This chapter provides information about distributing printers across your network to gain the best efficiency and about planning for printer setup.
This is a list of overview information in this chapter.
Printer Task |
For More Information |
---|---|
Set up printers with Solaris Print Manager and the lp commands | |
Administer printers with the lp commands after the printers are setup | |
Manage character sets, filters, forms, and fonts |
Chapter 6, Managing Character Sets, Filters, Forms, and Fonts (Tasks) |
Customize the LP print service |
The goal of setting up printers on a network is to give users access to one or more printers. As an administrator, you must determine whether each printer would be best used if it is dedicated to one system or available to many systems. In a network environment, distribute your printers on several print servers. The advantage of setting up several print servers is that when one print server has a problem, you can route print requests to other print servers.
If you use a centralized print configuration, you can still connect printers to users' systems for convenience or for improved response. A printer that is connected to a user's system is still available to other systems on the network.
The following figure shows an example of how you can have a centralized print configuration and still connect printers to users' systems.
You must decide which systems will have local printers physically attached to them, and which will systems use printers on other systems. A system that has a local printer attached to it and makes the printer available to other systems on the network is called a print server. A system that sends its print requests to a print server is called a print client.
The LP print service software provides printing services in the Solaris environment. Besides physically connecting a printer to a system, you must define the printer server characteristics to the LP print service. Once you have print servers set up, you can set up other systems as print clients.
Print servers and print clients can run different versions of the Solaris release and different version of the UNIX Operating System. Print clients running the Solaris 9 release and compatible versions can print to print servers running an lpd-based print service, such as the SunOS 4.1, BSD UNIX, and Linux releases. In addition, print clients running an lpd-based print service can print to print servers running the Solaris 9 release and compatible versions.
The following figure shows a print configuration on a network with systems running the Solaris release and an lpd-based print service. For details on how Solaris printing works in heterogeneous environments, see How Remote Printing Works.
You can attach a printer to a standalone system or to any system on the network. Any networked system with a printer can be a print server, as long as the system has adequate resources to manage the printing load.
Spooling space is the amount of disk space that is used to store and process requests in the print queue. Spooling space is the single most important factor to consider when deciding which systems to designate as print servers. When users submit files for printing, the files are stored in the /var/spool/lp directory until the files are printed. The size of the /var directory depends on the size of the disk and how the disk is partitioned. Spooling space can be allocated in the /var directory on the print server, or mounted from a file server and accessed over the network.
If /var is not created as a separate file system, the /var directory uses space in the root (/) file system, which is likely to be insufficient on a print server.
When evaluating systems as possible print servers, consider their available disk space. A large spool directory can consume 600 Mbytes of disk space. Look at the size and division of disk space on systems that can be designated as print servers.
Also, carefully evaluate the printing needs and use patterns of print client systems. If users in a small group typically print only short email messages, simple ASCII files without sophisticated formatting requirements, a print server with 20 to 25 Mbytes of disk space allocated to the /var directory is probably sufficient. If, however, many print client users are printing large documents or bit-mapped or raster images, the users will likely fill up the spooling space quite frequently. When users cannot queue their jobs for printing, work flow is interrupted. Requests for more spooling space can force you to either add disk space for spooling or designate a different system as the print server.
If the print server has a /var directory that is too small, and a larger file system is available, you can mount the larger file system on the /var directory for additional spooling space. For information about mounting file systems and editing the vfstab file, see “Mounting and Unmounting File Systems” in System Administration Guide: Devices and File Systems.
The Solaris environment requires a minimum of 64 Mbytes of memory to run. A print server does not require additional memory. However, you might find that more memory improves performance in filtering print requests.
The swap space allocation on the print server should be sufficient to handle LP print service requirements. For information about how to increase swap space, see “Configuring Additional Swap Space (Tasks)” in System Administration Guide: Devices and File Systems.
For optimal performance, the print server should have a hard disk and a local /var directory. You should mount spooling space for a print server on a local hard disk. If a print server has its own hard disk and a local /var directory, printing is much faster. And, you can more accurately predict the time needed to process print requests.
This section provides an overview of planning for printing in the Solaris OS that includes the following information:
Setting definitions for printers such as printer name, printer description, printer port
Selecting a printer make, model, and driver
Determining which PPD file to use
Selecting a printer type and file content type
In this release, you cannot assign printer type and file content type with Solaris Print Manager. For information about reverting to previous Solaris Print Manager behavior, see Reverting to Previous Solaris Print Manager Printer Definition Screens.
Setting up fault notification and a default printer destination
Determining whether you want to print banner pages or limit user access to a printer
Setting up printer classes and fault recovery
Establishing definitions for the printers on your network is an ongoing task that lets you provide a more effective print environment for users. For example, you can assign parameters for all your site's printers to help users find where a printer is located. Or, you can define a class of printers to provide the fastest turnaround for print requests.
The lpadmin command lets you set all of the printer definitions, while Solaris Print Manager lets you set only some of them when you install or modify a printer. The following table lists the printer definitions and shows whether you can assign the definition with Solaris Print Manager.
Table 3–1 Printer Definitions Set With Solaris Print Manager
Printer Definition |
Can You Set Printer Definitions With Solaris Print Manager? |
---|---|
Yes |
|
Yes |
|
Yes |
|
No, not by default |
|
No, not by default |
|
Printer Make |
Yes |
Printer Model |
Yes |
Printer Driver |
Yes |
Yes, but with less functionality than the lpadmin command |
|
Yes |
|
Yes, but with less functionality than the lpadmin command |
|
Yes, but with less functionality than the lpadmin command |
|
No |
|
No |
When adding a printer to a system, you specify a printer name for the printer. A printer name must meet the following requirements:
Unique among all printers within the bounds of an administrative domain
A maximum of 14 alphanumeric characters, which can include dashes and underscores
Easy to remember and can identify the type of printer, its location, or the print server name
Establish a naming convention that works for your site. For example, if you have different types of printers on the network, including the printer type as part of the printer name can help users choose an appropriate printer. For instance, you could identify PostScriptTM printers with the letters PS. If, however, all of the printers at your site are PostScript printers, you would not need to include the initials PS as part of the printer name.
You can assign a description to a printer by using the lpadmin -D command or Solaris Print Manager. The printer's description should contain information to help users identify the printer. You might include the room number where the printer is located, the type of printer, the manufacturer, or the name of the person to call if printing problems occur.
Users can look at a printer description by using the following command:
$ lpstat -D -p printer-name |
When you install a printer or later change its setup, you can specify the device, or the printer port, to which the printer is connected, by using Solaris Print Manager or the lpadmin -p printer-name -v device-name command.
Most systems have two serial ports and a parallel port or USB ports. Unless you add ports, you cannot directly connect more than two serial printers and a parallel printer or two USB printers to one system.
You can select the following printer port types with Solaris Print Manager. These options give you as much flexibility as the lpadmin command.
Printer Port Type |
Corresponding Device Name Options |
---|---|
Serial |
/dev/term/a |
Serial |
/dev/term/b |
Parallel |
/dev/printers/0 —> /dev/ecpp0 |
USB |
/dev/printers/[1–9] |
Specify any port name that the print server recognizes |
Other |
The LP print service initializes the printer port by using the settings from the standard printer interface program. For more information about printer interface programs, see Managing Print Filters. If you have a parallel printer or a serial printer for which the default settings do not work, see Adjusting Printer Port Characteristics for information about customizing the port settings.
If you use multiple ports on an x86 based system, only the first port is enabled by default. The second and any subsequent ports are disabled by default. To use more than one port, you must manually edit the device driver port configuration file for each additional asy (serial) port or lp (parallel) port. The pathnames for the x86 port configuration files are:
/platform/i86pc/kernel/drv/asy.conf
/platform/i86pc/kernel/drv/lp.conf
The printer make is the name of the manufacturer of the printer. The printer make is found on the printer itself, and on the packaging materials and documentation that is shipped with the printer.
The following are examples of printer makes that are available in this release:
Lexmark
Epson
Canon
QMS
Xerox
Printer manufacturers produce several types and models of printers. The printer model defines the printer precisely. The model is usually stamped on the front or top of the printer. This information is also displayed on the packaging materials and documentation that is shipped with the printer.
The following are examples of printer models that are available in this release:
Lexmark Optra E312
Lexmark Z32
Lexmark 1000
The printer driver selects the driver to use when printing to the printer. The printer driver is determined when you select the PPD file for the specified printer make and printer model
In this release, you can no longer assign printer type with Solaris Print Manager. Instead, you must select the printer make, model, and driver when adding a new printer or modifying an existing printer by using Solaris Printer Manager. For information about using the printer definitions previously assigned by Solaris Print Manager, see Reverting to Previous Solaris Print Manager Printer Definition Screens.
The printer type is a generic name for a type of printer. Printer type identifies the terminfo database entry that contains various control sequences for the printer. By convention, printer type is usually derived from the manufacturer's model name. For example, the printer type name for the DECwriter printer is decwriter. However, the common printer type PS does not follow this convention. PS is used as the printer type for many models of PostScript printers.
You can specify the printer type by using the lpadmin -T command.
Information about each printer type is stored in the terminfo database (/usr/share/lib/terminfo). This information includes the printer capabilities and initialization control data. The printer you install must correspond to an entry in the terminfo database.
$ pwd /usr/share/lib/terminfo $ ls 1 3 5 7 9 B H P a c e g i k m o q s u w y 2 4 6 8 A G M S b d f h j l n p r t v x z $ |
Each subdirectory contains compiled database entries for terminals or printers. The entries are organized by the first letter of the printer or terminal type. For example, if you have an Epson printer, look in the /usr/share/lib/terminfo/e directory to find your particular model of Epson printer.
$ cd /usr/share/lib/terminfo/e $ ls emots ep2500+high ep48 ergo4000 exidy2500 env230 ep2500+low epson2500 esprit envision230 ep40 epson2500-80 ethernet ep2500+basic ep4000 epson2500-hi ex3000 ep2500+color ep4080 epson2500-hi80 exidy $ |
The entries for Epson printers are included in the preceding example.
If you have a NEC printer, look in the /usr/share/lib/terminfo/n directory for your NEC printer model.
$ cd /usr/share/lib/terminfo/n $ ls ncr7900 ncr7900iv netronics network nuc ncr7900-na ncr7901 netty netx nucterm ncr7900i nec netty-Tabs newhp ncr7900i-na net netty-vi newhpkeyboard $ |
The entry in this directory for NEC is included in the preceding example.
For a local PostScript printer, use a printer type of either PostScript (PS) or Reverse PostScript (PSR). If your printer supports PostScript, choose PS or PSR even if the specific printer type is listed in the terminfo database.
If your PostScript printer prints pages face up, documents appear to be printed backwards, where the first page is at the bottom of the stack and the last page is on the top. If you specify the printer's type as PSR, the LP print service reverses the order of the pages before sending the pages to the printer. The last page is printed first, and the pages are stacked in forward order. However, the LP print service can reliably change the page order only for PostScript files that conform to the Adobe® Technical Note #5001, PostScript Language Document Structuring Conventions Specification, available on the Adobe Developer Relations web site.
If a printer can emulate more than one kind of printer, you can assign several printer types by using the lpadmin -T command. If you specify more than one printer type, the LP print service uses the type that is appropriate for each print request.
You might not find the printer type in the appropriate terminfo directory. The type of printer is not necessarily linked to the manufacturer's name on the printer. For example, for any type of PostScript printer, you can use the PS or PSR entry, found in the /usr/share/lib/terminfo/P directory, instead of an entry specific to manufacturer or product names.
If you have an unusual type of printer, you might need to try different entries before you can determine whether a particular terminfo entry works for your model of printer. If possible, find an entry in the terminfo database that works for your printer. Trying to use an existing entry will be much easier than trying to create an entry. If you have to create your own entry, Adding a terminfo Entry for an Unsupported Printer contains some useful tips.
In releases prior to Solaris 9 9/04, Solaris Print Manager provided the following list of file content types, from which you could choose when you installed or modified a local printer. File content type is no longer a printer definition that you can assign with Solaris Print Manager. In this release, you can add a printer with PPD files, selecting printer make, model, and driver, with Solaris Print Manager. When doing so, the recommended file content type is PostScript. This file content type is set by the tool.
If you choose, you can revert to the previous behavior of Solaris Print Manager. For more information, see Reverting to Previous Solaris Print Manager Printer Definition Screens.
If you want to specify file content type when adding a new printer or modifying an existing printer, you must use the lpadmin -I command.
Print filters convert the content type of a file to a content type that is acceptable to the destination printer. The file content type tells the LP print service the type of file contents that can be printed directly, without filtering. To print without filtering, the necessary fonts must also be available in the printer. You must set up and use filtering for other types of files.
Most printers can print the following types of files directly:
When submitting a file for printing, the user can indicate the content type of the file by using the lp -T content-type command. If no file content type is supplied when the request is submitted, the LP server looks at the first file in the request to determine the content type. If the file begins with ^D%! or %!, the request is considered to contain PostScriptTM data. Otherwise, the request is assumed to contain simple (ASCII) text. The LP print service uses the file content type to determine which filters to use to convert the file contents into a type the printer can handle.
The choices are translated to the names that the LP print service uses. The following table describes the file content types that you can choose with Solaris Print Manager.
Table 3–2 Choosing File Content Type With Solaris Print Manager
File Contents Choice |
LP Print Service Name |
Description |
---|---|---|
PostScript |
postscript |
PostScript files do not require filtering. |
ASCII |
simple |
ASCII files do not require filtering. |
Both PostScript and ASCII |
simple, postscript |
PostScript files and ASCII files do not require filtering. |
None |
"" |
All files require filtering, except those files matching the printer's type. |
Any |
any |
No filtering required. If the printer cannot handle a file content type directly, the file will not be printed. |
Choose the file content type that best matches the printer's capabilities. PostScript, which means filtering is not needed for PostScript files, is the default choice in Solaris Print Manager and is probably correct most of the time.
This section provides the printer type and file content type for the printers most commonly used with Solaris software. Although not shown, many of these printers can also directly print files with simple content type.
If you have a PostScript printer, use a printer type of PS or PSR and a content type of postscript. PSR reverses the pagination and prints the banner page last.
The following table lists additional non-PostScript printers and shows the printer type to use for configuring each printer. For all these printers, the file content type is simple.
Sun Microsystems does not supply filtering software for the printers listed in the following table, among others. However, you can use unsupported printers if you supply filtering or if the printer can directly print the file content type. If you have questions about any printer for which Sun Microsystems does not supply filters, contact the printer manufacturer.
Printer |
Printer Type |
---|---|
Daisy |
daisy |
Datagraphix |
datagraphix |
DEC LA100 |
la100 |
DEC LN03 |
ln03 |
DECwriter |
decwriter |
Diablo |
diablo |
|
diablo-m8 |
Epson 2500 variations |
epson2500 |
|
epson2500-80 |
|
epson2500-hi |
|
epson2500-hi80 |
Hewlett-Packard HPCL printer |
hplaser |
IBM Proprinter |
ibmproprinter |
If you want to set up a printer that is not in the terminfo database, see How to Add a terminfo Entry for an Unsupported Printer.