On 07/27/2011 11:46 AM, Chris Tooley wrote:
On 11-07-27 10:25 AM, Yasha Karant wrote:
I have found that modern CUPS printer support configuration tools under
EL have a fairly complete data base of the drivers/parameters needed for
vendor specific printers.
To some extent, this seems to include even reverse engineered data for
printers for which the vendor will not provide any detailed public
specifications and only provides proprietary "drivers" to the monopoly
(and sometimes, Apple).

Given various comments and suggestions that have appeared concerning the
proper Linux formatting/partitioning and use of some current SATA hard
drives that no longer present the 512 byte standard to the operating
system, could SL (or RH or something equivalent to the CUPS team or ...)
provide a data base for drives similar to the CUPS one for printers?
For example, during the initial installation of either a new drive or a
new major release of the OS (e.g., going from EL 5 to EL 6), the drive
partitioning/formatting utility would recognize the drive(s) in use and
automatically set either acceptable or "optimal" parameters.

If such a data base exists, relevant URLs and/or RPMs would be
appreciated.

Yasha Karant

This may be a suggestion that would be more pertinent to the upstream
vendor, as I understand it SL doesn't actually do any development to
modify or add to the EL base upon which SL is built. :)

If it's already been done, I haven't heard about it - that's not to say
it doesn't exist though ;)

-Chris


My understanding is that "CUPS is the standards-based, open source printing system developed by Apple Inc. for Mac OS® X and other UNIX®-like operating systems" quoted from http://www.cups.org/ .

Thus, CUPS is from a .org, not from a vendor, or even an academic/government entity such as Fermilab or CERN. Hence, although SL and even RH would not the establishing body, it is appropriate for SL, not just RH, to spearhead such an initiative for another appropriate .org entity . If Fermilab/CERN have sufficient resources, they could develop such a data base for use with gparted or other open source non-volatile storage (e.g., disk) subsystems.

Yasha

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