Hello, On Jul 1 14:50 Roger Oberholtzer wrote (shortened):
... Every user (at least on my system) has a $HOME/.cups/loptions file
If not all users on your system had intentionally at least once done whatever action (run lpoptions, click a [Save Settings] button in whatever graphical print dialog, whatever else...) which stores user specific print queue settings, it looks like a bug to me when whatever software writes user specific print queue settings without an explicite user request to do so. In particular when there is a default print queue setting for every user in his ~/.cups/lpoptions file this should mean that all users on your system should have done an explicite request to store a user specific default queue. You might inspect all ~/.cups/lpoptions files of your users (at least those which are worldwide readable). If they are very similar, an automatism which writes them is likely (or all your users prefer the same user specific settings which you may then better provide as system defaults ;-) I do not use a desktop system (only X plus a plain windowmanager) and I have nothing in ~/.cups/ so that the desktop systems (KDE and Gnome) are "the usual suspects" which may write stuff to ~/.cups/lpoptions without having an user request to do so. Kind Regards Johannes Meixner -- SUSE LINUX Products GmbH, Maxfeldstrasse 5, 90409 Nuernberg, Germany AG Nuernberg, HRB 16746, GF: Markus Rex -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org