On Sat November 21 2009, Wayne wrote:
In the cups interface http://localhost:631/printers pick the printer
and, in squeeze anyway, select in the administration dropdown select
Modify printer. Select Continue on the first two selections until you
get to the 3rd which allows you to select
On Sat November 21 2009, Wayne wrote:
Go to the Jobs tab in cups. You should be able to find of the jobs
shown when you did the lpq -a. Delete them.
the jobs tab is empty.
Re-reading your OP, I am now confused as to what you want. You are
using usb but the lpq -a showed you had files in
Wayne wrote:
Klaus Jantzen wrote:
Wayne wrote:
Paul Cartwright wrote:
I am using Lenny, up2date. I use CUPS for printing, and everything
prints just fine for MOST applications. I just tried to print a web
page, and I think it was a flash type page. It brought up a very
small window that ( I
Paul Cartwright wrote:
On Sat November 21 2009, Wayne wrote:
In the cups interface http://localhost:631/printers pick the printer
and, in squeeze anyway, select in the administration dropdown select
Modify printer. Select Continue on the first two selections until you
get to the 3rd which
On Sun November 22 2009, Wayne wrote:
Install the cups-bsd package. see the output of
'apt-cache show cups-bsd'
I guess my question is, if I have cups installed, why do I need cups-bsd?
I would do
aptitude purge lpd
aptitude install cups-bsd libwine-print lsb-core
I thought about doing
On Sun November 22 2009, Wayne wrote:
if I try to remove it, it also wants to remove:
libwine-print lsb-core
Install the cups-bsd package. see the output of
'apt-cache show cups-bsd'
I would do
aptitude purge lpd
it is actually:
aptitude purge lpr
and when you do that, it suggests
Paul Cartwright wrote:
On Sun November 22 2009, Wayne wrote:
Install the cups-bsd package. see the output of
'apt-cache show cups-bsd'
That's why I suggested looking at the cups-bsd package description.
cups-bsd is the cups interface to the printer. It replaces all of
the programs that lpr
On Sun November 22 2009, Wayne wrote:
That's why I suggested looking at the cups-bsd package description.
cups-bsd is the cups interface to the printer. It replaces all of
the programs that lpr supplied. The entries you were worried about in
your OP were lpr generated. As you stated, you
Paul Cartwright wrote:
On Sun November 22 2009, Wayne wrote:
That's why I suggested looking at the cups-bsd package description.
cups-bsd is the cups interface to the printer. It replaces all of
the programs that lpr supplied. The entries you were worried about in
your OP were lpr generated.
Paul Cartwright wrote:
I am using Lenny, up2date. I use CUPS for printing, and everything prints just
fine for MOST applications. I just tried to print a web page, and I think it
was a flash type page. It brought up a very small window that ( I thought)
had the correct gutenprint printer, and
Paul Cartwright wrote:
I am using Lenny, up2date. I use CUPS for printing, and everything prints just
fine for MOST applications. I just tried to print a web page, and I think it
was a flash type page. It brought up a very small window that ( I thought)
had the correct gutenprint printer, and
On Sat November 21 2009, Wayne wrote:
Nov 21 05:42:29 paulandcilla lpd[11629]: /dev/lp0: No such file or
directory Nov 21 05:43:30 paulandcilla lpd[11702]: /dev/lp0: No such file
or directory
Sorry missed this in first read.
Use the modify printer option of cups. The usb to parallel
Paul Cartwright wrote:
On Sat November 21 2009, Wayne wrote:
Nov 21 05:42:29 paulandcilla lpd[11629]: /dev/lp0: No such file or
directory Nov 21 05:43:30 paulandcilla lpd[11702]: /dev/lp0: No such file
or directory
Sorry missed this in first read.
Use the modify printer option of cups. The
Klaus Jantzen wrote:
Wayne wrote:
Paul Cartwright wrote:
I am using Lenny, up2date. I use CUPS for printing, and everything
prints just fine for MOST applications. I just tried to print a web
page, and I think it was a flash type page. It brought up a very
small window that ( I thought) had
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