Hi, John tries to tell you: Revert your configuration changes to the config file and use the local web interface / lp* / GUI Print Server Configuration tool to setup all printers at work and / or at home using these tools. This method needs a local cups instance that works if your OS is running (if a printer is not reachable for printing cups can still keep the job in it's queue until the printer is reachable). You can find an linux.com article on Printer Setups in [1] (mainly selected for its screenshots of cups web interface and not for its actuality) which should give you all information's to get it work. At least for desktop setups cups should be running by default, see "systemctl status cups" to check if it's running. For a more in-depth view on cups I can recommend reading the archwiki [2]. best regards Markus [1] https://www.linux.com/learn/linux-101-printing [2] https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/CUPS On Mon, 2018-10-29 at 15:35 +0100, Patrick Bégou wrote: > Hi John > > thanks for your quick reply. If it is not a bug, as I was reading on > the > web, it is some misunderstanding from me. > Running cups 1.4.2 (CentOS6) I was using the "BrowsePoll" directive > in > cupsd.conf. So the printers were automatically known from the central > server of the lab. And home printers were working fine with this > setup too. > In CentOS7, with cups 1.6.3, this directive does not exist any more > and > reading the doc I had understood that it was replaced by the > client.conf > file. Reading your answer suggest it is not true. > > So could you tell me or suggest reading on the right manner to > reproduce > my previous centos6 setup ? > > Sorry for this newbie question, I'm not very familiar with cups > setup. > > Patrick > > > Le 29/10/2018 à 14:45, John Hodrien a écrit : > > On Mon, 29 Oct 2018, Patrick Bégou wrote: > > > > > Any idea ? > > > > I don't see that this is a bug. > > > > In client.conf you're telling it which server to use, exclusively. > > You're not > > adding remote printers, you're telling it which CUPS server to talk > > to > > everytime you use CUPS clients commands. You don't even need to > > run a > > local > > CUPS server if you configure it like this. > > > > If you want a machine to work at both ends, I'd suggest you don't > > do > > this, and > > instead run a local CUPS server, and add remote printers to that > > local > > server. > > > > jh > > _______________________________________________ > > CentOS mailing list > > CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx > > https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos > > > > > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx > https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos