https://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=343242#c9
--- Comment #9 from Johannes Meixner 2007-11-29 04:31:03 MST ---
I am afraid but I have no idea why you cannot log in
as root with the system root password.
Usually such problems happen when an outdated CUPS 1.1 cupsd.conf
is used on a CUPS 1.2 system as described in
http://en.opensuse.org/SDB:CUPS_in_a_Nutshell
but in comment #7 you wrote "I have a 10.3 vanilla install
and I have deleted and reinstalled CUPS in its entirety
in attempting to resolve the username/password pair conflict."
Regarding "Reinstalling the Printing System", see
http://en.opensuse.org/SDB:CUPS_-_Reinstalling_the_Printing_System
Alternatively it might help to "Allow printer admin tasks
for a normal user", see
http://en.opensuse.org/SDB:CUPS_in_a_Nutshell
To allow any user anything you may add this to cupsd.conf:
-------------------------------------------------------------------
# Open and insecure policy which allows any user to do anything.
<Policy allowanything>
<Limit All>
Order deny,allow
</Limit>
</Policy>
DefaultPolicy allowanything
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Have in mind that a user who is allowed to do printer admin tasks
can change the print queues as he likes (e.g. send copies of
confidental print jobs to any external destination).
Furthermore to set up a HP device, it is often best to use HP's
own tool "hp-setup" (run this as root) but in comment #0
you wrote that even this already failed for you.
Finally it should not really cause problems if there is a
non-working print queue as long as you have at least one
working queue. Of course it is not nice to have a non-working
queue but I think first of all at least one working queue
is needed so that you can print.
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