man, 20.12.2004 kl. 05.07 skrev Phil Schaffner:
On Fri, 2004-12-17 at 20:50 -0500, Jeffrey D. Yuille wrote:
> On Friday 17 December 2004 05:47 pm, Kyrre Ness Sjobak wrote:
> > fre, 17.12.2004 kl. 21.06 skrev Rodolfo J. Paiz:
> > > On Fri, 2004-12-17 at 13:48 +0000, Timothy Murphy wrote:
> > > > CUPS is almost wilfully difficult to configure.
Thats putting it mildly.
...
> I was the one that originally posted this message. I went to my web
> browser and typed in "Localhost:631", and saw that print jobs were still
in
> the queue and the errors were "Unable to look up host "XXXXX- unknown
host".
> As I previously mentioned, I have a local LAN and can connect to the internet
> from all of the hosts but am having difficulty in seeing the other nodes on
> the network when it comes to printing - that is, when I try to print
> remotely. When I go the the printing manager, it shows that it can see the
> printer on the remote computer. I can sucessfully ping all of the hosts on
> the LAN, however. All five machines have Fedora Core 3 installed on them.
> How can I correct this problem? I have a wireless router with four ethernet
> ports and the printer is an Epson Stylus C80 on one of the desktops. How do
> I get the computers to "find" the host on which the printer resides? Any
> help would be greatly appreciated.
I have a similar setup on a 192.168.1.x network behind a cable modem and
router. Using static IP addresses, rather than allowing the router to
assign them via DHCP, and making entries for all the machines
in /etc/hosts works for me.
Yup. Personaly i use DNSMASQ...
And i personally mean that cups should *save* the broadcasted IP and use
that. And then maybe use the dns-name as a "hide" for the user...