KurtPfeifle
kpfeifle@danka.de
(24 May 2002)
Printing with CUPS in Samba 2.2.x
Printing with CUPS in Samba 2.2.x
CUPS is a newcomer in
the UNIX printing scene, which has convinced many people upon first trial
already. However, it has quite a few new features, which make it different
from other, more traditional printing systems.
Configuring smb.conf for CUPS
Printing with CUPS in the most basic smb.conf
setup in Samba 2.2.x only needs two settings: printing = cups and
printcap = cups. While CUPS itself doesn't need a printcap
anymore, the cupsd.conf configuration file knows two directives
(example: Printcap /etc/printcap and PrintcapFormat
BSD), which control if such a file should be created for the
convenience of third party applications. Make sure it is set! For details see
man cupsd.conf and other CUPS-related documentation.
If SAMBA is compiled against libcups, then printcap =
cups uses the CUPS API to list printers, submit jobs, etc. Otherwise it
maps to the System V commands with an additional -oraw
option for printing. On a Linux system, you can use the ldd command to
find out details (ldd may not be present on other OS platforms, or its
function may be embodied by a different command):
transmeta:/home/kurt # ldd `which smbd`
libssl.so.0.9.6 => /usr/lib/libssl.so.0.9.6 (0x4002d000)
libcrypto.so.0.9.6 => /usr/lib/libcrypto.so.0.9.6 (0x4005a000)
libcups.so.2 => /usr/lib/libcups.so.2 (0x40123000)
libdl.so.2 => /lib/libdl.so.2 (0x401e8000)
libnsl.so.1 => /lib/libnsl.so.1 (0x401ec000)
libpam.so.0 => /lib/libpam.so.0 (0x40202000)
libc.so.6 => /lib/libc.so.6 (0x4020b000)
/lib/ld-linux.so.2 => /lib/ld-linux.so.2 (0x40000000)
The line "libcups.so.2 => /usr/lib/libcups.so.2
(0x40123000)" shows there is CUPS support compiled into this version of
Samba. If this is the case, and printing = cups is set, then any
otherwise manually set print command in smb.conf is ignored.
Using CUPS as a mere spooling print server -- "raw"
printing with vendor drivers download
You can setup Samba and your Windows clients to use the
CUPS print subsystem just as you would with any of the more traditional print
subsystems: that means the use of vendor provided, native Windows printer
drivers for each target printer. If you setup the [print$] share to
download these drivers to the clients, their GDI system (Graphical Device
Interface) will output the Wndows EMF (Enhanced MetaFile) and
convert it -- with the help of the printer driver -- locally into the format
the printer is expecting. Samba and the CUPS print subsystem will have to
treat these files as raw print files -- they are already in the
shape to be digestable for the printer. This is the same traditional setup
for Unix print servers handling Windows client jobs. It does not take much
CPU power to handle this kind of task efficiently.
CUPS as a network PostScript RIP -- CUPS drivers working on server, Adobe
PostScript driver with CUPS-PPDs downloaded to clients
CUPS is perfectly able to use PPD files (PostScript
Printer Descriptions). PPDs can control all print device options. They
are usually provided by the manufacturer -- if you own a PostSript printer,
that is. PPD files are always a component of PostScript printer drivers on MS
Windows or Apple Mac OS systems. They are ASCII files containing
user-selectable print options, mapped to appropriate PostScript, PCL or PJL
commands for the target printer. Printer driver GUI dialogs translate these
options "on-the-fly" into buttons and drop-down lists for the user to
select.
CUPS can load, without any conversions, the PPD file from
any Windows (NT is recommended) PostScript driver and handle the options.
There is a web browser interface to the print options (select
http://localhost:631/printers/ and click on one "Configure Printer" button
to see it), a commandline interface (see man lpoptions or
try if you have lphelp on your system) plus some different GUI frontends on Linux
UNIX, which can present PPD options to the users. PPD options are normally
meant to become evaluated by the PostScript RIP on the real PostScript
printer.
CUPS doesn't stop at "real" PostScript printers in its
usage of PPDs. The CUPS developers have extended the PPD concept, to also
describe available device and driver options for non-PostScript printers
through CUPS-PPDs.
This is logical, as CUPS includes a fully featured
PostScript interpreter (RIP). This RIP is based on Ghostscript. It can
process all received PostScript (and additionally many other file formats)
from clients. All CUPS-PPDs geared to non-PostScript printers contain an
additional line, starting with the keyword *cupsFilter.
This line
tells the CUPS print system which printer-specific filter to use for the
interpretation of the accompanying PostScript. Thus CUPS lets all its
printers appear as PostScript devices to its clients, because it can act as a
PostScript RIP for those printers, processing the received PostScript code
into a proper raster print format.
CUPS-PPDs can also be used on Windows-Clients, on top of a
PostScript driver (recommended is the Adobe one).
This feature enables CUPS to do a few tricks no other
spooler can do:
act as a networked PostScript RIP (Raster Image Processor), handling
printfiles from all client platforms in a uniform way;
act as a central accounting and billing server, as all files are passed
through the pstops Filter and are therefor logged in
the CUPS page_log. - NOTE: this
can not happen with "raw" print jobs, which always remain unfiltered
per definition;
enable clients to consolidate on a single PostScript driver, even for
many different target printers.
Windows Terminal Servers (WTS) as CUPS clients
This setup may be of special interest to people
experiencing major problems in WTS environments. WTS need often a multitude
of non-PostScript drivers installed to run their clients' variety of
different printer models. This often imposes the price of much increased
instability. In many cases, in an attempt to overcome this problem, site
administrators have resorted to restrict the allowed drivers installed on
their WTS to one generic PCL- and one PostScript driver. This however
restricts the clients in the amount of printer options available for them --
often they can't get out more then simplex prints from one standard paper
tray, while their devices could do much better, if driven by a different
driver!
Using an Adobe PostScript driver, enabled with a CUPS-PPD,
seems to be a very elegant way to overcome all these shortcomings. The
PostScript driver is not known to cause major stability problems on WTS (even
if used with many different PPDs). The clients will be able to (again) chose
paper trays, duplex printing and other settings. However, there is a certain
price for this too: a CUPS server acting as a PostScript RIP for its clients
requires more CPU and RAM than just to act as a "raw spooling" device. Plus,
this setup is not yet widely tested, although the first feedbacks look very
promising...
Setting up CUPS for driver download
The cupsadsmb utility (shipped with all current
CUPS versions) makes the sharing of any (or all) installed CUPS printers very
easy. Prior to using it, you need the following settings in smb.conf:
[global]
load printers = yes
printing = cups
printcap name = cups
[printers]
comment = All Printers
path = /var/spool/samba
browseable = no
public = yes
guest ok = yes
writable = no
printable = yes
printer admin = root
[print$]
comment = Printer Drivers
path = /etc/samba/drivers
browseable = yes
guest ok = no
read only = yes
write list = root
For licensing reasons the necessary files of the Adobe
Postscript driver can not be distributed with either Samba or CUPS. You need
to download them yourself from the Adobe website. Once extracted, create a
drivers directory in the CUPS data directory (usually
/usr/share/cups/). Copy the Adobe files using
UPPERCASE filenames, to this directory as follows:
ADFONTS.MFM
ADOBEPS4.DRV
ADOBEPS4.HLP
ADOBEPS5.DLL
ADOBEPSU.DLL
ADOBEPSU.HLP
DEFPRTR2.PPD
ICONLIB.DLL
Users of the ESP Print Pro software are able to install
their "Samba Drivers" package for this purpose with no problem.
Sources of CUPS drivers / PPDs
On the internet you can find now many thousand CUPS-PPD
files (with their companion filters), in many national languages,
supporting more than 1.000 non-PostScript models.
ESP PrintPro
(http://wwwl.easysw.com/printpro/)
(commercial, non-Free) is packaged with more than 3.000 PPDs, ready for
successful usage "out of the box" on Linux, IBM-AIX, HP-UX, Sun-Solaris,
SGI-IRIX, Compaq Tru64, Digital Unix and some more commercial Unices (it
is written by the CUPS developers themselves and its sales help finance
the further development of CUPS, as they feed their creators)
the Gimp-Print-Project
(http://gimp-print.sourceforge.net/)
(GPL, Free Software) provides around 120 PPDs (supporting nearly 300
printers, many driven to photo quality output), to be used alongside the
Gimp-Print CUPS filters;
TurboPrint
(http://www.turboprint.com/)
(Shareware, non-Freee) supports roughly the same amount of printers in
excellent quality;
OMNI
(http://www-124.ibm.com/developerworks/oss/linux/projects/omni/)
(LPGL, Free) is a package made by IBM, now containing support for more
than 400 printers, stemming from the inheritance of IBM OS/2 KnowHow
ported over to Linux (CUPS support is in a Beta-stage at present);
HPIJS
(http://hpinkjet.sourceforge.net/)
(BSD-style licnes, Free) supports around 120 of HP's own printers and is
also providing excellent print quality now;
Foomatic/cupsomatic (http://www.linuxprinting.org/)
(LPGL, Free) from Linuxprinting.org are providing PPDs for practically every
Ghostscript filter known to the world, now usable with CUPS.
NOTE: the cupsomatic trick from Linuxprinting.org is
working different from the other drivers. While the other drivers take the
generic CUPS raster (produced by CUPS' own pstoraster PostScript RIP) as
their input, cupsomatic "kidnaps" the PostScript inside CUPS, before
RIP-ping, deviates it to an external Ghostscript installation (which now
becomes the RIP) and gives it back to a CUPS backend once Ghostscript is
finished. -- CUPS versions from 1.1.15 and later will provide their pstoraster
PostScript RIP function again inside a system-wide Ghostscript
installation rather than in "their own" pstoraster filter. (This
CUPS-enabling Ghostscript version may be installed either as a
patch to GNU or AFPL Ghostscript, or as a complete ESP Ghostscript package).
However, this will not change the cupsomatic approach of guiding the printjob
along a different path through the filtering system than the standard CUPS
way...
Once you installed a printer inside CUPS with one of the
recommended methods (the lpadmin command, the web browser interface or one of
the available GUI wizards), you can use cupsaddsmb to share the
printer via Samba. cupsaddsmb prepares the driver files for
comfortable client download and installation upon their first contact with
this printer share.
cupsaddsmb
The cupsaddsmb command copies the needed files
for convenient Windows client installations from the previously prepared CUPS
data directory to your [print$] share. Additionally, the PPD
associated with this printer is copied from /etc/cups/ppd/ to
[print$].
root# cupsaddsmb -U root infotec_IS2027
Password for root required to access localhost via SAMBA: [type in password 'secret']
To share all printers and drivers, use the -a
parameter instead of a printer name.
Probably you want to see what's going on. Use the
-v parameter to get a more verbose output:
root# cupsaddsmb -v -U root infotec_IS2027
Password for root required to access localhost via SAMBA:
Running command: smbclient //localhost/print\$ -N -U'root%secret' -c 'mkdir W32X86;put /var/spool/cups/tmp/3cd1cc66376c0 W32X86/infotec_IS2027.PPD;put /usr/share/cups/drivers/ADOBEPS5.DLL W32X86/ADOBEPS5.DLL;put /usr/share/cups/drivers/ADOBEPSU.DLL W32X86/ADOBEPSU.DLL;put /usr/share/cups/drivers/ADOBEPSU.HLP W32X86/ADOBEPSU.HLP'
added interface ip=10.160.16.45 bcast=10.160.31.255 nmask=255.255.240.0
added interface ip=192.168.182.1 bcast=192.168.182.255 nmask=255.255.255.0
added interface ip=172.16.200.1 bcast=172.16.200.255 nmask=255.255.255.0
Domain=[TUX-NET] OS=[Unix] Server=[Samba 2.2.3a.200204262025cvs]
NT_STATUS_OBJECT_NAME_COLLISION making remote directory \W32X86
putting file /var/spool/cups/tmp/3cd1cc66376c0 as \W32X86/infotec_IS2027.PPD (17394.6 kb/s) (average 17395.2 kb/s)
putting file /usr/share/cups/drivers/ADOBEPS5.DLL as \W32X86/ADOBEPS5.DLL (10877.4 kb/s) (average 11343.0 kb/s)
putting file /usr/share/cups/drivers/ADOBEPSU.DLL as \W32X86/ADOBEPSU.DLL (5095.2 kb/s) (average 9260.4 kb/s)
putting file /usr/share/cups/drivers/ADOBEPSU.HLP as \W32X86/ADOBEPSU.HLP (8828.7 kb/s) (average 9247.1 kb/s)
Running command: smbclient //localhost/print\$ -N -U'root%secret' -c 'mkdir WIN40;put /var/spool/cups/tmp/3cd1cc66376c0 WIN40/infotec_IS2027.PPD;put /usr/share/cups/drivers/ADFONTS.MFM WIN40/ADFONTS.MFM;put /usr/share/cups/drivers/ADOBEPS4.DRV WIN40/ADOBEPS4.DRV;put /usr/share/cups/drivers/ADOBEPS4.HLP WIN40/ADOBEPS4.HLP;put /usr/share/cups/drivers/DEFPRTR2.PPD WIN40/DEFPRTR2.PPD;put /usr/share/cups/drivers/ICONLIB.DLL WIN40/ICONLIB.DLL;put /usr/share/cups/drivers/PSMON.DLL WIN40/PSMON.DLL;'
added interface ip=10.160.16.45 bcast=10.160.31.255 nmask=255.255.240.0
added interface ip=192.168.182.1 bcast=192.168.182.255 nmask=255.255.255.0
added interface ip=172.16.200.1 bcast=172.16.200.255 nmask=255.255.255.0
Domain=[TUX-NET] OS=[Unix] Server=[Samba 2.2.3a.200204262025cvs]
NT_STATUS_OBJECT_NAME_COLLISION making remote directory \WIN40
putting file /var/spool/cups/tmp/3cd1cc66376c0 as \WIN40/infotec_IS2027.PPD (26091.5 kb/s) (average 26092.8 kb/s)
putting file /usr/share/cups/drivers/ADFONTS.MFM as \WIN40/ADFONTS.MFM (11241.6 kb/s) (average 11812.9 kb/s)
putting file /usr/share/cups/drivers/ADOBEPS4.DRV as \WIN40/ADOBEPS4.DRV (16640.6 kb/s) (average 14679.3 kb/s)
putting file /usr/share/cups/drivers/ADOBEPS4.HLP as \WIN40/ADOBEPS4.HLP (11285.6 kb/s) (average 14281.5 kb/s)
putting file /usr/share/cups/drivers/DEFPRTR2.PPD as \WIN40/DEFPRTR2.PPD (823.5 kb/s) (average 12944.0 kb/s)
putting file /usr/share/cups/drivers/ICONLIB.DLL as \WIN40/ICONLIB.DLL (19226.2 kb/s) (average 13169.7 kb/s)
putting file /usr/share/cups/drivers/PSMON.DLL as \WIN40/PSMON.DLL (18666.1 kb/s) (average 13266.7 kb/s)
Running command: rpcclient localhost -N -U'root%secret' -c 'adddriver "Windows NT x86" "infotec_IS2027:ADOBEPS5.DLL:infotec_IS2027.PPD:ADOBEPSU.DLL:ADOBEPSU.HLP:NULL:RAW:NULL"'
cmd = adddriver "Windows NT x86" "infotec_IS2027:ADOBEPS5.DLL:infotec_IS2027.PPD:ADOBEPSU.DLL:ADOBEPSU.HLP:NULL:RAW:NULL"
Printer Driver infotec_IS2027 successfully installed.
Running command: rpcclient localhost -N -U'root%secret' -c 'adddriver "Windows 4.0" "infotec_IS2027:ADOBEPS4.DRV:infotec_IS2027.PPD:NULL:ADOBEPS4.HLP:PSMON.DLL:RAW:ADFONTS.MFM,DEFPRTR2.PPD,ICONLIB.DLL"'
cmd = adddriver "Windows 4.0" "infotec_IS2027:ADOBEPS4.DRV:infotec_IS2027.PPD:NULL:ADOBEPS4.HLP:PSMON.DLL:RAW:ADFONTS.MFM,DEFPRTR2.PPD,ICONLIB.DLL"
Printer Driver infotec_IS2027 successfully installed.
Running command: rpcclient localhost -N -U'root%secret' -c 'setdriver infotec_IS2027 infotec_IS2027'
cmd = setdriver infotec_IS2027 infotec_IS2027
Succesfully set infotec_IS2027 to driver infotec_IS2027.
root#
If you look closely, you'll discover your root password
was transfered unencrypted over the wire, so beware! Also, if you look
further her, you'll discover error messages like
NT_STATUS_OBJECT_NAME_COLLISION in between. They occur, because
the directories WIN40 and W32X86 already
existed in the [print$] driver download share (from a previous driver
installation). They are harmless here.
Now your printer is prepared for the clients to use. From
a client, browse to the CUPS/Samba server, open the "Printers"
share, right-click on this printer and select "Install..." or
"Connect..." (depending on the Windows version you use). Now their
should be a new printer in your client's local "Printers" folder,
named (in my case) "infotec_IS2027 on kdebitshop"
NOTE:
cupsaddsmb will only reliably work i
with CUPS version 1.1.15 or higher
and Samba from 2.2.4. If it doesn't work, or if the automatic printer
driver download to the clients doesn't succeed, you can still manually
install the CUPS printer PPD on top of the Adobe PostScript driver on
clients and then point the client's printer queue to the Samba printer
share for connection, should you desire to use the CUPS networked
PostScript RIP functions.