Greetings folks... I've got a solution for a problem I was having, and after 2 weeks of rigorous testing, I feel confident that it is a viable solution. Many thanks to Peter Blake, Joe Bacom, and Anthony Montgomery for their solutions, ideas, and input into this isssue. My originally reported problem was this: We're running Samba 1.9.16p11 under Solaris 2.5. In our environment, we have a number of HP printers with JetDirect cards. These printers get jobs passed to them both through SAMBA, and from spooled Unix-side jobs (the server spools jobs which come in from a mainframe across campus, and passes them down to the printers). My problem was that the print jobs being passed off through SAMBA, and the print jobs from the Unix-side were able to step on one another, meaning that if you printed from a SAMBA client, and the server also received a print job from the mainframe at that same time, you'd get part of one job, part of the second job, and the rest of the first job, accompanied by (or translated into) much gibberish. The simple (yet elegant) solution to this problem (thanks to Joe Bacom) is to set up separate spools for SAMBA and for the Unix-side jobs, which point to the same device. For example, one of our printers with this problem is named "oaa1lj". For this printer, there might be two print queues: Job Source: Queue name: Printer Name: Unix/Mainframe -----> OAA1LJ ----------> OAA1LJ SAMBA Clients -----> OAA-WEST --------> OAA1LJ So, both queues point to the same place, in the long run... and the choice thing about this is that we haven't had a single problem with print jobs stepping on one another since I set up all of the secondary queues. -mh. --- Mark Hazen ph:(706) 542-1546 207 New College Network Administrator, Dean's Office The University of Georgia Franklin College of Arts and Sciences