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Samsung CLP-510 Series User Manual

Page 200

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S

OLVING

P

ROBLEMS

7.33

7

I can’t print to an SMB

(Windows) printer.

To be able to configure and use SMB-shared printers (such as

printers shared on a Windows printer), you need to have a

correct installation of the SAMBA package that enables that

feature. The “smbclient” command should be available and

usable on your system.

My application seems to be

frozen while LLPR is

running.

Most Unix applications will expect a command like the regular

“lpr” command to be non-interactive and thus return

immediately. Since LLPR is waiting for user input before

passing the job on to the print spooler, very often the

application will wait for the process to return, and thus will

appear to be frozen (its windows won’t refresh). This is

normal and the application should resume functioning

correctly after the user exits LLPR.

How do I specify the IP

address of my SMB server?

It can be specified in the “Add Printer” dialogue of the

configuration tool, if you don’t use the CUPS printing system.

Unfortunately, CUPS currently doesn’t allow you to specify the

IP address of SMB printers, so you will have to be able to

browse the resource with SAMBA in order to be able to print.

Some documents come out

as white pages when

printing.

Some versions of CUPS, especially those shipped with

Mandrake Linux before the 8.1 release, have some known

bugs when processing PostScript output from some

applications. Try upgrading to the latest version of CUPS (at

least 1.1.14). Some RPM packages for the most popular

distributions are provided as a convenience with this Linux

Printing Package.

I have CUPS and some

options (such as N-up)

seem to be always enabled

even though I don’t choose

them in LLPR.

There may be some local options defined in your ~/

.lpoptions file, which are manipulated by the lpoptions

command. These options are always used if not overridden by

LLPR settings. To get rid of all options for a printer, run the

following command, replacing “printer” with the name of the

queue: lpoptions -x printer

I configured a printer to

print to a file, but I get

“Permission denied” errors.

Most printing systems will not run as the super-user but as a

special user (usually “lp”). Therefore, make sure that the file

you have chosen to print to is accessible to the user owning

the spooler daemon.

On my PCL (or GDI)

printer, I sometimes get

error messages printing

instead of my document.

Unfortunately, some Unix applications may generate non-

compliant PostScript output that may not be supported by

Ghostscript, or even the printer itself in PostScript mode. You

can try to capture the output to a file and view the results

with Ghostscript (gv or ghostview will allow you to do so

interactively) and see if you get error messages. However,

since the application is probably at fault, contact your

software vendor to inform them of the issue.

Problem

Possible Cause and Solution