Michael Loßin
(c) 2001,2002 -- distributable under the GPL
1 Preface
2 Introduction
3 Installation
4 Setup
5 Usage
6 Configuration
7 FAQ
8 Links
9 Help
This handbook explains how to set up, operate, configure and extend the
apsfilter package while providing a step-by-step installation
guide. It is focused on apsfilter version 7.2.5 and compatible.
You are looking at the second edition of the apsfilter handbook.
It was written by Michael Loßin
<phallobst@web.de> (© 2001,2002) and has been published under
the regulations of the GPL.
It is available as indexed HTML, PostScript, PDF (with links) and plain text.
These editions are generated from a source HTML file by htmldoc and
w3m.
The colorful apsfilter logo was created by
Chris Cox <cjcox@acm.org>.
If you feel something important is missing, if you find blatant
typos or obsolete information, please contact the mailing-list at
<apsfilter-doc@apsfilter.org>.
Throughout this document we'll use the following typographical conventions:
- foobar
- 1. absolute or relative path names
2. computer input and output
- foobar
- 1. emphasis
2. software package names (as opposed to executables)
- #
- the root prompt
- $
- the user prompt
- $FOOBAR
- environment variables
- FOOBAR
- configuration variables
Apsfilter is an input filter suitable for most of the printer spoolers
found on many UNIX-like operating systems. It is used all over the world in
many different environments, from single user desktop computers to large-scale
university networks.
The goal of apsfilter is to provide the user and the
system administrator with a simple way to maintain, configure and use the
printing services of the UNIX system. It's not targeted at one particular
flavour or distribution of UNIX -- apsfilter tries to behave as
friendly as possible in any environment.
The latest major version of apsfilter is 7.0.0 which was released in
December 2001. There are also development snapshots and a CVS repository
available. Point your web browser to the Apsfilter Homepage at
http://www.apsfilter.org/ for a better
overview of the latest releases.
The maintainer and copyright owner of apsfilter is
Andreas Klemm <andreas@apsfilter.org>;
he coordinates releases, merges patches from contributors and does stuff. Do
not send bug reports or
help requests to this email address -- there
are mailing-lists that will save you (and us) the hassle of long fights with
apsfilter.
Apsfilter is not a printer driver collection. It completely relies on
ghostscript to provide a driver, since it only prepares the input
data, primarily by converting it to PostScript.
It also does not provide a printer spooler system, but instead it utilizes
services offered by the BSD spooler or its successor LPRng.
- it's free: the GPL ensures that it will always be
- it's flexible: you can print almost any kind of file (with the help of
various conversion tools):
ASCII (more precisely: all sorts of text), BMP, DVI, FBM, FIG, FITS, GIF,
Group 3 fax, HTML, IFF ILBM, JPEG, Kodak Photo CD, MGR, MIFF, PDF, PNG,
PNM, PostScript, RLE, SGI, Sketch, Sun raster, Targa, TGIF, TIFF, troff,
WMF, WordPerfect graphics, XCF, X pixmap, X window dump
- it works: more precisely, it works right out of the box -- no compilation
necessary
- it's extendable: new file formats, new drivers, new converters have
always been integrated without much hassle
- it's simple: a couple of printer-independent command line options allow
you to control certain aspects of file formatting, visual appearance etc.
without having to know which printer or driver you are using
- it uses free components: other programmers already have invented the
wheel, so we use their work and do some plumbing to produce The
Right Thing
- it's a script: using shell programming tools allows anyone to inspect
the source, produce verbose debugging information, test changes quickly
and fiddle around to adjust apsfilter to their system
So you see: apsfilter is the best sliced bread since... uhm... no,
wait...
- it's simple: restricting the dynamic options to a
manageable size automatically leads to driver features being inaccessible
(however, we try to offer at least a reasonable selection, and you can
always adjust the default options to your needs)
- it's not GUI'd: beginners might be deterred by having to use the command
line instead of a visually appealing configuration dialog (anybody willing
to write kapsprint?)
- it uses external components: you have to install at least a couple of
other packages to get a working printing system; these may come with their
own bugs, which could make apsfilter look buggy itself -- what a
silly idea :)
- it's limited: you can't make coffee with apsfilter, but we're
working on it
Yes, it is.
Maybe.
Since apsfilter is by no means a self-contained system, you'll have to
make sure you have some third-party packages installed. (The
links section will refer you to the web pages.)
Your printer spooler must be either the plain BSD-type lpd (which is
not only part of the *BSD systems, but also of many Linux distributions) or
(highly recommended) the "next generation" spooler called
LPRng (which is also compatible to the BSD version). Other spooler
types may work, but those are not officially supported by apsfilter.
A very important program is the shell (usually /bin/sh), which has to
support a couple of POSIX features. If you already have it,
bash is a good choice, but recent versions of zsh,
pdksh or ash are reported to work as well. You may need to
supply the path to a capable shell during installation.
We need awk in a couple of places, so a decent version should be
accessible (e.g. GNU awk). The configure script has an
option for this as well.
If you are not operating a PostScript capable printer, you'll need the free
PostScript interpreter ghostscript which has the correct driver for
your printer compiled into it. Both the GNU and the AFPL
(a.k.a. Aladdin) versions work, although you probably better install
the latest version to get full driver support.
The psutils collection is highly recommended to perform non-trivial
PostScript processing. Another tool we need is psset from the
a2ps package; so even if you prefer a different text-to-PostScript
converter, you'll have to install it anyway.
For any file format you want to be handled automagically, you'll need a
converter, e.g.
- for bitmap images: convert (from ImageMagick),
nconvert (from XnView) or the netpbm tools
(a.k.a. pbmplus)
- for text files: a2ps, mpage, enscript or
(without fancy formatting features) recode
- miscellaneous: dvips, fig2dev (from transfig),
groff, htmldoc, html2ps, acroread,
pdftops, sk2ps
Transparent handling of compressed files is supported for the gzip,
bzip2, compress, freeze, pack and
lzop compression styles.
Error reporting and notification messages need a working sendmail
installation, although it is possible to do without it. However, you won't be
able to use "fake duplex mode".
And most importantly: if you don't just want to use the "print to
file" feature, you'll need a working printer (don't laugh) --
apsfilter can't fix hardware problems. Please have a look at your
system documentation (e.g.
Printing-HOWTO, Linux
documentation of the parport device, man pages to stty and
setserial in case of a serial printer etc.) to ensure your printer
reacts properly on data sent directly to the interface.
If your OS vendor is able to provide you with an apsfilter package of
some kind, get that and install it the usual way. Please bear in mind that
support for those packages is only available from the package maintainers.
Otherwise follow these steps:
$ gzip -cd /path/to/apsfilter-X.Y.Z.tar.gz | tar xf -
(if you downloaded the gzip'ped version)
$ bzip2 -cd /path/to/apsfilter-X.Y.Z.tar.bz2 | tar xf -
(if you downloaded the bzip'ped version)
$ cd apsfilter
$ ./configure
(you might want to give options; see "./configure --help")
$ su -
Password:
# make install
You can optionally copy the contributed uniprint profiles into your
ghostscript "lib" directory -- if you don't intend to
use the uniprint driver, or use a different printer, these won't help you.
Recent packages of ghostscript may already contain them.
# cp uniprint/*.upp /path/to/ghostscript/version/lib
Here's a list of known limitations, bugs and incompatibilities of various
UNIX systems. If you happen to know problems with these or other system types
which are not addressed here, please contact us at
<apsfilter-hackers@apsfilter.org>.
SuSE ships with a modified version of apsfilter which is
derived from an earlier release (of the 4.x series). These are incompatible
in installation and usage, and support for their version is only available
from SuSE.
However, you can uninstall the SuSE package and install the original
tarball without any problems. In this case, installing printers is only
possible with the SETUP script, not via yast or other
SuSE configuration tools.
Users of older FreeBSD systems (and maybe others as well) might need to apply
the following patch to the plain BSD-lpr program (not
the LPRng version) to use the advanced features of apsfilter:
Index: lpr.c
===================================================================
RCS file: /home/ncvs/src/usr.sbin/lpr/lpr/lpr.c,v
retrieving revision 1.32
diff -u -r1.32 lpr.c
--- lpr.c 2000/01/19 14:25:08 1.32
+++ lpr.c 2000/04/05 09:36:01
@@ -320,7 +320,7 @@
seteuid(uid);
card('H', host);
card('P', person);
- if (hdr && !pp->no_header) {
+ if (hdr) {
if (jobname == NULL) {
if (argc == 0)
jobname = "stdin";
This patch may have already been applied to newer versions of lpr.
Using apsfilter under Solaris will not work with the bundled printer
spooler system (lpadmin, lpsched et al.), so you'll have to
install LPRng instead.
The default Solaris shell /bin/sh is an old release of the Korn shell
which unfortunately doesn't work with apsfilter. Please call the
configure script with the "--with-shell=..." option if
a POSIX compliant shell can't be detected.
The same applies to awk. If a suitable version can't be found, you
can pass the path via the "--with-awk=..." option.
Solaris' own file command might not be able to recognize all supported
file types correctly. In case of problems, get the free implementation.
If you are of the paranoid kind, you might want to disable the currently
running lpd before you change your spooler setup. Please consult the
appropriate system documentation to see what steps are required to do this.
The SETUP is a shell script which resides in the top-level
apsfilter installation directory. To start, please execute the
script via the (absolute or relative) path name:
# /usr/local/share/apsfilter/SETUP
No graphics-intensive magic is needed -- a 80x25 text console should suffice
to proceed through the setup.
For listings that are likely to need more screen estate, the environment
variable $PAGER will supply the default pager program -- if it is
unset or empty, more will be used.
In the first couple of screens, various information is gathered in order to
adapt SETUP to your system environment.
The current apsfilter license requires you to send a postcard to
Andreas Klemm. You can get his snail-mail address by sending an
e-mail to apsfilter-snailmail@apsfilter.org, which you can do directly during the
SETUP process, or later (e.g. if sendmail is not available).
The printer spooler daemon uses an additional directory (one for each printer)
to buffer the files which are about to be printed, along with various
administration data (e.g. log files). It is important that the owner, group
and permission settings of this spool directory match the requirements
of the spooler -- if in doubt, consult the documentation.
Do not use a directory on a shared or networked filesystem
for this purpose!
LPRng users can simply accept all settings, since the checkpc
program will be called later to ensure everything is correct.
Before you can do harm to your /etc/printcap, a backup copy will be saved
to /etc/printcap.old and (if it doesn't already exist) to
/etc/printcap.orig.
If you want to overwrite the previous entries in /etc/printcap,
SETUP will delete all apsfilter-related items, but won't
touch anything else. It is not (yet) possible to overwrite just one entry.
Normally you'd want to choose to add another printer, so this is also the
default.
The main menu is the central screen during the setup -- here you can see the
current settings (in square brackets), adjust them, install printers, print
test pages etc. Enter one of the keys displayed in parentheses to change
certain values or perform actions.
Any printer driver (with the single exception of a true PostScript printer)
needs to be included in the ghostscript binary gs in order to
be usable. Some drivers are part of the ghostscript distribution, but
are not compiled into gs by default, while others produce raster
images (e.g. JPEG, TIFF, PNG, PNM) which are not suitable for direct printer
input. You can also use a number of third-party drivers.
To see which drivers are known to gs, and also which version you are
using, enter d at the prompt. The list is alphabetically sorted.
In case you haven't already read the ghostscript documentation, a
text-only rendering of Devices.htm suitable for your gs
release can be viewed. Select r to read it.
This is the most important part of SETUP, since the correct driver is
the key component to ensure smooth interaction of apsfilter and your
printer. Choosing a driver which is not supported by gs will be
intercepted by SETUP.
Usually, you will be presented a list of printer models, preceded by a number.
Just enter this number at the prompt, or 0 to select a different type
of driver, or just press RETURN to see the list again.
If you see a comment in the list of the form {foo+bar} it means that
the ghostscript driver named foo is used to create an
intermediate data stream which the external tool bar converts into
a format suitable for the printer.
4.2.3.1 PostScript printer (generic)
This is the only "driver" that will actually bypass
ghostscript, so we assume the printer is able to understand
PostScript Level 2 (which is what most applications and
converters produce).
This kind of queue is also useful if you want to post-process the output from
apsfilter with a third-party printer driver. These packages usually
expect PostScript files to arrive at their own printer filter, so that they can
call gs and/or their driver.
4.2.3.2 PostScript printer (with ghostscript drivers)
This is similar to the "generic" driver, but the input will be passed
through ghostscript's special "pswrite", "psgray"
or "psmono" devices. This allows you to set options for gs,
use disk based fonts etc.
4.2.3.3 printer driver natively supported by ghostscript
Here you can see a list of drivers that are part of the original
ghostscript package (matching the version on your system).
Note: Not all drivers are compiled into gs by
default; you might have to adjust the ghostscript Makefile to
get full support for all drivers, then re-compile.
4.2.3.4 gimp-print (stp or ijs driver)
This high-quality driver supports many inkjet printers and is especially
targeted at photo printers.
You have two choices for gimp-print: the classic ghostscript
interface via the "stp" driver or the client for the new
"ijs" server within ghostscript. The features are the
same for these two, but the interfaces need different parameters internally.
4.2.3.5 hpdj
As the name might give away, this driver mostly supports DeskJet printers by
HP. You might succeed to operate compatible printers as well.
This driver has been superseded by pcl3, written by the same author.
4.2.3.6 pcl3 (successor to hpdj)
Since the hpdj driver has been discontinued, you should try its
successor. The pcl3 driver knows a wider range of HP models, and other
PCL-aware printers may also work.
4.2.3.7 IBM Omni
This driver collection emerged from the OS/2 driver support and covers
a very wide range of inkjet and dot matrix printers.
4.2.3.8 various HP Deskjet drivers
A collection of drivers for a number of HP printers.
4.2.3.9 PPA printer
PPA is a closed source printing protocol used under some
other operating system. It had to be reverse-engineered to provide
support for these HP printers. You'll need pnm2ppa to automatically
convert the data stream into a usable format for them.
4.2.3.10 HP DeskJet printer (official drivers)
These drivers, based on the "Inkjet Server" technology, are already
part of the latest ghostscript releases, but can be built into older
versions manually.
There's one list for the older ghostscript interface
("hpijs", version 0.97 and earlier) and one for its successor
("ijs", version 1.0 and later).
4.2.3.11 Epson printer (official drivers)
The Epson laser printer drivers are available as an add-on to
ghostscript, while the pips driver collection consists of
tools that convert PNG data into the printer language.
4.2.3.12 Lexmark inkjet printer
Some programmers (not at Lexmark, of course) have created
drivers for Lexmark inkjets.
4.2.3.13 miscellaneous other drivers
Those drivers which don't really fit into the other categories are assembled
in this list.
4.2.3.14 non-printer devices
Caution! These devices do not produce data which is suitable
for any printer (unless you have a really special kind). They are
only useful in a printer queue which is exclusively used by "printing to
file" (aps2file), since the output file will be either PDF or an
image format.
If you want to use one of these drivers, it's highly
recommended that you install the queue as a normal local printer (with a
parallel interface connection), but set the device node to /dev/null
to avoid unpleasant surprises if some user accidentally wants to print to this
queue in the usual way. Note that using /dev/null has no impact on the
functionality of aps2file.
Another way of restricting the use of the printer queue is to disable it on
the spooler level -- aps2file bypasses the spooler mechanism and only
needs access to the configuration files. In this case the user will get an
error message for any print attempt to that queue. However, it's necessary to
make sure that the queue is not re-enabled (e.g. at system reboot).
The physical connection to the printer can either be local (via the parallel,
USB or serial cable) or through the network. In the latter case, you can choose
between normal UNIX-style connections (lpd on the remote host),
SAMBA to talk to Windows-served printers (SMB protocol), AppleTalk
for Mac-based printers (via netatalk/pap) or Novell NetWare printer
servers (with ncprint or nprint).
4.2.4.1 Parallel or USB connection
You only need to enter the full path to the device node -- that's it.
4.2.4.2 Serial connection
Besides the device node name, we also need a couple of protocol specifications
here: baud rate, handshaking (flow control) and the data word format.
4.2.4.3 Unix network printer
The remote printer name (FQDN or IP address) and the remote queue name are
needed for lpd-type network printers, including printer servers
built into (or attached to) the printer itself.
Users of JetDirect interface cards must use "raw" as the queue name;
other queues (such as "text" or "ascii") are not useful.
4.2.4.4 Windows / Samba
Your Windows administrator should be able to provide you with the various
SMB/samba settings. If you choose to use a real user name (plus password),
the configuration file will not be world-readable (to protect the innocent).
4.2.4.5 AppleTalk
This connection only requires the name of the printer as provided by the
Apple server.
4.2.4.6 Novell NetWare
Contact your local NetWare guru to get the correct connection parameters for
the server, queue and user name. If you don't need a password, just leave it
empty.
Note: Both ncprint (for BSD) and nprint
(for Linux) are supported for NetWare connections.
The default paper size can be overridden by the user on the command line, but
you definitely should set it to the paper format which is most likely to be
used. There are far more paper formats known to mankind, but A4,
A3, Letter, Legal, Tabloid and
Ledger are the ones that are supported by the majority of conversion
tools used by apsfilter.
Note: There seems to be quite some confusion about the correct
handling of "ledger" vs. "tabloid" vs. "11x17".
The most common usage seems to be that ledger is 17''x11'' and
tabloid is 11''x17'' (some tools, including ghostscript, even
call it 11x17). So we use ledger as the landscape mode of
tabloid (and vice versa).
This is another setting which merely provides a default value for the user;
a different printing quality can be passed on the command line. However,
"medium" should be suitable for most printing tasks.
Please bear in mind that those categories don't represent absolute values --
they are driver specific, and relative to its abilities. So "photo"
quality on a cheap dot matrix printer might still be worse than
"draft" on a high-class laser printer.
Selecting the correct color mode does not only influence the dithering of
color in the output, but has also an impact on the processing speed: many
converters run faster if they are told to produce monochrome or grayscale
output.
Since this default setting can also be overridden by the user, it's probably
best to set it to "full color", just to be sure. Only if your printer
has no color ability, it makes sense to use "gray" or
"mono".
The printing resolution (in dots per inch) is only needed to provide
a default for drivers that don't derive it from the quality setting.
Currently this includes PostScript printers (with or without the use of
ghostscript) and uniprint profiles, besides others.
However, it is recommended to set it to a reasonable value anyway, since this
setting will also appear (as a comment) in the /etc/printcap database and
in listings produced by lpq.
For most cases, the printing method will be set to the default value
"auto"; this will cause apsfilter to check the type of any
input file and convert it to the correct printer language automagically.
However, if you want data to be passed unmodified (e.g. if you get printing
requests over the network), you must set it to "raw"; you can also
set it to "ascii" to trick apsfilter into thinking that
everything is a text file.
The default printing method can be overwritten with a command line option.
To test the current settings, you can send a test page to the printer. This
will not use the lpd mechanism, but rather contact
the printer directly (unless you print to a UNIX-style network printer).
If your current driver selection requires an additional external filter to be
used (e.g. pnm2ppa), it must be accessible in the PATH.
In case of an error, please install the appropriate filter program or adjust
the PATH setting at the top of the SETUP script.
Note: You need to set up your printer type, interface and
paper size to be able to print a test page.
After you have printed at least one test page, you can check how long it took
to (a) create and (b) actually print the data. Thus you can adjust the default
quality and color settings to decent values, and even use a different driver.
Note: You need to set up your printer type, interface and
paper size to be able to print a test page and view the performance log.
In case of a panic attack, just leave SETUP with no further changes to
your system. This is basically the same as pressing Ctrl-c.
If you think all settings are correct, you can install the printer; this will
create an entry in /etc/printcap, add the spool directories and put one
or more configuration files into the queue configuration directory.
But first you are prompted for a queue name; this will be used to select the
correct printer queue, if you happen to have more than one. The default name
is lp (if possible) or apsN (where N is a number).
This is guaranteed to be free to use.
If you are using the LPRng spooler, a system cleanup will be performed
by calling checkpc, which will ensure that all permissions are correct
and all necessary files are in place.
Note: You need to set up your printer type, interface and
paper size to be able to install the printer entry.
After your printers are installed, all parameter settings from SETUP
are saved to /usr/local/etc/apsfilter/SETUP.cfg; these will be re-read
the next time you want to install a printer.
At this point /etc/printcap has changed, so you have to tell your spooler
daemon to use the new values. Please use the command corresponding to your
spooler type:
- LPRng
- lpc reread
- BSD-lpd
- lpc restart all
- others
- /etc/rc.d/init.d/lpd restart
(adjust this to your OS)
There's only little magic attached to the printer driver name. If you need some
other driver which isn't listed, simply install a different driver and change
the setting in /usr/local/etc/apsfilter/QUEUE/apsfilterrc manually.
However, it is necessary to provide a driver script if you want to use advanced
features of your driver.
The stcolor driver is the only one that causes SETUP to write
an additional configuration variable into the local file:
PS_INIT='stcolor.ps'
This setting won't be used for all other drivers (although it is harmless in
those cases).
SETUP creates a comment for all entries in /etc/printcap which
will be displayed by lpq. It shows the default settings for quality,
resolution etc., but you can change it to whatever fits you. For non-printer
devices, it might be useful to explicitly state that the printer queue is
primarily targeted at "print-to-file" mode.
As every input filter for printer spoolers, apsfilter is not really
designed to be called directly on the command line, but it rather links itself
into the lpd mechanism for print job processing via the
/etc/printcap database. For every print job, the printer daemon
prepares the data, gathers some additional information and calls the filter
with a couple of parameters. Then apsfilter processes the input data
stream according to the configuration settings and basically spews the printer
data out (but there's lots of magic in between).
So the user doesn't actually get in touch with apsfilter, but rather
tells the printer daemon via lpr (or sometimes via lp) that
he wants to print something. To influence the visual appearance or printer
dependent processing features, there must be a way to pass parameters to
apsfilter: either via configuration files or on the command line.
Passing command line options depends on the spooler type which is installed on
the system:
- BSD-type spoolers don't provide a direct interface for additional filter
options, so the so-called "class" attribute for print jobs had to
be misused for this purpose:
lpr -C border:duplex:4pps somefile.txt
This has lead to the term "class options", although it's not very
accurate, since the class attribute is actually used for priority
matters.
- LPRng is compatible to the BSD variants, so "-C" can be used as
well; however, the use of the correct option "-Z" is preferred:
foobar | lpr -Z noheader,enscript,letter
- LPRng also provides an interface called lp which resembles the
SysV print tool; this one uses "-o" for options:
lp -o recode -o ascii source.ps
Apsfilter options can be separated by ":" or ",";
LPRng can also take more than one "-Z" or "-o"
block (and will effectively concatenate them). See below for a listing of
known command line options for
apsfilter.
A couple of features that are not very common, but provide some comfort to the
user, are available with apsfilter.
If your printer is not able to handle duplex printing by itself (most inkjets
can't do it), apsfilter can "fake" it for you. When you use
the command line option "duplex", your file will be printed this way:
- all necessary pre-processing, conversion etc. will be performed as usual
- the even pages of the resulting PostScript code are extracted and printed
(a blank page is inserted if needed)
- apsfilter sends you an email which tells you to flip the sheets
and put them back in
- you also get some more-or-less secret key ("password") with the
email which you should echo into an internal communication file (a
"named pipe" for the experts) when the paper and the printer is
ready
- the odd pages are printed on the backsides of the even pages
The DUPLEX_ODD_FIRST variable can be set so that the odd pages are
printed first. There are also two variables called DUPLEX_REVERSE_EVEN
and DUPLEX_REVERSE_ODD which can be used to have those pages printed
in reverse order. (Read the notes for
details.)
Please note:
- fake duplex printing does not work if you directly print to a network
printer server, since the named pipe must be on the same host as the user
who started the print job; but you can set up your printer spooler so that
all pre-processing is done on the local host and the resulting printer data
is sent via the network
- after the even pages are printed, apsfilter waits for the
password, thus effectively blocking the printer spooler; however, print
jobs of other users should not be delayed longer than necessary, so please
don't be nasty
- sendmail must be present for notification delivery (you can also
create a wrapper script which translates the options for your mailer
application)
Duplex printing (real or fake) can be disabled by setting the
DISABLE_DUPLEX variable to a non-empty value.
Almost all printer spoolers offer the possibility to print multiple copies of
a document without having to enter the print command multiple times. However,
from apsfilter's point of view, there is no difference -- it simply
gets the same request over and over again.
With the "copies=N" option you can print N copies
of the same document, but much faster (or rather: much less CPU-intensive).
Instead of performing all the pre-processing and rendering stages again for
each request, apsfilter does the hard work once, then prints the
resulting "raw" printer data N times. (This also works with
the fake duplex mode.)
In case your printer already knows how to handle multiple copies, the driver
can be adjusted in the driver script to use that feature. You should set
HARDWARE_COPIES to a non-empty value to enable this behaviour.
If this conflicts with other services on your system (e.g. accounting), you
can disable it by setting MAXCOPIES=1 in one of the configuration
files.
Besides feeding data to the printer via the spooler, sometimes it might also be
necessary or desired to direct apsfilter's output to a file.
This is not possible by directly calling apsfilter on the command
line, since it makes some presumptions about its parameters and environment.
But there is a script called aps2file which sets up the environment
so that apsfilter thinks it's running under LPRng.
Enter aps2file -h on the command line to see what options are
available. You'll mostly need "-P" to specify the printer queue
and "-Z" for parameters. If you want to debug apsfilter,
the "-D" option creates a log on stderr.
Using aps2file has the additional advantage to enable user supplied
configuration files, since we don't have to care about security issues here.
Note: The output will always be directed to a file,
even if you configured the queue to use the network.
If you are of the paranoid kind, you might want to preview the output before
it's sent to your printer. Now this is easily possible with apsfilter.
The script apspreview internally creates a PostScript file with the
help of aps2file and sends it to your PostScript viewer program
(gv, kghostview or ghostview). If you are satisfied
with the result, you can simply print that file from the viewer (or even
specific pages, if your application supports it).
To control the output, apspreview accepts basically the same options
as aps2file; entering apspreview -h will give you a short
overview.
Note: Command line options related to duplex printing
(duplex, simplex, shortbind, longbind)
should be used when actually printing the file -- they don't make sense for
previewing. Also be careful if you convert the stuff with "multiple pages
per sheet" as a default option -- while printing it must not be done
again, so use the "1pps" option there.
Configuring apsfilter can be done in two separate ways: either the
administrator supplies specific values to configuration variables, or the user
provides options to the lpr or lp program. Command line
options usually have greater priority, unless some service has been disabled
entirely (e.g. duplex printing).
The following configuration files are listed in the same order as they are
used by apsfilter; these are all ordinary shell scripts.
A global configuration file resides in the global directory
/usr/local/etc/apsfilter/, while a local file is located in
the printer queue specific directory /usr/local/etc/apsfilter/QUEUE/.
- /usr/local/etc/apsfilter/apsfilterrc
- /usr/local/etc/apsfilter/QUEUE/apsfilterrc (mandatory)
- ~/.apsfilter/apsfilterrc.QUEUE (disabled by default due to
security issues)
- /usr/local/etc/apsfilter/QUEUE/apsfilterrc.USER
- /usr/local/etc/apsfilter/restrictions
- /usr/local/etc/apsfilter/QUEUE/restrictions
- /usr/local/etc/apsfilter/QUEUE/smbclient.conf
- /usr/local/etc/apsfilter/QUEUE/netware.conf
- /usr/local/etc/apsfilter/QUEUE/lpr.conf
- /usr/local/etc/apsfilter/QUEUE/pap.conf
These two are the most important source of information for apsfilter,
since they define the basic options.
Typical settings you want to change in the global file include:
PATH
| shell search path; should be as restrictive as possible
| AWK
| properly working "awk" executable (e.g. GNU awk)
| NOTIFY
| user name of the person in charge for printer errors
| TMPDIR
| directory for temporary files; apsfilter actually creates a
subdirectory of its own for better security
| USE_USER_CODE
| if set, enables the user specific file
$HOME/.apsfilter/apsfilterrc.QUEUE as a configuration source
DANGEROUS! -- you probably don't want to set it
(it is unset by default)
| TEXINPUTS
| search path for dvips (PostScript pictures etc.)
| HAVE_MAKETEXPK
| if set, enables dvips to create fonts on the fly (this
functionality is broken on more systems than you would imagine)
| DVIPS_RES_DorP
| dvips resolution switch; should be "-D" or
"-P" (consult your dvips man page)
| GS_FONTPATH GS_LIB
| environment variables for gs, used to find fonts and support
PostScript files (the ghostscript documentation has more
information on this)
| IGNORE_LPD_RAW
| set this if your print jobs (most likely from remote machines) are
sent in "raw" mode, causing them to be passed through
apsfilter with no filtering whatsoever
| MAXCOPIES
| maximum numbers of copies created with apsfilter's internal
copying mechanism
| ASCII_FILTER
| filter to convert text files to PostScript (one of "a2ps",
"mpage", "enscript"), or to directly print text
files with possible charset and end-of-line conversion
("recode")
| ASCII_HEADER
| set this if you want header lines in the formatted text output (no
effect with "recode")
| ASCII_BORDER
| set this if you want borders in the formatted text output (no effect
with "recode")
| PS_NUP
| multiple pages per sheet (must be one of 1, 2, 4, 8)
| ASCII_PPS
| the same, but just for text (no effect with "recode")
| LANDSCAPE
| set this if you want landscape orientation
| ASCII_LANDSCAPE
| the same, but just for text (no effect with "recode")
| PS_BOOK
if set: output pages in "book" format (i.e. 2pps, duplex,
special printing order)
| PS_UTILS
| additional PostScript->PostScript filter
| |
Unlike others, the local configuration file (which overrides any
global options) is required by apsfilter and thus is created during
SETUP. Initial values (which should not be deleted) are given for
these variables:
PRINTER
| specifies the driver (and for some drivers the printer model as well)
| PAPERSIZE
| the paper size used for practically every program that needs to
handle PostScript code; currently possible values are "a4",
"a3", "letter", "legal",
"tabloid" and "ledger"
| METHOD
| either "auto" (automatic file conversion),
"ascii" (treat everything as text) or "raw"
(pass-through mode)
| QUALITY
| the printing quality (one of "draft", "low",
"medium", "high", "photo"); the driver
script will translate this into a decent resolution value
| COLOR
| control color or b/w printing, should be "color",
"gray" or "mono" (may not work with all
printer/driver combinations)
| RESOLUTION
| the printing resolution default (will most likely be overwritten by
the QUALITY setting)
|
Parameters that are usually only valid for one printer should also go into the
local file:
MEDIA
| paper type; one of "plain" (normal paper; default),
"coated" (inkjet quality), "glossy" (photo
quality paper), "premium" (very high quality) and
"trans" (transparencies)
| SWEEP
| whether printing should be unidirectional ("uni") or
bidirectional ("bi")
| PRINT_DVI
| custom "DVI to printer language" filter (stdin->stdout);
if empty, dvips (with possible rendering by
ghostscript) will be used
| RAW_PROLOGUE RAW_EPILOGUE
| printf style escape sequences to be used before/after a
"raw" print job
| RECODE_PROLOGUE RECODE_EPILOGUE
| printf style escape sequences to be used before/after
text printed with recode
| BLANK_PAGE
| printer codes to be sent if a single blank page is needed (for
"fake duplex" mode)
| GS_FEATURES
| basic features for ghostscript; this variable can be
extended with command line options
| PS_INIT
| ghostscript initialisation file
| PS_EXIT
| ghostscript "cleanup" file
| POST_FILTER_OPTS
| basic features for the (optional) post-ghostscript filter
POST_FILTER (which itself should only be set in the driver
script)
| HARDWARE_COPIES
| set this if your printer and the driver can handle
multiple copies by themselves (otherwise the copies will be sent
manually)
| REMOTE_COPIES
| set this if multiple copies should be done at the remote printer
server rather than locally (enabled by default; used by lpd
and NetWare connections)
| HARDWARE_DUPLEX
| set this if your printer and the driver can handle
duplex printing by themselves (otherwise it can be "faked")
| DISABLE_DUPLEX
| set this to completely forbid duplex printing; must be set on a
network print server that operates printers which would need
"fake" duplexing
| DUPLEX_REVERSE_EVEN DUPLEX_REVERSE_ODD
DUPLEX_ODD_FIRST
| these control the page order for "fake duplex" printing;
read the notes for details
| DUPLEX
| set this if you always want duplex prints
| BINDING
| which edge of the paper the binding should be (one of
"short", "long")
| PAPERTRAY
| integer value to select the correct paper feed tray
| A2PS_BASIC
| basic features for a2ps
| A2PS_PAPERSIZE
| override the paper size for use with a2ps
| A2PS_OPTS
| override the complete a2ps command line
| MPAGE_BASIC
MPAGE_PAPERSIZE
MPAGE_OPTS
| the same for mpage
| ENSCRIPT_BASIC
ENSCRIPT_PAPERSIZE
ENSCRIPT_OPTS
| the same for enscript
| PRETTY_PRINTING
| highlight level used for pretty-printing (0=none, 1=normal, 2=heavy)
| RECODE_OPTS
| override the complete recode command line
| HTMLDOC_OPTS
| override the complete htmldoc command line
| HTML2PS_OPTS
| override the complete html2ps command line
|
The template apsfilterrc file is the definite source for these
configuration possibilities, and shows the default value as well.
These are two files that should be considered relics of the times when there
were no command line options to apsfilter and printing to a file via
a locally installed apsfilter was impossible.
The user can provide arbitrary settings in a file in his home directory,
specifically ~/.apsfilter/apsfilterrc.QUEUE for the printer named
QUEUE. However, since apsfilter might run under a privileged
account (e.g. daemon or even root), this is considered
harmful (far worse than a goto statement) and needs to be activated
by the administrator by explicitly setting USE_USER_CODE. You don't
want to do that.
A secure, but less flexible way to have users supply their favourite options
is the file /usr/local/etc/apsfilter/QUEUE/apsfilterrc.USER which is
read when user USER prints on QUEUE. The downside is that the
admin is supposed to change the file according to the user's wishes, which is
probably not useful in practice. Do not let users edit their
files -- this would open the same security hole as mentioned above.
However, if you use apsfilter via the aps2file or
apspreview scripts, user-supplied configuration files are always used,
since they can't do any harm to the system in this case (apsfilter
will not run under a privileged account).
If the administrator wants to restrict certain options for all printer queues
and/or for just a single queue, the global and local restrictions
scripts will enable him to do that.
For example, if only a2ps and recode are installed, but
mpage and enscript are missing, a simple line like
[ "$ASCII_FILTER" = recode ] || ASCII_FILTER=a2ps
will ensure text files are printed via a2ps, unless recode
has been requested. This way users won't be annoyed by an error mail if they
accidentally chose "mpage" or "enscript".
If you just want to set certain options if apsfilter is called via
aps2file, you can test APS2FILE_CONTEXT for a non-empty
value; e.g.
if [ "$APS2FILE_CONTEXT" ]; then
unset DUPLEX; COPIES=1
fi
Let's say your PostScript printer knows duplex, but fscks up the paper
orientation -- it's tumbled where it shouldn't have been, and vice versa.
The solution is to simply switch the BINDING values:
if [ "$BINDING" = short ]; then
BINDING=long
else
BINDING=short
fi
Here's an example which sets some attributes, e.g. for the stp driver:
low-quality printing modes should use less ink.
case "$QUALITY" in
draft) GS_FEATURES="$GS_FEATURES -dDensity=0.5" ;;
low) GS_FEATURES="$GS_FEATURES -dDensity=0.8" ;;
esac
Or maybe you want to ensure the pages-per-sheet and paper orientation values
are in sync for printing text files:
case "$ASCII_PPS" in
1|4) unset ASCII_LANDSCAPE ;;
2|8) ASCII_LANDSCAPE=set ;;
esac
SETUP will create this file for you if you are using a remote printer
on a Windows host via smbclient.
The variables in here are SMB_SERVER, SMB_IP,
SMB_PRINTER, SMB_WORKGROUP and (optionally) SMB_USER
and SMB_PASSWD. The values have the same meaning as shown in the
SETUP dialog. Additional variables are SMB_BUFFER (default:
1400) and SMB_FLAGS (default: "-N").
If the file contains a user (other than guest) and password, it will
be read protected, so only the account used for printing by lpd is
granted access to it.
SETUP will create this file for you if you are using a remote printer
on a Novell NetWare printer server via ncprint or nprint.
The variables in this file are the same that SETUP allows you to
change: NCP_SERVER, NCP_PRINTER, NCP_USER and
NCP_PASSWD.
Similar to smbclient.conf, if you entered a password, read access to
netware.conf will be limited.
If your printer spooler does not allow input filters for remote printer queues,
you'll have to create this file manually. The only useful variable in there is
REMOTE_NAME, which contains the remote queue name in the form
printername (local queue), printername@hostname (queue on
remote host) or printername@hostname%port (socket connection on remote
host). Consult your spooler documentation about possible values.
This configuration file is not created by SETUP.
For AppleTalk printers, this file provides apsfilter with the
command line options for pap. It is created by SETUP and only
contains the remote printer name in the PAP_NBPNAME variable.
Specifying command line options to apsfilter is the easiest way to
control the printout. The parameters are driver independent
and case sensitive. Options are always valid for
all files on the same command line; later options in the
parameter list override previous values of the same kind.
Note that not all printer/driver combinations support all options -- the
appropriate driver script in /usr/local/share/apsfilter/driver/ will
tell you more.
option | meaning | variable
|
---|
draft lo / low med / medium hi / high photo
| draft quality low quality medium quality high quality
photo quality | QUALITY
| uni bi | uni-/bi-directional sweeps | SWEEP
| plain coated glossy premium trans
| plain paper coated (inkjet) paper glossy paper premium
(photo) paper transparencies | MEDIA
| color / colour gray / grey mono | color mode | COLOR
| auto ascii raw | automatic data conversion forced text
mode pass-through mode | METHOD
| a3 / a4 / legal / letter / ledger / tabloid | paper size
| PAPERSIZE
| a2ps / mpage / enscript / recode | text file filter
| ASCII_FILTER
| tray0 ... tray9 | paper feed tray number | PAPERTRAY
| pretty=N | highlight level for pretty-printing
(N=0,1,2) | PRETTY_PRINTING
| header / noheader | whether you want headers with your text prints
| ASCII_HEADER
| border / noborder | whether you want borders with your text prints
| ASCII_BORDER
| 1pps / 2pps / 4pps / 8pps | pages per sheet | PS_NUP, ASCII_PPS
| landscape / portrait | paper orientation | LANDSCAPE,
ASCII_LANDSCAPE
| book | output pages in "book" format implies
"2pps,duplex,shortbind" | PS_BOOK, PS_NUP, ASCII_PPS, DUPLEX,
BINDING
| duplex / simplex | whether to use duplex mode | DUPLEX
| shortbind / longbind | paper binding edge | BINDING
| copies=N | number of copies | COPIES
|
Since some combinations of apsfilter options are not too intuitive,
let me share some thoughts on combining "landscape" page orientation
with "n-up" printing (i.e. multiple pages per sheet).
Usually, you get one of the following layouts:
.-------. .-------. .-------.
| | | | | | | |
| | .-----------. | 1 | 2 | | 1 | 3 | .-----------. .-----------.
| | | | | | | | | | | |1 |2 |3 |4 | |1 |3 |5 |7 |
| 1 | | 1 | 2 | |---+---| |---+---| |--+--+--+--| |--+--+--+--|
| | | | | | | | | | | | 5| 6| 7| 8| | 2| 4| 6| 8|
| | `-----------´ | 3 | 4 | | 2 | 4 | `-----------´ `-----------´
| | | | | | | |
`-------´ `-------´ `-------´
So n-up printing always means "scale the pages with the correct x:y ratio
and distribute them on the sheet"; but it assumes the pages to be in
portrait mode in any case, since the psutils (here:
psnup) can't know about the "logical" page orientation.
If you additionally use "landscape" mode, there might be some strange
results, according to the converter's rotation direction, but we try to ensure
that all tools cooperate with psnup w.r.t rotation.
Fortunately, with most (even moderately sophisticated) text-to-PostScript
filters (e.g. a2ps, mpage and enscript), you'll get
decent results most of the time, since these are able to rotate and scale the
pages in one go.
If you are a lazy user, you might want to reduce the effort of page shuffling,
flipping and re-ordering which is required when printing in fake duplex mode.
To keep the "reverse" operation(s) of psselect to a minimum,
here are some hints as to use the correct set of options, adjusted to the
various paper feeding mechanisms:
- top loader (e.g. Epson Stylus series):
DUPLEX_ODD_FIRST=set
- front loader, output face down (e.g. HP LaserJet series):
DUPLEX_REVERSE_EVEN=set
- front loader, output face up (e.g. HP DeskJet series):
DUPLEX_REVERSE_ODD=set
If you happen to use the PS_UTILS variable to reverse the page order
for simplex printing, you might want to ensure that these
settings don't influence each other. In this case, you don't enter those values
in the apsfilterrc file, but rather add a block to the
restrictions file for that printer:
if [ "$DUPLEX" ]; then
# your settings as described above, e.g.
DUPLEX_REVERSE_EVEN=set
else
PS_UTILS='psselect -r'
fi
Note: Please make sure that the setting of BLANK_PAGE
(default: '\012\014', i.e. one LF followed by one FF) does indeed
create an empty page, otherwise documents with an odd number of pages might not
be printed as expected.
This section covers the most frequently asked questions, or what we think
should be questions frequently asked if they were asked at all :)
If you dare to ask one of this questions on the mailing-lists, you will be
laughed at!
Q: "can't find apsfilter basedir"
A: The SETUP (besides other things) creates a link
/usr/local/etc/apsfilter/basedir that points to the actual directory
where apsfilter was installed. This link has been either mangled or
deleted entirely. Try to run SETUP again.
Q: "can't find configuration"
A: The only configuration file that positively has to be found
for each QUEUE is /usr/local/etc/apsfilter/QUEUE/apsfilterrc,
because this file defines the most important variables (driver and printer
model, paper size, printing method). SETUP should have created that
file... strange.
Q: "unsupported file type 'foobar'"
A: The file command has identified your input file,
but apsfilter doesn't know how to print it. If you know a converter
for this type of file which works on the command line (preferably to PostScript
or PNM, but others might work as well), please contact us at
<apsfilter-hackers@apsfilter.org>.
This could also be caused by a wrong guess by file(1) -- the input
data might match a "magic number" by accident. In this case you can
use the "ascii" option (if the file contains only text), or you must
convert it yourself.
Q: "missing 'foo'; can't convert file type 'bar'"
A: In this case apsfilter knows the file type, but is
unable to locate any filter which may be used for further processing. This
might be solved by adjusting the PATH setting in the global
apsfilterrc, but most likely you don't have a converter for that type
installed. For several file formats there's more than one possible filter (not
just the one that is called "missing"; in most cases, it's the
"last resort").
Q: "invalid method 'foobar'"
A: This is another "can't happen" error, because the
only chance to get this error message is when some person fiddled with
the printer queue specific apsfilterrc file -- and it surely wasn't
you, was it? Anyway, the METHOD setting must be one of
"auto" (this is probably what you want), "ascii" or
"raw".
Q: "can't determine the lpd spool directory"
A: This error may have two different reasons:
- You want to print directly to a remote printer queue, but your spooler
can't handle it. In this case you either can install LPRng or you
need a bounce queue.
- You are using a BSD style spooler, but have removed the
"accounting file" specification in /etc/printcap (the
":af=..." line). Even if you don't want accounting, you must
leave that line in there, because that's the only chance for
apsfilter to get hold of the spool directory location (which is
also the directory the accounting file is in).
Q: "error creating directory for temporary
files"
A: The temporary file directory TMPDIR used by
apsfilter can be set in apsfilterrc; the default is
/tmp. The permission bits of this directory should be 1777
(rwxrwxrwt), so that apsfilter can create its own subdirectory which
will be used for temporary files.
Another reason for this error is a denial-of-service effect which occurs if the
name apsfilter$$ (where $$ is the process ID) is
already used in TMPDIR and the mktemp
program cannot be found. If you install mktemp, you most likely won't
ever see this error message again.
Note: In this case, apsfilter exits with a non-fatal
error code. Depending on your printer spooler type, lpd might want to
retry to print the file, since the error condition is not persistent (e.g. the
next run will have a different $$ value).
Q: "driver script 'foo' for 'bar' not found"
A: The driver you selected for your printer (bar) was
supposed to be configured by the shell script
/usr/local/share/apsfilter/driver/foo, but this script wasn't
found. This shouldn't have happened!
Q: "driver script 'foo' not yet available"
A: Similar to the message above, this warning says that no
script has yet been written for your particular driver. If you are willing to
create one (it's not too difficult), have a look at
/usr/local/share/apsfilter/driver/README. In case the driver doesn't
support options other than its defaults, you can just create an empty file
(touch /usr/local/share/apsfilter/driver/foo); this way, you
won't get annoyed by this message anymore.
Q: "missing 'foo'; can't unpack file type 'bar'"
A: The file you wanted to print was compressed, but the
decompressing tool was not found in the PATH. Install it, or adjust
the PATH setting in the global apsfilterrc configuration
file.
Q: "apsfilter warning: html2ps needs gs for DSC
compliance"
A: When converting HTML files to PostScript, the
html2ps converter relies on ghostscript to create
DSC compliant PostScript documents; this is needed for any further
processing via the psutils (n-up printing, duplex etc.). The
gs executable was not found in the PATH; however,
since it might be okay to create non-DSC documents, apsfilter just
prints a warning to the log/status file.
Note: Since html2ps can have its own PATH
setting in the configuration file html2psrc, this warning may even be
unnecessary.
Q: "apsfilter warning: duplex fifo couldn't be
created"
A: For fake duplex printing to work, apsfilter needs
to set up a named pipe (a.k.a. fifo) which enables the user to send
the release-key to apsfilter. This pipe/fifo is created with the
mkfifo command, which failed in this case -- apsfilter then
prints the file in simplex mode.
Q: I just have set up the printers, but the names are not
recognized by my spooler software!
A: Are you sure you have restarted the printer daemon? As
SETUP alters the central configuration file /etc/printcap,
the spooler must be told to use the new version. The setup instructions tell
you what to do.
Q: The spooler takes the input file, but there's nothing
coming out of the printer.
A: Are you sure you're talking to the correct printer? If your
/etc/printcap already contained a printer called lp, it's
likely that you tried to use that printer queue. Some lpd packages
"feature" a sample lp entry in /etc/printcap which is
suitable for a generic, mostly text-only printer. Try using the
"-P my_printer" command line option to lpr (for the
lp interface it's "-d my_printer"). If that works, either
set the environment variable PRINTER=my_printer or
change /etc/printcap manually, so that lp is an alias for the
correct queue.
However, this could also be a processing error, maybe even a syntax error in
the filter script. Please have a look at the help chapter to find out
how to enable debugging. If the debug output is not
helpful to you, please send us a bug report.
Q: I want to print to a remote printer, but my spooler
doesn't allow input filters for remote printers in
/etc/printcap.
A: This might be solved by using a so-called "bounce
queue". You must edit /etc/printcap to change the :lp=
entry for the printer to be :lp=/dev/null:; then you create a simple
text file called lpr.conf in the appropriate configuration directory,
e.g. /usr/local/etc/apsfilter/QUEUE/, that consists just of one line:
REMOTE_NAME=remoteprinter@remotehost.somedomain
If the printer is on the same host, you can leave out the trailing
@remotehost.somedomain part. Remember to restart the daemon in any
case.
Q: Why doesn't apsfilter find the conversion programs? I
know that they are installed!
A: By default apsfilter uses a restricted
PATH for security reasons. You can alter the PATH in
/usr/local/etc/apsfilter/apsfilterrc (global) or in the printer
specific apsfilterrc.
Q: Why is the resolution for dvips wrong?
A: For whatever reason, there are different dvips
version out there which use either "-D" or "-P" as the
command line switch to set the resolution. Consult your dvips manpage
and set DVIPS_RES_DorP in the main configuration file.
Q: I get "permission denied" errors for some
file cf...!
A: That's a classic FAQ :) Far too many lpd
installations suffer from wrong permissions or non-matching user/group ID
settings which prevent apsfilter from reading that control file.
All I can say is: LPRng doesn't have that problem.
Q: I want to print something, but I only see some weird
PostScript code!
A: There are a couple of reasons for this (too common) error:
- You used an option for lpr or apsfilter which causes
the data to be printed in "raw" (i.e. unfiltered) mode. This
can be the result of a METHOD=raw setting in one of the config
files, the "-l" or "-b" switch to lpr or the
raw command line option to apsfilter.
The latter case happens with gimp in connection with PostScript
output on a non-PostScript printer (maybe via an apsfilter queue).
The default options include "raw"; remove that in the
"Setup" dialog. (Please bear in mind that printing like this is
only useful if your printer is not supported by gimp-print, since
the plug-in is able to handle the options much better than
apsfilter, and it avoids PostScript as an intermediate format.)
Another reason could be remote clients for a printer server that send the
print jobs in "raw" mode. If the spooler on the client can't be
configured to disable that behaviour, you can include a line
IGNORE_LPD_RAW=set into the appropriate apsfilterrc file.
If you still want to print files in "raw" mode with this queue,
you can use the raw command line option to apsfilter --
this one won't be ignored.
- The input file might be PostScript code, but it is not recognized as
such. In this case, it is taken as normal text. Check the file's first
line to be at least %! or %!PS -- this should convince
your file command to correctly report the file type.
Some files in the ghostscript distribution need this kind of help.
- The printer type for this particular queue might be set to PS or
PSgs, although you don't have a PostScript printer. Check the
configuration file /usr/local/etc/apsfilter/QUEUE/apsfilterrc.
Q: My USB-connected Epson Stylus printer won't work with
{Free,Net,Open}BSD! [from the gimp-print FAQ]
A: By default, the BSD device driver for the USB printer
device (usually ulpt0) does a prime, or USB bus reset, when the device
is opened. This causes the printer to reset itself (one can hear the print head
moving back and forth when this happens) and lose sync. After this the printer
won't go into graphics mode and instead spews characters all over your
expensive photo paper. This has been observed on the Stylus Photo 870; it
likely exists with other USB-connected Epson Stylus printers.
The fix is to use the unlpt0 device instead of ulpt0. The
driver doesn't perform the USB prime when unlpt0 is opened. If this
device doesn't exist on your system you can create it with
mknod unlpt0 c 113 64 root wheel
in the /dev directory.
Q: For some files I want to print, there are error
messages regarding "DSC" showing up in the log. What's that?
A: DSC (Document Structuring Conventions) is the
format specification for PostScript data files. These error messages probably
say that the application which produces the PostScript data is buggy. You may
be able to fix that by saving the PostScript data to a file first, then using
the "fixps" tool (or some variant) to get it working.
Q: Why can't I print DVI/HTML/Sketch/FIG files with
embedded images etc.?
A: That depends on the file format and the way the images are
embedded. For inline images, i.e. images that are literally included in the
file, there shouldn't be any problems. If the image is referenced by a
filename, it must not only be found but it must also be accessible.
Relative pathnames are very hard for the filter to expand, since it would have
to know a directory (or a set of directories) to search in. Absolute pathnames
are more pleasant, but you still have to make sure that the referenced file is
readable by anyone and every directory down the path is executable by
anyone.
The easiest way to print the file correctly might be to use aps2file
inside the correct "document root" directory, so that all relative
paths are actually referring to the right files, and then pipe the output
through a "raw" queue. For example:
$ cd /usr/local/share/doc/apsfilter
$ aps2file handbook.html | lpr -Zraw
This should print the apsfilter handbook with a nice little logo :^)
Q: How to persuade apsfilter to attach EOT to PS
jobs not to leave LED blinking on a PS printer?
A: Use the printcap capability "tr". That string is sent
after each job. Add ":tr=\004:" to your printers entry in /etc/printcap.
This has been reported to work with a LJ 1200.
Q: My printer needs special treatment to reset it before
any print job, set the codepage, enable the correct end-of-line mode, add an
extra formfeed afterwards etc.
A: Grab your printer documentation to look for the escape
sequences needed and enter these into the configuration variables
RAW_PROLOGUE and RAW_EPILOGUE (remember to use octal values).
To send a reset sequence of "ESC c" before and an additional formfeed
after the raw print job, use
RAW_PROLOGUE='\033c'
RAW_EPILOGUE='\014'
You can also set command line options for recode in the variable
RECODE_OPTS if you want fast text listings; a simple conversion
from the latin1 charset with UNIX-style LF line endings to
codepage 437 with CR+LF line endings would be enabled by
RECODE_OPTS='latin1..cp437/crlf'
The RECODE_PROLOGUE and RECODE_EPILOGUE variables are used
in addition to the RAW_... stuff whenever recode does text
conversion.
Q: I have a PostScript Level 1 printer. How can I tell
apsfilter to produce correct output?
A: You must use the special PSgs driver which uses
the "pswrite", "psgray" and "psmono"
ghostscript devices. Then add "-dLanguageLevel=1" to the
GS_FEATURES variable for that printer.
Q: How do I prevent users from using command line options?
My printer shall always use the same settings.
A: There are two different approaches to this problem:
- The file /usr/local/etc/apsfilter/QUEUE/restrictions can be used
to reset options to their default, e.g.
QUALITY=medium
MEDIA=plain
COLOR=full
PAPERSIZE=a4
unset DUPLEX
- Instead of using your normal driver, you can create a custom driver
script. First you have to install the correct driver for your printer, e.g.
pcl3/hpdj690c. Then you change the PRINTER=pcl3/hpdj690c
line in /usr/local/etc/apsfilter/QUEUE/apsfilterrc to
PRINTER=custom (or some other unused name). The last step is to
create a new driver script named
/usr/local/share/apsfilter/driver/custom which includes all your
variables like GS_FEATURES and RESOLUTION and their
desired values, plus a line PRINTER=pcl3/hpdj690c to ensure the
original driver name is used properly.
Q: Printing program listings etc. is dog slow.
A: If you use a2ps (the default), mpage or
enscript to print text files, these are converted to PostScript first.
For plain text printings you can use recode as the filter (either set
ASCII_FILTER=recode or use the "recode" command line
option). However, you lose all the spiffy features like borders, headers,
multiple pages per sheet and fake duplex mode.
Q: I want to print the source code of some PostScript,
HTML, Sketch, ... file, but all I get is the formatted output.
A: You have to tell apsfilter not to automagically
convert the file, but rather treat is as normal text; use the "ascii"
command line option.
Q: The page margins are not correct. / The printout is
shifted in one direction.
A: Although this is not actually an apsfilter
problem, here are some hints:
Q: Why are parts of the page missing on my PostScript
printer?
A: Pages in higher resolutions or with complex content need
plenty of RAM to be rendered. For some printers the standard amount of memory
which is built in just isn't enough. You can either put more RAM into your
printer or reduce the rendering resolution (to probably half the amount).
Using the special PSgs driver might help as well.
Q: When I print more than one file at a time, the headers
for text files are wrong; they still show the name of the first file!
A: This ever-annoying problem only occurs with BSD
spoolers which just don't give enough information about a print job to the
filter. The solution is to install LPRng, or print just one file at a
time, or disable headers completely.
Q: Why is my DVI file messed up? It should be in landscape
mode, but the right border is chopped off!
A: The problem is that dvips doesn't know if the file is in
landscape mode or not. You have to explicitly use the "landscape"
command line option.
The first and most important link is of course the Apsfilter Homepage
at http://www.apsfilter.org/. This is
the definite source of information about apsfilter, most prominently
the download section.
To keep up with the latest apsfilter changes, you can use the
anonymous CVS server as described on the
support page or
browse the repository.
Here's an alphabetical list of software packages known to and supported by
apsfilter:
- a2ps
- http://www.inf.enst.fr/~demaille/a2ps/
- acroread
- http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/readermain.html
- ar (part of binutils)
- http://sourceware.cygnus.com/binutils/
- bzip2
- http://www.muraroa.demon.co.uk/
- cabextract
- http://www.kyz.uklinux.net/cabextract.php3
- convert (part of ImageMagick)
- http://www.imagemagick.org/
- cpio
- http://www.gnu.org/software/cpio/
- dvips (part of teTeX)
- http://www.tug.org/teTeX/
- enscript
- http://www.ngs.fi/mtr/genscript/index.html
- Epson printer drivers
- http://www.epkowa.co.jp/english/linux_e/pips_e.html ("pips")
http://www.epkowa.co.jp/english/linux_e/lpd_e.html (laser printers)
- fig2dev (part of transfig)
- http://www.xfig.org/
- file
- ftp://ftp.astron.com/pub/file/
- freeze
- ftp://ftp.std.com/src/util/freeze2.5/
- ghostscript
- http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~ghost/ (homepage)
http://ghostscript.sourceforge.net/ (project page)
http://www.ghostscript.com/ (commercial site)
- gimp-print (a.k.a. stp)
- http://gimp-print.sourceforge.net/
- groff
- http://www.gnu.org/software/groff/
- gzip
- http://www.gnu.org/software/gzip/gzip.html
- HP inkjet drivers (official)
- http://hpinkjet.sourceforge.net/
- hpdj
- http://home.t-online.de/home/Martin.Lottermoser/pcl3dist/
- html2ps
- http://www.tdb.uu.se/~jan/html2ps.html
- htmldoc
- http://www.easysw.com/htmldoc/
- IBM Omni drivers
- http://oss.software.ibm.com/developer/opensource/linux/projects/omni/
- lha
- http://www2m.meshnet.or.jp/~dolphin/lha/lha-unix.htm
- lpd (BSD-style)
- http://sourceforge.net/projects/lpr/
- LPRng
- http://www.lprng.com/
- lzop
- http://wildsau.idv.uni-linz.ac.at/mfx/lzop.html
- mktemp
- http://www.courtesan.com/mktemp/
- mpage
- http://www.mesa.nl/pub/mpage/
- nconvert (part of XnView)
- http://www.xnview.com/
- ncprint (part of ncplib)
- http://rbp.chat.ru/ncplen.html
- netpbm tools (a.k.a. pbmplus)
- http://sourceforge.net/projects/netpbm/
- nprint (part of ncpfs)
- ftp://ftp.platan.vc.cvut.cz/pub/linux/ncpfs/
- pap (part of netatalk)
- http://www.umich.edu/~rsug/netatalk/
- pcdtoppm (part of xpcd)
- http://bytesex.org/xpcd.html
- pcl3
- http://home.t-online.de/home/Martin.Lottermoser/pcl3.html
- pdftops (part of xpdf)
- http://www.foolabs.com/xpdf/
- pnm2ppa
- http://sourceforge.net/projects/pnm2ppa/
- psutils
- http://www.dcs.ed.ac.uk/home/ajcd/psutils/
- rar, unrar
- http://www.rarsoft.com/
- recode
- http://www.iro.umontreal.ca/contrib/recode/HTML/
- rpm
- http://www.rpm.org/
- sendmail
- http://www.sendmail.org/
- sk2ps (part of sketch)
- http://sketch.sourceforge.net/
- smbclient (part of samba)
- http://www.samba.org/
- tar
- http://www.gnu.org/software/tar/tar.html
- tgif
- http://bourbon.cs.umd.edu:8001/tgif/
- wmf2eps (part of libwmf)
- http://www.wvware.com/libwmf.html
- unarj
- http://testcase.newmail.ru/
- unzip
- http://www.info-zip.org/UnZip.html
Other driver packages that can be made to work with apsfilter include:
- turboprint
- http://www.turboprint.de/
- xw-tools
- http://xwtools.automatix.de/
A good overview of printers, drivers and printing systems can be found on
http://www.linuxprinting.org/.
Don't be misled by the name, most of the information is valid on any
UNIX-like system.
The Linux Printing HOWTO at
http://www.linuxprinting.org/howto/
is a must read for all Linux administrators (and probably others as well) --
preferably before you try to set up your printer.
Users might also profit from the Linux Printing Usage HOWTO at
http://www.linuxdoc.org/HOWTO/Printing-Usage-HOWTO.html.
Even if you don't want to use LPRng (which is hard to believe), the
LPRng-HOWTO at
http://www.lprng.com/LPRng-HOWTO.html
is a rich source of everything related to printer daemons, protocols, filters
and stuff.
That's not what you wanted to read, is it? Anyway, we are in a constant need of
bug reports, new ideas, suggestions -- but also "real value" support
in form of hardware or software donations, job offerings or just pure hard
ca$h.
The easiest way to contribute to apsfilter is probably to improve the
driver scripts, especially the one(s) for your printer(s). Have a look at
/usr/local/share/apsfilter/driver/README for more information.
If your preferred driver does not have a script yet, you'd really help us
if you'd try to write and test one -- it isn't too difficult. Maybe the driver
is already mapped to some other script (with basically the same settings) via
/usr/local/share/apsfilter/driver/MAPPING, but you can simply create
an appropriately named script; this will override the MAPPING entry.
The first step to solve any apsfilter problems is to make sure it
actually is not some kind of other defect on your system (hardware, spooler
software, cables, ...). If you are absolutely sure that your problem is not
already covered in the FAQ or in other parts of this
documentation, read on.
There's also a mailing-lists
archive which you can browse and search. Maybe your problem has already
been solved, or even classified as a feature ;)
To prepare a bug report, it's absolutely necessary to create a log of the
failed printing attempt (unless you have problems that occur before even
having a chance to print). You can (and should) use the aps2file tool
with the "-D" option. It is a good idea to use the same printer queue
and command line options as before when the printing attempt failed. You can
pass the options to apsfilter via aps2file by using the
"-P" and "-Z" switches.
The log will be created on stderr, so you might want to redirect it
to a file by appending 2>log.txt. You can see a detailed trace of
what apsfilter tried to do; if that doesn't help you, just save the
file for inclusion into the bug report. If you can, please use bash
as your shell, since the log will be much more verbose.
Since many bug reports we received were not exactly helpful, we now supply a
script that generates a half-automatic bug report which you just have to fill
out. Call apsfilter-bug on the command line and your favourite editor
should present you the template text.
The first thing you should edit is the From: field; please enter your
correct e-mail address there. Do not change the To:
field line, unless you positively know better.
Then just read the comments and fill in any information requested there.
All lines starting with a # character are comments and will be removed
automatically before the bug report is sent.
When you're done, save the text under its original name and exit the editor.
Exiting without saving will cause the bug report to be discarded.
We hope that we can help you!
If you need general help with apsfilter (i.e. if it's not even
possible to produce a bug report), there are some more mailing-lists available:
There are also two read-only public mailing-lists:
- <apsfilter-announce@apsfilter.org>: release announcements
- <apsfilter-cvs@apsfilter.org>: commit messages for CVS repository
The lists are controlled by majordomo; to get more information, send
an email to
<majordomo@apsfilter.org>
with the body help.
To subscribe to a mailing-list, send an email to
<majordomo@apsfilter.org>
with the body subscribe apsfilter-xyz.
To unsubscribe, send an email to
<majordomo@apsfilter.org>
with the body unsubscribe apsfilter-xyz.
You have reached the official end of the apsfilter handbook.
It is now safe to switch off your computer.
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