[opensuse] Printing Problems through D-Link Router
Hi all, I recently got a new computer (openSUSE 10.2, x86_64, fully patched) which does not have a parallel port. However I have an old HP Laserjet 4M (old, but works well) which only has a parallel port connection. This is at home, and I have a small D-Link DI-704P router which has a built in parallel port for sharing a printer - exactly what I would like to do here. After a rather frustrating bit of time I sort of have the printer working. I set it up as a remote LPD server (router address 192.168.0.1) with queue "lp". This "sort of" works in that the test pages (from CUPS and YaST) print just fine, but the document I wanted to print wouldn't. By trial and error I discovered that some documents will print, however some won't. For example, kwrite will print a text file (/etc/fstab for example) just fine, and postscript and pdf files generated (through CUPS) from this file using kwrite also print fine (from acrobat for example). However, openoffice writer with a simple text file will not print (the lights on the printer blink for a few seconds but then stop and no paper comes out). Similarly a pdf generated in openoffice writer from a simple text file does not print. Other pdf files (generated in Kile for example) seem to print OK. So, not all postscript of pdf files are created equally. However, I know very little about the format of postscript and pdf files and how these differences could affect essentially just the data passing through the router. (These files print just fine with this printer on another machine with a parallel port so I know the printer works.) I've looked at the logs in the router and the only messages related to printing are pairs of messages like Printing jobs started from <name of machine> Printing job finished with no indications of any errors. I checked the D-Link web site and there are no firmware upgrade for this router, and all of the support seems to be windows based. I've tried several different ppd files for this printer (though not all) and they each show the same behavior. I'm not sure what else to try and am looking for some suggestions (wild guesses also accepted). I hope someone here can shed some light on this for me. (I could always get a pci card with a parallel port I suppose, so if I don't get this to work that is probably what I will do, but of course I would like to figure this out. ) -- Don -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
On 2007/08/08 22:04 (GMT-0600) Don Raboud apparently typed:
I recently got a new computer (openSUSE 10.2, x86_64, fully patched) which does not have a parallel port. However I have an old HP Laserjet 4M (old, but works well) which only has a parallel port connection. This is at home, and I have a small D-Link DI-704P router which has a built in parallel port for sharing a printer....
My LaserJet 4M has http://tinyurl.com/2eeqqk and works perfectly using the correct driver and 192.168.0.4. YaST shows driver "HP LaserJet 4MP v2013.103 Postscript (recommended)". Picking the correct driver from the many possibles was an exercise in frustration for me and may be why you can't get yours to work in all apps on your router's parallel port. I too got the blinks a few seconds and quits trying from incorrect drivers. Trying the rest of the ppd files or finding the one I use might be your immediate solution. -- " It is impossible to rightly govern the world without God and the Bible." George Washington Team OS/2 ** Reg. Linux User #211409 Felix Miata *** http://mrmazda.no-ip.com/ -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
Don Raboud wrote:
Hi all,
I recently got a new computer (openSUSE 10.2, x86_64, fully patched) which does not have a parallel port. However I have an old HP Laserjet 4M (old, but works well) which only has a parallel port connection. This is at home, and I have a small D-Link DI-704P router which has a built in parallel port for sharing a printer - exactly what I would like to do here.
Many of those old HP printers can take an ethernet card. Perhaps you can find on on ebay. You can also buy ethernet to parallel port adapters, which might do the trick. -- Use OpenOffice.org <http://www.openoffice.org> -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org
participants (3)
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Don Raboud
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Felix Miata
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James Knott