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RFC2911 - Internet Printing Protocol/1.1: Model and Semantics

王朝other·作者佚名  2008-05-31
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Network Working Group T. Hastings, Editor

Request for Comments: 2911 R. Herriot

Obsoletes: 2566 Xerox Corporation

Category: Standards Track R. deBry

Utah Valley State College

S. Isaacson

Novell, Inc.

P. Powell

Astart Technologies

September 2000

Internet Printing Protocol/1.1: Model and Semantics

Status of this Memo

This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the

Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for

improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet

Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state

and status of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000). All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

This document is one of a set of documents, which together describe

all ASPects of a new Internet Printing Protocol (IPP). IPP is an

application level protocol that can be used for distributed printing

using Internet tools and technologies. This document describes a

simplified model consisting of abstract objects, their attributes,

and their operations that is independent of encoding and transport.

The model consists of a Printer and a Job object. A Job optionally

supports multiple documents. IPP 1.1 semantics allow end-users and

operators to query printer capabilities, submit print jobs, inquire

about the status of print jobs and printers, cancel, hold, release,

and restart print jobs. IPP 1.1 semantics allow operators to pause,

resume, and purge (jobs from) Printer objects. This document also

addresses security, internationalization, and Directory issues.

The full 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 (this document)

Internet Printing Protocol/1.1: Encoding and Transport [RFC2910]

Internet Printing Protocol/1.1: Implementer's Guide [IPP-IIG]

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: 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 a new scheme named 'ipp'

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

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.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction 9

1.1 Simplified Printing Model 10

2. IPP Objects 12

2.1 Printer Object 13

2.2 Job Object 15

2.3 Object Relationships 16

2.4 Object Identity 17

3. IPP Operations 20

3.1 Common Semantics 21

3.1.1 Required Parameters 21

3.1.2 Operation IDs and Request IDs 22

3.1.3 Attributes 22

3.1.4 Character Set and Natural Language Operation Attribute 24

3.1.4.1 Request Operation Attributes 25

3.1.4.2 Response Operation Attributes 29

3.1.5 Operation Targets 30

3.1.6 Operation Response Status Codes and Status Messages 32

3.1.6.1 "status-code" (type2 enum) 32

3.1.6.2 "status-message" (text(255)) 33

3.1.6.3 "detailed-status-message" (text(MAX)) 33

3.1.6.4 "document-Access-error" (text(MAX)) 34

3.1.7 Unsupported Attributes 34

3.1.8 Versions 36

3.1.9 Job Creation Operations 38

3.2 Printer Operations 41

3.2.1 Print-Job Operation 41

3.2.1.1 Print-Job Request 41

3.2.1.2 Print-Job Response 46

3.2.2 Print-URI Operation 48

3.2.3 Validate-Job Operation 49

3.2.4 Create-Job Operation 49

3.2.5 Get-Printer-Attributes Operation 50

3.2.5.1 Get-Printer-Attributes Request 51

3.2.5.2 Get-Printer-Attributes Response 53

3.2.6 Get-Jobs Operation 54

3.2.6.1 Get-Jobs Request 54

3.2.6.2 Get-Jobs Response 56

3.2.7 Pause-Printer Operation 57

3.2.7.1 Pause-Printer Request 59

3.2.7.2 Pause-Printer Response 60

3.2.8 Resume-Printer Operation 60

3.2.9 Purge-Jobs Operation 61

3.3 Job Operations 62

3.3.1 Send-Document Operation 62

3.3.1.1 Send-Document Request 64

3.3.1.2 Send-Document Response 65

3.3.2 Send-URI Operation 66

3.3.3 Cancel-Job Operation 66

3.3.3.1 Cancel-Job Request 67

3.3.3.2 Cancel-Job Response 68

3.3.4 Get-Job-Attributes Operation 69

3.3.4.1 Get-Job-Attributes Request 69

3.3.4.2 Get-Job-Attributes Response 70

3.3.5 Hold-Job Operation 71

3.3.5.1 Hold-Job Request 72

3.3.5.2 Hold-Job Response 73

3.3.6 Release-Job Operation 74

3.3.7 Restart-Job Operation 75

3.3.7.1 Restart-Job Request 76

3.3.7.2 Restart-Job Response 78

4. Object Attributes 78

4.1 Attribute Syntaxes 78

4.1.1 'text' 79

4.1.1.1 'textWithoutLanguage' 80

4.1.1.2 'textWithLanguage' 80

4.1.2 'name' 81

4.1.2.1 'nameWithoutLanguage' 82

4.1.2.2 'nameWithLanguage' 82

4.1.2.3 Matching 'name' attribute values 83

4.1.3 'keyWord' 84

4.1.4 'enum' 85

4.1.5 'uri' 85

4.1.6 'uriScheme' 86

4.1.7 'charset' 86

4.1.8 'naturalLanguage' 87

4.1.9 'mimeMediaType' 87

4.1.9.1 Application/octet-stream -- Auto-Sensing 88

the document format

4.1.10 'octetString' 89

4.1.11 'boolean' 89

4.1.12 'integer' 89

4.1.13 'rangeOfInteger' 90

4.1.14 'dateTime' 90

4.1.15 'resolution' 90

4.1.16 '1setOf X' 90

4.2 Job Template Attributes 91

4.2.1 job-priority (integer(1:100)) 94

4.2.2 job-hold-until (type3 keyword name (MAX)) 95

4.2.3 job-sheets (type3 keyword name(MAX)) 96

4.2.4 multiple-document-handling (type2 keyword) 96

4.2.5 copies (integer(1:MAX)) 98

4.2.6 finishings (1setOf type2 enum) 98

4.2.7 page-ranges (1setOf rangeOfInteger (1:MAX)) 101

4.2.8 sides (type2 keyword) 102

4.2.9 number-up (integer(1:MAX)) 102

4.2.10 orientation-requested (type2 enum) 103

4.2.11 media (type3 keyword name(MAX)) 104

4.2.12 printer-resolution (resolution) 105

4.2.13 print-quality (type2 enum) 105

4.3 Job Description Attributes 106

4.3.1 job-uri (uri) 107

4.3.2 job-id (integer(1:MAX)) 108

4.3.3 job-printer-uri (uri) 108

4.3.4 job-more-info (uri) 108

4.3.5 job-name (name(MAX)) 108

4.3.6 job-originating-user-name (name(MAX)) 109

4.3.7 job-state (type1 enum) 109

4.3.7.1 Forwarding Servers 112

4.3.7.2 Partitioning of Job States 112

4.3.8 job-state-reasons (1setOf type2 keyword) 113

4.3.9 job-state-message (text(MAX)) 118

4.3.10 job-detailed-status-messages (1setOf text(MAX)) 118

4.3.11 job-document-access-errors (1setOf text(MAX)) 118

4.3.12 number-of-documents (integer(0:MAX)) 119

4.3.13 output-device-assigned (name(127)) 119

4.3.14 Event Time Job Description Attributes 119

4.3.14.1 time-at-creation (integer(MIN:MAX)) 120

4.3.14.2 time-at-processing (integer(MIN:MAX)) 120

4.3.14.3 time-at-completed (integer(MIN:MAX)) 120

4.3.14.4 job-printer-up-time (integer(1:MAX)) 120

4.3.14.5 date-time-at-creation (dateTime) 121

4.3.14.6 date-time-at-processing (dateTime) 121

4.3.14.7 date-time-at-completed (dateTime) 121

4.3.15 number-of-intervening-jobs (integer(0:MAX)) 121

4.3.16 job-message-from-operator (text(127)) 121

4.3.17 Job Size Attributes 121

4.3.17.1 job-k-octets (integer(0:MAX)) 122

4.3.17.2 job-impressions (integer(0:MAX)) 122

4.3.17.3 job-media-sheets (integer(0:MAX)) 123

4.3.18 Job Progress Attributes 123

4.3.18.1 job-k-octets-processed (integer(0:MAX)) 123

4.3.18.2 job-impressions-completed (integer(0:MAX)) 123

4.3.18.3 job-media-sheets-completed (integer(0:MAX)) 124

4.3.19 attributes-charset (charset) 124

4.3.20 attributes-natural-language (naturalLanguage) 124

4.4 Printer Description Attributes 124

4.4.1 printer-uri-supported (1setOf uri) 126

4.4.2 uri-authentication-supported (1setOf type2 keyword) 127

4.4.3 uri-security-supported (1setOf type2 keyword) 128

4.4.4 printer-name (name(127)) 129

4.4.5 printer-location (text(127)) 129

4.4.6 printer-info (text(127)) 130

4.4.7 printer-more-info (uri) 130

4.4.8 printer-driver-installer (uri) 130

4.4.9 printer-make-and-model (text(127)) 130

4.4.10 printer-more-info-manufacturer (uri) 130

4.4.11 printer-state (type1 enum) 131

4.4.12 printer-state-reasons (1setOf type2 keyword) 131

4.4.13 printer-state-message (text(MAX)) 134

4.4.14 ipp-versions-supported (1setOf type2 keyword) 134

4.4.15 operations-supported (1setOf type2 enum) 135

4.4.16 multiple-document-jobs-supported (boolean) 136

4.4.17 charset-configured (charset) 136

4.4.18 charset-supported (1setOf charset) 137

4.4.19 natural-language-configured (naturalLanguage) 137

4.4.20 generated-natural-language-supported

(1setOf naturalLanguage) 137

4.4.21 document-format-default (mimeMediaType) 138

4.4.22 document-format-supported (1setOf mimeMediaType) 138

4.4.23 printer-is-accepting-jobs (boolean) 138

4.4.24 queued-job-count (integer(0:MAX)) 138

4.4.25 printer-message-from-operator (text(127)) 139

4.4.26 color-supported (boolean) 139

4.4.27 reference-uri-schemes-supported (1setOf uriScheme) 139

4.4.28 pdl-override-supported (type2 keyword) 139

4.4.29 printer-up-time (integer(1:MAX)) 140

4.4.30 printer-current-time (dateTime) 140

4.4.31 multiple-operation-time-out (integer(1:MAX)) 141

4.4.32 compression-supported (1setOf type3 keyword) 141

4.4.33 job-k-octets-supported (rangeOfInteger(0:MAX)) 142

4.4.34 job-impressions-supported (rangeOfInteger(0:MAX)) 142

4.4.35 job-media-sheets-supported (rangeOfInteger(0:MAX)) 142

4.4.36 pages-per-minute (integer(0:MAX)) 142

4.4.37 pages-per-minute-color (integer(0:MAX)) 142

5. Conformance 143

5.1 Client Conformance Requirements 143

5.2 IPP Object Conformance Requirements 145

5.2.1 Objects 145

5.2.2 Operations 145

5.2.3 IPP Object Attributes 146

5.2.4 Versions 146

5.2.5 Extensions 147

5.2.6 Attribute Syntaxes 147

5.2.7 Security 148

5.3 Charset and Natural Language Requirements 148

6. IANA Considerations 148

6.1 Typed 'keyword' and 'enum' Extensions 149

6.2 Attribute Extensibility 151

6.3 Attribute Syntax Extensibility 152

6.4 Operation Extensibility 152

6.5 Attribute Group Extensibility 153

6.6 Status Code Extensibility 153

6.7 Out-of-band Attribute Value Extensibility 154

6.8 Registration of MIME types/sub-types for document-formats 154

6.9 Registration of charsets for use in 'charset'

attribute values 154

7. Internationalization Considerations 154

8. Security Considerations 158

8.1 Security Scenarios 159

8.1.1 Client and Server in the Same Security Domain 159

8.1.2 Client and Server in Different Security Domains 159

8.1.3 Print by Reference 160

8.2 URIs in Operation, Job, and Printer attributes 160

8.3 URIs for each authentication mechanisms 160

8.4 Restricted Queries 161

8.5 Operations performed by operators and system

administrators 161

8.6 Queries on jobs submitted using non-IPP protocols 162

9. References 162

10. Authors' Addresses 166

11. Formats for IPP Registration Proposals 168

11.1 Type2 keyword attribute values registration 169

11.2 Type3 keyword attribute values registration 169

11.3 Type2 enum attribute values registration 169

11.4 Type3 enum attribute values registration 170

11.5 Attribute registration 170

11.6 Attribute Syntax registration 171

11.7 Operation registration 171

11.8 Attribute Group registration 171

11.9 Status code registration 172

11.10 Out-of-band Attribute Value registration 172

12. APPENDIX A: Terminology 173

12.1 Conformance Terminology 173

12.1.1 NEED NOT 173

12.2 Model Terminology 173

12.2.1 Keyword 173

12.2.2 Attributes 173

12.2.2.1 Attribute Name 173

12.2.2.2 Attribute Group Name 174

12.2.2.3 Attribute Value 174

12.2.2.4 Attribute Syntax 174

12.2.3 Supports 174

12.2.4 print-stream page 176

12.2.5 impression 177

13. APPENDIX B: Status Codes and Suggested Status Code Messages 177

13.1 Status Codes 178

13.1.1 Informational 178

13.1.2 Successful Status Codes 178

13.1.2.1 successful-ok (0x0000) 178

13.1.2.2 successful-ok-ignored-or-substituted-attributes

(0x0001) 179

13.1.2.3 successful-ok-conflicting-attributes (0x0002) 179

13.1.3 Redirection Status Codes 179

13.1.4 Client Error Status Codes 179

13.1.4.1 client-error-bad-request (0x0400) 180

13.1.4.2 client-error-forbidden (0x0401) 180

13.1.4.3 client-error-not-authenticated (0x0402) 180

13.1.4.4 client-error-not-authorized (0x0403) 180

13.1.4.5 client-error-not-possible (0x0404) 180

13.1.4.6 client-error-timeout (0x0405) 181

13.1.4.7 client-error-not-found (0x0406) 181

13.1.4.8 client-error-gone (0x0407) 181

13.1.4.9 client-error-request-entity-too-large (0x0408) 182

13.1.4.10 client-error-request-value-too-long (0x0409) 182

13.1.4.11 client-error-document-format-not-supported (0x040A) 182

13.1.4.12 client-error-attributes-or-values-not-supported

(0x040B) 183

13.1.4.13 client-error-uri-scheme-not-supported (0x040C) 183

13.1.4.14 client-error-charset-not-supported (0x040D) 183

13.1.4.15 client-error-conflicting-attributes (0x040E) 183

13.1.4.16 client-error-compression-not-supported (0x040F) 184

13.1.4.17 client-error-compression-error (0x0410) 184

13.1.4.18 client-error-document-format-error (0x0411) 184

13.1.4.19 client-error-document-access-error (0x0412) 184

13.1.5 Server Error Status Codes 185

13.1.5.1 server-error-internal-error (0x0500) 185

13.1.5.2 server-error-operation-not-supported (0x0501) 185

13.1.5.3 server-error-service-unavailable (0x0502) 185

13.1.5.4 server-error-version-not-supported (0x0503) 185

13.1.5.5 server-error-device-error (0x0504) 186

13.1.5.6 server-error-temporary-error (0x0505) 186

13.1.5.7 server-error-not-accepting-jobs (0x0506) 187

13.1.5.8 server-error-busy (0x0507) 187

13.1.5.9 server-error-job-canceled (0x0508) 187

13.1.5.10 server-error-multiple-document-jobs-not-supported

(0x0509) 187

13.2 Status Codes for IPP Operations 187

14. APPENDIX C: "media" keyword values 190

15. APPENDIX D: Processing IPP Attributes 208

15.1 Fidelity 209

15.2 Page Description Language (PDL) Override 210

15.3 Using Job Template Attributes During Document Processing 212

16. APPENDIX E: Generic Directory Schema 214

17. APPENDIX F: Differences between the IPP/1.0 and IPP/1.1

"Model and Semantics" Documents 215

18. Full Copyright Statement 224

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 (IPP/1.1) focuses primarily on end

user functionality with a few administrative operations included.

This document is just one of a suite of documents that fully define

IPP. The full 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 (this document)

Internet Printing Protocol/1.1: Encoding and Transport [RFC2910]

Internet Printing Protocol/1.1: Implementer's Guide [IPP-IIG]

Mapping between LPD and IPP Protocols [RFC2569]

Anyone reading these documents for the first time is strongly

encouraged to read the IPP documents in the above order.

This document is laid out as follows:

- The rest of Section 1 is an introduction to the IPP simplified

model for distributed printing.

- Section 2 introduces the object types covered in the model with

their basic behaviors, attributes, and interactions.

- Section 3 defines the operations included in IPP/1.1. IPP

operations are synchronous, therefore, for each operation, there is

a both request and a response.

- Section 4 defines the attributes (and their syntaxes) that are used

in the model.

- Sections 5 - 6 summarizes the implementation conformance

requirements for objects that support the protocol and IANA

considerations, respectively.

- Sections 7 - 11 cover the Internationalization and Security

considerations as well as References, Author contact information,

and Formats for Registration Proposals.

- Sections 12 - 14 are appendices that cover Terminology, Status

Codes and Messages, and "media" keyword values.

Note: This document uses terms such as "attributes", "keywords",

and "support". These terms have special meaning and are defined

in the model terminology section 12.2. Capitalized terms, such

as MUST, MUST NOT, REQUIRED, SHOULD, SHOULD NOT, MAY, NEED NOT,

and OPTIONAL, have special meaning relating to conformance.

These terms are defined in section 12.1 on conformance

terminology, most of which is taken from RFC2119 [RFC2119].

- Section 15 is an appendix that helps to clarify the effects of

interactions between related attributes and their values.

- Section 16 is an appendix that enumerates the subset of Printer

attributes that form a generic directory schema. These attributes

are useful when registering a Printer so that a client can find the

Printer not just by name, but by filtered searches as well.

- Section 17 is an appendix summarizing the additions and changes

from the IPP/1.0 "Model and Semantics" document [RFC2566] to make

this IPP/1.1 document.

- Section 18 is the full copyright notice.

1.1 Simplified Printing Model

In order to achieve its goal of realizing a workable printing

protocol for the Internet, the Internet Printing Protocol (IPP) is

based on a simplified printing model that abstracts the many

components of real world printing solutions. The Internet is a

distributed computing environment where requesters of print services

(clients, applications, printer drivers, etc.) cooperate and interact

with print service providers. This model and semantics document

describes a simple, abstract model for IPP even though the underlying

configurations may be complex "n-tier" client/server systems. An

important simplifying step in the IPP model is to eXPose only the key

objects and interfaces required for printing. The model described in

this model document does not include features, interfaces, and

relationships that are beyond the scope of the first version of IPP

(IPP/1.1). IPP/1.1 incorporates many of the relevant ideas and

lessons learned from other specification and development efforts

[HTPP] [ISO10175] [LDPA] [P1387.4] [PSIS] [RFC1179] [SWP]. IPP is

heavily influenced by the printing model introduced in the Document

Printing Application (DPA) [ISO10175] standard. Although DPA

specifies both end user and administrative features, IPP version 1.1

(IPP/1.1) focuses primarily on end user functionality with a few

additional OPTIONAL operator operations.

The IPP/1.1 model encapsulates the important components of

distributed printing into two object types:

- Printer (Section 2.1)

- Job (Section 2.2)

Each object type has an associated set of operations (see section 3)

and attributes (see section 4).

It is important, however, to understand that in real system

implementations (which lie underneath the abstracted IPP/1.1 model),

there are other components of a print service which are not

explicitly defined in the IPP/1.1 model. The following figure

illustrates where IPP/1.1 fits with respect to these other

components.

+--------------+

Application

o +. . . . . . .

\/ Spooler

/ \ +. . . . . . . +---------+

End-User Print Driver --- File

+-----------+ +-----+ +------+-------+ +----+----+

Browser GUI

+-----+-----+ +--+--+

+---+------------+---+

N D S IPP Client ------------+

O I E +---------+----------+

T R C

I E U

F C R -------------- Transport ------------------

I T I

C O T --+

A R Y +--------+--------+

T Y IPP Server

I +--------+--------+

O

N +-----------------+ IPP Printer

Print Service

+-----------------+

--+

+-----------------+

Output Device(s)

+-----------------+

An IPP Printer object encapsulates the functions normally associated

with physical output devices along with the spooling, scheduling and

multiple device management functions often associated with a print

server. Printer objects are optionally registered as entries in a

directory where end users find and select them based on some sort of

filtered and context based searching mechanism (see section 16). The

directory is used to store relatively static information about the

Printer, allowing end users to search for and find Printers that

match their search criteria, for example: name, context, printer

capabilities, etc. The more dynamic information, such as state,

currently loaded and ready media, number of jobs at the Printer,

errors, warnings, and so forth, is directly associated with the

Printer object itself rather than with the entry in the directory

which only represents the Printer object.

IPP clients implement the IPP protocol on the client side and give

end users (or programs running on behalf of end users) the ability to

query Printer objects and submit and manage print jobs. An IPP

server is just that part of the Printer object that implements the

server-side protocol. The rest of the Printer object implements (or

gateways into) the application semantics of the print service itself.

The Printer objects may be embedded in an output device or may be

implemented on a host on the network that communicates with an output

device.

When a job is submitted to the Printer object and the Printer object

validates the attributes in the submission request, the Printer

object creates a new Job object. The end user then interacts with

this new Job object to query its status and monitor the progress of

the job. An end user can also cancel their print jobs by using the

Job object's Cancel-Job operation. An end-user can also hold,

release, and restart their print jobs using the Job object's OPTIONAL

Hold-Job, Release-Job, and Restart-Job operations, if implemented.

A privileged operator or administrator of a Printer object can

cancel, hold, release, and restart any user's job using the REQUIRED

Cancel-Job and the OPTIONAL Hold-Job, Release-Job, and Restart-Job

operations. In additional privileged operator or administrator of a

Printer object can pause, resume, or purge (jobs from) a Printer

object using the OPTIONAL Pause-Printer, Resume-Printer, and Purge-

Jobs operations, if implemented.

The notification service is out of scope for this IPP/1.1 document,

but using such a notification service, the end user is able to

register for and receive Printer specific and Job specific events.

An end user can query the status of Printer objects and can follow

the progress of Job objects by polling using the Get-Printer-

Attributes, Get-Jobs, and Get-Job-Attributes operations.

2. IPP Objects

The IPP/1.1 model introduces objects of type Printer and Job. Each

type of object models relevant aspects of a real-world entity such as

a real printer or real print job. Each object type is defined as a

set of possible attributes that may be supported by instances of that

object type. For each object (instance), the actual set of supported

attributes and values describe a specific implementation. The

object's attributes and values describe its state, capabilities,

realizable features, job processing functions, and default behaviors

and characteristics. For example, the Printer object type is defined

as a set of attributes that each Printer object potentially supports.

In the same manner, the Job object type is defined as a set of

attributes that are potentially supported by each Job object.

Each attribute included in the set of attributes defining an object

type is labeled as:

- "REQUIRED": each object MUST support the attribute.

- "RECOMMENDED": each object SHOULD support the attribute.

- "OPTIONAL": each object MAY support the attribute.

Some definitions of attribute values indicate that an object MUST or

SHOULD support the value; otherwise, support of the value is

OPTIONAL.

However, if an implementation supports an attribute, it MUST support

at least one of the possible values for that attribute.

2.1 Printer Object

The major component of the IPP/1.1 model is the Printer object. A

Printer object implements the server-side of the IPP/1.1 protocol.

Using the protocol, end users may query the attributes of the Printer

object and submit print jobs to the Printer object. The actual

implementation components behind the Printer abstraction may take on

different forms and different configurations. However, the model

abstraction allows the details of the configuration of real

components to remain opaque to the end user. Section 3 describes

each of the Printer operations in detail.

The capabilities and state of a Printer object are described by its

attributes. Printer attributes are divided into two groups:

- "job-template" attributes: These attributes describe supported job

processing capabilities and defaults for the Printer object. (See

section 4.2)

- "printer-description" attributes: These attributes describe the

Printer object's identification, state, location, references to

other sources of information about the Printer object, etc. (see

section 4.4)

Since a Printer object is an abstraction of a generic document output

device and print service provider, a Printer object could be used to

represent any real or virtual device with semantics consistent with

the Printer object, such as a fax device, an imager, or even a CD

writer.

Some examples of configurations supporting a Printer object include:

1) An output device with no spooling capabilities

2) An output device with a built-in spooler

3) A print server supporting IPP with one or more associated

output devices

3a) The associated output devices may or may not be capable of

spooling jobs

3b) The associated output devices may or may not support IPP

The following figures show some examples of how Printer objects can

be realized on top of various distributed printing configurations.

The embedded case below represents configurations 1 and 2. The hosted

and fan-out figures below represent configurations 3a and 3b.

In this document the term "client" refers to a software entity that

sends IPP operation requests to an IPP Printer object and accepts IPP

operation responses. A client MAY be:

1. contained within software controlled by an end user, e.g.

activated by the "Print" menu item in an application or

2. the print server component that sends IPP requests to either an

output device or another "downstream" print server.

The term "IPP Printer" is a network entity that accepts IPP operation

requests and returns IPP operation responses. As such, an IPP object

MAY be:

1. an (embedded) device component that accepts IPP requests and

controls the device or

2. a component of a print server that accepts IPP requests (where

the print server controls one or more networked devices using

IPP or other protocols).

Legend:

##### indicates a Printer object which is

either embedded in an output device or is

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

embedded printer:

output device

+---------------+

O +--------+ ###########

/\ client ------------IPP------------># Printer #

/ \ +--------+ # Object #

###########

+---------------+

hosted printer:

+---------------+

O +--------+ ###########

/\ client --IPP--># Printer #-any-> output device

/ \ +--------+ # Object #

########### +---------------+

+---------------+

fan out:

+--> output device

any/

O +--------+ ########### / +---------------+

/\ client -IPP-># Printer #--*

/ \ +--------+ # Object # \ +---------------+

########### any\

+--> output device

+---------------+

2.2 Job Object

A Job object is used to model a print job. A Job object contains

documents. The information required to create a Job object is sent

in a create request from the end user via an IPP Client to the

Printer object. The Printer object validates the create request, and

if the Printer object accepts the request, the Printer object creates

the new Job object. Section 3 describes each of the Job operations

in detail.

The characteristics and state of a Job object are described by its

attributes. Job attributes are grouped into two groups as follows:

- "job-template" attributes: These attributes can be supplied by

the client or end user and include job processing instructions

which are intended to override any Printer object defaults

and/or instructions embedded within the document data. (See

section 4.2)

- "job-description" attributes: These attributes describe the Job

object's identification, state, size, etc. The client supplies

some of these attributes, and the Printer object generates

others. (See section 4.3)

An implementation MUST support at least one document per Job object.

An implementation MAY support multiple documents per Job object. A

document is either:

- a stream of document data in a format supported by the Printer

object (typically a Page Description Language - PDL), or

- a reference to such a stream of document data

In IPP/1.1, a document is not modeled as an IPP object, therefore it

has no object identifier or associated attributes. All job

processing instructions are modeled as Job object attributes. These

attributes are called Job Template attributes and they apply equally

to all documents within a Job object.

2.3 Object Relationships

IPP objects have relationships that are maintained persistently along

with the persistent storage of the object attributes.

A Printer object can represent either one or more physical output

devices or a logical device which "processes" jobs but never actually

uses a physical output device to put marks on paper. Examples of

logical devices include a Web page publisher or a gateway into an

online document archive or repository. A Printer object contains

zero or more Job objects.

A Job object is contained by exactly one Printer object, however the

identical document data associated with a Job object could be sent to

either the same or a different Printer object. In this case, a

second Job object would be created which would be almost identical to

the first Job object, however it would have new (different) Job

object identifiers (see section 2.4).

A Job object is either empty (before any documents have been added)

or contains one or more documents. If the contained document is a

stream of document data, that stream can be contained in only one

document. However, there can be identical copies of the stream in

other documents in the same or different Job objects. If the

contained document is just a reference to a stream of document data,

other documents (in the same or different Job object(s)) may contain

the same reference.

2.4 Object Identity

All Printer and Job objects are identified by a Uniform Resource

Identifier (URI) [RFC2396] so that they can be persistently and

unambiguously referenced. Since every URL is a specialized form of a

URI, even though the more generic term URI is used throughout the

rest of this document, its usage is intended to cover the more

specific notion of URL as well.

An administrator configures Printer objects to either support or not

support authentication and/or message privacy using Transport Layer

Security (TLS) [RFC2246] (the mechanism for security configuration is

outside the scope of this IPP/1.1 document). In some situations,

both types of connections (both authenticated and unauthenticated)

can be established using a single communication channel that has some

sort of negotiation mechanism. In other situations, multiple

communication channels are used, one for each type of security

configuration. Section 8 provides a full description of all security

considerations and configurations.

If a Printer object supports more than one communication channel,

some or all of those channels might support and/or require different

security mechanisms. In such cases, an administrator could expose

the simultaneous support for these multiple communication channels as

multiple URIs for a single Printer object where each URI represents

one of the communication channels to the Printer object. To support

this flexibility, the IPP Printer object type defines a multi-valued

identification attribute called the "printer-uri-supported"

attribute. It MUST contain at least one URI. It MAY contain more

than one URI. That is, every Printer object will have at least one

URI that identifies at least one communication channel to the Printer

object, but it may have more than one URI where each URI identifies a

different communication channel to the Printer object. The

"printer-uri-supported" attribute has two companion attributes, the

"uri-security-supported" attribute and the "uri-authentication-

supported". Both have the same cardinality as "printer-uri-

supported". The purpose of the "uri-security-supported" attribute is

to indicate the security mechanisms (if any) used for each URI listed

in "printer-uri-supported". The purpose of the "uri-authentication-

supported" attribute is to indicate the authentication mechanisms (if

any) used for each URI listed in "printer-uri-supported". These

three attributes are fully described in sections 4.4.1, 4.4.2, and

4.4.3.

When a job is submitted to the Printer object via a create request,

the client supplies only a single Printer object URI. The client

supplied Printer object URI MUST be one of the values in the

"printer-uri-supported" Printer attribute.

IPP/1.1 does not specify how the client oBTains the client supplied

URI, but it is RECOMMENDED that a Printer object be registered as an

entry in a directory service. End-users and programs can then

interrogate the directory searching for Printers. Section 16 defines

a generic schema for Printer object entries in the directory service

and describes how the entry acts as a bridge to the actual IPP

Printer object. The entry in the directory that represents the IPP

Printer object includes the possibly many URIs for that Printer

object as values in one its attributes.

When a client submits a create request to the Printer object, the

Printer object validates the request and creates a new Job object.

The Printer object assigns the new Job object a URI which is stored

in the "job-uri" Job attribute. This URI is then used by clients as

the target for subsequent Job operations. The Printer object

generates a Job URI based on its configured security policy and the

URI used by the client in the create request.

For example, consider a Printer object that supports both a

communication channel secured by the use of SSL3 (using HTTP over

SSL3 with an "https" schemed URI) and another open communication

channel that is not secured with SSL3 (using a simple "http" schemed

URI). If a client were to submit a job using the secure URI, the

Printer object would assign the new Job object a secure URI as well.

If a client were to submit a job using the open-channel URI, the

Printer would assign the new Job object an open-channel URI.

In addition, the Printer object also populates the Job object's

"job-printer-uri" attribute. This is a reference back to the Printer

object that created the Job object. If a client only has access to a

Job object's "job-uri" identifier, the client can query the Job's

"job-printer-uri" attribute in order to determine which Printer

object created the Job object. If the Printer object supports more

than one URI, the Printer object picks the one URI supplied by the

client when creating the job to build the value for and to populate

the Job's "job-printer-uri" attribute.

Allowing Job objects to have URIs allows for flexibility and

scalability. For example, in some implementations, the Printer

object might create Jobs that are processed in the same local

environment as the Printer object itself. In this case, the Job URI

might just be a composition of the Printer's URI and some unique

component for the Job object, such as the unique 32-bit positive

integer mentioned later in this paragraph. In other implementations,

the Printer object might be a central clearing-house for validating

all Job object creation requests, but the Job object itself might be

created in some environment that is remote from the Printer object.

In this case, the Job object's URI may have no physical-location

relationship at all to the Printer object's URI. Again, the fact

that Job objects have URIs allows for flexibility and scalability,

however, many existing printing systems have local models or

interface constraints that force print jobs to be identified using

only a 32-bit positive integer rather than an independent URI. This

numeric Job ID is only unique within the context of the Printer

object to which the create request was originally submitted.

Therefore, in order to allow both types of client access to IPP Job

objects (either by Job URI or by numeric Job ID), when the Printer

object successfully processes a create request and creates a new Job

object, the Printer object MUST generate both a Job URI and a Job ID.

The Job ID (stored in the "job-id" attribute) only has meaning in the

context of the Printer object to which the create request was

originally submitted. This requirement to support both Job URIs and

Job IDs allows all types of clients to access Printer objects and Job

objects no matter the local constraints imposed on the client

implementation.

In addition to identifiers, Printer objects and Job objects have

names ("printer-name" and "job-name"). An object name NEED NOT be

unique across all instances of all objects. A Printer object's name

is chosen and set by an administrator through some mechanism outside

the scope of this IPP/1.1 document. A Job object's name is

optionally chosen and supplied by the IPP client submitting the job.

If the client does not supply a Job object name, the Printer object

generates a name for the new Job object. In all cases, the name only

has local meaning.

To summarize:

- Each Printer object is identified with one or more URIs. The

Printer's "printer-uri-supported" attribute contains the URI(s).

- The Printer object's "uri-security-supported" attribute

identifies the communication channel security protocols that may

or may not have been configured for the various Printer object

URIs (e.g., 'tls' or 'none').

- The Printer object's "uri-authentication-supported" attribute

identifies the authentication mechanisms that may or may not

have been configured for the various Printer object URIs (e.g.,

'digest' or 'none').

- Each Job object is identified with a Job URI. The Job's "job-

uri" attribute contains the URI.

- Each Job object is also identified with Job ID which is a 32-

bit, positive integer. The Job's "job-id" attribute contains

the Job ID. The Job ID is only unique within the context of the

Printer object which created the Job object.

- Each Job object has a "job-printer-uri" attribute which contains

the URI of the Printer object that was used to create the Job

object. This attribute is used to determine the Printer object

that created a Job object when given only the URI for the Job

object. This linkage is necessary to determine the languages,

charsets, and operations which are supported on that Job (the

basis for such support comes from the creating Printer object).

- Each Printer object has a name (which is not necessarily

unique). The administrator chooses and sets this name through

some mechanism outside the scope of this IPP/1.1 document. The

Printer object's "printer-name" attribute contains the name.

- Each Job object has a name (which is not necessarily unique).

The client optionally supplies this name in the create request.

If the client does not supply this name, the Printer object

generates a name for the Job object. The Job object's "job-name"

attribute contains the name.

3. IPP Operations

IPP objects support operations. An operation consists of a request

and a response. When a client communicates with an IPP object, the

client issues an operation request to the URI for that object.

Operation requests and responses have parameters that identify the

operation. Operations also have attributes that affect the run-time

characteristics of the operation (the intended target, localization

information, etc.). These operation-specific attributes are called

operation attributes (as compared to object attributes such as

Printer object attributes or Job object attributes). Each request

carries along with it any operation attributes, object attributes,

and/or document data required to perform the operation. Each request

requires a response from the object. Each response indicates success

or failure of the operation with a status code as a response

parameter. The response contains any operation attributes, object

attributes, and/or status messages generated during the execution of

the operation request.

This section describes the semantics of the IPP operations, both

requests and responses, in terms of the parameters, attributes, and

other data associated with each operation.

The IPP/1.1 Printer operations are:

Print-Job (section 3.2.1)

Print-URI (section 3.2.2)

Validate-Job (section 3.2.3)

Create-Job (section 3.2.4)

Get-Printer-Attributes (section 3.2.5)

Get-Jobs (section 3.2.6)

Pause-Printer (section 3.3.5)

Resume-Printer (section 3.3.6)

Purge-Jobs (section 3.3.7)

The Job operations are:

Send-Document (section 3.3.1)

Send-URI (section 3.3.2)

Cancel-Job (section 3.3.3)

Get-Job-Attributes (section 3.3.4)

Hold-Job (section 3.3.5)

Release-Job (section 3.3.6)

Restart-Job (section 3.3.7)

The Send-Document and Send-URI Job operations are used to add a new

document to an existing multi-document Job object created using the

Create-Job operation.

3.1 Common Semantics

All IPP operations require some common parameters and operation

attributes. These common elements and their semantic characteristics

are defined and described in more detail in the following sections.

3.1.1 Required Parameters

Every operation request contains the following REQUIRED parameters:

- a "version-number",

- an "operation-id",

- a "request-id", and

- the attributes that are REQUIRED for that type of request.

Every operation response contains the following REQUIRED parameters:

- a "version-number",

- a "status-code",

- the "request-id" that was supplied in the corresponding request,

and

- the attributes that are REQUIRED for that type of response.

The "Encoding and Transport" document [RFC2910] defines special rules

for the encoding of these parameters. All other operation elements

are represented using the more generic encoding rules for attributes

and groups of attributes.

3.1.2 Operation IDs and Request IDs

Each IPP operation request includes an identifying "operation-id"

value. Valid values are defined in the "operations-supported"

Printer attribute section (see section 4.4.15). The client specifies

which operation is being requested by supplying the correct

"operation-id" value.

In addition, every invocation of an operation is identified by a

"request-id" value. For each request, the client chooses the

"request-id" which MUST be an integer (possibly unique depending on

client requirements) in the range from 1 to 2**31 - 1 (inclusive).

This "request-id" allows clients to manage multiple outstanding

requests. The receiving IPP object copies all 32-bits of the client-

supplied "request-id" attribute into the response so that the client

can match the response with the correct outstanding request, even if

the "request-id" is out of range. If the request is terminated

before the complete "request-id" is received, the IPP object rejects

the request and returns a response with a "request-id" of 0.

Note: In some cases, the transport protocol underneath IPP might be a

connection oriented protocol that would make it impossible for a

client to receive responses in any order other than the order in

which the corresponding requests were sent. In such cases, the

"request-id" attribute would not be essential for correct protocol

operation. However, in other mappings, the operation responses can

come back in any order. In these cases, the "request-id" would be

essential.

3.1.3 Attributes

Operation requests and responses are both composed of groups of

attributes and/or document data. The attributes groups are:

- Operation Attributes: These attributes are passed in the

operation and affect the IPP object's behavior while processing

the operation request and may affect other attributes or groups

of attributes. Some operation attributes describe the document

data associated with the print job and are associated with new

Job objects, however most operation attributes do not persist

beyond the life of the operation. The description of each

operation attribute includes conformance statements indicating

which operation attributes are REQUIRED and which are OPTIONAL

for an IPP object to support and which attributes a client MUST

supply in a request and an IPP object MUST supply in a response.

- Job Template Attributes: These attributes affect the processing

of a job. A client OPTIONALLY supplies Job Template Attributes

in a create request, and the receiving object MUST be prepared

to receive all supported attributes. The Job object can later

be queried to find out what Job Template attributes were

originally requested in the create request, and such attributes

are returned in the response as Job Object Attributes. The

Printer object can be queried about its Job Template attributes

to find out what type of job processing capabilities are

supported and/or what the default job processing behaviors are,

though such attributes are returned in the response as Printer

Object Attributes. The "ipp-attribute-fidelity" operation

attribute affects processing of all client-supplied Job Template

attributes (see sections 3.2.1.2 and 15 for a full description

of "ipp-attribute-fidelity" and its relationship to other

attributes).

- Job Object Attributes: These attributes are returned in response

to a query operation directed at a Job object.

- Printer Object Attributes: These attributes are returned in

response to a query operation directed at a Printer object.

- Unsupported Attributes: In a create request, the client supplies

a set of Operation and Job Template attributes. If any of these

attributes or their values is unsupported by the Printer object,

the Printer object returns the set of unsupported attributes in

the response. Sections 3.1.7, 3.2.1.2, and 15 give a full

description of how Job Template attributes supplied by the

client in a create request are processed by the Printer object

and how unsupported attributes are returned to the client.

Because of extensibility, any IPP object might receive a request

that contains new or unknown attributes or values for which it

has no support. In such cases, the IPP object processes what it

can and returns the unsupported attributes in the response. The

Unsupported Attribute group is defined for all operation

responses for returning unsupported attributes that the client

supplied in the request.

Later in this section, each operation is formally defined by

identifying the allowed and expected groups of attributes for each

request and response. The model identifies a specific order for each

group in each request or response, but the attributes within each

group may be in any order, unless specified otherwise.

The attributes within a group MUST be unique; if an attribute with

the same name occurs more than once, the group is mal-formed.

Clients MUST NOT submit such malformed requests and Printers MUST NOT

return such malformed responses. If such a malformed request is

submitted to a Printer, the Printer MUST either (1) reject the

request with the 'client-error-bad-request' status code (see section

13.1.4.1) or (2) process the request normally after selecting only

one of the attribute instances, depending on implementation. Which

attribute is selected when there are duplicate attributes depends on

implementation. The IPP Printer MUST NOT use the values from more

than one such duplicate attribute instance.

Each attribute definition includes the attribute's name followed by

the name of its attribute syntax(es) in parenthesizes. In addition,

each 'integer' attribute is followed by the allowed range in

parentheses, (m:n), for values of that attribute. Each 'text' or

'name' attribute is followed by the maximum size in octets in

parentheses, (size), for values of that attribute. For more details

on attribute syntax notation, see the descriptions of these

attributes syntaxes in section 4.1.

Note: Document data included in the operation is not strictly an

attribute, but it is treated as a special attribute group for

ordering purposes. The only operations that support supplying the

document data within an operation request are Print-Job and Send-

Document. There are no operation responses that include document

data.

Some operations are REQUIRED for IPP objects to support; the others

are OPTIONAL (see section 5.2.2). Therefore, before using an

OPTIONAL operation, a client SHOULD first use the REQUIRED Get-

Printer-Attributes operation to query the Printer's "operations-

supported" attribute in order to determine which OPTIONAL Printer and

Job operations are actually supported. The client SHOULD NOT use an

OPTIONAL operation that is not supported. When an IPP object

receives a request to perform an operation it does not support, it

returns the 'server-error-operation-not-supported' status code (see

section 13.1.5.2). An IPP object is non-conformant if it does not

support a REQUIRED operation.

3.1.4 Character Set and Natural Language Operation Attributes

Some Job and Printer attributes have values that are text strings and

names intended for human understanding rather than machine

understanding (see the 'text' and 'name' attribute syntax

descriptions in section 4.1). The following sections describe two

special Operation Attributes called "attributes-charset" and

"attributes-natural-language". These attributes are always part of

the Operation Attributes group. For most attribute groups, the order

of the attributes within the group is not important. However, for

these two attributes within the Operation Attributes group, the order

is critical. The "attributes-charset" attribute MUST be the first

attribute in the group and the "attributes-natural-language"

attribute MUST be the second attribute in the group. In other words,

these attributes MUST be supplied in every IPP request and response,

they MUST come first in the group, and MUST come in the specified

order. For job creation operations, the IPP Printer implementation

saves these two attributes with the new Job object as Job Description

attributes. For the sake of brevity in this document, these

operation attribute descriptions are not repeated with every

operation request and response, but have a reference back to this

section instead.

3.1.4.1 Request Operation Attributes

The client MUST supply and the Printer object MUST support the

following REQUIRED operation attributes in every IPP/1.1 operation

request:

"attributes-charset" (charset):

This operation attribute identifies the charset (coded

character set and encoding method) used by any 'text' and

'name' attributes that the client is supplying in this request.

It also identifies the charset that the Printer object MUST use

(if supported) for all 'text' and 'name' attributes and status

messages that the Printer object returns in the response to

this request. See Sections 4.1.1 and 4.1.2 for the definition

of the 'text' and 'name' attribute syntaxes.

All clients and IPP objects MUST support the 'utf-8' charset

[RFC2279] and MAY support additional charsets provided that

they are registered with IANA [IANA-CS]. If the Printer object

does not support the client supplied charset value, the Printer

object MUST reject the request, set the "attributes-charset" to

'utf-8' in the response, and return the 'client-error-charset-

not-supported' status code and any 'text' or 'name' attributes

using the 'utf-8' charset. The Printer NEED NOT return any

attributes in the Unsupported Attributes Group (See sections

3.1.7 and 3.2.1.2). The Printer object MUST indicate the

charset(s) supported as the values of the "charset-supported"

Printer attribute (see Section 4.4.18), so that the client can

query to determine which charset(s) are supported.

Note to client implementers: Since IPP objects are only

required to support the 'utf-8' charset, in order to maximize

interoperability with multiple IPP object implementations, a

client may want to supply 'utf-8' in the "attributes-charset"

operation attribute, even though the client is only passing and

able to present a simpler charset, such as US-ASCII [ASCII] or

ISO-8859-1 [ISO8859-1]. Then the client will have to filter

out (or charset convert) those characters that are returned in

the response that it cannot present to its user. On the other

hand, if both the client and the IPP objects also support a

charset in common besides utf-8, the client may want to use

that charset in order to avoid charset conversion or data loss.

See the 'charset' attribute syntax description in Section 4.1.7

for the syntax and semantic interpretation of the values of

this attribute and for example values.

"attributes-natural-language" (naturalLanguage):

This operation attribute identifies the natural language used

by any 'text' and 'name' attributes that the client is

supplying in this request. This attribute also identifies the

natural language that the Printer object SHOULD use for all

'text' and 'name' attributes and status messages that the

Printer object returns in the response to this request. See

the 'naturalLanguage' attribute syntax description in section

4.1.8 for the syntax and semantic interpretation of the values

of this attribute and for example values.

There are no REQUIRED natural languages required for the

Printer object to support. However, the Printer object's

"generated-natural-language-supported" attribute identifies the

natural languages supported by the Printer object and any

contained Job objects for all text strings generated by the IPP

object. A client MAY query this attribute to determine which

natural language(s) are supported for generated messages.

For any of the attributes for which the Printer object

generates text, i.e., for the "job-state-message", "printer-

state-message", and status messages (see Section 3.1.6), the

Printer object MUST be able to generate these text strings in

any of its supported natural languages. If the client requests

a natural language that is not supported, the Printer object

MUST return these generated messages in the Printer's

configured natural language as specified by the Printer's

"natural-language-configured" attribute" (see Section 4.4.19).

For other 'text' and 'name' attributes supplied by the client,

authentication system, operator, system administrator, or

manufacturer (i.e., for "job-originating-user-name", "printer-

name" (name), "printer-location" (text), "printer-info" (text),

and "printer-make-and-model" (text)), the Printer object is

only required to support the configured natural language of the

Printer identified by the Printer object's "natural-language-

configured" attribute, though support of additional natural

languages for these attributes is permitted.

For any 'text' or 'name' attribute in the request that is in a

different natural language than the value supplied in the

"attributes-natural-language" operation attribute, the client

MUST use the Natural Language Override mechanism (see sections

4.1.1.2 and 4.1.2.2) for each such attribute value supplied.

The client MAY use the Natural Language Override mechanism

redundantly, i.e., use it even when the value is in the same

natural language as the value supplied in the "attributes-

natural-language" operation attribute of the request.

The IPP object MUST accept any natural language and any Natural

Language Override, whether the IPP object supports that natural

language or not (and independent of the value of the "ipp-

attribute-fidelity" Operation attribute). That is the IPP

object accepts all client supplied values no matter what the

values are in the Printer object's "generated-natural-

language-supported" attribute. That attribute, "generated-

natural-language-supported", only applies to generated

messages, not client supplied messages. The IPP object MUST

remember that natural language for all client-supplied

attributes, and when returning those attributes in response to

a query, the IPP object MUST indicate that natural language.

Each value whose attribute syntax type is 'text' or 'name' (see

sections 4.1.1 and 4.1.2) has an Associated Natural-Language.

This document does not specify how this association is stored

in a Printer or Job object. When such a value is encoded in a

request or response, the natural language is either implicit or

explicit:

- In the implicit case, the value contains only the text/name

value, and the language is specified by the "attributes-

natural-language" operation attribute in the request or

response (see sections 4.1.1.1 textWithoutLanguage and

4.1.2.1 nameWithoutLanguage).

- In the explicit case (also known as the Natural-Language

Override case), the value contains both the language and the

text/name value (see sections 4.1.1.2 textWithLanguage and

4.1.2.2 nameWithLanguage).

For example, the "job-name" attribute MAY be supplied by the

client in a create request. The text value for this attribute

will be in the natural language identified by the "attribute-

natural-language" attribute, or if different, as identified by

the Natural Language Override mechanism. If supplied, the IPP

object will use the value of the "job-name" attribute to

populate the Job object's "job-name" attribute. Whenever any

client queries the Job object's "job-name" attri

 
 
 
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