Re: [gentoo-user] CUPS problem
No I haven't. I'll try one soon. This is a new 1GB DDR2 from Kingston. It would be interesting if it fails. Note that w/ Ubuntu's kernel, I have not encountered a balk at all in booting. Alan On Jan 9, 2008 3:51 PM, Randy Barlow [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Alan E. Davis wrote: When attempting to boot to that kernel, or other gentoo kernels I have compiled around (I do not use initrd/genkernel), almost every time since the initial boot (that went ok), the machine locks up during boot. It might take three or four attempts, but the machine locks up somewhere during the process. After cupsd has been started, somewhere around where syslog-ng is started, or hal, the machine locks. The next boot it stops ate approximately the same place, or perhaps further along. Finally, usually three or four boots later, it boots and no further problems are experienced. Have you run a memory test? -- Randy Barlow http://electronsweatshop.com -- gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org mailing list -- Alan Davis, Kagman High School, Saipan [EMAIL PROTECTED] It's never a matter of liking or disliking ... ---Santa Ynez Chumash Medicine Man -- gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] CUPS problem
On Tuesday 08 January 2008, Alan E. Davis wrote: Partly because I needed to print, and partly to rule out hardware issues, I booted ubuntu 7.10, and installed. No problem has been encountered over the past few days of using ubuntu. I can print, and no lockups are encountered (so far, KOW). Clearly your Gentoo installation has some configuration issues, inc. your compiled kernels. The initialisation scripts and misconfiguration of services at boot/default runlevels could be another problem causing it to choke. This is distressing. I enjoy not having to fiddle around, not spending so much time maintaining the system, and it's almost lightning quick to install packages!. Perhaps I'll use Ubuntu for a while---but I'd sure like to solve this problem. I just tried an incantation (kernel parameter) that had been recommended somewhere. (noapic nolapic acpi=off pci=noacpi), but still got the same behavior. Sometime soon I'll try to recompile the kernel or back down to 2.6.22. (I'd only compiled 2.6.23 for this new motherboard). I suggest that you zcat your Ubuntu's .config file into your Gentoo's /usr/src/linux and then run make oldconfig. That should give you the same kernel configuration which you can thereafter peruse at leisure. At the same time I would copy over the CUPS configuration file from Ubuntu to Gentoo (but don't try that until you have proven that your new Gentoo kernel is still having problems printing). You can even diff the two files to see if there are any significant differences in settings. HTH. -- Regards, Mick signature.asc Description: This is a digitally signed message part.
Re: [gentoo-user] CUPS problem
Thank you for the suggestions. I wonder out loud whether the Ubuntu kernel is using something like a genkernel install, with everything as modules. If so, in that case, how would one get a snapshot of what is being utilized? Alan On Jan 9, 2008 11:00 PM, Mick [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Tuesday 08 January 2008, Alan E. Davis wrote: Partly because I needed to print, and partly to rule out hardware issues, I booted ubuntu 7.10, and installed. No problem has been encountered over the past few days of using ubuntu. I can print, and no lockups are encountered (so far, KOW). Clearly your Gentoo installation has some configuration issues, inc. your compiled kernels. The initialisation scripts and misconfiguration of services at boot/default runlevels could be another problem causing it to choke. This is distressing. I enjoy not having to fiddle around, not spending so much time maintaining the system, and it's almost lightning quick to install packages!. Perhaps I'll use Ubuntu for a while---but I'd sure like to solve this problem. I just tried an incantation (kernel parameter) that had been recommended somewhere. (noapic nolapic acpi=off pci=noacpi), but still got the same behavior. Sometime soon I'll try to recompile the kernel or back down to 2.6.22. (I'd only compiled 2.6.23 for this new motherboard). I suggest that you zcat your Ubuntu's .config file into your Gentoo's /usr/src/linux and then run make oldconfig. That should give you the same kernel configuration which you can thereafter peruse at leisure. At the same time I would copy over the CUPS configuration file from Ubuntu to Gentoo (but don't try that until you have proven that your new Gentoo kernel is still having problems printing). You can even diff the two files to see if there are any significant differences in settings. HTH. -- Regards, Mick -- Alan Davis, Kagman High School, Saipan [EMAIL PROTECTED] It's never a matter of liking or disliking ... ---Santa Ynez Chumash Medicine Man -- gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] CUPS problem
On Wednesday 09 January 2008, Alan E. Davis wrote: Thank you for the suggestions. I wonder out loud whether the Ubuntu kernel is using something like a genkernel install, with everything as modules. If so, in that case, how would one get a snapshot of what is being utilized? Like most binary distros, on Ubuntu just about everything that can be a module, is a module. You can see how it's built by reading the config in /boot, or (maybe) via /proc/config (if enabled) - it might be zipped as well. To see the modules in use at any given time, lsmod. This gives you the names of modules loaded. It's up to you to match that with actual kernel config options (sometimes it's not obvious) alan -- Alan McKinnon alan dot mckinnon at gmail dot com -- gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] CUPS problem
On Monday 07 January 2008, Dale wrote: Randy Barlow wrote: Dale wrote: On my system hpijs was a blocker if I recall correctly. I read somewhere that hpijs was no longer being maintained and that hplip was the new thing to use. Not sure why tho. Also may be worth noting that hplip used to be a service that was started as well. /etc/init.d/hplip start used to work. The latest update got rid of the service and I guess it just runs when it is needed. I should clarify my question a bit more. I don't have the hpijs package installed. I do have hplip. Yet when I try to select the driver for my printer, hpijs is the only option of the two. I know that hplip includes hpijs, but I was looking for a driver called hplip and didn't see it... Did you run hp-setup? You may want to re-emerge hplip and read the messages there. I may be forgetting something it said to do. Also, check your error logs. Should be in /var/log. Depends on what logger you use as to the name of it. Mine is messages tho. Post back what you find out from that. May give us a clue. Dale :-) :-) What happens if under Device, you select: HP Printer (HPLIP) ? Also, have a look at http://localhost:631/help/network.html for defining the path (for network printers). However, I don't want to send you off scent here because I have not set up a USB printer before, so I am not sure what steps ought to be followed (if udev rules are desired and what not). I would have thought that guidance in this http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/printing-howto.xml#usb ought to help. -- Regards, Mick signature.asc Description: This is a digitally signed message part.
Re: [gentoo-user] CUPS problem
I think this is one of those multifactorial problems, and I'm unable to pin down the exact cause. I did several things that might have conspired to make printing stop working. I have a new motherboard, M2N-E, from ASUS, with a dual core AMD64-X2 processor (dual core), that has given me fits booting. I moved to the new motherboard after having compiled a first approximation to an SMP kernel with support for features and hardware I know about, then at last I tried a world update, after I'd been using gentoo for a few days. I had been printing all this time. My initial investigations (ie, google) revealed a large number of problems with the motherboard involving APIC or ACPI. Both, I think. Other problems mentioned were SATA, and I saw more than one reference to USB. USB and SATA are now sharing an interrrupt with that gentoo boot. When attempting to print or set up printing with CUPS: the printer shows up in CUPS as HPLIP. I had another printer on USB, and while I recall always CUPS showed me USB printers, both, as choices for found printers, no solely USB entries were seen. The other printer now has burned up in what I hope was a disconnected incident, a Brother HL1440, the fan burned out. I can install the HP multifunction as the HPLIP printer, and it shows as ready, but when I print, no printer action happens, and the jobs are immediately marked as stopped. I suspect some USB foibles, but the flash drives work fine. I recompiled with usblp as a module and compiled in, and several times recompiled, but got stuck in a place where I couldn't see a way out. When attempting to boot to that kernel, or other gentoo kernels I have compiled around (I do not use initrd/genkernel), almost every time since the initial boot (that went ok), the machine locks up during boot. It might take three or four attempts, but the machine locks up somewhere during the process. After cupsd has been started, somewhere around where syslog-ng is started, or hal, the machine locks. The next boot it stops ate approximately the same place, or perhaps further along. Finally, usually three or four boots later, it boots and no further problems are experienced. Partly because I needed to print, and partly to rule out hardware issues, I booted ubuntu 7.10, and installed. No problem has been encountered over the past few days of using ubuntu. I can print, and no lockups are encountered (so far, KOW). This is distressing. I enjoy not having to fiddle around, not spending so much time maintaining the system, and it's almost lightning quick to install packages!. Perhaps I'll use Ubuntu for a while---but I'd sure like to solve this problem. I just tried an incantation (kernel parameter) that had been recommended somewhere. (noapic nolapic acpi=off pci=noacpi), but still got the same behavior. Sometime soon I'll try to recompile the kernel or back down to 2.6.22. (I'd only compiled 2.6.23 for this new motherboard). I thank several list denizens for suggestions. I apologize for taking so much time in explaining this again, but I'd really appreciate any suggestions, before I become more committed to using Ubuntu. Alan [EMAIL PROTECTED] On Jan 8, 2008 7:56 PM, Mick [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Monday 07 January 2008, Dale wrote: Randy Barlow wrote: Dale wrote: On my system hpijs was a blocker if I recall correctly. I read somewhere that hpijs was no longer being maintained and that hplip was the new thing to use. Not sure why tho. Also may be worth noting that hplip used to be a service that was started as well. /etc/init.d/hplip start used to work. The latest update got rid of the service and I guess it just runs when it is needed. I should clarify my question a bit more. I don't have the hpijs package installed. I do have hplip. Yet when I try to select the driver for my printer, hpijs is the only option of the two. I know that hplip includes hpijs, but I was looking for a driver called hplip and didn't see it... Did you run hp-setup? You may want to re-emerge hplip and read the messages there. I may be forgetting something it said to do. Also, check your error logs. Should be in /var/log. Depends on what logger you use as to the name of it. Mine is messages tho. Post back what you find out from that. May give us a clue. Dale :-) :-) What happens if under Device, you select: HP Printer (HPLIP) ? Also, have a look at http://localhost:631/help/network.html for defining the path (for network printers). However, I don't want to send you off scent here because I have not set up a USB printer before, so I am not sure what steps ought to be followed (if udev rules are desired and what not). I would have thought that guidance in this http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/printing-howto.xml#usb ought to help. -- Regards, Mick -- Alan Davis, Kagman High School, Saipan [EMAIL PROTECTED] It's never a matter of liking or disliking
Re: [gentoo-user] CUPS problem
Alan E. Davis wrote: When attempting to boot to that kernel, or other gentoo kernels I have compiled around (I do not use initrd/genkernel), almost every time since the initial boot (that went ok), the machine locks up during boot. It might take three or four attempts, but the machine locks up somewhere during the process. After cupsd has been started, somewhere around where syslog-ng is started, or hal, the machine locks. The next boot it stops ate approximately the same place, or perhaps further along. Finally, usually three or four boots later, it boots and no further problems are experienced. Have you run a memory test? -- Randy Barlow http://electronsweatshop.com -- gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] CUPS problem
Alan E. Davis wrote: CUPS has been working flawlessly for quite some time, one of the feats of newer GNU/Linux installs (to one who couldn't get an HP mainstream inkjet working right some 10 years ago).Simultaneously, I notices that Apple now owns the copyright, and after a recent upgrade, stopped working. I have to blame myself, because running cfg-update, the changes to /etc/cups/cupsd.conf were considerable, involving three, and not two files to be merged. The interface of xxdiff is not intuitive, to me: I've blundered through it's kludgey structure for a while, but this time I was genuinely confused. Furthermore, I made the mistake of taking a stab in the dark. So I uninstalled CUPS completely, and reinstalled. Then installed the printer again. It is doing the same thing: the interface at localhost:631 says that the printer is ready to print. Any job sent to the queue, including test prints, are immediately stopped. Reprint a job, and it is immediately stopped. Hypotheses: New ASUS M2N-E Motherboard (was working before upgrading CUPS) Configuration file issues. (I have deleted the entire directory /etc/cups, and the new derault file was replaced with a simplified one scavenged of a mailing list, but with no improvement. Unknown factors (where to start?) So I am turning to the mailing list for suggestions. Any ideas? Thank you, Alan Davis I ran into something similar to the a while back and I had to un-merge cups, delete the config files, then reemerge cups and reconfigure my printer. Keep in mind that when you unmerge something, the config files remain in /etc unchanged. This may not help your situation but I hope it does. Dale :-) :-) -- gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] CUPS problem
On Sunday 06 January 2008, Dale wrote: Alan E. Davis wrote: Any ideas? I ran into something similar to the a while back and I had to un-merge cups, delete the config files, then reemerge cups and reconfigure my printer. Keep in mind that when you unmerge something, the config files remain in /etc unchanged. Assuming that you have set the correct device in the GUI for your printer, then the most likely error is that your have not provided the correct path for it. Show us what you have defined the path as in case we can help. -- Regards, Mick signature.asc Description: This is a digitally signed message part.
Re: [gentoo-user] CUPS problem
I have installed two or three times, deleted /etc/cups and reinstalled the printer. It showed up as an HPLIP device when installing, w/ CUPS and/or the kde printer utility. NOtably the utility OR the localhost:631 interface did not show any option for a USB printer. The address that ended up being used was a usb:printername. When I get gentoo booted up I'll look at it again. For now, I have to print, so I've installed Ubuntu on another partition. Printing works fine there, so that's a start. Thank you, Alan On Jan 7, 2008 2:48 AM, Mick [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Sunday 06 January 2008, Dale wrote: Alan E. Davis wrote: Any ideas? I ran into something similar to the a while back and I had to un-merge cups, delete the config files, then reemerge cups and reconfigure my printer. Keep in mind that when you unmerge something, the config files remain in /etc unchanged. Assuming that you have set the correct device in the GUI for your printer, then the most likely error is that your have not provided the correct path for it. Show us what you have defined the path as in case we can help. -- Regards, Mick -- Alan Davis, Kagman High School, Saipan [EMAIL PROTECTED] It's never a matter of liking or disliking ... ---Santa Ynez Chumash Medicine Man -- gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] CUPS problem
Alan E. Davis wrote: I have installed two or three times, deleted /etc/cups and reinstalled the printer. It showed up as an HPLIP device when installing, w/ CUPS and/or the kde printer utility. NOtably the utility OR the localhost:631 interface did not show any option for a USB printer. The address that ended up being used was a usb:printername. When I get gentoo booted up I'll look at it again. For now, I have to print, so I've installed Ubuntu on another partition. Printing works fine there, so that's a start. Thank you, Alan On Jan 7, 2008 2:48 AM, Mick [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Sunday 06 January 2008, Dale wrote: Alan E. Davis wrote: Any ideas? I ran into something similar to the a while back and I had to un-merge cups, delete the config files, then reemerge cups and reconfigure my printer. Keep in mind that when you unmerge something, the config files remain in /etc unchanged. Assuming that you have set the correct device in the GUI for your printer, then the most likely error is that your have not provided the correct path for it. Show us what you have defined the path as in case we can help. -- Regards, Mick They recently changed it over to hplip. Is that installed on your system? Dale :-) :-)
Re: [gentoo-user] CUPS problem
Yes. Even installed as hplip, when jobs are printed, they are immediately marked as stopped in the jobs interface. There is no indication that the printer is on line at all, except that it shows up as Ready. Thank you, Alan On Jan 7, 2008 10:24 AM, Dale [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Alan E. Davis wrote: I have installed two or three times, deleted /etc/cups and reinstalled the printer. It showed up as an HPLIP device when installing, w/ CUPS and/or the kde printer utility. NOtably the utility OR the localhost:631 interface did not show any option for a USB printer. The address that ended up being used was a usb:printername. When I get gentoo booted up I'll look at it again. For now, I have to print, so I've installed Ubuntu on another partition. Printing works fine there, so that's a start. Thank you, Alan On Jan 7, 2008 2:48 AM, Mick [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Sunday 06 January 2008, Dale wrote: Alan E. Davis wrote: Any ideas? I ran into something similar to the a while back and I had to un-merge cups, delete the config files, then reemerge cups and reconfigure my printer. Keep in mind that when you unmerge something, the config files remain in /etc unchanged. Assuming that you have set the correct device in the GUI for your printer, then the most likely error is that your have not provided the correct path for it. Show us what you have defined the path as in case we can help. -- Regards, Mick They recently changed it over to hplip. Is that installed on your system? Dale :-) :-) -- Alan Davis, Kagman High School, Saipan [EMAIL PROTECTED] It's never a matter of liking or disliking ... ---Santa Ynez Chumash Medicine Man -- gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] CUPS problem
Alan E. Davis wrote: Yes. Even installed as hplip, when jobs are printed, they are immediately marked as stopped in the jobs interface. There is no indication that the printer is on line at all, except that it shows up as Ready. Thank you, Alan On Jan 7, 2008 10:24 AM, Dale [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Alan E. Davis wrote: I have installed two or three times, deleted /etc/cups and reinstalled the printer. It showed up as an HPLIP device when installing, w/ CUPS and/or the kde printer utility. NOtably the utility OR the localhost:631 interface did not show any option for a USB printer. The address that ended up being used was a usb:printername. When I get gentoo booted up I'll look at it again. For now, I have to print, so I've installed Ubuntu on another partition. Printing works fine there, so that's a start. Thank you, Alan On Jan 7, 2008 2:48 AM, Mick [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Sunday 06 January 2008, Dale wrote: Alan E. Davis wrote: Any ideas? I ran into something similar to the a while back and I had to un-merge cups, delete the config files, then reemerge cups and reconfigure my printer. Keep in mind that when you unmerge something, the config files remain in /etc unchanged. Assuming that you have set the correct device in the GUI for your printer, then the most likely error is that your have not provided the correct path for it. Show us what you have defined the path as in case we can help. -- Regards, Mick They recently changed it over to hplip. Is that installed on your system? Dale :-) :-) One of the things I did when I ran into this was to remove all printers and use hp-setup to set up the printers. You tried that? It should have mentioned this when hplip was installed but sometimes we miss those messages. ;-) Other than this, I may be out of ideas. Dale :-) :-)
Re: [gentoo-user] CUPS problem
Dale wrote: They recently changed it over to hplip. Is that installed on your system? Sorry to steal the thread a bit, but should hplip show up as an option for the driver to your printer? Because I still see hpijs as the printer driver even though I have the hplip package. -- Randy Barlow http://electronsweatshop.com -- gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] CUPS problem
Randy Barlow wrote: Dale wrote: They recently changed it over to hplip. Is that installed on your system? Sorry to steal the thread a bit, but should hplip show up as an option for the driver to your printer? Because I still see hpijs as the printer driver even though I have the hplip package. On my system hpijs was a blocker if I recall correctly. I read somewhere that hpijs was no longer being maintained and that hplip was the new thing to use. Not sure why tho. Also may be worth noting that hplip used to be a service that was started as well. /etc/init.d/hplip start used to work. The latest update got rid of the service and I guess it just runs when it is needed. Dale :-) :-)
Re: [gentoo-user] CUPS problem
Dale wrote: On my system hpijs was a blocker if I recall correctly. I read somewhere that hpijs was no longer being maintained and that hplip was the new thing to use. Not sure why tho. Also may be worth noting that hplip used to be a service that was started as well. /etc/init.d/hplip start used to work. The latest update got rid of the service and I guess it just runs when it is needed. I should clarify my question a bit more. I don't have the hpijs package installed. I do have hplip. Yet when I try to select the driver for my printer, hpijs is the only option of the two. I know that hplip includes hpijs, but I was looking for a driver called hplip and didn't see it... -- Randy Barlow http://electronsweatshop.com -- gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] CUPS problem
Randy Barlow wrote: Dale wrote: On my system hpijs was a blocker if I recall correctly. I read somewhere that hpijs was no longer being maintained and that hplip was the new thing to use. Not sure why tho. Also may be worth noting that hplip used to be a service that was started as well. /etc/init.d/hplip start used to work. The latest update got rid of the service and I guess it just runs when it is needed. I should clarify my question a bit more. I don't have the hpijs package installed. I do have hplip. Yet when I try to select the driver for my printer, hpijs is the only option of the two. I know that hplip includes hpijs, but I was looking for a driver called hplip and didn't see it... Did you run hp-setup? You may want to re-emerge hplip and read the messages there. I may be forgetting something it said to do. Also, check your error logs. Should be in /var/log. Depends on what logger you use as to the name of it. Mine is messages tho. Post back what you find out from that. May give us a clue. Dale :-) :-)
[gentoo-user] CUPS problem
CUPS has been working flawlessly for quite some time, one of the feats of newer GNU/Linux installs (to one who couldn't get an HP mainstream inkjet working right some 10 years ago).Simultaneously, I notices that Apple now owns the copyright, and after a recent upgrade, stopped working. I have to blame myself, because running cfg-update, the changes to /etc/cups/cupsd.conf were considerable, involving three, and not two files to be merged. The interface of xxdiff is not intuitive, to me: I've blundered through it's kludgey structure for a while, but this time I was genuinely confused. Furthermore, I made the mistake of taking a stab in the dark. So I uninstalled CUPS completely, and reinstalled. Then installed the printer again. It is doing the same thing: the interface at localhost:631 says that the printer is ready to print. Any job sent to the queue, including test prints, are immediately stopped. Reprint a job, and it is immediately stopped. Hypotheses: New ASUS M2N-E Motherboard (was working before upgrading CUPS) Configuration file issues. (I have deleted the entire directory /etc/cups, and the new derault file was replaced with a simplified one scavenged of a mailing list, but with no improvement. Unknown factors (where to start?) So I am turning to the mailing list for suggestions. Any ideas? Thank you, Alan Davis -- Alan Davis, Kagman High School, Saipan [EMAIL PROTECTED] It's never a matter of liking or disliking ... ---Santa Ynez Chumash Medicine Man -- gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] cups problem
Hello Randy, Randy Barlow [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: Roger Mason wrote: I have tried both the ipp and lpd devices to no avail. Just FYI, IPP is the Internet Printing Protocol and it is used to print to a device on another machine, so that's why it didn't work for you here :) Yes, I finally tumbled to that (duh!). What confused me was that I had set up a remote printer using IPP at some point in the past. Cheers, Roger -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] cups problem
Quoting Roger Mason [EMAIL PROTECTED]: dmesg | grep -i print returns: parport0: Printer, Hewlett-Packard HP LaserJet 5L see if this helps http://www.murrayc.com/blog/permalink/2005/12/24/wheres-my-parport0/ -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] cups problem
Roger Mason wrote: I have tried both the ipp and lpd devices to no avail. Just FYI, IPP is the Internet Printing Protocol and it is used to print to a device on another machine, so that's why it didn't work for you here :) -- Randy Barlow http://electronsweatshop.com -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
[gentoo-user] cups problem
Hello, I'm trying to set up a printer using CUPS. I have worked my way through the printing guide but cannot get a test page to print from the printers tab of the cups configuration page. I turned up the logging level to debug2 and am seeing this in the logs: d [07/Dec/2007:16:00:26 -03-30] cupsdIsAuthorized: auth=AUTH_DENY... d [07/Dec/2007:16:00:26 -03-30] cupsdReadClient: Unauthorized request for /ipp/... One thing I noticed in the setup that is different from the guide is that the option to listen to Parallel Port #1 is never offered although it should be the most appropriate option given that the printer is on lpt1. I have tried both the ipp and lpd devices to no avail. dmesg | grep -i print returns: parport0: Printer, Hewlett-Packard HP LaserJet 5L This is the emerge information: [ebuild R ] net-print/cups-1.2.12-r2 USE=X dbus jpeg ldap pam png ppds ssl tiff -nls -php -samba -slp Thanks for any help. Roger -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] cups problem
Quoting Roger Mason [EMAIL PROTECTED]: http://www.murrayc.com/blog/permalink/2005/12/24/wheres-my-parport0/ Bingo!. cool. I wasn't sure if it would help, as it was a stab in the dark. Glad you got it working! -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] cups problem
Hello Billy, Billy Holmes [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: see if this helps http://www.murrayc.com/blog/permalink/2005/12/24/wheres-my-parport0/ Bingo!. For the record, I built ppdev and lp as modules, modprobe'd them and now everything works. Thanks very much. Roger -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] cups problem
On Tuesday 26 September 2006 03:55, Paul Stear [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote about '[gentoo-user] cups problem': When I start cupsd I get the following message:- /etc/init.d/cupsd start * Starting cupsd ... cupsd: Child exited on signal 15! :( Any ideas what to do next? Did cupsd write any log messages (to somewhere in /var/log) before dying? -- If there's one thing we've established over the years, it's that the vast majority of our users don't have the slightest clue what's best for them in terms of package stability. -- Gentoo Developer Ciaran McCreesh pgp7yPd59PjgU.pgp Description: PGP signature
[gentoo-user] cups problem
I am having trouble with cups, part of the problem seems to be I have no /usr/lib/cups/backend/ipp Where do I get it? Mike -- Michael W. Holdeman Fire Chief Porter Emergency Services Powered by Gentoo Linux www.gentoo.org | Kernel 2.6.15-ck2 | VMWare Workstation 5.5.1 vmware.com | Win4LinPro 6.1.1-03 win4lin.com | | -- Michael W. Holdeman Powered by Gentoo Linux www.gentoo.org | Kernel 2.6.15-ck2 | VMWare Workstation 5.5.1 vmware.com | Win4LinPro 6.1.1-03 win4lin.com | | -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] cups problem
quoth the Michael W. Holdeman: I am having trouble with cups, part of the problem seems to be I have no /usr/lib/cups/backend/ipp Where do I get it? Did you emerge cups? It is present on my system, and epm shows me that it is owned by 'cups' so it should be on yours too. I have cups-1.1.23-r7 here. There are no USE flags that look germaine...try re-emerging cups I guess... Mike -- Michael W. Holdeman Fire Chief Porter Emergency Services Powered by Gentoo Linux www.gentoo.org | Kernel 2.6.15-ck2 | VMWare Workstation 5.5.1 vmware.com | Win4LinPro 6.1.1-03 win4lin.com | | -d -- darren kirby :: Part of the problem since 1976 :: http://badcomputer.org ...the number of UNIX installations has grown to 10, with more expected... - Dennis Ritchie and Ken Thompson, June 1972 pgpFhdfs3ovYg.pgp Description: PGP signature
Re: [gentoo-user] cups problem
On Saturday 24 June 2006 21:21, darren kirby wrote: quoth the Michael W. Holdeman: I am having trouble with cups, part of the problem seems to be I have no /usr/lib/cups/backend/ipp Where do I get it? Did you emerge cups? It is present on my system, and epm shows me that it is owned by 'cups' so it should be on yours too. I have cups-1.1.23-r7 here. There are no USE flags that look germaine...try re-emerging cups I guess... cups-1.2.1-r2 does not seem to contain /usr/lib/cups/backend/ipp? Mike Mike -- Michael W. Holdeman Fire Chief Porter Emergency Services Powered by Gentoo Linux www.gentoo.org | Kernel 2.6.15-ck2 | VMWare Workstation 5.5.1 vmware.com | Win4LinPro 6.1.1-03 win4lin.com | | -d -- Michael W. Holdeman Powered by Gentoo Linux www.gentoo.org | Kernel 2.6.15-ck2 | VMWare Workstation 5.5.1 vmware.com | Win4LinPro 6.1.1-03 win4lin.com | | -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] cups problem
quoth the Michael W. Holdeman: On Saturday 24 June 2006 21:21, darren kirby wrote: quoth the Michael W. Holdeman: I am having trouble with cups, part of the problem seems to be I have no /usr/lib/cups/backend/ipp Where do I get it? Did you emerge cups? It is present on my system, and epm shows me that it is owned by 'cups' so it should be on yours too. I have cups-1.1.23-r7 here. There are no USE flags that look germaine...try re-emerging cups I guess... cups-1.2.1-r2 does not seem to contain /usr/lib/cups/backend/ipp? Mike OK, so are you running an ~arch system? If you don't need cups 1.2.* then I think the path of least resistance is to downgrade your cups to 1.1.* I found this: http://packages.gentoo.org/ebuilds/?cups-1.2.1-r2 which although cryptic seems to imply some sort of config change between 1.1 and 1.2 that requires some symlinks. There did not appear to be any relevant bugs in bugzilla. So...I don't know... -d -- darren kirby :: Part of the problem since 1976 :: http://badcomputer.org ...the number of UNIX installations has grown to 10, with more expected... - Dennis Ritchie and Ken Thompson, June 1972 pgpIICeDyNaJl.pgp Description: PGP signature
[gentoo-user] cups problem-like ...
Hi list, i'm experiencing strange cups behaviour: i'm accessing the cupsd setting both via web interface (localhost:631) or via the KDE printer control modue. However since two days i'm experiencing long load time of the all stuff: every action i'm trying to execute nearly 10 seconds are needed for the program to accomplish. If i'm using the KDE control modules nearly every time the module stops and i have to kill the kcontrol program. What can be the cause of this behaviour? Secondly i've tried to add some local udev rules as a file called 10-local.rules. Even if i'm not touching anything related to the printers, if i use this file together with the 50-udev.rules standard file (not touched) in the KDE control module i'm not getting any of the standard icons (Print tp File (PDF), Print to File (PostScript) and so on...) Thank you for your help, MC -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list