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OpenPrinting/pappl-retrofit

PPD/Classic CUPS driver retro-fit Printer Application Library

INTRODUCTION

This library together with PAPPL, libcupsfilters 2.x, and libppd allows to convert classic CUPS printer drivers into Printer Applications. This way the printer appears as an emulated IPP printer and one can print on it from practically any operating system, especially also mobile operating systems and IoT platforms, without need of any client-side driver.

It also makes printers needing a classic CUPS driver available to the CUPS Snap and to CUPS 3.x (library, local server, sharing server) which do not support installing and using classic CUPS drivers.

The basic framework for making up a Printer Application comes from PAPPL, many resources to cope with PPD files, CUPS filters, job data format conversions, and even CUPS backends are provided by libcupsfilters, libppd, and cups-filters.

With this library a Printer Application is simply made up by defining a configuration of basic properties and data conversion rules, and also add some own functions for auto-assignment of drivers, test page, ... in a small C program stub, and packaging this together with the PPD files, CUPS filters, and CUPS backend out of which the classic CUPS filter is composed. The resulting Printer Application can also be easily packaged in a Snap to be available for a wide range of Linux distributions.

Your contributions are welcome. Please post issues and pull requests.

Properties

  • A classic CUPS printer driver consists of PPD files, CUPS filters, and sometimes also CUPS backends. All this is supported by this library.

  • The PPD files can be provided in all forms which CUPS supports: Individual files, compressed files, tar archives, driver information files (.drv), executables which generate PPDs on-the-fly.

  • Even more complex filters and backends which use the side and back channel communication are supported.

  • All user-settable options of the PPD file are made available in the web interface of the Printer Application, under "Printing Defaults". All paper input trays are listed under "Media" and one can assign the loaded paper size and type, and also whether borderless printing should be done (if the printer supports it).

  • To be able to get best printing results from any client platform the PPD options are mapped to standard job IPP attributes, not only paper sizes, types, trays, duplex, but especially "print-color-mode" (color/monochrome), "print-quality" (draft/normal/high), and "print-content-optimize" (auto/photo/graphics/text/text&graphics) are auto-selecting the best possible PPD option settings, and that for ~10000 PPD files without any manually created database of option presets (no one will take the time for that).

  • If you want to get the last bits out of your printer and therefore want to override the automatic settings done by the standard job IPP attributes you can always move the option settings on the "Printing Defaults" web interface page away from "Automatic Selection" and get all the choices from the original PPD. Remember to go back to "Automatic Selection" when done with the special job.

  • If "print-content-optimize" is set to "auto" the job data is pre-checked for the content. Images (JPEG, PNG) are considered as photos, on PDF files it is determined by which application they were created and the content type selected by that.

  • Some printers have hardware accessories which can be installed, like extra trays, a duplex unit, finishers, or more RAM. If the PPD file describes these accessories and what extra settings get available by them, a "Device Settings" web interface page will appear in the Printer Application. There you can configure what is installed amd the options under "Media" and "Printing Defaults" get updated appropriately.

  • If the Printer is a PostScript printer and appropriate commands are defined in the PPD file, both option default settings and the configuration of installable accessories can be polled from the printer and the settings in the Printer Application get automatically adjusted. In this case you have a "Device Settings" web interface page for your printer and there are "Poll" buttons to do the polls.

  • With this library any arbitrary amount of PPD files included in a single Printer Application is supported, it even does not slow down with ~10000 PPDs. Naturally only PPDs work for which the appropriate CUPS filters are available. Only PostScript printer PPDs can alternatively be used without the CUPS filter specified in them (but most PostScript PPDs do not specify a CUPS filter anyway).

  • One can create Printer Applications which allow the user to add their own PPD files via "Add PPD file" web interface page.

  • The full functionality of PAPPL is supported, including the emulation of a highly standards-conforming driverless IPP printer (IPP Everywhere, AirPrint) and streaming of Raster jobs (if the printer and driver support it), which saves resources on the server and allows even infinite jobs.

  • Drivers can be assigned to the discovered printers automatically or manually by selecting the driver (a PPD file) from the menu on the "Add Printer" web interface page. The implementor of the Printer Application can use their own auto-assignment function. The library contains some functions for common operations, like finding the best PPD for a printer or checking which PDLs (Page Description Languages) the printer supports.

  • The included Legacy Printer Application allows to easily check whether a CUPS driver works inside a Printer Application. Simply install the driver normally (into the system's conventionally installed CUPS) and the Legacy Printer Application looks for the driver's files in the usual CUPS directories. It can also be used to make classically installed printer drivers available to the CUPS Snap or to CUPS 3.x, especially proprietary legacy drivers which do not exist in a Snap in the Snap Store. In addition, it serves as example to create your own driver-retro-fitting Printer Application.

Remark

  • This library is derived from the PostScript Printer Application, but note that when you are looking into its GIT repository now, you will only see a little code stub as it is now using this library. Go back in the GIT history to see the last pre-libpappl-retrofit state of it. The current state is also a nice example for using this library.

To Do

  • On the "Add PPD files" page in the list of already added user PPD files mark which ones are actually used by a printer which got set up in the Printer Application, to avoid that the user removes these files.

  • Internationalization/Localization

  • SNMP Ink level check via ps_status() function

  • In the C files some places can be marked with TODO. These are points to be improved or where functionality in PAPPL is still needed.

  • Build options for cups-filters, to build without libqpdf and/or without libppd, the former will allow to create the Snap of some Printer Applications without downloading and building QPDF

SNAP

This is a library and not a Printer Application, so there will be no Snap for this, but Printer Applications created with the help of this library are available in the Snap Store.

The included Legacy Printer Application is also not suitable to get snapped, as it simply points its search directories to the PPD, filter, and backend locations of a conventionally (not the Snap) installed CUPS, to make all installed drivers available in a Printer Application. Out of a fully constrained Snap you cannot simply access the system's files and so this does not work (otherwise the CUPS Snap would support claasic printer drivers).

Please have a look at the PostScript Printer Application, the Ghostscript Printer Application, the HPLIP Printer Application, and the Gutenprint Printer Application for examples on how Snaps of Printer Applications are created. All these Printer Applications use this library, retro-fitting PostScript printer PPD files, Ghostscript drivers with Foomatic PPD files (and many other printer drivers), HPLIP, and Gutenprint. Practically every free software printer driver which is available as Debian package is now also available as a Printer Application Snap. They can be all installed from the Snap Store.

The HPLIP Printer Application is especially an example of how to add driver-specific functionality which is beyond the pappl-retrofit library and control this functionality through extra pages in the web interface. Here a feature for downloading HP's proprietary plugin is added.

INSTALLATION

To install this library, you need libcups (of CUPS 2.2.x or newer), PAPPL 1.3.x or newer, libcupsfilters 2.0b1 or newer, and libppd 2.0b1 or newer.

With this installed, you do the usual

./configure
make
sudo make install

Note that if you are using a GIT snapshot you have to run

./autogen.sh

before the above-mentioned commands.

Then have a look at

legacy/legacy-printer-app.c

as a coding example and

pappl-retrofit/pappl-retrofit.h

for the full public API to get a feeling how to create a Printer Application in your desired configuration.

If you have a systemd-based system and want to run the Legacy Printer Application (see below) as a permanently running system daemon to make your classic CUPS drivers available to CUPS 3.x or to the CUPS Snap, do the same as above but run the ./configure command as follows:

./configure --enable-legacy-printer-app-as-daemon

This installs the legacy-printer-app in /usr/(local/)sbin/ and installs a systemd service file to make the Printer Application automatically start during boot.

Setting up your Printer Application

If you have your Printer Application, start it as a server, for example (using the name of our Legacy Printer Application in the examples):

sudo legacy-printer-app server &

Enter the web interface

http://localhost:8000/

Use the web interface to add a printer. Supply a name, select the discovered printer, then select make and model. Also set the loaded media and the option defaults.

Then print PDF, PostScript, JPEG, Apple Raster, or PWG Raster files with

legacy-printer-app FILE

or print with CUPS, CUPS (and also cups-browsed) discover and treat the printers set up with this Printer Application as driverless IPP printers (IPP Everywhere and AirPrint).

You can also add PPD files, either by using the "Add PPD files" button in the web interface or by manually copying PPD files:

sudo cp PPDFILE /var/lib/legacy-printer-app/ppd/

After manually copying (or removing) PPD files you need to restart the server or in the web interface, on the "Add PPD files" page click the "Refresh" button at the bottom. This adds the changes to the internal driver list.

On the "Add Printer" page in the drop-down to select the driver, user-added PPD files are marked "USER-ADDED". When setting up a printer with automatic driver selection, user-added PPD files are preferred.

PPDFILE in the command line above cannot only be a single PPD file but any number of single PPD files, .tar.gz files containing PPDs (in arbitrary directory structure), driver information files (.drv), and PPD-generating executables which are usually put into /usr/lib/cups/driver. You can also create arbitrary sub-directory structures in /var/lib/legacy-printer-app/ppd/ containing the mentioned types of files. Only make sure to not put any executables there which do anything else than listing and generating PPD files.

Note that with the web interface you can only manage individual PPDs (uncompressed or compressed with gzip) in the /var/lib/legacy-printer-app/ppd/ directory itself. Archives, driver information files, executables, or sub-directories are not shown and appropriate uploads not accepted. This especially prevents adding executables without root rights.

Any added PPD file must be for printers supported by the Printer Application (its included filters and backends). The "Add PPD files" page shows warnings if unsuitable files get uploaded.

See

legacy-printer-app --help

for more options.

Use the --debug argument for verbose logging in your terminal window.

LEGACY PRINTER APPLICATION

The Legacy Printer Application simply points to the directories of the CUPS installed conventionally (not the CUPS Snap) on your system. So it makes all of your installed printer drivers available in a Printer Application. Some drivers may not work in the different environment (for example if a filter or backend tries to communicate with the CUPS daemon), but such cases are rare.

This especially makes the drivers available to the CUPS Snap (Snap Store) and to CUPS 3.x (library, local server, sharing server) which do not directly support classically installed printer drivers. So the CUPS Snap/CUPS 3.x can be used as the system's standard printing environment keeping the classically installed printer drivers. This works but is generally not recommended, as most free software printer drivers are already available as Printer Applications (Snap Store), but there could be some drivers which are not yet converted, especially many proprietary legacy drivers from printer manufacturers. Here the Legacy Printer Application comes in handy.

So the best way for a Linux distribution using the CUPS Snap or CUPS 3.x as its printing system it is recommended not to install the standard drivers classically but use the appropriate Printer Application (Snaps) instead, but also install the Legacy Printer Application classically to catch any drivers for which we do not have a Printer Application.

You can also use this Printer Application to test the driver which you want to retro-fit before you start to configure your Printer Application executable and package everything into a Snap (or other packaging/containerization format). This library and the functions of libcupsfilters and libppd used by it try to resemble the CUPS environment for the filters and backends as well as possible: Environment variables, command lines, even side and back channels. But it is always better to test whether the driver behaves correctly, whether the PPD options are represented well on the "Device Settings", "Media", and "Printing Defaults" pages of the web interface, and whether the printer reacts correctly to IPP attributes supplied with the job, especially print-color-mode, print-quality, and print-content-optimize.

The Legacy Printer Application uses the (classically installed) CUPS backends for communication with the printer hardware by default and not the backends built into PAPPL, to get the best compatibility with the CUPS drivers. To make the PAPPL backends also available, the Legacy Printer Application has to be built with the --enable-pappl-backends-for-legacy-printer-app for ./configure.

The Legacy Printer Application searches for PPDs, PPD archives, driver information files (.drv), and PPD-generating executables on

/usr/share/ppd/
/usr/share/cups/model/
/usr/lib/cups/driver/
/usr/share/cups/drv/
/var/lib/legacy-printer-app/ppd/

The last one is where the web interface drops user-uploaded PPD files.

It uses the following directories for its files:

/var/lib/legacy-printer-app
/var/spool/legacy-printer-app
/usr/share/legacy-printer-app
/usr/lib/legacy-printer-app

The last directory is linked to /usr/lib/cups so that the Printer Application sees the filters and backends of CUPS.

The test page

/usr/share/legacy-printer-app/testpage.ps

is the good old 21-year-old PostScript test page of CUPS, but you can easily use any other test page for your Printer Application.

Configured print queues and job history is saved in

/var/lib/legacy-printer-app/legacy-printer-app.state

You can set the PPD_PATHS environment variable to search other places instead:

PPD_PATHS=/path/to/my/ppds:/my/second/place ./legacy-printer-app server

Simply put a colon-separated list of any amount of paths into the variable, always the last being used by the "Add PPD files" page. Creating a wrapper script is recommended.

For an alternative place for the test page use the TESTPAGE_DIR environment variable:

TESTPAGE_DIR=`pwd` PPD_PATHS=/path/to/my/ppds:/my/second/place ./legacy-printer-app server

or for your own creation of a test page (PostScript, PDF, PNG, JPEG, Apple Raster, PWG Raster):

TESTPAGE=/path/to/my/testpage/my_testpage.ps PPD_PATHS=/path/to/my/ppds:/my/second/place ./legacy-printer-app server

If anything behaves wrongly and you cannot get it working by modifying the configuration of your Printer Application, your callbacks, regular expressions, conversion rule selections, ... please report an issue on libpappl-retrofit (we move it to cups-filters if it is actually there).

If you want the Legacy Printer Application to be permanently run as a server, being auto-started during boot, build the package with the --enable-legacy-printer-app-as-daemon option for ./configure. This way an appropriate systemd service file gets installed.

ALREADY AVAILABLE PRINTER APPLICATIONS

Please also have a look at the PostScript Printer Application, the Ghostscript Printer Application, the HPLIP Printer Application, and the Gutenprint Printer Application for examples on how Printer Applications and their Snaps are created. All these Printer Applications use this library, retro-fitting PostScript printer PPD files, Ghostscript drivers with Foomatic PPD files (and many other printer drivers), HPLIP, and Gutenprint. Practically every free software printer driver which is available as Debian package is now also available as a Printer Application Snap. They can be all installed from the Snap Store.

The HPLIP Printer Application is especially an example of how to add driver-specific functionality which is beyond the pappl-retrofit library and control this functionality through extra pages in the web interface. Here a feature for downloading HP's proprietary plugin is added.

HISTORY

My work on making Printer Applications out of classic CUPS drivers practically started when PAPPL got born. I already saw the need for this before, especially for the CUPS Snap and have opened GSoC projects on that, but PAPPL was the real start for it.

I first started with PostScript printers, the simplest approach of only PPD files without CUPS filters or backends, writing the PostScript Printer Application derived from Michael Sweet's first working model, the HP PCL Printer Application. When I saw the code of the PostScript Printer Application growing and also when I added CUPS filter support as some PostScript PPDs use CUPS filters to manage the password for secure printing options, I decided on creating this library.

You can see the sections about the PostScript Printer Application and about Retro-fitting of CUPS printer drivers into Printer Applications in my monthly news posts on the OpenPrinting web site.

I also wrote up my ideas on the design and the inner workings of this library in the weeks of development before putting up a GitHub repository for it on this thread in the PostScript Printer Application GitHub. The thread has ended now and further write-ups will appear in the commit messages of this library's GIT, as I am already doing with the CUPS Snap.

LEGAL STUFF

The CUPS driver retro-fit library is Copyright © 2021-2022 by Till Kamppeter.

It is derived from the PostScript Printer Application and this one derived from the HP PCL Printer Application, a first working model of a raster Printer Application using PAPPL.

The HP PCL Printer Application is Copyright © 2019-2020 by Michael R Sweet.

This software is licensed under the Apache License Version 2.0 with an exception to allow linking against GPL2/LGPL2 software (like older versions of CUPS). See the files "LICENSE" and "NOTICE" for more information.

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PPD/Classic CUPS driver retro-fit Printer Application Library

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