Michael Hennebry wrote: >>>> How do I print to a remote CUPS printer >>>> from machines on which I am not root? >>>> On the remote machine, FC5, I am root. >>>> On the clients, FreeBSD and FC3, I am not root, >>>> but can open TCP ports. >>>> Is there a nonroot IPP client that can >>>> be used to print on a remote printer? I think we need to know what's meant by "remote". Another device on the local network? Something on a distant network? Over the internet? Amadeus W. M.: >>> On the CUPS server you must make the print queues shared. The clients' >>> CUPS will automatically see the shared queues on the network. >>> >>> On the server, go to System->Administration->Printing, click on the >>> queue you want to share, then Edit, etc. >>> >>> Oh, and you must have port 631 tcp and udp open on the CUPS server. Aaron Konstam: >> That is absolutely the wrong way to share printers using CUPS. All >> printers on the same lan as the server can print to the server's >> printers by default. No configuration is required. Amadeus W. M.: > And exactly why is it absolutely wrong? It works flawlessly on > my lan. And in fact if I don't make the queues shared on the CUPS > server, they are not automatically seen by the clients. I wonder if the situation gets confused if one's printing through CUPS via Samba? I found that to be a right disaster. But ignoring Samba, if you configure a printer with CUPS (using the webpage) on the machine that the printer is directly connected to, it acts as a server for the rest of the network, by default. Automatically advertising the fact. When other unconfigured client PCs connect to the network, they're informed that there's a printer, automatically by CUPS (the server, and their local CUPS finding it), and they use it, by default, automatically. Alternatively, if you configure your print server using the Gnome GUI tool (don't know about non-Gnome alternatives, I haven't tried them), you do seem to need to fiddle with more options to get it acting as a server for your network. It seems that the default options are more restrictive. Once you start manually configuring clients, they tend to stop automatically finding other printers on your network. There's something unreliable, here. I've systems where I can configure a local printer, and the network printer is available as a choice. Sometimes the default printer choice doesn't stick. Sometimes only the local printer is found. Personally, I got jack of the lot of those half-arsed configuration tools. Configuring CUPS by hand editing the configuration files seems better, you've got your options spelt out for you. The CUPS webserver configuration doesn't let you set half the things that you could. The Gnome GUI tool seems to make a mess of things for lots of people. -- (Currently running FC4, occasionally trying FC5.) Don't send private replies to my address, the mailbox is ignored. I read messages from the public lists.