On Wed, 2009-01-28 at 22:28 -0800, Joel Gomberg wrote: > Craig White wrote: > > On Thu, 2009-01-29 at 12:08 +1030, Tim wrote: > >> On Wed, 2009-01-28 at 10:56 -0500, Brian C. Huffman wrote: > >>> the alternative that someone suggested about just making it a network > >>> printer and pointing to the http address for cups (bypassing samba) > >>> does work. I'm just thinking that I might want to use this machine as > >>> a fileserver at some point and there's no need to use two points of > >>> entry if one works. > >> It's worth thinking about that putting Samba in between CUPS and remote > >> access to it, and you are putting an *extra* thing in the middle, *is* > >> complicating how printing works. > > ---- > > sure, when you're talking about one system. > > > > also, experience tells me that things don't occur in isolation and > > eventually you figure out that whatever is broken also affects other > > things down the line that you haven't discovered yet. > > > > The theory here is fairly simple...If cups is functioning properly, > > computer can print. If samba is functioning properly, Windows computers > > can print to samba shared printer through cups. Since PCL drivers on > > Windows systems do not speak postscript, you must permit 'raw' printing > > to allow the PCL through to the printer unmolested by cups. It really > > isn't that complicated. > > I've been experiencing a similar problem with my wife's new Vista computer. The > printer is recognized. I can print a test page. Printing anything else has > failed 99% of the time. The only relevant error I see in my cups error_log is: > > cupsdAuthorize: No authentication data provided. ---- sounds as if you added... guest ok = yes to the 'printers' section of smb.conf, this would go away though it defies logic that you can print a test page from Windows but not from other applications on Windows because of authentication. Also, samba authentication is for Windows to samba and once samba has the job, it should automatically authenticate itself to cups so it doesn't make much sense for cups to complain about authentication. ---- > > The same setup worked on W2k and continues to work on a VMware W2k virtual > machine. The relevant user has the same user name and password on both > machines. Only printing is affected. Both computers can see the shares of the > other. The shares can be mounted, files transferred, etc. This must be > something Vista-specific. And, no, I can't explain why one or two jobs did > print. I haven't posted about this issue before, because it doesn't really seem > to be a Fedora problem. ---- There may be something Vista specific - I can't personally test because I'm not eager to install Vista on any of my systems. I would suspect that it's a Windows print driver issue. Craig -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines