On Tue, Mar 6, 2012 at 2:46 PM, Nils Philippsen <nils@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Mon, 2012-03-05 at 12:02 -0500, Bill Nottingham wrote: >> Tim Waugh (twaugh@xxxxxxxxxx) said: >> > For things like cloud printing, where the print server is a hosted >> > service somewhere out in the Internet, I think the applications should >> > be talking directly to it (via the print dialog). >> > >> > For a plain network printer, where the printer might not be able to >> > accept the job while it's busy processing others, you might have to >> > queue the job and retry it later. So if you are doing that as a user >> > process, how should that work when you log out, and when the machine is >> > restarted? >> >> It waits until you log in again. > > I wonder if that works with longer print jobs: > > - User: "I'll kick that one off before the weekend, it might take a > while, so that I won't disturb others." > - (User's) cupsd: queues the job in user's home, starts printing onto > the printer. > - User logs off after 15 pages of 300 are printed. > - systemd kills off all processes in user session cgroup, including > cupsd. > - User: "Aiiieh!", heads off into the weekend as he has to catch a bus, > forgets about it. > - User returns after the weekend, logs in again, cupsd picks up the > still queued print job from user's home, starts printing the remaining > 285 pages. This requires: * A network printer * ... that has a 300page paper tray, so it is clearly an industrial one * ... but does not have a separate print queue * an user that starts a print job and leaves? I don't know how much that is likely. In any case, the per-user cupsd could stay running after the user logs off until the queue is empty - then there should be no discernible difference between the system queue and per-user queue until the system reboots (when it reboots, the per-user cupsd probably wouldn't start and continue processing the job again - although that could be arranged as well). Mirek -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel