RFC2569

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Network Working Group R. Herriot Request For Comments: 2569 Xerox Corporation Category: Experimental N. Jacobs

                                              Sun Microsystems, Inc.
                                                         T. Hastings
                                                   Xerox Corporation
                                                           J. Martin
                                                    Underscore, Inc.
                                                          April 1999
             Mapping between LPD and IPP Protocols

Status of this Memo

This memo defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet community. It does not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Discussion and suggestions for improvement are requested. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999). All Rights Reserved.

IESG Note

This document defines an Experimental protocol for the Internet community. The IESG expects that a revised version of this protocol will be published as Proposed Standard protocol. The Proposed Standard, when published, is expected to change from the protocol defined in this memo. In particular, it is expected that the standards-track version of the protocol will incorporate strong authentication and privacy features, and that an "ipp:" URL type will be defined which supports those security measures. Other changes to the protocol are also possible. Implementors are warned that future versions of this protocol may not interoperate with the version of IPP defined in this document, or if they do interoperate, that some protocol features may not be available.

The IESG encourages experimentation with this protocol, especially in combination with Transport Layer Security (TLS) [[[RFC2246|RFC 2246]]], to help determine how TLS may effectively be used as a security layer for IPP.

Abstract

This document is one of a set of documents, which together describe all aspects of a new Internet Printing Protocol (IPP). IPP is an application level protocol that can be used for distributed printing using Internet tools and technologies. This document gives some advice to implementers of gateways between IPP and LPD (Line Printer Daemon). This document describes the mapping between (1) the commands and operands of the 'Line Printer Daemon (LPD) Protocol' specified in RFC 1179 and (2) the operations, operation attributes and job template attributes of the Internet Printing Protocol/1.0 (IPP). One of the purposes of this document is to compare the functionality of the two protocols. Another purpose is to facilitate implementation of gateways between LPD and IPP.

WARNING: RFC 1179 was not on the IETF standards track. While RFC 1179 was intended to record existing practice, it fell short in some areas. However, this specification maps between (1) the actual current practice of RFC 1179 and (2) IPP. This document does not attempt to map the numerous divergent extensions to the LPD protocol that have been made by many implementers.

The full set of IPP documents includes:

  Design Goals for an Internet Printing Protocol RFC2567
  Rationale for the Structure and Model and Protocol for the
  Internet Printing Protocol RFC2568
  Internet Printing Protocol/1.0: Model and Semantics RFC2566
  Internet Printing Protocol/1.0: Encoding and Transport RFC2565
  Internet Printing Protocol/1.0: Implementors Guide [ipp-iig]
  Mapping between LPD and IPP Protocols (this document)

The document, "Design Goals for an Internet Printing Protocol", takes a broad look at distributed printing functionality, and it enumerates real-life scenarios that help to clarify the features that need to be included in a printing protocol for the Internet. It identifies requirements for three types of users: end users, operators, and administrators. It calls out a subset of end user requirements that are satisfied in IPP/1.0. Operator and administrator requirements are out of scope for version 1.0.

The document, "Rationale for the Structure and Model and Protocol for the Internet Printing Protocol", describes IPP from a high level view, defines a roadmap for the various documents that form the suite of IPP specifications, and gives background and rationale for the IETF working group's major decisions.

The document, "Internet Printing Protocol/1.0: Model and Semantics", describes a simplified model with abstract objects, their attributes, and their operations. It introduces a Printer and a Job object. The Job object supports multiple documents per Job. It also addresses security, internationalization, and directory issues.

The document, "Internet Printing Protocol/1.0: Encoding and Transport", is a formal mapping of the abstract operations and attributes defined in the model document onto HTTP/1.1. It defines the encoding rules for a new Internet media type called ' application/ipp'.

This document "Internet Printing Protocol/1.0: Implementer's Guide", gives advice to implementers of IPP clients and IPP objects.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

4. Mapping of LPD Control File Lines to IPP Operation and Job

10.Appendix A: ABNF Syntax for response of Send-queue-state (short)25 11.Appendix B: ABNF Syntax for response of Send-queue-state (long) 26

Introduction

The reader of this specification is expected to be familiar with the IPP Model and Semantics specification RFC2566, the IPP Encoding and Transport [RF2565], and the Line Printer Daemon (LPD) protocol specification RFC1179 as described in RFC 1179.

RFC 1179 was written in 1990 in an attempt to document existing LPD protocol implementations. Since then, a number of undocumented extensions have been made by vendors to support functionality specific to their printing solutions. All of these extensions consist of additional control file commands. This document does not address any of these vendor extensions. Rather it addresses existing practice within the context of the features described by RFC 1179. Deviations of existing practice from RFC 1179 are so indicated.

Other LPD control file commands in RFC 1179 are obsolete. They are intended to work on "text" only formats and are inappropriate for many contemporary document formats that completely specify each page. This document does not address the support of these obsolete features.

In the area of document formats, also known as page description languages (PDL), RFC 1179 defines a fixed set with no capability for extension. Consequently, some new PDL's are not supported, and some of those that are supported are sufficiently unimportant now that they have not been registered for use with the Printer MIB RFC1759 and IPP RFC2566 RFC2565, though they could be registered if desired. See the Printer MIB specification RFC1759 and/or the IPP Model specification RFC2566 for instructions for registration of document-formats with IANA. IANA lists the registered document- formats as "printer languages".

This document addresses the protocol mapping for both directions: mapping of the LPD protocol to the IPP protocol and mapping of the IPP protocol to the LPD protocol. The former is called the "LPD-to- IPP mapper" and the latter is called the "IPP-to-LPD mapper".

This document is an informational document that is not on the standards track. It is intended to help implementers of gateways between IPP and LPD. It also provides an example, which gives additional insight into IPP.

Terminology

The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 RFC2119.

RFC 1179 uses the word "command" in two contexts: for over-the-wire operations and for command file functions. This document SHALL use the word "command" for the former and the phrase "functions" for the latter. The syntax of the LPD commands is given using ABNF RFC2234.

The following tokens are used in order to make the syntax more readable:

  LF stands for %x0A (linefeed)
  SP stands for %x20.  (space)
  DIGIT stands for %x30-39 ("0" to "9")

Mapping from LPD Commands to IPP Operations

This section describes the mapping from LPD commands to IPP operations. Each of the following sub-sections appear as sub- sections of section 5 of RFC 1179.

The following table summarizes the IPP operation that the mapper uses when it receives an LPD command. Each section below gives more detail:

  LPD command                IPP operation
  print-any-waiting-jobs     ignore
  receive-a-printer-job      Print-Job or Create-Job/Send-Document
        send queue state       Get-Printer-Attributes and Get-Jobs
          (short or long)
        remove-jobs          Cancel-Job

Print any waiting jobs

Command syntax:

 print-waiting-jobs = %x01 printer-name LF

This command causes the LPD daemon check its queue and print any waiting jobs. An IPP printer handles waiting jobs without such a nudge.

If the mapper receives this LPD command, it SHALL ignore it and send no IPP operation.

Receive a printer job

Command syntax:

 receive-job = %x02 printer-name LF

The control file and data files mentioned in the following paragraphs are received via LPD sub-commands that follow this command. Their mapping to IPP commands and attributes is described later in this section.

The mapper maps the 'Receive a printer job' command to either:

  - the Print-Job operation which includes a single data file or
  - the Create-Job operation followed by one Send-Document operation
    for each data file.

If the IPP printer supports both Create-Job and Send-Document, and if a job consists of:

  - a single data file, the mapper SHOULD use the Print-Job
    operation, but MAY use the Create-Job and Send-Document
    operations.
  - more than one data file, the mapper SHALL use Create-Job
    followed by one Send-Document for each received LPD data file.

If the IPP printer does not support both Create-Job and Send- Document, and if a job consists of:

  - a single data file, the mapper SHALL use the PrintJob
    operation.
  - more than one data file, the mapper SHALL submit each received
    LPD data file as a separate Print-Job operation (thereby
    converting a single LPD job into multiple IPP jobs).

If the mapper uses Create-Job and Send-Document, it MUST send the Create-Job operation before it sends any Send-Document operations whether the LPD control file, which supplies attributes for Create- Job, arrives before or after all LPD data files.

NOTE: This specification does not specify how the mapper maps: the LPD Printer-name operand to the IPP "printer-uri" operation attribute.

The following three sub-sections gives further details about the mapping from LPD receive-a-printer-job sub-commands. Each of the following subsections appear as sub-sections of section 6 of RFC 1179.

Abort job

Sub-command syntax:

  abort-job = %x1 LF

This sub-command of receive-a-printer-job is intended to abort any job transfer in process.

If the mapper receives this sub-command, it SHALL cancel the job that it is in the process of transmitting.

If the mapper is in the process of sending a Print-Job or Create-Job operation, it terminates the job either by closing the connection, or performing the Cancel-Job operation with the job-uri that it received from the Print-Job or Create-Job operation.

NOTE: This sub-command is implied if at any time the connection between the LPD client and server is terminated before an entire print job has been transferred via an LPD Receive-a-printer-job request.

Receive control file

Sub-command syntax:

receive-control-file = %x2 number-of-bytes SP name-of-control-file LF number-of-bytes = 1*DIGIT name-of-control-file = "cfA" job-number client-host-name

                      ; e.g. "cfA123woden"

job-number = 3DIGIT client-host-name = <a host name>

This sub-command is roughly equivalent to the IPP Create-Job operation.

The mapper SHALL use the contents of the received LPD control file to create IPP operation attribute and job template attribute values to transmit with the Print-Job or Create-Job operation.

Receive data file

Sub-command syntax: %x3 number-of-bytes-in-data-file Name-of-data-file

receive-data-file = %x03 number-of-bytes SP name-of-data-file LF number-of-bytes = 1*DIGIT name-of-data-file = "df" letter job-number client-host-name

           ; e.g. "dfA123woden for the first file

letter = %x41-5A / %x61-7A ; "A" to "Z", "a" to "z"

                              ;  first file is "A",
                              ; second "B", and  52nd file is "z"

job-number = 3DIGIT client-host-name = <a host name>

This sub-command is roughly equivalent to the IPP Send-Document operation.

The mapper SHALL use the contents of the received LPD data file as the data to transmit with the IPP Print-Job or Send-Document operation.

Although RFC 1179 alludes to a method for passing an unspecified length data file by using an octet-count of zero, no implementations support this feature. The mapper SHALL reject a job that has a value of 0 in the number-of-bytes field.

Send queue state (short)

Command syntax:

send-queue-short = %x03 printer-name *(SP(user-name / job-number)) LF

The mapper's response to this command includes information about the printer and its jobs. RFC 1179 specifies neither the information nor the format of its response. This document requires the mapper to follow existing practice as specified in this document.

The mapper SHALL produce a response in the following format which consists of a printer-status line optionally followed by a heading line, and a list of jobs. This format is defined by examples below. Appendix A contains the ABNF syntax.

For an printer with no jobs, the response starts in column 1 and is:

  no entries

For a printer with jobs, an example of the response is:

 killtree is ready and printing
 Rank   Owner      Job          Files             Total Size
 active fred       123          stuff             1204 bytes
 1st    smith      124          resume, foo       34576 bytes
 2nd    fred       125          more              99 bytes
 3rd    mary       126          mydoc             378 bytes
 4th    jones      127          statistics.ps     4567 bytes
 5th    fred       128          data.txt          9 bytes

The column numbers of above headings and job entries are:

 |      |          |            |                 |
 01     08         19           35                63

The mapper SHALL produce each field above from the following IPP attribute:

LPD field IPP attribute special conversion details

printer- printer-state and For a printer-state of idle or status printer-state-reasons processing, the mapper SHALL use

                                the formats above.  For stopped,
                                the mapper SHALL use printer-
                                state-reasons to produce an
                                unspecified format for the error.

rank number-of- the mapper SHALL the format above

         intervening-jobs

owner job-originating-user- unspecified conversion; job-

         name                   originating-user-name may be the
                                mapper's user-name

job job-id the mapper shall use the job-id files document-name the mapper shall create a comma

                                separated list of the document-
                                names and then truncate this list
                                to the first 24 characters

total- job-k- the mapper shall multiple the size octets*copies*1024 value of job-k-octets by 1024 and

                                by the value of the "copies"
                                attribute.

A mapper SHOULD use the job attribute number-of-intervening-jobs rather than the job's position in a list of jobs to determine 'rank' because a Printer may omit jobs that it wants to keep secret. If a printer doesn't support the job attribute number-of-intervening-jobs, a mapper MAY use the job's position.

Note: a Printer may set the value of job-originating-user-name to the authenticated user or to the value of "requesting-user-name", depending on the implementation and configuration. For a gateway, the authenticated user is the user-id of the gateway, but the "requesting-user-name" may contain the name of the user who is the gateway's client.

In order to obtain the information specified above, The LPD-to-IPP mapper SHALL use the Get-Printer-Attributes operation to get printer-status and SHOULD use the Get-Jobs operation to get information about all of the jobs. If the LPD command contains job- numbers or user-names, the mapper MAY handle the filtering of the response. If the LPD command contains job-numbers but no user-names, the mapper MAY use Get-Job-Attributes on each converted job-number rather than Get-Jobs. If the LPD command contains a single user-name but no job-numbers, the mapper MAY use Get-Jobs with the my-jobs option if the server supports this option and if the server allows the client to be a proxy for the LPD user.

NOTE: This specification does not define how the mapper maps the LPD Printer-name operand to the IPP "printer-uri" operation attribute.

Send queue state (long)

Command syntax:

send-queue-long = %x04 printer-name *(SP(user-name / job-number)) LF

The mapper's response to this command includes information about the printer and its jobs. RFC 1179 specifies neither the information nor the format of its response. This document requires the mapper to follow existing practice as specified in this document.

The mapper SHALL produce a response in the following format which consists of a printer-status line optionally followed a list of jobs, where each job consists of a blank line, a description line, and one line for each file. The description line contains the user-name, rank, job-number and host. This format is defined by examples below. Appendix B contain the ABNF syntax.

For an printer with no jobs the response is:

  no entries

For a printer with jobs, an example of the response is:

  killtree is ready and printing
  fred: active                        [job 123 tiger]
          2 copies of stuff           602 bytes
  smith: 1st                          [job 124 snail]
          2 copies of resume          7088 bytes
          2 copies of foo             10200 bytes
  fred: 2nd                           [job 125 tiger]
          more                        99 bytes
  The column numbers of above headings and job entries are:
  |       |                           |
  01      09                          41

Although the format of the long form is different from the format of the short form, their fields are identical except for a) the copies and host fields which are only in the long form, and b) the "size" field contains the single copy size of each file. Thus the sum of the file sizes in the "size" field times the value of the "copies" field produces the value for the "Total Size" field in the short form. For fields other than the host and copies fields, see the preceding section. For the host field see the table below.

  LPD field IPP attribute        special conversion details
  host                           unspecified conversion; job-
                                 originating-host may be the
                                 mapper's host
  copies    copies               the mapper shall assume the
                                 value of copies precedes the
                                 string "copies of "; otherwise,
                                 the value of copies is 1.

NOTE: This specification does not define how the mapper maps the LPD Printer-name operand to the IPP printer-uri operation attribute.

Remove jobs

Command syntax:

  remove-jobs = %x05 printer-name SP agent
                      *(SP(user-name / job-number)) LF

The agent operand is the user-name of the user initiating the remove-jobs command. The special user-name 'root' indicates a privileged user who can remove jobs whose user-name differs from the agent.

The mapper SHALL issue one Cancel-Job operation for each job referenced by the remove-jobs command. Each job-number in the remove-jobs command references a single job. Each user-name in the remove-jobs command implicitly references all jobs owned by the specified user. The active job is implicitly referenced when the remove-jobs command contains neither job-numbers nor user-names. The mapper MAY use Get-Jobs to determine the job-uri of implicitly referenced jobs.

The mapper SHALL not use the agent name of 'root' when end-users cancel their own jobs. Violation of this rule creates a potential security violation, and it may cause the printer to issue a notification that misleads a user into thinking that some other person canceled the job.

If the agent of a remove-jobs command for a job J is the same as the user name specified with the 'P' function in the control file for job J, then the mapper SHALL ensure that the initiator of the Cancel-Job command for job J is the same as job-originating-user for job J.

Note: This requirement means that a mapper must be consistent in who the receiver perceives as the initiator of IPP operations. The mapper either acts as itself or acts on behalf of another user. The latter is preferable if it is possible. This consistency is necessary between Print-Job/Create-Job and Cancel-Job in order for Cancel-Job to work, but it is also desirable for other operations. For example, Get-Jobs may give more information about job submitted by the initiator of this operation.

NOTE: This specification does not define how the mapper maps: (1) the LPD printer-name to the IPP "printer-uri" or (2) the LPD job-number to the IPP "job-uri".

NOTE: This specification does not specify how the mapper maps the LPD user-name to the IPP job-originating-user because the mapper may use its own user-name with jobs.

Mapping of LPD Control File Lines to IPP Operation and Job Template

Attributes

This section describes the mapping from LPD control file lines (called 'functions') to IPP operation attributes and job template attributes. The mapper receives the control file lines via the LPD receive-control-file sub-command. Each of the LPD functions appear as sub-sections of section 7 of RFC 1179.

In LPD control file lines, the text operands have a maximum length of 31 or 99 while IPP operation attribute and job template attribute values have a maximum of 255 or 1023 octets, depending on the attribute syntax. Therefore, no data is lost.

The mapper converts each supported LPD function to its corresponding IPP operation or job template attribute as defined by tables in the subsections that follow. These subsections group functions according to whether they are:

  - required with a job,
  - optional with a job
  - required with each document.

In the tables below, each LPD value is given a name, such as 'h'. If an IPP value uses the LPD value, then the IPP value column contains the LPD name, such as 'h' to denote this. Otherwise, the IPP value column specifies the literal value.

Required Job Functions

The following LPD functions MUST be in a received LPD job. The mapper SHALL receive each of the following LPD functions and SHALL include the information as a operation or job template attribute with each IPP job. The functions SHOULD be in the order 'H', 'P' and they SHOULD be the first two functions in the control file, but they MAY be anywhere in the control file and in any order:

LPD function IPP name value description name value

H h Originating Host h (in security layer) P u User identification requesting- u (and in security

                                user-name     layer)
            none                ipp-          'true'
                                attribute-
                                fidelity

A mapper MAY send its own host rather than the client's host, and a mapper MAY send its own user-name as user identification rather than the client user. But in any case, the values sent SHALL be compatible with the Cancel-Job operation. The IPP operation MAY have no way to specify an originating host-name.

The mapper SHALL include ipp-attribute-fidelity = true so that it doesn't have to determine which attributes a printer supports.

Optional Job Functions

The following LPD functions MAY be present in a received job. These functions SHOULD follow the required job functions and precede the document functions, but they MAY be anywhere in the control file.

If the mapper receives such an LPD function, the mapper SHALL include the corresponding IPP attribute with the value converted as specified in the table below. If the mapper does not receive such an LPD attribute, the mapper SHALL NOT include the corresponding IPP attribute, except the 'L' LPD function whose absence has a special meaning as noted in the table.

LPD function IPP name value description name value

J j Job name for job-name j

           banner page

L l Print banner page job-sheets 'standard' if 'L' is

                                          present
                                          'none' if 'L' is present

M m Mail When Printed IPP has no notification

                                          mechanism. To support
                                          this LPD feature, the
                                          gateway must poll using
                                          the Get-Job-Attributes
                                          operation.

Required Document Functions

The mapper SHALL receive one set of the required document functions with each copy of a document, and SHALL include the converted information as operation or job template attributes with each IPP document.

If the control file contains required and recommended document functions, the required functions SHOULD precede the recommended ones and if the job contains multiple documents, all the functions for

each document are grouped together as shown in the example of section 6.3 "Required Document Functions". However, the document functions MAY be in any order.

LPD function IPP name value description name value

f fff Print formatted document-format 'application/octet-

          file                                 stream'

l fff Print file leaving document-format 'application/octet-

          control characters                   stream'

o fff Print Postscript document-format 'application/PostScri

          output file                          pt'
                              copies           see note

Note: In practice, the 'f' LPD function is often overloaded. It is often used with any format of document data including PostScript and PCL data.

Note: In practice, the 'l' LPD function is often used as a rough equivalent to the 'f' function.

Note: When RFC 1179 was written, no implementation supported the 'o' function; instead 'f' was used for PostScript. Windows NT now sends ' o' function for a PostScript file.

Note: the value 'fff' of the 'f', 'l' and 'o' functions is the name of the data file as transferred, e.g. "dfA123woden".

If the mapper receives any other lower case letter, the mapper SHALL reject the job because the document contains a format that the mapper does not support.

The mapper determines the number of copies by counting the number of occurrences of each 'fff' file with one of the lower-case functions above. For example, if 'f dfA123woden' occurs 4 times, then copies has a value of 4. Although the LPD protocol allows the value of copies to be different for each document, the commands and the receiving print systems don't support this.

Recommended Document Functions

The mapper SHOULD receive one set of the recommended document functions with each document, and SHOULD include the converted information as an operation or job template attribute with each IPP document. The functions SHOULD be received in the order 'U' and 'N', but they MAY arrive in any order.

LPD function IPP name value description name value

U fff ignored N n Name of source file document-name n

Note: the value 'fff' of the 'U' function is the name of the data file as transferred, e.g. "dfA123woden".

Mapping from IPP operations to LPD commands

If the IPP-to-LPD mapper receives an IPP operation, the following table summarizes the LPD command that it uses. Each section below gives the detail. Each of the following sub-sections appear as sub- sections of section 3 in the document "Internet Printing Protocol/1.0: Model and Semantics" RFC2566.

IPP operation LPD command

Print-Job or Print-URI or receive-a-printer-job Create-Job/Send-Document/Send-URI and then print-any-waiting-jobs Validate-Job implemented by the mapper Cancel-Job remove-jobs Get-Printer-Attributes, Get-Job- send queue state (short or long) Attributes or Get-Jobs

Print-Job

The mapper SHALL send the following commands in the order listed below:

  - receive-a-printer-job command
  - both receive-control-file sub-command and receive-data-file
    sub-command (unspecified order, see Note below)
  - print-any-waiting-jobs command, except that if the mapper is
    sending a sequence of receive a printer-job commands, it MAY
    omit sending print-any-waiting-jobs after any receive a
    printer-job command that is neither the first nor last command
    in this sequence

Note: it is recommended that the order of the receive-control-file subcommand and the receive-data-file sub-command be configurable because either order fails for some print systems. Some print systems assume that the control file follows all data files and start printing immediately on receipt of the control file. When such a print system tries to print a data file that has not arrived, it produces an error. Other print systems assume that the control file arrives before the data files and start printing when the first data file arrives. Such a system ignores the control information, such as banner page or copies.

NOTE: This specification does not define the mapping between the IPP printer-uri and the LPD printer-name.

The mapper SHALL send the IPP operation attributes and job template attributes received from the operation to the LPD printer by using the LPD receive-control-file sub-command. The mapper SHALL create the LPD job-number for use in the control file name, but the receiving printer MAY, in some circumstances, assign a different job-number to the job. The mapper SHALL create the IPP job-id and IPP job-uri returned in the Print-Job response.

NOTE: This specification does not specify how the mapper determines the LPD job-number, the IPP job-id or the IPP job-uri of a job that it creates nor does it specify the relationship between the IPP job- uri, IPP the job-id and the LPD job-number, both of which the mapper creates. However, it is likely that the mapper will use the same integer value for both the LPD job-number and the IPP job-id, and that the IPP Job-uri is the printer's URI with the job-id concatenated on the end.

The mapper SHALL send data received in the IPP operation to the LPD printer by using the LPD receive-data-file sub-command. The mapper SHALL specify the exact number of bytes being transmitted in the number-of-bytes field of the receive-data-file sub-command. It SHALL NOT use a value of 0 in this field.

If the mapper, while it is transmitting a receive-a-printer-job command or sub-command, either detects that its IPP connection has closed or receives a Cancel-Job operation, the mapper SHALL terminate the LPD job either with the abort sub-command or the remove-jobs command.

This document does not address error code conversion.

Print-URI

The mapper SHALL handle this operation in the same way as a Print-Job operation except that it SHALL obtain data referenced by the "document-uri" operation attribute and SHALL then treat that data as if it had been received via a Print-Job operation.

Validate-Job

The mapper SHALL perform this operation directly. Because LPD supports very few attributes, this operation doesn't have much to check.

Create-Job

The mapper SHALL handle this operation like Print-Job, except:

  - the mapper SHALL send the control file after it has received the
    last Send-Document or Send-URI operation because the control
    file contains all the document-name and document-format values
    specified in the Send-Document and Send-URI operations.
  - the mapper SHALL perform one receive-data-file sub-command for
    each Send-Document or Send-URI operation received and in the
    same order received.
  - the mapper SHALL send the control file either before all data
    files or after all data files. (See the note in the section on
    Print-Job about the dilemma of sending the control file either
    before or after the data files.

Send-Document

The mapper performs a receive-data-file sub-command on the received data. See the preceding section 5.4 "Create-Job" for the details.

Send-URI

The mapper SHALL obtain the data referenced by the "document-uri" operation attribute, and SHALL then treat that data as if it had been received via a Send-Document operation. See the preceding section 5.5 "Send-Document" for the details.

Cancel-Job

The mapper SHALL perform a remove-jobs command with the following operation attributes:

  - the printer is the one to which the job was submitted, that is
    the IPP printer-uri is mapped to an LPD printer-name by the same
    mechanism as for all commands
  - the agent is the authenticated user-name of the IPP client
  - the job-number is the job-id returned by the Print-Job command,
    that is, the LPD job-number has the same value as the IPP job-id
    for likely implementations

Get-Printer-Attributes

LPD severely limits the set of attributes that the mapper is able to return in its response for this operation. The mapper SHALL support, at most, the following printer attributes:

  - printer-state
  - printer-state-reasons

The mapper uses either the long or short form of the "send queue state" command.

The mapper SHALL assume that the LPD response that it receives has the format and information specified in section 3.3 "Send queue state (short)" and section 3.4 "Send queue state (long)". The mapper SHALL determine the value of each requested attribute by using the inverse of the mapping specified in the two aforementioned sections.

Note: the mapper can determine the response from the printer-status line without examining the rest of the LPD response.

Get-Job-Attributes

LPD severely limits the set of attributes that the mapper is able to return in its response for this operation. The mapper SHALL support, at most, the following job attributes:

  - number-of-intervening-jobs
  - job-originating-user-name
  - job-id
  - document-name
  - job-k-octets
  - copies

The mapper uses either the long or short form of the "send queue state" command. If it receives a request for the "job-k-octets" or "copies" and supports the attribute it SHALL use the long form; otherwise, it SHALL use the short form.

Note: the value of job-k-octets is the value in the short form divided by the number of "copies" which is on the long form only. Its value can also be determined by adding the "size" field values for each document in the job in the long form.

The mapper SHALL assume that the LPD response that it receives has the format and information specified in section 3.3 "Send queue state (short)" and section 3.4 "Send queue state (long)". The mapper SHALL determine the value of each requested attribute by using the inverse of the mapping specified in the two aforementioned sections.

Note: when the mapper uses the LPD short form, it can determine the response from the single LPD line that pertains to the job specified by the Get-Job-Attributes operation.

Note: the mapper can use its correspondence between the IPP job-id, job-uri and the LPD job-number.

5.10 Get-Jobs

The mapper SHALL perform this operation in the same way as Get-Job- Attributes except that the mapper converts all the LPD job-lines, and the IPP response contains one job object for each job-line in the LPD response.

Mapping of IPP Attributes to LPD Control File Lines

This section describes the mapping from IPP operation attributes and job template attributes to LPD control file lines (called ' functions'). The mapper receives the IPP operation attributes and job template atributes via the IPP operation. Each of the IPP operation attributes and job template attributes appear as sub-sections of section 3 and 4.2 in the IPP model document RFC2566.

In the context of LPD control file lines, the text operands have a maximum length of 31 or 99 while IPP operation attributes and job template attributes have a maximum of 255 or 1023 octets, depending on the attribute syntax. Therefore, there may be some data loss if the IPP operation attribute and job template attribute values exceed the maximum length of the LPD equivalent operands.

The mapper converts each supported IPP operation attribute and job template attribute to its corresponding LPD function as defined by tables in the subsections that follow. These subsections group functions according to whether they are:

  - required with a job,
  - optional with a job
  - required with each document.

In the tables below, each IPP value is given a name, such as 'h'. If an LPD value uses the IPP value, then the LPD value column contains the IPP name, such as 'h' to denote this. Otherwise, the LPD value column specifies the literal value.

Required Job Functions

The mapper SHALL include the following LPD functions with each job, and they SHALL have the specified value. They SHALL be the first functions in the control file and they SHALL be in the order "H" and then "P".

IPP LPD function name value name value description

(perhaps in security h H gateway host Originating Host layer) requesting-user-name u P u User identification and in the security layer

A mapper SHALL sends its own host rather than the client's host, because some LPD systems require that it be the same as the host from which the remove-jobs command comes. A mapper MAY send its own user name as user identification rather than the client user. But in any case, the values sent SHALL be compatible with the LPD remove-jobs operation.

Optional Job Functions

The mapper MAY include the following LPD functions with each job. They SHALL have the specified value if they are sent. These functions, if present, SHALL follow the require job functions, and they SHALL precede the required document functions.

IPP attribute LPD function name value name value description

job-name j J j Job name for banner

                                              page

job-sheets 'standard' L u Print banner page job-sheets 'none' omit 'L' function

Note: 'L' has special meaning when it is omitted. If 'J' is omitted, some undefined behavior occurs with respect to the banner page.

Required Document Functions

The mapper SHALL include one set of the following LPD functions with each document, and they SHALL have the specified values. For each document, the order of the functions SHALL be 'f', 'U' and then 'N', where 'f' is replicated once for each copy.

IPP attribute LPD function

name value name value description

document- 'application/octet- f fff Print formatted file format stream' or

           'application/PostScript'

copies c replicate 'f' 'c'

                                              times

none U fff Unlink data file document- n N n Name of source file name

Note: the value 'fff' of the 'f' and 'U' functions is the name of the data file as transferred, e.g. "dfA123woden".

Note: the mapper SHALL not send the 'o' function

ISSUE: should we register DVI, troff or ditroff?

If the mapper receives no "ipp-attribute-fidelitybest-effort" or it has a value of false, then the mapper SHALL reject the job if it specifies attributes or attribute values that are not among those supported in the above tables.

Below is an example of the minimal control file for a job with three copies of two files 'foo' and 'bar':

  H tiger
  P jones
  f dfA123woden
  f dfA123woden
  f dfA123woden
  U dfA123woden
  N foo
  f dfB123woden
  f dfB123woden
  f dfB123woden
  U dfB123woden
  N bar

Security Considerations

There are no security issues beyond those covered in the IPP Encoding and Transport document RFC2565, the IPP model document RFC2566 and the LPD document RFC1179.

References

[ipp-iig] Hasting, T., et al., "Internet Printing Protocol/1.0:

         Implementer's Guide", Work in Progress.

RFC1759 Smith, R., Wright, F., Hastings, T., Zilles, S., and J.

         Gyllenskog, "Printer MIB", RFC 1759, March 1995.

RFC1179 McLaughlin, L., "Line Printer Daemon Protocol", RFC 1179,

         August 1990.

RFC2119 Bradner, S. "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate

         Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

RFC2234 D. Crocker et al., "Augmented BNF for Syntax

         Specifications:  ABNF", RFC 2234, November 1997.

RFC2565 Herriot, R., Butler, S., Moore, P. and R. Tuner, "Internet

         Printing Protocol/1.0: Encoding and Transport", RFC 2565,
         April 1999.

RFC2566 deBry, R., Hastings, T., Herriot, R., Isaacson, S., and P.

         Powell, "Internet Printing Protocol/1.0: Model and
         Semantics", RFC 2566, April 1999.

RFC2567 Wright, D., "Design Goals for an Internet Printing

         Protocol", RFC 2567, April 1999.

RFC2568 Zilles, S., "Rationale for the Structure and Model and

         Protocol for the Internet Printing Protocol", RFC 2568,
         April 1999.

Authors' Addresses

Robert Herriot (Editor) Xerox Corporation 3400 Hillview Ave., Bldg #1 Palo Alto, CA 94304

Phone: 650-813-7696 Fax: 650-813-6860 EMail: [email protected]

Norm Jacobs Sun Microsystems Inc. 1430 Owl Ridge Rd. Colorado Springs, CO 80919

Phone: 719-532-9927 Fax: 719-535-0956 EMail: [email protected]

Thomas N. Hastings Xerox Corporation 701 S. Aviation Blvd., ESAE-231 El Segundo, CA 90245

Phone: 310-333-6413 Fax: 310-333-5514 EMail: [email protected]

Jay Martin Underscore, Inc. 41-C Sagamore Park Road Hudson, NH 03051-4915

Phone: 603-889-7000 Fax: 603-889-2699 EMail: [email protected]

10. Appendix A: ABNF Syntax for response of Send-queue-state (short)

The syntax in ABNF for the response to the LPD command 'send-queue- state (long)' is:

status-response = empty-queue / nonempty-queue
empty-queue = "no-entries" LF
nonempty-queue = printer-status LF heading LF *(job LF)
printer-status =  OK-status / error-status
OK-status = printer-name SP "ready and printing" LF
error-status = < implementation dependent status information >
heading = "Rank" 3SP "Owner" 6SP "Job" 13SP "Files"
                23SP "Total Size" LF
                   ; the column headings and their values below begin
at the columns
                   ; 1, 8, 19, 35 and 63
job = rank *SP owner *SP job *SP files *SP total-size "bytes"
                  ; jobs are in order of oldest to newest
rank = "active" / "1st" / "2nd" / "3rd" / integer "th"
                  ; job that is printing is "active"
                  ; other values show position in the queue
owner = <user name of person who submitted the job>
job = 1*3DIGIT   ; job-number
files = <file name> *( "," <file name>) ; truncated to 24 characters
total-size = 1*DIGIT  ; combined size in bytes of all documents

11. Appendix B: ABNF Syntax for response of Send-queue-state (long)

The syntax in ABNF for the response to the LPD command 'send-queue- state (long)' is:

status-response = empty-queue / nonempty-queue
empty-queue = "no-entries" LF
nonempty-queue = printer-status LF  *job
printer-status =  OK-status / error-status
OK-status = printer-name SP "ready and printing" LF
error-status = < implementation dependent status information >
job = LF line-1 LF line-2 LF
line-1 = owner ":" SP rank 1*SP "[job" job SP host "]"
line-2 =  file-name 1*SP document-size "bytes"
      ; jobs are in order of oldest to newest
rank = "active" / "1st" / "2nd" / "3rd" / integer "th"
        ; job that is printing is "active"
        ; other values show position in the queue
owner = <user name of person who submitted the job>
job = 1*3DIGIT
file-name = [ 1*DIGIT  "copies of" SP ] <file name>
              ; truncated to 24 characters
document-size = 1*DIGIT  ;size of single copy of the document.

12. Appendix C: Unsupported LPD functions

The follow LPD functions have no IPP equivalent. The LPD-to-IPP mapper ignores them and the IPP-to-LPD mapper does not send them.

LPD command
name  description
C     Class for banner page
I     Indent Printing
H     Host of client
M     Mail when printed
S     Symbolic link data
T     Title for pr
W     Width of output
1     troff R font
2     troff I font
3     troff B font
4     troff S font

The follow LPD functions specify document-formats which have no IPP equivalent, unless someone registers them. The LPD-to-IPP mapper rejects jobs that request such a document format, and the IPP-to-LPD mapper does not send them.

LPD command
name   description
c      Plot CIF file
d      Print DVI file
g      Plot file
k      reserved for Kerberized clients and servers
n      Print ditroff output file
p      Print file with 'pr' format
r      File to print with FORTRAN carriage control
t      Print troff output file
v      Print raster file
z      reserved for future use with the Palladium
       print system

13. Full Copyright Statement

Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999). All Rights Reserved.

This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than English.

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