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The "good old" UNIX SYSV printing system knows about forms in a manner quite similar
to what good old line printer spooling systems on mainframes support.
In essence, a SYSV forms definition contains things like
Page length: scaled-decimal-number1
Page width: scaled-decimal-number2
Number of pages: integer
Line pitch: scaled-decimal-number3
Character pitch: scaled-decimal-number4
Character set choice: character-set/print-wheel [mandatory]
Ribbon color: ribbon-color
Comment:
comment
Alignment pattern: [content-type]
content
(copied from the lpforms man page of Solaris 9). As you see, the attributes
only apply to plain text printing.
AFAIK, CUPS has no equivalent to this, but you could emulate most of this by using
the lpoptions command and setting up printer instances. But assigning a specific form
to a printer in such a way that only jobs using the specified form are printed (and all others
suspended) cannot easily emulated using CUPS (except perhaps by "mis"using the classes concept).