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Date:      Mon, 20 Apr 2009 19:30:48 -0500
From:      Adam Vande More <amvandemore@gmail.com>
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Can you ACTUALLY print from FreeBSD?
Message-ID:  <49ED13B8.50106@gmail.com>
In-Reply-To: <20090420223625.8847EA3DF2@maxine.cjones.org>
References:  <20090420145839.5D396A3DC7@maxine.cjones.org>	<86fxg3gwny.fsf@nowhere.org>	<20090420173603.8CF7EA3DC7@maxine.cjones.org>	<9B2BDFC5F4D9083916FFE187@utd65257.utdallas.edu>	<20090420192048.40290A3D2E@maxine.cjones.org>	<62CFD48735EA944E20668C98@utd65257.utdallas.edu> <20090420223625.8847EA3DF2@maxine.cjones.org>

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Keith Seyffarth wrote:
>> Googling that shows it to be a file shared with Windows boxes when you're 
>> running samba.  I don't know if you set up samba or not, but I would ignore 
>> this error for now.  It's likely unrelated to the printing problem that you're 
>> having.
>>     
>
> OK. Thanks. I guess. I was kind of hoping that figuring that out might
> be the fix...
>
>   
>>>> Do you have the startup script:
>>>> /usr/local/etc/rc.d/cupsd ?
>>>>         
>>> yes
>>>
>>>       
>>>> If so, what is the output of /usr/local/etc/rc.d/cupsd status?
>>>>         
>>> currently it's:
>>> cupsd is running as pid 721.
>>>
>>> but I did start cups manually since my last reboot.
>>>
>>>       
>> Cupsd was started automatically on reboot by the script.  So that part is 
>> working fine.
>>     
>
> after rebooting the machine, it's:
> cupsd is not running.
>
> <config info snipped>
>
>   
This seems to me to be area to focus on.  Have you tried starting if 
from cli and seeing if any errors show.  Also check logs etc recompile 
cups w/ debugging info if applicable.  I suspect it's not so you may 
have to increase the verbosity in a config file somewhere.  It's been 
awhile since I printed from FreeBSD, but my last experience was positive 
and not nearly as much issue as you're having.  Anyways I suspect 
following cupsd not starting to it's end will result in either solving 
the issue or at least getting to a point where it's easy to resolve.  
You can also try to trace back /usr/local/etc/rc.d/cupsd to see where 
it's failing.



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