Provided by: libieee1284-3-dev_0.2.11-14.1build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       libieee1284 - IEEE1284 communications library

SYNOPSIS

               #include <ieee1284.h>
               cc files... -lieee1284

OVERVIEW

       The libieee1284 library is a library for accessing parallel port devices.

       The model presented to the user is fairly abstract: a list of parallel ports with
       arbitrary names, with functions to access them in various ways ranging from bit operations
       to block data transfer in one of the IEEE 1284 sanctioned protocols.

       Although the library resides in user space the speed penalty may not be as bad as you
       initially think, since the operating system may well provide assistance with block data
       transfer operations; in fact, the operating system may even use hardware assistance to get
       the job done. So, using libieee1284, ECP transfers using DMA are possible.

       The normal sequence of events will be that the application
        1.  calls ieee1284_find_ports to get a list of available ports
        2.  then ieee1284_get_deviceid to look for a device on each port that it is interested in
        3.  and then ieee1284_open to open each port it finds a device it can control on.
        4.  The list of ports returned from ieee1284_find_ports can now be disposed of using
           ieee1284_free_ports.
        5.  Then when it wants to control the device, it will call ieee1284_claim to prevent
           other drivers from using the port
        6.  then perhaps do some data transfers
        7.  and then ieee1284_release when it is finished that that particular command. This
           claim-control-release sequence will be repeated each time it wants to tell the device
           to do something.
        8.  Finally when the application is finished with the device it will call ieee1284_close.

       Usually a port needs to be claimed before it can be used. This is to prevent multiple
       drivers from trampling on each other if they both want to use the same port. The exception
       to this rule is the collection of IEEE 1284 Device IDs, which has an implicit
       open-claim-release-close sequence. The reason for this is that it may be possible to
       collect a Device ID from the operating system, without bothering the device with it.

CONFIGURATION

       When ieee1284_find_ports is first called, the library will look for a configuration file,
       /etc/ieee1284.conf.

       Comments begin with a '#' character and extend to the end of the line. Everything else is
       freely-formatted tokens. A non-quoted (or double-quoted) backslash character '\' preserves
       the literal value of the next character, and single and double quotes may be used for
       preserving white-space. Braces and equals signs are recognised as tokens, unless quoted or
       escaped.

       The only configuration instruction that is currently recognised is “disallow method
       ppdev”, for preventing the use of the Linux ppdev driver.

ENVIRONMENT

       You can enable debugging output from the library by setting the environment variable
       LIBIEEE1284_DEBUG to any value.

FILES

       /etc/ieee1284.conf
           Configuration file.

SEE ALSO

       parport(3), parport_list(3), ieee1284_find_ports(3), ieee1284_free_ports(3),
       ieee1284_get_deviceid(3), ieee1284_open(3), ieee1284_close(3), ieee1284_claim(3),
       ieee1284_release(3), ieee1284_data(3), ieee1284_status(3), ieee1284_control(3),
       ieee1284_negotiation(3), ieee1284_ecp_fwd_to_rev(3), ieee1284_transfer(3),
       ieee1284_get_irq_fd(3), ieee1284_set_timeout(3)

AUTHOR

       Tim Waugh <twaugh@redhat.com>
           Author.

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright © 2001-2003 Tim Waugh

                                            09/18/2007                             LIBIEEE1284(3)