Windows NT Print Driver Architecture
ID: Q141302
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The information in this article applies to:
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Microsoft Windows NT operating system version 3.1
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Microsoft Windows NT Advanced Server version 3.1
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Microsoft Windows NT Workstation versions 3.5, 3.51, 4.0
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Microsoft Windows NT Server versions 3.5, 3.51, 4.0
SUMMARY
This article describes the Windows NT print driver. It also illustrates the
advantages and disadvantages of having a universal driver with
characterization files.
MORE INFORMATION
Printer drivers are composed of three separate files:
- A printer graphics driver (for example, PSCRIPT.DLL, RASDD.DLL, or
PLOTTER.DLL). Graphics drivers are responsible for print rendering
(converting DDI commands from the graphics engine into printer commands
that a printer can understand). Each graphics driver handles different
printer languages. For example:
PSCRIPT.DLL: deals with the PostScript printer language.
PLOTTER.DLL: deals with the HPGL/2 language used by many plotters.
RASDD.DLL: deals with printer languages based on raster (bitmap)
images, including PCL and most dot matrix printer
languages.
- A printer interface driver (for example, PSCRPTUI.DLL, RASDDUI.DLL, or
PLOTUI.DLL). This dynamic-link library (DLL) includes the user interface
you see when you configure a printer in Print Manager. It is called by
the client side of the router (WINSPOOL.DRV).
- Characterization Files: Characterization data files provide model-
specific information about print devices.
When hardware vendors release new print devices, a characterization data
file for the new device is all you will need for Windows NT. If Windows
NT does not supply such a file for your print device, check the device's
users' guide for a list of emulations. If your device emulates a device
for which Windows NT supplies a driver, then you may be able to use this
driver to get output.
- Raster minidrivers are actually DLLs. The Windows NT Raster printer
driver can read most Windows 3.1 minidriver DLLs (those created for
UNIDRV.DLL)directly with no porting required. Raster minidrivers contain
printer-specific information.
- The PostScript driver uses standard Adobe PostScript .ppd files as
characterization data files. These files include printer-specific
information for a particular printer model and are available from the
printer's manufacturer. Unlike Windows 3.1, the Windows NT PostScript
printer driver can directly interpret .PPD files. Because PostScript
printers are included with .PPD files, when new PostScript printers
become available, they will be ready for use with Windows NT.
- Plotter .pcd files are similar in function to raster minidrivers. They
are dynamic link libraries (DLLs), which provide device-specific
information to the graphics driver. Unlike raster minidrivers, .pcd
files are specific to Windows NT; Windows NT cannot use plotter
drivers built for Windows 3.1.
The architecture explained above is an excellent way to easily
support a variety of printers by using a characterization file. The
disadvantage is that new innovative technologies or unique vendor-specific
features are not always supported by the universal driver. For this reason
it is often a good idea to request a vendor-supplied NT Print driver to
fully utilize the capabilities of a print device.
Additional query words:
prodnt
Keywords : kbnetwork kbprint ntprint NTSrvWkst
Version : 3.1 3.5 3.51 4.0
Platform : winnt
Issue type :
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