Anne Wilson wrote:
One thing you could try - set up keychain authentication with keys.
I've
only
used it in an ssh situation, but I believe it can work in lots of others.
You give the keychain password at the start of a session and that is
checked
against known-hosts on the remote machine. That's certainly worth a try.
Thanks to Tim Waugh, who told me how to create the diagnostic file
troubleshoot.txt, I have worked out the cause of my problem.
Firstly, I thought that on my laptop (192.168.2.7)
I had to go to <
http://localhost:631> and add my printer,
which is attached to the computer 192.168.2.1,
giving the URI <
http://192.168.2.1:631/printers/HP_LaserJet_5L>.
I now see that it is not necessary to do anything on the laptop,
apart from start cups.
The printer can then be seen in the CUPS web interface.
(I thought I had set the printer to be shared,
but perhaps I failed to do this originally.)
The actual problem arose because my server, running httpd, is 192.168.2.2 .
It seems that either CUPS or hp-setup substituted
192.168.2.2 for 192.168.2.1 in its internal working,
as shown in the diagnostic file.
--
Timothy Murphy
e-mail: gayleard /at/
eircom.net
tel: +353-86-2336090, +353-1-2842366
s-mail: School of Mathematics, Trinity College, Dublin 2, Ireland