The primary mechanism for Ubuntu printing and print services is the Common UNIX Printing System (CUPS). This printing system is a freely available, portable printing layer which has become the new standard for printing in most Linux distributions.
CUPS manages print jobs and queues and provides network printing using the standard Internet Printing Protocol (IPP), while offering support for a very large range of printers, from dot-matrix to laser and many in between. CUPS also supports PostScript Printer Description (PPD) and auto-detection of network printers, and features a simple web-based configuration and administration tool.
To install CUPS on your Ubuntu computer, simply use sudo with the apt-get command and give the packages to install as the first parameter. A complete CUPS install has many package dependencies, but they may all be specified on the same command line. Enter the following at a terminal prompt to install CUPS:
sudo apt-get install cupsys cupsys-client
Upon authenticating with your user password, the packages should be downloaded
and installed without error. Upon the conclusion of installation, the CUPS server
will be started automatically. For troubleshooting purposes, you can access CUPS
server errors via the error log file at: /var/log/cups/error_log
.
If the error log does not show enough information to troubleshoot any problems you
encounter, the verbosity of the CUPS log can be increased by changing the LogLevel directive in the configuration file (discussed below)
to "debug" or even "debug2", which logs everything, from the default of "info". If
you make this change, remember to change it back once you've solved your problem, to
prevent the log file from becoming overly large.
The Common UNIX Printing System server's behavior is configured through the
directives contained in the file /etc/cups/cupsd.conf
.
The CUPS configuration file follows the same syntax as the primary configuration
file for the Apache HTTP server, so users familiar with editing Apache's
configuration file should feel at ease when editing the CUPS configuration
file. Some examples of settings you may wish to change initially will be
presented here.
Prior to editing the configuration file, you should make a copy of the original file and protect it from writing, so you will have the original settings as a reference, and to reuse as necessary. Copy the |
sudo cp /etc/cups/cupsd.conf /etc/cups/cupsd.conf.original
sudo chmod a-w /etc/cups/cupsd.conf.original
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ServerAdmin: To configure the email address of the designated administrator of the CUPS server, simply edit the
/etc/cups/cupsd.conf
configuration file with your preferred text editor, and modify the ServerAdmin line accordingly. For example, if you are the Administrator for the CUPS server, and your e-mail address is 'bjoy@somebigco.com', then you would modify the ServerAdmin line to appear as such:ServerAdmin bjoy@somebigco.com
For more examples of configuration directives in the CUPS server configuration file, view the associated system manual page by entering the following command at a terminal prompt:
man cupsd.conf
Whenever you make changes to the |
sudo /etc/init.d/cupsys restart
Some other configuration for the CUPS server is done in the file /etc/cups/cups.d/ports.conf
:
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Listen: By default on Ubuntu, the CUPS server installation listens only on the loopback interface at IP address 127.0.0.1. In order to instruct the CUPS server to listen on an actual network adapter's IP address, you must specify either a hostname, the IP address, or optionally, an IP address/port pairing via the addition of a Listen directive. For example, if your CUPS server resides on a local network at the IP address 192.168.10.250 and you'd like to make it accessible to the other systems on this subnetwork, you would edit the
/etc/cups/cupsd.conf
and add a Listen directive, as such:Listen 127.0.0.1:631 # existing loopback Listen Listen /var/run/cups/cups.sock # existing socket Listen Listen 192.168.10.250:631 # Listen on the LAN interface, Port 631 (IPP)
In the example above, you may comment out or remove the reference to the Loopback address (127.0.0.1) if you do not wish cupsd to listen on that interface, but would rather have it only listen on the Ethernet interfaces of the Local Area Network (LAN). To enable listening for all network interfaces for which a certain hostname is bound, including the Loopback, you could create a Listen entry for the hostname socrates as such:
Listen socrates:631 # Listen on all interfaces for the hostname 'socrates'
or by omitting the Listen directive and using Port instead, as in:
Port 631 # Listen on port 631 on all interfaces