Frarquit
Sat, 06 Jan 2007 06:25:20 -0800
1) When I examine the dmesg output I get these lines: [ 76.648788] pmac_zilog: 0.6 (Benjamin Herrenschmidt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>) [ 76.661021] ttyS0 at MMIO 0xf3013020 (irq = 15) is a Z85c30 ESCC - Serial port [ 76.673774] ttyS1 at MMIO 0xf3013000 (irq = 16) is a Z85c30 ESCC - Serial port
2) when I try configure the printer (Epson Stylus Color 1520) by the configure system> printers>add new printer> the option for serial local printer is not available (!) 2a) I`ve tried serial:/dev/ttyS0, serial:///dev/ttyS0 and only /dev/ttyS0 but it does not work. 2b) I think the printer`drive is not a problem. There are four drivers for Epson Stylus Color 1520. As long I understood, the problem is still in first step (1): serial port assignment. Thank you. Francisco. > OK here is a guess (I have not tried it, though my BJC4550 is a serial > and parallel printer so I could try to dig up a Mac serial printer > cable).... > > 1) Examine your dmesg output to determine which port gets assigned to > which /dev -- on mine the serial/printer port gets assigned to > /dev/ttyS0 (that last character is a zero). > > 2) Assuming you're using CUPS, configure it using your favorite > method, such as the web interface (which in U/K/Xubuntu you have to go > through some rigamarole to activate). Personally I really like the > printing config tool in KDE. (You can install the Kubuntu stuff and > run any of it in Xubuntu, or switch to KDE at will.) > > 2a) When CUPS asks how the printer is connected, I BELIEVE you put in > the port like this-- serial:///dev/ttyS0/ -- but I don't know for > sure, having never tried it. > > 2b) If you are very very lucky, the model printer you have will be > fully supported by a CUPS driver -- simply choose it from the list. If > you aren't so lucky, you might try the commercial software called > TurboPrint, which works MUCH better with my Canon printer than any of > the CUPS drivers. > > CAVEATS -- having set up more than my fair share of serial printers in > a previous life, I can tell you that you very likely will have port > speed, buffer overruns (handshaking problems), or cabling issues. > > SPEED: If the printer doesn't work at all, you should determine the > speed of the printer's interface, and set the Mac's serial interface > to match. (This includes the parity and number of stop bits. Make them > the same.) Alternatively, set the printer's serial interface to match > (with its dip switches or software settings). Whichever is easier. > (Since minicom knows how to configure the serial ports, I presume the > standard unix serial utilities work with the pmac_zilog driver, but I > have not delved into it. Installing minicom might help you debug the > printer settings, or it might be a real time sink, because most > printers don't have a lot of things to "say" to you over their serial > ports.) > > HANDSHAKING: If the printer seems to work on very short documents but > goes crazy when you print several pages at a time, you're probably > having a handshaking issue between the computer and the printer. Set > both to use the same form of handshaking -- hardware handshaking is > best, XON/XOFF handshaking might work, might not (it works best on > very slow connections). Hardware handshaking depends on your cabling, > and it's been a long time since I've done it so I don't remember the > acronyms for sure. > > CABLING: If you are using some sort of adapter cable instead of the > standard Macintosh serial cable, be prepared to get heavily into the > arcane world of RS-232 handshake lines, and how they connect to the > RS-422 serial ports on a Macintosh. > > > I hope this gets you going... if it doesn't, please say what kind of > printer you're using so someone can guess a little better -- xubuntu-devel mailing list xubuntu-devel@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/xubuntu-devel