On Thursday 10 Oct 2002 6:00 pm, you wrote: > On Thu, 10 Oct 2002, Gavin Rollins wrote: > > On Thursday 10 October 2002 04:21 pm, Dale Huckeby wrote: > > > I seem to recall there was a brief discussion on either the newbie or > > > expert list not too long ago on how to stop a print job and clear the > > > printer's memory (don't want to waste 70 or 80 pages worth of ink), but > > > I haven't been able to find it. Can anyone point me to it, or offer > > > some suggestions? > > > > > > THX, > > > Dale Huckeby > > > > Dale, > > > > checking my notes from my "Linux Desk Reference" book p.178 (bottom) says > > try this command.. (straight from the book) > > > > lprm [-Pprinter] [-] [job#....][user.....] > > > > Remove the specified jobs from the print queue. > > Example: to remove job 43 from printer lp1: > > lprm -Plp1 43 > > job numbers may be obtained via the lpq command. > > I hope this helps. > > Alas, I killed the job, but my printer is still printing what it has > in memory. Perhaps that command only works if you remove a job from the > cue _before_ it starts printing. I've decided to bite the bullet so > I can get my printer back. Right now I'm feeding it scrap paper until > it clears its buffer. (No scrap ink to feed it, unfortuneately.) > I did have a similar problem yesterday. I killed and unstarted but unwanted (duplicate) printjob from K > Configuration > Printing > Print Job Administration - but it didn/t stop. Nor did switching off the printer to clear the buffer work. Eventually I managed to kill it properly from the CUPS WWW admin tool. HTH
Anne
Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com