Common Unix Printing System icon
Common Unix Printing System icon

Common Unix Printing System

CUPS is a modular printing system for Unix-like computer operating systems which allows to act as a print server. A CUPS-Server is a host that can accept print jobs from client computers, process them, and send them to the appropriate printer.

Cost / License

  • Free
  • Open Source

Platforms

  • Windows
  • Linux
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 Tags

  • printing
  • network-printing
  • print-server

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Common Unix Printing System information

  • Developed by

    Unknown
  • Licensing

    Open Source and Free product.
  • Alternatives

    1 alternatives listed
  • Supported Languages

    • English

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Our users have written 1 comments and reviews about Common Unix Printing System, and it has gotten 1 likes

Common Unix Printing System was added to AlternativeTo by anubioz on and this page was last updated .

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I think this is a good printing system. My favorite feature is that it allows me to add things at the start, to tell everyone that what I'm about to print is ultra-secret.

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What is Common Unix Printing System?

CUPS is the software you use to print from applications like the web browser you are using to read this page. It converts the page descriptions produced by your application (put a paragraph here, draw a line there, and so forth) into something your printer can understand and then sends the information to the printer for printing.

Now, since every printer manufacturer does things differently, printing can be very complicated. CUPS does its best to hide this from you and your application so that you can concentrate on printing and less on how to print. Generally, the only time you need to know anything about your printer is when you use it for the first time, and even then CUPS can often figure things out on its own.

The first time you print to a printer, CUPS creates a queue to keep track of the current status of the printer (everything OK, out of paper, etc.) and any pages you have printed. Most of the time the queue points to a printer connected directly to your computer via a USB port, however it can also point to a printer on your network, a printer on the Internet, or multiple printers depending on the configuration. Regardless of where the queue points, it will look like any other printer to you and your applications.

Every time you print something, CUPS creates a job which contains the queue you are sending the print to, the name of the document you are printing, and the page descriptions. Job are numbered (queue-1, queue-2, and so forth) so you can monitor the job as it is printed or cancel it if you see a mistake. When CUPS gets a job for printing, it determines the best programs (filters, printer drivers, port monitors, and backends) to convert the pages into a printable format and then runs them to actually print the job.

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