IBM* System i* customers who must comply with government regulations from HIPAA, Sarbanes-Oxley or the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act may face a chink in their System i armor. Spooled files, unless sent over a secure VPN connection, travel in a clear text format that anyone using a sniffer or other packet-analysis software can read. Recent discoveries have led to a working Internet printing protocol (IPP) solution, and with the right hardware and configuration, it can work for you.
IBM OS/400* V5R2 introduced the IPP driver that allows for a direct connection to an IPP-capable printer. Make sure you're on R520 or later and have applied the latest IPP PTFs. You can find these in Software Knowledge Base document 23383453: "V5Rx PTF Listing for TCP/IP and LAN printing" (www-912.ibm.com/s_dir/slkbase.nsf/slkbase).
Additionally, the printer must be able to import or create a digital certificate, as they play a key role in secure IPP printing. Currently, no printers are known to support the recommended method of secure connection - via an upgrade to transport-layer security - described in "RFC2910: Internet Printing Protocol/1.1: Encoding and Transport" (www.apps.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2910.html). The only known print servers to support this method are the iSeries* IPP Server and the common UNIX* printing system. The method described in this article uses digital certificates instead.
Your printer must support the import of a signed digital certificate from a third party, or the creation and export of its own, self-signed digital certificate. Both are equally secure, and both methods have been tested to work on System i architecture. The certificate installed on the printer must be exported and imported into the System i platform, so the server (the printer) and the client (the System i platform) have matching certificates.
The following instructions match the screens you'll likely find on the Infoprint 15xx series of printers, but may differ greatly from your printer. Any questions regarding how a given printer manages digital certificates should be directed to its manufacturer.
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