root / pykota / trunk / docs / filterpykota.sgml @ 2966

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Improved installation documentation

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1<!-- $Id: filterpykota.sgml 1454 2005-03-06 16:52:43Z jerome $ -->
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3<chapter>
4  <title id="filter">PyKota's internals</title>
5 
6  <para>Last modified on $Date: 2005-03-06 17:52:43 +0100 (dim, 06 mar 2005) $</para>
7 
8  <para>
9    To account for pages or eventually ink usage
10    <footnote>
11      <para>
12        PyKota doesn't currently account for ink usage, it only accounts
13        pages. To account for ink usage, you should use PrintBill instead for now.
14      </para> 
15    </footnote> 
16    , you must plug your accounting
17    system somewhere into the printing system you use. One way to do this without having
18    to modify the printing system itself, is by using a <firstterm>filter</firstterm>.
19  </para>
20 
21  <para>
22    A filter is a computer program which takes data in one format as its input, and outputs the
23    same data but transformed into another format. <application>CUPS</application> already
24    contains many filters. For example there's one filter named <command>pstops</command> which accepts
25    PostScript data as its input, and, as its name implies, outputs PostScript data too, but after having
26    eventually rearranged the pages to fit several pages on a single sheet of paper, or other manipulations
27    like that.
28  </para>
29 
30  <para>
31    The <command>pstops</command> filter described above is also in charge of doing basic page
32    accounting, but <application>PyKota</application> currently doesn't use this facility since it may
33    prove to be unreliable depending on the drivers used or if a paper jam occurs for example.
34  </para>
35 
36  <para>
37    So to do its own accounting, <application>PyKota</application> has its own filters, for <application>CUPS</application>
38    it's named <command>cupspykota</command>, which is in fact a <application>CUPS</application> backends wrapper.
39    The procedure to plug the correct filter into your printing system is described in the
40    <xref linkend="installation" endterm="installation"> chapter.
41  </para>
42 
43  <para>
44    Currently with <application>CUPS</application>' internal accounting mechanism, the <command>pstops</command>
45    filter can be bypassed. That's why <application>PyKota</application> uses its own backend.
46    The <command>cupspykota</command> backend wrapper ensures that jobs can't bypass it, so you can use
47    any printer with any driver and any command line option, and you can be sure that your
48    print job will be correctly accounted for.
49  </para>
50 
51  <para>
52    When using the <literal>hardware</literal> accounting method,
53    <application>PyKota</application> launches the script you specified to
54    ask the printer for its internal page counter at the start and at the end of the print job, and
55    computes the values' difference to know the job's size.
56  </para>
57 
58  <para>
59    When using the <literal>software</literal> accounting method,
60    the command you specified is launched with the job's data on its
61    standard input. Your command must print the job's size in number of
62    pages on a single line on its standard output. This number is then
63    read by <application>PyKota</application> and used to update the current user's quota information.
64  </para>
65 
66  <para>
67    If a problem occurs, it is logged either to the filter's standard error or to the system logger, depending on
68    your preferences in <application>PyKota</application>'s configuration files. Also if a print quota is reached
69    you may choose if the administrator, the user, both or no-one will receive an email message explaining
70    the situation and proposing a solution. You can even configure another action instead of sending email
71    messages if you want.
72  </para>
73 
74</chapter>
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