• There are no items in your cart

CAN/CSA-ISO/IEC 10175-1-01 (R2014)

Current

Current

The latest, up-to-date edition.

Information Technology - Text and Office Systems - Document Printing Application (DPA) - Part 1: Abstract Service Definition and Procedures (Adopted ISO/IEC 10175-1:1996 including Technical Corrigendum #1:2001, #2:2001, #3:2001 and #4:2001, first edition, 1996-09-01)

Available format(s)

Hardcopy , PDF

Language(s)

English

Published date

01-01-2001

US$375.00
Excluding Tax where applicable

Section 1 - General
1 Scope
2 Normative references
3 Definitions
4 Abbreviations
5 Conventions
Section 2 - DP abstract-service definition
6 DP abstract model
7 Abstract-association information
8 Abstract-operations
Section 3 - Print-service attributes
9 Print-service attributes
Section 4 - DPA realization
10 Overview
11 Supply of the DP-User abstract-service
12 Supply of the DP-administrator abstract-service
13 Port realization
Annex A - Formal assignment of DPA standard object
          identifiers
Annex B - Formal definition of the DPA abstract service
Annex C - Formal definition of DPA standard attributes
Annex D - Formal definition of DPA standard parameter
          upper and lower bounds
Annex E - Conformance requirements
Annex F - Document Format Definitions
Annex G - List of Object Identifier Characteristics
Annex H - Future Work
Index

Scope ISO/IEC 10175 consists of three parts: Part 1: Abstract service definition and procedures Part 2: Protocol specification Part 3: Management abstract service definition and procedures This part of ISO/IEC 10175: specifies a client-server model of printing in accordance with the Distributed-office-applications Model (ISO/IEC 10031-1); specifies functions and services provided by Document Printing Application servers; specifies the Document Printing Application abstract service using the principles established by the Abstract Service Definition Conventions (ISO/IEC 10021-3); specifies the usage of other services. The Document Printing Application is one component of a coordinated set of facilities and standards needed to satisfy the printing requirements of the modern distributed office. Together, the capabilities provided can enable users to create and produce high-quality office documents in a consistent and unambiguous manner within a distributed open systems environment. Specifically, ISO/IEC 10175 addresses those aspects of document processing that enable users in a distributed open systems environment to send electronic documents to shared, possibly geographically-dispersed printers, and to cause the documents to be printed in accordance with the desires of those users. For the purposes of ISO/IEC 10175, it is assumed that such documents have been composed in a form that is compatible with the destination printing system prior to their introduction to the Document Printing Application. Other Standards deal with related aspects of document processing, such as the creation and formatting of electronic documents, and the underlying protocols used to transport electronic documents to a printing system. ISO/IEC 10175 is aligned with these related Standards as appropriate, and shares some information in common with them. Clause 2 identifies those standards that are directly applicable to this one. The Document Printing Application defined in ISO/IEC 10175 is consistent with the model, architectural framework and design principles of the Distributed Office Applications Model (ISO/IEC 10031-1). This Document Printing Application Standard defines services and specifies access protocols available within the application layer of the Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) Basic Reference Model (ISO/IEC 7498-1). In addition, recognition has been given to the potential need for printing systems to be able to operate within and across diverse networking environments. In particular, the Document Printing Application has contributed to, and benefited from, related standardization activities in other venues such as the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), the Desktop Management Task Force, the POSIX project of the IEEE Computer Society, and X/Open. The Document Printing Application constitutes the final phase of the document processing cycle, i.e., the queuing, preparation, rendering and finishing of the fully composed form of the document on marking engines and other image generation devices and ancillary equipment. This cycle includes other processes such as document creation and interchange through public and private networks. ISO/IEC 10175 is oriented toward satisfying the following subset of the overall document processing functional requirements: an ability for multiple users to share access to distributed printers; an ability for users to convey information to a printing system to influence the scheduling and processing requirements of a print-job; a capability for users to monitor and manage the progress of their print-job; a capability for printing systems, and associated facilities, to protect against unauthorized printing of documents. Accordingly, the abstract-service defined by ISO/IEC 10175 enables a user to convey document files to a document print-server, along with the parameters needed to express the user\'s desires regarding the scheduling and production of the ensuing print-job. In addition, the abstract-service permits a user to inquire about the status, capabilities and characteristics of a document print-server in order to choose from a variety of printing devices, depending on capabilities, formats, logistic convenience, cost, ownership and availability. The abstract-service also allows users to inquire about jobs, modify the characteristics and progress of jobs, and obtain feedback about a job. Many different document formats have been developed for printing purposes, and are in wide use. For this reason, the Document Printing Application has been developed with a view toward supporting arbitrary document formats in a transparent manner. That is, the specific content or format of an electronic document is independent of the access protocol defined by ISO/IEC 10175. The only requirement is that the destination printing system be capable of dealing with the format of the transmitted document, and possess the features and functionality needed to render the document successfully. However, in spite of this generality of focus, ISO/IEC 10175 is particularly oriented toward alignment with the Standard Page Description Language (SPDL - ISO/IEC 10180). This will assure that DPA will include the features needed to assist in the transport and faithful rendering of SPDL documents.

DocumentType
Standard
ISBN
1-55324-316-1
Pages
486
ProductNote
Reconfirmed EN
PublisherName
Canadian Standards Association
Status
Current
Supersedes

Scope ISO/IEC 10175 consists of three parts: Part 1: Abstract service definition and procedures Part 2: Protocol specification Part 3: Management abstract service definition and procedures This part of ISO/IEC 10175: specifies a client-server model of printing in accordance with the Distributed-office-applications Model (ISO/IEC 10031-1); specifies functions and services provided by Document Printing Application servers; specifies the Document Printing Application abstract service using the principles established by the Abstract Service Definition Conventions (ISO/IEC 10021-3); specifies the usage of other services. The Document Printing Application is one component of a coordinated set of facilities and standards needed to satisfy the printing requirements of the modern distributed office. Together, the capabilities provided can enable users to create and produce high-quality office documents in a consistent and unambiguous manner within a distributed open systems environment. Specifically, ISO/IEC 10175 addresses those aspects of document processing that enable users in a distributed open systems environment to send electronic documents to shared, possibly geographically-dispersed printers, and to cause the documents to be printed in accordance with the desires of those users. For the purposes of ISO/IEC 10175, it is assumed that such documents have been composed in a form that is compatible with the destination printing system prior to their introduction to the Document Printing Application. Other Standards deal with related aspects of document processing, such as the creation and formatting of electronic documents, and the underlying protocols used to transport electronic documents to a printing system. ISO/IEC 10175 is aligned with these related Standards as appropriate, and shares some information in common with them. Clause 2 identifies those standards that are directly applicable to this one. The Document Printing Application defined in ISO/IEC 10175 is consistent with the model, architectural framework and design principles of the Distributed Office Applications Model (ISO/IEC 10031-1). This Document Printing Application Standard defines services and specifies access protocols available within the application layer of the Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) Basic Reference Model (ISO/IEC 7498-1). In addition, recognition has been given to the potential need for printing systems to be able to operate within and across diverse networking environments. In particular, the Document Printing Application has contributed to, and benefited from, related standardization activities in other venues such as the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), the Desktop Management Task Force, the POSIX project of the IEEE Computer Society, and X/Open. The Document Printing Application constitutes the final phase of the document processing cycle, i.e., the queuing, preparation, rendering and finishing of the fully composed form of the document on marking engines and other image generation devices and ancillary equipment. This cycle includes other processes such as document creation and interchange through public and private networks. ISO/IEC 10175 is oriented toward satisfying the following subset of the overall document processing functional requirements: an ability for multiple users to share access to distributed printers; an ability for users to convey information to a printing system to influence the scheduling and processing requirements of a print-job; a capability for users to monitor and manage the progress of their print-job; a capability for printing systems, and associated facilities, to protect against unauthorized printing of documents. Accordingly, the abstract-service defined by ISO/IEC 10175 enables a user to convey document files to a document print-server, along with the parameters needed to express the user\'s desires regarding the scheduling and production of the ensuing print-job. In addition, the abstract-service permits a user to inquire about the status, capabilities and characteristics of a document print-server in order to choose from a variety of printing devices, depending on capabilities, formats, logistic convenience, cost, ownership and availability. The abstract-service also allows users to inquire about jobs, modify the characteristics and progress of jobs, and obtain feedback about a job. Many different document formats have been developed for printing purposes, and are in wide use. For this reason, the Document Printing Application has been developed with a view toward supporting arbitrary document formats in a transparent manner. That is, the specific content or format of an electronic document is independent of the access protocol defined by ISO/IEC 10175. The only requirement is that the destination printing system be capable of dealing with the format of the transmitted document, and possess the features and functionality needed to render the document successfully. However, in spite of this generality of focus, ISO/IEC 10175 is particularly oriented toward alignment with the Standard Page Description Language (SPDL - ISO/IEC 10180). This will assure that DPA will include the features needed to assist in the transport and faithful rendering of SPDL documents.

Standards Relationship
ISO/IEC 10175-1:1996 Identical

ISO/IEC 9945-1:2003 Information technology Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX) Part 1: Base Definitions
ISO/IEC 10031-2:1991 Information technology — Text and office systems — Distributed-office-applications model — Part 2: Distinguished-object-reference and associated procedures
ISO/IEC 7498-1:1994 Information technology Open Systems Interconnection Basic Reference Model: The Basic Model
ISO/IEC 9541-1:1991 Information technology — Font information interchange — Part 1: Architecture
ISO/IEC 8859-1:1998 Information technology 8-bit single-byte coded graphic character sets Part 1: Latin alphabet No. 1
ISO/IEC 10180:1995 Information technology Processing languages Standard Page Description Language (SPDL)
ISO/IEC 6429:1992 Information technology Control functions for coded character sets
ISO/IEC 10021-4:2003 Information technology Message Handling Systems (MHS): Message transfer system Abstract service definition and procedures Part 4:
ISO 639:1988 Code for the representation of names of languages
ISO/IEC 2022:1994 Information technology Character code structure and extension techniques
ISO/IEC 10166-1:1991 Information technology — Text and office systems — Document Filing and Retrieval (DFR) — Part 1: Abstract service definition and procedures
ISO/IEC 10367:1991 Information technology Standardized coded graphic character sets for use in 8-bit codes
ISO/IEC 7350:1991 Information technology Registration of repertoires of graphic characters from ISO/IEC 10367
ISO/IEC 8824:1990 Information technology — Open Systems Interconnection — Specification of Abstract Syntax Notation One (ASN.1)
ISO 216:2007 Writing paper and certain classes of printed matter Trimmed sizes A and B series, and indication of machine direction
ISO/IEC 9594-3:2017 Information technology Open Systems Interconnection The Directory Part 3: Abstract service definition
ISO 7498-2:1989 Information processing systems Open Systems Interconnection Basic Reference Model Part 2: Security Architecture
ISO/IEC 8825:1990 Information technology — Open Systems Interconnection — Specification of Basic Encoding Rules for Abstract Syntax Notation One (ASN.1)
ISO/IEC 10021-3:1990 Information technology — Text Communication — Message-Oriented Text Interchange Systems (MOTIS) — Part 3: Abstract Service Definition Conventions
ISO/IEC 10031-1:1991 Information technology —Text and office systems — Distributed-office-applications model — Part 1: General model
ISO 269:1985 Correspondence envelopes Designation and sizes
ISO/IEC 2375:2003 Information technology — Procedure for registration of escape sequences and coded character sets
ISO/IEC 646:1991 Information technology ISO 7-bit coded character set for information interchange
ISO/IEC 9541-2:1991 Information technology — Font information interchange — Part 2: Interchange format
ISO/IEC 9594-2:2017 Information technology Open Systems Interconnection The Directory Part 2: Models
ISO/IEC 10646-1:2000 Information technology Universal Multiple-Octet Coded Character Set (UCS) Part 1: Architecture and Basic Multilingual Plane
ISO/IEC 8822:1994 Information technology Open Systems Interconnection Presentation service definition
ISO 8571-3:1988 Information processing systems Open Systems Interconnection File Transfer, Access and Management Part 3: File Service Definition
ISO/IEC 10538:1991 Information technology Control functions for text communication

Access your standards online with a subscription

Features

  • Simple online access to standards, technical information and regulations.

  • Critical updates of standards and customisable alerts and notifications.

  • Multi-user online standards collection: secure, flexible and cost effective.