On Sun, 27 Jun 2004 20:00:20 +0200, "Jacob S."
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>the softrat <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> >Jacob S. wrote:
>> >>Cups will let you administer your own printer. Make sure to use the
>> >root>username and password when it prompts for it.
>> >>
It's a lie!  :-) CUPS admin rejects all of my advances. Tells me that
I am not authorized.
>> 
>> I see now that I am getting a *Fatal Error* at startup time:
>> 
>> "Fatal error - Cannot bind to lpd port '515'"
>
>Ah, that's some helpful information. Do you perhaps have lpd running in
>the background or something?

Apparently, yes.

> (ps ax | grep lpd will let you check that).
>Also, "netstat -nvl --program | grep 515" when run as root will show you
>what your machine thinks is listening on port 515.
>
>On my machine, it says inetd is listening on 515, which indeed it should
>be. It then calls cups when a print job starts comin' down the queue.
>
Now, yes (I REMOVED 'lprng' completely)
>
>hmm... Didn't you say it was working except for stair-stepped text once
>before? Did you change something since then?
>
Yeah: lots of things. For one, I added CUPS. Used to be lprng.

BTW, I did a test of raw printing directly to the printer (no
spooling):

   cat stuff | gdffilter > /dev/lp0

 Works fine! 'gdffilter' changes 'line feed' to 'CRLF'.

However the CUPS spoller just hangs, waiting for something according
to the debug messages. (It says that the server is 'busy'.)

>Jacob

the softrat
"Honi soit qui mal y pense." 
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
A monk was traveling and came to a fork in the road. He stopped,
looked at it and decided to leave it there for someone else to
ponder, someone who may need it, for his own spoon was quite
sufficient.


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