1 | <!-- $Id$ --> |
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2 | |
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3 | <chapter> |
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4 | <title id="filter">PyKota's internals</title> |
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5 | |
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6 | <para>Last modified on $Date$</para> |
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7 | |
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8 | <para> |
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9 | To account for pages or eventually ink usage |
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10 | <footnote> |
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11 | <para> |
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12 | PyKota doesn't currently account for ink usage, it only accounts |
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13 | pages. To account for ink usage, you should use PrintBill instead. |
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14 | </para> |
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15 | </footnote> |
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16 | , you must plug your accounting |
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17 | system somewhere into the printing system you use, be it either <application>CUPS</application> |
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18 | or <application>LPRng</application>. One way to do this without having |
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19 | to modify the printing system itself, is by using a <firstterm>filter</firstterm>. |
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20 | </para> |
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21 | |
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22 | <para> |
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23 | A filter is a computer program which takes data in one format as its input, and outputs the |
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24 | same data but transformed into another format. <application>CUPS</application> already |
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25 | contains many filters. For example there's one filter named <application>pstops</application> which accepts |
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26 | PostScript data as its input, and, as its name implies, outputs PostScript data too, but after having |
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27 | eventually rearranged the pages to fit several pages on a single sheet of paper, or other manipulations |
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28 | like that. |
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29 | </para> |
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30 | |
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31 | <para> |
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32 | The <application>pstops</application> filter described above is also in charge of doing basic page |
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33 | accounting, but <application>PyKota</application> currently doesn't use this facility since it may |
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34 | prove to be unreliable depending on the drivers used or if a paper jam occurs for example. |
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35 | </para> |
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36 | |
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37 | <para> |
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38 | <application>LPRng</application> can also use filters, one often used in combination with |
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39 | <application>LPRng</application> is <application>magicfilter</application> which can convert |
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40 | different input formats to native printers languages like PostScript or ESC/P2. |
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41 | </para> |
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42 | |
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43 | <para> |
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44 | So to do its own accounting, <application>PyKota</application> has its own filter, named <application>pykota</application>, |
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45 | which you have to plug into the different set of filters used by your printing system of choice. The procedure to |
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46 | install the <application>pykota</application> filter is described in the |
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47 | <xref linkend="installation" endterm="installation"> chapter. |
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48 | </para> |
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49 | |
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50 | <para> |
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51 | Currently with a <application>CUPS</application> backend, the <application>pykota</application> filter is |
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52 | deprecated. You have to use the <application>cupspykota</application> CUPS backend instead. |
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53 | This CUPS backend ensures that jobs can't bypass the filtering mechanism, so you can use |
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54 | any printer with any driver and any command line option, and you can be sure that your |
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55 | print job will be correctly accounted for. |
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56 | </para> |
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57 | |
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58 | <para> |
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59 | When used with an <application>LPRng</application> backend, the accounting filter is not defined the same way |
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60 | input filters are, so the problem described above doesn't exist, and <application>PyKota</application> |
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61 | may work with non-postscript printers, provided they can report their page counter and you know how to retrieve |
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62 | it. |
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63 | </para> |
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64 | |
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65 | <para> |
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66 | When you submit a print job, <application>cupspykota</application> (with CUPS) or <application>pykota</application> (with LPRng) is automatically launched by your printing system, |
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67 | so it has to detect which system you are using (<application>CUPS</application> or <application>LPRng</application>) |
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68 | and behave like if it was specifically designed for your printing system. Fortunately there's not a lot |
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69 | of differences, the more important one is the exit codes used to tell the printing environment if a job |
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70 | has to be accepted or rejected. |
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71 | </para> |
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72 | |
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73 | <para> |
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74 | When using the <literal>querying</literal> accounting method, |
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75 | <application>pykota</application> asks the printer for its internal page counter, reads from the Quota DataBase the internal |
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76 | page counter for this printer when the previous job was launched, computes the difference, and report it as the |
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77 | previous job's size in the Quota DataBase. It then updates the last user's print quota and account balance, and |
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78 | warn him if he is over quota or if his account balance is below 0. Finally it checks if the user who launched the |
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79 | current job is below or above his print quota, and either allows or denies the job's datas to pass to the underlying |
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80 | layer (the printer itself). The <application>cupspykota</application> CUPS backend on the other hand, |
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81 | asks the printer for its internal page counter at the start and at the end of the print job, and |
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82 | computes the values' difference so accounting is done immediately. This way it doesn't let open a window for abuse in the case |
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83 | several printers are managed. That's why the use of <application>cupspykota</application> |
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84 | instead of <application>pykota</application> is recommended with CUPS. |
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85 | </para> |
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86 | |
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87 | <para> |
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88 | When using the <literal>external</literal> accounting method, |
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89 | and if the user is still allowed to print, |
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90 | the command you specified is launched with the job's data on its |
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91 | standard input. Your command must print the job's size in number of |
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92 | pages on a single line on its standard output. This number is then |
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93 | read by PyKota and used to update the current user's quota information. |
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94 | Of course checks are also done like with the <literal>querying</literal> |
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95 | accounting method, to see if the current job is allowed to be printed or not. |
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96 | </para> |
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97 | |
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98 | <para> |
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99 | If a problem occurs, it is logged either to the filter's standard output or to the system logger, depending on |
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100 | your preferences in <application>PyKota</application>'s configuration files. Also if a print quota is reached |
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101 | you may choose if the administrator, the user, both or no-one will receive an email message explaining |
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102 | the situation and proposing a solution. |
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103 | </para> |
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104 | |
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105 | </chapter> |
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106 | |
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107 | <!-- |
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108 | |
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109 | $Log$ |
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110 | Revision 1.9 2004/03/03 19:35:36 jalet |
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111 | Spelling problem. Thanks to Jurandy Martins |
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112 | |
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113 | Revision 1.8 2003/11/15 14:59:53 jalet |
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114 | Documentation wrt the new CUPS backend. |
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115 | |
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116 | Revision 1.7 2003/10/14 20:26:53 jalet |
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117 | Better documentation. |
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118 | 1.15 is out ! |
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119 | |
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120 | Revision 1.6 2003/07/25 13:10:58 jalet |
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121 | Improved documentation |
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122 | |
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123 | Revision 1.5 2003/07/25 10:41:29 jalet |
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124 | Better documentation. |
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125 | pykotme now displays the current user's account balance. |
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126 | Some test changed in ldap module. |
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127 | |
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128 | Revision 1.4 2003/04/30 20:00:51 jalet |
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129 | Typo |
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130 | |
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131 | Revision 1.3 2003/04/24 21:09:47 jalet |
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132 | Documentation slightly improved. |
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133 | |
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134 | Revision 1.2 2003/03/25 09:32:06 jalet |
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135 | Improved documentation. |
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136 | |
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137 | Revision 1.1 2003/02/08 00:03:35 jalet |
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138 | Documentation skeleton added |
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139 | |
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140 | |
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141 | --> |
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