# HP ePrint like service clone (web edition) This is a HP ePrint clone that has similar functions to normal HP ePrint but it is on the web and it is not specific to a given brand of printers (HP ePrint is only available on printers from 2013 - fall 2020) ### To be clear and to not get a C&D from HP, the core isn't similar to HP ePrint (printing over e-mail) just it's functions are similar between them (aka printing files remotely to Your printer) ## Features - Printing PDF, any image file, text, [encoded html render .ini files](https://git.fluffy.pw/matu6968/web-hp-eprint-clone/wiki/Encoded-.ini-files-that-prints-out-a-url), MS Office documents (gets converted to a .pdf file first then print out) and HTML files - custom print quality and page index options - REST API - ~~NSFW scanning (requires DeepAI PRO account and API key)~~ feature broken and removed ## Prerequisites - Go (1.23.1 or later, older will work with go.mod changes to the version) - Node.js (20 LTS or later, needed for HTML rendering and for .ini html render files to convert to a .png file) - LibreOffice (for converting Microsoft Office documents to .pdf) ## Installation 1. Clone the repository: ``` git clone https://git.fluffy.pw/matu6968/web-hp-eprint-clone ``` 2. Go to the project directory: ``` cd web-hp-eprint-clone ``` 3. Build the binary and install web renderer dependencies: ``` go build -o eprintclone yarn install ``` 4. Execture the binary: ``` ./eprintclone ``` # Configuration In the .env file this is the only thing you can set ``` PORT=8080 LOG=log # enables file logging (aka copies file to user home directory under the folder imagelog so make a folder first in the home root if you wish to enable it), to disable it replace it with nolog ``` ## Autostart with systemd or OpenRC You can autostart the web server using systemd or OpenRC (init scripts are in the init-scripts folder) To use it, edit the script accordingly (edit username on what user it is going to run and the path to the binary on where it will run from) ## for systemd edit the following lines: ``` ; Don't forget to change the value here! ; There is no reason to run this program as root, just use your username User=examplename # change this to your username WorkingDirectory=/path/to/binary # change this to the path where the binary resides ``` ### and to add it as a service: ``` sudo cp /path/to/cloned/repo/init-scripts/eprint-clone-web.service /etc/systemd/system/ sudo systemctl daemon-reload sudo systemctl enable eprint-clone-web.service sudo systemctl start eprint-clone-web.service ``` ## for OpenRC edit the following lines: ``` command="bash -c cd ~/web-hp-eprint-clone && ./eprintclone" # if you have put the eprintclone binary somewhere else change this line # Don't forget to change the value here! # There is no reason to run this program as root, just use your username command_user="userexample" # change this to your usernames ``` ### and to add it as a service: ``` sudo cp /path/to/cloned/repo/init-scripts/eprint-clone-web /etc/init.d/ sudo rc-update add eprint-clone-web sudo rc-service eprint-clone-web start ``` ### For this to even work You need a linux distro which has the modern equifelent of the lpr program. To check if you have the newer version, type `man lpr` and look at the program description, if it says `lpr - print files` (present on recent Ubuntu versions and rolling release distros like Arch Linux) then you are good to go otherwaise if it says `lpr - off line print` (present on Debian and older Ubuntu versions) then this won't work as the commands for the older version are different and this targets the newer version of the program. Then setup a printer on your host by connecting it over USB or WiFi and then adding the printer in your distro and put the eprintcloned script (ePrint clone daemon aka it handles the printing commands) in the "/usr/bin" folder # !IMPORTANT! You need to modify the script to include your printer name (it is at the top and is called printer and not the one used in the included configuration in the repository) for example change it from ``` #!/bin/bash printer=examplename # replace this with your actual printer name before putting it into /usr/bin ``` to ``` #!/bin/bash printer=Deskjet-2600 # replace this with your actual printer name before putting it into /usr/bin ```