Difference between revisions of "CUPS"

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(Printing to Printer From Windows)
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=Printing to Printer From Windows=
 
=Printing to Printer From Windows=
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Once the specific name of the printer is already known, the printer queue may be accessed via web page with the URL based upon the host name or queue name of the printer.  For example, in the case of "515HPCLJ", the URL is:
 
Once the specific name of the printer is already known, the printer queue may be accessed via web page with the URL based upon the host name or queue name of the printer.  For example, in the case of "515HPCLJ", the URL is:
  
http://cups.bnl.gov/printers/515HPCLJ
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For Example:  http://cups.bnl.gov/printers/515HPCLJ
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The printer queue that a workstation will use to send print jobs to the printer is the same as the URL of the printer queue itself.  To connect this printer queue on a workstation, follow the process to add a new printer on that workstation's operating system.  For Windows XP, the process is as follows:
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    Start the "Add Printer" Wizard.
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    When prompted for "Local or Network Printer", select "Network printer, or printer attached to another computer".
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    When asked to "Specify a Printer", select "Connect to a printer on the Internet". (sometimes included with an example text beginning "http://" ).  In the available text entry field, enter the URL of the print queue (see above under "Accessing CUPS").
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    When prompter for a driver, for the Manufacturer, select Generic.  Then for the Printer, select MS Publisher Color Printer.  The reason for this is that the CUPS server uses the printer-specific driver for communication with the printer.  By using a generic printer driver on the workstation, it reduces conflicts with the target printer.
  
This is kinda crappy.  I have printed documents that are 32 meg and end up being 4gb transfered uncompressed to cups.  A better method must exist.
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{{Note | This is kinda crappy.  I have printed documents that are 32 meg and end up being 4gb transfered uncompressed to cups.  A better method must exist. }}

Revision as of 10:17, 2 July 2012

Manual Configuration of Print Queues

The most tedious method of configuring client machines is to configure each remote queue by hand using the lpadmin(8) command:

lpadmin -p printer -E -v ipp://server/printers/printer

The printer name is the name of the printer on the server machine. The server name is the hostname or IP address of the server machine. Repeat the lpadmin command for each remote printer you wish to use.

# Show shared printers on the local network.
Browsing On
BrowseOrder allow,deny
BrowseAllow all
BrowseLocalProtocols CUPS dnssd
BrowsePoll 192.168.1.x

Printing to Printer From Windows

Once the specific name of the printer is already known, the printer queue may be accessed via web page with the URL based upon the host name or queue name of the printer. For example, in the case of "515HPCLJ", the URL is:

For Example: http://cups.bnl.gov/printers/515HPCLJ

The printer queue that a workstation will use to send print jobs to the printer is the same as the URL of the printer queue itself. To connect this printer queue on a workstation, follow the process to add a new printer on that workstation's operating system. For Windows XP, the process is as follows:

   Start the "Add Printer" Wizard.
   When prompted for "Local or Network Printer", select "Network printer, or printer attached to another computer".
   When asked to "Specify a Printer", select "Connect to a printer on the Internet". (sometimes included with an example text beginning "http://" ).  In the available text entry field, enter the URL of the print queue (see above under "Accessing CUPS").
   When prompter for a driver, for the Manufacturer, select Generic.  Then for the Printer, select MS Publisher Color Printer.  The reason for this is that the CUPS server uses the printer-specific driver for communication with the printer.  By using a generic printer driver on the workstation, it reduces conflicts with the target printer.
Note: This is kinda crappy. I have printed documents that are 32 meg and end up being 4gb transfered uncompressed to cups. A better method must exist.