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1# $Id$
2
3PyKota - Print Quota for CUPS
4
5(c) 2003 Jerome Alet <alet@librelogiciel.com>
6This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
7it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
8the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
9(at your option) any later version.
10
11This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
12but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
13MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
14GNU General Public License for more details.
15
16You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
17along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
18Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
19
20====================================================================
21
22READ SPECIAL LICENSING AND REDISTRBUTION TERMS IN THE FILE 'LICENSE'
23
24====================================================================
25
26PyKota is a complete Print Quota system for the Common Unix Printing
27System (aka CUPS), which works by directly querying the printers
28for the number of pages they have printed.
29
30Actual working features :
31
32        - Per printer user quotas.
33       
34        - Automated email warning of users above quota to the
35          user himself and to the print quota administrator.
36       
37        - CUPS filter for quota accounting : pykota
38       
39        - Command line print quota editor : edpykota
40       
41        - Command line print quota report generator : repykota
42       
43        - Command line print quota automated warning sender : warnpykota
44       
45        - Command line tools mimic the disk quota utilities for
46          easier mastering.
47       
48        - Centralized storage of quotas : you can manage quotas for
49          different printers on different print servers and store them all
50          on the same quota storage server.
51          WARNING : actually all your printers must have an unique name,
52                    but this may change in a future version.
53                   
54        - SNMP querying of any networked SNMP-enabled printer.
55       
56        - External command querying of any printer : you can use
57          you own querying command, e.g. to query a printer via
58          the serial port, sending it a special PJL job and
59          reading the result. See the example scripts in the
60          "untested" directory and try to adapt them to your
61          configuration.
62       
63        - Special scripts included for a seamless integration of
64          PyKota on Debian machines.
65         
66All the command line tools accept the -h | --help command line option
67which prints all the available options and show usage examples.
68       
69Planned features are described in the TODO file.
70
71Actually only the lazy quota method is implemented. What do I call
72lazy method ?
73
74  The lazy method consists in querying the printer (actually via SNMP)
75  for its total pages counter, just before the beginning of a job, and
76  use this to modify the *preceding* user's quota. So you're
77  always late of one print job, but this is generally ok, especially
78  because a check is also done to see if the current user is allowed
79  or not to print.
80 
81  Problem may theorically arise in batches of successive print jobs by
82  different users when there's no sleep time between two jobs : the
83  used pages may theorically be attributed to an incorrect user in the
84  case that the printer is asked for its page counter at the beginning
85  of a new job and before the end of the previous job. This depends on
86  the printer speed and time between jobs, but so far I've not seen
87  any problem with moderately used printers. This also depends on CUPS
88  internal behavior : if CUPS doesn't begin to send a job to a printer
89  before the previous one is completely printed, then there's no
90  problem.
91 
92  Other querying methods which won't suffer from this possible
93  problem, but probably from other ones ;-) will be implemented in the
94  future.
95 
96PyKota is known to work fine with HP Laserjet 2100 and 2200   
97networked printers, and should work with any SNMP-enabled
98network printer capable of outputing its lifetime printed pages
99number.
100
101If your printers don't support SNMP, then making them work with
102PyKota is up to you. Some sample scripts which can query non-SNMP
103printers for their lifetime page counter are included in the
104./untested directory. You'll have to test and adapt them though, and
105define them as external requesters in the PyKota configuration file.
106
107============================================================
108
109INSTALLATION:
110=============
111
112Prerequisite :
113--------------
114   
115  You need to have the following tools installed on the CUPS Server :
116 
117    - CUPS
118    - Python v2.1 or above
119    - eGenix' mxDateTime Python extension
120    - PostgreSQL's PygreSQL Python extension and the PostgreSQL client
121      libraries.
122    - SNMP tools (specifically the snmpget command)
123   
124  You need to have the following tools installed on the Quota Storage 
125  Server :
126 
127    - PostgreSQL
128   
129  PygreSQL and the PostgreSQL client libraries's versions on the CUPS
130  Server must match the PostgreSQL version used on the Quota Storage
131  Server.
132 
133  This list of prerequisite software may change in the future, when
134  PyKota will support more functionnalities you will be given
135  alternatives.
136 
137  Of course the CUPS Server and the Quota Storage Server can be the
138  very same machine if you've got a tiny network, or you can have
139  multiple CUPS Servers all storing their quotas on the same Quota
140  Storage Server if you've got a bigger network.
141 
142Then :   
143------
144 
145Download the latest PyKota version from the CVS tree on :
146
147    http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/pykota
148
149Just type :
150
151    python setup.py install
152
153You may need to be logged in with sufficient privileges (e.g. root)
154
155The installation script will now automatically check if some software
156is missing and ask you if you still want to proceed with the
157installation or abort it completely.
158
159Go to the initscripts subdirectory of PyKota's sources, and choose
160the appropriate storage backend for your configuration. Read
161the associated README file and execute the initialization script
162to create an empty PyKota Storage. Upgrade scripts may be
163provided as well.
164
165Copy the conf/pykota.conf.sample sample configuration file to
166/etc/pykota.conf, and adapt this file to your own needs and
167configuration.
168
169Modify the PPD files for each printer on which you want to manage
170print quotas, for example /etc/cups/ppd/lp.ppd :
171
172--- Add the line below exactly as-is somewhere near the top ---
173*cupsFilter:  "application/vnd.cups-postscript 0 /usr/bin/pykota"
174--- Add the line above exactly as-is somewhere near the top  ---
175
176Modify the path to the pykota executable if needed, unfortunately
177you have to supply the correct absolute path here due to CUPS
178internals, or put the pykota executable into /usr/lib/cups/filter
179instead of into /usr/bin.
180
181Do this for each ppd file present in this directory if you want
182to enable quota on every printer.
183         
184WARNING : In the case you've got a non-postscript printer, chances
185          are that the *cupsFilter is already filled-in and points
186          to cupsomatic or such a print filter. In this case please
187          check if you can switch your printer to PostScript mode
188          or if there's a way to make it accept PostScript jobs.
189          If yes then ensure that your workstations uses a PostScript
190          printer driver, and replace the *cupsFilter line with the
191          one pointing to the pykota filter. This should work, but
192          is currently untested.
193          If your printer really needs the original *cupsFilter line
194          then you may not be able to use PyKota easily for now.
195
196Add printers and users to the quota system and set their quota values :
197
198    $ edpykota --add -P printer -S softlimit -H hardlimit user1 ... userN
199       
200    launching edpykota without any argument or with the --help
201    command line option will show you all the possibilities.
202
203Restart CUPS, for example under Debian GNU/Linux systems :         
204
205    $ /etc/init.d/cupsys restart
206       
207Your users now should be able to print but not exceed their
208printing quota.
209
210To see printer command usage, you can use :
211
212    $ repykota --printer lp
213   
214or :
215
216    $ repykota
217   
218    which will print quota usage for all users on all printers,
219    along with totals.
220   
221WARNING : as of today, 2003-02-06, group quotas are not
222implemented.
223
224SECURITY : You should ensure that only the print quota administrator
225           can run the warnpykota command, but this is actually not
226           enforced in the program. Any user able to launch warnpykota
227           could flood over-quota users' email boxes.
228           
229           You should ensure that only the print quota administrator
230           can run the edpykota command, but this is actually not
231           enforced in the program. Otherwise, any user could modify
232           his/her or other people's print quota.
233         
234           launching : chmod 750 /usr/bin/warnpykota /usr/bin/edpykota
235           should make you reasonably safe.
236           
237Test.           
238============================================================
239
240Please e-mail bugs to: alet@librelogiciel.com (Jerome Alet)
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