It is worth noting that a Fuji Xerox DocuPrint P265 dw is listed in About AirPrint - Apple Support as a model supporting the driverless AirPrint technology. This means that you should be able to use the printer without having to install drivers, if the printer and the computer are connected to the same network (Wi-Fi router).

In order to figure out what's going on, let's have a bit of a recap of the Linux printing stack and the problem space in general. Printing under Linux is handled by CUPS, a userspace daemon responsible for connecting to printer hardware and feeding it the right slurry of bits. In this context, a printer "driver" is a PrinterName.ppd file (PostScript Printer Description), containing a bunch of information about the hardware, what features are supported, what slurry types to feed it, and so forth. Seperate to that, there is a printers.conf file listing each active printer and how it is connected; locally (LPT, USB) or via the network (IPP, JetDirect, SMB).


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Now for the longest time, all of this configuration was manual. There were large collections of PPDs (such as foomatic) containing definitions for thousands of different printer models, usually not the one in front of you. More often than not you'd have to settle for one of the generic drivers, which produce a slurry that a lot of printers eat such as PCL6. If you're really unlucky the printer would need a proprietary driver; this would take the form of a PPD file plus a binary blob executable responsible for generating special Brand-Name Printer Slurry.

But here we are, with the Dark Age of Printing long behind us. In 2013 the Printer Working Group developed the IPP Everywhere standard, which Apple (amongst others) decided was the future for printing from mobile devices, and so has become a standard for consumer printers. Finally, network printers could enunciate exactly the type of slurry they would like and remove the need for drivers once and for all! You no longer had to suffer like your printing ancestors did.

The short version is that (CUPS/GNOME Settings/whatever I used to set it up) has gone down some other, more sinister route to create a PPD file for my driverless printer. One which doesn't involve page margins. But it does have about four times as many exotic media types, on the offchance that I might need to print a swan.

I finally found that you had to manually tell the driver about the presence of the duplex unit. This is done through Control Panel > Printers & Devices > right-click your printer > Printer Properties. 2351a5e196

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