postio man page on SunOS

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postio(1)			 User Commands			     postio(1)

NAME
       postio - serial interface for PostScript printers

SYNOPSIS
       postio  -l line	[-D] [-i] [-q] [-t] [-S] [-b speed] [-B num] [-L file]
       [-P string] [-R num] [file...]

       /usr/lib/lp/postscript/postio

DESCRIPTION
       postio sends files to the PostScript printer attached to	 line.	If  no
       files are specified the standard input is sent.

OPTIONS
       The first group of options should be sufficient for most applications:

       -D	       Enable  debug  mode. Guarantees that everything read on
		       line will be added to the log file (standard  error  by
		       default).

       -q	       Prevents	 status	 queries while files are being sent to
		       the printer. When status queries are disabled  a	 dummy
		       message	is  appended to the log file before each block
		       is transmitted.

       -b speed	       Transmit data over line at baud rate speed.  Recognized
		       baud  rates  are 1200, 2400, 4800, 9600, and 19200. The
		       default speed is	 9600 baud.

       -B num	       Set the internal buffer size for	 reading  and  writing
		       files to num bytes. By default num is  2048 bytes.

       -l line	       Connect	to the printer attached to line. In most cases
		       there is no default  and postio must be	able  to  read
		       and  write line. If the line does not begin with a / it
		       may be treated as a Datakit destination.

       -L file	       Data received on line gets put in file. The default log
		       file is standard error. Printer or status messages that
		       don't show a change in state are not  normally  written
		       to file but can be forced out using the -D option.

       -P string       Send  string  to	 the  printer  before any of the input
		       files. The default string  is  simple  PostScript  code
		       that disables timeouts.

       -R num	       Run  postio as a single process if num is 1 or as sepa‐
		       rate read and write processes if num is 2.  By  default
		       postio runs as a single process.

       The next two options are provided for users who expect to run postio on
       their own. Neither is suitable for use in spooler interface programs:

       -i	Run the program in interactive mode. Any files are sent	 first
		and  followed  by the standard input. Forces separate read and
		write processes and overrides  many  other  options.  To  exit
		interactive  mode use your interrupt or quit character. To get
		a friendly interactive connection with the printer type execu‐
		tive on a line by itself.

       -t	Data  received on line and not recognized as printer or status
		information is written to the standard output. Forces separate
		read  and write processes. Convenient if you have a PostScript
		program that will be returning useful data to the host.

       The last option is not generally recommended and should only be used if
       all else fails to provide a reliable connection:

       -S	Slow  the transmission of data to the printer. Severely limits
		throughput, runs as a single process, disables the -q  option,
		limits	the  internal  buffer  size  to 1024 bytes, can use an
		excessive amount of CPU time, and does nothing in  interactive
		mode.

       The best performance will usually be obtained by using a large internal
       buffer (the -B option) and by running the program as separate read  and
       write  processes	 (the  -R  2 option). Inability to fork the additional
       process causes postio to continue as a single read/write process.  When
       one process is used, only data sent to the printer is flow controlled.

       The  options are not all mutually exclusive. The -i option always wins,
       selecting its own settings for whatever is needed  to  run  interactive
       mode,  independent of anything else found on the command line. Interac‐
       tive mode runs as separate read and write  processes  and  few  of  the
       other options accomplish anything in the presence of the -i option. The
       -t option  needs a reliable two	way  connection	 to  the  printer  and
       therefore  tries	 to  force  separate  read and write processes. The -S
       option relies on the status query mechanism, so -q is disabled and  the
       program runs as a single process.

       In  most	 cases	postio	starts by making a connection to line and then
       attempts to force the printer into the  IDLE state by sending an appro‐
       priate  sequence of  ^T (status query), ^C (interrupt), and  ^D (end of
       job) characters. When the printer  goes	IDLE,  files  are  transmitted
       along with an occasional	 ^T (unless the -q option was used). After all
       the files are sent the program waits until it's reasonably sure the job
       is  complete.  Printer  generated  error	 messages received at any time
       except while establishing  the  initial	connection  (or	 when  running
       interactive  mode)  cause   postio  to  exit with a non-zero status. In
       addition to being added to the log file,	 printer  error	 messages  are
       also echoed to standard error.

EXAMPLES
       Example 1: Examples of the postio command.

       Run  as	a single process at 9600 baud and send	file1 and file2 to the
       printer attached to /dev/tty01:

       example% postio -l /dev/tty01 file1 file2

       Same as above except two processes are used, the internal buffer is set
       to 4096 bytes, and data returned by the printer gets put in file log:

       example% postio -R 2 -B 4096 -l/dev/tty01 -L log file1 file2

       Establish an interactive connection with	 the printer at Datakit desti‐
       nation my/printer:

       example% postio -i -l my/printer

       Send file program to the printer connected to  /dev/tty22, recover  any
       data in file results,  and put log messages in file log:

       example% postio -t -l /dev/tty22 -L log program >results

EXIT STATUS
       The following exit values are returned:

       0	       Successful completion.

       non-zero	       An error occurred.

ATTRIBUTES
       See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:

       ┌─────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────┐
       │      ATTRIBUTE TYPE	     │	    ATTRIBUTE VALUE	   │
       ├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
       │Availability		     │SUNWpsf			   │
       └─────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────┘

SEE ALSO
       download(1),   dpost(1),	 postdaisy(1),	postdmd(1),  postmd(1),	 post‐
       print(1), postreverse(1), posttek(1), attributes(5)

NOTES
       The input files are handled as a single PostScript job. Sending several
       different  jobs,	 each  with their own internal end of job mark (^D) is
       not guaranteed to work properly. postio may quit before	all  the  jobs
       have completed and could be restarted before the last one finishes.

       All  the	 capabilities  described  above	 may not be available on every
       machine or even across  the different versions of the UNIX system  that
       are currently supported by the program.

       There  may be no default line, so using the -l option  is strongly rec‐
       ommended. If omitted, postio may attempt	 to  connect  to  the  printer
       using  the  standard output. If Datakit is involved,  the -b option may
       be ineffective  and attempts by postio to impose flow control over data
       in both directions may not work.	 The -q option can help if the printer
       is connected to RADIAN. The -S option  is not generally recommended and
       should  be used only if all other attempts to establish a reliable con‐
       nection fail.

SunOS 5.10			  9 Sep 1996			     postio(1)
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