On Thu, Apr 29, 2010 at 08:47:49AM -0500, Dale wrote: > Helmut Jarausch wrote: > > On 29 Apr, Stroller wrote: > > > >> On 28 Apr 2010, at 15:27, Helmut Jarausch wrote: > >> > >>>> ... > >>>> Why do you need to bypass CUPS? > >>>> > >>> Thanks, it's just for debugging. > >>> > >>> Printing some pdf files with acroread makes some printers > >>> hang here. > >>> To locate the problem source, I'd like to check if the printer > >>> works if it gets the postscript or pdf-file (there printer is assumed > >>> to accept postscript level 3). > >>> > >> Have you tried using `lpr` at the command line? > >> > >> I *believe* something like `lpr /path/to/file.pdf` should work. > >> > >> > > Thanks, but lpr is just a front-end for cups. > > > > > > I tried that here and got a error. It may be a bad setting on my end > but it didn't like the idea. > > r...@smoker ~ # lpr /data/pdf/LivingWill.pdf > lpr: Unsupported format 'application/pdf'! > r...@smoker ~ #
I started noticing this today too. My Macs aren't able to successfully print, I just get an error in the error log about application/pdf being an unsupported format. If I take a PDF generated on the Mac and move it to my Linux system and run "lpr <filename>.pdf" I get: lpr: Unsupported format 'application/pdf'! If I use "pdftops" to generate a PS file, "lpr <filename>.ps" works fine. If I open the PDF in xpdf and print, telling it to use the command "lpr," that also works fine. I upgraded from cups 1.3.10 to 1.3.11 today (cannot go back). I've rebuilt all the foomatic packages I had installed, gutenprint, cups-pdf, ghostscript-gpl, but still it doesn't work... -- -M There are 10 kinds of people in this world: Those who can count in binary and those who cannot.