are still able to print
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<quote>device-independent</quote> &PostScript; page description
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language files and specify device-dependent finishing options on top,
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which are added to the application-generated &PostScript;.</para>
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</sect2>
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<sect2>
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<title>Where to get the &PPD;s for &PostScript; Printers</title>
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<para>&PPD;s originally were not used routinely in &UNIX; and &Linux;
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systems. The vendors providing those &PPD;s never intended them for
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anything other than the originally supported &OS;s: &Microsoft; &Windows; and
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&MacOS;. Through its brilliant move to fully support and utilize
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the existing &PPD; specification, &CUPS; now gives the power to use
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all features of modern printers to users of &Linux; and &Linux;-like
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systems. &tdeprint; makes its usage even more comfortable than the
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&CUPS; developers ever dreamed of.</para>
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<para>&CUPS; can use original &Windows; &PPD;s, distributed by the
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vendors in the case of &PostScript; printers. Those normally don't
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cost any money, and they can be grabbed from any &Windows; computer
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with an installed &PostScript; driver for the model concerned, or from
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the disks provided with the printer. There are also several places on
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the web to download them.</para>
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</sect2>
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<sect2>
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<title>How Special &PPD;s are Now Useful Even For Non-&PostScript;
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Printers.</title>
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<para>Now you know how &PostScript;-Printers can use &PPD;s. But what
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about non-&PostScript; printers? &CUPS; has done a very good trick: by
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using the same format and data structure as the &PostScript; Printer
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Descriptions (&PPD;s) in the &PostScript; world, it can describe the
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available print job options for non-&PostScript; printers just the
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same. For its own special purposes &CUPS; just added a few special
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options (namely the line which defines the filter to be used for
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further processing of the &PostScript; file).</para>
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<para>So, the developers could use the same software engine to parse
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the Printer Description Files for available options for all sorts of
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printers. Of course the &CUPS; developers could not rely on the
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non-&PostScript; hardware manufacturers to suddenly develop &PPD;s.
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They had to do the difficult start themselves and write them from
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scratch. More than 1000 of these are available through the commercial
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version of &CUPS;, called <application>ESP
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PrintPro</application>.</para>
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<para>Meanwhile there are a lot of &CUPS;-specific &PPD;s available.
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Even now those are in most cases not originating from the printer
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manufacturers, but from Free software developers. The &CUPS; folks
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proofed it, and others followed suit: where &Linux; and &UNIX;
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printing one or two years ago still was a kludge, it is now able to
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support a big range of printers, including 7-color inkjets capable of
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pushing them to Photo Quality output.</para>
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</sect2>
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<sect2>
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<title>Different Ways to get &PPD;s for non-&PostScript;
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Printers</title>
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<para>You can get &PPD;s to be used with &CUPS; and non-&PostScript;
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printers from different areas in the Web:</para>
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<itemizedlist>
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<listitem>
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<para> first, there is the repository at <ulink
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url="http://www.linuxprinting.org">www.linuxprinting.org</ulink>,
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which lets you generate a <quote>CUPS-O-Matic</quote>-&PPD; online for
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any printer that had been supported by traditional &ghostscript;
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printing already. This helps you to switch over to &CUPS; with little
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effort, if you wish so. If your printer was doing well with the
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traditional way of &ghostscript; printing, take CUPS-O-Matic to plug
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your driver into th e &CUPS; system and you'll have the best of both
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worlds.</para>
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</listitem>
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<listitem>
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<para>second, there are &CUPS;-&PPD;s for the more than 120 printer
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models, which are driven by the new universal
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<application>stp</application> driver. <application>stp</application>
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(stood originally for Stylus Photo) is now developed by the gimp-print
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project; it was started by Mike Sweet, the leading &CUPS; developer
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and is now available through <ulink
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url="http://gimp-print.sourceforge.net">gimp-print.sourceforge.net</ulink>.
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This driver prints real Photo quality on many modern inkjets and can
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be configured to make 120 &CUPS;-&PPD;s along its own
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compilation. &HP; Laser- and DeskJet, <trademark
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class="registered">Epson</trademark> Stylus and Photo Color models as
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well as some <trademark class="registered">Canon</trademark> and
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<trademark class="registered">Lexmark</trademark> are covered.</para>
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</listitem>
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<listitem>
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<para>third, there is the commercial extension to &CUPS; from the
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&CUPS; developers themselves: it is called <application>ESP
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PrintPro</application> and comes with more than 2.300 printer
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drivers. There are even improved imagetoraster and pstoraster filters
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included.</para>
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</listitem>
|
|
</itemizedlist>
|
|
|
|
<para>&CUPS; makes it really easy for manufacturers to start
|
|
supporting &Linux; and &UNIX; printing for their models at reasonably
|
|
low cost. The modular framework of &CUPS; facilitates to plug in any
|
|
filter (=driver) with minimal effort and to access and utilize the
|
|
whole printing framework that &CUPS; is creating.</para>
|
|
|
|
<para>Read more about the exciting &CUPS; features in the available
|
|
&CUPS; documentation at <ulink
|
|
url="http://www.cups.org/documentation.html">http://www.cups.org/documentation.html</ulink>
|
|
and <ulink
|
|
url="http://wwww.danka.de/printpro/faq.html">http://www.danka.de/printpro/faq.html</ulink>.
|
|
Also at <ulink
|
|
url="http://www.linuxprinting.org">http://www.linuxprinting.org/</ulink>
|
|
is a universal repository for all issues related to &Linux; and &UNIX;
|
|
printing.</para>
|
|
|
|
</sect2>
|
|
|
|
</sect1>
|
|
|
|
<sect1 id="cups-ipp-support">
|
|
<title>How &IPP; Support Makes &CUPS; the Best Choice Around</title>
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<title><quote><acronym>LPD</acronym> Must Die!</quote></title>
|
|
|
|
<para>For a long time many developers were deeply dissatisfied with good
|
|
old <acronym>LPD</acronym>. Quite a few new projects were started to
|
|
improve printing: <application>LPRng</application> is the best known
|
|
example. Others are <acronym>PDQ</acronym>, <acronym>PPR</acronym>,
|
|
<acronym>PLP</acronym>, <acronym>GNUlpr</acronym> and
|
|
<acronym>RLPR</acronym>. But none of the new programs were seen as a
|
|
<quote>big shot</quote>; most of them are just implementing the same old
|
|
<acronym>LPD</acronym> specification with a few (or many) new
|
|
extensions, which again make them incompatible with each other.</para>
|
|
|
|
<para>Having seen the development of not just one, but different
|
|
viable alternatives to venerable <acronym>BSD</acronym>-style
|
|
<acronym>LPD</acronym>, Grant Taylor, author of the <citetitle>Linux
|
|
Printing HOWTO</citetitle>, finally rallied the call <citetitle>LPD
|
|
Must Die!</citetitle> in his <quote>Campaign To Abolish The Line
|
|
Printer Daemon</quote>.</para>
|
|
|
|
<!-- FIXME: look up URLs for the above -->
|
|
|
|
</sect2>
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<title>How the &IPP; Came to Be</title>
|
|
|
|
<para>Along with the above, on the industry side of things, there were
|
|
efforts to overcome the well-known weaknesses of
|
|
<acronym>LPD</acronym>. It started with proprietary extensions to
|
|
plain old <acronym>LPD</acronym>, and stretched as far as
|
|
&Hewlett-Packard;'s attempt to establish &HP; JetDirect as a new
|
|
standard for a network printing protocol. The result were even more
|
|
incompatibilities.</para>
|
|
|
|
<para>In the end, an initiative to define a new common industry and
|
|
<acronym>IETF</acronym> standard took shape. The <quote>Printer
|
|
Working Group</quote> or <acronym>PWG</acronym>, a loose aggregation
|
|
of vendors in hardware, software, and operating systems, drafted the
|
|
new <quote>Internet Printing Protocol</quote>, &IPP;. &IPP; v1.1 has
|
|
now been approved by the <acronym>IETF</acronym> (Internet Engineering
|
|
Task Force) as a proposed standard, and now enjoys the unanimous
|
|
support throughout the industry in Europe, USA and Japan. Most
|
|
current network printer models have now built in &IPP; support on top
|
|
of traditional <acronym>LPR</acronym>/<acronym>LPD</acronym> or
|
|
JetDirect Printing.</para>
|
|
|
|
</sect2>
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<title>Why &IPP; is Solving Many Problems</title>
|
|
|
|
<para>&IPP; promises to solve a lot of problems network administrators
|
|
face. This trade normally deals with heterogeneous network
|
|
environments and spends more than half of its working hours dealing
|
|
with printing problems.</para>
|
|
|
|
<para>By creating a unified set of query functions for &IPP; enabled
|
|
printers and servers, for transferring files and setting job-control
|
|
attributes &etc;, &IPP; is destined to work across all &OS; platforms.
|
|
It's rollout however, will not happen overnight, as many legacy print
|
|
devices will still be in use for many years to come. Therefore, in
|
|
&IPP; there is a provision made for backwards compatibility of all
|
|
&IPP; implementations. &CUPS; is proving the viability of &IPP;
|
|
printing in all environments.</para>
|
|
|
|
<para>The most striking advantage will be it's integration into the
|
|
existing set of other robust <acronym>IP</acronym> protocols. Being
|
|
an extension of the proven and robust <acronym>HTTP</acronym> 1.1
|
|
protocol, for the special task of handling print file and related
|
|
data, it is also very easy to plug in other standards as they are
|
|
being developed and deployed:</para>
|
|
|
|
<itemizedlist>
|
|
<listitem>
|
|
<para>Basic, Digest, and Certificate Authentication for users seeking
|
|
access to print services.</para>
|
|
</listitem>
|
|
<listitem>
|
|
<para>SSL3 and <acronym>TLS</acronym> encryption for transferring
|
|
data.</para>
|
|
</listitem>
|
|
<listitem>
|
|
<para>Bi directional communication of clients with print devices, using
|
|
the <acronym>HTTP</acronym>/&IPP; <command>GET</command> and
|
|
<command>POST</command> mechanism.</para>
|
|
</listitem>
|
|
<listitem>
|
|
<para>LDAP directory service integration to keep a consistent database
|
|
of available printers, their capabilities and page-costs, &etc;, as well
|
|
as user passwords, <acronym>ACL</acronym>s &etc;.</para>
|
|
</listitem>
|
|
<listitem>
|
|
<para><quote>Pull</quote> (as opposed to the usual <quote>Push</quote>
|
|
model) printing, where a server or printer just needs to be told the
|
|
&URL; of a document, whereupon it is retrieved from the resource on the
|
|
internet and printed.</para>
|
|
</listitem>
|
|
</itemizedlist>
|
|
|
|
</sect2>
|
|
|
|
<!--
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<title>&CUPS;, &IPP; and &tde;</title>
|
|
|
|
<para>&CUPS; is the most advanced implementation of &IPP; on all &OS;
|
|
platforms. That makes &CUPS; a crucial ally to help "conquer the
|
|
desktop" for projects like &tde;. &tdeprint; is the best utility to
|
|
make &CUPS; core functionality available to &tde; Desktop
|
|
users.</para>
|
|
|
|
</sect2> -->
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<title>Printer <quote>Plug'n'Play</quote> for Clients</title>
|
|
|
|
<para>Have you ever seen a demonstration about &CUPS; capabilities in
|
|
the network? You must have been quite impressed if you didn't know in
|
|
advance what to expect.</para>
|
|
|
|
<para>Imagine you as the administrator of a <quote>LAN</quote>. For
|
|
testing purposes you fully installed one &tde;/&CUPS; box on your net,
|
|
complete with a dozen printers configured and functional:
|
|
&PostScript;, LaserJets, InkJets and BubbleJets, and so on. Your
|
|
&tde; users on that box are very happy, they can print like never
|
|
before, <quote>ringing all the bells and whistles</quote> of every
|
|
printer. It took you 2 hours to make everything run perfectly... and
|
|
now all the other 100 users on the network want the same. Two hours
|
|
again for every box? No way you could do that before next year, you
|
|
think?</para>
|
|
|
|
<para>Wrong. Just change one setting in the original &CUPS; box to
|
|
make it a <quote>server</quote>. Install &CUPS; on five other boxes,
|
|
as <quote>clients</quote>. By the time you turn back to your first
|
|
client, you find the users happily playing with the settings for the
|
|
dozen printers you had defined earlier on the <quote>server</quote>.
|
|
Somehow magically the printers had appeared on all the
|
|
<quote>Print</quote> dialogs of the five new &CUPS; client
|
|
boxes.</para>
|
|
|
|
<para>Your users print, but not a single driver had been installed on
|
|
the clients, nor a printer queue defined.</para>
|
|
|
|
<para>So, how does this magic work?</para>
|
|
|
|
</sect2>
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<title><quote>Seeing</quote> Printers Not Installed Locally?</title>
|
|
|
|
<para>The answer is not complicated at all.</para>
|
|
|
|
<para>If a &CUPS; server is on the <acronym>LAN</acronym>, it
|
|
broadcasts the names of all available printers to the
|
|
<acronym>LAN</acronym>, using the <acronym>UDP</acronym> protocol and
|
|
port 631. Port 631 is reserved as a <quote>well-known port</quote> by
|
|
<acronym>IANA</acronym> (the <quote>Internet Assigning Numbers
|
|
Authority</quote>) for &IPP; purposes. All &CUPS; clients listen to
|
|
&CUPS; server info sent to their port 631. That's how they know about
|
|
available printers, and that's how they learn about the
|
|
<quote>path</quote> to the printers as well.</para>
|
|
|
|
<para>Using &IPP;, which is really a clever extension to
|
|
<acronym>HTTP</acronym> v1.1, &CUPS; is able to address all objects
|
|
related to the printing system via <quote>Universal Resource
|
|
Locators</quote> or <acronym>URL</acronym>s. Print jobs to be deleted
|
|
or restarted, printers to be queried or modified, admin tasks to be
|
|
performed on the server, with &IPP; and &CUPS;, everything is
|
|
addressable by a certain <acronym>URL</acronym>. Many important
|
|
things can be done through the web interface to &CUPS;, accessible for
|
|
example with &konqueror;.</para>
|
|
|
|
</sect2>
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<title>Printing Without Installing a Driver</title>
|
|
|
|
<para>And more, the clients basically can <quote>administer</quote>
|
|
and <quote>use</quote> any printer they see, just as if it was a
|
|
locally installed one. Of course, you can set restrictions on it with
|
|
access control lists &etc;, so that not <emphasis>any</emphasis>
|
|
clients may use <emphasis>any</emphasis> printer as it likes.</para>
|
|
|
|
<para>The clients even are able to print without the appropriate filter
|
|
(or driver) installed locally.</para>
|
|
|
|
<para>So how does this work? If a client wants to know about and
|
|
select printer-specific options, it sends a request (called
|
|
<command>CUPS-get-ppd</command>) to the server. The server tells the
|
|
client all about all printer-specific options, as read from the server
|
|
side &PPD;. The user on the client side can see the options and
|
|
select the required ones. He then sends the print file, usually
|
|
unfiltered <quote>raw</quote> &PostScript;, spiced up with the
|
|
printer-options to the printer server, using &IPP; as the transport
|
|
protocol. All further processing, especially the filtering to
|
|
generate the final format for the target printer, is then done by the
|
|
server. The server has the necessary programs (<quote>drivers</quote>
|
|
or <quote>filters</quote>) to do this.</para>
|
|
|
|
<para>This way a client prints without needing to install a driver
|
|
locally.</para>
|
|
|
|
<para>Any change on the server, such as adding or modifying a printer,
|
|
is instantly <quote>known</quote> to the clients with no further
|
|
configuration.</para>
|
|
|
|
</sect2>
|
|
|
|
<sect2>
|
|
<title><quote>Zero Administration</quote>, Load Balancing, and
|
|
<quote>Failover Switching</quote></title>
|
|
|
|
<para>Some other advanced features built into &CUPS; are the capacity to
|
|
do <quote>load balancing</quote>.</para>
|
|
|
|
<para>If you define the same printer queues on two or more different
|
|
servers, the clients will send their jobs to the first responding or
|
|
available server. This implies an automatic load balancing amongst
|
|
servers. If you have to take one server off the network for
|
|
maintenance, the others will just take over its tasks without the users
|
|
even noticing the difference.</para>
|
|
|
|
</sect2>
|
|
|
|
</sect1>
|
|
|
|
</chapter>
|