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Date:      Sat, 22 Jul 2000 08:14:58 -0500
From:      David Uhring <duhring@charter.net>
To:        Mark Ovens <mark@ukug.uk.freebsd.org>
Cc:        "Justin W. Pauler" <jwpauler@jwpages.com>, freebsd-stable@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re:
Message-ID:  <00072208263702.00230@dave.uhring.com>
In-Reply-To: <20000722120620.A236@parish>
References:  <00072123420801.00237@pauler.lgtch02.fais.net> <00072200101801.00223@dave.uhring.com> <20000722120620.A236@parish>

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On Sat, 22 Jul 2000, Mark Ovens wrote:
> On Sat, Jul 22, 2000 at 12:05:34AM -0500, David Uhring wrote:
> > On Fri, 21 Jul 2000, Justin W. Pauler wrote:
> > > Just CVSup'd last night, July 20th, after a complete re-install from my
> > > 4.0-RELEASE CD's. I then CVSup'd and built/installed the world and proceded to
> > > make me up a new kernel. Much to my surprise after I compiled everything, my
> > > system, as it has done many times before, would not compile the kernel with
> > > -ANY- USB devices what-so-ever. All that is in my kernel relating to USB is
> > > the following four lines:
> > > 
> > >  device          uhci            # UHCI controller
> > >  device          ohci            # OHCI controller
> > >  device          usb             # Generic USB code
> > >  device          ugen            # Generic USB device driver  
> > > 
> > >  Now if I attempt to compile this kernel with the code in, I get the following
> > > error when attempting to link the kernel:
> > > 
> > >  linking kernel
> > >  usb_ethersubr.o: In function `usbintr':
> > >  usb_ethersubr.o(.text+0x31): undefined reference to `ether_input'
> > >  *** Error code 1        
> > >  Stop in /usr/src/sys/compile/PAULER.
> > > 
> > >  Therefore I am not able to compile any support for USB in my kernel at
> > > all. I have found this problem for awhile now and have not been able to
> > > correct it, even after a complete brand new CVS'up and reinstall. This is
> > > frustrating as I have several devices I would like to run on my system:
> > > 
> > >  Dell XPS Pentium II 233 w/MMX
> > >  96 MB RAM
> > >  FreeBSD pauler.lgtch02.fais.net 4.1-RC FreeBSD 4.1-RC #0: 
> > >  Fri Jul 21 12:52:05 CDT 2000
> > > 
> > >  Also, has anyone gotten a HP Deskjet Printer to -successfully- work in
> > > FreeBSD and X? I just received an HP Deskjet 610c, and after reading the
> > > handbook and other guides off the internet, installing ifhp, ghostscript and a
> > > mass of other utilities and filters, I can print from the console (plain text)
> > > fine. However, when I print from say netscape in X, I just get a bunch of
> > > postscript junk that my printer either can convert or doesn't understand. I
> > > know it is not a problem with the printer, as it works fine in Windows =>
> > > 
> > > Justin W. Pauler
> > > 
> > You need to make /usr/ports/print/apsfilter. And it's a big make to
> > do the whole thing. Fundamentally, you need the ghostscript
> > interpreter for postscript. apsfilter converts various types of
> > output files to postscript and then uses ghostscript to convert the
> > ps to the PCL your printer needs. Netscape produces postscript (.ps)
> > files when you print a web page.
> > 
> 
> FWIW I have an HP 610C but I don't use apsfilter, just ghostscript. To
> make it print from Netscape (or any PS stuff) add this to
> /etc/printcap (either make it the default ``lp'' entry or set the
> PRINTER envar to ``hpdj''):
> 
>    hpdj|deskjet|Hewlett Packard DeskJet 610C:\
>         :lp=/dev/lpt0:sh:sd=/var/spool/lpd/:mx#0:\
>         :if=/usr/local/libexec/hpif:
> 
> The input filter, /usr/local/libexec/hpif, is this:
> 
> #!/bin/sh
> #
> # hpif - Simple text input filter for lpd for HP-PCL based printers
> # Installed in /usr/local/libexec/hpif
> #
> # Simply copies stdin to stdout.  Ignores all filter arguments.
> # Tells printer to treat LF as CR+LF.  Ejects the page when done.
> 
> # printf "\033&k2G" && cat && printf "\033&l0H" && exit 0
> # exit 2
> 
> 
> #
> #  Read first two characters of the file
> #
> 
> read first_line
> first_two_chars=`expr "$first_line" : '\(..\)'`
> 
> if [ "$first_two_chars" = "%!" ]; then
> 
> 	#
> 	#  It is PostScript; use Ghostscript to scan-convert and print it.
> 	#
> 	#  Note that PostScript files are actually interpreted programs,
> 	#  and those programs are allowed to write to stdout, which will
> 	#  mess up the printed output.  So, we redirect stdout to stderr
> 	#  and then make descriptor 3 go to stdout, and have Ghostscript
> 	#  write its output there.  Exercise for the clever reader:
> 	#  capture the stderr output from Ghostscript and mail it back to
> 	#  the user originating the print job.
> 	#
> 	exec 3>&1 1>&2
> 	/usr/local/bin/gs -dSAFER -sPAPERSIZE=a4 -dNOPAUSE -q \
> 		-sDEVICE=cdj550 -sOutputFile=/dev/fd/3 - && exit 0
> 
> else
> 
> 	#
> 	#  Plain text or HP/PCL, so just print it directly; print a form
> 	#  at the end to eject the last page.
> 	#
> 	printf "\033&k2G" && echo $first_line && cat && \
> 		printf "\033&l0H" && exit 0
> fi
> 
> exit 2
> 
> HTH
> 
> > 
> > To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org
> > with "unsubscribe freebsd-stable" in the body of the message
> 
> -- 
>   If I buy a copy of WinDelete, and it doesn't delete Windows,
>   am I entitled to my money back?
> ________________________________________________________________
>       FreeBSD - The Power To Serve http://www.freebsd.org
>       My Webpage http://ukug.uk.freebsd.org/~mark/
> mailto:marko@freebsd.org             http://www.radan.com

Your filter has the gs output to /dev/fd/3.  I have always output to /dev/lpt0.
 And the ESC char to make HP-812C understand Unix LF is 033&k3G.  If you print
nothing but ASCII and Postscript, this is OK.  I sometimes have the need to
print PDF, HTML, etc.  For this purpose, using apsfilter is really the simplest
way to go.  http://freebsd.org/ports/print.html now shows apsfilter-5.4.2.  One
of the earlier versions, 5.2.0 IIRC, appeared to be broken, but Andreas has a
good one in 5.4.2.


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