End of servicing plan for third-party printer drivers on Windows

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    End of servicing plan for third-party printer drivers on Windows

    End of servicing plan for third-party printer drivers on Windows


    Posted: 07 Sep 2023

    This article provides information on the end of servicing plan for third-party printer drivers on Windows.

    Overview

    With the release of Windows 10 21H2, Windows offers inbox support for Mopria compliant printer devices over network and USB interfaces via the Microsoft IPP Class Driver. This removes the need for print device manufacturers to provide their own installers, drivers, utilities, and so on.  Device experience customization is now available via the Print Support Apps that are distributed and automatically installed via the Windows Store. This framework improves reliability and performance by moving customization from the Win32 framework to the UWP software development framework. Finally, print device manufacturers no longer have to rebuild their software since this solution is supported across all Windows versions and editions.

    With these advancements in the Windows print platform, we are announcing the end of servicing of the legacy v3 and v4 Windows printer drivers. As this is an impactful change, end of servicing will be staged over multiple years. See the following Timeline and FAQ sections for guidance on the end of servicing roadmap.

    Timeline

    Timeline * Plan
    September 2023 Announce legacy third-party printer driver for Windows end of servicing plan.
    2025 No new printer drivers will be published to Windows Update.

    Existing printer drivers on Windows Update can still be updated.
    2026 Printer driver ranking order modified to always prefer Windows IPP inbox class driver.
    2027 Except for security-related fixes, third-party printer driver updates will no longer be allowed.

    Existing third-party printer drivers can be installed from Windows Update or users can install printer drivers using printer manufactures installer programs.
    * Dates are subject to change.

    FAQ

    Q: Will vendor-supplied drivers be signed by WHCP (Windows Hardware Compatibility Program)?
    A:
    Printer manufacturers can continue to submit printer drivers through the Partner Center hardware tool for driver validation and signing. However, in 2026 new printer drivers will no longer be published to Windows Update. Manufacturers and independent software vendors will need to provide customers with an alternative means to download and install those printer drivers.

    Q: Will Windows prevent installation of new printer drivers?
    A:
    Windows will continue to allow vendor-supplied printer drivers to be installed via separate installation packages.

    Q: Will installation of Microsoft-signed printers already released to the market be prevented from installing on Windows?
    A:
    Existing printer drivers can be installed on Windows PCs even after the end of servicing.

    Q: Does end of servicing apply to all versions of Windows?
    A:
    This change applies to all versions of Windows.

    Q: Will supporting Mopria certification be a mandatory requirement for HLK (Hardware Lab Kit)?
    A:
    Yes.

    Q: Will Microsoft continue to address security-related issues related to the legacy driver platform after the end of servicing?
    A:
    Microsoft will continue to issue security fixes related to the legacy printer driver platform while the Windows OS version is still within Microsoft Support Lifecycle.

    Q: Does Microsoft have plans to remove existing features supported by v3 and v4 printer drivers as part of the end of servicing plan?
    A:
    There are no plans to disable print features specifically related to the legacy printer driver platform.

    Q: Can print vendors continue to add printer Hardware IDs (HWID) to existing third-party driver packages?
    A:
    Once driver enforcement policies are live, adding new HWID will be approved on a case-by-case basis.

    Q: Will multi-function devices (print, scan, fax) work over IPP?
    A:
    Yes, they will.  For network devices, the Print and Fax endpoints will work via IPP and IPP Fax Out, respectively, while the Scan endpoint will work via WS-Scan or eSCL.  For USB devices, the endpoints will only be accessible when the USB interface is in IPP Over USB mode which means IPP for Print, IPP Fax Out for Fax, and only eSCL for Scan.

    Source: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/wi...ers-on-windows
    Brink's Avatar Posted By: Brink
    07 Sep 2023


  1. Posts : 295
    Windows 10 Pro
       #1

    Just more on how they want everyone to use the M$ store. Which to this tech observer is BS.

    Windows will continue to allow vendor-supplied printer drivers to be installed via separate installation packages.
    I have a funny felling the vendor will just tell the consumer to go to the BS store...

    If I ran a company I would NEVER invest in Windows. It'd be customized Gentoo - and my IT will thank me...

    Before any chimp laughs, educate yourself. Gentoo Linux - Wikipedia
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 1,775
    Windows 10 Pro
       #2

    F22 Simpilot said:

    If I ran a company I would NEVER invest in Windows. It'd be customized Gentoo - and my IT will thank me...

    Before any chimp laughs, educate yourself. Gentoo Linux - Wikipedia
    Gentoo (or any other Linux)might be fine for developers, and of course for servers. But for user desktops, no friggin' way. What company would want to invest in user training and support for Linux, when lots of employees already know Windows, and some Windows programs don't have Linux counterparts?

    I don't mean to start another "culture war" but Linux on the desktop has yet to achieve any significant market penetration, and probably never will.

    Companies have a big investment in Office 365 and they aren't about to drop O 365, because they would have massive test costs before they can confidently roll out say Libre Office.
      My Computers


  3. Posts : 295
    Windows 10 Pro
       #3

    Linux is well suited for an office environment unless you need some kind of propitiatory software. I wouldn't need my staff to use Office. They can use LibreOffice. Many governments have already moved to OpenOffice...

    Many small to medium sized businesses can use Linux. If you're in corporate or whatever that may be a different story.


    Major OpenOffice.org Deployments - Apache OpenOffice Wiki
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 15,491
    Windows10
       #4

    F22 Simpilot said:
    Just more on how they want everyone to use the M$ store. Which to this tech observer is BS.



    I have a funny felling the vendor will just tell the consumer to go to the BS store...

    If I ran a company I would NEVER invest in Windows. It'd be customized Gentoo - and my IT will thank me...

    Before any chimp laughs, educate yourself. Gentoo Linux - Wikipedia
    The veiled insult (chimp) is then on you - you will be out of business in weeks. No decent company can survive without MS Office.

    Re. government - name any major G10 country?
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 295
    Windows 10 Pro
       #5

    cereberus said:
    No decent company can survive without MS Office.

    Really? So if I ran a pizza shop, an insurance company, a pet groomer, a non-profit, etc I'm going out of business because I chose to use a non-Windows OS and software?

    Yeah, chimp... Low IQ - bipedal - carbon based - chimp. The world is full of them and it's why the wold is a masterful shithole to live in...

    Also, read the f&(*king link I posted.

    Here's a couple more.

    Deployments: Public sector | Open Document

    Linux not Windows: Why Munich is shifting back from Microsoft to open source – again | ZDNET

    (Substitute OpenOffice with LibreOffice).
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 10,741
    Windows 11 Workstation x64
       #6

    Play nice, children
      My Computers


  7. Posts : 1,767
    Windows 10 Pro (+ Windows 10 Home VMs for testing)
       #7

    F22 Simpilot said:
    Many governments have already moved to OpenOffice...

    Major OpenOffice.org Deployments - Apache OpenOffice Wiki
    Sorry but... that OpenOffice Wiki document you linked to is ancient. Look at the very bottom of it and you'll see it was last updated July 2013... 10 years ago.

    Whilst development of LibreOffice continues, development of OpenOffice has all but halted.

    I discussed this here on TenForums 18 months ago. There's been no improvement and it looks like the Apache Foundation has all but given up.

    As an example OpenOffice 4.1.11 was released in October 2021; the latest version almost 2 years later is OpenOffice 4.1.14 - a maintenance release in February 2023... just more bug fixes and 'enhancements', no new features.

    In fact the last major release, i.e. moving from OpenOffice 4.0 to OpenOffice 4.1 was April 2014. It's been nothing but small incremental maintenance and security releases (bug fixes) since then.

    Whilst I use LibreOffice.... OpenOffice?

    End of servicing plan for third-party printer drivers on Windows-its_dead_jim.png
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 295
    Windows 10 Pro
       #8

    End of servicing plan for third-party printer drivers on Windows-rdeyhr5.jpg
      My Computer


  9. Posts : 1,767
    Windows 10 Pro (+ Windows 10 Home VMs for testing)
       #9

    This is more than 2 years old (May 2020). Now compare it to a much more recent article like this one (Jan 2023):

    Munich Is Ditching Linux For Purely Political Reasons
      My Computer


 

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