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Date:      Wed, 27 Feb 2013 12:56:47 +0100
From:      Matthias Apitz <guru@unixarea.de>
To:        freebsd-ports@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: FreeBSD port for redirecting printer
Message-ID:  <20130227115646.GA1821@tiny.Sisis.de>
In-Reply-To: <20130226183646.GA2351@tiny.Sisis.de>
References:  <alpine.BSF.2.00.1302261814330.27474@wojtek.tensor.gdynia.pl> <20130226180645.GA1161@tiny.Sisis.de> <alpine.BSF.2.00.1302261929020.27796@wojtek.tensor.gdynia.pl> <20130226183646.GA2351@tiny.Sisis.de>

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El día Tuesday, February 26, 2013 a las 07:36:46PM +0100, Matthias Apitz escribió:

> > > Install CUPS (from our ports), catch the incoming data on 9100 with
> > > ncat(1) (from ports) and pipe the data to a "lpr -P.... -o raw" command (of CUPS)
> > No not CUPS. Not needed (i just want to sent it to printer). And avoided 
> > at all cost.
> 
> But for this, CUPS is your best choice.

Re/ CUPS and lpd(8), I only want to mention that in real world live I'm
the technical lead of a software company and we have around 150 big
libraries (of Universities etc.) which run our solutions on Linux or
Solaris SPARC; they all use a precompiled CUPS and configure all their
printers in the network with CUPS (browser admin); I will not imagine
what would happen for us on service hotline, if they would all use
something different and asking "why the hell the print is not coming
out";

another issue, how do you print an UTF-8 encoded text file, containing
for example Hebrew and Greek? With CUPS' lpr(1) you just say:

$ lpr -Pfoo myfile.txt

and all is done on the fly, assuming the printer "foo" understands
Postscript.

	matthias
-- 
Sent from my FreeBSD netbook

Matthias Apitz               |  - No system with backdoors like Apple/Android
E-mail: guru@unixarea.de     |  - Never being an iSlave
WWW: http://www.unixarea.de/ |  - No proprietary attachments, no HTML/RTF in E-mail
phone: +49-170-4527211       |  - Respect for open standards



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