msweet at apple.com
Tue Dec 20 08:02:59 PST 2016
There are a variety of historical reasons this is the case, but ultimately this is a) configurable and b) defaults to whatever the Linux distribution wants. > On Dec 20, 2016, at 10:43 AM, Zdenek Dohnal <zdohnal at redhat.com> wrote: > > On 12/20/2016 04:04 PM, Helge Blischke wrote: >>> Am 20.12.2016 um 12:42 schrieb Zdenek Dohnal <zdohnal at redhat.com>: >>> >>> Hi, >>> >>> I have question about CUPS system groups. Is it possible to add group >>> 'wheel' to default CUPS system groups in configure? If it is not, can >>> you please someone explains why not? >>> >>> Thank you for answer in advance. >>> >>> Best regards, >>> >>> Zdenek Dohnal >> By default, wheel is not a member of the CUPS system groups. But you may explicitly >> define which groups belong to the system groups by using the >> SystemGroup >> directive in cups-files.conf. >> >> Helge >> >> _______________________________________________ >> cups-devel mailing list >> cups-devel at cups.org >> https://lists.cups.org/mailman/listinfo/cups-devel > Yes, I know group 'wheel' is not a member of the CUPS default system > groups, but my question was why it is not. And if it can be added as > default CUPS system group at configuration time (not manually define in > cups-files.conf after installation). Probably I did not express myself > clearly, I am sorry. > > > _______________________________________________ > cups-devel mailing list > cups-devel at cups.org > https://lists.cups.org/mailman/listinfo/cups-devel _________________________________________________________ Michael Sweet, Senior Printing System Engineer