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Full Discussion: printing devices
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers printing devices Post 45493 by HN19 on Monday 22nd of December 2003 02:44:58 PM
Old 12-22-2003
Thank you, now I know that the printer I have is more like a device. Stilll I can't get it to print.
I was reading about verifying getty process (this are the running process right?) and there is a command: ps -t ttysnn that shows you the actual process, and I used it and there was a process, I try killing it, but whenever I kill one, another different appears.

Then I try comparing the settings with a printer that does work, with this command: stty -a < /dev/ttys12, and the speed was different. I read that for optimum performance I needed to set the speed at 9600 baud. The problem is I don't know how to change the settings.

I read how to change them, you need to invoke sysadmsh, but I can't do that. When I type it shows: sysadmsh: not found.

Any ideas of how can I fix this?

Last edited by HN19; 12-22-2003 at 04:26 PM..
 

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INITSCRIPT(5)						Linux System Administrator's Manual					     INITSCRIPT(5)

NAME
initscript - script that executes inittab commands. SYNOPSIS
/bin/sh /etc/initscript id runlevels action process DESCRIPTION
When the shell script /etc/initscript is present, init will use it to execute the commands from inittab. This script can be used to set things like ulimit and umask default values for every process. EXAMPLES
This is a sample initscript, which might be installed on your system as /etc/initscript.sample. # # initscript Executed by init(8) for every program it # wants to spawn like this: # # /bin/sh /etc/initscript <id> <level> <action> <process> # # Set umask to safe level, and enable core dumps. umask 022 ulimit -c 2097151 PATH=/bin:/sbin:/usr/bin:/usr/sbin export PATH # Increase the hard file descriptor limit for all processes # to 8192. The soft limit is still 1024, but any unprivileged # process can increase its soft limit up to the hard limit # with "ulimit -Sn xxx" (needs a 2.2.13 or later Linux kernel). ulimit -Hn 8192 # Execute the program. eval exec "$4" NOTES
This script is not meant as startup script for daemons or somesuch. It has nothing to do with a rc.local style script. It's just a handler for things executed from /etc/inittab. Experimenting with this can make your system un(re)bootable. FILES
/etc/inittab, /etc/initscript. AUTHOR
Miquel van Smoorenburg ,<miquels@cistron.nl> SEE ALSO
init(8), inittab(5). July 10, 2003 INITSCRIPT(5)
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