On Fri, Apr 07, 2023 at 03:05:56PM -0700, capercally.bleery670@??? wrote:
> On Fri, Apr 07, 2023 at 11:04:50AM -0400, Haines Brown wrote:
>
> > I get my printer's IP address (obfuscated) with
>
> > $ curl -s https://icanhazip.com
> > 32.210.NNN.NNN
>
> > For printer queue I do
>
> > $ ippfind
> > ipp://lenin.local:631/printers/HP_LaserJet_Pro_M428f-M429f
> > ipp://HPF8B46A8264A8.local:631/ipp/print
> > ipp://lenin.local:631/printers/HP_LaserJet_Pro_M428f_M429f_8264A8
>
> > I presumed the second line is the printer queue I should tell the
> > Mac about. I also used the ipp:// prefix.
>
> Isn't this mixing two different things together? Either you want to
> use the Linux system as a print server (and then the IP of the printer
> should not matter), or else you want to print directly from the Mac to
> the printer and then the queue on the Linux box (presumably lenin,
> heh) should not matter.
Thanks, Ian, I certainly does mix them. Decided to hvae my linux box
(Daedalus) be a print server for the Mac laptop. But I find that the
guideline to set linux up as a print server makes no sense. That is
ends with cross your fingers and hope is not very ecouraging.
For example, I'm told to modify /etc/cups/cupsd.conf by changing
the Listen line to " Listen *:49631". Or should that line be added?
It says further he print location section should look like this:
<Location /printers>
Order allow,deny
Allow 192.168.0.*
Allow 192.168.1.*
</Location>
I have no such Line or section in my cupsd.conf.
Apparently making these chages will make the linux box into a print
server wheb CUPS is restarted.
--
Haines Brown
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