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1<!-- $Id$ -->
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3<chapter>
4  <title id="filter">The pykota filter</title>
5 
6  <para>Last modified on $Date$</para>
7 
8  <para>
9    To account for pages or eventually ink usage, you must plug your accounting
10    system somewhere into the printing system you use, be it either <application>CUPS</application>
11    or <application>LPRng</application>. One way to do this without having
12    to modify the printing system itself, is by using a <firstterm>filter</firstterm>.
13  </para>
14 
15  <para>
16    A filter is a computer program which takes data in one format as its input, and outputs the
17    same data but transformed into another format. <application>CUPS</application> already
18    contains many filters. For example there's one filter named <application>pstops</application> which accepts
19    PostScript data as its input, and, as its name implies, outputs PostScript data too, but after having
20    eventually rearranged the pages to fit several pages on a single sheet of paper, or other manipulations
21    like that.
22  </para>
23 
24  <para>
25    The <application>pstops</application> filter described above is also in charge of doing basic page
26    accounting, but <application>PyKota</application> currently doesn't use this facility since it may
27    prove to be unreliable depending on the drivers used or if a paper jam occur for example.
28  </para>
29 
30  <para>
31    <application>LPRng</application> can also use filters, one often used in combination with
32    <application>LPRng</application> is <application>magicfilter</application> which can convert
33    different input formats to native printers languages like PostScript or ESC/P2.
34  </para> 
35 
36  <para>
37    So to do its own accounting, <application>PyKota</application> has its own filter, named <application>pykota</application>,
38    which you have to plug into the different set of filters used by your printing system of choice. The procedure to
39    install the <application>pykota</application> filter is described in the
40    <xref linkend="installation" endterm="installation"> chapter.
41  </para>
42 
43  <para>
44    Currently with a <application>CUPS</application> backend, the <application>pykota</application> filter is used at the very last stage of the print mechanism,
45    just before the final data is sent to the printer, but it may eventually be used earlier with some
46    modifications to <application>CUPS</application>'s filtering configuration. This is not tested yet, but this
47    may be the solution to use <application>PyKota</application> with printers which really needs to have
48    a specific filter like <application>magicfilter</application> or <application>cupsomatic</application>,
49    i.e. non-postscript printers. This is a limitation in <application>CUPS</application> which doesn't really
50    allow to specify multiple print filters for different purposes. This problem will be solved in <application>CUPS</application>
51    version 1.2 and higher.
52  </para>
53 
54  <para>
55    When used with an <application>LPRng</application> backend, the accounting filter is not defined the same way
56    input filters are, so the problem described above doesn't exist, and <application>PyKota</application>
57    may work with non-postscript printers, provided they can report their page counter and you know how to do
58    this.
59  </para>
60 
61  <para>
62    When you submit a print job, <application>pykota</application> is automatically launched by your printing system,
63    so it has to detect which system you are using (<application>CUPS</application> or <application>LPRng</application>)
64    and behave like if it was specifically designed for your printing system. Fortunately there's not a lot
65    of differences, the more important one is the exit codes used to tell the printing environment if a job
66    has to be accepted or rejected.
67  </para>
68 
69  <para>
70    <application>pykota</application> then asks the printer for its internal page counter, read from the Quota DataBase the internal
71    page counter for this printer when the previous job was launched, computes the difference, and report it as the
72    previous job's size in the Quota DataBase. It then updates the last user's print quota and account balance, and
73    warn him if he is over quota or his account balance below 0. Finally it checks if the user who launched the
74    current job is below or above his print quota, and either allow or deny the job's datas to pass to the underlying
75    layer (the printer itself).
76  </para>
77 
78  <para>
79    If a problem occurs, it is logged either to the filter's standard output or to the system logger, depending on
80    your preferences in <application>PyKota</application>'s configuration file. Also if a print quota is reached
81    you may choose if the administrator, the user, both or noone will receive an email message explaining
82    the situation and proposing a solution.
83  </para>
84 
85</chapter>
86
87<!--
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89$Log$
90Revision 1.4  2003/04/30 20:00:51  jalet
91Typo
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93Revision 1.3  2003/04/24 21:09:47  jalet
94Documentation slightly improved.
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96Revision 1.2  2003/03/25 09:32:06  jalet
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99Revision 1.1  2003/02/08 00:03:35  jalet
100Documentation skeleton added
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