On Thu, 15 Apr 2010 23:09:22 -0400, John A. Sullivan III wrote: > On Thu, 2010-04-15 at 10:49 -0700, Carl Johnson wrote: >> "John A. Sullivan III" writes: >> >> > On Thu, 2010-04-15 at 13:05 +0000, Camaleón wrote: >> >> >> >> Make sure that LID_LIBRARY_PATH points to the location for libcups >> >> and also CUPS lp and lpr are in PATH. >> >> >> >> When you invoke the print dialog using Control+P, all the printers >> >> configured show up in the Printer Name dropdown. *** >> >> >> >> I'm not sure how to check this in Debian, maybe someone else can >> >> give you a hint on this :-) >> > <snip> >> > Thanks. I tried setting LID_LIBRARY_PATH and I know the binaries are >> > in the path but it didn't help :( >> >> I don't know if you noticed, but I think that should be >> LD_LIBRARY_PATH, without the extra 'I'. I don't know enough to help >> otherwise. > <snip> > Argh!! I did upgrade to acroreat 9.3.1 from multimedia unstable upon > these responses and the referenced article which was based upon 9.x. I > even set a LID_LIBRARY_PATH variable in case it was not a typo. It > still doesn't work. Setting the command line debugging variable, I > found that it cannot find the PPD file.
Ughhh, yes, *it's a typo* (I copied/pasted from the site and didn't notice the error either) :-/. Correct value is "LD_LIBRARY_PATH" as Carl pointed-out. > Does it only work if the CUPS > server is running locally? In our case, we use a central CUPS server > running on a non-standard port. This is reflected in > /etc/cups/client.conf. How do we tell acroread where the printer server > and PPD files are? Thanks - John Mmmm, that should not affect. If you can print from other programs, Acroread should do the same. If it fails, it sounds to me like a bug on their side. Greetings, -- Camaleón -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/pan.2010.04.16.06.56...@gmail.com