papd.conf — Configuration file used by papd(8) to determine the configuration of printers used by the Netatalk printing daemon
papd.conf is the configuration file used by papd to configure the printing services offered by netatalk. papd shares the same defaults as lpd on many systems. One notable exception is Solaris.
The format of papd.conf is derived from printcap(5) and can contain configurations for one or more printers. Any line not prefixed with # is interpreted. The configuration lines are composed like this:
printername:[options]
On systems running a System V printing system, the simplest case is to have either no papd.conf, or to have one that has no active lines. In this case, atalkd should auto-discover the local printers on the machine. Please note that you can split lines with a \ (backslash).
printername may be just a name (Printer 1), or it may be a full name in nbp_name format (Printer 1:LaserWriter@My Zone).
Systems using a BSD printing system should make use of a pipe to the printing command in question within the pr option (e.g. pr=|/usr/bin/lpr).
When CUPS support is compiled in, then cupsautoadd as the first entry in papd.conf will automagically configure and make all CUPS printers available to papd (customizable -- see below). This can be overwritten for individual printers by subsequently adding individual entries using the CUPS queue name as pr entry. Note: CUPS support is mutually exclusive with System V support described above.
The possible options are colon delimited (:), and lines must be terminated with colons. The available options and flags are:
The am option allows specific UAMs to be specified for a particular printer. It has no effect if the au flag is not present. Note: possible values are uams_guest.so and uams_clrtxt.so only. The first method requires a valid username, but no password. The second requires both a valid username and the correct password.
If present, this flag enables authentication for the printer.
The co option allows options to be passed through to CUPS (e.g. co="protocol=TBCP" or co="raw").
If used as the first entry in papd.conf this will share all CUPS printers via papd. type/zone settings as well as other parameters assigned to this special shared printer will apply to all CUPS printers. Unless the pd option is set, the CUPS PPDs will be used. To overwrite these global settings for individual printers simply add them subsequently to papd.conf and assign different settings.
If present, this flag enables a hack to translate line endings originating from pre-Mac OS X LaserWriter drivers to let foomatic-rip recognize foomatic PPD options set in the printer dialog. Attention: Use with caution since this might corrupt binary print jobs!
This specifies the operator name, for lpd spooling. Default value is "operator".
Allows specification of AppleTalk addresses. Usually not needed.
Specifies a particular PPD (printer description file) to associate with the selected printer.
Sets the lpd or CUPS printer that this is spooled to. Default value is "lp".
Unless CUPS support has been compiled in (which is default from
Netatalk 2.0 on) one simply defines the lpd queue in question by setting
the pr
parameter to the queue name, in the following
example "ps". If no pr
parameter is set, the default
printer will be used.
Example 6.6. papd.conf System V printing system examples
The first spooler is known by the AppleTalk name Mac Printer
Spooler, and uses a PPD file located in
/usr/share/lib/ppd
. In addition, the user mcs will
be the owner of all jobs that are spooled. The second spooler is known
as HP Printer and all options are the default.
Mac Printer Spooler:\ :pr=ps:\ :pd=/usr/share/lib/ppd/HPLJ_4M.PPD:\ :op=mcs: HP Printer:\ :
An alternative to the technique outlined above is to direct papd's output via a pipe into another program. Almost any printing system can be driven using this mechanism.
Example 6.7. papd.conf examples using pipes
The first spooler is known as HP 8100. It pipes the print job to
/usr/bin/lpr for printing. PSSP authenticated
printing is enabled, as is CAP-style authenticated printing. Both
methods support guest and cleartext authentication as specified by the
'am
' option. The PPD used is
/etc/atalk/ppds/hp8100.ppd
.
HP 8100:\ :pr=|/usr/bin/lpr -Plp:\ :sp:\ :ca=/tmp/print:\ :am=uams_guest.so,uams_clrtxt.so:\ :pd=/etc/atalk/ppds/hp8100.ppd:
Starting with Netatalk 2.0, direct CUPS integration is available. In
this case, defining only a queue name as pr
parameter
won't invoke the SysV lpd daemon but uses CUPS instead. Unless a specific
PPD has been assigned using the pd
switch, the PPD
configured in CUPS will be used by papd, too.
There exists one special share named "cupsautoadd". If this is present as the first entry then all available CUPS queues will be served automagically using the parameters assigned to this global share. But subsequent printer definitions can be used to override these global settings for individual spoolers.
Example 6.8. papd.conf CUPS examples
The first entry sets up automatic sharing of all CUPS printers. All those shares appear in the zone "1st floor" and since no additional settings have been made, they use the CUPS printer name as NBP name and use the PPD configured in CUPS. The second entry defines different settings for one single CUPS printer. Its NBP name is differing from the printer's name and the registration happens in another zone.
cupsautoadd@1st floor:op=root: Boss' LaserWriter@2nd floor:\ :pr=laserwriter-chief: