lpd
—
line printer spooler daemon
The lpd
utility is the line printer daemon (spool area
handler) and is normally invoked at boot time from the
rc(8) file.
It makes a single pass through the
printcap(5)
file to find out about the existing printers and prints any files left after a
crash. It then uses the system calls
listen(2)
and
accept(2)
to receive requests to print files in the queue, transfer files to the
spooling area, display the queue, or remove jobs from the queue. In each case,
it forks a child to handle the request so the parent can continue to listen
for more requests.
Available options:
-c
- By default, if some remote host has a connection error while trying to
send a print request to
lpd
on a local host,
lpd
will only send error message to that remote
host. The -c
flag causes
lpd
to also log all of those connection errors via
syslog(3).
-d
- Turn on
SO_DEBUG
on the Internet listening socket
(see
setsockopt(2)).
-l
- The
-l
flag causes lpd
to
log valid requests received from the network. This can be useful for
debugging purposes.
-p
- The
-p
flag is a synonym for the
-s
flag. It is being deprecated, and may be
removed in a future version of lpd
.
-s
- The
-s
(secure) flag causes
lpd
not to open an Internet listening socket. This
means that lpd
will not accept any connections
from any remote hosts, although it will still accept print requests from
all local users.
-W
- By default, the
lpd
daemon will only accept
connections which originate from a reserved-port (<1024) on the remote
host. The -W
flag causes
lpd
to accept connections coming from any port.
This is can be useful when you want to accept print jobs from certain
implementations of lpr written for Windows.
-4
- Inet only.
-6
- Inet6 only.
-46
- Inet and inet6 (default).
- port#
- The Internet port number used to rendezvous with other processes is
normally obtained with
getservbyname(3)
but can be changed with the port# argument.
Access control is provided by two means. First, all requests must
come from one of the machines listed in the file
/etc/hosts.equiv or
/etc/hosts.lpd. Second, if the
rs
capability is specified in the
printcap(5)
entry for the printer being accessed, lpr requests will
only be honored for those users with accounts on the machine with the
printer.
The file minfree in each spool directory
contains the number of kilobytes to leave free so that the line printer
queue will not completely fill the disk. The minfree file
can be edited with your favorite text editor.
The daemon begins processing files after it has successfully set
the lock for exclusive access (described a bit later), and scans the spool
directory for files beginning with cf. Lines in each
cf file specify files to be printed or non-printing
actions to be performed. Each such line begins with a key character to
specify what to do with the remainder of the line.
- J
- Job Name. String to be used for the job name on the burst page.
- C
- Classification. String to be used for the classification line on the burst
page.
- L
- Literal. The line contains identification info from the password file and
causes the banner page to be printed.
- T
- Title. String to be used as the title for
pr(1).
- H
- Host Name. Name of the machine where
lpr(1)
was invoked.
- P
- Person. Login name of the person who invoked
lpr(1).
This is used to verify ownership by
lprm(1).
- M
- Send mail to the specified user when the current print job completes.
- f
- Formatted File. Name of a file to print which is already formatted.
- l
- Like ``f'' but passes control characters and does not make page
breaks.
- p
- Name of a file to print using
pr(1) as
a filter.
- t
- Troff File. The file contains
troff(1)
output (cat phototypesetter commands).
- n
- Ditroff File. The file contains device independent troff output.
- r
- DVI File. The file contains Tex l output DVI format from Stanford.
- g
- Graph File. The file contains data produced by
plot(3).
- c
- Cifplot File. The file contains data produced by
cifplot.
- v
- The file contains a raster image.
- r
- The file contains text data with FORTRAN carriage control characters.
- 1
- Troff Font R. Name of the font file to use instead of the default.
- 2
- Troff Font I. Name of the font file to use instead of the default.
- 3
- Troff Font B. Name of the font file to use instead of the default.
- 4
- Troff Font S. Name of the font file to use instead of the default.
- W
- Width. Changes the page width (in characters) used by
pr(1) and
the text filters.
- I
- Indent. The number of characters to indent the output by (in ASCII).
- U
- Unlink. Name of file to remove upon completion of printing.
- N
- File name. The name of the file which is being printed, or a blank for the
standard input (when
lpr(1)
is invoked in a pipeline).
- Z
- Locale. String to be used as the locale for
pr(1).
If a file cannot be opened, a message will be logged via
syslog(3)
using the LOG_LPR facility. The
lpd
utility will try up to 20 times to reopen a file
it expects to be there, after which it will skip the file to be printed.
The lpd
utility uses
flock(2)
to provide exclusive access to the lock file and to prevent multiple daemons
from becoming active simultaneously. If the daemon should be killed or die
unexpectedly, the lock file need not be removed. The lock file is kept in a
readable ASCII form and contains two lines. The first is the process id of
the daemon and the second is the control file name of the current job being
printed. The second line is updated to reflect the current status of
lpd
for the programs
lpq(1) and
lprm(1).
- /etc/printcap
- printer description file
- /var/spool/*
- spool directories
- /var/spool/*/minfree
- minimum free space to leave
- /dev/lp*
- line printer devices
- /var/run/printer
- socket for local requests
- /etc/hosts.equiv
- lists machine names allowed printer access
- /etc/hosts.lpd
- lists machine names allowed printer access, but not under same
administrative control.
lpq(1),
lpr(1),
lprm(1),
setsockopt(2),
syslog(3),
hosts.lpd(5),
printcap(5),
chkprintcap(8),
lpc(8),
pac(8)
Ralph Campbell,
4.2 BSD Line Printer Spooler Manual.
An lpd
daemon appeared in Version 6 AT&T UNIX.