On Fri, Jul 14, 2006 at 02:38:02PM -0400, Linda Knippers wrote: > George Wilson wrote: > > It is to allow a user to allocate a printer for exclusive use. Because > > relabeling is a privileged operation, we need an intermediary to do the > > work on the user's behalf. > > I don't think we need this for printers. Do we really want to > support users allocating personal printer devices? I've assumed > that an admin would configure the printer devices with devallocator > and then use the lpadmin or other cups utilities to create printer > queues for them. I don't think this is something a regular user > does. > > I don't think we have personal printer queues with CUPS > today (do we?) and I didn't think we needed them for LSPP, even if > TSOL supports that feature. I think even with Trusted Solaris, the > user has to have the right authorizations to perform the operation.
It sounds as if the printers in question would not be under the control of CUPS, and the user would just send data to the printer directly. Is that the way it's supposed to work? In that case, I can see the need for a trusted app to do the switching, but I don't see how to meet the LSPP requirements for human readable labels on the printed output in that case. (Single level devices don't need those, but I don't think that really applies to a printer relabeled on a non-admin's behalf.) -Klaus -- redhat-lspp mailing list [email protected] https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-lspp
