I expect it to be possible to simply compose a notepad textfile with text and control chararcters (ESC/POS) and copy that file to an Epson Thermal Receipt printer. Amongst a lot of information that I found on internet, I could not find a sample text file that simply shows how to do such.
I was able to link the USB printer to lpt1 and when I use something like copy /b c:\test.txt lpt1, I get some output. I reached the printer but it doesn't understand the language so to speak.
I did find Epson documentation with the esc codes. It would be of great help if I had a sample text-file and some directions on how to place the control characters in that file.
The Epson information is not a course, it is a manual. That is why I get stuck I guess.
You can see the ESC/POS specifications based on this page.
TOP»POS › TECH.REFERENCE»ESC/POS COMMAND FOR TM PRINTER»Introduction
There is no document compiled in PDF etc., but perhaps it may be available by registering for EPSON's partner program. At least you can ask if it exists.
Epson Advantage Partner Program
LPT devices may also be used for questions like questions, but a more suitable one would be serial port device mode.
If you change the interface setting of the printer hardware from the printer class to the vendor class and install the serial port device driver, you will be able to communicate via the serial port.
Please refer to the user's manual etc.
However, in any case, if there is no paper, the cover is open, or some error has occurred, printing will not be possible.
And you can't know the status just by sending unilaterally on the command line.
In order to deal with such a situation properly, it will be necessary to create a program that communicates with the printer and requests printing, and in that program, monitor the status of the printer and deal with errors.
Related
I have used PJL commands with some HP printers to set printer control panel display message and duplexing of PDF documents. I have some customers with similar requirements using Okidata MB760 and MB492 machines. I know the Okidata machines support PJL, but it appears to be a different set of codes from HP (as is the case with every manufacturer - no standard for PJL except the entry/exit codes). Okidata support was unable to provide a programmer's manual or a PJL reference. Does anyone have information specific to these machines or (since each manufacturer tends to use the same codes with slight variations for a long time) for any other Okidata MB machines?
No response, not even comments. I did some testing via "print to file" in Windows and it looks like I can extract enough PJL from there to do what I need to do. But I still hold some small bit of hope that someone - maybe a helpful insider at Okidata? - will post some sort of PJL reference.
You can download a program called PCL Paraphernalia which allows you to connect and execute some PJL commands.
It's not the sleekest of interfaces but the Status Readback Utility option should allow you to retrieve all the allowed variables from the printer
My Bixolon SRP-350II is not shown in the list of available devices given by
posExplorer.GetDevices();
All I see are Microsoft's simulated devices. The printer itself works, I can print on it and, using raw printing, send commands such as "cut". I've installed the OPOS driver for the printer, but nothing changed.
Is it necessary to do some further configuration? Is the order of installing POS.NET, the OPOS-driver and the Windows driver important?
Alright, figured out the Printer had to be configured with PSPLauncher.exe and now it shows up. Still, I am not sure I understand where exactly the benefit of POS .NET lies. I want the customers to plug-in new printers and when using Raw Printing and EscPos-commands, this seems to be much easier.
Plug printer in, install windows driver, set to main printer and then cut-commands etc. are being send in the raw stream.
I can't say directly for printers, but where we get the benefits out of POS.NET is the standard code we wrote for the scanners, or MSRs or cash drawers. All we have to do is install the driver, and configure the device in OPOS configuration (which is probably the step you were missing and resolved with the "PSPLauncher.exe") and we know that it's code-compatible and just works.
We have hundreds of terminals across the country (Australia) and they all use a variety of models and brands for the devices (within a range of tolerance) but because of POS.NET they're all supported.
I'd like to use port 515 (lpd protocol) to query a printer about its identity, but, unlike some other protocols, lpd does not seem to return any information about the printer when a print request is made. (Judging by the packets captured with Wireshark.) I've looked through Unix's lpinfo, lpadmin, lpstat, etc., as well as RFC 1179 (LPD Protocol) but can't seem to find any commands that will fingerprint the printer over 515 (e.g. "HP2250 LaserJet"). Anyone know how to do this?
LPD makes a huge assumption about the printer with its PostScript roots. It can manage raw print files to any printer (ASCII inclusive), but makes the assumption the the page definition language (e.g. PostScript) will be consumed and rendered by the printer itself. Though queue status information is often available, the rest is not.
This also goes with the history of LPD in that it was not necessarily a printer-level deamon but a server deamon which would then queue/proxy this off to either other LPDs or (line) printers attached locally that would not queue jobs.
Is there something you're trying to accomplish via LPD above and beyond what it is intended?
I'm running out of ideas.
I'm using C by the way via inpout32.dll.
I have these "bytes"(e.g. 0000,00CC) being read from the printer data ports D0-7 or D1-8.
I need to filter out human readable characters when a print job is being done.
This is still very primitive, but I've got a listener function catching these data using inp32.
Basically if I do a print in notepad like 'Hello World', this will be pulled out from the byte being read by inp32 function.
the printer port listener is on a separate app.
the idea is that the app can listen in on any printer.
It's basically a PoC at the moment.
but what I'm using right now to test is a Canon BJC-1000SP, it's pretty old but it's the only parallel port printer we've got at the office. the others are USB types.
I'm using this on Windows at the moment.
Thermal Printers are actually the ones we'll be listening on.
So now I'm trying to use a generic driver that allows raw text file to print.
How can I extract text from it via the port?
If anybody can give me an idea, a function/converter or where to search, that would be great.
If all you read is already human-readable text, just store it all.
If not, you need to think about the character encoding in use. If it's plain old ASCII, you can probably just call isprint() to determine if a byte is a printable character.
The above of course assumes that your printer is talking plain-text, which probably means it has to be a rather old and simplistic printer (like a dot-matrix from ~20 years ago, or so).
If it's a modern "Win-Printer" laser or inkjet, with all the intelligence of page layout being done by the host computer in the driver, you're probably out of luck. In these cases, what is transmitted is the instructions to layout the page, typically in a printer-specific format.
I think you should edit your question and specify exactly what printer you're using, and in which operating system environment you're running your program.
Update: The Canon BJC-1000 printer you're currently using is an inkjet. It very probably relies on the host computer to send it line-by-line (as in ink lines, not text lines) of data to control the various ink nozzles. I don't think it ever sends plain text to the printer. You could investigate by reading through the code of an open source driver. For Linux, the recommended driver is called gutenprint.
can you please help me with the following questions...
If I need a virtual printer that will convert a PostScript stream to a different format, do I have to implement a virtual printer from scratch or implement a rendering plug-in?
The rendering plug-in seems to support only certain customizations. Also the data invariably goes to the spooler which is not needed in this case.
If I implement a virtual printer driver does it completely replace the Microsoft PostScript Driver or the Microsoft Universal Driver?
Since my driver is virtual, does it matter if I write a PostScript compliant or a Universal Driver compliant one?
Any other method to convert a printed document to a custom document format apart from implementing a virtual printer driver? Can I hook on as a port monitor or something? From what I could understand I guess not.
What you need is a port monitor. You can create a virtual printer using the Microsoft Postscript driver found in the WDK. You don't need to provide any code for this part, just an INF and PPD file to describe your virtual printer. Once you have that working and installed, users will then see your virtual printer when they print from an app. This printer will produce a stream of Postscript like any standard Postscript printer, which will then be sent to the printer's port monitor.
Now add a port monitor to handle converting the Postscript stream to whatever format you need. Port monitors are considerably easier to deal with than print drivers.
EDIT: Andy points out in the comments that v4 (ie, Win8) print drivers don't support custom port monitors. However, v3 drivers will still work in Win8.
I know this is old, but these answers would have helped me a couple months ago, when I started this project. I spent a lot of time creating a port monitor, only to find a much easier method in the end (see WritePrinter link below).
If I need a virtual printer that will convert a PostScript stream to a
different format, do I have to implement a virtual printer from
scratch or implement a rendering plug-in?
Rendering plug-in is what you want.
The rendering plug-in seems to support only certain customizations.
Correct -- you'll have to decide if it is enough for you.
Also the data invariably goes to the spooler which is not needed in
this case.
This should not be an issue.
If I implement a virtual printer driver does it completely replace the
Microsoft PostScript Driver or the Microsoft Universal Driver?
If you implement a rendering plug-in, it does not replace the PS/Uni drivers. The PS/Uni drivers are in fact used by a huge number (maybe 90%?) of all "printer drivers". OEMs that make printers don't want to write their own drivers, so they use the PS/Uni driver design -- some create UI plug-ins, some rendering plug-ins, some both, some neither.
Since my driver is virtual, does it matter if I write a PostScript
compliant or a Universal Driver compliant one?
It depends what format you want the data in. If you want bitmap format, a Uni driver is better, if you want PostScript format, PS is better. If you want data for each line drawn, text out, and other GDI operations, then either is fine.
Any other method to convert a printed document to a custom document
format apart from implementing a virtual printer driver? Can I hook on
as a port monitor or something? From what I could understand I guess
not.
Most people that want raw access to the PostScript data, usually to use GhostScript to convert to PDF or other format, use a port monitor to do this. For example, the Virtual PDF Printer that Adobe ships with the full version of Acrobat (Writer), uses a port monitor, and also a rendering plug-in and a UI plug-in, for the PSCRIPT5 driver.
The problem with a port monitor is that it doesn't run in the context of the user -- not in the context of the application/process doing the printing. It runs in the context of the print spooler, and requires a lot of hacks to figure out which user/session is doing the printing.
If you want bitmap data, to save as a JPG/BMP/PNG, for example, then just create a rendering plug-in for the universal printer driver and access/save the bitmap data inside IPrintOemUni::FilterGraphics.
If you want PostScript data, to use with GhostScript (or other library, or your own code) to convert to PDF or other formats, then just create a rendering plug-in for the PSCRIPT5 driver and access/save the PS data inside IPrintOemUni2::WritePrinter.
In either case, you want a rendering plug-in. If you want to easily display a UI while printing, and want your code to run in the same context as the user, and not the spooler service, then make sure you set your printer to print directly to printer -- bypass the spooler. If you use AddPrinter to install your printer, you would use the PRINTER_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECT flag.
Not sure I fully understand. You have an app that produces Postscript and you want to convert that to something else? If the application outputs the 'print ready' data then a new printer driver isn't going to help as the 'queue/driver' is just a way to get the data to the printer and not something that is creating the output file.
You might be best to look at something like: Redmon
This can take the output and spawn an new process. The idea would be that you have it output the Postscript to a file and then you launch some console .exe that you create against it.
Just a thought.
Again not sure which way round you are doing this, but ghostscript is the simplest way to convert a PS output into any other format. It's also pretty easy to write your own output format for ghostscript.
This all happens at the app level - no need to write a driver.