On Tuesday, January 29, 2019 08:40:04 AM to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> I'm still having difficulty in expressing this phenomenon (and it /is/
> important to me: the one advantage Google has over DDG is that it "knows"
> more about you -- and that is exactly why I don't want it. This means
> that I've t
On Tue, Jan 29, 2019 at 08:21:37AM -0500, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Tuesday, January 29, 2019 04:10:01 AM to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
[...]
> > Now I'm not saying all of this to tease you or something, but because
> > it illustrates (to me, at least) how difficult search actually is:
>
> +1 (or
On Tue, Jan 29, 2019 at 08:20:52AM -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 29, 2019 at 10:10:01AM +0100, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> > I must admit I skipped ( EEEK =:-o ) the search engine myself, which
> > would've
> > been DuckDuckGo (y'all know: Google -- what is Google, anyway? ;-)
> >
> > C
On Tuesday, January 29, 2019 04:10:01 AM to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> On Mon, Jan 28, 2019 at 12:08:35PM -0500, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> > Ahh, ok, sorry, it looks like I lied -- I searched for [define: bananian]
> > using Duck Duck Go (not google, as I had stated).
>
> I must admit I skipped ( EE
On Tue, Jan 29, 2019 at 10:10:01AM +0100, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> I must admit I skipped ( EEEK =:-o ) the search engine myself, which would've
> been DuckDuckGo (y'all know: Google -- what is Google, anyway? ;-)
>
> Curious as I am, I tried define:bananian with DDG: the second hit is a
> Wikipe
On Mon, Jan 28, 2019 at 12:08:35PM -0500, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Monday, January 28, 2019 11:42:52 AM Jeremy Nicoll wrote:
> > On Mon, 28 Jan 2019, at 15:11, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> > > Maybe I am morphing into a cat, but what does bananian mean. Googling
> > > didn't help, showed me B
On Monday 28 January 2019 13:19:50 rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Monday, January 28, 2019 12:08:35 PM rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> > Ahh, ok, sorry, it looks like I lied
>
> I guess I should clarify, I should know better than to make statements
> like that on a mail list (but, it does say "it loo
On Monday, January 28, 2019 12:08:35 PM rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> Ahh, ok, sorry, it looks like I lied
I guess I should clarify, I should know better than to make statements like
that on a mail list (but, it does say "it looks like I lied" ;-)
I mean, if I want to run for president -- oh, wa
On Monday, January 28, 2019 11:42:52 AM Jeremy Nicoll wrote:
> On Mon, 28 Jan 2019, at 15:11, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> > Maybe I am morphing into a cat, but what does bananian mean. Googling
> > didn't help, showed me Banyan (a fruit) and talked about a website and
> > whether it is safe for ch
On Mon, 28 Jan 2019, at 15:11, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> Maybe I am morphing into a cat, but what does bananian mean. Googling didn't
> help, showed me Banyan (a fruit) and talked about a website and whether it is
> safe for children.
The very first hit I get is for a linux distro.
And I di
On Monday, January 28, 2019 10:21:31 AM Curt wrote:
> It helped me:
>
> https://www.bananian.org/details
Thanks to you and Tomas -- you are a better googler than I am ;-)
On 2019-01-28, wrote:
>
>
> I don't know, but my assoc memory suggests it might be a Raspbian
> for a Banana Pi.
>
A bananian could also be someone who lives in a banana.
On 2019-01-28, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Monday, January 28, 2019 08:14:24 AM Brian wrote:
>> bananian
>
> Maybe I am morphing into a cat, but what does bananian mean. Googling didn't
> help, showed me Banyan (a fruit) and talked about a website and whether it is
> safe for children.
>
I
On Mon, Jan 28, 2019 at 10:11:00AM -0500, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Monday, January 28, 2019 08:14:24 AM Brian wrote:
> > bananian
>
> Maybe I am morphing into a cat, but what does bananian mean. Googling didn't
> help, showed me Banyan (a fruit) and talked about a website and whether it is
On Monday, January 28, 2019 08:14:24 AM Brian wrote:
> bananian
Maybe I am morphing into a cat, but what does bananian mean. Googling didn't
help, showed me Banyan (a fruit) and talked about a website and whether it is
safe for children.
On Sun 27 Jan 2019 at 20:49:36 +0100, toog...@mailbox.org wrote:
> Hey!
>
> i have a laptop and one remote server/computer. The remote server is
> bananian, i
> hope that doesn't matter for this case.
It shouldn't.
> I have configured cups with hplip to print things on the remote server. Tha
On Sun 27 Jan 2019 at 20:49:36 +0100, toog...@mailbox.org wrote:
> Hey!
>
> i have a laptop and one remote server/computer. The remote server is
> bananian, i
> hope that doesn't matter for this case.
>
> I have configured cups with hplip to print things on the remote server. That
> means, i c
Hey!
i have a laptop and one remote server/computer. The remote server is bananian, i
hope that doesn't matter for this case.
I have configured cups with hplip to print things on the remote server. That
means, i can go to https://remote-server/printers/printername in my laptop's
webbrowser and p
On Thu, 25 Dec 2014, Brian wrote:
From man cups-browsed:
3. Broadcast local queues with the CUPS protocol.
yes, but the next line says
Note that 2. and 3. are only to allow communication with legacy CUPS
servers (1.5.x or older) on the remote machine(s)
that seems apply to
On Wed 24 Dec 2014 at 20:40:53 +0100, Pierre Frenkiel wrote:
> On Sun, 21 Dec 2014, Brian wrote:
>
> >It is impossible for a Wheezy client to discover the queues on a 1.7
> >CUPS server without the help of cups-browsed on the server. Please read
> >the documentation.
>
>My experience proves th
On Thursday 25 December 2014 15:40:18 Pierre Frenkiel wrote:
> On Thu, 25 Dec 2014, Lisi Reisz wrote:
> > I did reply. I said both.
>
>In case I became blind, I looked for the word "both" in all your posts.
>I found it only once: in your last post !!!
https://lists.debian.org/201412242151
On Thu, 25 Dec 2014, Lisi Reisz wrote:
I did reply. I said both.
In case I became blind, I looked for the word "both" in all your posts.
I found it only once: in your last post !!!
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On Thursday 25 December 2014 14:32:21 Pierre Frenkiel wrote:
> On Thu, 25 Dec 2014, Lisi Reisz wrote:
> > No, but you have not explained why you dislike my solution so much that
> > you are not even willing to try it! You may, of course, have a very good
> > reason, but you have not explained it.
On Thu, 25 Dec 2014, Lisi Reisz wrote:
No, but you have not explained why you dislike my solution so much that you
are not even willing to try it! You may, of course, have a very good reason,
but you have not explained it. ;-)
hi Lisi,
what you call "solution" was "do the setup to get what yo
On Thursday 25 December 2014 09:58:02 Pierre Frenkiel wrote:
> On Wed, 24 Dec 2014, Lisi Reisz wrote:
> > Have you tried enabling server and client on all computers involved and
> > using CUPS to print? This is what I do, and I have no problem.
>
>hi Lisi,
>I suppose that's the case for mo
On Wed, 24 Dec 2014, Lisi Reisz wrote:
Have you tried enabling server and client on all computers involved and using
CUPS to print? This is what I do, and I have no problem.
hi Lisi,
I suppose that's the case for most debian users, I think that you could say
the
same thing for almost a
On Wednesday 24 December 2014 19:40:53 Pierre Frenkiel wrote:
> On Sun, 21 Dec 2014, Brian wrote:
> >> . . .
> >>
> cups-browsed needs to be correctly set up on the server for the client
> >>>
> >>> to be able to see the advertised queues. > > "listen 192.168.1.12"
> >>
> >> should not be the
On Sun, 21 Dec 2014, Brian wrote:
. . .
cups-browsed needs to be correctly set up on the server for the client
to be able to see the advertised queues. > > "listen 192.168.1.12"
should not be the least bit necessary.
. . .
It is impossible for a Wheezy client to discover the queues on a 1.7
On Sun 21 Dec 2014 at 23:25:38 +, Brian wrote:
> This may or may not be significant for the printing process.
It would be useful to see the server log. If you do post it please do
not truncate or edit the beginning of it before sending.
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On Sun 21 Dec 2014 at 20:46:55 +0100, Pierre Frenkiel wrote:
> On Sun, 21 Dec 2014, Brian wrote:
>
> >On Sat 20 Dec 2014 at 22:03:50 +0100, Pierre Frenkiel wrote:
> >> I think that a so mature OS as Debian should provide the same
> >> facility.
> >
> >It does.
>
>the experience proves that
On Sunday 21 December 2014 21:59:10 Lisi Reisz wrote:
> On Sunday 21 December 2014 19:46:55 Pierre Frenkiel wrote:
> > > On Sat 20 Dec 2014 at 22:03:50 +0100, Pierre Frenkiel wrote:
> > >> I think that a so mature OS as Debian should provide the same
> > >> facility.
> > >
> > > It does.
> >
>
On Sunday 21 December 2014 19:46:55 Pierre Frenkiel wrote:
> > On Sat 20 Dec 2014 at 22:03:50 +0100, Pierre Frenkiel wrote:
> >> I think that a so mature OS as Debian should provide the same
> >> facility.
> >
> > It does.
>
> the experience proves that it does not: otherwise, why nobody co
On Sat, 20 Dec 2014, Lisi Reisz wrote:
Go into CUPS web interface. Go to Administration -> printers -> click on the
printer that you want -> click on the administration drop down menu and alter
the server settings to give you what you want.
hi Lisi,
what I want is to get, when I print 1 p
On Sun, 21 Dec 2014, Brian wrote:
On Sat 20 Dec 2014 at 22:03:50 +0100, Pierre Frenkiel wrote:
I think that a so mature OS as Debian should provide the same
facility.
It does.
the experience proves that it does not: otherwise, why nobody could
explain the problem I described and s
On Sat 20 Dec 2014 at 22:03:50 +0100, Pierre Frenkiel wrote:
> On Sat, 20 Dec 2014, Brian wrote:
>
> >. . .
> >This shows you have the android correctly set up for printing.
>
> not exactly: I said that I didn't have anything to setup: just launching the
> application and wait for 10 seconds
On Saturday 20 December 2014 21:03:50 Pierre Frenkiel wrote:
> On Sat, 20 Dec 2014, Brian wrote:
> > . . .
> > This shows you have the android correctly set up for printing.
>
> not exactly: I said that I didn't have anything to setup: just launching
> the application and wait for 10 seconds.
>
On Saturday 20 December 2014 21:03:50 Pierre Frenkiel wrote:
> On Sat, 20 Dec 2014, Brian wrote:
> > . . .
> > This shows you have the android correctly set up for printing.
>
> not exactly: I said that I didn't have anything to setup: just launching
> the application and wait for 10 seconds.
>
On Sat, 20 Dec 2014, Brian wrote:
. . .
This shows you have the android correctly set up for printing.
not exactly: I said that I didn't have anything to setup: just launching the
application and wait for 10 seconds.
I think that a so mature OS as Debian should provide the same
facilit
On Sat 20 Dec 2014 at 16:25:40 +0100, Pierre Frenkiel wrote:
> I have a HP photosmmart printer connected via USB to my Debian desktop.
> On my android tablet,the "printershare" application found it immedialty,
> without providing it any information (just: "look on the wifi network"). and
> the ins
hi,
I have a HP photosmmart printer connected via USB to my Debian desktop.
On my android tablet,the "printershare" application found it immedialty,
without providing it any information (just: "look on the wifi network"). and
the installation was done in less that 10 seconds.
On my wheezy laptop,
Printing to a aficio 270 printer/photostat machine, sometimes it gives
"recoverable: Network host '192.168.xxx.xxx' is busy; will retry in 30
seconds..."Tried telnet to the printer
ctrl:~# telnet 192.168.xxx.xxx 9100
Trying 192.168.xxx.xxx...
telnet: Unable to connect to remote host: Connection ref
| HP-UX Print Server | -> / Networked HP LasterJet /
----
The GUI gnome-cups-add and gnome-cups-manager don't seem to be unable to set
up remote printing via a remote print server.
Tried direct with lpadmin, however eve
ter.
>
> My setup is this:
>
> ---
> -
> | Debian wS | -> | HP-UX Print Server | -> / Networked HP
> LasterJet /
> ---
> -
>
> The GUI gnome-cups-add and gnome-cups-manager don't see
nter.
>
> My setup is this:
>
> ----
> | Debian wS | -> | HP-UX Print Server | -> / Networked HP LasterJet /
> ----
>
> The GUI gnome-cups-add and gnome-cups-manager don't seem to be
t Server | -> / Networked HP LasterJet /
----
The GUI gnome-cups-add and gnome-cups-manager don't seem to be unable to set
up remote printing via a remote print server.
Tried direct with lpadmin, however every command
I (Marty) wrote:
I have an HP PSC 2110 working locally with foomatic and CUPS back end.
When I try to print remotely the CUPS web interface returns with:
"Print file was not accepted (client-error-bad-request)!"
I find these entries in /var/log/cups/error_log:
E [01/Jul/2005:00:13:09 -0400] pr
I have an HP PSC 2110 working locally with foomatic and CUPS back end.
When I try to print remotely the CUPS web interface returns with:
"Print file was not accepted (client-error-bad-request)!"
I find these entries in /var/log/cups/error_log:
E [01/Jul/2005:00:13:09 -0400] print_job: No file!?
On (19/05/05 23:26), Peter Jay Salzman wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> Just installed Debian on my new workstation, "satan". The workstation has
> an HP LaserJet 6MP that I'd like to share with other Linux computers on my
> home network. I use lpd, not lprng.
>
> I'm pretty sure /etc/printcap is set up co
Hi all,
Just installed Debian on my new workstation, "satan". The workstation has
an HP LaserJet 6MP that I'd like to share with other Linux computers on my
home network. I use lpd, not lprng.
I'm pretty sure /etc/printcap is set up correctly on satan and the remote
hosts. I'm pretty sure that
I've been using lpd for printing on my home desktop machine running woody
and am comfortable with it. Recently I acquired a laptop machine
pre-installed with sarge which uses cups. The laptop is connected to
the deskton via a LAN, and I would like print from the laptop using the
printer on the d
On Thu, Dec 26, 2002 at 11:46:52PM +1030, David Purton wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I'm stuck
>
Never mind, gs with woody seemed not to be liking the hpijs driver -
it works ok with the ljet4 driver
dc
--
David Purton
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
If you, O LORD, kept a record of sins, O Lord, who could stand?
Hi all,
I'm stuck
I want to print from a laptop to a printer connected to my desktop
using cups.
Printing from the desktop works fine.
printing from the laptop under windows works fine.
Printing from the laptop under linux with a command like this works:
lp -d printer_name@desktop_name
But
Raymond> other Redhat machine
Raymond> am I missing something in the upgrade
If I remember correctly, Debian installed a traditional lpd style
system by default (the lpr package) for me. This system disables
remote printing by default. Since I no longer use this system I can't
rem
Raymond Gree wrote:
Hello Debian community
I installed Debian to replace my RedHat on my server and have the
following problem
I can't print anymore on my remote Debian printer from my other Redhat
machine
am I missing something in the upgrade
Thanks for the help
Ray
I assume you are usi
Hello Debian community
I installed Debian to replace my RedHat on my server and have the
following problem
I can't print anymore on my remote Debian printer from my other Redhat
machine
am I missing something in the upgrade
Thanks for the help
Ray
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On Tue, Apr 30, 2002 at 01:04:00AM +0100, Carlos Sousa wrote:
> > You neglected to give information on the printing system you're using.
> > Looks like LPRNG, though... In that case, I don't think LPRNG uses
> > hosts.lpd, that would be utter nonsense. You should perhaps look
> > in lpd.perms and/
On Mon, 29 Apr 2002 20:17:41 +0100 Carlos Sousa <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Mon, 29 Apr 2002 12:55:12 +0200 Erik van der Meulen
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Dear All - I have two Debian boxes, one of which has a printer
> > connected to it. The printer works (magicfilter), I can print f
On Mon, 29 Apr 2002 12:55:12 +0200 Erik van der Meulen
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Dear All - I have two Debian boxes, one of which has a printer
> connected to it. The printer works (magicfilter), I can print from the
> local machine (echo 'Hello World' |lp), and also from my other Win
> boxes u
I have hosts specified in my hosts.lpd - don't know
about "+" maybe it's enough.
However there is another file /etc/lpd.perms which I
had to edit to get things working the way they had
when I switched from redhat to debian.
__
Do You Yahoo!?
Everyt
Dear All - I have two Debian boxes, one of which has a printer connected
to it. The printer works (magicfilter), I can print from the local
machine (echo 'Hello World' |lp), and also from my other Win boxes using
Samba.
What I have not been able to do is print from another Debian system. If
I try t
begin quoting what Jeroen Valcke said on Fri, Apr 05, 2002 at 12:34:25PM +0200:
>
> BTW, is there a way to make this new (remote) printer the default
> printer? I tried by making a symbolic link from lp to the new printer.
> But that doesn't seem to work.
In the printtool config, there's a place
begin quoting what Jeroen Valcke said on Fri, Apr 05, 2002 at 10:08:13AM +0200:
>
> Does this mean I have to add every remote printer in my printcap config
> file?
Yes; you're using an lpr program that looks for it's config there.
> However. The problem is solved now, but I don't understand why
On Thu, Apr 04, 2002 at 02:04:24PM -0500, Shawn McMahon wrote:
> > On Thu, 2002-04-04 at 05:47, Jeroen Valcke wrote:
> > >
> > > Recently I upgraded my pc from Redhat to Debian ;-)
> > > However since then I have a problem with remote printing. I used to type
&g
On Thu, Apr 04, 2002 at 02:04:24PM -0500, Shawn McMahon wrote:
> > On Thu, 2002-04-04 at 05:47, Jeroen Valcke wrote:
> > >
> > > Recently I upgraded my pc from Redhat to Debian ;-)
> > > However since then I have a problem with remote printing. I used to type
&g
On Thu, Apr 04, 2002 at 10:00:22AM -0900, Greg C. Madden wrote:
> On Thu, 2002-04-04 at 05:47, Jeroen Valcke wrote:
> > Hello,
> >
> > Recently I upgraded my pc from Redhat to Debian ;-)
> > However since then I have a problem with remote printing. I used to type
> &
> On Thu, 2002-04-04 at 05:47, Jeroen Valcke wrote:
> >
> > Recently I upgraded my pc from Redhat to Debian ;-)
> > However since then I have a problem with remote printing. I used to type
> > 'lpr -P [EMAIL PROTECTED]' on the redhat machine. However when I
On Thu, 2002-04-04 at 05:47, Jeroen Valcke wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Recently I upgraded my pc from Redhat to Debian ;-)
> However since then I have a problem with remote printing. I used to type
> 'lpr -P [EMAIL PROTECTED]' on the redhat machine. However when I try
> this
Hello,
Recently I upgraded my pc from Redhat to Debian ;-)
However since then I have a problem with remote printing. I used to type
'lpr -P [EMAIL PROTECTED]' on the redhat machine. However when I try
this on the debian box, I get an error 'lpr: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: unknown
printer
dman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> CUPS is created by a company (commercial entity) but the CUPS system
> is free. I think the source is available too.
It's GPL.
--
Alan Shutko <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> - In a variety of flavors!
Be independent. Insult a rich relative today.
On Fri, Oct 19, 2001 at 10:14:35AM +1000, Alan E Davis wrote:
| Thank you.
|
| I was able to get remote printing to work. The printer is an HP
| Laserjet attached to one machine's printer port. I had to create an
| /etc/hosts.lpd file; listing the hosts in hosts.equiv didn't work,
| c
Thank you.
I was able to get remote printing to work. The printer is an HP Laserjet
attached to one machine's printer port. I had to create an /etc/hosts.lpd
file; listing the hosts in hosts.equiv didn't work, contrary to the Printing
HOWTO.
I may take you up on the offer to he
On Wed, Oct 17, 2001 at 10:51:27AM +1000, Alan E. Davis wrote:
| In my high school classroom we have a small network of four linux
| boxen, with private block ip addresses (our Public School System
| domain is in a private block), with one printer. I have been able
| to ftp/telnet between my own b
Printing-HOWTO, and I have attempted
to follow instructions on the debian lists. When testing remote printing, the
file is spooled, but
mhs49:/home/adavis# lpc stat
lp:
queuing is enabled
printing is enabled
11 entiries in spool area
waiting for queue t
On Fri, Mar 02, 2001 at 10:24:08PM -0500, Michael P. Soulier wrote:
>
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] msoulier]$ lpr mail.out
> lpr: connect: Connection refused
> jobs queued, but cannot start daemon.
>
> I've checked, the the lpd daemon is running on both machines.
>
> What am I missing?
Ah,
Hey people. I need some help getting remote printing to work. I have a
print server with a local printer attached. I used magicfilter and now it
works great. Now, I'd like to be able to use lpr to remotely print to it like
I do at work.
My local /etc/printcap is
lp|Remote printer
"Paul D. Smith" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I have a bunch of networked printers available (no local printers). So,
> I created entries like this in /etc/printcap:
>
[... story about failing network printing ...]
>
> Thoughts?
A little bit OT, but have a look at the cupsys packages (take the
> I have a bunch of networked printers available (no local printers). So,
> I created entries like this in /etc/printcap:
>
> 6tp4s65hp:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:client
>
> 6tp4s65hp-dup:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:client
>
> 6tp4s65qms:[EMAIL PROTECTED]:client
>
> (don't ask me, I didn't name 'em :). If
I haven't been able to contact the lprng folks (my mail was never posted
to their mailing list, according to the archive, and I can't seem to
subscribe due to mail address issues), so maybe someone here has an idea.
I'm using Debian 2.2 + some woody, with lprng 3.6.24-2.
I have a bunch of network
On Mon, Sep 04, 2000 at 01:48:03PM -0700, Paulo Henrique Baptista de Oliveira
wrote:
: Hi all,
: I installed lprng (at client - Woody and server - Potato) and want
: to printing remote from client. I saw at Printing HOWTO, only tips to
lpd.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] lpr -P@
If most of
Hi all,
I installed lprng (at client - Woody and server - Potato) and want
to printing remote from client. I saw at Printing HOWTO, only tips to
lpd.
Anyone can help me on this.
Thanks, Paulo Henrique
I believe the answer lies in the /etc/lpd.perms
That is the print server that will recieve the jobs. It is commented well,
but the time I tried to make it so I could print from one Linux box
to the other, I could not print from the print server to itsself. Then of
course you have to configure the r
Since upgrading to Potato, I cannot print from remote boxes on my network, I
get a message "Link Transfer Fail."
I also note that in syslog, I see
tcplog: printer request from brubaker.martinet
ippl: ICMP message type destination unreachable - bad port from localhost
[127.0.0.1]
Also, auth.lo
After I installed Potato on my machine, I noticed that remote printing from the
Windows boxes on my network was failing. Looking into the problem, I noted
entries like this in auth.log when I tried to print:
PAM_unix[535]: authentication failure; (uid=0) -> scmartin for samba service
I h
On Mon, 6 Mar 2000 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
mahdi> Have you rebooted after making the setting?
Some two or three times I have rebooted the machine. That is the
normal course. It will not be running continuously.
mahdi> Did you try redirection?
mahdi> # cat /etc/fstab > /dev/laser
Hi,
I have the lpd running on both the machines. In fact, after the new
entries in my printcap, I have restarted lpd. The results were posted
only after these things failed. The HOWTO was not much of a help.
sridhar
---
Sridhar M.A.
Have you rebooted after making the setting?
Did you try redirection?
# cat /etc/fstab > /dev/laser
Whats the output of ps -ef on the remote machine?
are both the queue daemon and the lp daemon in the output?
It is worth trying the same thing from the remote printer itself..
setting its local
Hi,
I have the lpd running on both the machines. In fact, after the new
entries in my printcap, I have restarted lpd. The results were posted
only after these things failed. The HOWTO was not much of a help.
sridhar
---
Sridhar M.A.
Hi,
Can you verify that your lpd daemon is running on vayu.xrdlab.mysore ?
I would check that first.
Hi,
I am trying to set up my printcap to print on to a laser printer
connected to another machine. My /etc/printcap is as follows:
#Local haralu.xrdlab.mysore
lp|ex1000:\
:lp=/dev
Hi,
I am trying to set up my printcap to print on to a laser printer
connected to another machine. My /etc/printcap is as follows:
#Local haralu.xrdlab.mysore
lp|ex1000:\
:lp=/dev/lp0:sd=/var/spool/lpd/ex1000:\
:sh:pw#80:pl#72:px#1440:mx#0:\
:if=/etc/magicfilter/epsonlq-
I'm not too sure. If you print to a remote printer then the file must be sent
over the
network. I'm not sure why the daemon would complain then about the file not
being linked.
"Joseph A. Martin" wrote:
> Hello,
> I found part of the problem. I added my brothers' computer to
> /etc/host
Hello,
I found part of the problem. I added my brothers' computer to
/etc/hosts.lpd and it gave them access. However I have another
problem. After they print a message is sent by the lpd on my server
back to the user account on their machine. The message says:
"Your printer job ((stdin)) w
Symbolic links work fine across separate filesystems, NFS or otherwise. Hard
links
cannot be made to files outside the filesystem where the file linked to
resides. I
would guess rather that the link failure refers to an inability to connect (or a
connection which terminates). Look at the lpd man
Hello,
I have a system set up for my family that is networked with
the rest of my systems. I want their machine to be able to print to my
machine. I have lprng installed on their system and a printcap entry
setup. This printcap entry works for network printing from my laptop
also running l
I'm not a guru, and printing always causes some problems
to me. However I use lpr (the good old lpr) and printtool
and all seems to work. I found printtool very useful for
configuring remote (and local) printing and avoiding headaches.
Enjoy!
Albert
> I'm running slink on a x86 box with all the security & y2k updates
> applied. I've got lprng (version 3.5.2-2), magicfilter (version
> 1.2-28), a2ps (version 4.10.4-4) and aladdin-gs (version 5.50-3)
> installed.
>
> The first problem I'm having is that when I print (lpr file), I'm not
> getti
I'm running slink on a x86 box with all the security & y2k updates
applied. I've got lprng (version 3.5.2-2), magicfilter (version
1.2-28), a2ps (version 4.10.4-4) and aladdin-gs (version 5.50-3)
installed.
The first problem I'm having is that when I print (lpr file), I'm not
getting a prompt bac
> > ACCEPT SERVICE=M SAMEHOST SAMEUSERACCEPT SERVICE=M SERVER REMOTEUSER=root
> ^^^
> I think, this is in a separate line?
yes bad cut&paste...
> $ checkpc
what's that??? i haven't this comm
Hi, I use lprng but maybe I help you
On Fri, Dec 03, 1999 at 03:29:25PM +0100, Bruno Boettcher wrote:
> Hello,
>
> i use this thread since it is alive to report my own problem, having problems
> with remote printing and standard lpd (the jobs were stored on the server with
> a u
Hello,
i use this thread since it is alive to report my own problem, having problems
with remote printing and standard lpd (the jobs were stored on the server with
a uid/gid that the lpd daemon couldn't retreive, filling my var completely up
blocking other services as mail etc...) i tryy
On Thu, Nov 11, 1999 at 05:51:35PM -0800, Alvin Oga wrote:
>
> hi bon
>
> Asumming your printer is hooked up to WinNT parallel port /dev/lp0 ( LPT1 )
>
>
> /etc/printcap
>lp0|hp5si|HP LaserJet 5si:\
> :lp=:\
> :rp=lp0:\
> :rm=hp5si.your_domain.com:\
> :sd=/v
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