Hi. I mostly use my system as a super-user and so I can mostly do everything without worrying too much about permissions. Not too long ago I created a "general" user account which is automatically logged in after a few seconds for others to have (limited) access to the system. Mostly everything works (ie. CD/DVD writing, sound, floppy access, etc.) But when it comes to printing, only a specific "lpr" at the command prompt does the job. I've tried printing from mozilla, ggv and firefox without success. The funny thing is that an app such as gedit does print. (I'm guessing it's because gedit uses some sort of a2ps -> lpr combination). I have an Epson Stylus C82 connected via a USB cable and my system is running CUPS. Can anyone enlighten me? Thanks so much. Sincerely Jose
lnthai2002 at aim.com
2006-Mar-14 20:01 UTC
[CentOS] Printing from apps as a regular user...
-----Original Message----- From: Jose Alburquerque <jaalburquerque at cox.net> To: centos at centos.org Sent: Mon, 13 Mar 2006 12:57:53 -0500 Subject: [CentOS] Printing from apps as a regular user... Hi. I mostly use my system as a super-user and so I can mostly do everything without worrying too much about permissions. Not too long ago I created a "general" user account which is automatically logged in after a few seconds for others to have (limited) access to the system. Mostly everything works (ie. CD/DVD writing, sound, floppy access, etc.) But when it comes to printing, only a specific "lpr" at the command prompt does the job. I've tried printing from mozilla, ggv and firefox without success. The funny thing is that an app such as gedit does print. (I'm guessing it's because gedit uses some sort of a2ps -> lpr combination). I have an Epson Stylus C82 connected via a USB cable and my system is running CUPS. Can anyone enlighten me? Thanks so much. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----- Most application use lpr to send print job to print server. lpr is not a program actually, it is just a symlink to lpr.cups. Some application does not use lpr but lp instead. For example, acroreader use lp on my system by default. Since it can not find lp or lp.cups, acroread cant print. To make it print, you have 2 options: create a symlink called lp in /usr/bin pointing to /usr/bin/lpr.cups or tell the application to use lpr instead of lp. Hope it help Thai ________________________________________________________________________ Check Out the new free AIM(R) Mail -- 2 GB of storage and industry-leading spam and email virus protection.