Ciao Antonio
Do you use cups on your Printer Server? To find out, take a browser and enter the URL http://your.printer.server:631.
If bloudy firewall stays in between, open port 631
If you get a page on the above URL, then printing on your client is as easy as:

on your client host, edit the file /etc/cups/client.conf and enter a line like

ServerName your.printer.server

If that file does not exist, create it and enter the line above. If the /etc/cups directory does not exist, create it and put the above file therein. After having created/edited this file, check to see which printers are available:
In a terminal window enter the following command:

lpstat -p

and start printing on them.

suomi

On 2013-02-13 15:25, antonio montagnani wrote:
Tim Waugh ha scritto / said the following    il giorno/on 13/02/2013 12:12:
On Wed, 2013-02-13 at 11:43 +0100, antonio montagnani wrote:
what am I missing??? and which are the correct tools???

If you use system-config-printer, or its troubleshooter, you might find
what's up.

My guess is that firewalld is preventing CUPS Browse packets from being
received.

Tim.
*/



  yes, but as I am new to firewalld, what shall I do in order to share
printer.I don't see any cups service to let open
A point is: is sharing in Fedora easy for a standard user??? because we
are loosing the point of usability in my opinion, unless you disable
firewalld on all your networked computer

--
users mailing list
users@lists.fedoraproject.org
To unsubscribe or change subscription options:
https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users
Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines
Have a question? Ask away: http://ask.fedoraproject.org

Reply via email to