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BugTraq
vulnerabilities of postscript printers Jan 22 2004 06:45PM Bob Kryger (bobk panix com) (2 replies) Re: vulnerabilities of postscript printers Jan 23 2004 05:01AM Darren Reed (avalon caligula anu edu au) (6 replies) Re: vulnerabilities of postscript printers Jan 24 2004 02:56AM Glynn Clements (glynn clements virgin net) (1 replies) Re: vulnerabilities of postscript printers Jan 23 2004 07:21PM Elizabeth Zwicky (zwicky greatcircle com) (1 replies) Re: vulnerabilities of postscript printers Jan 23 2004 06:40PM der Mouse (mouse Rodents Montreal QC CA) Re: vulnerabilities of postscript printers Jan 23 2004 04:15AM der Mouse (mouse Rodents Montreal QC CA) (2 replies) Re: vulnerabilities of postscript printers Jan 27 2004 10:12PM Ian Farquhar - Network Security Group (Ian Farquhar Sun COM) Re: vulnerabilities of postscript printers Jan 24 2004 12:41AM Michael Zimmermann (zim vegaa de) (1 replies) Re: vulnerabilities of postscript printers Jan 24 2004 04:38AM der Mouse (mouse Rodents Montreal QC CA) (1 replies) Re: vulnerabilities of postscript printers Jan 24 2004 09:39AM Michael Zimmermann (zim vegaa de) (1 replies) Re: vulnerabilities of postscript printers Jan 24 2004 05:26PM der Mouse (mouse Rodents Montreal QC CA) |
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>
> > I've never heard of anyone suggesting you could copy data
> >from one port to another, if only because there's no such thing as an
> >open file in postscript.
>
> Sure there is. PostScript has all the standard file handling, among
> other things for handling peripherals for font storage.
[...]
> >Of course if you had a postscript printer AND a the postscript cookbooks
> >you'd instantly get a better understanding.
>
> Umm, apparently not. Although the PostScript manuals are handy, you
> need to dig pretty deep into them to get to relatively little-used
> commands.
Mea culpa.
I'd always believed font handling was just done "special" :)
Both the "Red book" and "Blue book" are available online and to my
surprise there is "open", "read", "write" and "close". A quick skip
through to the command index shows they're there.
Btw, someone else mentioned something to the effect that hard drives
were "new" to printers. Hard drives have been in printers for ~10 years
(if not more) where you needed 100MB or so of space to spool print jobs.
Darren
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