Re: [Marketing Mail] Re: [Marketing Mail] Re: Cups freeze when remote server is unavailable

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Hi Patrick,

you can install your lab printers using the lp* / cups* commands in
your ks file or using scripts, see centos / redhat / arch / cups docu
for more informations on that (arch wiki got some examples).
For the home printers you can use what ever method available, for ease
the web interface / GUI configuration tool should be a good choice.

Markus

On Mon, 2018-10-29 at 19:58 +0100, Patrick Bégou wrote:
> Hi Lange,
> 
> thanks for these links. Following John reply I goes back and deeper
> in
> looking for documentation. Using the web interface is not an option
> as I
> have many laptops to set up and they are all automatically
> (re)installable from a PXE boot + kickstart in case of trouble. So
> all
> must be setup automatically (using command lines in the kickstart
> file)
> and user must be allowed to add their own home printer.
> 
> I understand some things this afternoon, discover cups-browsed that
> was
> not available in 1.4 version (CentOS6), understand why it was not
> working (the laboratory cups version was 1.4 on a debian server and
> CentOS7 has 1.6.x now) discover also that ppd files are deprecated in
> newer cups version (> 2.x ?)....
> 
> Time is to go deeper in all these documentations and build a scenario
> to
> set up cups in these automatic installations process. I agree, it was
> not a bug, just misunderstanding new cups software behaviour.
> 
> Patrick
> 
> Le 29/10/2018 à 17:15, Lange, Markus a écrit :
> > 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
> > > > 
> > > 
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> 
> 
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