root / pykota / trunk / conf / pykota.conf.sample @ 2233

Revision 2217, 32.8 kB (checked in by jerome, 20 years ago)

The job-billing info is now saved into the database if present.

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1# PyKota sample configuration file
2#
3#
4# File format :
5#
6#   - A mandatory [global] section :
7#
8#     Contains configuration directives which apply for all printers.
9#     Some directives MUST be set in the [global] section, e.g.
10#     database related directives.
11#
12#   - Any number of optional [PrintQueueName] sections :
13#
14#     Contain directives which apply for a particular print queue only.
15#
16#     Override the values of the same directives present in [global].
17#
18#
19# Directives format :
20#
21#   - Directive's name, followed by ':' followed by the directive's value.
22#
23#   - No leading whitespace : leading whitespace tell the parser that the
24#     current directive is the continuation of the previous one. Use with
25#     care and only when you need it.
26#
27#
28# PyKota - Print Quotas for CUPS and LPRng
29#
30# (c) 2003, 2004, 2005 Jerome Alet <alet@librelogiciel.com>
31# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
32# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
33# the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
34# (at your option) any later version.
35#
36# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
37# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
38# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
39# GNU General Public License for more details.
40#
41# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
42# along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
43# Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
44#
45# $Id$
46#
47
48[global]
49# Storage backend for quotas
50# only PGStorage (PostgreSQL) and LDAPStorage (OpenLDAP) are supported.
51# MySQL and BerkeleyDB are planned.
52
53# the 'postgresql' value is deprecated, use 'pgstorage' instead.
54storagebackend: pgstorage
55
56# Quota Storage Server hostname (and optional port)
57# e.g. db.example.com:5432
58storageserver: localhost
59
60#
61# name of the Quota Storage Database
62storagename: pykota
63
64#
65# Quota Storage normal user's name and password
66# These two fields contain a username and optional password
67# which may give readonly access to your print quota database.
68#
69# PLEASE ENSURE THAT THIS USER CAN'T WRITE TO YOUR PRINT QUOTA
70# DATABASE, OTHERWISE ANY USER WHO COULD READ THIS CONFIGURATION
71# FILE COULD CHANGE HIS PRINT QUOTA.
72#
73storageuser: pykotauser
74# storageuserpw: Comment out if unused, or set to Quota Storage user password
75
76# Should the database caching mechanism be enabled or not ?
77# If unset, caching is disabled. Possible values Y/N/YES/NO
78# caching mechanism works with both PostgreSQL and OpenLDAP backends
79# but may be really interesting only with OpenLDAP.
80#
81# ACTIVATING CACHE MAY CAUSE PRECISION PROBLEMS IN PRINT ACCOUNTING
82# IF AN USER PRINTS ON SEVERAL PRINTERS AT THE SAME TIME.
83# YOU MAY FIND IT INTERESTING ANYWAY, ESPECIALLY FOR LDAP.
84#
85# FYI, I ALWAYS SET IT TO YES !
86#
87storagecaching: No
88
89# Should full job history be disabled ?
90# If unset or set to No, full job history is kept in the database.
91# This will be useful in the future when the report generator
92# will be written.
93# Disabling the job history can be useful with heavily loaded
94# LDAP servers, to not make the LDAP tree grow out of control.
95# Disabling the job history with the PostgreSQL backend works too
96# but it's probably less useful than with LDAP.
97disablehistory: No
98
99# LDAP example, uncomment and adapt it to your own configuration :
100#storagebackend: ldapstorage
101#storageserver: ldap://ldap.librelogiciel.com:389
102#storagename: dc=librelogiciel,dc=com
103#storageuser: cn=notadmin,dc=librelogiciel,dc=com
104#storageuserpw: abc.123
105#
106# TLS support for LDAP
107#
108# ldaptls can be set to either Yes or No
109# the default value when not set is No, meaning that TLS won't be used.
110#ldaptls: No
111#
112# cacert points to the CA Certificate file to use for TLS.
113# Ensure that every user who can launch PyKota commands can read this file.
114# There's NO default value for this directive.
115#cacert /etc/pykota/mycertfile
116#
117#
118# Here we define some helpers to know where
119# to plug into an existing LDAP directory
120#userbase: ou=People,dc=librelogiciel,dc=com
121#userrdn: uid
122#balancebase: ou=People,dc=librelogiciel,dc=com
123#balancerdn: uid
124#groupbase: ou=Groups,dc=librelogiciel,dc=com
125#grouprdn: cn
126#printerbase: ou=Printers,ou=PyKota,dc=librelogiciel,dc=com
127#printerrdn: cn
128#jobbase: ou=Jobs,ou=PyKota,dc=librelogiciel,dc=com
129#lastjobbase: ou=LastJobs,ou=PyKota,dc=librelogiciel,dc=com
130
131# These two fields are special, they either accept a branch
132# dn, like an ou for example, or the special keywords 'user'
133# and 'group'. If 'user' or 'group' is used, the print quota
134# entries will be created below the user or group entry itself,
135# which will then be used like a branch (you can mix and match
136# different values depending on what you want to do).
137#userquotabase: user
138#userquotabase: ou=UQuotas,ou=PyKota,dc=librelogiciel,dc=com
139#groupquotabase: group
140#groupquotabase: ou=GQuotas,ou=PyKota,dc=librelogiciel,dc=com
141
142#
143# How to create new accounts and groups
144# authorized values are "below" and "attach(objectclass name [, fail|warn])"
145#
146# "below" creates the new accounts/groups as standalone entries
147# below the above defined 'userbase' ou
148#
149# attach(objectclass name [, action]) tries to find some existing user/group
150# using the above defined 'userrdn' or 'grouprdn' and 'userbase'
151# 'groupbase', and attach the PyKota specific entries to it.
152# if action is "warn" and no entry exists to attach to, a new
153# entry is created, and a message is logged.
154# if action is "fail" and no entry exists to attach to, program
155# logs an error message and aborts.
156# if action is not set, the default value is "fail".
157#
158# a possible value:  newuser: attach(posixAccount, warn)
159#newuser : below
160#newgroup : below
161#
162# LDAP attribute which stores the user's email address
163#usermail : mail
164
165#
166# Choose what attribute contains the list of group members
167# common values are : memberUid, uniqueMember, member
168#groupmembers: memberUid
169
170# Activate low-level LDAP cache yes/no
171# Nothing to do with "storagecaching" which is higher level
172# and database independant.
173# This saves some search queries and may help with heavily
174# loaded LDAP servers.
175# This is EXPERIMENTAL.
176#
177# BEWARE : SETTING THIS TO 'YES' CAUSES PROBLEMS FOR NOW
178# BETTER TO LET IT SET TO 'NO'
179# ldapcache: no
180
181# Where to log ?
182# supported values : stderr, system (system means syslog, but don't use 'syslog' here)
183# if the value is not set then the default SYSTEM applies.
184logger: system
185
186# Enable debugging ? Put YES or NO there.
187# debug is set to yes in this sample
188# configuration file, so debugging is activated
189# when configuring PyKota. After all works, just
190# put NO instead to save some disk space in your
191# logs.
192debug : Yes
193
194# Mail server to use to warn users
195# If the value is not set then localhost is used.
196smtpserver: localhost
197
198# Crash messages' recipient : in addition to the log files
199# each software crash can be sent to the author of PyKota
200# or any other person of your choice. By default this
201# is disabled. The recipient pykotacrashed@librelogiciel.com
202# reaches PyKota's author.
203# The 'adminmail' (defined a bit below) is CCed.
204#
205# Privacy concerns : what is sent is only :
206#
207#        - a copy of the software's traceback
208#        - a copy of the software's command line arguments
209#        - a copy of the software's environment variables
210#
211# suggested value
212# crashrecipient: pykotacrashed@librelogiciel.com
213
214# Email domain
215# If the value is not set, and the mail attribute for the user
216# is not set in the PyKota storage, be it LDAP (see usermail directive
217# above) or PostgreSQL, then email messages are sent to
218# username@smtpserver
219#
220# If the value is set, then email messages are sent to
221# username@maildomain using the SMTP server defined above
222#
223# Set the appropriate value below, example.com set as per RFC2606.
224maildomain: example.com
225
226# Should we force usernames to be all lowercase when printing ?
227# Default is No.
228# This is a global option only.
229# Some people reported that WinXP sends mixed case usernames
230# setting 'utolower: Yes' solves the problem.
231# Of course you have to use lowercase only when adding
232# users with edpykota, because ALL database accesses are
233# still case sensitive.
234#
235# If utolower is Yes, the usernames received from the printing
236# system is converted to lowercase at the start of the cupspykota
237# backend or of the lprngpykota filter.
238#
239# If utolower is No, which is the default, strict case checking
240# is done, this means that users 'Jerome' and 'jerome' are
241# different. Printer and groups names are ALWAYS case sensitive.
242utolower: No
243
244# Should we split usernames on a specific separator when printing ?
245# Default is No, i.e. if the value is unset.
246# This is a global option only.
247# This option adds support for Samba's Winbind utility, which
248# prefixes usernames with domain name and separator character.
249# Of course if you set this then you have to use NO separator when
250# adding users with edpykota.
251#
252# If winbind_separator is set, the usernames received from the printing
253# system are split on the separator's value, and only the last part
254# (real username) is used.
255#
256# If winbind_separator is not set, which is the default, strict
257# username equality checking will be done (modulo the setting
258# of the 'utolower' directive), this means that users 'DOMAIN1/jerome',
259# 'Domain2/jerome' and 'jerome' are different.
260# winbind_separator: /
261
262# When creating users or groups accounts, should we reject users
263# or groups which are unknown from the system ?
264# The default if unset is NO. This means that by default, you
265# can create users or groups for which `getent passwd username`
266# or `getent group groupname` returns nothing.
267#
268# Allowed values : Yes | No
269# Default value : No
270#
271# reject_unknown: No
272
273# Do we want to hide jobs' title, filename and options for privacy
274# reasons ?
275# This may be required in some countries (Italy comes to mind).
276# Allowed values are YES and NO.
277# If unset, the default value is NO, meaning that jobs' title, filename
278# and options will be saved into the history.
279# This option can't be set on a per printer basis, only into the
280# [global] section.
281privacy : no
282
283# What is the accounting backend to use
284#
285# supported values :
286#
287#    - hardware : asks the printer for its lifetime page counter
288#                 via either SNMP, AppleTalk, or any external
289#                 command. This method is the recommended one
290#                 in PyKota since its beginning.
291#
292#                 In the lines below "%(printer)s" is automatically replaced
293#                 at run time with your printer's Fully Qualified Domain Name
294#                 for network printers, if PyKota can extract it from its
295#                 environment.
296#                 e.g. myprinter.example.com
297#
298#         Recommended values :
299#
300#             accounter: hardware(snmp)
301#
302#               Extracts the printer's internal page counter via SNMP.
303#
304#         Or :
305#
306#             accounter: hardware(pjl)
307#
308#               Extracts the printer's internal page counter via PJL queries over port tcp/9100.
309#
310#         Other Examples :
311#         
312#             accounter: hardware(/usr/bin/snmpget -v1 -c public -Ov %(printer)s mib-2.43.10.2.1.4.1.1 | cut -f 2,2 -d " ")
313#         
314#         Another untested example, using npadmin :
315#         
316#             accounter: hardware(/usr/bin/npadmin --pagecount %(printer)s)
317#         
318#         Another example, for AppleTalk printers which works fine :
319#         (You may need the pap CUPS backend installed, and copy the
320#         pagecount.ps file from untested/netatalk into /etc or any
321#         appropriate location)
322#         
323#             accounter: hardware(/usr/share/pykota/papwaitprinter.sh "MyPrinter:LaserWriter@*" && /usr/bin/pap -p "MyPrinter:LaserWriter@*" /usr/share/pykota/pagecount.ps  2>/dev/null | /bin/grep -v status | /bin/grep -v Connect | /usr/bin/tail -1)
324#         
325#         An example for parallel printers like the HP Laserjet 5MP :
326#         
327#             accounter: hardware(/bin/cat /usr/share/pykota/pagecount.pjl >/dev/lp0 && /usr/bin/head -2 </dev/lp0 | /usr/bin/tail -1)
328#         
329#         This value can be set either globally or per printer or both.
330#         If both are defined, the printer option has priority.
331#         
332#         Some examples and comments provided by Bob Martel from csuohio.edu
333#         
334#         For several printers I could not get the page count using snmpget.  I
335#         resorted to snmpwalk:
336#         
337#             accounter: hardware(/opt/local/net-snmp/bin/snmpwalk -v 1 -Cc -c public %(printer)s | grep mib-2.43.10.2.1.4.1.1 | cut -d " " -f4)
338#         
339#         The last example is still more ugly, some of the printers only provided
340#         their counters without names, but at least always on the same line:
341#         
342#             accounter: hardware(/opt/local/net-snmp/bin/snmpwalk -v 1 -Cc -c public -Ov %(printer)s | grep Counter32 | tail -2 | head -1 | cut -d " " -f2)
343#         
344#         An example using netcat and a preformatted PJL job which you can find
345#         in the untested/pjl directory, which is sent to a JetDirect print
346#         server on port 9100 :
347#         
348#             accounter: hardware(/bin/nc -w 2 %(printer)s 9100 </usr/share/pykota/pagecount.pjl | /usr/bin/tail -2)
349#         
350#         An example using the contributed pagecount.pl script which does
351#         the same as above, but should work on more printers :
352#         
353#             accounter: hardware(LC_ALL=C /usr/share/pykota/pagecount.pl %(printer)s 9100)
354#         
355#         NB : the LC_ALL=C is used because sometimes Perl can correctly set locale and is verbose
356#              about it, causing PyKota to miss the correct answer.
357#
358#         WARNING : In any case, when using an hardware accounter, please test the command line outside
359#                   of PyKota before. This will save you some headaches in case it doesn't work as expected.
360#         
361#         The waitprinter.sh is there to wait until the printer is idle again.
362#         This should prevent a job to be sent to the printer while another one is
363#         not yet finished (not all pages are printed, but the complete job is in
364#         the printer)
365#         
366#   YOU ABSOLUTELY HAVE TO BE SURE YOU HAVE A SCRIPT WHICH WAITS FOR THE
367#   PRINTER BEING READY BEFORE ASKING FOR ITS INTERNAL PAGE COUNTER.
368#         
369#   PYKOTA INCLUDES SUCH SCRIPTS FOR SNMP AND APPLETALK PRINTERS, MORE TO COME
370#
371#   SOME OF THE ABOVE EXAMPLES DON'T USE SUCH A SCRIPT, YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED
372#
373#
374#   WITH THE SPECIAL MAGIC hardware(snmp) AND hardware(pjl) VALUES, PYKOTA
375#   TAKES CARE OF ALL THIS FOR YOU, SO PLEASE UNDERSTAND THAT IT IS PREFERABLE
376#   TO USE THESE TWO METHODS : THEY WORK FINE, REQUIRE LITTLE TO NO CPU,
377#   AND DO ALL THE HARD WORK AUTOMATICALLY. IF YOU REALLY NEED TO YOU CAN USE
378#   YOUR OWN EXTERNAL COMMANDS AS DESCRIBED ABOVE, JUST BE CAREFUL WITH THIS.
379#         
380#
381#    - software : delegates the job's size computation to any
382#                 external command of your choice.
383#
384#                 best choice for this is probably to set it
385#                 this way :
386#
387#                   accounter: software()
388#
389#                 which uses PyKota's internal parser to compute
390#                 the size of the job.
391#
392#                 You could obtain exactly the same result with :
393#
394#                   accounter: software(/usr/bin/pkpgcounter)
395#
396#                 But in this case the job would be passed through
397#                 PyKota's internal parser a second time.
398#
399#                 pkpgcounter is a command line tool which is
400#                 part of PyKota and which can handle both
401#                 DSC compliant or binary PostScript, PCL5, PCL6 (aka PCLXL)
402#                 and PDF documents. More file formats will be added
403#                 in the future, as time permits.
404#
405#                 while pkpgcounter is the recommended value if you want
406#                 to use an external command here, you can use whatever
407#                 command you want provided your command accepts the job's
408#                 data on its standard input and prints the job's size in
409#                 pages as a single integer on its standard output.
410#
411# This value can be set either globally or on a per printer basis
412# If both are defined, the printer option has priority.
413#
414# accounter: hardware(/usr/share/pykota/waitprinter.sh %(printer)s && /usr/bin/snmpget -v1 -c public -Ov %(printer)s mib-2.43.10.2.1.4.1.1 | cut -f 2,2 -d " ")
415# accounter: hardware(snmp)
416# accounter: hardware(pjl)
417# accounter: software(/usr/bin/pkpgcounter)
418#
419# The following is only allowed since PyKota 1.21
420accounter: software()
421
422# What should we do if the accounter's subprocess doesn't return
423# a valid result (for example doesn't return an integer on its stdout)
424#
425# Valid values are : 'continue' and 'stop'. 'stop' is the default
426# if unset.
427#
428# 'continue' means try to process as usual, this may introduce
429# accounting errors and free jobs. This was the default behavior
430# until v1.20alpha5.
431#
432# 'stop' means fail and stop the print queue. If an accounter
433# error occurs, most of the time this is a misconfiguration, so
434# stopping the print queue is usually the better thing to do
435# until the admin has fixed the configuration.
436#
437# This value can be set either globally or on a per printer basis
438# If both are defined, the printer option has priority.
439#
440# NB : This directive shouldn't do much now because in case
441# of external accounter error, PyKota just loops.
442#
443# onaccountererror: continue
444onaccountererror: stop
445
446# Print Quota administrator
447# These values can be set either globally or per printer or both.
448# If both are defined, the printer option has priority.
449# If these values are not set, the default admin root
450# and the default adminmail root@localhost are used.
451admin: John Doe
452adminmail: root@localhost
453
454#
455# Who should we send an email to in case a quota is reached ?
456# possible values are : DevNull, User, Admin, Both, External(some command)
457# The Both value means that the User and the Admin will receive
458# an email message.
459# The DevNull value means no email message will be sent.
460# This value can be set either globally or per printer or both.
461# If both are defined, the printer option has priority.
462# If the value is not set, then the default BOTH applies.
463#
464#   Format of the external syntax :
465#
466#       mailto: external(/usr/bin/mycommand >/dev/null)
467#
468#   You can use :
469#
470#       '%(action)s'            will contain either WARN or DENY
471#       '%(username)s'          will contain the user's name
472#       '%(printername)s'       will contain the printer's name
473#       '%(email)s'             will contain the user's email address
474#       '%(message)s'           will contain the message if you want
475#                               to use it.
476#
477#   On your command line, to pass arguments to your command.
478#   Example :
479#
480#       mailto: external(/usr/bin/callpager %(username)s "Quota problem on %(printername)s" >/dev/null)
481#
482#   To automatically send a WinPopup message (this may only work with a PDC,
483#   here the same machine does Samba as PDC + CUPS) :
484#
485#       mailto: external(echo "%(message)s"  | /usr/bin/iconv --to-code utf-8 --from-code iso-8859-15 | /usr/bin/smbclient -M "%(username)s" 2>&1 >/dev/null)
486#
487#   NB : I use ISO-8859-15, but Windows expects UTF-8, so we pipe the message
488#        into iconv before sending it to the Windows user.
489#
490# or more simply :
491#
492#       mailto: external(/usr/share/pykota/mailandpopup.sh %(username)s %(printername)s "%(email)s" "%(message)s" 2>&1 >/dev/null)
493#
494#   NB : The mailandpopup.sh shell script is now included in PyKota
495#
496#   NB : in ANY case, don't forget to redirect your command's standard output
497#        somewhere (e.g. >/dev/null) so that there's no perturbation to the
498#        underlying layer (filter or backend)
499#
500mailto: both
501
502#
503# Grace delay in days
504# This value can be set either globally or per printer or both.
505# If both are defined, the printer option has priority.
506# If the value is not set then the default seven (7) days applies.
507gracedelay: 7
508
509#
510# Poor man's threshold
511# If account balance reaches below this amount,
512# a warning message is sent by email
513#
514# If unset, default poor man's threshold is 1.0.
515# This option can only appear in the global section
516poorman: 2.0
517
518# Poor man's warning message
519# The warning message that is sent if the "poorman" value is reached
520# Again this must appear in the global section
521poorwarn: Your Print Quota account balance is low.
522 Soon you'll not be allowed to print anymore.
523
524# Soft limit reached warning message
525# The warning message that is sent if the soft quota limit is reached
526# May appear either globally or on a per-printer basis
527softwarn: Your Print Quota Soft Limit is reached.
528 This means that you may still be allowed to print for some
529 time, but you must contact your administrator to purchase
530 more print quota.
531 
532# Hard limit reached error message
533# The error message that is sent if the hard quota limit is reached
534# May appear either globally or on a per-printer basis
535hardwarn: Your Print Quota Hard Limit is reached.
536 This means that you are not allowed to print anymore.
537 Please contact your administrator at root@localhost
538 as soon as possible to solve the problem.
539
540# one section per printer, or no other section at all if all options
541# are defined globally.
542# Each section's name must be the same as the printer's queue name as defined
543# in your printing system, be it CUPS or LPRng, between square brackets, for
544# example a print queue named 'hpmarketing' would appear in this file as
545# [hpmarketing]
546
547
548# Default policy to apply when either :
549#
550#       - Printer doesn't exist in PyKota's database
551#       - User doesn't exist in PyKota's database
552#       - User has no quota entry for this Printer in PyKota's database
553#
554# Value can be either allow or deny or external(some command here)
555#
556# This value can be set either globally or per printer or both.
557# If both are defined, the printer option has priority.
558# If the value is not set then the default policy DENY applies.
559# There's no policy wrt inexistant groups, they are ignored.
560#
561# external policy can be used to launch any external command of your choice,
562# for example to automatically add the user to the quota storage
563# if he is unknown. Example :
564#
565#   policy: external(/usr/bin/edpykota --add --printer %(printername)s --softlimit 50 --hardlimit 60 %(username)s >/dev/null)
566#
567# NB : If you want to limit users by their account balance value, it is preferable to
568# use the following policy to automate user account creation on first print :
569#
570#   policy: external(/usr/bin/autopykota --initbalance 25.0 >/dev/null)
571#
572#   This will automatically add the user if he doesn't already exist, and
573#   set his initial balance value to 25.0 (for example). If the user already
574#   exists then his balance value will not be modified.
575#   Please don't use autopykota if you want to limit your users by page
576#   quota, and in any case, carefully read autopykota's help or manpage
577#   and understand its goal before using it in your own configuration.
578#
579# Of course you can launch any command of your choice with this, e.g. :
580#
581#   policy: external(/usr/local/bin/myadminscript.sh %(username)s >/dev/null)
582
583# You can use :
584#
585#       '%(username)s'          will contain the user's name
586#       '%(printername)s'       will contain the printer's name
587#
588#   On your command line, to pass arguments to your command.
589#
590#   NB : Don't forget to redirect your command's standard output somewhere
591#        (e.g. >/dev/null) so that there's no perturbation to the underlying
592#        layer (filter or backend)
593#
594# If the printer, user, or user quota entry still doesn't exist after
595# external policy command was launched (the external command didn't add it),
596# or if an error occured during the execution of the external policy
597# command, then the job is rejected.
598#
599policy: deny
600
601# Pre and Post Hooks
602# These directives allow the easy plug-in of any command of your choice
603# at different phases of PyKota's execution.
604# Pre and Post Hooks can access some of PyKota's internal information
605# by reading environment variables as described below.
606# The actual phase of PyKota's execution is available in the
607# PYKOTAPHASE environment variable.
608# Pre and Post Hooks can be defined either globally, per printer,
609# or both. If both are defined, the printer specific hook has
610# priority.
611#
612# List of available environment variables :
613# NB : Most of these variables are also available during the execution
614# of external commands defined in the accounter and mailto
615# directives.
616#
617# PYKOTAMD5SUM : Contains an hexadecimal digest of the md5 sum of the job's datas
618# PYKOTAPHASE : BEFORE or AFTER the job is sent to the printer
619# PYKOTAACTION : ALLOW or DENY or WARN for current print job
620# PYKOTAUSERNAME : user's name
621# PYKOTAPRINTERNAME : printer's name
622# PYKOTAPGROUPS : list of printers groups the current printer is a member of
623# PYKOTAJOBID : job's id
624# PYKOTATITLE : job's title
625# PYKOTAFILENAME : job's filename
626# PYKOTACOPIES : number of copies
627# PYKOTAOPTIONS : job's options
628# PYKOTABALANCE : user's account balance
629# PYKOTALIFETIMEPAID : user's grand total paid
630# PYKOTALIMITBY : user print limiting factor, for example 'quota' or 'balance'
631# PYKOTAPAGECOUNTER : user's page counter on this printer
632# PYKOTALIFEPAGECOUNTER : user's life time page counter on this printer
633# PYKOTASOFTLIMIT : user's soft page limit on this printer
634# PYKOTAHARDLIMIT : user's hard page limit on this printer
635# PYKOTADATELIMIT : user's soft to hard limit date limit on this printer
636# PYKOTASTATUS : contains "CANCELLED" when SIGTERM was received by PyKota
637#                else is not set.
638# PYKOTAJOBSIZEBYTES : contains the job's size in bytes. Always available.
639# PYKOTAPRECOMPUTEDJOBSIZE : contains the precomputed job's size
640# PYKOTAPRECOMPUTEDJOBPRICE : contains the precomputed job's price
641# PYKOTAJOBORIGINATINGHOSTNAME : contains the client's hostname if
642#                                it is possible to retrieve it.
643# PYKOTAPRINTERHOSTNAME : the printer's hostname or IP address for network
644#                         printers, or "localhost" if not defined or not
645#                         meaningful.
646# PYKOTAWARNCOUNT : the number of times the user was forbidden to print but a banner
647#                   page was still printed on the current printer.                   
648# PYKOTAOVERCHARGE : user's overcharging factor.
649# PYKOTAJOBBILLING : Job's billing code if present (CUPS only)
650#
651
652# PreHook : gets executed after being sure the user, printer and user quota
653# entry on the printer both exist in the PyKota database, and after
654# checking if the user is allowed to print or not, but just before
655# the job is sent to the printer (if allowed)
656# prehook has access to many environment variables :
657#
658# PYKOTAACTION contains either "ALLOW", "WARN" or "DENY" and
659# represents the action which is to be done wrt the print job.
660# PYKOTAPHASE contains 'BEFORE' during execution of prehook
661#
662# uncomment the line below to see what environment variables are available
663# prehook: /usr/bin/printenv >/tmp/before
664
665# PostHook : gets executed after the job has been added to the history.
666# posthook has access to all the environment variables defined above,
667# as well as two additionnal environment variables : PYKOTAJOBPRICE
668# and PYKOTAJOBSIZE.
669# PYKOTAPHASE contains 'AFTER' during execution of posthook.
670#
671# uncomment the line below to see what environment variables are available
672# posthook: /usr/bin/printenv >/tmp/after
673
674# AccountBanner : how should banner accounting be done ?
675#
676# NB : CUPS ONLY FOR NOW !
677#
678# If enabled, banner pages printed from StartingBanner and/or EndingBanner
679# (depending on the value) will be included in the accounting for the
680# print job
681#
682# If disabled, banner pages printed from StartingBanner and EndingBanner will
683# *not* be included in the accounting for the print job
684#
685# IMPORTANT : CUPS generated banners are ALWAYS accounted for, although you
686#             can refund them by using negative prices on printers.
687#
688# Allowed values : Starting | Ending | None | Both
689#
690#       - Starting : only the starting banner will be accounted for.
691#       - Ending : only the ending banner will be accounted for.
692#       - Both : both starting and ending banners will be accounted for.
693#       - None : banners will not be accounted for.
694#
695# Default value :
696# accountbanner: Both
697
698# Maximal number of times the banner will still be printed if
699# the user is forbidden to print.
700#
701# NB : CUPS ONLY FOR NOW !
702#
703# This option can be set either globally or on a per printer basis.
704# Allowed values are 0 or any positive integer.
705# Default value is 0, which means that the banner won't be printed
706# at all if the user is forbidden to print.
707maxdenybanners: 0
708
709# StartingBanner : if defined will print a banner before the rest of the job
710# is printed. The argument can be a printable file, or an executable file.
711# If not executable, the file will be printed as is. If executable, the
712# file will be executed and its output will be printed.
713#
714# NB : CUPS ONLY FOR NOW !
715#
716# In any case, the banner content which will be sent to the printer
717# MUST be in a format your printer will accept !!!
718#
719# The pkbanner command included in PyKota can automatically generate
720# starting and ending banners in the PostScript format. You can use
721# this command in a pipe through GhostScript if your printer doesn't
722# accept PostScript as an input format.
723# NB : pkbanner's default page size is A4
724#
725# startingbanner: /home/joe/mystaticbanner.ps
726# startingbanner: /usr/bin/pkbanner --pagesize=A4 --logo="/home/joe/mylogo.jpeg" --url="http://tech.example.com"
727# startingbanner: /usr/bin/pkbanner | gs -q -dNOPAUSE -dBATCH -dPARANOIDSAFER -sOutputFile=- -sDEVICE=lj5mono -
728# startingbanner: /usr/bin/pkbanner
729
730# EndingBanner : if defined will print a banner before the rest of the job
731# is printed. The argument can be a printable file, or an executable file.
732# If not executable, the file will be printed as is. If executable, the
733# file will be executed and its output will be printed.
734#
735# NB : CUPS ONLY FOR NOW !
736#
737# In any case, the banner content which will be sent to the printer
738# MUST be in a format your printer will accept !!!
739#
740# The pkbanner command included in PyKota can automatically generate
741# starting and ending banners in the PostScript format. You can use
742# this command in a pipe through GhostScript if your printer doesn't
743# accept PostScript as an input format.
744# NB : pkbanner's default page size is A4
745#
746# A static banner page
747# endingbanner: /home/joe/mystaticbanner.ps
748#
749# A banner with personnalized logo and url
750# endingbanner: /usr/bin/pkbanner --pagesize=A4 --logo="/home/joe/mylogo.jpeg" --url="http://tech.example.com"
751#
752# A banner in the format accepted by the printer
753# endingbanner: /usr/bin/pkbanner | gs -q -dNOPAUSE -dBATCH -dPARANOIDSAFER -sOutputFile=- -sDEVICE=lj5mono -
754#
755# A banner with more info on it, extracted from the yellow pages.
756# the string "Phone 111222333444" will be added to the banner page
757# if extractphone.sh returns 111222333444 for the current user.
758# endingbanner: /usr/bin/pkbanner Phone `extractphone.sh $PYKOTAUSERNAME`
759#
760# Default PyKota banner
761# endingbanner: /usr/bin/pkbanner
762
763# How should enforcement be done for this printer ?
764#
765# "laxist" is the default if value is not set, and allows users
766# to be over quota on their last job.
767#
768# "strict" tries to prevent users from ever being over quota.
769#
770# Enforcement can be defined either globally, per printer,
771# or both. If both are defined, the printer specific enforcement
772# setting has priority.
773#
774# valid values : "strict" or "laxist"
775#
776# default value
777# enforcement : laxist
778enforcement : strict
779
780# Should we trust the job size on this printer ?
781#
782# "trustjobsize : yes" is the default, the jobsize, either computed
783# by the hardware or by software is trusted.
784#
785# "trustjobsize : >N:precomputed" : uses the precomputed value if jobsize > N pages
786# "trustjobsize : >N:25" : uses 25 if jobsize is >N pages
787#
788# General form : ">n:m" where n is a positive integer, and m is
789# either the word 'precomputed' or a positive integer.
790# The special form "yes" is also accepted and is the default.
791#
792# This directive can be set either globally or on a per printer
793# basis. Use this directive when hardware accounting for a particular
794# printer produces some glitches due to the printer returning
795# incorrect answers.
796#
797# NB : DON'T MODIFY THIS IF YOU DON'T NEED TO. THIS IS ONLY TO BE USED
798# AS A WORKAROUND FOR SOME PRINTERS. IT'S PROBABLY BETTER TO ALWAYS
799# SET THIS DIRECTIVE TO 'yes'. THIS DIRECTIVE WILL ONLY BE HONORED
800# IF PYKOTA DETECTS A DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE PRECOMPUTED JOB SIZE
801# AND THE JOB SIZE AS COMPUTED BY PYKOTA EITHER USING HARDWARE OR
802# SOFTWARE.
803trustjobsize : yes
804
805# Should we deny duplicate jobs ?
806#
807# A duplicate is a job sent twice (or more) in a row to the same printer
808# by the same user.
809#
810# This can be defined either globally or on a per printer basis
811# The default value is 'no', meaning that duplicate jobs are
812# allowed.
813#
814# NB : if an user prints a job, a second user prints another
815#      job, and the first user prints the first job again,
816#      this is NOT considered as a duplicate since the two
817#      identical jobs printed by the first user are not
818#      one just after the other.
819#
820# Possible values are 'yes' and 'no'
821#
822denyduplicates : no
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