One document matched: draft-ietf-ipp-ops-set2-04.txt
Differences from draft-ietf-ipp-ops-set2-03.txt
Internet Printing Protocol WG Carl Kugler
INTERNET-DRAFT H. Lewis
<draft-ietf-ipp-ops-set2-04.txt> IBM Corporation
Updates: RFC 2911, RFC 3380 T. Hastings (editor)
[Target Category: standards track Xerox Corporation
Expires: January 15, 2005 July 15, 2004
Internet Printing Protocol (IPP):
Job and Printer Administrative Operations
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2004). All Rights Reserved.
Status of this Memo
This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with
all provisions of Section 10 of [rfc2026]. Internet-Drafts are
working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), its
areas, and its working groups. Note that other groups may also
distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts.
Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months
and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
material or to cite them other than as "work in progress".
The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at
http://www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt
The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed as
http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html.
By submitting this Internet-Draft, we certify that any applicable
patent or other IPR claims of which we are aware have been disclosed,
or will be disclosed, and any of which we become aware will be
disclosed, in accordance with RFC 3668.
Abstract
This document specifies the following 16 additional OPTIONAL system
administration operations for use with the Internet Printing
Protocol/1.1 (IPP) [RFC2910, RFC2911]:
Printer operations: Job operations:
Enable-Printer and Disable-Printer Reprocess-Job
Pause-Printer-After-Current-Job Cancel-Current-Job
Hold-New-Jobs and Release-Held-New-Jobs Suspend-Current-Job
Deactivate-Printer and Activate-Printer Resume-Job
Restart-Printer Promote-Job
Shutdown-Printer and Startup-Printer Schedule-Job-After
plus a few associated attributes, values, and status codes and
using the IPP Printer object to manage printer fan-out and fan-in.
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Table of Contents
1 Introduction.....................................................5
2 Terminology......................................................5
2.1 Conformance Terminology........................................5
2.2 Other terminology..............................................5
3 Definition of the Printer Operations.............................6
3.1 The Disable and Enable Printer Operations......................8
3.1.1 Disable-Printer Operation....................................8
3.1.2 Enable-Printer Operation.....................................9
3.2 The Pause and Resume Printer Operations........................9
3.2.1 Pause-Printer-After-Current-Job operation...................10
3.3 Hold and Release New Jobs operations..........................12
3.3.1 Hold-New-Jobs operation.....................................12
3.3.2 Release-Held-New-Jobs operation.............................13
3.4 Deactivate and Activate Printer Operations....................13
3.4.1 Deactivate-Printer operation................................13
3.4.2 Activate-Printer operation..................................14
3.5 Restart-Printer, Shutdown-Printer, and Startup-Printer operations
15
3.5.1 Restart-Printer operation...................................15
3.5.2 Shutdown-Printer Operation..................................15
3.5.3 Startup-Printer operation...................................16
4 Definition of the Job Operations................................17
4.1 Reprocess-Job Operation.......................................18
4.2 Cancel-Current-Job Operation..................................19
4.3 Suspend and Resume Job operations.............................20
4.3.1 Suspend-Current-Job operation...............................20
4.3.2 Resume-Job operation........................................21
4.4 Job Scheduling Operations.....................................22
4.4.1 Promote-Job operation.......................................22
4.4.2 Schedule-Job-After operation................................23
5 Additional status codes.........................................24
5.1 'server-error-printer-is-deactivated' (0x050A)................24
6 Use of Operation Attributes that are Messages from the Operator.25
7 New Printer Description Attributes..............................28
7.1 subordinate-printers-supported (1setOf uri)...................28
7.2 parent-printers-supported (1setOf uri)........................28
8 Additional Values for the "printer-state-reasons" Printer
Description attribute.............................................29
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8.1 'hold-new-jobs' value.........................................29
8.2 'deactivated' value...........................................29
9 Additional Values for the "job-state-reasons" Job Description
attribute.........................................................29
9.1 'job-suspended' value.........................................30
10 Use of the Printer object to represent IPP Printer Fan-Out and IPP
Printer Fan-In....................................................30
10.1 IPP Printer Fan-Out..........................................30
10.2 IPP Printer Fan-In...........................................31
10.3 Printer object attributes used to represent Printer Fan-Out and
Printer Fan-In....................................................31
10.4 Subordinate Printer URI......................................31
10.5 Printer object attributes used to represent Output Device Fan-
Out 32
10.6 Figures to show all possible configurations..................33
10.7 Forwarding requests..........................................36
10.7.1 Forwarding requests that affect Printer objects............36
10.7.2 Forwarding requests that affect Jobs.......................38
10.8 Additional attributes to help with fan-out...................40
10.8.1 output-device-assigned (name(127)) Job Description attribute -
from [RFC2911].........................................40
10.8.2 original-requesting-user-name (name(MAX)) operation and Job
Description attribute..................................40
10.8.3 requesting-user-name (name(MAX)) operation attribute -
additional semantics...................................40
10.8.4 job-originating-user-name (name(MAX)) Job Description
attribute - additional semantics.......................41
11 Conformance Requirements.......................................41
12 Normative References...........................................42
13 Informative References.........................................43
14 IANA Considerations............................................43
14.1 Attribute Registrations......................................44
14.2 Attribute Value Registrations................................44
14.3 Additional Enum Attribute Value Registrations................45
14.4 Operation Registrations......................................45
14.5 Status code Registrations....................................46
15 Internationalization Considerations............................46
16 Security Considerations........................................47
17 Author's Addresses.............................................47
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18 IPR Notice.....................................................48
19 Summary of Base IPP Documents..................................49
20 Full Copyright Statement.......................................50
List of Tables
Table 1 - Printer Operation Operation-Id assignments...............7
Table 2 - Pause and Resume Printer Operations.....................10
Table 3 - State Transition Table for Pause-Printer-After-Current-Job
operation.....................................................11
Table 4 - Job operation Operation-Id assignments..................18
Table 5 - Operation attribute support for Printer Operations......26
Table 6 - Operation attribute support for Job operations..........27
Table 7 - Forwarding operations that affect Printer objects.......37
Table 8 - Forwarding operations that affect Jobs objects..........39
Table 9 - Conformance Requirement Dependencies for Operations.....41
Table 10- Conformance Requirement Dependencies for "printer-state-
reasons" Values...............................................42
Table 11- Conformance Requirement Dependencies for "job-state-
reasons" Values...............................................42
List of Figures
Figure 1 - Embedded Printer object................................34
Figure 2 - Hosted Printer object..................................34
Figure 3 - Output Device Fan-Out..................................34
Figure 4 - Chained IPP Printer Objects............................35
Figure 5 - IPP Printer Object Fan-Out.............................35
Figure 6 - IPP Printer Object Fan-In..............................35
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1 Introduction
The Internet Printing Protocol (IPP) is an application level protocol
that can be used for distributed printing using Internet tools and
technologies. IPP version 1.1 ([RFC2911, RFC2910]) focuses on end
user functionality with a few administrative operations included.
This document defines additional OPTIONAL end user, operator, and
administrator operations used to control Jobs and Printers. In
addition, this document extends the semantic model of the Printer
object by allowing them to be configured into trees and/or inverted
trees that represent Printer object Fan-Out and Printer object Fan-
In, respectively. The special case of a tree with only a single
Subordinate node represents Chained Printers. This document is a
registration proposal for an extension to IPP/1.0 and IPP/1.1
following the registration procedures in those documents.
The requirements and use cases for this document are defined in
[RFC3239].
2 Terminology
This section defines terminology used throughout this document.
2.1 Conformance Terminology
Capitalized terms, such as MUST, MUST NOT, REQUIRED, SHOULD, SHOULD
NOT, MAY, NEED NOT, and OPTIONAL, have special meaning relating to
conformance as defined in RFC 2119 [RFC2119] and [RFC2911] section
12.1. If an implementation supports the extension defined in this
document, then these terms apply; otherwise, they do not. These
terms define conformance to this document only; they do not affect
conformance to other documents, unless explicitly stated otherwise.
2.2 Other terminology
This document uses terms such as "client", "Printer", "Job",
"attributes", "keywords", "operation" and "support". These terms
have special meaning and are defined in the model terminology
[RFC2911] section 12.2.
In addition, the following capitalized terms are defined:
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IPP Printer object (or Printer for short) - a software abstraction
defined by [RFC2911].
Printer Operation - an operation whose target is an IPP Printer
object and whose effect is on the Printer object.
Output Device - the physical imaging mechanism that an IPP Printer
controls. Note: while this term is capitalized in this
specification (but not in [RFC2911]), there is no formal object
called an Output Device defined in this document (or [RFC2911]).
Output Device Fan-Out - a configuration in which an IPP Printer
controls more that one Output Device.
Printer Fan-Out - a configuration in which an IPP Printer object
controls more than one Subordinate IPP Printer object.
Printer Fan-In - a configuration in which an IPP Printer object is
controlled by more than one IPP Printer object.
Subordinate Printer - an IPP Printer object that is controlled by
another IPP Printer object. Such a Subordinate Printer MAY have
zero or more Subordinate Printers.
Leaf Printer - an IPP Printer object that has no Subordinate
Printers.
Non-Leaf Printer - an IPP Printer object that has one or more
Subordinate Printers. A Non-Leaf Printer is also called a Parent
Printer.
Chained Printer - a Non-Leaf Printer that has exactly one Subordinate
Printer.
Job Creation operations - IPP operations that create a Job object:
Print-Job, Print-URI, and Create-Job.
3 Definition of the Printer Operations
All Printer Operations are directed at Printer objects. A client
MUST always supply the "printer-uri" operation attribute in order to
identify the correct target of the operation. These descriptions
assume all of the common semantics of IPP/1.1 Model and Semantics
document [RFC2911] section 3.1.
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The Printer Operations defined in this document are summarized in
Table 1:
Table 1 - Printer Operation Operation-Id assignments
Operation Name Operation- Brief description
Id
Enable-Printer 0x22 Allows the target Printer to accept
Job Creation operations
Disable-Printer 0x23 Prevents the target Printer from
accepting Job Creation operations
Pause-Printer- 0x24 Pause the Printer after the current
After-Current- job has been sent to the Output
Job Device.
Hold-New-Jobs 0x25 Finishes processing all currently
pending jobs. Any new jobs are
placed in the 'pending-held' state.
Release-Held- 0x26 Release all jobs to the 'pending'
New-Jobs state that had been held by the
effect of a previous Hold-New-Jobs
operation and condition the Printer
to no longer hold new jobs.
Deactivate- 0x27 Puts the Printer into a read-only
Printer deactivated state.
Activate- 0x28 Restores the Printer to normal
Printer activity
Restart-Printer 0x29 Restarts the target Printer and re-
initializes the software
Shutdown- 0x2A Shuts down the target Printer so that
Printer it cannot be restarted or queried
Startup-Printer 0x2B Starts up the instance of the Printer
object
All of the operations in this document are OPTIONAL for an IPP object
to support. Unless the specification of an OPTIONAL operation
requires support of another OPTIONAL operation, conforming
implementations may support any combination of these operations.
Many of the operations come in pairs and so both are REQUIRED if
either one is implemented.
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3.1 The Disable and Enable Printer Operations
This section defines the OPTIONAL Disable-Printer and Enable-Printer
operations that stop and start the IPP Printer object from accepting
new IPP jobs. If either of these operations are supported, both MUST
be supported.
These operations allow the operator to control whether or not the
Printer will accept new Job Creation (Print-Job, Print-URI, and
Create-Job) operations. These operations have no other effect on the
Printer, so that the Printer continues to accept all other operations
and continues to schedule and process jobs normally. In other words,
these operation control the "input of new jobs" to the IPP Printer
while the Pause and Resume operations (see section 3.2) independently
control the "output of new jobs" from the IPP Printer to the Output
Device.
3.1.1 Disable-Printer Operation
This OPTIONAL operation allows a client to stop the Printer object
from accepting new jobs, i.e., cause the Printer to reject subsequent
Job Creation operations and return the 'server-error-not-accepting-
jobs' status code. The Printer still accepts all other operations,
including Validate-Job, Send-Document and Send-URI operations. Thus
a Disable-Printer operation allows a client to continue submitting
multiple documents of a multiple document job if the Create-Job
operation had already been accepted. All previously created or
submitted Jobs and currently processing Jobs continue unaffected.
The IPP Printer MUST accept the request in any state. The Printer
sets the value of its "printer-is-accepting-jobs" READ-ONLY Printer
Description attribute to 'false' (see [RFC2911] section 4.4.20), no
matter what the previous value was. This operation has no immediate
or direct effect on the Printer's "printer-state" and "printer-state-
reasons" attributes.
Access Rights: The authenticated user (see [RFC2911] section 8.3)
performing this operation must be an operator or administrator of the
Printer object (see [RFC2911] Sections 1 and 8.5).
The Disable-Printer Request and Disable-Printer Response have the
same attribute groups and attributes as the Pause-Printer operation
(see [RFC2911] sections 3.2.7.1 and 3.2.7.2), including the new
"printer-message-from-operator" operation attribute (see section 6).
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3.1.2 Enable-Printer Operation
This OPTIONAL operation allows a client to start the Printer object
accepting jobs, i.e., cause the Printer to accept subsequent Job
Creation operations. The Printer still accepts all other operations.
All previously submitted Jobs and currently processing Jobs continue
unaffected.
The IPP Printer MUST accept the request in any state. The Printer
sets the value of its "printer-is-accepting-jobs" READ-ONLY Printer
Description attribute to 'true' (see [RFC2911] section 4.4.20), no
matter what the previous value was. This operation has no immediate
or direction effect on the Printer's "printer-state" and "printer-
state-reasons" attributes.
Access Rights: The authenticated user (see [RFC2911] section 8.3)
performing this operation must be an operator or administrator of the
Printer object (see [RFC2911] Sections 1 and 8.5).
The Enable-Printer Request and Enable-Printer Response have the same
attribute groups and attributes as the Pause-Printer operation (see
[RFC2911] sections 3.2.8.1 and 3.2.8.2), including the new "printer-
message-from-operator" operation attribute (see section 6).
3.2 The Pause and Resume Printer Operations
This section leaves the OPTIONAL IPP/1.1 Pause-Printer (see [RFC2911]
sections 3.2.7) to be ambiguous as to whether or not it stops the
Printer immediately or after the current job and defines the OPTIONAL
Pause-Printer-After-Current-Job operation to be after the current
job. These operations affect the scheduling of IPP jobs. If either
of these Pause Printer operations are supported, then the Resume-
Printer operation MUST be supported.
These operations allow the operator to control whether or not the
Printer will send new IPP jobs to the associated Output Device(s)
that the IPP Printer object represents. These operations have no
other effect on the Printer, so that the Printer continues to accept
all operations. In other words, these operation control the "output
of new jobs" to the Output Device(s) while the Disable and Enable
Printer Operations (see section 3.1) independently control the "input
of new jobs" to the IPP Printer.
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Table 2 - Pause and Resume Printer Operations
Pause and Resume Printers Description
IPP/1.1 Pause Printer Stops the IPP Printer from sending
new IPP Jobs to the Output Device(s)
either immediately or after the
current job completes, depending on
implementation, as defined in
[RFC2911].
Pause-Printer-After- Stops the IPP Printer from sending
Current-Job new IPP Jobs to the Output Device(s)
after the current jobs finish
Resume-Printer Starts the IPP Printer sending IPP
Jobs to the Output Device again.
3.2.1 Pause-Printer-After-Current-Job operation
This OPTIONAL operation allows a client to stop the Printer object
from starting to send IPP jobs to any of its Output Devices or
Subordinate Printers. If the IPP Printer is in the middle of sending
an IPP job to an Output Device or Subordinate Printer, the IPP
Printer MUST complete sending that Job. However, after receiving
this operation, the IPP Printer MUST NOT start to send any additional
IPP jobs to any of its Output Devices or Subordinate Printers. In
addition, after having received this operation, the IPP Printer MUST
NOT start processing any more jobs, so additional jobs MUST NOT enter
the 'processing' state.
If the IPP Printer is not sending an IPP Job to the Output Device or
Subordinate Printer (whether or not the Output Device or Subordinate
Printer is busy processing any jobs), the IPP Printer object
transitions immediately to the 'stopped' state by setting its
"printer-state" attribute to 'stopped', removing the 'moving-to-
paused' value, if present, from its "printer-state-reasons"
attribute, and adding the 'paused' value to its "printer-state-
reasons" attribute.
If the implementation will take appreciable time to complete sending
an IPP job that it has started sending to an Output Device or
Subordinate Printer, the IPP Printer adds the 'moving-to-paused'
value to the Printer object's "printer-state-reasons" attribute (see
section [RFC2911] 4.4.12). When the IPP Printer has completed
sending IPP jobs that it was in the process of sending, the Printer
object transitions to the 'stopped' state by setting its "printer-
state" attribute to 'stopped', removing the 'moving-to-paused' value,
if present, from its "printer-state-reasons" attribute, and adding
the 'paused' value to its "printer-state-reasons" attribute.
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This operation MUST NOT affect the acceptance of Job Creation
requests (see Disable-Printer section 3.1.1).
For any jobs that are 'pending' or 'pending-held', the 'printer-
stopped' value of the jobs' "job-state-reasons" attribute also
applies. However, the IPP Printer NEED NOT update those jobs' "job-
state-reasons" attributes and only need return the 'printer-stopped'
value when those jobs are queried using the Get-Job-Attributes or
Get-Jobs operations (so-called "lazy evaluation").
The IPP Printer MUST accept the request in any state and transition
the Printer to the indicated new "printer-state" and MUST add the
indicated value to "printer-state-reasons" attribute before returning
as follows:
Table 3 - State Transition Table for Pause-Printer-After-Current-Job
operation
Current New "printer IPP Printer's response status
"printer- "printer- -state- code and action:
state" state" reasons"
REQUIRED/OPTIONAL state
transition for a Printer to
support
'idle' 'stopped' 'paused' REQUIRED: 'successful-ok'
'processing' 'processing' 'moving- OPTIONAL: 'successful-ok';
to- Later, when the IPP Printer
paused' has finished sending IPP jobs
to an Output Device, the
"printer-state" becomes
'stopped', and the 'paused'
value replaces the 'moving-to-
paused' value in the "printer-
state-reasons" attribute
'processing' 'stopped' 'paused' REQUIRED: 'successful-ok';
the IPP Printer wasn't in the
middle of sending an IPP job
to an Output Device
'stopped' 'stopped' 'paused' REQUIRED: 'successful-ok'
Access Rights: The authenticated user (see [RFC2911] section 8.3)
performing this operation must be an operator or administrator of the
Printer object (see [RFC2911] Sections 1 and 8.5).
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The Pause-Printer-After-Current-Job Request and Pause-Printer-After-
Current-Job Response have the same attribute groups and attributes as
the Pause-Printer operation (see [RFC2911] sections 3.2.7.1 and
3.2.7.2), including the new "printer-message-from-operator" operation
attribute (see section 6).
3.3 Hold and Release New Jobs operations
This section defines operations to condition the Printer to hold any
new jobs and to release them.
3.3.1 Hold-New-Jobs operation
This OPTIONAL operation allows a client to condition the Printer to
complete the current 'pending' and 'processing' IPP Jobs but not
start processing any subsequently created IPP Jobs. If the IPP
Printer is in the middle of sending an IPP job to an Output Device or
Subordinate Printer, the IPP Printer MUST complete sending that Job.
Furthermore, the IPP Printer MUST send all of the current 'pending'
IPP Jobs to the Output Device(s) or Subordinate IPP Printer
object(s). Any subsequently received Job Creation operations will
cause the IPP Printer to put the Job into the 'pending-held' state
with the 'job-held-on-create' value being added to the job's "job-
state-reasons" attribute. Thus all newly accepted jobs will be
automatically held by the Printer.
When the Printer completes all of the 'pending' and 'processing'
jobs, it enters the 'idle' state as usual. An operator that is
monitoring Printer state changes will know when the Printer has
completed all current jobs because the Printer enters the 'idle'
state.
This operation MUST NOT affect the acceptance of Job Creation
requests (see Disable-Printer section 3.1.1), except to put the Jobs
into the 'pending-held' state, instead of the 'pending' or
'processing' state.
The IPP Printer MUST accept the request in any state, MUST NOT
transition the Printer to any other "printer-state", and MUST add the
'hold-new-jobs' value to the Printer's "printer-state-reasons"
attribute (whether the value was present or not).
Access Rights: The authenticated user (see [RFC2911] section 8.3)
performing this operation must be an operator or administrator of the
Printer object (see [RFC2911] Sections 1 and 8.5).
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The Hold-New-Jobs Request and Hold-New-Jobs Response have the same
attribute groups and attributes as the Pause-Printer operation (see
[RFC2911] sections 3.2.7.1 and 3.2.7.2), including the new "printer-
message-from-operator" operation attribute (see section 6).
3.3.2 Release-Held-New-Jobs operation
This OPTIONAL operation allows a client to undo the effect of a
previous Hold-New-Jobs operation. In particular, the Printer
releases all of the jobs that it had held as a consequence of a Hold-
New-Jobs operations, i.e., while the 'hold-new-jobs' value was
present in the Printer's "printer-state-reasons" attribute. In
addition, the Printer MUST accept this request in any state, MUST NOT
transition the Printer to any other "printer-state", and MUST remove
the 'hold-new-jobs' value from its "printer-state-reasons" attribute
(whether the value was present or not) so that the Printer no longer
holds newly created jobs.
Access Rights: The authenticated user (see [RFC2911] section 8.3)
performing this operation must be an operator or administrator of the
Printer object (see [RFC2911] Sections 1 and 8.5).
The Release-Held-New-Jobs Request and Release-Held-New-Jobs Response
have the same attribute groups and attributes as the Pause-Printer
operation (see [RFC2911] sections 3.2.7.1 and 3.2.7.2), including the
new "printer-message-from-operator" operation attribute (see section
6).
3.4 Deactivate and Activate Printer Operations
This section defines the OPTIONAL Deactivate-Printer and Activate-
Printer operations that stop and start the IPP Printer object from
accepting all requests except queries and performing work. If either
of these operations are supported, both MUST be supported.
These operations allow the operator to put the Printer into a dormant
read-only condition and to take it out of such a condition. These
operations are a combination of the Deactivate and Pause operations,
plus preventing the acceptance of any other requests, except queries.
3.4.1 Deactivate-Printer operation
This OPTIONAL operation allows a client to stop the Printer object
from starting to send IPP jobs to any of its Output Devices or
Subordinate Printers (Pause-Printer-After-Current-Job) and stop the
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Printer object from accepting any, but query requests. The Printer
performs a Disable-Printer and a Pause-Printer-After-Current-Job
operation immediately, including use of all of the "printer-state-
reasons" if these two operations cannot be completed immediately. In
addition, the Printer MUST immediately reject all requests, except
Activate-Printer, queries (Get-Printer-Attributes, Get-Job-
Attributes, Get-Jobs, etc.), Send-Document, and Send-URI (so that
partial job submission can be completed - see section 3.1.1) and
return the 'server-error-service-unavailable' status code.
The IPP Printer MUST accept the request in any state. Immediately,
the Printer MUST set the 'deactivated' value in its "printer-state-
reasons" attribute. Note: neither the Disable-Printer nor the Pause-
Printer-After-Current-Job set the 'deactivated' value.
Access Rights: The authenticated user (see [RFC2911] section 8.3)
performing this operation must be an operator or administrator of the
Printer object (see [RFC2911] Sections 1 and 8.5).
The Deactivate-Printer Request and Deactivate-Printer Response have
the same attribute groups and attributes as the Pause-Printer
operation (see [RFC2911] sections 3.2.7.1 and 3.2.7.2), including the
new "printer-message-from-operator" operation attribute (see section
6).
3.4.2 Activate-Printer operation
This OPTIONAL operation allows a client to undo the effects of the
Deactivate-Printer, i.e., allow the Printer object to start sending
IPP jobs to any of its Output Devices or Subordinate Printers (Pause-
Printer-After-Current-Job) and start the Printer object from
accepting any requests. The Printer performs an Enable-Printer and a
Resume-Printer operation immediately. In addition, the Printer MUST
immediately start accepting all requests.
The IPP Printer MUST accept the request in any state. Immediately,
the Printer MUST immediately remove the 'deactivated' value from its
"printer-state-reasons" attribute (whether present or not).
Access Rights: The authenticated user (see [RFC2911] section 8.3)
performing this operation must be an operator or administrator of the
Printer object (see [RFC2911] Sections 1 and 8.5).
The Activate-Printer Request and Activate-Printer Response have the
same attribute groups and attributes as the Pause-Printer operation
(see [RFC2911] sections 3.2.7.1 and 3.2.7.2), including the new
"printer-message-from-operator" operation attribute (see section 6).
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3.5 Restart-Printer, Shutdown-Printer, and Startup-Printer operations
This section defines the OPTIONAL Restart-Printer, Shutdown-Printer,
and Startup-Printer operations that initialize, shutdown, and startup
the Printer object, respectively. Each of these operations is
OPTIONAL and any combination MAY be supported.
3.5.1 Restart-Printer operation
This OPTIONAL operation allows a client to restart a Printer object
whose operation is in need of initialization because of incorrect or
erratic behavior, i.e., perform the effect of a software re-boot.
The implementation MUST attempt to save any information about Jobs
and the Printer object before re-initializing. However, this
operation MAY have drastic consequences on the running system, so the
client SHOULD first try the Deactivate-Printer operation to minimize
the effect on the current state of the system. The effects of
previous Disable-Printer, Pause Printer, and Deactivate-Printer
operations are lost.
The IPP Printer MUST accept the request in any state. The Printer
object MUST initialize its Printer's "printer-state" to 'idle',
remove the state reasons from its "printer-state-reasons" attribute,
and its "printer-is-accepting-jobs" attribute to 'true'.
Access Rights: The authenticated user (see [RFC2911] section 8.3)
performing this operation must be an operator or administrator of the
Printer object (see [RFC2911] Sections 1 and 8.5).
The Restart-Printer Request and Restart-Printer Response have the
same attribute groups and attributes as the Pause-Printer operation
(see [RFC2911] sections 3.2.8.1 and 3.2.8.2), including the new
"printer-message-from-operator" operation attribute (see section 6).
3.5.2 Shutdown-Printer Operation
This OPTIONAL operation allows a client to shutdown a Printer, i.e.,
stop processing jobs without losing any jobs and make the Printer
object no longer available for any operations using the IPP protocol.
There is no way to bring the instance of the Printer object back to
being used, except for the Startup-Printer (see section 3.5.3) which
starts up a new instance of the Printer object for hosted
implementations. The purpose of Shutdown-Printer is to shutdown the
Printer for an extended period, not to reset the device(s) or modify
a Printer attribute. See Restart-Printer (section 3.5.1) and
Startup-Printer (section 3.5.3) for the way to initialize the
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software. See the Disable-Printer operation (section 3.1) for a way
for the client to stop the Printer from accepting Job Creation
requests without stopping processing or shutting down.
The Printer MUST add the 'shutdown' value (see [RFC2911] section
4.4.11) immediately to its "printer-state-reasons" Printer
Description attribute and performs a Deactivate-Printer operation
(see section 3.4.1) which performs a Disable-Printer and Pause-
Printer-After-Current-Job operation).
Note: In order to shutdown the Printer after all the currently
submitted jobs have completed, the operator issues a Disable-Printer
operation (see section 3.1.1) and then waits until all the jobs have
completed and the Printer goes into the 'idle' state before issuing
the Shutdown-Printer operation.
The Printer object MUST accept this operation in any state and
transition the Printer object through the "printer-states" and
"printer-state-reasons" defined for the Pause-Printer-After-Current-
Job operation until the activity is completed and the Printer object
disappears.
Access Rights: The authenticated user (see [RFC2911] section 8.3)
performing this operation must be an operator or administrator of the
Printer object (see [RFC2911] Sections 1 and 8.5).
The Shutdown-Printer Request and Shutdown-Printer Response have the
same attribute groups and attributes as the Pause-Printer operation
(see [RFC2911] sections 3.2.7.1 and 3.2.7.2), including the new
"printer-message-from-operator" operation attribute (see section 6).
3.5.3 Startup-Printer operation
This OPTIONAL operation allows a client to startup an instance of a
Printer object, provided that there isn't one already instantiated.
The purpose of Startup-Printer is to allow a hosted implementation of
the IPP Printer object (i.e., a Server that implements an IPP Printer
on behalf of a networked or local Output Device) to be started after
the host is available (by means outside this document). See Restart-
Printer (section 3.5.1) for the way to initialize the software or
reset the Output Device(s) when the IPP Printer object has already
been instantiated.
The host MUST accept this operation only when the Printer object has
not been instantiated. If the Printer object already exists, the
host must return the 'client-error-not-possible' status code.
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The result of this operation MUST be with the Printer object's
"printer-state" set to 'idle', the state reasons removed from its
"printer-state-reasons" attribute, and its "printer-is-accepting-
jobs" attribute set to 'false'. Then the operator can reconfigure
the Printer before performing an Enable-Printer operation. However,
when a Printer is first powered up, it is RECOMMENDED that its
"printer-is-accepting-jobs" attribute be set to 'true' in order to
achieve easy "out of the box" operation.
Access Rights: The authenticated user (see [RFC2911] section 8.3)
performing this operation must be an operator or administrator of the
Printer object (see [RFC2911] Sections 1 and 8.5).
The Shutdown-Printer Request and Shutdown-Printer Response have the
same attribute groups and attributes as the Pause-Printer operation
(see [RFC2911] sections 3.2.7.1 and 3.2.7.2), including the new
"printer-message-from-operator" operation attribute (see section 6).
4 Definition of the Job Operations
All Job operations are directed at Job objects. A client MUST always
supply some means of identifying the Job object in order to identify
the correct target of the operation. That job identification MAY
either be a single Job URI or a combination of a Printer URI with a
Job ID. The IPP object implementation MUST support both forms of
identification for every job.
The Job Operations defined in this document are summarized in Table
4:
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Table 4 - Job operation Operation-Id assignments
Operation Name Operation- Brief description
Id
Reprocess-Job 0x2C Creates a copy of a completed target
job with a new Job ID and processes it
Cancel-Current- 0x2D Cancels the current job on the target
Job Printer or the specified job if it is
the current job
Suspend- 0x2E Suspends the current processing job on
Current-Job the target Printer or the specified
job if it is the current job, allowing
other jobs to be processed instead
Resume-Job 0x2F Resume the suspended target job
Promote-Job 0x30 Promote the pending target job to be
next after the current job(s) complete
Schedule-Job- 0x31 Schedule the target job immediately
After after the specified job, all other
scheduling factors being equal.
4.1 Reprocess-Job Operation
This OPTIONAL operation is a create job operation that allows a
client to re-process a copy of a job that had been retained in the
queue after processing completed, was canceled, or was aborted (see
[RFC2911] section 4.3.7.2). This operation is the same as the
Restart-Job operation (see [RFC2911] section 3.3.7), except that the
Printer creates a new job that is a copy of the target job and the
target job is unchanged. The new job is assigned new values to the
"job-uri" and "job-id" attributes and the new job's Job Description
attributes that accumulate job progress, such as "job-impressions-
completed", "job-media-sheets-completed", and "job-k-octets-
processed", are initialized to 0 as with any create job operation.
The target job moves to the Job History after a suitable period,
independent of whether one or more Reprocess-Job operations have been
performed on it.
If the Set-Job-Attributes operation is supported, then the "job-hold-
until" operation attribute MUST be supported with at least the
'indefinite' value, so that a client can modify the new job before it
is scheduled for processing using the Set-Job-Attributes operation.
After modifying the job, the client can release the job for
processing, by using the Release-Job operation specifying the newly
assigned "job-uri" or "job-id" for the new job.
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4.2 Cancel-Current-Job Operation
This OPTIONAL operation allows a client to cancel the current job on
the target Printer or the specified job if it is the current job on
the Printer. See [RFC2911] section 3.3.3 for the semantics of
canceling a job. Since a Job might already be marking by the time a
Cancel-Current-Job is received, some media sheet pages might be
printed before the job is actually terminated.
If the client does not supply a "job-id" operation attribute, the
Printer MUST accept the request and cancel the current job if there
is a current job in the 'processing' or 'processing-stopped' state;
otherwise, it MUST reject the request and return the 'client-error-
not-possible' status code. If more than one job is in the
'processing' or 'processing-stopped' states, the one that is marking
is canceled and the others are unaffected.
Warning: On a shared printer, there is a race condition. Between
the time that a user issues this operation and its acceptance, the
current job might change to a different job. If the user or operator
is authenticated to cancel the new job, the wrong job is canceled.
To prevent this race from canceling the wrong job, the client MAY
supply the "job-id" operation attribute which is checked against the
current job's job-id. If the job identified by the "job-id"
attribute is not the current job on the Printer, i.e., is not in the
'processing' or 'processing-stopped' states, the Printer MUST reject
this operation and return the 'client-error-not-possible' status
code. Otherwise, the Printer cancels the specified job.
Access Rights: The authenticated user (see [RFC2911] section 8.3)
performing this operation must either be the job owner (as determined
in the Job Creation operation) or an operator or administrator of the
Printer object (see [RFC2911] Sections 1 and 8.5).
The Cancel-Current-Job Request and Cancel-Current-Job Response have
the same attribute groups and attributes as the Resume-Printer
operation (see [RFC2911] section 3.2.8), including the new "job-
message-from-operator" operation attribute (see section 6), with the
addition of the following Group 1 Operation attributes in the
request:
"job-id" (integer(1:MAX)):
The client OPTIONALLY supplies this Operation attribute in
order to verify that the identified job is still the current
job on the target Printer object. The IPP object MUST supports
this operation attribute, if it supports this operation.
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4.3 Suspend and Resume Job operations
This section defines the Suspend-Current-Job and Resume-Job
operations. These operations allow an operator or user to suspend a
job while it is processing and allow other jobs to be processed and
the resume the suspended job at a later point in time without losing
any of the output.
If either of these operations is supported, they both MUST be
supported.
The Hold-Job and Release-Job operations ([RFC2911] section 3.3.5) are
for holding and releasing held jobs, not suspending and resuming
suspended jobs.
4.3.1 Suspend-Current-Job operation
This OPTIONAL operation allows a client to stop the current job on
the target Printer or the specified job if it is the current job on
the Printer, and allow other jobs to be processed instead. The
Printer moves the current job or the target job to the 'processing-
stopped' state and sets the 'job-suspended' value (see section 9.1)
in the job's "job-state-reasons" attribute and processes other jobs.
If the client does not supply a "job-id" operation attribute, the
Printer MUST accept the request and suspend the current job if there
is a current job in the 'processing' or 'processing-stopped' state;
otherwise, it MUST reject the request and return the 'client-error-
not-possible' status code. If more than one job is in the
'processing' or 'processing-stopped' states, all of them are
suspended.
Warning: On a shared printer, there is a race condition. Between
the time that a user issues this operation and its acceptance, the
current job might change to a different job. If the user or operator
is authenticated to suspend the new job, the wrong job is suspended.
To prevent this race from pausing the wrong job, the client MAY
supply the "job-id" operation attribute which is checked against the
current job's job-id. If the job identified by the "job-id"
attribute is not the current job on the Printer, i.e., is not in the
'processing' or 'processing-stopped' states, the Printer MUST reject
this operation and return the 'client-error-not-possible' status
code. Otherwise, the Printer suspends the specified job and
processed other jobs.
The Printer MUST reject a Resume-Job request (and return the 'client-
error-not-possible') for a job that has been suspended , i.e., for a
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job in the 'processing-stopped' state, with the 'job-suspended' value
in its "job-state-reasons" attribute.
Access Rights: The authenticated user (see [RFC2911] section 8.3)
performing this operation must either be the job owner (as determined
in the Job Creation operation) or an operator or administrator of the
Printer object (see [RFC2911] Sections 1 and 8.5).
The Suspend-Current-Job Request and Suspend-Current-Job Response have
the same attribute groups and attributes as the Pause-Printer
operation (see [RFC2911] section 3.2.8 ), including the new "job-
message-from-operator" operation attribute (see section 6), with the
addition of the following Group 1 Operation attributes in the
request:
"job-id" (integer(1:MAX)):
The client OPTIONALLY supplies this Operation attribute in
order to verify that the identified job is still the current
job on the target Printer object. The IPP object MUST supports
this operation attribute, if it supports this operation.
4.3.2 Resume-Job operation
This OPTIONAL operation allows a client to resume the target job at
the point where it was suspended. The Printer moves the target job
to the 'pending' state and removes the 'job-suspended' value from the
job's "job-state-reasons" attribute.
If the target job is not in the 'processing-stopped' state with the
'job-suspended' value in the job's "job-state-reasons" attribute, the
Printer MUST reject the request and return the 'client-error-not-
possible' status code, since the job was not suspended.
Access Rights: The authenticated user (see [RFC2911] section 8.3)
performing this operation must either be the job owner (as determined
in the Job Creation operation) or an operator or administrator of the
Printer object (see [RFC2911] Sections 1 and 8.5).
The Resume-Job Request and Resume-Job Response have the same
attribute groups and attributes as the Release-Job operation (see
[RFC2911] section 3.3.6), including the new "job-message-from-
operator" operation attribute (see section 6).
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4.4 Job Scheduling Operations
This section defines jobs that allow an operator to control the
scheduling of jobs.
4.4.1 Promote-Job operation
This OPTIONAL operation allows a client to make the pending target
job be processed next after the current job completes. This
operation is specially useful in a production printing environment
where the operator is involved in job scheduling.
If the target job is in the 'pending' state, this operation does not
change the job's state, but causes the job to be processed after the
current job(s) complete. If the target job is not in the 'pending'
state, the Printer MUST reject the request and return the 'client-
error-not-possible' status code.
If the Printer implements the "job-priority" Job Template attribute
(see [RFC2911] section 4.2.1), the Printer sets the job's "job-
priority" to the highest value supported (so that the job will print
before any of the other pending jobs). The Printer returns the
target job immediately after the current job(s) in a Get-Jobs
response (see [RFC2911] section 3.2.6) for the 'not-completed' jobs.
When the current job completes, is canceled, suspended (see section
4.3.1), or aborted, the target of this operation is processed next.
If a client issues this request (again) before the target of the
operation of the original request started processing, the target of
this new request is processed before the previous job that was to be
processed next.
IPP is specified not to require queues for job scheduling, since
there are other implementation techniques for scheduling multiple
jobs, such as re-evaluating a criteria function for each job on a
scheduling cycle. However, if an implementation does implement
queues for jobs, then the Promote-Job puts the specified job at the
front of the queue. A subsequent Promote-Job before the first job
starts processing puts that specified job at the front of the queue,
so that it is "in front" of the previously promoted job.
Access Rights: The authenticated user (see [RFC2911] section 8.3)
performing this operation must be an operator or administrator of the
Printer object (see [RFC2911] Sections 1 and 8.5).
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The Promote-Job Request and Promote-Job Response have the same
attribute groups and attributes as the Cancel-Job operation (see
[RFC2911] section 3.3.3), including the new "job-message-from-
operator" operation attribute (see section 6).
4.4.2 Schedule-Job-After operation
This OPTIONAL operation allows a client to request the Printer to
schedule the target job so that it will be processed immediately
after the specified predecessor job, all other scheduling factors
being equal. This operation is specially useful in a production
printing environment where the operator is involved in job
scheduling.
If the target job is in the 'pending' state, this operation does not
change the job's state, but causes the job to be processed after the
predecessor job completes. The predecessor job can be in the
'pending', 'processing', or 'processing-stopped' states. If the
target job is not in the 'pending' state or the predecessor job is
not in the 'pending', 'processing', or 'processing-stopped' states,
the Printer MUST reject the request and returns the 'client-error-
not-possible' status code, since the job cannot have its position
changed.
If the Printer implements the "job-priority" Job Template attribute
(see [RFC2911] section 4.2.1), the Printer sets the job's "job-
priority" to that of the predecessor job (so that the job will print
after the predecessor job). The Printer returns the target job
immediately after the predecessor in a Get-Jobs response (see
[RFC2911] section 3.2.6) for the 'not-completed' jobs.
When the predecessor job completes processing or is canceled or
aborted while processing, the target of this operation is processed
next.
If the client does not supply a predecessor job, this operation has
the same semantics as Promote-Job (see section 4.4).
IPP is specified not to require queues for job scheduling, since
there are other implementation techniques for scheduling multiple
jobs, such as re-evaluating a criteria function for each job on a
scheduling cycle. However, if an implementation does implement
queues for jobs, then the Schedule-Job-After operation puts the
specified job immediately after the specified job in the queue. A
subsequent Schedule-Job-After operation specifying the same job will
cause its target job to be placed after that job, even though it is
between the first target job and the specified job. For example,
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suppose the job queue consisted of jobs: A, B, C, D, and E, in that
order. A Schedule-Job-After with job E as the target and B as the
specified job would result in the following queue: A, B, E, C, D. A
subsequent Schedule-Job-After with Job D as the target and B as the
specified job would result in the following queue: A, B, D, E, C.
In other words, the link between the two jobs in a Schedule-Job-After
operation is not retained, i.e., there is no attribute on either job
that points to the other job as a result of this operation.
Access Rights: The authenticated user (see [RFC2911] section 8.3)
performing this operation must be operator or administrator of the
Printer object (see [RFC2911] Sections 1 and 8.5).
The Schedule-Job-After Request have the same attribute groups and
attributes as the Cancel-Job operation (see [RFC2911] section 3.3.3),
plus the new "job-message-from-operator" operation attribute (see
section 6). In addition, the following operation attributes are
defined:
"predecessor-job-id":
The client OPTIONALLY supplies this attribute. The Printer
MUST support it, if it supports this operation. This attribute
specifies the job after which the target job is to be
processed. If the client omits this attribute, the Printer
MUST process the target job next, i.e., after the current job,
if any.
The Schedule-Job-After Response has the same attribute groups,
attributes, and status codes as the Cancel-Job operation (see
[RFC2911] section 3.3.3). The following status codes have particular
meaning for this operation:
'client-error-not-possible' - the target job was not in the
'pending' state or the predecessor job was no in the 'pending',
'processing', or 'processing-stopped' states.
'client-error-not-found' - either the target job or the
predecessor job was not found.
5 Additional status codes
This section defines new status codes used by the operations defined
in this document.
5.1 'server-error-printer-is-deactivated' (0x050A)
The Printer has been deactivated using the Deactivate-Printer
operation and is only accepting the Activate-Printer (see section
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3.5.1), Get-Job-Attributes, Get-Jobs, Get-Printer-Attributes, and any
other Get-Xxxx operations. An operator can perform the Activate-
Printer operation to allow the Printer to accept other operations.
6 Use of Operation Attributes that are Messages from the Operator
This section summarizes the usage of the "printer-message-from-
operator" and "job-message-from-operator" operation attributes
[RFC3380] that set the corresponding Printer and Job Description
attributes (see [RFC2911] for the definition of these Description
attributes). These operation attributes are defined for most of the
Printer and Job operations that operators are likely to perform,
respectively, so that operators can indicate the reasons for their
actions.
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Table 5 shows the operation attributes that are defined for use with
the Printer Operations.
Table 5 - Operation attribute support for Printer Operations
Operation Attribute A B
attributes-charset REQ REQ
attributes-natural-language REQ REQ
printer-uri REQ REQ
requesting-user-name REQ REQ
printer-message-from-operator Note OPT
Legend:
A: Get-Printer-Attributes, Set-Printer-Attributes
B: All other Printer administrative operations, including, but not
limited to: Pause-Printer, Pause-Printer-After-Current-Job, Resume-
Printer, Hold-New-Jobs, Release-Held-New-Jobs, Purge-Jobs, , Enable-
Print, Disable-Printer, Restart-Printer, Shutdown-Printer, and
Startup-Printer.
REQ - REQUIRED for a Printer to support
OPT - OPTIONAL for a Printer to support; the Printer ignores the
attribute if not supported
Note - According to [RFC3380], the Client MUST NOT supply the
"printer-message-from-operator" operation attribute in a
Get-Printer-Attributes or Set-Printer-Attributes operation;
the Printer MUST ignore this operation attribute in these
two operations. Instead, the client when used by an
operator MUST supply the "printer-message-from-operator" as
(one of the) explicit attributes being set on the Printer
object with the Set-Printer-Attributes operation.
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Table 6 shows the operation attributes that are defined for use with
the Job operations.
Table 6 - Operation attribute support for Job operations
Operation Attribute A B C F
attributes-charset REQ REQ REQ REQ
attributes-natural-language REQ REQ REQ REQ
printer-uri REQ REQ REQ REQ
job-uri REQ REQ REQ
job-id REQ REQ REQ REQ
requesting-user-name REQ REQ REQ REQ
job-message-from-operator OPT OPT OPT Note
message*** OPT OPT OPT n/a
job-hold-until n/a n/a OPT* n/a
Legend:
A: Cancel-Job, Resume-Job, Restart-Job, Promote-Job, Schedule-Job-
After
B: Cancel-Current-Job, Suspend-Current-Job
C: Hold-Job, Release-Job, Reprocess-Job
F: Get-Job-Attributes, Set-Job-Attributes
REQ - REQUIRED for a Printer to support
OPT - OPTIONAL for a Printer to support; the Printer ignores the
attribute if supplied, but not supported
n/a - not applicable for use with the operation; the Printer ignores
the attribute
Note - According to [RFC3380], the Client MUST NOT supply the "job-
message-from-operator" operation attribute in a Get-Job-
Attributes or Set-Job-Attributes operation; the Printer MUST
ignore this operation attribute in these two operations.
Instead, the client when used by an operator MUST supply the
"job-message-from-operator" as (one of the) explicit attributes
being set on the Job object with the Set-Job-Attributes
operation.
* - The Printer MUST support the "job-hold-until" operation
attribute if it supports the "job-hold-until" Job Template
attribute. For the Reprocess-Job operation the client can hold
the job and then modify the job before releasing it to be
processed.
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** - In [RFC2911] the "message" operation attribute is defined to
contain a message to the operator but [RFC2911] does not define
a Job Description to store the message.
7 New Printer Description Attributes
The following new Printer Description attributes are needed to
support the new operations defined in this document and the concepts
of Printer Fan-Out (see section 10).
7.1 subordinate-printers-supported (1setOf uri)
This Printer attribute is REQUIRED if an implementation supports
Subordinate Printers (see section 10) and contains the URIs of the
immediate Subordinate Printer object(s) associated with this Printer
object. Each Non-Leaf Printer object MUST support this Printer
Description attribute. A Leaf Printer object either does not support
the "subordinate-printers-supported" attribute or does so with the
'no-value' out-of-band value (see [RFC2911] section 4.1), depending
on implementation.
The precise format of the Subordinate Printer URIs is implementation
dependent (see section 10.4).
If the Printer object does not have an associated Output Device, the
Printer MAY automatically copy the value of the Subordinate Printer
object's "printer-name" attribute to the Job object's "output-
device-assigned" attribute (see [RFC2911] section 4.3.13). The
"output-device-assigned" Job attribute identifies the Output Device
to which the Printer object has assigned a job, for example, when a
single Printer object is supporting Device Fan-Out or Printer Fan-
Out.
7.2 parent-printers-supported (1setOf uri)
This Printer attribute is REQUIRED if an implementation supports
Subordinate Printers (see section 10) and contains the URI of the
Non-Leaf printer object(s) for which this Printer object is the
immediate Subordinate, i.e., this Printer's immediate "parent" or
"parents". Each Subordinate Printer object MUST support this Printer
Description attribute. A Printer that has no parents, either does
not support the "parent-printers-supported" attribute or does so with
the 'no-value' out-of-band value (see [RFC2911] section 4.1),
depending on implementation.
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8 Additional Values for the "printer-state-reasons" Printer Description
attribute
This section defines additional values for the "printer-state-
reasons" Printer Description attribute.
8.1 'hold-new-jobs' value
'hold-new-jobs': The operator has issued the Hold-New-Jobs operation
(see section 3.3.1) or other means, but the output-device(s) are
taking an appreciable time to stop. Later, when all output has
stopped, the "printer-state" becomes 'stopped', and the 'paused'
value replaces the 'moving-to-paused' value in the "printer-state-
reasons" attribute. This value MUST be supported, if the Hold-
New-Jobs operation is supported and the implementation takes
significant time to pause a device in certain circumstances.
8.2 'deactivated' value
'deactivated': A client has issued a Deactivate-Printer operation
for the Printer object (see section 3.4.1) and the Printer is in
the process of becoming deactivated or has become deactivated. The
Printer MUST reject all requests except Activate-Printer, queries
(Get-Printer-Attributes, Get-Job-Attributes, Get-Jobs, etc.),
Send-Document, and Send-URI (so that partial job submission can be
completed - see section 3.1.1) and return the 'server-error-
service-unavailable' status code.
9 Additional Values for the "job-state-reasons" Job Description
attribute
This section defines additional values for the "job-state-reasons"
Job Description attribute.
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9.1 'job-suspended' value
'job-suspended': The job has been suspended while processing
using the Suspend-Current-Job operation and other jobs can be
processed on the Printer. The Job can be resumed using the
Resume-Job operation which removes this value.
10 Use of the Printer object to represent IPP Printer Fan-Out and IPP
Printer Fan-In
This section defines how the Printer object MAY be used to represent
IPP Printer Fan-Out and IPP Printer Fan-In. Fan-Out is where an IPP
Printer is used to represent other IPP Printer objects. Fan-In is
where several IPP Printer objects are used to represent another IPP
Printer object.
10.1 IPP Printer Fan-Out
The IPP/1.1 Model and Semantics introduces the semantic concept of an
IPP Printer object that represents more than one Output Device (see
[RFC2911] section 2.1). This concept is called "Output Device Fan-
Out". However, there was no way to represent the individual states
of the Output Devices or to perform operations on a specific Output
Device when there was Fan-Out. This document generalizes the
semantics of the Printer object to represent such Subordinate Fan-Out
Output Devices as IPP Printer objects. This concept is called
"Printer object Fan-Out". A Printer object that has a Subordinate
Printer object is called a Non-Leaf Printer object. Thus a Non-Leaf
Printer object supports one or more Subordinate Printer objects in
order to represent Printer object Fan-Out. A Printer object that does
not have any Subordinate Printer objects is called a Leaf Printer
object.
Each Non-Leaf Printer object submits jobs to its immediate
Subordinate Printers and otherwise controls the Subordinate Printers
using IPP or other protocols. Whether pending jobs are kept in the
Non-Leaf Printer until a Subordinate Printer can accept them or are
kept in the Subordinate Printers depends on implementation and/or
configuration policy. Furthermore, a Subordinate Printer object MAY,
in turn, have Subordinate Printer objects. Thus a Printer object can
be both a Non-Leaf Printer and a Subordinate Printer.
A Subordinate Printer object MUST be a conforming Printer object, so
it MUST support all of the REQUIRED [RFC2911] operations and
attributes. However, with access control, the Subordinate Printer
MAY be configured so that end-user clients are not permitted to
perform any operations (or just Get-Printer-Attributes) while one or
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more Non-Leaf Printer object(s) are permitted to perform any
operation.
10.2 IPP Printer Fan-In
The IPP/1.1 Model and Semantics did not preclude the semantic concept
of multiple IPP Printer objects that represent a single Output Device
(see [RFC2911] section 2.1). However, there was no way for the
client to determine that there was a Fan-In configuration, nor was
there a way to perform operations on the Subordinate device. This
specification generalizes the semantics of the Printer object to
allow several Non-Leaf IPP Printer objects to represent a single
Subordinate Printer object. Thus a Non-Leaf Printer object MAY share
a Subordinate Printer object with one or more other Non-Leaf Printer
objects in order to represent IPP Printer Fan-In.
As with Fan-Out (see section 10.1), when a Printer object is a Non-
Leaf Printer, it MUST NOT have an associated Output Device. As with
Fan-Out, a Leaf Printer object has one or more associated Output
Devices. As with Fan-Out, the Non-Leaf Printer objects submit jobs
to their Subordinate Printer objects and otherwise control the
Subordinate Printer. As with Fan-Out, whether pending jobs are kept
in the Non-Leaf Printers until the Subordinate Printer can accept
them or are kept in the Subordinate Printer depends on implementation
and/or configuration policy.
10.3 Printer object attributes used to represent Printer Fan-Out and
Printer Fan-In
The following Printer Description attributes are defined to represent
the relationship between Printer object(s) and their Subordinate
Printer object(s):
1. "subordinate-printers-supported" (1setOf uri) - contains the URI
of the immediate Subordinate Printer object(s).
2. "parent-printers-supported (1setOf uri) - contains the URI of
the Non-Leaf printer object(s) for which this Printer object is
the immediate Subordinate, i.e., this Printer's immediate
"parent" or "parents".
10.4 Subordinate Printer URI
Each Subordinate Printer object has a URI which is used as the target
of each operation on the Subordinate Printer. The means for
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configuring URIs for Subordinate Printer objects is implementation-
dependent as are all URIs. However, there are two distinct
approaches:
a. When the implementation wants to make sure that no operation on
a Subordinate Printer object as a target "sneaks by" the parent
Printer object (or the Subordinate Printer is fronting for a device
that is not networked), the host part of the URI specifies the host
of the parent Printer. Then the parent Printer object can easily
reflect the state of the Subordinate Printer objects in the
parent's Printer object state and state reasons as the operation
passes "through" the parent Printer object.
b. When the Subordinate Printer is networked and the implementation
allows operations to go directly to the Subordinate Printer (with
proper access control) without knowledge of the parent Printer
object, the host part of the URI is different than the host part of
the parent Printer object. In such a case, the parent Printer
object MAY keep its "printer-state" and "printer-state-reasons" up
to date, either by polling the Subordinate Printer object or by
subscribing to events with the Subordinate Printer object (see
[ipp-ntfy] for means to subscribe to event notification when the
Subordinate Printer object supports IPP notification).
Alternatively, the parent Printer MAY wait until its "printer-
state" and "printer-state-reasons" attributes are queried and then
query all its Subordinate Printers in order to return the correct
values.
10.5 Printer object attributes used to represent Output Device Fan-Out
Only Leaf IPP Printer objects are allowed to have one or more
associated Output Devices. Each Leaf Printer object MAY support the
"output-devices-supported" (1setOf name(127)) to indicate the user-
friendly name(s) of the Output Device(s) that the Leaf Printer object
represents. It is RECOMMENDED that each Leaf Printer object have
only one associated Output Device, so that the individual Output
Devices can be represented completely and controlled completely by
clients. In other words, the Leaf Printer's "output-devices-
supported" attribute SHOULD have only one value.
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Non-Leaf Printer MUST NOT have associated Output Devices. However, a
Non-Leaf Printer SHOULD support an "output-devices-supported" (1setOf
name(127)) Printer Description attribute that contains all the values
of its immediate Subordinate Printers. Since such Subordinate
Printers MAY be Leaf or Non-Leaf, the same rules apply to them, etc.
Thus any Non-Leaf Printer SHOULD have an "output-devices-supported"
(1setOf name(127)) attribute that contains all the values of the
Output Devices associated with Leaf Printers of its complete sub-
tree.
When adding, removing, or changing a configuration of Printers and
Output Devices, there can be moments in time when the tree structure
is not consistent. In other words, times when a Non-Leaf Printer's
"subordinate-printers-supported" does not agree with the Subordinate
Printer's "parent-printers-supported". Therefore, the operator
SHOULD first Deactivate all Printers that are being configured in
this way, update all pointer attributes, and then reactivate. A
useful client tool would validate a tree structure before Activating
the Printers involved.
10.6 Figures to show all possible configurations
Figure 1, Figure 2, and Figure 3 are taken from [RFC2911] to show the
configurations possible with IPP/1.0 and IPP/1.1 where all Printer
objects are Leaf Printer objects. The remaining figures show
additional configurations that this document defines using Non-Leaf
and Leaf Printer objects. Legend for all figures:
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----> indicates a network protocol with the direction of its requests
##### indicates a Printer object which is either:
- embedded in an Output Device or
- hosted in a server. The Printer object
might or might not be capable of queuing/spooling.
any indicates any network protocol or direct
connect, including IPP
Output Device
+---------------+
| ########### |
O +--------+ | # (Leaf) # |
/|\ | client |------------IPP-----------------># Printer # |
/ \ +--------+ | # Object # |
| ########### |
+---------------+
Figure 1 - Embedded Printer object
########### Output Device
O +--------+ # (Leaf) # +---------------+
/|\ | client |---IPP----># Printer #---any->| |
/ \ +--------+ # object # | |
########### +---------------+
Figure 2 - Hosted Printer object
+---------------+
| |
+->| Output Device |
########### any/ | |
O +--------+ # (Leaf) # / +---------------+
/|\ | client |---IPP----># Printer #--*
/ \ +--------+ # Object # \ +---------------+
########### any\ | |
+->| Output Device |
| |
+---------------+
Figure 3 - Output Device Fan-Out
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########### ###########
O +--------+ # Non-Leaf# # subord. #
/|\ | client |---IPP----># Printer #---IPP----># Printer #
/ \ +--------+ # object # # object #
########### ###########
The Subordinate Printer can be a Non-Leaf Printer as in Figure 4 to
Figure 6, or can be a Leaf Printer as in Figure 1 to Figure 3.
Figure 4 - Chained IPP Printer Objects
+------IPP--------------------->###########
/ +---># subord. #
/ / # Printer #
/ ########### IPP # object #
O +--------+ # Non-Leaf# / ###########
/|\ | client |---IPP----># Printer #--*
/ \ +--------+ # object # \
\ ########### IPP ###########
\ \ # subord. #
\ +---># Printer #
+------IPP---------------------># object #
###########
The Subordinate Printer can be a Non-Leaf Printer as in Figure 4 to
Figure 6, or can be a Leaf Printer as in Figure 1 to Figure 3.
Figure 5 - IPP Printer Object Fan-Out
###########
# Non-Leaf#
+---># Printer #-+
/ # object # \
IPP ########### \ ###########
O +--------+ / +-IPP-># subord. #
/|\ | client |--+-----------IPP---------------># Printer #
/ \ +--------+ \ +-IPP-># object #
IPP ########### / ###########
\ # Non-Leaf# /
+---># Printer #-+
# object #
###########
The Subordinate Printer can be a Non-Leaf Printer as in Figure 4, to
Figure 6, or can be a Leaf Printer as in Figure 1, to Figure 3.
Figure 6 - IPP Printer Object Fan-In
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10.7 Forwarding requests
This section describes the forwarding of Job and Printer requests to
Subordinate Printer objects.
10.7.1 Forwarding requests that affect Printer objects
In Printer Fan-Out, Printer Fan-In, and Chained Printers, the Non-
Leaf IPP Printer object MUST NOT forward the operations that affect
Printer objects to its Subordinate Printer objects. If a client
wants to explicitly target a Subordinate Printer, the client MUST
specify the URI of the Subordinate Printer. The client can
determine the URI of any Subordinate Printers by querying the
Printer's "subordinate-printers-supported (1setOf uri) attribute (see
section 7.1).
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Table 7 lists the operations that affect Printer objects and the
forwarding behavior that a Non-Leaf Printer MUST exhibit to its
immediate Subordinate Printers. Operations that affect jobs have a
different forwarding rule (see section 10.7.2 and Table 8):
Table 7 - Forwarding operations that affect Printer objects
Printer Operation Non-Leaf Printer action
Printer Operations:
Enable-Printer MUST NOT forward to any of its Subordinate
Printers
Disable-Printer MUST NOT forward to any of its Subordinate
Printers
Hold-New-Jobs MUST NOT forward to any of its Subordinate
Printers
Release-Held-New- MUST NOT forward to any of its Subordinate
Jobs Printers
Deactivate-Printer MUST NOT forward to any of its Subordinate
Printers
Activate-Printer MUST NOT forward to any of its Subordinate
Printers
Restart-Printer MUST NOT forward to any of its Subordinate
Printers
Shutdown-Printer MUST NOT forward to any of its Subordinate
Printers
Startup-Printer MUST NOT forward to any of its Subordinate
Printers
IPP/1.1 Printer See [RFC2911]
Operations:
Get-Printer- MUST NOT forward to any of its Subordinate
Attributes Printers
Pause-Printer MUST NOT forward to any of its Subordinate
Printers
Resume-Printer MUST NOT forward to any of its Subordinate
Printers
Set operations: See [RFC3380]
Set-Printer- MUST NOT forward to any of its Subordinate
Attributes Printers
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10.7.2 Forwarding requests that affect Jobs
Unlike Printer Operations that only affect Printer objects (see
section 10.7.1), a Non-Leaf Printer object MUST forward operations
that directly affect jobs to the appropriate Job object(s) in one or
more of its immediate Subordinate Printer objects. Forwarding is
REQUIRED since the purpose of such a Job operation is to affect the
indicated job which itself may have been forwarded. Such forwarding
MAY be immediate or queued, depending on the operation and the
implementation. For example, a Non-Leaf Printer object MAY
queue/spool jobs, feeding a job at a time to its Subordinate
Printer(s), or MAY forward jobs immediately to one of its Subordinate
Printers. In either case, the Non-Leaf Printer object is forwarding
Job Creation operations to one of its Subordinate Printers. Only the
time of forwarding of the Job Creation operations depends on whether
the policy is to queue/spool jobs in the Non-Leaf Printer or the
Subordinate Printer.
When a Non-Leaf Printer object creates a Job object in its
Subordinate Printer, whether that Non-Leaf Printer object keeps a
fully formed Job object or just keeps a mapping from the "job-ids"
that it assigned to those assigned by its Subordinate Printer object
is IMPLEMENTATION-DEPENDENT. In either case, the Non-Leaf Printer
MUST be able to accept and carry out future Job operations that
specify the "job-id" that the Non-Leaf Printer assigned and returned
to the job submitting client.
Table 8 lists the operations that directly affect jobs and the
forwarding behavior that a Non-Leaf Printer MUST exhibit to its
Subordinate Printers:
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Table 8 - Forwarding operations that affect Jobs objects
Job operation Non-Leaf Printer action
Job operations:
Reprocess-Job MUST forward to the appropriate Job in one of
its Subordinate Printers
Cancel-Current- MUST NOT forward
Job
Resume-Job MUST forward to the appropriate Job in one of
its Subordinate Printers
Promote-Job MUST forward to the appropriate Job in one of
its Subordinate Printers
IPP/1.1 Printer
Operations:
Print-Job MUST forward immediately or queue to the
appropriate Subordinate Printer
Print-URI MUST forward immediately or queue to the
appropriate Subordinate Printer
Validate-Job MUST forward to the appropriate Subordinate
Printer
Create-Job MUST forward immediately or queue to the
appropriate Subordinate Printer
Get-Jobs MUST forward to all its Subordinate Printers
Purge-Jobs MUST forward to all its Subordinate Printers
IPP/1.1 Job
operations:
Send-Document MUST forward immediately or queue to the
appropriate Job in one of its Subordinate
Printers
Send-URI MUST forward immediately or queue to the
appropriate Job in one of its Subordinate
Printers
Cancel-Job MUST forward to the appropriate Job in one of
its Subordinate Printers
Get-Job- MUST forward to the appropriate Job in one of
Attributes its Subordinate Printers, if the Non-Leaf
Printer doesn't know the complete status of the
Job object
Hold-Job MUST forward to the appropriate Job in one of
its Subordinate Printers
Release-Job MUST forward to the appropriate Job in one of
its Subordinate Printers
Restart-Job MUST forward to the appropriate Job in one of
its Subordinate Printers
IPP Set operations: See [RFC3380]
Set-Job- MUST forward to the appropriate Job in one of
Attributes its Subordinate Printers
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When a Printer receives a request that REQUIRES forwarding, it does
so on a "best efforts basis", and returns a response to its client
without waiting for responses from any of its Subordinate Printers.
Such forwarded requests could fail.
10.8 Additional attributes to help with fan-out
The following operation and Job Description attributes are defined to
help represent Job relationships for Fan-Out and forwarding of jobs:
10.8.1 output-device-assigned (name(127)) Job Description attribute -
from [RFC2911]
[RFC2911] defines "output-device-assigned" as: "This attribute
identifies the Output Device to which the Printer object has assigned
this job. If an Output Device implements an embedded Printer object,
the Printer object NEED NOT set this attribute. If a print server
implements a Printer object, the value MAY be empty (zero-length
string) or not returned until the Printer object assigns an Output
Device to the job. This attribute is particularly useful when a
single Printer object supports multiple devices (so called "Device
Fan-Out" see [RFC2911] section 2.1)." See also section 10.1 in this
specification.
10.8.2 original-requesting-user-name (name(MAX)) operation and Job
Description attribute
The operation attribute containing the user name of the original
user, i.e., corresponds to the "requesting-user-name" operation
attribute (see [RFC2911] section 3.2.1.1) that the original client
supplied to the first Printer object. The Printer copies the
"original-requesting-user-name" operation attribute to the
corresponding Job Description attribute.
10.8.3 requesting-user-name (name(MAX)) operation attribute - additional
semantics
The IPP/1.1 "requesting-user-name" operation attribute (see [RFC2911]
section 3.2.1.1) is updated by each client to be itself on each hop,
i.e., the "requesting-user-name" is the client forwarding the
request, not the original client.
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10.8.4 job-originating-user-name (name(MAX)) Job Description attribute -
additional semantics
The "job-originating-user-name" Job Description attribute (see
[RFC2911] section 4.3.6) remains as the authenticated original user,
not the parent Printer's authenticated host, and is forwarded by each
client without changing the value.
11 Conformance Requirements
The Job and Printer Administrative operations defined in this
document are OPTIONAL operations. However, some operations MUST be
implemented if others are implemented as shown in Table 9.
Table 9 - Conformance Requirement Dependencies for Operations
Operations REQUIRED If any of these operations are
supported:
Enable-Printer Disable-Printer
Disable-Printer Enable-Printer
Pause-Printer Resume-Printer
Resume-Printer Pause-Printer,
Pause-Printer-After-Current-Job
Hold-New-Jobs Release-Held-New-Jobs
Release-Held-New-Jobs Hold-New-Jobs
Activate-Printer, Deactivate-Printer
Disable-Printer,
Pause-Printer-After-Current-Job
Deactivate-Printer, Activate-Printer
Enable-Printer,
Resume-Printer
Restart-Printer none
Shutdown-Printer none
Startup-Printer none
Reprocess-Job none
Cancel-Current-Job none
Resume-Job Suspend-Current-Job
Suspend-Current-Job Resume-Job
Promote-Job none
Schedule-Job-After Promote-Job
Table 10 and Table 11 list the "printer-state-reasons" and "job-
state-reasons" values that are REQUIRED if the indicated operations
are supported.
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Table 10- Conformance Requirement Dependencies for "printer-state-
reasons" Values
"printer-state- Conformance If any of the following Printer
reasons" values: Requirement Operations are supported:
'paused' REQUIRED Pause-Printer,
Pause-Printer-After-Current-Job,
or Deactivate-Printer
'hold-new-jobs' REQUIRED Hold-New-Jobs
'moving-to-paused' OPTIONAL Pause-Printer,
Pause-Printer-After-Current-Job,
Deactivate-Printer
'deactivated' REQUIRED Deactivate-Printer
Table 11- Conformance Requirement Dependencies for "job-state-
reasons" Values
"job-state-reasons" Conformance If any of the following Job
values: Requirement operations are supported:
'job-suspended' REQUIRED Suspend-Current-Job
'printer-stopped' REQUIRED always REQUIRED
12 Normative References
[RFC2910]
Herriot, R., Butler, S., Moore, P., Tuner, R., "Internet Printing
Protocol/1.1: Encoding and Transport", RFC 2910, September 2000.
[RFC2911]
R. deBry, T. Hastings, R. Herriot, S. Isaacson, P. Powell,
"Internet Printing Protocol/1.0: Model and Semantics", RFC 2911,
September 2000.
[RFC3380]
Hastings, T., Herriot, R., Kugler, C., and H. Lewis, "Internet
Printing Protocol (IPP): Job and Printer Set Operations", RFC 3380,
September 2002.
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13 Informative References
[ipp-ntfy]
Herriot, R., and T. Hastings, "Internet Printing Protocol/1.1:
Event Notifications and Subscriptions", <draft-ietf-ipp-not-spec-
12.txt>, June 21, 2004.
[RFC2566]
R. deBry, T. Hastings, R. Herriot, S. Isaacson, P. Powell,
"Internet Printing Protocol/1.0: Model and Semantics", RFC 2566,
April 1999.
[RFC3196]
Hastings, T., Manros, C., Zehler, P., Kugler, C., and H. Holst,
"Internet Printing Protocol/1.1: Implementer's Guide", RFC 3196,
November 2001.
[RFC3239]
Kugler, C., Lewis, H., and T. Hastings, "Internet Printing Protocol
(IPP): Requirements for Job, Printer, and Device Administrative
Operations", RFC 3239, February 2002.
Change History of this document is available at:
ftp://ftp.pwg.org/pub/pwg/ipp/new_OPS/ipp-ops-set2-change-
history.txt
14 IANA Considerations
This section contains the registration information for IANA to add to
the IPP Registry according to the procedures defined in RFC 2911
[RFC2911] section 6 to cover the definitions in this document. The
resulting registrations will be published as additions to the
http://www.iana.org/assignments/ipp-registrations file.
Note to RFC Editors: Replace [RFCnnnn] below with the RFC number
for this document, so that it accurately reflects the content of the
information for the IANA Registry.
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14.1 Attribute Registrations
The following table lists all the attributes defined in this
document. These are to be registered according to the procedures in
RFC 2911 [RFC2911] section 6.2.
Name Reference Section
-------------------------------------- --------- -------
Job Description attributes:
original-requesting-user-name (name(MAX)) [RFCnnnn] 10.8.2
Printer Description attributes:
subordinate-printers-supported (1setOf uri) [RFCnnnn] 7.1
parent-printers-supported (1setOf uri) [RFCnnnn] 7.2
Operation attributes:
original-requesting-user-name (name(MAX)) [RFCnnnn] 10.8.2
14.2 Attribute Value Registrations
This section lists the additional values that are defined in this
document for existing attributes.
Attribute
Value Reference Section
--------------------- --------- -------
job-state-reasons (1setOf type2 keyword)
job-suspended [RFCnnnn] 9.1
printer-state-reasons (1setOf type2 keyword)
hold-new-jobs [RFCnnnn] 8.1
deactivated [RFCnnnn] 8.2
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14.3 Additional Enum Attribute Value Registrations
The following table lists all the new enum attribute values defined
in this document. These are to be registered according to the
procedures in RFC 2911 [RFC2911] section 6.1.
Attribute (attribute syntax)
Value Name Reference Section
----- -------------------- --------- -------
operations-supported (1setOf type2 enum) [RFC2911] 4.4.1
0x0022 Enable-Printer [RFCnnnn] 3
0x0023 Disable-Printer [RFCnnnn] 3
0x0024 Pause-Printer-After-Current-Job [RFCnnnn] 3
0x0025 Hold-New-Jobs [RFCnnnn] 3
0x0026 Release-Held-New-Jobs [RFCnnnn] 3
0x0027 Deactivate-Printer [RFCnnnn] 3
0x0028 Activate-Printer [RFCnnnn] 3
0x0029 Restart-Printer [RFCnnnn] 3
0x002A Shutdown-Printer [RFCnnnn] 3
0x002B Startup-Printer [RFCnnnn] 3
0x002C Reprocess-Job [RFCnnnn] 4
0x002D Cancel-Current-Job [RFCnnnn] 4
0x002E Suspend-Current-Job [RFCnnnn] 4
0x002F Resume-Job [RFCnnnn] 4
0x0030 Promote-Job [RFCnnnn] 4
0x0031 Schedule-Job-After [RFCnnnn] 4
14.4 Operation Registrations
The following table lists all of the operations defined in this
document. These are to be registered according to the procedures in
RFC 2911 [RFC2911] section 6.4.
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Name Reference Section
----------------------------- --------- -------
Activate-Printer [RFCnnnn] 3.4.2
Cancel-Current-Job [RFCnnnn] 4.2
Deactivate-Printer [RFCnnnn] 3.4.1
Disable-Printer [RFCnnnn] 3.1.1
Enable-Printer [RFCnnnn] 3.1.2
Hold-New-Jobs [RFCnnnn] 3.3.1
Pause-Printer-After-Current-Job [RFCnnnn] 3.2.1
Promote-Job [RFCnnnn] 4.4.1
Release-Held-New-Jobs [RFCnnnn] 3.3.2
Reprocess-Job [RFCnnnn] 4.1
Restart-Printer [RFCnnnn] 3.5.1
Resume-Job [RFCnnnn] 4.3.2
Schedule-Job-After [RFCnnnn] 4.4.2
Shutdown-Printer [RFCnnnn] 3.5.2
Startup-Printer [RFCnnnn] 3.5.3
Suspend-Current-Job [RFCnnnn] 4.3.1
14.5 Status code Registrations
The following table lists the status code defined in this document.
This is to be registered according to the procedures in RFC 2911
[RFC2911] section 6.6.
Value Name Reference Section
------ ------------------------ --------- -------
0x0000:0x00FF - "successful"
none at this time
0x0100:0x01FF - "informational"
none at this time
0x0300:0x03FF - "redirection" - -- See RFC 2911 Errata
none at this time
0x0400:0x04FF - "client-error"
none at this time
0x0500:0x05FF - "server-error"
0x050A server-error-printer-is-deactivated [RFCnnnn] 5.1
15 Internationalization Considerations
This document has the same localization considerations as the
[RFC2911].
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16 Security Considerations
The IPP Model and Semantics document [RFC2911] discusses high level
security requirements (Client Authentication, Server Authentication
and Operation Privacy). Client Authentication is the mechanism by
which the client proves its identity to the server in a secure
manner. Server Authentication is the mechanism by which the server
proves its identity to the client in a secure manner. Operation
Privacy is defined as a mechanism for protecting operations from
eavesdropping.
Printer operations defined in this specification (see section 3) and
Pause-Printer, Resume-Printer, and Purge-Job (defined in [RFC2911])
are intended for use by an operator and/or administrator. Job
operations defined in this specification (see section 4) and Cancel-
Job, Hold-Job, Release-Job defined in [RFC2911]) are intended for use
by the job owner or may be an operator or administrator of the
Printer object. These operator and administrative operations affect
the service of all users. In appropriate use of an administrative
operation by an un-authenticated end user could affect the quality of
service for all users. Therefore, for both inter-net and intra-net,
conformance to this specification REQUIRES that initial configuration
of IPP Printer implementations MUST require successful certificate-
based TLS [RFC2246] client authentication and successful operator and
administrator authorization (see [RFC2911] sections 5.2.7 and 8 and
[RFC2910]) for any administrative operations defined in this
document. [RFC2910] REQUIRES the IPP Printer to support the minimum
cypher suite required for TLS/1.0. The means for authorizing an
operator or administrator of the Printer object are outside the scope
of this specification, [RFC2911], and [RFC2910].
The use of TLS and Client Authentication solves the Denial of
Service, Man in the Middle, and Masquerading security threats.
17 Author's Addresses
Carl Kugler
P.O. Box 1900
IBM
Boulder CO 80301-9191
Phone: (303) 924-5060
FAX:
e-mail: kugler@us.ibm.com
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Tom Hastings, editor
Xerox Corporation
701 Aviation Blvd. ESAE 231
El Segundo, CA 90245
Phone: 310-333-6413
Fax: 310-333-5514
e-mail: hastings@cp10.es.xerox.com
Harry Lewis
P.O. Box 1900
IBM
Boulder CO 80301-9191
Phone: (303) 924-5337
FAX:
e-mail: harryl@us.ibm.com
18 IPR Notice
The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any
Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to
pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in
this document or the extent to which any license under such rights
might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has
made any independent effort to identify any such rights. Information
on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be
found in BCP 78 and BCP 79.
Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any
assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an
attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of
such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this
specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository at
http://www.ietf.org/ipr.
The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any
copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary
rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement
this standard. Please address the information to the IETF at ietf-
ipr@ietf.org."
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19 Summary of Base IPP Documents
The base set of IPP documents includes:
Design Goals for an Internet Printing Protocol [RFC2567]
Rationale for the Structure and Model and Protocol for the Internet
Printing Protocol [RFC2568]
Internet Printing Protocol/1.1: Model and Semantics [RFC2911]
Internet Printing Protocol/1.1: Encoding and Transport [RFC2910]
Internet Printing Protocol/1.1: Implementer's Guide [RFC3196]
Mapping between LPD and IPP Protocols [RFC2569]
The "Design Goals for an Internet Printing Protocol" document takes a
broad look at distributed printing functionality, and it enumerates
real-life scenarios that help to clarify the features that need to be
included in a printing protocol for the Internet. It identifies
requirements for three types of users: end users, operators, and
administrators. It calls out a subset of end user requirements that
are satisfied in IPP/1.0. A few OPTIONAL operator operations have
been added to IPP/1.1.
The "Rationale for the Structure and Model and Protocol for the
Internet Printing Protocol" document describes IPP from a high level
view, defines a roadmap for the various documents that form the suite
of IPP specification documents, and gives background and rationale
for the IETF working group's major decisions.
The "Internet Printing Protocol/1.1: Model and Semantics" document
describes a simplified model with abstract objects, their attributes,
and their operations that are independent of encoding and transport.
It introduces a Printer and a Job object. The Job object optionally
supports multiple documents per Job. It also addresses security,
internationalization, and directory issues.
The "Internet Printing Protocol/1.1: Encoding and Transport" document
is a formal mapping of the abstract operations and attributes defined
in the model document onto HTTP/1.1 [RFC2616]. It defines the
encoding rules for a new Internet MIME media type called
"application/ipp". This document also defines the rules for
transporting over HTTP a message body whose Content-Type is
"application/ipp". This document defines the 'ippget' scheme for
identifying IPP printers and jobs.
The "Internet Printing Protocol/1.1: Implementer's Guide" document
gives insight and advice to implementers of IPP clients and IPP
objects. It is intended to help them understand IPP/1.1 and some of
the considerations that may assist them in the design of their client
and/or IPP object implementations. For example, a typical order of
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processing requests is given, including error checking. Motivation
for some of the specification decisions is also included.
The "Mapping between LPD and IPP Protocols" document gives some
advice to implementers of gateways between IPP and LPD (Line Printer
Daemon) implementations.
20 Full Copyright Statement
Copyright (C) The Internet Society
(1998,1999,2000,2001,2002,2003,2004). All Rights Reserved
This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this
document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
English.
The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.
This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
"AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
Acknowledgement
Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
Internet Society.
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