- Source: Berkeley printing system
The Berkeley printing system is one of several standard architectures for printing on the Unix platform. It originated in 2.10BSD, and is used in BSD derivatives such as FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, and DragonFly BSD. A system running this print architecture could traditionally be identified by the use of the user command lpr as the primary interface to the print system, as opposed to the System V printing system lp command.
Typical user commands available to the Berkeley print system are:
lpr — the user command to print
lpq — shows the current print queue
lprm — deletes a job from the print queue
The lpd program is the daemon with which those programs communicate.
These programs support the line printer daemon protocol, so that other machines on a network can submit jobs to a print queue on a machine running the Berkeley printing system, and so that the Berkeley printing system user commands can submit jobs to machines that support that protocol.
See also
Common Unix Printing System (CUPS)
LPRng
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- Berkeley printing system
- System V printing system
- Line Printer Daemon protocol
- CUPS
- LPRng
- List of printing protocols
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- LPQ
- Letterpress printing