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NAME

       lp - line printer devices

SYNOPSIS

       #include <linux/lp.h>

CONFIGURATION

       lp[0–2]  are  character devices for the parallel line printers; they have major number 6 and minor number
       0–2.  The minor numbers correspond to the printer port base addresses 0x03bc, 0x0378 and 0x0278.  Usually
       they  have mode 220 and are owned by root and group lp.  You can use printer ports either with polling or
       with interrupts.  Interrupts are recommended when high  traffic  is  expected,  for  example,  for  laser
       printers.  For usual dot matrix printers polling will usually be enough.  The default is polling.

DESCRIPTION

       The following ioctl(2) calls are supported:

       int ioctl(int fd, LPTIME, int arg)
              Sets  the  amount  of time that the driver sleeps before rechecking the printer when the printer's
              buffer appears to be filled to arg.  If you have a fast printer, decrease this number; if you have
              a  slow  printer  then  increase  it.  This is in hundredths of a second, the default 2 being 0.02
              seconds.  It only influences the polling driver.

       int ioctl(int fd, LPCHAR, int arg)
              Sets the maximum number of busy-wait iterations which the polling driver does  while  waiting  for
              the printer to get ready for receiving a character to arg.  If printing is too slow, increase this
              number; if the system gets too slow,  decrease  this  number.   The  default  is  1000.   It  only
              influences the polling driver.

       int ioctl(int fd, LPABORT, int arg)
              If arg is 0, the printer driver will retry on errors, otherwise it will abort.  The default is 0.

       int ioctl(int fd, LPABORTOPEN, int arg)
              If arg is 0, open(2) will be aborted on error, otherwise error will be ignored.  The default is to
              ignore it.

       int ioctl(int fd, LPCAREFUL, int arg)
              If arg is 0, then the out-of-paper, offline and error signals are required  to  be  false  on  all
              writes, otherwise they are ignored.  The default is to ignore them.

       int ioctl(int fd, LPWAIT, int arg)
              Sets  the  number of busy waiting iterations to wait before strobing the printer to accept a just-
              written character, and the number of iterations to wait before turning the strobe  off  again,  to
              arg.   The  specification  says this time should be 0.5 microseconds, but experience has shown the
              delay caused by the code is already enough.  For that reason, the default value  is  0.   This  is
              used for both the polling and the interrupt driver.

       int ioctl(int fd, LPSETIRQ, int arg)
              This  ioctl(2) requires superuser privileges.  It takes an int containing the new IRQ as argument.
              As a side effect, the printer will be reset.  When arg is 0, the  polling  driver  will  be  used,
              which is also default.

       int ioctl(int fd, LPGETIRQ, int *arg)
              Stores the currently used IRQ in arg.

       int ioctl(int fd, LPGETSTATUS, int *arg)
              Stores the value of the status port in arg.  The bits have the following meaning:

              LP_PBUSY     inverted busy input, active high
              LP_PACK      unchanged acknowledge input, active low
              LP_POUTPA    unchanged out-of-paper input, active high
              LP_PSELECD   unchanged selected input, active high

              LP_PERRORP   unchanged error input, active low

              Refer to your printer manual for the meaning of the signals.  Note that undocumented bits may also
              be set, depending on your printer.

       int ioctl(int fd, LPRESET)
              Resets the printer.  No argument is used.

FILES

       /dev/lp*

SEE ALSO

       chmod(1), chown(1), mknod(1), lpcntl(8), tunelp(8)

COLOPHON

       This page is part of release 3.54 of the Linux man-pages project.  A  description  of  the  project,  and
       information about reporting bugs, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.