Thanks for sharing.
What happens to PRINTER if the desired string is not found in the printers.conf?
Your looong pipe with two grep and four more programs could be abbreviated to
May need some modification / adaption, as this is an approximation as I don't have your printer.conf around for testing.
Hi All,
I am trying to configure printer in solaris 10 with the help of print manager. There is no printer attached to my system, ia m doing it for test purpose. However I am unable to do so coz its pops up window - Heading as error with option as dismiss and cancel. Kindly help as I am... (3 Replies)
Hello
Let me first give a small overview of the setup. All printers are connected to Windows 2000 servers. There are a lot of UNIX (AIX & HP-UX) servers as well which have SAP running.
I'm working on a script to add printers to a specified SAP instance. I want to verify the user input (to... (0 Replies)
Hello,
I'm rather new to the world of regular expressions and sed, though am excited by its possibilities. I have a particular task I'd like to achieve, and have googled the topic quite a bit. However, having found some codes that perform a task very similar to what I'd like to do, I can't for... (2 Replies)
Hi,
Is it possible to find the printer location and printer type (whether it is local or network) using command in Linux ?
Thanks in advance. (1 Reply)
I want to match the number exactly from the variable which has multiple numbers seperated by pipe symbol similar to search in egrep.below is the code which i tried
#!/usr/bin/perl
my $searchnum = $ARGV;
my $num = "148|1|0|256";
print $num;
if ($searchnum =~ /$num/)
{
print "found";
}... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have file in my $datadir as below :-
SAT_1.txt
SAT_2.txt
BAT_UD.lst
BAT_DD1.lst
DUTT_1.txt
DUTT_la.txt
Expected result :-
should get all the above file in $<Filename>_file.lst
Below is my code :-
for i in SAT BAT DUTT
do
touch a.lst
cd $datadir (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: satishmallidi
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT LINUX
printers.conf
printers.conf(5) Apple Inc. printers.conf(5)NAME
printers.conf - printer configuration file for cups
DESCRIPTION
The printers.conf file defines the local printers that are available. It is normally located in the /etc/cups directory and is generated
automatically by the cupsd(8) program when printers are added or deleted.
Each line in the file can be a configuration directive, a blank line, or a comment. Comment lines start with the # character.
DIRECTIVES
<Printer name> ... </Printer>
Defines a specific printer.
<DefaultPrinter name> ... </Printer>
Defines a default printer.
Accepting Yes
Accepting No
Specifies whether the printer is accepting new jobs.
AllowUser [ user @group ... ]
Allows specific users and groups to print to the printer.
DenyUser [ user @group ... ]
Prevents specific users and groups from printing to the printer.
DeviceURI uri
Specifies the device URI for a printer.
ErrorPolicy abort-job
ErrorPolicy retry-current-job
ErrorPolicy retry-job
ErrorPolicy stop-printer
Specifies the error policy for the printer.
Info text
Specifies human-readable text describing the printer.
JobSheets banner banner
Specifies the banner pages to use for the printer.
KLimit number
Specifies the job-k-limit value for the printer.
Location text
Specifies human-readable text describing the location of the printer.
OpPolicy name
Specifies the operation policy for the printer.
PageLimit number
Specifies the job-page-limit value for the printer.
PortMonitor monitor
Specifies the port monitor for a printer.
QuotaPeriod seconds
Specifies the job-quota-period value for the printer.
Shared Yes
Shared No
Specifies whether the printer is shared.
State idle
State stopped
Specifies the initial state of the printer (Idle or Stopped)
StateMessage text
Specifies the message associated with the state.
StateTime seconds
Specifies the date/time associated with the state.
SEE ALSO classes.conf(5), cupsd(8), cupsd.conf(5), mime.convs(5), mime.types(5),
http://localhost:631/help
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2007-2011 by Apple Inc.
29 April 2009 CUPS printers.conf(5)