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2 "$Id: api-filter.shtml 7677 2008-06-19 23:22:19Z mike $"
3
4 Filter and backend programming introduction for CUPS.
5
6 Copyright 2007-2011 by Apple Inc.
7 Copyright 1997-2006 by Easy Software Products, all rights reserved.
8
9 These coded instructions, statements, and computer programs are the
10 property of Apple Inc. and are protected by Federal copyright
11 law. Distribution and use rights are outlined in the file "LICENSE.txt"
12 which should have been included with this file. If this file is
13 file is missing or damaged, see the license at "http://www.cups.org/".
14 -->
15
16 <h2 class='title'><a name="OVERVIEW">Overview</a></h2>
17
18 <p>Filters (which include printer drivers and port monitors) and backends
19 are used to convert job files to a printable format and send that data to the
20 printer itself. All of these programs use a common interface for processing
21 print jobs and communicating status information to the scheduler. Each is run
22 with a standard set of command-line arguments:<p>
23
24 <dl class="code">
25
26 <dt>argv[1]</dt>
27 <dd>The job ID</dd>
28
29 <dt>argv[2]</dt>
30 <dd>The user printing the job</dd>
31
32 <dt>argv[3]</dt>
33 <dd>The job name/title</dd>
34
35 <dt>argv[4]</dt>
36 <dd>The number of copies to print</dd>
37
38 <dt>argv[5]</dt>
39 <dd>The options that were provided when the job was submitted</dd>
40
41 <dt>argv[6]</dt>
42 <dd>The file to print (first program only)</dd>
43 </dl>
44
45 <p>The scheduler runs one or more of these programs to print any given job. The
46 first filter reads from the print file and writes to the standard output, while
47 the remaining filters read from the standard input and write to the standard
48 output. The backend is the last filter in the chain and writes to the
49 device.</p>
50
51 <p>Filters are always run as a non-privileged user, typically "lp", with no
52 connection to the user's desktop. Backends are run either as a non-privileged
53 user or as root if the file permissions do not allow user or group execution.
54 The <a href="#PERMISSIONS">file permissions</a> section talks about this in
55 more detail.</p>
56
57 <h3><a name="SECURITY">Security Considerations</a></h3>
58
59 <p>It is always important to use security programming practices. Filters and
60 most backends are run as a non-privileged user, so the major security
61 consideration is resource utilization - filters should not depend on unlimited
62 amounts of CPU, memory, or disk space, and should protect against conditions
63 that could lead to excess usage of any resource like infinite loops and
64 unbounded recursion. In addition, filters must <em>never</em> allow the user to
65 specify an arbitrary file path to a separator page, template, or other file
66 used by the filter since that can lead to an unauthorized disclosure of
67 information. <em>Always</em> treat input as suspect and validate it!</p>
68
69 <p>If you are developing a backend that runs as root, make sure to check for
70 potential buffer overflows, integer under/overflow conditions, and file
71 accesses since these can lead to privilege escalations. When writing files,
72 always validate the file path and <em>never</em> allow a user to determine
73 where to store a file.</p>
74
75 <blockquote><b>Note:</b>
76
77 <p><em>Never</em> write files to a user's home directory. Aside from the
78 security implications, CUPS is a network print service and as such the network
79 user may not be the same as the local user and/or there may not be a local home
80 directory to write to.</p>
81
82 <p>In addition, some operating systems provide additional security mechanisms
83 that further limit file system access, even for backends running as root. On
84 Mac OS X, for example, no backend may write to a user's home directory.</p>
85 </blockquote>
86
87 <h3><a name="SIGNALS">Canceled Jobs and Signal Handling</a></h3>
88
89 <p>The scheduler sends <code>SIGTERM</code> when a printing job is canceled or
90 held. Filters, backends, and port monitors <em>must</em> catch
91 <code>SIGTERM</code> and perform any cleanup necessary to produce a valid output
92 file or return the printer to a known good state. The recommended behavior is to
93 end the output on the current page, preferably on the current line or object
94 being printed.</p>
95
96 <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 ignore <code>SIGPIPE</code> at the beginning of <code>main()</code> with the following function call:</p>
97
98 <pre class="example">
99 #include &lt;signal.h&gt;>
100
101 ...
102
103 int
104 main(int argc, char *argv[])
105 {
106 signal(SIGPIPE, SIG_IGN);
107
108 ...
109 }
110 </pre>
111
112 <h3><a name="PERMISSIONS">File Permissions</a></h3>
113
114 <p>For security reasons, CUPS will only run filters and backends that are owned
115 by root and do not have world or group write permissions. The recommended
116 permissions for filters and backends are 0555 - read and execute but no write.
117 Backends that must run as root should use permissions of 0500 - read and execute
118 by root, no access for other users. Write permissions can be enabled for the
119 root user only.</p>
120
121 <p>To avoid a warning message, the directory containing your filter(s) must also
122 be owned by root and have world and group write disabled - permissions of 0755
123 or 0555 are strongly encouraged.</p>
124
125 <h3><a name="TEMPFILES">Temporary Files</a></h3>
126
127 <p>Temporary files should be created in the directory specified by the
128 "TMPDIR" environment variable. The
129 <a href="#cupsTempFile2"><code>cupsTempFile2</code></a> function can be
130 used to safely create temporary files in this directory.</p>
131
132 <h3><a name="COPIES">Copy Generation</a></h3>
133
134 <p>The <code>argv[4]</code> argument specifies the number of copies to produce
135 of the input file. In general, you should only generate copies if the
136 <em>filename</em> argument is supplied. The only exception to this are
137 filters that produce device-independent PostScript output, since the PostScript
138 filter <var>pstops</var> is responsible for generating copies of PostScript
139 files.</p>
140
141 <h3><a name="EXITCODES">Exit Codes</a></h3>
142
143 <p>Filters must exit with status 0 when they successfully generate print data
144 or 1 when they encounter an error. Backends can return any of the
145 <a href="#cups_backend_t"><code>cups_backend_t</code></a> constants.</p>
146
147 <h3><a name="ENVIRONMENT">Environment Variables</a></h3>
148
149 <p>The following environment variables are defined by the printing system
150 when running print filters and backends:</p>
151
152 <dl class="code">
153
154 <dt>APPLE_LANGUAGE</dt>
155 <dd>The Apple language identifier associated with the job
156 (Mac OS X only).</dd>
157
158 <dt>CHARSET</dt>
159 <dd>The job character set, typically "utf-8".</dd>
160
161 <dt>CLASS</dt>
162 <dd>When a job is submitted to a printer class, contains the name of
163 the destination printer class. Otherwise this environment
164 variable will not be set.</dd>
165
166 <dt>CONTENT_TYPE</dt>
167 <dd>The MIME type associated with the file (e.g.
168 application/postscript).</dd>
169
170 <dt>CUPS_CACHEDIR</dt>
171 <dd>The directory where cache files can be stored. Cache files can be
172 used to retain information between jobs or files in a job.</dd>
173
174 <dt>CUPS_DATADIR</dt>
175 <dd>The directory where (read-only) CUPS data files can be found.</dd>
176
177 <dt>CUPS_FILETYPE</dt>
178 <dd>The type of file being printed: "job-sheet" for a banner page and
179 "document" for a regular print file.</dd>
180
181 <dt>CUPS_SERVERROOT</dt>
182 <dd>The root directory of the server.</dd>
183
184 <dt>DEVICE_URI</dt>
185 <dd>The device-uri associated with the printer.</dd>
186
187 <dt>FINAL_CONTENT_TYPE</dt>
188 <dd>The MIME type associated with the printer (e.g.
189 application/vnd.cups-postscript).</dd>
190
191 <dt>LANG</dt>
192 <dd>The language locale associated with the job.</dd>
193
194 <dt>PPD</dt>
195 <dd>The full pathname of the PostScript Printer Description (PPD)
196 file for this printer.</dd>
197
198 <dt>PRINTER</dt>
199 <dd>The queue name of the class or printer.</dd>
200
201 <dt>RIP_CACHE</dt>
202 <dd>The recommended amount of memory to use for Raster Image
203 Processors (RIPs).</dd>
204
205 <dt>TMPDIR</dt>
206 <dd>The directory where temporary files should be created.</dd>
207
208 </dl>
209
210 <h3><a name="MESSAGES">Communicating with the Scheduler</a></h3>
211
212 <p>Filters and backends communicate with the scheduler by writing messages
213 to the standard error file. The scheduler reads messages from all filters in
214 a job and processes the message based on its prefix. For example, the following
215 code sets the current printer state message to "Printing page 5":</p>
216
217 <pre class="example">
218 int page = 5;
219
220 fprintf(stderr, "INFO: Printing page %d\n", page);
221 </pre>
222
223 <p>Each message is a single line of text starting with one of the following
224 prefix strings:</p>
225
226 <dl class="code">
227
228 <dt>ALERT: message</dt>
229 <dd>Sets the printer-state-message attribute and adds the specified
230 message to the current error log file using the "alert" log level.</dd>
231
232 <dt>ATTR: attribute=value [attribute=value]</dt>
233 <dd>Sets the named printer or job attribute(s). Typically this is used
234 to set the <code>marker-colors</code>, <code>marker-high-levels</code>,
235 <code>marker-levels</code>, <code>marker-low-levels</code>,
236 <code>marker-message</code>, <code>marker-names</code>,
237 <code>marker-types</code>, <code>printer-alert</code>, and
238 <code>printer-alert-description</code> printer attributes. Standard
239 <code>marker-types</code> values are listed in <a href='#TABLE1'>Table
240 1</a>.</dd>
241
242 <dt>CRIT: message</dt>
243 <dd>Sets the printer-state-message attribute and adds the specified
244 message to the current error log file using the "critical" log
245 level.</dd>
246
247 <dt>DEBUG: message</dt>
248 <dd>Sets the printer-state-message attribute and adds the specified
249 message to the current error log file using the "debug" log level.</dd>
250
251 <dt>DEBUG2: message</dt>
252 <dd>Sets the printer-state-message attribute and adds the specified
253 message to the current error log file using the "debug2" log level.</dd>
254
255 <dt>EMERG: message</dt>
256 <dd>Sets the printer-state-message attribute and adds the specified
257 message to the current error log file using the "emergency" log
258 level.</dd>
259
260 <dt>ERROR: message</dt>
261 <dd>Sets the printer-state-message attribute and adds the specified
262 message to the current error log file using the "error" log level.
263 Use "ERROR:" messages for non-persistent processing errors.</dd>
264
265 <dt>INFO: message</dt>
266 <dd>Sets the printer-state-message attribute. If the current log level
267 is set to "debug2", also adds the specified message to the current error
268 log file using the "info" log level.</dd>
269
270 <dt>NOTICE: message</dt>
271 <dd>Sets the printer-state-message attribute and adds the specified
272 message to the current error log file using the "notice" log level.</dd>
273
274 <dt>PAGE: page-number #-copies</dt>
275 <dt>PAGE: total #-pages</dt>
276 <dd>Adds an entry to the current page log file. The first form adds
277 #-copies to the job-media-sheets-completed attribute. The second
278 form sets the job-media-sheets-completed attribute to #-pages.</dd>
279
280 <dt>PPD: keyword=value [keyword=value ...]</dt>
281 <dd>Changes or adds keywords to the printer's PPD file. Typically
282 this is used to update installable options or default media settings
283 based on the printer configuration.</dd>
284
285 <dt>STATE: + printer-state-reason [printer-state-reason ...]</dt>
286 <dt>STATE: - printer-state-reason [printer-state-reason ...]</dt>
287 <dd>Sets or clears printer-state-reason keywords for the current queue.
288 Typically this is used to indicate persistent media, ink, toner, and
289 configuration conditions or errors on a printer.
290 <a href='#TABLE2'>Table 2</a> lists the standard state keywords -
291 use vendor-prefixed ("com.example.foo") keywords for custom states. See
292 <a href="#MANAGING_STATE">Managing Printer State in a Filter</a> for more
293 information.
294
295 <dt>WARNING: message</dt>
296 <dd>Sets the printer-state-message attribute and adds the specified
297 message to the current error log file using the "warning" log
298 level.</dd>
299
300 </dl>
301
302 <p>Messages without one of these prefixes are treated as if they began with
303 the "DEBUG:" prefix string.</p>
304
305 <div class='table'><table width='80%' summary='Table 1: Standard marker-types Values'>
306 <caption>Table 1: <a name='TABLE1'>Standard marker-types Values</a></caption>
307 <thead>
308 <tr>
309 <th>marker-type</th>
310 <th>Description</th>
311 </tr>
312 </thead>
313 <tbody>
314 <tr>
315 <td>developer</td>
316 <td>Developer unit</td>
317 </tr>
318 <tr>
319 <td>fuser</td>
320 <td>Fuser unit</td>
321 </tr>
322 <tr>
323 <td>fuserCleaningPad</td>
324 <td>Fuser cleaning pad</td>
325 </tr>
326 <tr>
327 <td>fuserOil</td>
328 <td>Fuser oil</td>
329 </tr>
330 <tr>
331 <td>ink</td>
332 <td>Ink supply</td>
333 </tr>
334 <tr>
335 <td>opc</td>
336 <td>Photo conductor</td>
337 </tr>
338 <tr>
339 <td>solidWax</td>
340 <td>Wax supply</td>
341 </tr>
342 <tr>
343 <td>staples</td>
344 <td>Staple supply</td>
345 </tr>
346 <tr>
347 <td>toner</td>
348 <td>Toner supply</td>
349 </tr>
350 <tr>
351 <td>transferUnit</td>
352 <td>Transfer unit</td>
353 </tr>
354 <tr>
355 <td>wasteInk</td>
356 <td>Waste ink tank</td>
357 </tr>
358 <tr>
359 <td>wasteToner</td>
360 <td>Waste toner tank</td>
361 </tr>
362 <tr>
363 <td>wasteWax</td>
364 <td>Waste wax tank</td>
365 </tr>
366 </tbody>
367 </table></div>
368
369 <br>
370
371 <div class='table'><table width='80%' summary='Table 2: Standard State Keywords'>
372 <caption>Table 2: <a name='TABLE2'>Standard State Keywords</a></caption>
373 <thead>
374 <tr>
375 <th>Keyword</th>
376 <th>Description</th>
377 </tr>
378 </thead>
379 <tbody>
380 <tr>
381 <td>connecting-to-device</td>
382 <td>Connecting to printer but not printing yet.</td>
383 </tr>
384 <tr>
385 <td>cover-open</td>
386 <td>The printer's cover is open.</td>
387 </tr>
388 <tr>
389 <td>input-tray-missing</td>
390 <td>The paper tray is missing.</td>
391 </tr>
392 <tr>
393 <td>marker-supply-empty</td>
394 <td>The printer is out of ink.</td>
395 </tr>
396 <tr>
397 <td>marker-supply-low</td>
398 <td>The printer is almost out of ink.</td>
399 </tr>
400 <tr>
401 <td>marker-waste-almost-full</td>
402 <td>The printer's waste bin is almost full.</td>
403 </tr>
404 <tr>
405 <td>marker-waste-full</td>
406 <td>The printer's waste bin is full.</td>
407 </tr>
408 <tr>
409 <td>media-empty</td>
410 <td>The paper tray (any paper tray) is empty.</td>
411 </tr>
412 <tr>
413 <td>media-jam</td>
414 <td>There is a paper jam.</td>
415 </tr>
416 <tr>
417 <td>media-low</td>
418 <td>The paper tray (any paper tray) is almost empty.</td>
419 </tr>
420 <tr>
421 <td>media-needed</td>
422 <td>The paper tray needs to be filled (for a job that is printing).</td>
423 </tr>
424 <tr>
425 <td>paused</td>
426 <td>Stop the printer.</td>
427 </tr>
428 <tr>
429 <td>timed-out</td>
430 <td>Unable to connect to printer.</td>
431 </tr>
432 <tr>
433 <td>toner-empty</td>
434 <td>The printer is out of toner.</td>
435 </tr>
436 <tr>
437 <td>toner-low</td>
438 <td>The printer is low on toner.</td>
439 </tr>
440 </tbody>
441 </table></div>
442
443 <h4><a name="MANAGING_STATE">Managing Printer State in a Filter</a></h4>
444
445 <p>Filters are responsible for managing the state keywords they set using
446 "STATE:" messages. Typically you will update <em>all</em> of the keywords that
447 are used by the filter at startup, for example:</p>
448
449 <pre class="example">
450 if (foo_condition != 0)
451 fputs("STATE: +com.example.foo\n", stderr);
452 else
453 fputs("STATE: -com.example.foo\n", stderr);
454
455 if (bar_condition != 0)
456 fputs("STATE: +com.example.bar\n", stderr);
457 else
458 fputs("STATE: -com.example.bar\n", stderr);
459 </pre>
460
461 <p>Then as conditions change, your filter sends "STATE: +keyword" or "STATE:
462 -keyword" messages as necessary to set or clear the corresponding keyword,
463 respectively.</p>
464
465 <p>State keywords are often used to notify the user of issues that span across
466 jobs, for example "media-empty-warning" that indicates one or more paper trays
467 are empty. These keywords should not be cleared unless the corresponding issue
468 no longer exists.</p>
469
470 <p>Filters should clear job-related keywords on startup and exit so that they
471 do not remain set between jobs. For example, "connecting-to-device" is a job
472 sub-state and not an issue that applies when a job is not printing.</p>
473
474 <blockquote><b>Note:</b>
475
476 <p>"STATE:" messages often provide visible alerts to the user. For example,
477 on Mac OS X setting a printer-state-reason value with an "-error" or
478 "-warning" suffix will cause the printer's dock item to bounce if the
479 corresponding reason is localized with a cupsIPPReason keyword in the
480 printer's PPD file.</p>
481
482 <p>When providing a vendor-prefixed keyword, <em>always</em> provide the
483 corresponding standard keyword (if any) to allow clients to respond to the
484 condition correctly. For example, if you provide a vendor-prefixed keyword
485 for a low cyan ink condition ("com.example.cyan-ink-low") you must also set the
486 "marker-supply-low-warning" keyword. In such cases you should also refrain
487 from localizing the vendor-prefixed keyword in the PPD file - otherwise both
488 the generic and vendor-specific keyword will be shown in the user
489 interface.</p>
490
491 </blockquote></dd>
492
493 <h4><a name="REPORTING_SUPPLIES">Reporting Supply Levels</a></h4>
494
495 <p>CUPS tracks several "marker-*" attributes for ink/toner supply level
496 reporting. These attributes allow applications to display the current supply
497 levels for a printer without printer-specific software. <a href="#TABLE3">Table 3</a> lists the marker attributes and what they represent.</p>
498
499 <p>Filters set marker attributes by sending "ATTR:" messages to stderr. For
500 example, a filter supporting an inkjet printer with black and tri-color ink
501 cartridges would use the following to initialize the supply attributes:</p>
502
503 <pre class="example">
504 fputs("ATTR: marker-colors=#000000,#00FFFF#FF00FF#FFFF00\n", stderr);
505 fputs("ATTR: marker-low-levels=5,10\n", stderr);
506 fputs("ATTR: marker-names=Black,Tri-Color\n", stderr);
507 fputs("ATTR: marker-types=ink,ink\n", stderr);
508 </pre>
509
510 <p>Then periodically the filter queries the printer for its current supply
511 levels and updates them with a separate "ATTR:" message:</p>
512
513 <pre class="example">
514 int black_level, tri_level;
515 ...
516 fprintf(stderr, "ATTR: marker-levels=%d,%d\n", black_level, tri_level);
517 </pre>
518
519 <div class='table'><table width='80%' summary='Table 3: Supply Level Attributes'>
520 <caption>Table 3: <a name='TABLE3'>Supply Level Attributes</a></caption>
521 <thead>
522 <tr>
523 <th>Attribute</th>
524 <th>Description</th>
525 </tr>
526 </thead>
527 <tbody>
528 <tr>
529 <td>marker-colors</td>
530 <td>A list of comma-separated colors; each color is either "none" or one or
531 more hex-encoded sRGB colors of the form "#RRGGBB".</td>
532 </tr>
533 <tr>
534 <td>marker-high-levels</td>
535 <td>A list of comma-separated "almost full" level values from 0 to 100; a
536 value of 100 should be used for supplies that are consumed/emptied like ink
537 cartridges.</td>
538 </tr>
539 <tr>
540 <td>marker-levels</td>
541 <td>A list of comma-separated level values for each supply. A value of -1
542 indicates the level is unavailable, -2 indicates unknown, and -3 indicates
543 the level is unknown but has not yet reached capacity. Values from 0 to 100
544 indicate the corresponding percentage.</td>
545 </tr>
546 <tr>
547 <td>marker-low-levels</td>
548 <td>A list of comma-separated "almost empty" level values from 0 to 100; a
549 value of 0 should be used for supplies that are filled like waste ink
550 tanks.</td>
551 </tr>
552 <tr>
553 <td>marker-message</td>
554 <td>A human-readable supply status message for the user like "12 pages of
555 ink remaining."</td>
556 </tr>
557 <tr>
558 <td>marker-names</td>
559 <td>A list of comma-separated supply names like "Cyan Ink", "Fuser",
560 etc.</td>
561 </tr>
562 <tr>
563 <td>marker-types</td>
564 <td>A list of comma-separated supply types; the types are listed in
565 <a href="#TABLE1">Table 1</a>.</td>
566 </tr>
567 </tbody>
568 </table></div>
569
570 <h3><a name="COMMUNICATING_BACKEND">Communicating with the Backend</a></h3>
571
572 <p>Filters can communicate with the backend via the
573 <a href="#cupsBackChannelRead"><code>cupsBackChannelRead</code></a> and
574 <a href="#cupsSideChannelDoRequest"><code>cupsSideChannelDoRequest</code></a>
575 functions. The
576 <a href="#cupsBackChannelRead"><code>cupsBackChannelRead</code></a> function
577 reads data that has been sent back from the device and is typically used to
578 obtain status and configuration information. For example, the following code
579 polls the backend for back-channel data:</p>
580
581 <pre class="example">
582 #include &lt;cups/cups.h&gt;
583
584 char buffer[8192];
585 ssize_t bytes;
586
587 /* Use a timeout of 0.0 seconds to poll for back-channel data */
588 bytes = cupsBackChannelRead(buffer, sizeof(buffer), 0.0);
589 </pre>
590
591 <p>Filters can also use <code>select()</code> or <code>poll()</code> on the
592 back-channel file descriptor (3 or <code>CUPS_BC_FD</code>) to read data only
593 when it is available.</p>
594
595 <p>The
596 <a href="#cupsSideChannelDoRequest"><code>cupsSideChannelDoRequest</code></a>
597 function allows you to get out-of-band status information and do synchronization
598 with the device. For example, the following code gets the current IEEE-1284
599 device ID string from the backend:</p>
600
601 <pre class="example">
602 #include &lt;cups/sidechannel.h&gt;
603
604 char data[2049];
605 int datalen;
606 <a href="#cups_sc_status_t">cups_sc_status_t</a> status;
607
608 /* Tell cupsSideChannelDoRequest() how big our buffer is, less 1 byte for
609 nul-termination... */
610 datalen = sizeof(data) - 1;
611
612 /* Get the IEEE-1284 device ID, waiting for up to 1 second */
613 status = <a href="#cupsSideChannelDoRequest">cupsSideChannelDoRequest</a>(CUPS_SC_CMD_GET_DEVICE_ID, data, &amp;datalen, 1.0);
614
615 /* Use the returned value if OK was returned and the length is non-zero */
616 if (status == CUPS_SC_STATUS_OK && datalen > 0)
617 data[datalen] = '\0';
618 else
619 data[0] = '\0';
620 </pre>
621
622 <h4><a name="DRAIN_OUTPUT">Forcing All Output to a Printer</a></h4>
623
624 <p>The
625 <a href="#cupsSideChannelDoRequest"><code>cupsSideChannelDoRequest</code></a>
626 function allows you to tell the backend to send all pending data to the printer.
627 This is most often needed when sending query commands to the printer. For example:</p>
628
629 <pre class="example">
630 #include &lt;cups/cups.h&gt;
631 #include &lt;cups/sidechannel.h&gt;
632
633 char data[1024];
634 int datalen = sizeof(data);
635 <a href="#cups_sc_status_t">cups_sc_status_t</a> status;
636
637 /* Flush pending output to stdout */
638 fflush(stdout);
639
640 /* Drain output to backend, waiting for up to 30 seconds */
641 status = <a href="#cupsSideChannelDoRequest">cupsSideChannelDoRequest</a>(CUPS_SC_CMD_DRAIN_OUTPUT, data, &amp;datalen, 30.0);
642
643 /* Read the response if the output was sent */
644 if (status == CUPS_SC_STATUS_OK)
645 {
646 ssize_t bytes;
647
648 /* Wait up to 10.0 seconds for back-channel data */
649 bytes = cupsBackChannelRead(data, sizeof(data), 10.0);
650 /* do something with the data from the printer */
651 }
652 </pre>
653
654 <h3><a name="COMMUNICATING_FILTER">Communicating with Filters</a></h3>
655
656 <p>Backends communicate with filters using the reciprocal functions
657 <a href="#cupsBackChannelWrite"><code>cupsBackChannelWrite</code></a>,
658 <a href="#cupsSideChannelRead"><code>cupsSideChannelRead</code></a>, and
659 <a href="#cupsSideChannelWrite"><code>cupsSideChannelWrite</code></a>. We
660 recommend writing back-channel data using a timeout of 1.0 seconds:</p>
661
662 <pre class="example">
663 #include &lt;cups/cups.h&gt;
664
665 char buffer[8192];
666 ssize_t bytes;
667
668 /* Obtain data from printer/device */
669 ...
670
671 /* Use a timeout of 1.0 seconds to give filters a chance to read */
672 cupsBackChannelWrite(buffer, bytes, 1.0);
673 </pre>
674
675 <p>The <a href="#cupsSideChannelRead"><code>cupsSideChannelRead</code></a>
676 function reads a side-channel command from a filter, driver, or port monitor.
677 Backends can either poll for commands using a <code>timeout</code> of 0.0, wait
678 indefinitely for commands using a <code>timeout</code> of -1.0 (probably in a
679 separate thread for that purpose), or use <code>select</code> or
680 <code>poll</code> on the <code>CUPS_SC_FD</code> file descriptor (4) to handle
681 input and output on several file descriptors at the same time.</p>
682
683 <p>Once a command is processed, the backend uses the
684 <a href="#cupsSideChannelWrite"><code>cupsSideChannelWrite</code></a> function
685 to send its response. For example, the following code shows how to poll for a
686 side-channel command and respond to it:</p>
687
688 <pre class="example">
689 #include &lt;cups/sidechannel.h&gt;
690
691 <a href="#cups_sc_command_t">cups_sc_command_t</a> command;
692 <a href="#cups_sc_status_t">cups_sc_status_t</a> status;
693 char data[2048];
694 int datalen = sizeof(data);
695
696 /* Poll for a command... */
697 if (!<a href="#cupsSideChannelRead">cupsSideChannelRead</a>(&amp;command, &amp;status, data, &amp;datalen, 0.0))
698 {
699 switch (command)
700 {
701 /* handle supported commands, fill data/datalen/status with values as needed */
702
703 default :
704 status = CUPS_SC_STATUS_NOT_IMPLEMENTED;
705 datalen = 0;
706 break;
707 }
708
709 /* Send a response... */
710 <a href="#cupsSideChannelWrite">cupsSideChannelWrite</a>(command, status, data, datalen, 1.0);
711 }
712 </pre>
713
714 <h3><a name="SNMP">Doing SNMP Queries with Network Printers</a></h3>
715
716 <p>The Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) allows you to get the current
717 status, page counter, and supply levels from most network printers. Every
718 piece of information is associated with an Object Identifier (OID), and
719 every printer has a <em>community</em> name associated with it. OIDs can be
720 queried directly or by "walking" over a range of OIDs with a common prefix.</p>
721
722 <p>The two CUPS SNMP functions provide a simple API for querying network
723 printers through the side-channel interface. Each accepts a string containing
724 an OID like ".1.3.6.1.2.1.43.10.2.1.4.1.1" (the standard page counter OID)
725 along with a timeout for the query.</p>
726
727 <p>The <a href="#cupsSideChannelSNMPGet"><code>cupsSideChannelSNMPGet</code></a>
728 function queries a single OID and returns the value as a string in a buffer
729 you supply:</p>
730
731 <pre class="example">
732 #include &lt;cups/sidechannel.h&gt;
733
734 char data[512];
735 int datalen = sizeof(data);
736
737 if (<a href="#cupsSideChannelSNMPGet">cupsSideChannelSNMPGet</a>(".1.3.6.1.2.1.43.10.2.1.4.1.1", data, &amp;datalen, 5.0)
738 == CUPS_SC_STATUS_OK)
739 {
740 /* Do something with the value */
741 printf("Page counter is: %s\n", data);
742 }
743 </pre>
744
745 <p>The
746 <a href="#cupsSideChannelSNMPWalk"><code>cupsSideChannelSNMPWalk</code></a>
747 function allows you to query a whole group of OIDs, calling a function of your
748 choice for each OID that is found:</p>
749
750 <pre class="example">
751 #include &lt;cups/sidechannel.h&gt;
752
753 void
754 my_callback(const char *oid, const char *data, int datalen, void *context)
755 {
756 /* Do something with the value */
757 printf("%s=%s\n", oid, data);
758 }
759
760 ...
761
762 void *my_data;
763
764 <a href="#cupsSideChannelSNMPWalk">cupsSNMPSideChannelWalk</a>(".1.3.6.1.2.1.43", 5.0, my_callback, my_data);
765 </pre>