lpq
—
spool queue examination program
lpq |
[-a ] [-l ]
[-P printer] [job # ...]
[user ...] |
The lpq
utility examines the spooling area used by
lpd(8) for
printing files on the line printer, and reports the status of the specified
jobs or all jobs associated with a user. The lpq
utility invoked without any arguments reports on any jobs currently in the
queue.
Options:
-P
- Specify a particular printer, otherwise the default line printer is used
(or the value of the
PRINTER
variable in the
environment). All other arguments supplied are interpreted as user names
or job numbers to filter out only those jobs of interest.
-l
- Information about each of the files comprising the job entry is printed.
Normally, only as much information as will fit on one line is
displayed.
-a
- Report on the local queues for all printers, rather than just the
specified printer.
For each job submitted (i.e., invocation of
lpr(1))
lpq
reports the user's name, current rank in the
queue, the names of files comprising the job, the job identifier (a number
which may be supplied to
lprm(1)
for removing a specific job), and the total size in bytes. Job ordering is
dependent on the algorithm used to scan the spooling directory and is
supposed to be FIFO (First in First Out). File names comprising a job may be
unavailable (when
lpr(1) is
used as a sink in a pipeline) in which case the file is indicated as
``(standard input)''.
If lpq
warns that there is no daemon
present (i.e., due to some malfunction), the
lpc(8)
command can be used to restart the printer daemon.
If the following environment variable exists, it is used by
lpq
:
PRINTER
- Specifies an alternate default printer.
- /etc/printcap
- To determine printer characteristics.
- /var/spool/*
- The spooling directory, as determined from printcap.
- /var/spool/*/cf*
- Control files specifying jobs.
- /var/spool/*/lock
- The lock file to obtain the currently active job.
Unable to open various files. The lock file being malformed. Garbage files when
there is no daemon active, but files in the spooling directory.
A lpq
utility appeared in 3BSD.
Due to the dynamic nature of the information in the spooling directory
lpq
may report unreliably. Output formatting is
sensitive to the line length of the terminal; this can results in widely
spaced columns.