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CUPS is a standards-based, open-source printing system used by Apple's Mac OS® and other UNIX®-like operating systems, especially also Linux. CUPS uses the Internet Printing Protocol ("IPP") and provides System V and Berkeley command-line interfaces, a web interface, and a C API to manage printers and print jobs.
This package contains backends, filters, and other software that was once part of the core CUPS distribution, but during the time when CUPS was developed at Apple, Apple stopped maintaining these parts as they were not needed by Mac OS.
In addition it contains more filters and software developed independently of Apple, especially filters for the PDF-centric printing workflow introduced by OpenPrinting.
Since CUPS 1.6.0 cups-filters is required for using printer drivers (and also driverless printing) with CUPS under Linux. This version of cups-filters is only for CUPS 2.2.2 or newer. Please use the cups-filters 1.x line for older CUPS versions.
CUPS 3.x has a vastly changed architecture (what we call the New Architecture for printing) being all-IPP, only supporting driverless IPP printers and no PPD files and classic CUPS drivers any more. It will not use external filters any more and so will not need this package. This package retro-fits the filter functions of libcupsfilters and libppd to CUPS 2.x.
For compiling and using this package CUPS (2.2.2 or newer), libcupsfilters 2.x, and libppd are needed. It is highly recommended, especially if non-PDF printers are used, to have at least one of Ghostscript (preferred), Poppler, or MuPDF installed.
It also needs gcc (C compiler), automake, autoconf, autopoint, and libtool. On Debian, Ubuntu, and distributions derived from them you could also install the "build-essential" package to auto-install most of these packages.
If Ghostscript is used (via the "gsto..." or the "universal" CUPS filters), Ghostscript 10.00.0 is required (10.01.0 is highly recommended) and it has to be built at least with the "pdfwrite", "ps2write", "cups", "pwgraster", "appleraster", "pclm", "pclm8", "pdfimage24", "pdfimage8", "pxlcolor", and "pxlmono" output devices. libcups of CUPS 2.2.2 or newer is required to build Ghostscript this way.
If you use MuPDF as PDF renderer make sure to use at least version 1.15, as the older versions have bugs and so some files get not printed correctly.
CUPS, this package, and Ghostscript contain some rudimentary printer drivers and especially the filters needed for driverless printing (currently PWG Raster, Apple Raster, PCLm, and PDF output formats, for printers supporting IPP Everywhere, AirPrint, Wi-Fi Direct, and other standards). See the links to the Printer Applications below and also http://www.openprinting.org/drivers/ for a comprehensive set of printer drivers for Linux.
Report bugs to
https://github.com/OpenPrinting/cups-filters/issues
See the "COPYING", "LICENCE", and "NOTICE" files for legal information. The license is the same as for CUPS, for a maximum of compatibility.
Most of this is still valid for the current version of cups-filters.
Compared to the PostScript-based original CUPS filters there is a change of defaults: The imagetopdf and imagetoraster filters print in "print-scaling=fit" or "scale-to-fit" mode (image is scaled to fill one page but nothing of the image being cut off) by default.
This is done to support photo printing via AirPrint. The photo apps on Apple's iOS devices send print jobs as JPEG images and do not allow to set any options like "print-scaling" or the page size. With "scale-to-fit" mode set by default, the iOS photos come out on one page, as expected.
To get back to the old behavior, supply one of the options "print-scaling=none", "nofitplot", "filplot=Off", "nofit-to-page", or "fit-to-page=Off".
When Ghostscript is rendering PostScript or PDF files into a raster format the filled paths are ususally rendered with the any-part-of-pixel method as it is PostScript standard. On low-resolution printers, like label printers with 203 dpi, graphics output can get inaccurate and so for example bar codes do not work any more. This problem can be solved by letting Ghostscript use the center-of-pixel method.
This can be done by either supplying the option "-o center-of-pixel" or "-o CenterOfPixel" on the command line when printing or by adding a "CenterOfPixel" option to the PPD file and set it to "true", for example by adding the following lines to the PPD file of the print queue (usually in /etc/cups/ppd/):
*OpenUI *CenterOfPixel/Center Of Pixel: PickOne
*OrderDependency: 20 AnySetup *CenterOfPixel
*DefaultCenterOfPixel: true
*CenterOfPixel true/true: ""
*CenterOfPixel false/false: ""
*CloseUI: *CenterOfPixel
This option can be used when the print queue uses the gstoraster filter.
If you use CUPS with this package and a PostScript printer then the included pdftops filter converts the print job data which is in PDF format into PostScript. By default, the PostScript is generated with Ghostscript's "ps2write" output device, which generates a DSC-conforming PostScript with compressed embedded fonts and compressed page content. This is resource-saving and leads to fast wire transfer of print jobs to the printer.
Unfortunately, Ghostscript's PostScript output is not compatible with some printers due to interpreter bugs in the printer and in addition, processing (by Ghostscript or by the printer's interpreter) can get very slow with high printing resolutions when parts of the incoming PDF file are converted to bitmaps if they contain graphical structures which are not supported by PostScript. The bitmap problem especially occurs on input files with transparency, especially also the ones produced by Cairo (evince and many other GNOME/GTK applications) which unnecessarily introduces transparency even if the input PDF has no transparency.
Therefore there are two possibilities to configure pdftops at runtime:
- Selection of the renderer: Ghostscript, Poppler, pdftocairo, Adobe Reader, or MuPDF
Ghostscript has better color management and is generally optimized more for printing. Poppler produces a PostScript which is compatible with more buggy built-in PostScript interpreters of printers and it leads to a somewhat quicker workflow when graphical structures of the input PDF has to be turned into bitmaps. Adobe Reader is the PDF renderer from Adobe, the ones who created PDF and PostScript. pdftocairo is a good choice for the PDF output of Cairo (for example when printing from evince). It is less resource-consuming when rasterizing graphical elements which cannot be represented in PostScript (like transparency). Note that pdftocairo only supports PDF input using DeviceRGB, DeviceGray, RGB or sGray and is not capable of generating PostScript level 1. So its support is only experimental and distributions should not choose it as default.
The selection is done by the "pdftops-renderer" option, setting it to "gs", "pdftops", "pdftocairo", "acroread", "mupdf", or "hybrid":
Per-job: lpr -o pdftops-renderer=pdftops ... Per-queue default: lpadmin -p printer -o pdftops-renderer-default=gs Remove default: lpadmin -p printer -R pdftops-renderer-default
By default, pdftops uses Ghostscript if this does not get changed at compile time, for example by the Linux distribution vendor.
Hybrid means Ghostscript for most printers, but Poppler's pdftops for Brother, Minolta, and Konica Minolta. Printer make and model information comes from the PPD or via the "make-and-model" option.
- Limitation of the image rendering resolution
If graphical structures of the incoming PDF file have to be converted to bitmaps due to limitations of PostScript, the conversion of the file by pdftops or the rendering by the printer can get too slow if the bitmap resolution is too high or the printout quality can degrade if the bitmap resolution is too low.
By default, pdftops tries to find out the actual printing resolution and sets the resolution for bitmap generation to the same value. If it cannot find the printing resolution, it uses 300 dpi. It never goes higher than a limit of 1440 dpi. Note that this default limit can get changed at compile time, for example by the Linux distribution vendor.
The resolution limit for bitmaps can be changed to a lower or higher value, or be set to unlimited. This is done by the option "pdftops-max-image-resolution", setting it to the desired value (in dpi) or to zero for unlimited. It can be used per-job or as per-queue default as the "pdftops-renderer" option described above.
The "pdftops-max-image-resolution" option is ignored when Adobe Reader is selected as PDF renderer.
POSTSCRIPT PRINTING DEBUG MODE
Sometimes a PostScript printer's interpreter errors, crashes, or somehow else misbehaves on Ghostscript's output. To find workarounds (currently we have already workarounds for Brother and Kyocera) it is much easier to work with uncompressed PostScript. To get uncompressed PostScript as output, send a job with the "psdebug" option, with commands like the following:
lpr -P <printer> -o psdebug <file>
lp -d <printer> -o psdebug <file>
If you want to send your job out of a desktop application, run
lpoptions -p <printer> -o psdebug
to make "psdebug" a personal default setting for you.
To extract the PostScript output for a developer to analyse it, clone your print queue to a one which prints into a file:
cupsctl FileDevice=yes
lpadmin -p test -E -v file:/tmp/printout \
-P /etc/cups/ppd/<name of original queue>.ppd
and print into this queue as described above. The PostScript output is in /tmp/printout after the job has completed.
This option does not change anything if Poppler's pdftops is used as renderer.
Here is documentation from the former CUPS add-on tarball with the filters for the PDF-based printing workflow: imagetopdf, texttopdf, pdftopdf, and pdftoraster
The original filters are from http://sourceforge.jp/projects/opfc/
NOTE: the texttops filter shipping with this package is a simple wrapper script for backward compatibility with third-party PPD files and custom configurations. It is not referred to in the cupsfilters.convs file and therefore not used by the default configuration. Direct conversion of text to PostScript is deprecated in the PDF-based printing workflow. So do not use this filter when creating new PPD files or custom configurations. The parameters for this filter are the same as for texttopdf (see below) as the texttops filter calls the texttopdf filter plus Ghostscript's pdf2ps.
- INTRODUCTION
This program is "imagetopdf". "imagetopdf" is a CUPS filter which reads a single image file, converts it into a PDF file and outputs it to stdout.
This program accepts the following image file format;
gif, png, jpeg, tiff, photocd, portable-anymap, portable-bitmap,
portable-graymap, portable-pixmap, sgi-rgb, sun-raster, xbitmap,
xpixmap, xwindowdump
xbitmap, xpixmap and xwindowdump images are converted into png images by the "convert" command. Other kinds of image file format can be supported if the "convert" command support them.
Output PDF file format conforms to PDF version 1.3 specification, and input image is converted and contained in the output PDF file as a binary format non-compression image.
"imagetopdf" may outputs multiple pages if the input image exceeds page printable area.
- COMMAND LINE
"imagetopdf" is a CUPS filter, and the command line arguments, environment variables and configuration files are in accordance with the CUPS filter interface.
imagetopdf <job> <user> <title> <num-copies> <options> [<filename>]
"imagetopdf" ignores and .
<title> is appended into the PDF dictionary as /Title. specifies the number of document copies. is a CUPS option list. is an input image file name.When omit the , "imagetopdf" reads an image file from stdin.
- ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
This program refers the following environment variable;
PPD: PPD file name of the printer.
- COMMAND OPTIONS
"imagetopdf" accepts the following CUPS standard options;
fitplot
mirror
PageSize
page-left, page-right, page-bottom, page-top
OutputOrder
Collate
sides
cupsEvenDuplex
position
scaling
ppi
natural-scaling
landscape
orientation-requested
See the CUPS documents for details of these options.
- KNOWN PROBLEMS
Problem: PBM and SUN raster images can not be printed. Solution: Due to the CUPS libcupsimage library's bug. Update the CUPS on your system.
- INFORMATION FOR DEVELOPERS
Following information is for developers, not for driver users.
6.1 Options handled by a printer or "imagetopdf"
Following options are handled by a printer or "imagetopdf":
Collate, Copies, Duplex, OutputOrder
Which handles these options depends on following options and attributes:
Collate, Copies, Duplex, OutputOrder, cupsEvenDuplex, cupsManualCopies
"imagetopdf" judges whether a printer can handle these options according to the followings option settings in a PPD file.
Collate:
If Collate is defined, "imagetopdf" judges the printer supports Collate.
Copies:
If cupsManualCopies is defined as True, "imagetopdf" judges the printer
does not support Copies feature.
  Duplex: If Duplex is defined, "imagetopdf" judges the printer supports Duplex. If cupsEvenDuplex is True, Number of pages must be even. OutputOrder: If OutputOrder is defined, "imagetopdf" judges the printer supports OutputOrder.
If the printer cannot handle these options, "imagetopdf" handles it.
Following pseudo program describes how "imagetopdf" judges to handle these options.
Variables
Copies: specified Copies Duplex: specified Duplex Collate: specified Collate OutputOrder: specified OutputOrder EvenDuplex: specified cupsEvenDuplex pages: number of pages number_up: specified number-up
device_copies: Copies passed to the printer device_duplex: Duplex passed to the printer device_collate: Collate passed to the printer device_outputorder: OutputOrder passed to the printer
soft_copies: copies by imagetopdf
device_copies = 1;
device_duplex = False;
device_collate = False;
device_outputorder = False;
if (Copies == 1) {
/* Collate is not needed. */
Collate = False;
}
if (!Duplex) {
/* EvenDuplex is not needed */
EvenDuplex = False;
}
if (Copies > 1 && the printer can handle Copies) device_copies = Copies;
if (Duplex && the printer can handle Duplex) {
device_duplex = True;
} else {
/* imagetopdf cannot handle Duplex */
}
if (Collate && the printer can handle Collate) device_collate = True;
if (OutputOrder == Reverse && the printer can handle OutputOrder)
device_outputorder = True;
if (Collate && !device_collate) {
/* The printer cannot handle Collate.
So imagetopdf handle Copies */
device_copies = 1;
}
if (device_copies != Copies /* imagetopdf handle Copies */ && Duplex)
/* Make imagetopdf handle Collate, otherwise both paper side may have
same page */
Collate = True;
device_collate = False;
}
if (Duplex && Collate && !device_collate) {
/* Handle EvenDuplex, otherwise the last page has
the next copy's first page in the other side of the paper. */
EvenDuplex = True;
}
if (Duplex && OutputOrder == Reverse && !device_outputorder) {
/* Handle EvenDuplex, otherwise the first page's other side of paper
is empty. */
EvenDuplex = True;
}
soft_copies = device_copies > 1 ? 1 : Copies;
6.2 JCL
When you print PDF files to a PostScript(PS) printer, you can specify device options in PS. In this case, you can write PS commands in a PPD file like as follows.
*OpenUI *Resolution/Resolution : PickOne
*DefaultResolution: 600
*Resolution 300/300 dpi: "<</HWResolution[300 300]>>setpagedevice"
*Resolution 600/600 dpi: "<</HWResolution[600 600]>>setpagedevice"
*CloseUI: *Resolution
However, if options cannot be described in PS file, you can write JCLs as follows;
*JCLOpenUI *JCLFrameBufferSize/Frame Buffer Size: PickOne
*DefaultJCLFrameBufferSize: Letter
*OrderDependency: 20 JCLSetup *JCLFrameBufferSize
*JCLFrameBufferSize Off: '@PJL SET PAGEPROTECT = OFF<0A>'
*JCLFrameBufferSize Letter: '@PJL SET PAGEPROTECT = LTR<0A>'
*JCLFrameBufferSize Legal: '@PJL SET PAGEPROTECT = LGL<0A>'
*JCLCloseUI: *JCLFrameBufferSize
Because PDF cannot specify device options in a PDF file, you have to define all the device options as JCLs.
When a printer does not support PS or PDF, you can use Ghostscript (GS). In this case, you can specify device options like a PS printer. If you want to use the same printer and same PPD file for both PDF and PS printing, when you print a PS file, you can specify that GS handles it, and when you print a PDF file, you can also specify that PDF filters handle it in the same PPD file. However in this case, previous methods is not appropriate to specify device options.
So, "imagetopdf" handles this case as follows; (In following pseudo program, JCL option is an option specified with JCLOpenUI)
if (Both JCLBegin and JCLToPSInterpreter are specified in the PPD file) {
output JCLs that marked JCL options.
}
if (pdftopdfJCLBegin attribute is specified in the PPD file) {
output it's value
}
if (Copies option is specified in the PPD file) {
mark Number of copies specified
} else if (pdftopdfJCLCopies is specified in the PPD file) {
output JCL specified with JCLCopies
}
for (each marked options) {
if (pdftopdfJCL<marked option's name> is specified in the PPD file) {
output it's value as a JCL
} else if (pdftopdfJCLBegin attributes is specified in the PPD file) {
output "<option's name>=<marked choice>;" as a JCL
}
}
output NEWLINE
Thus, if you want to use both PDF filters and GS by single PPD file, what you should do is to add the following line in the PPD file;
*pdftopdfJCLBegin: "pdfto... jobInfo:"
Replace "pdfto..." by the name of the actual filter to be called after pdftopdf.
Note: If you specify JCLBegin, you have to specify JCLToPSInterpreter as well.
Note: When you need to specify the value which is different from the choosen value based on the PPD into the jobInfo, you have to specify the values with the key started by "pdftopdfJCL" string.
For example, if the page size is defined in a PPD file as following;
*OpenUI *PageSize/Page Size: PickOne
*DefaultPageSize: A4
*PageSize A4/A4:
*PageSize Letter/US Letter:
*CloseUI: *PageSize
if you choose the page size "Letter", the string "PageSize=Letter;" is added to jobInfo. On the other hand, if the driver requires the different value for the "Letter" size, for instance driver requires "PS=LT;" instead of "PageSize=Letter;" as the jobInfo value, the PPD file has to be defined as following;
*OpenUI *PageSize/Page Size: PickOne
*DefaultPageSize: A4
*PageSize A4/A4:
*pdftopdfJCLPageSize A4/A4: "PS=A4;"
*PageSize Letter/US Letter:
*pdftopdfJCLPageSize Letter/US Letter: "PS=LT;"
*CloseUI: *PageSize
6.3 Temporally files location
"imagetopdf" creates temporally files if needed. Temporary files are created in the location specified by TMPDIR environment variable. Default location is "/tmp".
The pdftopdf filter depends on libqpdf to read and write PDF files.
It replaces and imitates the pstops filter in the PDF-based workflow. A similar filter (which can serve as behavior reference) is called "cgpdftopdf" in OS X (not open source).
pdftopdf follows the usual CUPS filter calling conventions, i.e.
pdftopdf <job> <user> <title> <num-copies> <options> [<filename>]
together with the environment variables "PPD" and "CLASSIFICATION".
When omitting , "pdftopdf" reads a PDF file from stdin. Internally this will write the data to a temporary file, because the PDF format cannot be processed in a streaming fashion.
are delimited by space; boolean type CUPS options can be set by only adding the option key, other types are provided as pairs of key and value, =.
pdftopdf processes the following standard command-line and/or PPD options:
Copies # ppd will only override, when commandline parameter was 1
fitplot / fit-to-page / ipp-attribute-fidelity
landscape / orientation-requested
PageSize / page-size / MediaSize / media-size
page-left / page-right / page-bottom / page-top
media-top-margin / media-left-margin / media-right-margin /
media-bottom-margin
Duplex / JCLDuplex / EFDuplex / JD03Duplex / sides
number-up / number-up-layout
page-border
OutputOrder / OutputBin / DefaultOutputOrder / page-delivery
page-label
page-set
page-ranges
MirrorPrint / mirror
emit-jcl
position
Collate / multiple-document-handling / sheet-collate
cupsEvenDuplex
cupsManualCopies # via ppd
Additional (non-standard) options
-
Booklet printing
booklet=Off/On/Shuffle-Only
"On" also tries to set DuplexTumble (two-sided-short-edge) and forces number-up=2
booklet-signature=(multiple of 4, or default: -1 to use "all pages")
- Page autorotate
pdftopdf automatically rotates pages to the same orientation, instead of (e.g. fitplot) scaling them down unrotated. This behavier can be controlled by
pdfAutorotate / nopdfAutorotate
Specifically, if a PDF file contains pages with page width greater than page height (a landscape page), such pages are automatically rotated anticlockwise by 90 degrees, unless the PPD file specifies "*LandscapeOrientation: Minus90". In this case, clockwise rotation is used. To turn off the feature on a job-by-job basis use
lp -d <print_queue_name> -o nopdfAutorotate <document>
On a per-queue basis use
-o nopdfAutorotate-default
as an option to lpadmin.
When the 'landscape' or 'orientation-requested=4' (or =5) option of CUPS is given, the pdfAutorotate processing will adjust and accordingly rotate the non-landscape pages are rotated instead.
Note: Some pages might end up 180 degree rotated (instead of 0 degree). Those should probably be rotated manually before binding the pages together.
- Method of flattening interactive PDF forms and annotations.
Some PDF files (like application forms) contain interactive forms which the user can fill in inside a PDF viewer like evince. The filled in data is not integrated in each page of the PDF file but stored in an extra layer. Due to this the data gets lost when applying manipulations like scaling or N-up to the pages. To prevent the loss of the data pdftopdf flattens the form before doing the manipulations. This means the PDF will be converted into a static PDF file with the data being integral part of the pages.
The same flattening is needed for annotations in PDF files.
By default the actual flattening work is done by QPDF, as QPDF is also doing everything else in pdftopdf. This way no external utilities need to be called and so extra piping between processes and extra PDF interpreter runs are avoided which makes the filtering process faster.
As we did not test the new QPDF-based form-flattening with thousands of PDF files yet and it has not been available to actual users yet it is possible that there are still some bugs. To give users a possibility to work around possible bugs in QPDF's form flattening, we have introduced an option to get back to the old flattening by the external tools pdftocairo or Ghostscript.
The selection of the method is done by the "pdftopdf-form-flattening" option, setting it to "auto", "qpdf", "pdftocairo", "ghostscript", "gs", "internal" or "external":
Per-job: lpr -o pdftopdf-form-flattening=pdftocairo ... Per-queue default: lpadmin -p printer -o pdftopdf-form-flattening-default=gs Remove default: lpadmin -p printer -R pdftopdf-form-flattening-default
By default, pdftopdf uses QPDF if the option is not supplied, also the settings "auto" and "internal" make QPDF being used. "external" auto-selects from the two external utilities, trying pdftocairo at first and on failure Ghostscript. If the selected utility fails, the form stays unflattened and so the filled in data will possibly not get printed.
Note that for most modern native PDF printers JCL is not needed any more as they are controlled via IPP. For these the PPD files get auto-generated by the support of CUPS and cups-filters for driverless IPP printing.
pdftopdf will emit JCL when provided with a PPD file that includes the "*JCLToPDFInterpreter:" keyword.
This enables for hardware copy generation and device collate; e.g. with PJL:
*JCLBegin: "<1B>%-12345X@PJL JOB<0A>"
*JCLToPDFInterpreter: "@PJL ENTER LANGUAGE = PDF <0A>"
*JCLEnd: "<1B>%-12345X@PJL EOJ <0A><1B>%-12345X"
For each marked option, the prefixed "pdftopdfJCL" keywords can also be used to send raw JCL strings for that option. These keywords also include *pdftopdfJCLBegin and *pdftopdfJCLCopies, This allows the use of the same PPD for PDF- and PS-based workflows, as pdftopdfJCL... will not be read in the PS case.
When the PPD contains the "Copies" keyword, pdftopdf will detect the use of PJL and has special code which adds "@PJL SET COPIES=...", or "@PJL SET QTY=...", respectively.
Other JCL code can be injected via "*JCLOpenUI: ..." ... "*JCLCloseUI: ...".
pdftopdf adds comments to the pdf preamble that might esp. be of use to subsequent filters, e.g.
% This file was generated by pdftopdf %%PDFTOPDFNumCopies : 1 %%PDFTOPDFCollate : false
The "NumCopies" and "Collate" values refer to the expected device/hardware copies, i.e. when pdftopdf's soft-copy generation did not handle this options.
pdftopdf does not support functions that are not related to printing features, including interactive features and document interchange features. Many of these operators and sections are just ignored. Some of these may be output, but those functions are not assured.
-
Borders, esp. in the "number-up=1 fitplot=false"-case might be drawn at incorrect locations.
-
JCL documentation is sparse. The imagetopdf or old pdftopdf documentation contains a tad more information.
-
Missing AcroForm-content might surprise users printing PDF files directly / from the command-line (see the Limitations section, above).
This implements a texttopdf filter, and is derived from cups' texttops.
-
texttopdf uses CUPS_DATADIR/charset/pdf.utf-8 for font configuration (when utf-8 was requested as charset). The font names given there are used as fontconfig selectors; the best matching font, that is both monospaced and in a supported format (TTC, TTF or OTF) will then be used.
-
As a special exception, all fontnames that start with a '.' or '/' are considered filenames, and fontconfig is skipped; the name is used directly for loading the font file.
-
Implementation note: TrueType Collections (.TTC) are internally handled by appending '/' and the index of the font inside the collection to the filename (e.g. to use the second font of uming.ttc, the filename uming.ttc/1 must be given to the fontembed-library). By appending the index-field returned from fontconfig, this is completely transparent to the user (but currently not widely tested).
-
You may look at the two examples: pdf.utf-8.simple and pdf.utf-8.heavy.
The filter is called just like any other cups filter. Have a look at test.sh for example.
-
Text extraction does not work (at least for pdftotext from xpdf) for the resulting pdfs.
-
OTF(CFF) embedding currently does not subset the fonts.
-
Text wrapping in pretty-printing mode does not respect double-wide characters (CJK), and thus produce wrong results (wrap too late) for lines where they occur. The fix is not trivial, since all the pretty-printing processing is done without knowledge of / prior to the font configuration (which is where single or double width code-ranges are specified).
-
The hebrew example in test5.pdf shows one of our limitations: Compose glyphs are not composed with the primary glyph but printed as separate glyphs.
Font embedding is handled by libfontembed in the cupsfilters/fontembed subdirectory.
Please report all bugs to
https://github.com/OpenPrinting/cups-filters/issues
"pdftoraster" is a filter for CUPS. It reads PDF files, convert it and output CUPS raster.
"pdftoraster" does not support functions that are not related to printing features, including interactive features and document interchange features. Many of these operators and sections are just ignored. Some of these may be output, but those functions are not assured. Encryption feature is not supported.
"pdftoraster" is a CUPS filter, and the command line arguments, environment variables and configuration files are in accordance with the CUPS filter interface.
pdftoraster <job> <user> <title> <num-copies> <options> [<filename>]
"pdftoraster" ignores and .
<title> is appended into the PDF dictionary as /Title. specifies the number of document copies. is a CUPS option list. is an input PDF file name.When omit the , "pdftoraster" reads a PDF file from the stdin, and save it as a temporary file.
This program refers the following environment variable;
PPD: PPD file name of the printer.
See CUPS documents for details.
Following information is for developers, not for driver users.
"pdftopdf" outputs the following special comments from the 4th line in the created PDF data.
%%PDFTOPDFNumCopies : <copies> --- <copies> specified Number of Copies
%%PDFTOPDFCollate : <collate> --- <collate> is true or false
"pdftoraster" overrides the command line options by above two option's values.
"pdftoraster" creates temporally files if needed. Temporary files are created in the location specified by TMPDIR environment variable. Default location is "/tmp".
"pclmtoraster" is a filter for pclm and raster-only pdf files. It reads the raster graphics from each page using the QPDF API and converts it to CUPS/PWG Raster. This filter supports all PCLm files. PDF files with single page bitmap for each page and one of the following colorspaces with 8 Bits-per-component are supported DeviceGray, DeviceRGB and DeviceCMYK.
This program refers the following environment variable;
PPD: PPD file name of the printer.
Bi-Level output
print-color-mode=bi-level
Use "bi-level" color mode to apply threshold dithering for 1 bit B/W outputs. By default, ordered dithering is used.
For other options, see CUPS documents for more details.
Following information is for developers, not for filter users.
"pclmtoraster" creates temporary files if needed. Temporary files are created in the location specified by TMPDIR environment variable. Default location is "/tmp".
This is a special filter for text-only printers (e. g. line printers, daisy-wheel printers, POS printers, ...) or for using printers in their text mode (e. g. dot-matrix printers or otherwise unsupported printers). It takes plain text (UTF-8-encoded as this is standard with CUPS) and not PDF as input.
The texttotext filter replaces the former textonly filter.
It is for the following use cases:
-
Using text-only printers, like line printers or daisy-wheel printers. Note that only text can get printed in the way the printer is designed. No support for graphics printing tricks like ASCII art or printing pixels with the period character.
-
Fast and less resource-consuming text printing with dot-matrix printers using the printer's text mode instead of converting the text to PDF and printing the PDF in the printer's graphics mode, which is slow, loud, and consumes much more ink.
-
POS printing. POS printers often print only text on roll paper. This filter has a non-paginated mode which prints continuously, ignoring page height definitions.
The filter has the following features:
-
Conversion of UTF-8 to most printer's encodings.
-
To each page size a number of lines and columns is assigned, after that you only need to select the size of the paper in use.
-
At end of page you can optionally send a Form Feed or let the filter fill up the rest of the page with blank lines.
-
New lines can be initiated by Line Feed, Carriage Return, or both.
-
Adjustable margins.
-
Adjustable width for tab stops.
-
Pagination can be turned off for roll paper or continuous printing in general.
-
Wrapping or truncation of long lines
-
Support for most of CUPS' page management options (only with pagination turned on): page-ranges, page-set, output-order, collate, multiple copies.
Setting up the printer
In the printer setup tool select the "Generic Text-Only Printer" (with lpadmin use "-m drv:///cupsfilters.drv/textonly.ppd"), then under the "Installable Options" adjust the following:
-
Which page sizes to use and how many lines and columns the printer is capable to print on them. The default setting for lines and columns assume 6 lines per inch and 10 columns per inch.
-
Whether to send a Form Feed character after each page. Sending a Form Feed is highly recommended to get the content of each page exactly onto the desired sheet. If the printer does not support Form Feed characters, turn them off and make sure that you have adjusted the correct number of lines for each page size, as the printer is advancing pages by filling up the rest of the paper with blank lines.
-
How the printer advancs to a new line. Most printers require both Crriage Return and Line Feed (the DOS/Windows standard), but some would also work with either Carriage Return or Line Feed.
-
The printer's encoding: Most text and dot-matrix printers (usually older devices) do not understand CUPS' standard encoding UTF-8 but instead, the use a simpler encoding (where each character is represented by one byte). ASCII should always work, but does not support letters with accents. So check the printer's manual what is supported. You cannot only use the encodings suggested by the PPD file, but any one-byte-per-character encoding which the "iconv" utility supports (see "iconv --list" for a list of encodings).
Also note that text-only and dot-matrix printers often have a DIP switch block which allows for some hardware configuration, like newline characters, length of page, input encoding, ...
Options of the texttotext filter:
To be usually used when sending a job:
PageSize: Paper format to be used. Make sure that the number of lines and columns printable on each paper size are correctly adjusted with the appropriate setup option. The page height is ignore when pagination is turned off. Possible values: Letter, Legal, Tabloid, Ledger, A4, A3, FanFoldGerman, FanFoldGermanLegal, 11x14Rotated, LegalRotated, Custom1, Custom2, Custom3
OverLongLines: What to do with lines longer that the width of the page: Truncate: Simply drop the extra characters; WrapAtWidth (default): Continue the line in the next line on the paper; WordWrap: As WrapAtWidth, but do not cut in the middle of a word.
TabWidth: Width of a tab stop. Can be any positive number.
Pagination: On: Text is divided in pages depending on the page size selection, with each page having the user-selected margins, recommended for sheet paper; Off: Text is printed continuously, ignoring page breaks and the height and upper and lower margins of the destination page size, recommended for roll paper, POS, long lists on continuous paper, ... Note that with pagination turned off, multiple copies, collate, page-ranges, page-set, and output-order are not supported and therefore ignored.
page-left, page-right, page-top, page-bottom: Width of the margins left blank, counted in lines or columns. Top and bottom margins are ignored when pagination is turned off. Can be any positive number or zero for no margin.
To be usually used when setting up the printer:
PrinterEncoding: The printer's character encoding (code page). Any encoding which the iconv utility can generate (see "iconv --list") and which uses only one byte per character can be used. This should support practically any printer which is capable of printing text. ASCII is the default setting. See the printer's manual for the correct encoding to use.
NewlineCharacters: The characters sent on the end of a line, LineFeed (LF), Crriage Return (CR), or both Carriage Return and Line Feed (CRLF). Default is CRLF as most printers require this.
SendFF: On: Send a Form Feed after each page, so that printer changes to the next sheet. Off: Do not send Form Feeds. To advance to the next page blank lines are printed to fill up the page (requires the number of limes for the selected page size correctly being set). When pagination is off, Form Feeds are never sent.
LetterAvailable, LegalAvailable, TabloidAvailable, LedgerAvailable, A4Available, A3Available, FanFoldGermanAvailable, FanFoldGermanLegalAvailable, 11x14RotatedAvailable, LegalRotatedAvailable, Custom1Available, Custom2Available, Custom3Available: On: Paper of this size is available; Off: This paper size is not available.
LetterNumLines, LegalNumLines, TabloidNumLines, LedgerNumLines, A4NumLines, A3NumLines, FanFoldGermanNumLines, FanFoldGermanLegalNumLines, 11x14RotatedNumLines, LegalRotatedNumLines, Custom1NumLines, Custom2NumLines, Custom3NumLines: Maximum number of text lines fitting on the paper size. Default value is selected assuming 6 lines per inch. Can be any positive number.
LetterNumColumns, LegalNumColumns, TabloidNumColumns, LedgerNumColumns, A4NumColumns, A3NumColumns, FanFoldGermanNumColumns, FanFoldGermanLegalNumColumns, 11x14RotatedNumColumns, LegalRotatedNumColumns, Custom1NumColumns, Custom2NumColumns, Custom3NumColumns: Maximum number of columns (characters) fitting on the paper size. Default value is selected assuming 10 characters per inch. Can be any positive number.
Standard CUPS options supported:
page-ranges, page set, output-order, collate
Note that these options and multiple copies are ignored when pagination is turned off.
A wrapper for CUPS backends to make error handling more configurable
Usually, if a CUPS backend exits with an error status other than zero (for example if a printer is not turned on or not reachable on the network), CUPS disables the print queue and one can only print again if a system administrator re-enables the queue manually. Even restarting CUPS (or rebooting) does not re-enable disabled queues.
For system administrators this can get annoying, for newbie users who are not aware of this problem it looks like that CUPS is severely broken. They remove and re-install print queues, getting on the nerves of distro install support, people, or even switch back to a proprietary operating system.
Nowadays CUPS allows some configurability to avoid this, setting the Error Policy to "retry-job", but this does not allow to retry for infinitely many times and generally does not allow to change the number of repetitions. It is also not possible to simply drop the job without disabling the queue when CUPS gives up repeating the job.
This script makes the handling of such backend errors more configurable, so that the problem can easily be worked around. The new possibilities are:
-
Let queues simply not being disabled. Simple approach, but job gets lost.
-
Repeat a given number of times.
-
Repeat infinitely often, until the job gets finally through. This is the standard of LPRng, and it eliminates loss of the job.
-
The interval between two attempts to run the backend can also be configured.
-
Configuration is done independently for each print queue. So local printers and network printers can be treated differently.
Usage:
Activate "beh" for your print queue(s) with command(s) like this:
lpadmin -p <queue name> -E -v beh:/<dd>/<att>/<delay>/<originaluri>
with
<queue name>: The name of your print queue
<dd>: Don't Disable, if "1", beh always exits with zero
status, so the queue gets never disabled when the
original backend exits with an error. "0" carries
the error status of the last call of the backend
(after <att> retries) on to CUPS, so the queue
usually gets disabled.
<att>: Attempts, number of attempts to recall the backend
in case of an error. "0" means infinite retries. In
this case <dd> gets meaningless.
<delay>: Delay between two attempts to call the beckend, to
be given in seconds and as an integer number.
Meaningless if <att> is one.
<originaluri>: The original URI, which your queue had before. Can
be determined with "lpstat -v".
All parameters, especially,
beh works with every backend except the "hp" backend of HPLIP, as the "hp" backend repeats failed jobs by itself.
Example URIs:
beh:/1/3/5/socket://printer:9100
On the network printer with host name "printer" it is tried to
access 3 times with 5 second delays between the attempts. If the job
still fails, the queue is not disabled (and the job discarded).
beh:/0/10/60/socket://printer:9100
Retry 10 times in one minute intervals, disable the queue when still
not succeeding.
beh:/1/0/60/usb://Brother/HL-5040%20series
On a Brother HL-5040 on the USB try infinitely often until the
printer comes back, in intervals of one minute. This way the job
does not get lost when the printer is turned off and one can
intendedly delay printing by simply switching off the printer. The
ideal configuration for desktop printers and/or home users.
Originally this backend was written in Perl and part of the foomatic-filters package. It was not overtaken into cups-filters together with foomatic-rip to avoid the introduction of a dependency on Perl. Now it has been re-written in C and so it can be part of cups-filters without introducing new dependencies.