/ipp-printer

An IPP printer written in Node.js

Primary LanguageJavaScriptMIT LicenseMIT

ipp-printer

Create a printer on your network using nothing but Node.js. This module implements version 1.1 of the IPP protocol and uses Bonjour/Zeroconf to advertise a printer on your local network that anyone can print to.

For a video introduction, check out the talk I gave at Node.js Interactive 2015 in Portland.

ipp-printer

Build status js-standard-style

Project Status

This module have been confirmed to work with both OS X and Windows clients. But if you experience any problems please don't hesitate to open an issue.

Be aware that this module currently doesn't support any of the security features build into IPP, so don't print anything you don't want others to know on an open network.

Installation

Install globally to use CLI:

npm install ipp-printer -g

Or install locally to use in your project:

npm install ipp-printer --save

CLI Usage

Just run:

$ ipp-printer

The printer will now advertise it self on the network using Bonjour/Zeroconf and write all jobs to the current working directory.

Programmatic Usage

var fs = require('fs')
var Printer = require('ipp-printer')

var printer = new Printer('My Printer')

printer.on('job', function (job) {
  console.log('[job %d] Printing document: %s', job.id, job.name)

  var filename = 'job-' + job.id + '.ps' // .ps = PostScript
  var file = fs.createWriteStream(filename)

  job.on('end', function () {
    console.log('[job %d] Document saved as %s', job.id, filename)
  })

  job.pipe(file)
})

API

Class: Printer

new Printer([options])

The Printer object can be initialized with either the printer name as a string or an object containing:

  • name - Name of the printer (default: Node JS)
  • port - Port the printer should listen on (defaults to a random available port)
  • zeroconf - Boolean. If true, the printer will advertise it self on the network using Bonjour/Zeroconf for easier setup (default: true)
  • fallback - Boolean. If true, responses to IPP/1.0 requests will identify them selfs as coming from an IPP/1.0 server. This shouldn't be necessary in a perfect world, but some versions of Windows doesn't like connecting to a server running a different version of the IPP protocol than it self (default: true)

Note that the IPP standard specifies port 631 as the default IPP port, but most IPP clients are fine with connecting to another port.

Event: job

function (job) {}

Emitted each time a new job is sent to the printer. The job is an instance of the Job class.

Example writing a print job document to a file:

printer.on('job', function (job) {
  var filename = 'job-' + job.id + '.ps' // expect Postscript
  var file = fs.createWriteStream(filename)
  job.on('end', function () {
    console.log('written job to', filename)
  })
  job.pipe(file)
})

Event: operation

function (operation) {}

Emitted each time a new IPP operation is received. This event is more low level than the job event as it will be emitted on all incoming IPP operations.

This module currently supports the minimum set of operations required by the IPP standard:

  • print-job (0x02)
  • validate-job (0x04)
  • cancel-job (0x08)
  • get-job-attribtes (0x09)
  • get-jobs (0x0a)
  • get-printer-attributes (0x0b)

The operation object have the following properties supplied by the printer client:

  • version - An object containing the major and minor IPP version of the request (e.g. { major: 1, minor: 1 })
  • operationId - The id of the IPP operation
  • requestId - The id of the IPP request
  • groups - An array of IPP attribute groups

See the ipp-encoder for an explanation of the different operation types.

printer.name

The printer name.

printer.port

The port of the printer is listening on.

printer.jobs

An array of all jobs handled by the printer.

printer.server

An instance of http.Server.

Class: Job

A job is a readable stream containing the document to be printed. In many cases this will be in Postscript format.

Event: cancel

function () {}

Emitted if the job is cancelled prior to completion.

Event: abort

function () {}

Emitted if the job is aborted prior to completion.

Event: error

function (error) {}

Emitted if the job encounters an error.

job.id

The id of the job.

job.state

The job state.

See the ipp-encoder for an explanation of the job states.

job.uri

The job URI.

job.name

The document name.

job.userName

The name of the requesting user.

job.attributes([filter])

Returns an array of job attributes.

If an array of attribute names or attribute groups is given as the first argument, the returned array will only include the attributes maching the supplied names or groups.

Attributes example:

[
  { tag: 0x45, name: 'job-printer-uri', value: 'ipp://watson.local.:3000/' },
  { tag: 0x45, name: 'job-uri', value: 'ipp://watson.local.:3000/1' },
  { tag: 0x42, name: 'job-name', value: 'My Document Title' },
  { tag: 0x42, name: 'job-originating-user-name', value: 'watson' },
  { tag: 0x44, name: 'job-state-reasons', value: 'none' },
  { tag: 0x21, name: 'time-at-creation', value: 40 },
  { tag: 0x47, name: 'attributes-charset', value: 'utf-8' },
  { tag: 0x48, name: 'attributes-natural-language', value: 'en-us' }
]

See the ipp-encoder for an explanation of the tag values.

Debugging

To see the communication between the client and the server, enable debugging mode by setting the environment variable DEBUG=ipp-printer.

If you open an issue because the module crashes or if the client cannot communicate properly with the printer it helps a lot if you attach the client/server communication to the issue.

License

MIT