On Sunday 24 September 2006 4:46 pm, Anders Ellenshøj Andersen wrote:
> Instead of hacking the configurations files, have you tried CUPS's built in
> webinterface?
>
> Just point your browser to http://localhost:631
This is why pure good ol' Debian is better than Ubuntu.
--
D. Michael McIntyre
Am Sonntag 24 September 2006 00:59 schrieb Seb:
> I'm using CUPS, and the printer
> is running well in the one computer. I'm having trouble finding how to
> make this printer available to the other computer in the network.
> Any pointers on how to do this in kde would be appreciated.
KDE assists
On Sunday 24 September 2006 04:46 pm, Anders Ellenshøj Andersen wrote:
> Instead of hacking the configurations files, have you tried CUPS's
> built in webinterface?
>
> Just point your browser to http://localhost:631
On Sarge that didn't give a way to configure a CUPS server for a
network, only
On Sunday 24 September 2006 04:05 pm, Seb wrote:
> Thanks for your suggestions. I'm using Debian unstable, and I don't
> have a /etc/cups.conf file, but a /etc/cups/cupsd.conf, which didn't
> have a 'BrowseAddress' directive in it.
That's the correct file, my mistake.
> # Only listen for c
On Sun, 24 Sep 2006 22:46:27 +0200,
Anders Ellenshøj Andersen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[...]
> Instead of hacking the configurations files, have you tried CUPS's built
> in webinterface?
> Just point your browser to http://localhost:631
Thank you, I was indeed familiar with it, but somehow mi
Søndag 24 september 2006 00:59 skrev Seb:
> is running well in the one computer. I'm having trouble finding how to
> make this printer available to the other computer in the network. Any
> pointers on how to do this in kde would be appreciated. Thanks in
> advance.
Instead of hacking the config
On Sun, 24 Sep 2006 15:05:44 -0500,
Seb <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[...]
> # Only listen for connections from the local machine.
> Listen localhost:631
> Listen /var/run/cups/cups.sock
> # Show shared printers on the local network.
> Browsing On
> BrowseOrder allow,deny
> BrowseAllow @LOCAL
I
On Sun, 24 Sep 2006 14:06:21 -0400,
Bob Hauck <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[...]
> You need to tell CUPS on the machine with the printer to broadcast it's
> services and allow access from computers on the local network. Once
> that is done the client should automatically find the server within a
>
On Saturday 23 September 2006 06:59 pm, Seb wrote:
> I'm using CUPS, and the printer is running well in the one computer.
> I'm having trouble finding how to make this printer available to the
> other computer in the network.
You need to tell CUPS on the machine with the printer to broadcast i
Hi,
I've recently made a 2 computer network at home, via a router. I used nfs
to be able to mount parts of each computer's file system onto the other.
So far so good, but now we need to be able to share the printer that's
connected directly to one the computers. I'm using CUPS, and the printer
i
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