On Tuesday 29 January 2008 02:15, Jonathan Doe wrote: > On Monday 28 January 2008 11:23:47 am Dotan Cohen wrote: > > On Debian etch, I downloaded the drivers for Brother dcp7010 from the > > Brother website, but I cannot add the printer in Kcontrol -> > > Peripherals -> Printers -> Add. THe text "Add printer/class" is grey. > > This is the site from where I downloaded the drivers: > > http://solutions.brother.com/linux/sol/printer/linux/cups_drivers.html#de > > > > What must I do to enable the addition of the printer? Thanks in advance. > > I have had the experience where sometimes adding a printer via kde is easy, > and sometimes it is impossible. I would reccommend adding the printer via > the cups web interface, the kde print configuration should pick up on this > and Just Work. > > FYI running kde as root in order to add a printer is generally not > considered safe. Try the cups webinterface: On suse it is impossible to install some printers any other way than via a graphic interface. . Samsung provide a self installing closed source driver with a graphic installation interface. The install can be run as an ordinary user with out any problem but the final printer enable part has exactly the problem mentioned. Will cups accept a driver supplied like that - no. Suse won't either because of a list of "acceptable" printers it maintains many of which are probably obsolete. Trying to force it into the list doesn't work either. If the driver installation manages to get the right things in the right places you may find that you can do the final enabling part via the cups web interface. You may also find that the cups password isn't the same as root. On safety I personally will run any none web accessing program as root but I would also point out that many disto's have the ability to run "file manager" as su. A very useful facility for those that mostly stop away from the shell. I use it a lot. Type a web address and it will still go where ever. Despite this fact suse for one clobbered the facility installed onto roots desktop for what basically seem to be nonsensical reasons. Also eg why edit system files in the shell when it's much easier to edit in a desktop editor. KDE also provides a user the opportunity to run any program as root. It just needs a little bit of thought as to what one does do when logged in as root. -- Regards John Suse 10.0 KDE 3.4.2 B ___________________________________________________ This message is from the kde mailing list. Account management: https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde. Archives: http://lists.kde.org/. More info: http://www.kde.org/faq.html.