On Monday 12 November 2001 22:56, John Gay wrote:
> After many sleepless nights re-compiling ghostscript5.50 to get my Samsung 
> ml4500 'gdi' printer working, sort-of, I found that cups and ghostscript6.50 
> from unstable support my printer and now I can print without having to call 
> gs by hand, as root, specifying the driver and printer port! I can just open 
> any KDE app, and select print and my new cups-provided ml4500 printer is 
> magically there! The downside is, this does not work for non-KDE apps. These 
> only show the old lp printer I had spent ages trying to get to work, but 
> couldn't. 
> 
> How do I make the cups-provided ml4500 printer available to the rest of my 
> system?

Make sure that you have the cups printer clients installed.  They are in 
packages
        cupsys-bsd              (lpr, lpq, ...)
        cupsys-client           (lp, cancel, ...)

Some apps parse /etc/printcap themself.  Direct cupsd to generate the 
/etc/printcap

ds02[0] ~ # grep Printcap /etc/cups/cupsd.conf
Printcap /etc/printcap

Achim
> 
> I realise this is a little off-topic, but it was thanks the KDE and the tips 
> for fetching unstable packages that made it possible for my to use my printer 
> again! KDE has come a long way towards making Linux usable for the non-geeks 
> out there.
> 
> Thanks for all the support!
> 
> Cheers,
> 
>       John Gay 
> 
> 
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-- 
  To me vi is Zen.  To use vi is to practice zen. Every command is
  a koan. Profound to the user, unintelligible to the uninitiated.
  You discover truth everytime you use it.
                                      -- [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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