Canon CAPT
CAPT (Canon Advanced Printing Technology) is Canon's proprietary driver, supporting the Canon i-Sensys series of laser printers. For more information, see Setting up CAPT printers on Ubuntu.
Installation
Install the capt-srcAUR package. It depends on 32-bit library packages and requires enabling multilib.
There is also an open source CAPT driver in early alpha stage not described here, available as captdriver-gitAUR.
Configuration
Canon's driver uses a local daemon to communicate with the printer, and wraps that using a CUPS driver.
To configure the printer, follow the CUPS article, adding a CAPT printer and using a Printer URI of ccp://localhost:59787
. Find the right model using lpinfo -m
, or check the table provided on the Ubuntu help page, which matches each supported printer with its corresponding PPD.
Next, register the printer with the CAPT driver itself via ccpdadmin. Replace queue_name
with the queue descriptive name and printer_address
with either the USB port (e.g. /dev/usb/lp0
) in case of a local printer or the IP address, prefixed by net:
(e.g. net:192.168.1.100
), in case of a network printer:
# ccpdadmin -p queue_name -o printer_address
For example, for a USB printer:
# ccpdadmin -p LBP6310 -o /dev/usb/lp0
Or for a network printer:
# ccpdadmin -p LBP6310 -o net:192.168.1.100
Start/enable the CAPT daemon with ccpd.service
.
To remove a printer:
# ccpdadmin -x queue_name
CAPT status monitor
Local CUPS
The driver includes a status monitor which can be launched with
$ captstatusui -P printer_model
e.g.
$ captstatusui -P LBP6310
If you only want the status monitor to pop up when a problem occurs, simply append the -e
switch:
$ captstatusui -P LBP6310 -e
Remote CUPS
Unfortunately, a local installation of captstatusui will not detect CAPT printers on a remote CUPS server.
Remote print monitoring can be achieved, however, using SSH and X11 forwarding.
-Y
switch (ForwardX11Trusted, required for the CAPT status monitor to work via X11 Forwarding). See X11 forwarding for further information.Client configuration
- create a new SSH key
~/.ssh/capt
and copy the public key to the remote server - create a file
captstatusui.sh
with the following content, make it executable and place it in your autostart folder:
#!/bin/sh ssh -T -Y -i ~/.ssh/capt remote_server_hostname_or_IP_address < /dev/null
Server configuration
- create a new user
capt
- append the following section to
/etc/ssh/sshd_config
and restart the SSH daemon or socket
... Match User capt X11Forwarding yes PermitTTY no ForceCommand captstatusui -P printer_model -e AuthenticationMethods publickey
e.g.
... Match User capt X11Forwarding yes PermitTTY no ForceCommand captstatusui -P LBP6310 -e AuthenticationMethods publickey
This can be extended to include multiple users (using a single, shared SSH key or each with a unique SSH key) by adding each user to a capt
group, then using a Match Group rule:
... Match Group capt X11Forwarding yes PermitTTY no ForceCommand captstatusui -P LBP6310 -e AuthenticationMethods publickey