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341<body>
5a738aea 342<div class='body'>
ef416fc2 343<!--
68b10830 344 "$Id$"
ef416fc2 345
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346 Filter and backend programming header for the Common UNIX Printing System
347 (CUPS).
ef416fc2 348
178cb736 349 Copyright 2008-2009 by Apple Inc.
ef416fc2 350
351 These coded instructions, statements, and computer programs are the
bc44d920 352 property of Apple Inc. and are protected by Federal copyright
353 law. Distribution and use rights are outlined in the file "LICENSE.txt"
354 which should have been included with this file. If this file is
355 file is missing or damaged, see the license at "http://www.cups.org/".
ef416fc2 356-->
357
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358<h1 class='title'>Filter and Backend Programming</h1>
359
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360<div class='summary'><table summary='General Information'>
361<thead>
362<tr>
ac884b6a 363 <th>Headers</th>
5a738aea 364 <th>cups/backend.h<br>
79e1d494 365 cups/sidechannel.h</th>
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366</tr>
367</thead>
368<tbody>
369<tr>
370 <th>Library</th>
371 <td>-lcups</td>
372</tr>
373<tr>
374 <th>See Also</th>
375 <td>Programming: <a href='api-overview.html' target='_top'>Introduction to CUPS Programming</a><br>
376 Programming: <a href='api-cups.html' target='_top'>CUPS API</a><br>
377 Programming: <a href='api-ppd.html' target='_top'>PPD API</a><br>
79e1d494 378 Programming: <a href='api-raster.html' target='_top'>Raster API</a><br>
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379 Programming: <a href='postscript-driver.html' target='_top'>Developing PostScript Printer Drivers</a><br>
380 Programming: <a href='raster-driver.html' target='_top'>Developing Raster Printer Drivers</a><br>
10d09e33 381 Specifications: <a href='spec-design.html' target='_top'>CUPS Design Description</a></td>
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382</tr>
383</tbody>
384</table></div>
385<h2 class="title">Contents</h2>
386<ul class="contents">
5a738aea 387<li><a href="#OVERVIEW">Overview</a><ul class="subcontents">
0268488e 388 <li><a href="#SECURITY">Security Considerations</a></li>
22c9029b 389 <li><a href="#SIGNALS">Signal Handling</a></li>
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390 <li><a href="#TEMPFILES">Temporary Files</a></li>
391 <li><a href="#COPIES">Copy Generation</a></li>
392 <li><a href="#EXITCODES">Exit Codes</a></li>
393 <li><a href="#ENVIRONMENT">Environment Variables</a></li>
394 <li><a href="#MESSAGES">Communicating with the Scheduler</a></li>
395 <li><a href="#COMMUNICATING_BACKEND">Communicating with the Backend</a></li>
396 <li><a href="#COMMUNICATING_FILTER">Communicating with Filters</a></li>
397 <li><a href="#SNMP">Doing SNMP Queries with Network Printers</a></li>
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398</ul></li>
399<li><a href="#FUNCTIONS">Functions</a><ul class="code">
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400 <li><a href="#cupsBackChannelRead" title="Read data from the backchannel.">cupsBackChannelRead</a></li>
401 <li><a href="#cupsBackChannelWrite" title="Write data to the backchannel.">cupsBackChannelWrite</a></li>
402 <li><a href="#cupsBackendDeviceURI" title="Get the device URI for a backend.">cupsBackendDeviceURI</a></li>
403 <li><a href="#cupsBackendReport" title="Write a device line from a backend.">cupsBackendReport</a></li>
404 <li><a href="#cupsSideChannelDoRequest" title="Send a side-channel command to a backend and wait for a response.">cupsSideChannelDoRequest</a></li>
405 <li><a href="#cupsSideChannelRead" title="Read a side-channel message.">cupsSideChannelRead</a></li>
406 <li><a href="#cupsSideChannelSNMPGet" title="Query a SNMP OID's value.">cupsSideChannelSNMPGet</a></li>
407 <li><a href="#cupsSideChannelSNMPWalk" title="Query multiple SNMP OID values.">cupsSideChannelSNMPWalk</a></li>
408 <li><a href="#cupsSideChannelWrite" title="Write a side-channel message.">cupsSideChannelWrite</a></li>
8b450588 409</ul></li>
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410<li><a href="#TYPES">Data Types</a><ul class="code">
411 <li><a href="#cups_backend_t" title="Backend exit codes">cups_backend_t</a></li>
412 <li><a href="#cups_sc_bidi_t" title="Bidirectional capabilities">cups_sc_bidi_t</a></li>
413 <li><a href="#cups_sc_command_t" title="Request command codes">cups_sc_command_t</a></li>
82f97232 414 <li><a href="#cups_sc_connected_t" title="Connectivity values">cups_sc_connected_t</a></li>
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415 <li><a href="#cups_sc_state_t" title="Printer state bits">cups_sc_state_t</a></li>
416 <li><a href="#cups_sc_status_t" title="Response status codes">cups_sc_status_t</a></li>
20fbc903 417 <li><a href="#cups_sc_walk_func_t" title="SNMP walk callback">cups_sc_walk_func_t</a></li>
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418</ul></li>
419<li><a href="#ENUMERATIONS">Constants</a><ul class="code">
420 <li><a href="#cups_backend_e" title="Backend exit codes">cups_backend_e</a></li>
79e1d494 421 <li><a href="#cups_sc_bidi_e" title="Bidirectional capability values">cups_sc_bidi_e</a></li>
5a738aea 422 <li><a href="#cups_sc_command_e" title="Request command codes">cups_sc_command_e</a></li>
82f97232 423 <li><a href="#cups_sc_connected_e" title="Connectivity values">cups_sc_connected_e</a></li>
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424 <li><a href="#cups_sc_state_e" title="Printer state bits">cups_sc_state_e</a></li>
425 <li><a href="#cups_sc_status_e" title="Response status codes">cups_sc_status_e</a></li>
426</ul></li>
0268488e 427</ul>
5a738aea 428<!--
68b10830 429 "$Id$"
ef416fc2 430
22c9029b 431 Filter and backend programming introduction for CUPS.
ef416fc2 432
22c9029b 433 Copyright 2007-2011 by Apple Inc.
5a738aea 434 Copyright 1997-2006 by Easy Software Products, all rights reserved.
ef416fc2 435
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436 These coded instructions, statements, and computer programs are the
437 property of Apple Inc. and are protected by Federal copyright
438 law. Distribution and use rights are outlined in the file "LICENSE.txt"
439 which should have been included with this file. If this file is
440 file is missing or damaged, see the license at "http://www.cups.org/".
441-->
f7deaa1a 442
5a738aea 443<h2 class='title'><a name="OVERVIEW">Overview</a></h2>
ef416fc2 444
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445<p>Filters (which include printer drivers and port monitors) and backends
446are used to convert job files to a printable format and send that data to the
447printer itself. All of these programs use a common interface for processing
448print jobs and communicating status information to the scheduler. Each is run
449with a standard set of command-line arguments:<p>
ef416fc2 450
5a738aea 451<dl class="code">
f7deaa1a 452
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453 <dt>argv[1]</dt>
454 <dd>The job ID</dd>
ef416fc2 455
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456 <dt>argv[2]</dt>
457 <dd>The user printing the job</dd>
f7deaa1a 458
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459 <dt>argv[3]</dt>
460 <dd>The job name/title</dd>
f7deaa1a 461
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462 <dt>argv[4]</dt>
463 <dd>The number of copies to print</dd>
f7deaa1a 464
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465 <dt>argv[5]</dt>
466 <dd>The options that were provided when the job was submitted</dd>
f7deaa1a 467
5a738aea 468 <dt>argv[6]</dt>
79e1d494 469 <dd>The file to print (first program only)</dd>
5a738aea 470</dl>
f7deaa1a 471
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472<p>The scheduler runs one or more of these programs to print any given job. The
473first filter reads from the print file and writes to the standard output, while
474the remaining filters read from the standard input and write to the standard
475output. The backend is the last filter in the chain and writes to the
476device.</p>
f7deaa1a 477
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478<p>Filters are always run as a non-privileged user, typically "lp", with no
479connection to the user's desktop. Backends are run either as a non-privileged
480user or as root if the file permissions do not allow user or group execution.
481The <a href="#PERMISSIONS">file permissions</a> section talks about this in
482more detail.</p>
483
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484<h3><a name="SECURITY">Security Considerations</a></h3>
485
486<p>It is always important to use security programming practices. Filters and
eac3a0a0 487most backends are run as a non-privileged user, so the major security
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488consideration is resource utilization - filters should not depend on unlimited
489amounts of CPU, memory, or disk space, and should protect against conditions
490that could lead to excess usage of any resource like infinite loops and
491unbounded recursion. In addition, filters must <em>never</em> allow the user to
492specify an arbitrary file path to a separator page, template, or other file
493used by the filter since that can lead to an unauthorized disclosure of
494information. <em>Always</em> treat input as suspect and validate it!</p>
495
4d301e69 496<p>If you are developing a backend that runs as root, make sure to check for
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497potential buffer overflows, integer under/overflow conditions, and file
498accesses since these can lead to privilege escalations. When writing files,
499always validate the file path and <em>never</em> allow a user to determine
500where to store a file.</p>
501
502<blockquote><b>Note:</b>
503
504<p><em>Never</em> write files to a user's home directory. Aside from the
505security implications, CUPS is a network print service and as such the network
506user may not be the same as the local user and/or there may not be a local home
507directory to write to.</p>
508
509<p>In addition, some operating systems provide additional security mechanisms
178cb736 510that further limit file system access, even for backends running as root. On
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511Mac OS X, for example, no backend may write to a user's home directory.</p>
512</blockquote>
513
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514<h3><a name="SIGNALS">Signal Handling</a><h3>
515
516<p>The scheduler sends <code>SIGTERM</code> when a printing job is canceled or
517held. Filters, backends, and port monitors <em>must</em> catch
518<code>SIGTERM</code> and perform any cleanup necessary to produce a valid output
519file or return the printer to a known good state. The recommended behavior is to
520end the output on the current page.</p>
521
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522<p>Filters and backends may also receive <code>SIGPIPE</code> when an upstream or downstream filter/backend exits with a non-zero status. Developers should generally <code>ignore SIGPIPE</code> at the beginning of <code>main()</code> with the following function call:</p>
523
524<pre class="example">
525#include &lt;signal.h&gt;>
526
527...
528
529int
530main(int argc, char *argv[])
531{
532 signal(SIGPIPE, SIG_IGN);
533
534 ...
535}
536</pre>
537
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538<h3><a name="PERMISSIONS">File Permissions</a></h3>
539
540<p>For security reasons, CUPS will only run filters and backends that are owned
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541by root and do not have world or group write permissions. The recommended
542permissions for filters and backends are 0555 - read and execute but no write.
543Backends that must run as root should use permissions of 0500 - read and execute
544by root, no access for other users. Write permissions can be enabled for the
545root user only.</p>
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546
547<p>To avoid a warning message, the directory containing your filter(s) must also
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548be owned by root and have world and group write disabled - permissions of 0755
549or 0555 are strongly encouraged.</p>
178cb736 550
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551<h3><a name="TEMPFILES">Temporary Files</a></h3>
552
553<p>Temporary files should be created in the directory specified by the
554"TMPDIR" environment variable. The
555<a href="#cupsTempFile2"><code>cupsTempFile2</code></a> function can be
556used to safely create temporary files in this directory.</p>
557
558<h3><a name="COPIES">Copy Generation</a></h3>
559
560<p>The <code>argv[4]</code> argument specifies the number of copies to produce
561of the input file. In general, you should only generate copies if the
562<em>filename</em> argument is supplied. The only exception to this are
563filters that produce device-independent PostScript output, since the PostScript
564filter <var>pstops</var> is responsible for generating copies of PostScript
565files.</p>
566
5a738aea 567<h3><a name="EXITCODES">Exit Codes</a></h3>
f7deaa1a 568
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569<p>Filters must exit with status 0 when they successfully generate print data
570or 1 when they encounter an error. Backends can return any of the
571<a href="#cups_backend_t"><code>cups_backend_t</code></a> constants.</p>
f7deaa1a 572
5a738aea 573<h3><a name="ENVIRONMENT">Environment Variables</a></h3>
f7deaa1a 574
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575<p>The following environment variables are defined by the printing system
576when running print filters and backends:</p>
f7deaa1a 577
5a738aea 578<dl class="code">
f7deaa1a 579
acb056cb 580 <dt>APPLE_LANGUAGE</dt>
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581 <dd>The Apple language identifier associated with the job
582 (Mac OS X only).</dd>
f7deaa1a 583
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584 <dt>CHARSET</dt>
585 <dd>The job character set, typically "utf-8".</dd>
f7deaa1a 586
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587 <dt>CLASS</dt>
588 <dd>When a job is submitted to a printer class, contains the name of
589 the destination printer class. Otherwise this environment
590 variable will not be set.</dd>
f7deaa1a 591
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592 <dt>CONTENT_TYPE</dt>
593 <dd>The MIME type associated with the file (e.g.
594 application/postscript).</dd>
f7deaa1a 595
5a738aea 596 <dt>CUPS_CACHEDIR</dt>
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597 <dd>The directory where cache files can be stored. Cache files can be
598 used to retain information between jobs or files in a job.</dd>
f7deaa1a 599
5a738aea 600 <dt>CUPS_DATADIR</dt>
79e1d494 601 <dd>The directory where (read-only) CUPS data files can be found.</dd>
f7deaa1a 602
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603 <dt>CUPS_FILETYPE</dt>
604 <dd>The type of file being printed: "job-sheet" for a banner page and
605 "document" for a regular print file.</dd>
606
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607 <dt>CUPS_SERVERROOT</dt>
608 <dd>The root directory of the server.</dd>
f7deaa1a 609
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610 <dt>DEVICE_URI</dt>
611 <dd>The device-uri associated with the printer.</dd>
f7deaa1a 612
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613 <dt>FINAL_CONTENT_TYPE</dt>
614 <dd>The MIME type associated with the printer (e.g.
615 application/vnd.cups-postscript).</dd>
f7deaa1a 616
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617 <dt>LANG</dt>
618 <dd>The language locale associated with the job.</dd>
f7deaa1a 619
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620 <dt>PPD</dt>
621 <dd>The full pathname of the PostScript Printer Description (PPD)
622 file for this printer.</dd>
f7deaa1a 623
5a738aea 624 <dt>PRINTER</dt>
79e1d494 625 <dd>The queue name of the class or printer.</dd>
f7deaa1a 626
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627 <dt>RIP_CACHE</dt>
628 <dd>The recommended amount of memory to use for Raster Image
629 Processors (RIPs).</dd>
f7deaa1a 630
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631 <dt>TMPDIR</dt>
632 <dd>The directory where temporary files should be created.</dd>
633
5a738aea 634</dl>
f7deaa1a 635
5a738aea 636<h3><a name="MESSAGES">Communicating with the Scheduler</a></h3>
f7deaa1a 637
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638<p>Filters and backends communicate with the scheduler by writing messages
639to the standard error file. The scheduler reads messages from all filters in
640a job and processes the message based on its prefix. For example, the following
641code sets the current printer state message to "Printing page 5":</p>
f7deaa1a 642
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643<pre class="example">
644int page = 5;
f7deaa1a 645
5a738aea 646fprintf(stderr, "INFO: Printing page %d\n", page);
f7deaa1a 647</pre>
648
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649<p>Each message is a single line of text starting with one of the following
650prefix strings:</p>
651
652<dl class="code">
653
654 <dt>ALERT: message</dt>
655 <dd>Sets the printer-state-message attribute and adds the specified
656 message to the current error log file using the "alert" log level.</dd>
657
658 <dt>ATTR: attribute=value [attribute=value]</dt>
659 <dd>Sets the named printer or job attribute(s). Typically this is used
660 to set the <code>marker-colors</code>, <code>marker-levels</code>,
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661 <code>marker-message</code>, <code>marker-names</code>,
662 <code>marker-types</code>, <code>printer-alert</code>, and
663 <code>printer-alert-description</code> printer attributes. Standard
664 <code>marker-types</code> values are listed in <a href='#TABLE1'>Table
665 1</a>.</dd>
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666
667 <dt>CRIT: message</dt>
668 <dd>Sets the printer-state-message attribute and adds the specified
669 message to the current error log file using the "critical" log
670 level.</dd>
671
672 <dt>DEBUG: message</dt>
673 <dd>Sets the printer-state-message attribute and adds the specified
674 message to the current error log file using the "debug" log level.</dd>
675
676 <dt>DEBUG2: message</dt>
677 <dd>Sets the printer-state-message attribute and adds the specified
678 message to the current error log file using the "debug2" log level.</dd>
679
680 <dt>EMERG: message</dt>
681 <dd>Sets the printer-state-message attribute and adds the specified
682 message to the current error log file using the "emergency" log
683 level.</dd>
684
685 <dt>ERROR: message</dt>
686 <dd>Sets the printer-state-message attribute and adds the specified
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687 message to the current error log file using the "error" log level.
688 Use "ERROR:" messages for non-persistent processing errors.</dd>
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689
690 <dt>INFO: message</dt>
691 <dd>Sets the printer-state-message attribute. If the current log level
692 is set to "debug2", also adds the specified message to the current error
693 log file using the "info" log level.</dd>
694
695 <dt>NOTICE: message</dt>
696 <dd>Sets the printer-state-message attribute and adds the specified
697 message to the current error log file using the "notice" log level.</dd>
698
699 <dt>PAGE: page-number #-copies</dt>
700 <dt>PAGE: total #-pages</dt>
701 <dd>Adds an entry to the current page log file. The first form adds
702 #-copies to the job-media-sheets-completed attribute. The second
703 form sets the job-media-sheets-completed attribute to #-pages.</dd>
704
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705 <dt>PPD: keyword=value [keyword=value ...]</dt>
706 <dd>Changes or adds keywords to the printer's PPD file. Typically
707 this is used to update installable options or default media settings
708 based on the printer configuration.</dd>
709
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710 <dt>STATE: printer-state-reason [printer-state-reason ...]</dt>
711 <dt>STATE: + printer-state-reason [printer-state-reason ...]</dt>
712 <dt>STATE: - printer-state-reason [printer-state-reason ...]</dt>
713 <dd>Sets, adds, or removes printer-state-reason keywords to the
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714 current queue. Typically this is used to indicate persistent media,
715 ink, toner, and configuration conditions or errors on a printer.
716 <a href='#TABLE2'>Table 2</a> lists the standard state keywords -
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717 use vendor-prefixed ("com.acme.foo") keywords for custom states.
718
719 <blockquote><b>Note:</b>
720
721 <p>"STATE:" messages often provide visible alerts to the user. For example, on
722 Mac OS X setting a printer-state-reason value with an "-error" or "-warning"
723 suffix will cause the printer's dock item to bounce if the corresponding reason
724 is localized with a cupsIPPReason keyword in the printer's PPD file.</p>
725
726 </blockquote></dd>
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727
728 <dt>WARNING: message</dt>
729 <dd>Sets the printer-state-message attribute and adds the specified
730 message to the current error log file using the "warning" log
731 level.</dd>
732
733</dl>
734
735<p>Messages without one of these prefixes are treated as if they began with
736the "DEBUG:" prefix string.</p>
737
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738<div class='table'><table width='80%' summary='Table 1: Standard marker-types Values'>
739<caption>Table 1: <a name='TABLE1'>Standard marker-types Values</a></caption>
740<thead>
741<tr>
742 <th>marker-type</th>
743 <th>Description</th>
744</tr>
745</thead>
746<tbody>
747<tr>
748 <td>developer</td>
749 <td>Developer unit</td>
750</tr>
751<tr>
752 <td>fuser</td>
753 <td>Fuser unit</td>
754</tr>
755<tr>
756 <td>fuserCleaningPad</td>
757 <td>Fuser cleaning pad</td>
758</tr>
759<tr>
760 <td>fuserOil</td>
761 <td>Fuser oil</td>
762</tr>
763<tr>
764 <td>ink</td>
765 <td>Ink supply</td>
766</tr>
767<tr>
768 <td>opc</td>
769 <td>Photo conductor</td>
770</tr>
771<tr>
772 <td>solidWax</td>
773 <td>Wax supply</td>
774</tr>
775<tr>
776 <td>staples</td>
777 <td>Staple supply</td>
778</tr>
779<tr>
780 <td>toner</td>
781 <td>Toner supply</td>
782</tr>
783<tr>
784 <td>transferUnit</td>
785 <td>Transfer unit</td>
786</tr>
787<tr>
788 <td>wasteInk</td>
789 <td>Waste ink tank</td>
790</tr>
791<tr>
792 <td>wasteToner</td>
793 <td>Waste toner tank</td>
794</tr>
795<tr>
796 <td>wasteWax</td>
797 <td>Waste wax tank</td>
798</tr>
799</tbody>
800</table></div>
801
802<br>
803
804<div class='table'><table width='80%' summary='Table 2: Standard State Keywords'>
805<caption>Table 2: <a name='TABLE2'>Standard State Keywords</a></caption>
806<thead>
807<tr>
808 <th>Keyword</th>
809 <th>Description</th>
810</tr>
811</thead>
812<tbody>
813<tr>
814 <td>connecting-to-device</td>
815 <td>Connecting to printer but not printing yet</td>
816</tr>
817<tr>
818 <td>cover-open</td>
819 <td>A cover is open on the printer</td>
820</tr>
821<tr>
822 <td>input-tray-missing</td>
823 <td>An input tray is missing from the printer</td>
824</tr>
825<tr>
826 <td>marker-supply-empty</td>
827 <td>Out of ink</td>
828</tr>
829<tr>
830 <td>marker-supply-low</td>
831 <td>Low on ink</td>
832</tr>
833<tr>
834 <td>marker-waste-almost-full</td>
835 <td>Waste tank almost full</td>
836</tr>
837<tr>
838 <td>marker-waste-full</td>
839 <td>Waste tank full</td>
840</tr>
841<tr>
842 <td>media-empty</td>
843 <td>Out of media</td>
844</tr>
845<tr>
846 <td>media-jam</td>
847 <td>Media is jammed in the printer</td>
848</tr>
849<tr>
850 <td>media-low</td>
851 <td>Low on media</td>
852</tr>
853<tr>
854 <td>paused</td>
855 <td>Stop the printer</td>
856</tr>
857<tr>
858 <td>timed-out</td>
859 <td>Unable to connect to printer</td>
860</tr>
861<tr>
862 <td>toner-empty</td>
863 <td>Out of toner</td>
864</tr>
865<tr>
866 <td>toner-low</td>
867 <td>Low on toner</td>
868</tr>
869</tbody>
870</table></div>
871
20fbc903 872<h3><a name="COMMUNICATING_BACKEND">Communicating with the Backend</a></h3>
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873
874<p>Filters can communicate with the backend via the
875<a href="#cupsBackChannelRead"><code>cupsBackChannelRead</code></a> and
876<a href="#cupsSideChannelDoRequest"><code>cupsSideChannelDoRequest</code></a>
22c9029b 877functions. The
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878<a href="#cupsBackChannelRead"><code>cupsBackChannelRead</code></a> function
879reads data that has been sent back from the device and is typically used to
880obtain status and configuration information. For example, the following code
881polls the backend for back-channel data:</p>
882
883<pre class="example">
884#include &lt;cups/cups.h&gt;
885
886char buffer[8192];
887ssize_t bytes;
888
889/* Use a timeout of 0.0 seconds to poll for back-channel data */
890bytes = cupsBackChannelRead(buffer, sizeof(buffer), 0.0);
891</pre>
f7deaa1a 892
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893<p>Filters can also use <code>select()</code> or <code>poll()</code> on the
894back-channel file descriptor (3 or <code>CUPS_BC_FD</code>) to read data only
895when it is available.</p>
896
897<p>The
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898<a href="#cupsSideChannelDoRequest"><code>cupsSideChannelDoRequest</code></a>
899function allows you to get out-of-band status information and do synchronization
900with the device. For example, the following code gets the current IEEE-1284
901device ID string from the backend:</p>
902
903<pre class="example">
f7deaa1a 904#include &lt;cups/sidechannel.h&gt;
905
906char data[2049];
907int datalen;
5a738aea 908<a href="#cups_sc_status_t">cups_sc_status_t</a> status;
f7deaa1a 909
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910/* Tell cupsSideChannelDoRequest() how big our buffer is, less 1 byte for
911 nul-termination... */
f7deaa1a 912datalen = sizeof(data) - 1;
913
914/* Get the IEEE-1284 device ID, waiting for up to 1 second */
5a738aea 915status = <a href="#cupsSideChannelDoRequest">cupsSideChannelDoRequest</a>(CUPS_SC_CMD_GET_DEVICE_ID, data, &amp;datalen, 1.0);
f7deaa1a 916
917/* Use the returned value if OK was returned and the length is non-zero */
918if (status == CUPS_SC_STATUS_OK && datalen > 0)
919 data[datalen] = '\0';
920else
921 data[0] = '\0';
922</pre>
923
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924<h3><a name="COMMUNICATING_FILTER">Communicating with Filters</a></h3>
925
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926<p>Backends communicate with filters using the reciprocal functions
927<a href="#cupsBackChannelWrite"><code>cupsBackChannelWrite</code></a>,
928<a href="#cupsSideChannelRead"><code>cupsSideChannelRead</code></a>, and
929<a href="#cupsSideChannelWrite"><code>cupsSideChannelWrite</code></a>. We
930recommend writing back-channel data using a timeout of 1.0 seconds:</p>
f7deaa1a 931
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932<pre class="example">
933#include &lt;cups/cups.h&gt;
f7deaa1a 934
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935char buffer[8192];
936ssize_t bytes;
f7deaa1a 937
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938/* Obtain data from printer/device */
939...
940
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941/* Use a timeout of 1.0 seconds to give filters a chance to read */
942cupsBackChannelWrite(buffer, bytes, 1.0);
f7deaa1a 943</pre>
944
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945<p>The <a href="#cupsSideChannelRead"><code>cupsSideChannelRead</code></a>
946function reads a side-channel command from a filter, driver, or port monitor.
947Backends can either poll for commands using a <code>timeout</code> of 0.0, wait
948indefinitely for commands using a <code>timeout</code> of -1.0 (probably in a
949separate thread for that purpose), or use <code>select</code> or
950<code>poll</code> on the <code>CUPS_SC_FD</code> file descriptor (4) to handle
20fbc903 951input and output on several file descriptors at the same time.</p>
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952
953<p>Once a command is processed, the backend uses the
954<a href="#cupsSideChannelWrite"><code>cupsSideChannelWrite</code></a> function
955to send its response. For example, the following code shows how to poll for a
956side-channel command and respond to it:</p>
957
958<pre class="example">
f7deaa1a 959#include &lt;cups/sidechannel.h&gt;
960
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961<a href="#cups_sc_command_t">cups_sc_command_t</a> command;
962<a href="#cups_sc_status_t">cups_sc_status_t</a> status;
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963char data[2048];
964int datalen = sizeof(data);
f7deaa1a 965
966/* Poll for a command... */
20fbc903 967if (!<a href="#cupsSideChannelRead">cupsSideChannelRead</a>(&amp;command, &amp;status, data, &amp;datalen, 0.0))
f7deaa1a 968{
f7deaa1a 969 switch (command)
970 {
20fbc903 971 /* handle supported commands, fill data/datalen/status with values as needed */
f7deaa1a 972
973 default :
974 status = CUPS_SC_STATUS_NOT_IMPLEMENTED;
975 datalen = 0;
976 break;
977 }
978
979 /* Send a response... */
5a738aea 980 <a href="#cupsSideChannelWrite">cupsSideChannelWrite</a>(command, status, data, datalen, 1.0);
f7deaa1a 981}
982</pre>
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983
984<h3><a name="SNMP">Doing SNMP Queries with Network Printers</a></h3>
985
986<p>The Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) allows you to get the current
987status, page counter, and supply levels from most network printers. Every
988piece of information is associated with an Object Identifier (OID), and
989every printer has a <em>community</em> name associated with it. OIDs can be
990queried directly or by "walking" over a range of OIDs with a common prefix.</p>
991
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992<p>The two CUPS SNMP functions provide a simple API for querying network
993printers through the side-channel interface. Each accepts a string containing
994an OID like ".1.3.6.1.2.1.43.10.2.1.4.1.1" (the standard page counter OID)
995along with a timeout for the query.</p>
ac884b6a 996
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997<p>The <a href="#cupsSideChannelSNMPGet"><code>cupsSideChannelSNMPGet</code></a>
998function queries a single OID and returns the value as a string in a buffer
999you supply:</p>
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1000
1001<pre class="example">
20fbc903 1002#include &lt;cups/sidechannel.h&gt;
ac884b6a 1003
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1004char data[512];
1005int datalen = sizeof(data);
ac884b6a 1006
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1007if (<a href="#cupsSideChannelSNMPGet">cupsSideChannelSNMPGet</a>(".1.3.6.1.2.1.43.10.2.1.4.1.1", data, &amp;datalen, 5.0)
1008 == CUPS_SC_STATUS_OK)
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1009{
1010 /* Do something with the value */
20fbc903 1011 printf("Page counter is: %s\n", data);
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1012}
1013</pre>
1014
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1015<p>The
1016<a href="#cupsSideChannelSNMPWalk"><code>cupsSideChannelSNMPWalk</code></a>
1017function allows you to query a whole group of OIDs, calling a function of your
1018choice for each OID that is found:</p>
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1019
1020<pre class="example">
20fbc903 1021#include &lt;cups/sidechannel.h&gt;
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1022
1023void
20fbc903 1024my_callback(const char *oid, const char *data, int datalen, void *context)
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1025{
1026 /* Do something with the value */
20fbc903 1027 printf("%s=%s\n", oid, data);
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1028}
1029
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1030...
1031
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1032void *my_data;
1033
20fbc903 1034<a href="#cupsSideChannelSNMPWalk">cupsSNMPSideChannelWalk</a>(".1.3.6.1.2.1.43", 5.0, my_callback, my_data);
ac884b6a 1035</pre>
20fbc903 1036<h2 class="title"><a name="FUNCTIONS">Functions</a></h2>
426c6a59 1037<h3 class="function"><span class="info">&nbsp;CUPS 1.2/Mac OS X 10.5&nbsp;</span><a name="cupsBackChannelRead">cupsBackChannelRead</a></h3>
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1038<p class="description">Read data from the backchannel.</p>
1039<p class="code">
1040ssize_t cupsBackChannelRead (<br>
1041&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;char *buffer,<br>
1042&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;size_t bytes,<br>
1043&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;double timeout<br>
1044);</p>
1045<h4 class="parameters">Parameters</h4>
1046<dl>
1047<dt>buffer</dt>
79e1d494 1048<dd class="description">Buffer to read into</dd>
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1049<dt>bytes</dt>
1050<dd class="description">Bytes to read</dd>
1051<dt>timeout</dt>
79e1d494 1052<dd class="description">Timeout in seconds, typically 0.0 to poll</dd>
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1053</dl>
1054<h4 class="returnvalue">Return Value</h4>
1055<p class="description">Bytes read or -1 on error</p>
1056<h4 class="discussion">Discussion</h4>
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1057<p class="discussion">Reads up to &quot;bytes&quot; bytes from the backchannel/backend. The &quot;timeout&quot;
1058parameter controls how many seconds to wait for the data - use 0.0 to
1059return immediately if there is no data, -1.0 to wait for data indefinitely.
ef416fc2 1060
5a738aea 1061</p>
426c6a59 1062<h3 class="function"><span class="info">&nbsp;CUPS 1.2/Mac OS X 10.5&nbsp;</span><a name="cupsBackChannelWrite">cupsBackChannelWrite</a></h3>
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1063<p class="description">Write data to the backchannel.</p>
1064<p class="code">
1065ssize_t cupsBackChannelWrite (<br>
1066&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;const char *buffer,<br>
1067&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;size_t bytes,<br>
1068&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;double timeout<br>
1069);</p>
1070<h4 class="parameters">Parameters</h4>
1071<dl>
1072<dt>buffer</dt>
1073<dd class="description">Buffer to write</dd>
1074<dt>bytes</dt>
1075<dd class="description">Bytes to write</dd>
1076<dt>timeout</dt>
79e1d494 1077<dd class="description">Timeout in seconds, typically 1.0</dd>
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1078</dl>
1079<h4 class="returnvalue">Return Value</h4>
1080<p class="description">Bytes written or -1 on error</p>
1081<h4 class="discussion">Discussion</h4>
79e1d494 1082<p class="discussion">Writes &quot;bytes&quot; bytes to the backchannel/filter. The &quot;timeout&quot; parameter
ef416fc2 1083controls how many seconds to wait for the data to be written - use
10840.0 to return immediately if the data cannot be written, -1.0 to wait
1085indefinitely.
1086
ac884b6a 1087</p>
426c6a59 1088<h3 class="function"><span class="info">&nbsp;CUPS 1.2/Mac OS X 10.5&nbsp;</span><a name="cupsBackendDeviceURI">cupsBackendDeviceURI</a></h3>
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1089<p class="description">Get the device URI for a backend.</p>
1090<p class="code">
1091const char *cupsBackendDeviceURI (<br>
1092&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;char **argv<br>
1093);</p>
1094<h4 class="parameters">Parameters</h4>
1095<dl>
1096<dt>argv</dt>
1097<dd class="description">Command-line arguments</dd>
1098</dl>
1099<h4 class="returnvalue">Return Value</h4>
1100<p class="description">Device URI or <code>NULL</code></p>
1101<h4 class="discussion">Discussion</h4>
1102<p class="discussion">The &quot;argv&quot; argument is the argv argument passed to main(). This
1103function returns the device URI passed in the DEVICE_URI environment
1104variable or the device URI passed in argv[0], whichever is found
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1105first.
1106
1107</p>
178cb736 1108<h3 class="function"><span class="info">&nbsp;CUPS 1.4/Mac OS X 10.6&nbsp;</span><a name="cupsBackendReport">cupsBackendReport</a></h3>
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1109<p class="description">Write a device line from a backend.</p>
1110<p class="code">
1111void cupsBackendReport (<br>
1112&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;const char *device_scheme,<br>
1113&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;const char *device_uri,<br>
1114&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;const char *device_make_and_model,<br>
1115&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;const char *device_info,<br>
1116&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;const char *device_id,<br>
1117&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;const char *device_location<br>
1118);</p>
1119<h4 class="parameters">Parameters</h4>
1120<dl>
1121<dt>device_scheme</dt>
1122<dd class="description">device-scheme string</dd>
1123<dt>device_uri</dt>
1124<dd class="description">device-uri string</dd>
1125<dt>device_make_and_model</dt>
1126<dd class="description">device-make-and-model string or <code>NULL</code></dd>
1127<dt>device_info</dt>
1128<dd class="description">device-info string or <code>NULL</code></dd>
1129<dt>device_id</dt>
1130<dd class="description">device-id string or <code>NULL</code></dd>
1131<dt>device_location</dt>
1132<dd class="description">device-location string or <code>NULL</code></dd>
1133</dl>
1134<h4 class="discussion">Discussion</h4>
1135<p class="discussion">This function writes a single device line to stdout for a backend.
1136It handles quoting of special characters in the device-make-and-model,
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1137device-info, device-id, and device-location strings.
1138
1139</p>
1140<h3 class="function"><span class="info">&nbsp;CUPS 1.3/Mac OS X 10.5&nbsp;</span><a name="cupsSideChannelDoRequest">cupsSideChannelDoRequest</a></h3>
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1141<p class="description">Send a side-channel command to a backend and wait for a response.</p>
1142<p class="code">
1143<a href="#cups_sc_status_t">cups_sc_status_t</a> cupsSideChannelDoRequest (<br>
1144&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#cups_sc_command_t">cups_sc_command_t</a> command,<br>
1145&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;char *data,<br>
1146&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;int *datalen,<br>
1147&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;double timeout<br>
1148);</p>
1149<h4 class="parameters">Parameters</h4>
1150<dl>
1151<dt>command</dt>
1152<dd class="description">Command to send</dd>
1153<dt>data</dt>
1154<dd class="description">Response data buffer pointer</dd>
1155<dt>datalen</dt>
1156<dd class="description">Size of data buffer on entry, number of bytes in buffer on return</dd>
1157<dt>timeout</dt>
1158<dd class="description">Timeout in seconds</dd>
1159</dl>
1160<h4 class="returnvalue">Return Value</h4>
1161<p class="description">Status of command</p>
1162<h4 class="discussion">Discussion</h4>
1163<p class="discussion">This function is normally only called by filters, drivers, or port
f7deaa1a 1164monitors in order to communicate with the backend used by the current
1165printer. Programs must be prepared to handle timeout or &quot;not
1166implemented&quot; status codes, which indicate that the backend or device
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1167do not support the specified side-channel command.<br>
1168<br>
1169The &quot;datalen&quot; parameter must be initialized to the size of the buffer
f7deaa1a 1170pointed to by the &quot;data&quot; parameter. cupsSideChannelDoRequest() will
1171update the value to contain the number of data bytes in the buffer.
1172
5a738aea 1173</p>
426c6a59 1174<h3 class="function"><span class="info">&nbsp;CUPS 1.3/Mac OS X 10.5&nbsp;</span><a name="cupsSideChannelRead">cupsSideChannelRead</a></h3>
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1175<p class="description">Read a side-channel message.</p>
1176<p class="code">
1177int cupsSideChannelRead (<br>
1178&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#cups_sc_command_t">cups_sc_command_t</a> *command,<br>
1179&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#cups_sc_status_t">cups_sc_status_t</a> *status,<br>
1180&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;char *data,<br>
1181&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;int *datalen,<br>
1182&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;double timeout<br>
1183);</p>
1184<h4 class="parameters">Parameters</h4>
1185<dl>
1186<dt>command</dt>
1187<dd class="description">Command code</dd>
1188<dt>status</dt>
1189<dd class="description">Status code</dd>
1190<dt>data</dt>
1191<dd class="description">Data buffer pointer</dd>
1192<dt>datalen</dt>
1193<dd class="description">Size of data buffer on entry, number of bytes in buffer on return</dd>
1194<dt>timeout</dt>
1195<dd class="description">Timeout in seconds</dd>
1196</dl>
1197<h4 class="returnvalue">Return Value</h4>
1198<p class="description">0 on success, -1 on error</p>
1199<h4 class="discussion">Discussion</h4>
1200<p class="discussion">This function is normally only called by backend programs to read
f7deaa1a 1201commands from a filter, driver, or port monitor program. The
1202caller must be prepared to handle incomplete or invalid messages
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1203and return the corresponding status codes.<br>
1204<br>
1205The &quot;datalen&quot; parameter must be initialized to the size of the buffer
f7deaa1a 1206pointed to by the &quot;data&quot; parameter. cupsSideChannelDoRequest() will
1207update the value to contain the number of data bytes in the buffer.
1208
20fbc903 1209</p>
178cb736 1210<h3 class="function"><span class="info">&nbsp;CUPS 1.4/Mac OS X 10.6&nbsp;</span><a name="cupsSideChannelSNMPGet">cupsSideChannelSNMPGet</a></h3>
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1211<p class="description">Query a SNMP OID's value.</p>
1212<p class="code">
1213<a href="#cups_sc_status_t">cups_sc_status_t</a> cupsSideChannelSNMPGet (<br>
1214&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;const char *oid,<br>
1215&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;char *data,<br>
1216&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;int *datalen,<br>
1217&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;double timeout<br>
1218);</p>
1219<h4 class="parameters">Parameters</h4>
1220<dl>
1221<dt>oid</dt>
1222<dd class="description">OID to query</dd>
1223<dt>data</dt>
1224<dd class="description">Buffer for OID value</dd>
1225<dt>datalen</dt>
1226<dd class="description">Size of OID buffer on entry, size of value on return</dd>
1227<dt>timeout</dt>
1228<dd class="description">Timeout in seconds</dd>
1229</dl>
1230<h4 class="returnvalue">Return Value</h4>
1231<p class="description">Query status</p>
1232<h4 class="discussion">Discussion</h4>
1233<p class="discussion">This function asks the backend to do a SNMP OID query on behalf of the
1234filter, port monitor, or backend using the default community name.<br>
1235<br>
1236&quot;oid&quot; contains a numeric OID consisting of integers separated by periods,
1237for example &quot;.1.3.6.1.2.1.43&quot;. Symbolic names from SNMP MIBs are not
1238supported and must be converted to their numeric forms.<br>
1239<br>
1240On input, &quot;data&quot; and &quot;datalen&quot; provide the location and size of the
1241buffer to hold the OID value as a string. HEX-String (binary) values are
1242converted to hexadecimal strings representing the binary data, while
1243NULL-Value and unknown OID types are returned as the empty string.
1244The returned &quot;datalen&quot; does not include the trailing nul.
1245
1246<code>CUPS_SC_STATUS_NOT_IMPLEMENTED</code> is returned by backends that do not
1247support SNMP queries. <code>CUPS_SC_STATUS_NO_RESPONSE</code> is returned when
1248the printer does not respond to the SNMP query.
1249
1250</p>
178cb736 1251<h3 class="function"><span class="info">&nbsp;CUPS 1.4/Mac OS X 10.6&nbsp;</span><a name="cupsSideChannelSNMPWalk">cupsSideChannelSNMPWalk</a></h3>
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1252<p class="description">Query multiple SNMP OID values.</p>
1253<p class="code">
1254<a href="#cups_sc_status_t">cups_sc_status_t</a> cupsSideChannelSNMPWalk (<br>
1255&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;const char *oid,<br>
1256&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;double timeout,<br>
1257&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#cups_sc_walk_func_t">cups_sc_walk_func_t</a> cb,<br>
1258&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;void *context<br>
1259);</p>
1260<h4 class="parameters">Parameters</h4>
1261<dl>
1262<dt>oid</dt>
1263<dd class="description">First numeric OID to query</dd>
1264<dt>timeout</dt>
1265<dd class="description">Timeout for each query in seconds</dd>
1266<dt>cb</dt>
1267<dd class="description">Function to call with each value</dd>
1268<dt>context</dt>
1269<dd class="description">Application-defined pointer to send to callback</dd>
1270</dl>
1271<h4 class="returnvalue">Return Value</h4>
1272<p class="description">Status of first query of <code>CUPS_SC_STATUS_OK</code> on success</p>
1273<h4 class="discussion">Discussion</h4>
1274<p class="discussion">This function asks the backend to do multiple SNMP OID queries on behalf
1275of the filter, port monitor, or backend using the default community name.
1276All OIDs under the &quot;parent&quot; OID are queried and the results are sent to
1277the callback function you provide.<br>
1278<br>
1279&quot;oid&quot; contains a numeric OID consisting of integers separated by periods,
1280for example &quot;.1.3.6.1.2.1.43&quot;. Symbolic names from SNMP MIBs are not
1281supported and must be converted to their numeric forms.<br>
1282<br>
1283&quot;timeout&quot; specifies the timeout for each OID query. The total amount of
1284time will depend on the number of OID values found and the time required
1285for each query.<br>
1286<br>
1287&quot;cb&quot; provides a function to call for every value that is found. &quot;context&quot;
1288is an application-defined pointer that is sent to the callback function
1289along with the OID and current data. The data passed to the callback is the
1290same as returned by <a href="#cupsSideChannelSNMPGet"><code>cupsSideChannelSNMPGet</code></a>.
1291
1292<code>CUPS_SC_STATUS_NOT_IMPLEMENTED</code> is returned by backends that do not
1293support SNMP queries. <code>CUPS_SC_STATUS_NO_RESPONSE</code> is returned when
1294the printer does not respond to the first SNMP query.
1295
5a738aea 1296</p>
426c6a59 1297<h3 class="function"><span class="info">&nbsp;CUPS 1.3/Mac OS X 10.5&nbsp;</span><a name="cupsSideChannelWrite">cupsSideChannelWrite</a></h3>
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1298<p class="description">Write a side-channel message.</p>
1299<p class="code">
1300int cupsSideChannelWrite (<br>
1301&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#cups_sc_command_t">cups_sc_command_t</a> command,<br>
1302&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#cups_sc_status_t">cups_sc_status_t</a> status,<br>
1303&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;const char *data,<br>
1304&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;int datalen,<br>
1305&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;double timeout<br>
1306);</p>
1307<h4 class="parameters">Parameters</h4>
1308<dl>
1309<dt>command</dt>
1310<dd class="description">Command code</dd>
1311<dt>status</dt>
1312<dd class="description">Status code</dd>
1313<dt>data</dt>
1314<dd class="description">Data buffer pointer</dd>
1315<dt>datalen</dt>
1316<dd class="description">Number of bytes of data</dd>
1317<dt>timeout</dt>
1318<dd class="description">Timeout in seconds</dd>
1319</dl>
1320<h4 class="returnvalue">Return Value</h4>
1321<p class="description">0 on success, -1 on error</p>
1322<h4 class="discussion">Discussion</h4>
1323<p class="discussion">This function is normally only called by backend programs to send
f7deaa1a 1324responses to a filter, driver, or port monitor program.
1325
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1326</p>
1327<h2 class="title"><a name="TYPES">Data Types</a></h2>
1328<h3 class="typedef"><a name="cups_backend_t">cups_backend_t</a></h3>
1329<p class="description">Backend exit codes</p>
1330<p class="code">
1331typedef enum <a href="#cups_backend_e">cups_backend_e</a> cups_backend_t;
1332</p>
1333<h3 class="typedef"><a name="cups_sc_bidi_t">cups_sc_bidi_t</a></h3>
1334<p class="description">Bidirectional capabilities</p>
1335<p class="code">
1336typedef enum <a href="#cups_sc_bidi_e">cups_sc_bidi_e</a> cups_sc_bidi_t;
1337</p>
1338<h3 class="typedef"><a name="cups_sc_command_t">cups_sc_command_t</a></h3>
1339<p class="description">Request command codes</p>
1340<p class="code">
1341typedef enum <a href="#cups_sc_command_e">cups_sc_command_e</a> cups_sc_command_t;
1342</p>
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1343<h3 class="typedef"><a name="cups_sc_connected_t">cups_sc_connected_t</a></h3>
1344<p class="description">Connectivity values</p>
1345<p class="code">
1346typedef enum <a href="#cups_sc_connected_e">cups_sc_connected_e</a> cups_sc_connected_t;
1347</p>
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1348<h3 class="typedef"><a name="cups_sc_state_t">cups_sc_state_t</a></h3>
1349<p class="description">Printer state bits</p>
1350<p class="code">
1351typedef enum <a href="#cups_sc_state_e">cups_sc_state_e</a> cups_sc_state_t;
1352</p>
1353<h3 class="typedef"><a name="cups_sc_status_t">cups_sc_status_t</a></h3>
1354<p class="description">Response status codes</p>
1355<p class="code">
1356typedef enum <a href="#cups_sc_status_e">cups_sc_status_e</a> cups_sc_status_t;
1357</p>
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1358<h3 class="typedef"><a name="cups_sc_walk_func_t">cups_sc_walk_func_t</a></h3>
1359<p class="description">SNMP walk callback</p>
1360<p class="code">
1361typedef void (*cups_sc_walk_func_t)(const char *oid, const char *data, int datalen, void *context);
1362</p>
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1363<h2 class="title"><a name="ENUMERATIONS">Constants</a></h2>
1364<h3 class="enumeration"><a name="cups_backend_e">cups_backend_e</a></h3>
1365<p class="description">Backend exit codes</p>
1366<h4 class="constants">Constants</h4>
1367<dl>
1368<dt>CUPS_BACKEND_AUTH_REQUIRED </dt>
1369<dd class="description">Job failed, authentication required</dd>
1370<dt>CUPS_BACKEND_CANCEL </dt>
1371<dd class="description">Job failed, cancel job</dd>
1372<dt>CUPS_BACKEND_FAILED </dt>
1373<dd class="description">Job failed, use error-policy</dd>
1374<dt>CUPS_BACKEND_HOLD </dt>
1375<dd class="description">Job failed, hold job</dd>
1376<dt>CUPS_BACKEND_OK </dt>
1377<dd class="description">Job completed successfully</dd>
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MS
1378<dt>CUPS_BACKEND_RETRY </dt>
1379<dd class="description">Job failed, retry this job later</dd>
1380<dt>CUPS_BACKEND_RETRY_CURRENT </dt>
1381<dd class="description">Job failed, retry this job immediately</dd>
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1382<dt>CUPS_BACKEND_STOP </dt>
1383<dd class="description">Job failed, stop queue</dd>
1384</dl>
1385<h3 class="enumeration"><a name="cups_sc_bidi_e">cups_sc_bidi_e</a></h3>
79e1d494 1386<p class="description">Bidirectional capability values</p>
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MS
1387<h4 class="constants">Constants</h4>
1388<dl>
1389<dt>CUPS_SC_BIDI_NOT_SUPPORTED </dt>
1390<dd class="description">Bidirectional I/O is not supported</dd>
1391<dt>CUPS_SC_BIDI_SUPPORTED </dt>
1392<dd class="description">Bidirectional I/O is supported</dd>
1393</dl>
1394<h3 class="enumeration"><a name="cups_sc_command_e">cups_sc_command_e</a></h3>
1395<p class="description">Request command codes</p>
1396<h4 class="constants">Constants</h4>
1397<dl>
1398<dt>CUPS_SC_CMD_DRAIN_OUTPUT </dt>
1399<dd class="description">Drain all pending output</dd>
1400<dt>CUPS_SC_CMD_GET_BIDI </dt>
1401<dd class="description">Return bidirectional capabilities</dd>
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1402<dt>CUPS_SC_CMD_GET_CONNECTED <span class="info">&nbsp;CUPS 1.5&nbsp;</span></dt>
1403<dd class="description">Return whether the backend is &quot;connected&quot; to the printer </dd>
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1404<dt>CUPS_SC_CMD_GET_DEVICE_ID </dt>
1405<dd class="description">Return the IEEE-1284 device ID</dd>
1406<dt>CUPS_SC_CMD_GET_STATE </dt>
1407<dd class="description">Return the device state</dd>
178cb736 1408<dt>CUPS_SC_CMD_SNMP_GET <span class="info">&nbsp;CUPS 1.4/Mac OS X 10.6&nbsp;</span></dt>
20fbc903 1409<dd class="description">Query an SNMP OID </dd>
178cb736 1410<dt>CUPS_SC_CMD_SNMP_GET_NEXT <span class="info">&nbsp;CUPS 1.4/Mac OS X 10.6&nbsp;</span></dt>
20fbc903 1411<dd class="description">Query the next SNMP OID </dd>
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MS
1412<dt>CUPS_SC_CMD_SOFT_RESET </dt>
1413<dd class="description">Do a soft reset</dd>
1414</dl>
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MS
1415<h3 class="enumeration"><a name="cups_sc_connected_e">cups_sc_connected_e</a></h3>
1416<p class="description">Connectivity values</p>
1417<h4 class="constants">Constants</h4>
1418<dl>
1419<dt>CUPS_SC_CONNECTED </dt>
1420<dd class="description">Backend is &quot;connected&quot; to printer</dd>
1421<dt>CUPS_SC_NOT_CONNECTED </dt>
1422<dd class="description">Backend is not &quot;connected&quot; to printer</dd>
1423</dl>
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1424<h3 class="enumeration"><a name="cups_sc_state_e">cups_sc_state_e</a></h3>
1425<p class="description">Printer state bits</p>
1426<h4 class="constants">Constants</h4>
1427<dl>
1428<dt>CUPS_SC_STATE_BUSY </dt>
1429<dd class="description">Device is busy</dd>
1430<dt>CUPS_SC_STATE_ERROR </dt>
1431<dd class="description">Other error condition</dd>
1432<dt>CUPS_SC_STATE_MARKER_EMPTY </dt>
1433<dd class="description">Toner/ink out condition</dd>
1434<dt>CUPS_SC_STATE_MARKER_LOW </dt>
1435<dd class="description">Toner/ink low condition</dd>
1436<dt>CUPS_SC_STATE_MEDIA_EMPTY </dt>
1437<dd class="description">Paper out condition</dd>
1438<dt>CUPS_SC_STATE_MEDIA_LOW </dt>
1439<dd class="description">Paper low condition</dd>
1440<dt>CUPS_SC_STATE_OFFLINE </dt>
79e1d494 1441<dd class="description">Device is offline</dd>
5a738aea 1442<dt>CUPS_SC_STATE_ONLINE </dt>
79e1d494 1443<dd class="description">Device is online</dd>
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1444</dl>
1445<h3 class="enumeration"><a name="cups_sc_status_e">cups_sc_status_e</a></h3>
1446<p class="description">Response status codes</p>
1447<h4 class="constants">Constants</h4>
1448<dl>
1449<dt>CUPS_SC_STATUS_BAD_MESSAGE </dt>
1450<dd class="description">The command/response message was invalid</dd>
1451<dt>CUPS_SC_STATUS_IO_ERROR </dt>
1452<dd class="description">An I/O error occurred</dd>
1453<dt>CUPS_SC_STATUS_NONE </dt>
1454<dd class="description">No status</dd>
1455<dt>CUPS_SC_STATUS_NOT_IMPLEMENTED </dt>
1456<dd class="description">Command not implemented</dd>
1457<dt>CUPS_SC_STATUS_NO_RESPONSE </dt>
1458<dd class="description">The device did not respond</dd>
1459<dt>CUPS_SC_STATUS_OK </dt>
1460<dd class="description">Operation succeeded</dd>
1461<dt>CUPS_SC_STATUS_TIMEOUT </dt>
1462<dd class="description">The backend did not respond</dd>
1463<dt>CUPS_SC_STATUS_TOO_BIG </dt>
1464<dd class="description">Response too big</dd>
1465</dl>
1466</div>
ef416fc2 1467</body>
1468</html>