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1. Introduction to Printing in the Solaris Operating System 2. Planning for Printing in the Solaris Operating System (Tasks) 3. Setting Up Printing Services (Tasks) Setting Up Solaris Printing Services (Task Map) Setting Up the Internet Printing Protocol Enabling and Disabling Printing Services (Task Map) Administering Network Printing Services How to Enable the IPP Network Listening Service How to Disable the IPP Network Listening Service How to Restart the IPP Network Listening Service How to Enable the RFC-1179 Network Listening Service How to Disable the RFC-1179 Network Listening Service How to Restart the RFC-1179 Network Listening Service How to Enable the SMB Network Service How to Disable the SMB Network Service How to Restart the SMB Network Service 4. Setting Up Printers (Tasks) 5. Administering Printers by Using Solaris Print Manager and LP Print Commands (Tasks) 6. Administering Printers by Using Printing Protocols (Tasks) 7. Customizing Printing Services and Printers (Tasks) 8. Administering Character Sets, Filters, Forms, and Fonts (Tasks) 9. Administering Printers by Using the PPD File Management Utility (Tasks) 10. Setting Up and Administering Printers by Using GNOME Desktop Tools (Tasks) 11. Printing in the Solaris Operating System (Reference) 12. Troubleshooting Printing Problems (Tasks) |
Using Solaris Print ManagerSolaris Print Manager is a Java-based graphical user interface that enables you to manage local and remote printer configuration. This tool can be used in the following naming service environments: LDAP, NIS, NIS+, and files. You must be logged in as superuser to use this tool. You can use Solaris Print Manager to set up print servers (Add New Attached Printer or Add a Network Printer) and print clients (Add Access to Printer). An attached printer is a printer that is physically cabled to the print server. A network printer is physically attached to the network. Adding access to a printer, or adding remote access to a printer, is the process of giving print clients (all those machines that are not the server) access to the printer. For more information about printing terms, see Glossary. Solaris 10 5/08: Starting with this release, the Solaris print system can use and recognize localhost as the host name in the print system databases. Previously, /bin/hostname was used to generate the print host name. These improvements were made to enable print servers to maintain the same print host name, independent of the machine host name. For more information, see How to Specify localhost as the Host Name When Adding a Print Queue by Using Solaris Print Manager. Solaris Print Manager Options and Selectable AttributesYou can add, modify, or delete a printer, and add printer access by using the Solaris Print Manager GUI tool. Many of the same options that can be used with the lpadmin command are also available in Solaris Print Manager. Note - You must be superuser to gain access to some of the options in Solaris Print Manager. Options and selectable attributes within the tool can vary, depending on the user. For a detailed description of all the printer definitions that you can set or reset by using Solaris Print Manager, see Setting Printer Definitions by Using Solaris Print Manager. For step-by-step instructions on setting up new printers with Solaris Print Manager, see Chapter 3, Setting Up Printing Services (Tasks). Solaris Print Manager and Special CharactersSolaris Print Manager checks user input for the various text fields in the input screens. There are two types of checking: general illegal input and input that is illegal for specific fields. Solaris Print Manager does not accept the following characters as input, except for the help screens:
Starting Solaris Print ManagerTo start Solaris Print Manager, use either of the following methods:
See the following procedure for details. How to Start Solaris Print Manager
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