Difference between revisions of "Printing from Linux-Notebooks"
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With this setting, you will not be able to print to somewhere else. | With this setting, you will not be able to print to somewhere else. | ||
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+ | Using this you should disable cups-browsed or remove the package, esp. if you encounter hight CUP load of cups. |
Revision as of 09:01, 24 May 2019
Pre-condition
To access our printers you have to be connected by cable to the outlets with the blue dots or by VPN.
Access from Wifi is only possible with a VPN Connection.
The following is also valid for any other Linux machine connected to the blue outlets, e.g. self managed desktop computers.
Background
Using the default cups configuration provided with Ubuntu may have some cliches. On problem is a high CPU load of cups. Then cups takes do long to add the printers provides by the cups-browsed and procedure is repeated. If you see this you should increase the timeouts in cups-browsed.
Open /etc/cups/cups-browsed.conf in your editor as root und search for the statements:
HttpLocalTimeout 10 HttpRemoteTimeout 50
Uncomment this is set this to a high value than the default, which is short for some complex printers.
Scenarios
Self managed desktops
This is a simple and but the most radical way to connect to the printer. This will bypass your local cups server on the notebook and let your applications talk directly with the ITP print server.
You can change this system wide or only for the current user. System wide settings go to the file /etc/cups/client.conf. Personal changes go to ~/.cups/client.conf.
In most cases this file needs to be created. The man page tells you that this is deprecated. Currently this is only valid for MacOS and runs fine with Ubuntu 18.04. Add the following content:
ServerName print-itp:631
With this setting, you will not be able to print to somewhere else.
Using this you should disable cups-browsed or remove the package, esp. if you encounter hight CUP load of cups.