Kenshi Muto wrote:
...
I suspect your file hasn't any Printer line by something reason.
...
Correct. I manually added a Printer line to /etc/cups/classes.conf and
was then able to start cupsd.
I initially tried to use lpadmin, but that failed because it tries to
communicate with cupsd. I fo
At Wed, 09 Aug 2006 22:40:24 +0100,
Benedict Adamson wrote:
> The stack trace given by gdb is as follows:
> > #0 cupsdFindAvailablePrinter (name=0x80ba720 "Postscript") at classes.c:282
> > #1 0x0807dfef in cupsdCheckJobs () at job.c:343
> > #2 0x080667e9 in main (argc=2, argv=0xaff09534) at mai
Kenshi Muto wrote:
...
I still couldn't reproduce your problem.
Could you check again with nostripped version?
...
The stack trace given by gdb is as follows:
#0 cupsdFindAvailablePrinter (name=0x80ba720 "Postscript") at classes.c:282
#1 0x0807dfef in cupsdCheckJobs () at job.c:343
#2 0x080
At Tue, 08 Aug 2006 23:53:29 +0100,
Benedict Adamson wrote:
> Running /usr/sbin/cupsd -F under gdb shows that the immediate cause of
> the crash is a SEGV. FWIW, here is the top of the stack trace:
> > #0 0x08052511 in ?? ()
> > #1 0x080ba720 in ?? ()
> > #2 0xa7d60c45 in _IO_file_sync () from
I have the same problem, but using cupsys 1.2.2-1.
Running /usr/sbin/cupsd -F under gdb shows that the immediate cause of
the crash is a SEGV. FWIW, here is the top of the stack trace:
#0 0x08052511 in ?? ()
#1 0x080ba720 in ?? ()
#2 0xa7d60c45 in _IO_file_sync () from /lib/tls/i686/cmov/lib
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