> I had tried that also, but tried it again. > before my last try, I power-cycled the printer. > This time it worked. > For some reason CUPS now shows two queue names: > HL-L2360D-series Brother HL-L2360D series localhost.localdomain > HL-L2360D HLL2360D > both Brother HL-L2360D for CUPS . > > 'Tain't as big a deal as having none, > but why does CUPS have two queue names for the printer? Do you have CUPS autodiscover turned on? (AKA Avahi on Linux systems), if so CUPS will have automatically added the printer in addition to the one you manually added. > > I think they were the same packages that I tried to use. > In any case, they both ended in 386. Once again, do you have a 64 bit system? If so, then any executables in the RPMs won't work unless you have added the 32-bit compatibility stuff. RPMs aren't magic, they need to have the requirements added by the packager and if the requirements aren't mentioned in the RPM, it will still install, but none of the executables will run. They will come up with Bad ELF errors. > > Had not heard of system-config-printer . > Neither man, info nor --help helped. > What is it suppoded to do? > Google suggests it is a GUI. > Google also suggests that it is always started through a GUI. The god Google is not infallible. system-config-printer is the old way of adding and managing printers. It's a GUI, but you can start it from a command line in a GUI environment (i.e. it's not a command line program). But it's just a front end, you still need the underlying drivers there before it can configure a printer. However, system-config-printer is deprecated in CentOS 7 and I believe it's not in CentOS 8 (I could be wrong though). The official way to manage printers in CentOS 8 is either via CUPS or cockpit. P. _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos