Book Image

CUPS Administrative Guide

By : Ankur Shah
Book Image

CUPS Administrative Guide

By: Ankur Shah

Overview of this book

Table of Contents (16 chapters)
CUPS Administrative Guide
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewer
Preface

Chapter 6. Client Setup

A machine that sends jobs to another machine for printing is called a client and the machine that accepts the job is called a print server. A client can also be a print server if it is directly connected to a printer.

One of the biggest advantages of CUPS is that it allows you to set up a universal print server which can work with almost all printer connection types and most of the printing protocol. The following figure shows that CUPS doesn't only accept print jobs from a local application, but also support the clients working on different platforms. There are various methods to configure clients in CUPS.

In this section, we are going to check how the CUPS clients working on different platforms can be configured. CUPS can work with different clients such as CUPS/IPP client, LPD client, windows client, Mac client, and so on.

Setting up a CUPS Client

Client set up in CUPS depends on the configuration of two things:

  • Print queues

  • CUPS Server's communication with clients...