Convert .phs output for a Hewlett-Packard PCL compatible printer
phs-to-pcl -m model [options] filename > device
Neutrino
- -A
- Force the anti-aliasing of fonts.
- -B size
- Specify the size of the printer buffer, in bytes.
This buffer is used if the specified input file is a FIFO.
- -b size
- Specify the size of the printer buffer, in bytes.
- -c colors
- The number of colors available; a value of 1 indicates 256 colors, and
a value of 3 indicates 16 million colors.
- -D debug_fname
- Send debug information to the specified file.
- -d
- Delete the input file after processing.
- -h height
- Specify the initial height of the source image.
The default is 480 pixels.
- -m model
- Select the model by specifying the HP model ID string.
Underscores in model are converted to spaces, and the ID isn't
case-sensitive.
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If you specify an unsupported printer model, the filter doesn't produce
any output.
Use a model of list_supported to get a list of
the substrings of all supported printers.
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- -n name
- Specify the name of the printer.
- -opmode
- Specify the color mode.
The choices are 1 (black and white), 3 (color), or 4 (Color).
- -oQn
- Set the print quality (0 is draft, 1 is normal, 2 is high).
The default is 1.
- -oq
- Use the QNX dithering method (default).
- -oSX,Y
- Scale the image in the X or Y dimension
(e.g. -oS0.75,0.6). The scale value may be:
- Negative
- Scale as a multiple of the source image size. For example, use -oS-1,-1 to print the image at exactly its source size. Each pixel of the image will correspond to one printed dot on the page. The size of the printed image will vary depending on the printer resolution (DPI).
- Positive
- Scale as a multiple of the page size. For example, use -oS1,1 to print the image at the full page size. In this example, the image will be distorted if its aspect ratio (X:Y) is different from the page's width:height ratio.
- 0
- Use the maximum size while respecting the aspect ratio of the source image. For example, -oS0,0.5 scales the image to half the height of the page and scales the width of the image proportionately.
If you set only the X scale factor, the Y scale factor is assumed to be the same value. For example, -oS0.5 sets both X and Y to 0.5, meaning the image will fill ¼ of the page.
- -P file
- The name of the Photon palette file to use.
The default is default.pal.
- -p start[,end]
- Specify the starting (and optionally ending) page number to print.
If start is greater than end, the pages are printed
in reverse order.
- -pr
- Print the entire file in reverse order.
- -s level
- Specify the reporting level, where level is an integer.
- -U filename
- Delete this file when the print job is completed.
- -V
- Be verbose (-VV: be more verbose).
- -w width
- Specify the initial width of the source image.
The default is 640 pixels.
- -x offset
- The initial x offset (default: 0).
- -y offset
- The initial y offset (default: 0).
- filename
- The name of a Photon draw-stream (*.phs) file.
This utility converts Photon draw-stream (.phs) output into
a form that Hewlett-Packard PCL-compatible printers can understand.
The configuration for HP PCL printers, /etc/printers/pcl.cfg,
specifies phs-to-pcl as a filter for
spooler
to use.
The phs-to-pcl filter is based on
HP's Appliance Printing Development Kit (APDK),
a library that generates PCL output for a wide range of HP printers.
To produce the correct output, it must be given the printer model,
which for best results should be extracted from the model field of
the printer's PnP string.
The spooler utility does this automatically if you start it
without specifying a configuration file ( with the -c option).
For example:
spooler -d /dev/usbpar0
This is the case when spooler is started by an enumerator.
To get a list of all valid printer model substrings, pass a model name of
list_supported and a valid .phs file.
For example:
phs-to-pcl -m list_supported file.phs > /dev/null
This displays a list of printer model substrings accepted by the APDK.
For example, if DESKJET 85 is in the list, then a printer that
identifies itself as DESKJET 850 will be accepted.
Note that some printers may not identify
themselves as exactly the same model they're labelled with.
For example, the HP Deskjet 5650 isn't in the substring list, but it
actually identifies itself as a Deskjet 5600, which is.
According to the HP APDK documentation, the following printer models and/or
families are supported:
- Deskjet 350C
- Deskjet 400, 400L
- Deskjet 450, 460 Series
- Deskjet 500 Series, 520, 540
- Deskjet 6XX series
- Deskjet 810C, 812C, 815C, 816C, 830, 832, 840, 841, 842, 843
- Deskjet 825, 845
- Deskjet 850, 855, 870, 880, 882, 890, 895
- Deskjet 9XX Series
- Deskjet 11XX Series, 12XX Series
- Deskjet 3810, 3816, 3818, 3819, 3820 Series, 3822, 3870
- Deskjet 51XX, 55XX, 56XX, 57XX, 58XX, 59XX
- Deskjet 61XX, 65XX, 66XX, 68XX, 69XX
- Deskjet 5600 & 5100 & 5800
- Deskjet 6540 & 6520
- Deskjet 5740
- Deskjet 6840
- Deskjet 3320 & 3420 & 3325
- Deskjet 3600 & 3500
- Deskjet 3740 & 3840
- Deskjet 9300
- Deskjet 96XX
- Deskjet 98XX
- Officejet 3XX, 5XX, 6XX, 7XX
- Officejet 11XX
- Officejet 51XX, 61XX, 62XX, 63XX, 4100, 4105, 4200, 5500, 9100
- Officejet 71XX, 72XX, 73XX, 74XX
- Officejet 9x11
- Officejet d Series
- Officejet G Series
- Officejet J Series
- Officejet K Series
- Officejet Lx
- Officejet R Series
- Officejet t Series
- Officejet v Series
- Officejet Pro K Series
- Officejet Pro L Series
- PSC 500, 7XX, 9XX
- PSC 15XX, 16XX
- PSC 21XX, 22XX, 23XX, 24XX, 25XX
- PhotoSmart 1XX, 2XX, 3XX, 4XX
- PhotoSmart 11XX, 12XX, 13XX
- PhotoSmart 25XX, 26XX, 27XX
- PhotoSmart 31XX, 32XX, 33XX
- PhotoSmart 71XX, 72XX, 73XX, 74XX, 75XX, 76XX, 77XX, 78XX, 79XX
- PhotoSmart 80XX, 81XX, 82XX, 84XX, 87XX
- PhotoSmart A3XX, A4XX, A5XX, A6XX, A7XX
- PhotoSmart C31XX, C41XX, C51XX, C61XX, C71XX
- PhotoSmart D51XX, D61XX, D71XX, D73XX
- PhotoSmart Pro B83XX
- PhotoSmart P1000, P1100
- All Monochrome Laserjet Printers and MFPs (except LJ 1000, 1005, 1018, 1020)
- All Color LaserJet Printers and MFPs (except LJ 1600, 2600, 3500, 3550, 3600)
- Apollo P2100 & P2150
- Apollo P2200 & P2250
- E-Printer e20
- Business InkJet 1000, 1100 Series, 1200 Series, 22XX Series, 2300 Series, 2600 Series, 2800 Series, 3000 Series
- Color Inkjet cp1700 Series
- HP 2000 Series, 2500 Series
- Apollo 2200, 2500, 26XX, P2XXX
To see if your printer is supported, you can:
- Check the list above to see if your printer model is on it.
- Get the PNP model information from your printer by using the
enum-par (see the documentation for
enum-devices)
or
usb
command, and then checking it against the substring list given by
phs-to-pcl's -mlist_supported option.
If a string in this list is a substring of your printer's PNP model,
then the printer is supported.
If there is no substring match, phs-to-pcl filter aborts when
that model name is used.
If phs-to-pcl rejects an HP printer model, you might be able to
make it work by specifying a different printer model when you invoke
phs-to-pcl;
if you try different printer models, you may well get perfectly good results.
The output from phs-to-pcl is sent to stdout.
You typically redirect this to a printer device, as shown in the example.
Error messages are sent to the system logger (viewable using
sloginfo),
and may also be written to stderr.
phs-to-pcl -mDeskjet_6940_series file.phs > /dev/usbpar0
phs-to-bjc,
phs-to-bmp,
phs-to-escp2,
phs-to-ijs,
phs-to-ps,
spooler
“Printing with spooler”
in the Printing chapter of the Neutrino User's Guide