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#1 Le 16/05/2006, à 08:23

silencio

Imprimante en partage avec Mac OSX, quelle option?

Bonjour,

hier j'ai reçus mon Mac Mini pour remplacer mon pc windows qui était tout pourri!! (tu m'étonnes.... cool )
J'ai aussi un laptop IBM qui tourne sous Kubuntu, et mon imprimante était connectée en USB sur le pc windows, je faisais un partage Samba et tout marché niquel.
Maintenant que mon imprimante est branchée à mon Mac je ne sais pas quelle option choisir sous Kubuntu pour pouvoir imprimer. J'ai essayé avec CUPS puisque Mac OS X est de l'Unix, je vois mon imprimante mais ça n'imprime pas.
Est-ce que quelqu'un peut m'aider?
Je précise que j'ai activé sous Mac OSX le partage d'imprimante tongue

Merci d'avance

Hors ligne

#2 Le 16/05/2006, à 11:11

cflam69

Re : Imprimante en partage avec Mac OSX, quelle option?

Moi c'est l'inverse => imprimante sous Linux. Pas de problème pour mon 2ème PC sous Ubuntu mais impossible d'imprimer depuis le Mac (et pourtant j'ai Googliser à mort). Même des modification de fichiers de configuration à la main sous Mac ne donne rien.
Apparemment c'est un problème insoluble mais bon.

Je me permet donc de te faire part de cette "mauvaise expérience" et d'intervenir dans ton post.


La liberté ne s'use que si l'on ne s'en sert pas.

Hors ligne

#3 Le 18/05/2006, à 20:13

silencio

Re : Imprimante en partage avec Mac OSX, quelle option?

Vraiment personne... snif sad
Il doit bien y avoir moyen de partager une imprimante avec Mac OSX, je ne pense pas être le seul à posseder un mac... non? Si?
big_smile

Hors ligne

#4 Le 18/05/2006, à 20:51

cflam69

Re : Imprimante en partage avec Mac OSX, quelle option?

Regarde du côté de samba (moi j'ai pas essayé et pas le temps en ce moment)


La liberté ne s'use que si l'on ne s'en sert pas.

Hors ligne

#5 Le 19/05/2006, à 07:23

silencio

Re : Imprimante en partage avec Mac OSX, quelle option?

Salut,
J'avais essayé avec Samba, mais comme je le pensais, ça ne fonctionne pas. Quand je lance l'analyse pour trouver détecter l'imprimante sur le réseau, il ne me la trouve pas. Normalement Samba est réservé à Windows, ça ne fonctionne pas avec Mac OS

Hors ligne

#6 Le 13/06/2006, à 02:35

xenophon

Re : Imprimante en partage avec Mac OSX, quelle option?

Sur le mac ouvre un terminal et  édite le fichier /etc/cups/client.conf :
nano /etc/cups/client.conf

Tu y verras une ligne :
#ServerName myhost.domain.com

Enlève le dièse devant, et entre l'adresse ip de la machine Ubuntu qui possède l'imprimante à la place de myhost.domain.com

Sauvegarde le fichier avec CTRL+O

Quitte Nano avec CTRL+X

et redémarre le mac

Normalement ça devrait marcher... à condition que sur la machine ubuntu, le réseau cups soit partagé comme dans mon fichier /etc/cups/cupsd.conf ci dessous :

#
#
#   Sample configuration file for the Common UNIX Printing System (CUPS)
#   scheduler.
#
#   Copyright 1997-2005 by Easy Software Products, all rights reserved.
#
#   These coded instructions, statements, and computer programs are the
#   property of Easy Software Products and are protected by Federal
#   copyright law.  Distribution and use rights are outlined in the file
#   "LICENSE.txt" which should have been included with this file.  If this
#   file is missing or damaged please contact Easy Software Products
#   at:
#
#       Attn: CUPS Licensing Information
#       Easy Software Products
#       44141 Airport View Drive, Suite 204
#       Hollywood, Maryland 20636 USA
#
#       Voice: (301) 373-9600
#       EMail: cups-info@cups.org
#         WWW: http://www.cups.org
#

########################################################################
#                                                                      #
# This is the CUPS configuration file.  If you are familiar with       #
# Apache or any of the other popular web servers, we've followed the   #
# same format.  Any configuration variable used here has the same      #
# semantics as the corresponding variable in Apache.  If we need       #
# different functionality then a different name is used to avoid       #
# confusion...                                                         #
#                                                                      #
########################################################################


########
######## Server Identity
########

#
# ServerName: the hostname of your server, as advertised to the world.
# By default CUPS will use the hostname of the system.
#
# To set the default server used by clients, see the client.conf file.
#

#ServerName myhost.domain.com

#
# ServerAdmin: the email address to send all complaints/problems to.
# By default CUPS will use "root@hostname".
#

#ServerAdmin root@your.domain.com


########
######## Server Options
########

#
# ConfigFilePerm: permissions of configuration files like
# /etc/cups/printer.conf.
#

ConfigFilePerm 0600

#
# AccessLog: the access log file; if this does not start with a leading /
# then it is assumed to be relative to ServerRoot.  By default set to
# "/var/log/cups/access_log"
#
# You can also use the special name "syslog" to send the output to the
# syslog file or daemon.
#

AccessLog /var/log/cups/access_log

#
# Classification: the classification level of the server.  If set, this
# classification is displayed on all pages, and raw printing is disabled.
# The default is the empty string.
#

#Classification classified
#Classification confidential
#Classification secret
#Classification topsecret
#Classification unclassified

#
# ClassifyOverride: whether to allow users to override the classification
# on printouts. If enabled, users can limit banner pages to before or
# after the job, and can change the classification of a job, but cannot
# completely eliminate the classification or banners.
#
# The default is off.
#

#ClassifyOverride off

#
# DataDir: the root directory for the CUPS data files.
# By default "/usr/share/cups".
#

DataDir /usr/share/cups

#
# DefaultCharset: the default character set to use. If not specified,
# defaults to "utf-8".  Note that this can also be overridden in
# HTML documents...
#

DefaultCharset notused

#
# DefaultLanguage: the default language if not specified by the browser.
# If not specified, the current locale is used.
#

#DefaultLanguage en

#
# DocumentRoot: the root directory for HTTP documents that are served.
# By default "/usr/share/cups/doc-root".
#

#DocumentRoot /usr/share/cups/doc-root

#
# ErrorLog: the error log file; if this does not start with a leading /
# then it is assumed to be relative to ServerRoot.  By default set to
# "/var/log/cups/error_log"
#
# You can also use the special name "syslog" to send the output to the
# syslog file or daemon.
#

ErrorLog /var/log/cups/error_log

#
# FileDevice: determines whether the scheduler will allow new printers
# to be added using device URIs of the form "file:/foo/bar". The default
# is not to allow file devices due to the potential security vulnerability
# and due to the fact that file devices do not support raw printing.
#

#FileDevice No


#
# FontPath: the path to locate all font files (currently only for pstoraster)
# By default "/usr/share/cups/fonts".
#

FontPath /usr/share/cups/fonts

#
# LogLevel: controls the number of messages logged to the ErrorLog
# file and can be one of the following:
#
#     debug2	Log everything.
#     debug	Log almost everything.
#     info      Log all requests and state changes.
#     warn      Log errors and warnings.
#     error     Log only errors.
#     none      Log nothing.
#

LogLevel info

#
# MaxLogSize: controls the maximum size of each log file before they are
# rotated.  Defaults to 1048576 (1MB).  Set to 0 to disable log rotating.
#

#MaxLogSize 0

#
# PageLog: the page log file; if this does not start with a leading /
# then it is assumed to be relative to ServerRoot.  By default set to
# "/var/log/cups/page_log"
#
# You can also use the special name "syslog" to send the output to the
# syslog file or daemon.
#

PageLog /var/log/cups/page_log

#
# PreserveJobHistory: whether or not to preserve the job history after a
# job is completed, cancelled, or stopped.  Default is Yes.
#

PreserveJobHistory Yes

#
# PreserveJobFiles: whether or not to preserve the job files after a
# job is completed, cancelled, or stopped.  Default is No.
#

#PreserveJobFiles No

#
# AutoPurgeJobs: automatically purge jobs when not needed for quotas.
# Default is No.
#

AutoPurgeJobs No

#
# MaxCopies: maximum number of copies that a user can request. Default is
# 100.
#

#MaxCopies 100

#
# MaxJobs: maximum number of jobs to keep in memory (active and completed.)
# Default is 500; the value 0 is used for no limit.
#

#MaxJobs 500

#
# MaxJobsPerPrinter: maximum number of active jobs per printer. The default
# is 0 for no limit.
#

#MaxJobsPerPrinter 0

#
# MaxJobsPerUser: maximum number of active jobs per user. The default
# is 0 for no limit.
#

#MaxJobsPerUser 0

#
# MaxPrinterHistory: controls the maximum number of history collections
# in the printer-state-history attribute.  Set to 0 to disable history
# data.
#

#MaxPrinterHistory 10

#
# Printcap: the name of the printcap file.  Default is /etc/printcap.
# Leave blank to disable printcap file generation.
#

Printcap /var/run/cups/printcap

#
# PrintcapFormat: the format of the printcap file, currently either
# BSD or Solaris.  The default is "BSD".
#

#PrintcapFormat BSD
#PrintcapFormat Solaris

#
# PrintcapGUI: the name of the GUI options panel program to associate
# with print queues under IRIX.  The default is "/usr/bin/glpoptions"
# from ESP Print Pro.
#
# This option is only used under IRIX; the options panel program
# must accept the "-d printer" and "-o options" options and write
# the selected printer options back to stdout on completion.
#

#PrintcapGUI /usr/bin/glpoptions

#
# RequestRoot: the directory where request files are stored.
# By default "/var/spool/cups".
#

RequestRoot /var/spool/cups

#
# RemoteRoot: the name of the user assigned to unauthenticated accesses
# from remote systems.  By default "remroot".
#

#RemoteRoot remroot

#
# ServerBin: the root directory for the scheduler executables.
# By default "/usr/lib/cups".
#

ServerBin /usr/lib/cups

#
# ServerRoot: the root directory for the scheduler.
# By default "/etc/cups".
#

ServerRoot /etc/cups


#
# ServerTokens: specifies what information in provided in the Server
# header of HTTP responses. The default is Minor.
#
# ServerTokens None
# ServerTokens ProductOnly       CUPS
# ServerTokens Major             CUPS/1
# ServerTokens Minor             CUPS/1.1
# ServerTokens Minimal           CUPS/1.1.23
# ServerTokens OS                CUPS/1.1.23 (uname)
# ServerTokens Full              CUPS/1.1.23 (uname) IPP/1.1
#

#ServerTokens Minor


########
######## Fax Support
########

#
# FaxRetryLimit: the number of times a fax job is retried.
# The default is 5 times.
#

#FaxRetryLimit 5

#
# FaxRetryInterval: the number of seconds between fax job retries.
# The default is 300 seconds/5 minutes.
#

#FaxRetryInterval 300


########
######## Encryption Support
########

#
# ServerCertificate: the file to read containing the server's certificate.
# Defaults to "/etc/cups/ssl/server.crt".
#

#ServerCertificate /etc/cups/ssl/server.crt

#
# ServerKey: the file to read containing the server's key.
# Defaults to "/etc/cups/ssl/server.key".
#

#ServerKey /etc/cups/ssl/server.key


########
######## Filter Options
########

#
# User/Group: the user and group the server runs under.  Normally this
# must be cupsys and lpadmin, however you can configure things for another
# user or group as needed.
#
# Note: the server must be run initially as root to support the
# default IPP port of 631.  It changes users whenever an external
# program is run, or if the RunAsUser directive is specified...
#

#User cupsys
#Group lpadmin

#
# RunAsUser: The RunAsUser directive controls whether the scheduler runs as the
# unpriviledged user account (usually cupsys). The default is No which
# leaves the scheduler running as the root user. However, the Debian package
# was prepared to work as user cupsys, which greatly reduces the impact of
# security holes.
#
# Note: Running as a non-priviledged user may prevent LPD and locally connected
# printers from working due to permission problems. The lpd backend will
# automatically use a non-priviledged mode that is not 100% compliant with RFC
# 1179. The parallel, serial, and usb backends will need write access to the
# corresponding device files.
#

RunAsUser Yes

#
# RIPCache: the amount of memory that each RIP should use to cache
# bitmaps.  The value can be any real number followed by "k" for
# kilobytes, "m" for megabytes, "g" for gigabytes, or "t" for tiles
# (1 tile = 256x256 pixels.)  Defaults to "8m" (8 megabytes).
#

#RIPCache 8m

#
# TempDir: the directory to put temporary files in.  This directory must be
# writable by the user defined above!  Defaults to "/var/spool/cups/tmp" or
# the value of the TMPDIR environment variable.
#

TempDir /var/spool/cups/tmp

#
# FilterLimit: sets the maximum cost of all job filters that can be run
# at the same time.  A limit of 0 means no limit.  A typical job may need
# a filter limit of at least 200; limits less than the minimum required
# by a job force a single job to be printed at any time.
#
# The default limit is 0 (unlimited).
#

#FilterLimit 0

########
######## Network Options
########

#
# Ports/addresses that we listen to.  The default port 631 is reserved
# for the Internet Printing Protocol (IPP) and is what we use here.
#
# You can have multiple Port/Listen lines to listen to more than one
# port or address, or to restrict access:
#
#    Port 80
#    Port 631
#    Listen hostname
#    Listen hostname:80
#    Listen hostname:631
#    Listen 1.2.3.4
#    Listen 1.2.3.4:631
# 
# NOTE: Unfortunately, most web browsers don't support TLS or HTTP Upgrades
# for encryption.  If you want to support web-based encryption you'll
# probably need to listen on port 443 (the "https" port...)
#
# NOTE 2: In order for the command-line and web interfaces to work, you
# must have at least one Port or Listen line that allows access from the
# local loopback address (localhost).
#

#Port 80
#Port 443
Port 631
#
#Listen 127.0.0.1:631

#
# HostNameLookups: whether or not to do lookups on IP addresses to get a
# fully-qualified hostname.  This defaults to Off for performance reasons...
#

#HostNameLookups On

#
# KeepAlive: whether or not to support the Keep-Alive connection
# option.  Default is on.
#

#KeepAlive On

#
# KeepAliveTimeout: the timeout before Keep-Alive connections are
# automatically closed.  Default is 60 seconds.
#

#KeepAliveTimeout 60

#
# MaxClients: controls the maximum number of simultaneous clients that
# will be handled.  Defaults to 100.
#

#MaxClients 100

#
# MaxClientsPerHost: controls the maximum number of simultaneous clients that
# will be handled from a specific host.  Defaults to 10 or 1/10th of the
# MaxClients setting, whichever is larger.  A value of 0 specifies the
# automatic (10 or 1/10th) setting.
#

#MaxClientsPerHost 0

#
# MaxRequestSize: controls the maximum size of HTTP requests and print files.
# Set to 0 to disable this feature (defaults to 0.)
#

#MaxRequestSize 0

#
# Timeout: the timeout before requests time out.  Default is 300 seconds.
#

#Timeout 300


########
######## Browsing Options
########

#
# Browsing: whether or not to broadcast and/or listen for CUPS printer
# information on the network. For Ubuntu, this setting has been externalized to
# a separate configuration file cupsd-browsing.conf. This allows to change the
# browsing setting with /usr/share/cups/enable_browsing (or manually) without
# modifying this main configuration file, which avoids dpkg questions on
# conffile upgrades.

Include cupsd-browsing.conf

#
# BrowseProtocols: which protocols to use for browsing.  Can be
# any of the following separated by whitespace and/or commas:
#
#     all  - Use all supported protocols.
#     cups - Use the CUPS browse protocol.
#     slp  - Use the SLPv2 protocol.
#
# The default is "cups".
#
# NOTE: If you choose to use SLPv2, it is *strongly* recommended that
#       you have at least one SLP Directory Agent (DA) on your
#       network.  Otherwise, browse updates can take several seconds,
#       during which the scheduler will not respond to client
#       requests.
#

BrowseProtocols cups

#
# BrowseAddress: specifies a broadcast address to be used.  By
# default browsing information is not sent!
#
# Note: HP-UX does not properly handle broadcast unless you have a
# Class A, B, C, or D netmask (i.e. no CIDR support).
#
# Note: Using the "global" broadcast address (255.255.255.255) will
# activate a Linux demand-dial link with the default configuration.
# If you have a LAN as well as the dial-up link, use the LAN's
# broadcast address.
#
# The @LOCAL address broadcasts to all non point-to-point interfaces.
# For example, if you have a LAN and a dial-up link, @LOCAL would
# send printer updates to the LAN but not to the dial-up link.
# Similarly, the @IF(name) address sends to the named network
# interface, e.g. @IF(eth0) under Linux.  Interfaces are refreshed
# automatically (no more than once every 60 seconds), so they can
# be used on dynamically-configured interfaces, e.g. PPP, 802.11, etc.
#

#BrowseAddress x.y.z.255
#BrowseAddress x.y.255.255
#BrowseAddress x.255.255.255
#BrowseAddress 255.255.255.255
BrowseAddress @LOCAL
#BrowseAddress @IF(name)

#
# BrowseShortNames: whether or not to use "short" names for remote printers
# when possible (e.g. "printer" instead of "printer@host".)  Enabled by
# default.
#

#BrowseShortNames Yes

#
# BrowseAllow: specifies an address mask to allow for incoming browser
# packets. The default is to allow packets from all addresses.
#
# BrowseDeny: specifies an address mask to deny for incoming browser
# packets. The default is to deny packets from no addresses.
#
# Both "BrowseAllow" and "BrowseDeny" accept the following notations for
# addresses:
#
#     All
#     None
#     *.domain.com
#     .domain.com
#     host.domain.com
#     nnn.*
#     nnn.nnn.*
#     nnn.nnn.nnn.*
#     nnn.nnn.nnn.nnn
#     nnn.nnn.nnn.nnn/mm
#     nnn.nnn.nnn.nnn/mmm.mmm.mmm.mmm
#     @LOCAL
#     @IF(name)
#
# The hostname/domainname restrictions only work if you have turned hostname
# lookups on!
#

#BrowseAllow address
#BrowseDeny address

#
# BrowseInterval: the time between browsing updates in seconds.  Default
# is 30 seconds.
#
# Note that browsing information is sent whenever a printer's state changes
# as well, so this represents the maximum time between updates.
#
# Set this to 0 to disable outgoing broadcasts so your local printers are
# not advertised but you can still see printers on other hosts.
#

#BrowseInterval 30

#
# BrowseOrder: specifies the order of BrowseAllow/BrowseDeny comparisons.
#

#BrowseOrder allow,deny
BrowseOrder deny,allow

#
# BrowsePoll: poll the named server(s) for printers
#

#BrowsePoll address:port

#
# BrowsePort: the port used for UDP broadcasts.  By default this is
# the IPP port; if you change this you need to do it on all servers.
# Only one BrowsePort is recognized.
#

BrowsePort 631

#
# BrowseRelay: relay browser packets from one address/network to another.
#

#BrowseRelay source-address destination-address
#BrowseRelay @IF(src) @IF(dst)

#
# BrowseTimeout: the timeout for network printers - if we don't
# get an update within this time the printer will be removed
# from the printer list.  This number definitely should not be
# less the BrowseInterval value for obvious reasons.  Defaults
# to 300 seconds.
#

#BrowseTimeout 300

#
# ImplicitClasses: whether or not to use implicit classes.
#
# Printer classes can be specified explicitly in the classes.conf
# file, implicitly based upon the printers available on the LAN, or
# both.
#
# When ImplicitClasses is On, printers on the LAN with the same name
# (e.g. Acme-LaserPrint-1000) will be put into a class with the same
# name. This allows you to setup multiple redundant queues on a LAN
# without a lot of administrative difficulties.  If a user sends a
# job to Acme-LaserPrint-1000, the job will go to the first available
# queue.
#
# Enabled by default.
#

#ImplicitClasses On

#
# ImplicitAnyClasses: whether or not to create "AnyPrinter" implicit
# classes.
#
# When ImplicitAnyClasses is On and a local queue of the same name
# exists, e.g. "printer", "printer@server1", "printer@server1", then
# an implicit class called "Anyprinter" is created instead.
#
# When ImplicitAnyClasses is Off, implicit classes are not created
# when there is a local queue of the same name.
#
# Disabled by default.
#

#ImplicitAnyCLasses Off

#
# HideImplicitMembers: whether or not to show the members of an
# implicit class.
#
# When HideImplicitMembers is On, any remote printers that are
# part of an implicit class are hidden from the user, who will
# then only see a single queue even though many queues will be
# supporting the implicit class.
#
# Enabled by default.
#

#HideImplicitMembers On


########
######## Security Options
########

#
# SystemGroup: the group name for "System" (printer administration)
# access.  The default varies depending on the operating system, but
# will be "sys", "system", or "root" (checked for in that order.)
#
# Debian: The default CUPS group is "lpadmin".
#

SystemGroup lpadmin

#
# RootCertDuration: How frequently the root certificate is regenerated.
# Defaults to 300 seconds.
#

#RootCertDuration 300

#
# Access permissions for each directory served by the scheduler.
# Locations are relative to DocumentRoot...
#
# AuthType: the authorization to use:
#
#    None   - Perform no authentication
#    Basic  - Perform authentication using the HTTP Basic method.
#    Digest - Perform authentication using the HTTP Digest method.
#
#    (Note: local certificate authentication can be substituted by
#           the client for Basic or Digest when connecting to the
#           localhost interface)
#
# AuthClass: the authorization class; currently only "Anonymous", "User",
# "System" (valid user belonging to group SystemGroup), and "Group"
# (valid user belonging to the specified group) are supported.
#
# AuthGroupName: the group name for "Group" authorization.
#
# Order: the order of Allow/Deny processing.
#
# Allow: allows access from the specified hostname, domain, IP address,
# network, or interface.
#
# Deny: denies access from the specified hostname, domain, IP address,
# network, or interface.
#
# Both "Allow" and "Deny" accept the following notations for addresses:
#
#     All
#     None
#     *.domain.com
#     .domain.com
#     host.domain.com
#     nnn.*
#     nnn.nnn.*
#     nnn.nnn.nnn.*
#     nnn.nnn.nnn.nnn
#     nnn.nnn.nnn.nnn/mm
#     nnn.nnn.nnn.nnn/mmm.mmm.mmm.mmm
#     @LOCAL
#     @IF(name)
#
# The host and domain address require that you enable hostname lookups
# with "HostNameLookups On" above.
#
# The @LOCAL address allows or denies from all non point-to-point
# interfaces.  For example, if you have a LAN and a dial-up link,
# @LOCAL could allow connections from the LAN but not from the dial-up
# link.  Similarly, the @IF(name) address allows or denies from the
# named network interface, e.g. @IF(eth0) under Linux.  Interfaces are
# refreshed automatically (no more than once every 60 seconds), so
# they can be used on dynamically-configured interfaces, e.g. PPP,
# 802.11, etc.
#
# Encryption: whether or not to use encryption; this depends on having
# the OpenSSL library linked into the CUPS library and scheduler.
#
# Possible values:
#
#     Always       - Always use encryption (SSL)
#     Never        - Never use encryption
#     Required     - Use TLS encryption upgrade
#     IfRequested  - Use encryption if the server requests it
#
# The default value is "IfRequested".
#

#<Location /classes>
#
# You may wish to limit access to printers and classes, either with Allow
# and Deny lines, or by requiring a username and password.
#
#</Location>

#<Location /classes/name>
#
# You may wish to limit access to printers and classes, either with Allow
# and Deny lines, or by requiring a username and password.
#
#</Location>

#<Location /jobs>
#
# You may wish to limit access to job operations, either with Allow
# and Deny lines, or by requiring a username and password.
#
#</Location>

<Location />
Order Deny,Allow
Deny From All
Allow From 192.168.1.*
Allow From @LOCAL
</Location>

#<Location /printers/name>
#
# You may wish to limit access to printers and classes, either with Allow
# and Deny lines, or by requiring a username and password.
#

## Anonymous access (default)
#AuthType None

## Require a username and password (Basic authentication)
#AuthType Basic
#AuthClass User

## Require a username and password (Digest/MD5 authentication)
#AuthType Digest
#AuthClass User

## Restrict access to local domain
#Order Deny,Allow
#Deny From All
#Allow From .mydomain.com
#</Location>

<Location /admin>
AuthType None
Order Deny,Allow
Deny From All
Allow From 127.0.0.1
Allow From 192.168.1.*
Allow From @LOCAL
</Location>

#
#

Chez moi le réseau est en ip fixe : 192.168.1.*

Si tu modifies ce fichier, relance le service cups sous uduntu :

sudo /etc/init.d/cupsys restart

Voilà !

Tiens moi au courant

Edit modo : je me suis permis de mettre une balise code pour éviter le gros paté smile

Dernière modification par dawar (Le 13/06/2006, à 10:32)

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#7 Le 13/06/2006, à 08:37

cflam69

Re : Imprimante en partage avec Mac OSX, quelle option?

Moi, j'avais déjà fait une manip' similaire (vu sur un site Mac) mais en vain. Je vais réessayé.


La liberté ne s'use que si l'on ne s'en sert pas.

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#8 Le 26/06/2006, à 00:56

xenophon

Re : Imprimante en partage avec Mac OSX, quelle option?

toujours pas arrivé à configurer ton imprimante ???

Chez moi ça ne marche plus sad et je ne sais pas pourquoi !!!!!

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#9 Le 26/06/2006, à 23:54

xenophon

Re : Imprimante en partage avec Mac OSX, quelle option?

Ca refonctionne de nouveau !!!! big_smile Après avoir passé une nuit à programmer :
- sur l'iBook j'ai remis un /etc/cups/cupsd.conf propre (sans aucune modification)
- dans /etc/cups/client.conf j'ai rajouté l'ip du server :
ServerName 192.168.1.1
- dans /etc/hosts, j'ai mis ceci :
192.168.1.1 ubuntu
ce qui correspond au nom du serveur sur mon réseau
- en reconfigurant l'imprimante, dans emplacement de l'imprimante, j'ai rajouté ceci :
ipp://192.168.1.1/printers/Stylus-C64
- j'ai redémarré les taches de l'imprimante


Et maintenant je peux imprimer sans soucis sur l'imprimante Stylus-C64 qui est gérée par le serveur cups de ma ubuntu

Voilà, si ça peut t'aider tongue

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#10 Le 27/06/2006, à 09:31

cflam69

Re : Imprimante en partage avec Mac OSX, quelle option?

Oh oui, je vais essayer tout cela rapidement. Si ça marche, un p'tit ajout dans le Wiki ...


La liberté ne s'use que si l'on ne s'en sert pas.

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#11 Le 27/06/2006, à 23:52

cflam69

Re : Imprimante en partage avec Mac OSX, quelle option?

Salut Xenophon,

En fait, je crois que j'ai un problème tout bête ... j'arrive pas à me servir de vim sur l'Ibook ! Il refuse d'enregister mes changements.
Peux-tu me dire comment tu as fais svp ?
Merci smile


La liberté ne s'use que si l'on ne s'en sert pas.

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#12 Le 28/06/2006, à 02:37

xenophon

Re : Imprimante en partage avec Mac OSX, quelle option?

j'ai ouvert un terminal et j'utilise le programme nano :
Ex: si je veux ouvrir le fichier /etc/cups/client.conf je tape dans un terminal :
sudo nano /etc/cups/client.conf

je rentre mon mot de passe. Je modifie ce dont j'ai besoin. Puis CTRL+O pour sauvegarder et CTRL+X pour quitter

Voilà tongue

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#13 Le 29/06/2006, à 21:29

cflam69

Re : Imprimante en partage avec Mac OSX, quelle option?

C'est nickel ... Merci Xenophon. big_smile cool
Note que je n'ai pas rajouté la ligne dans host et ça fonctionne tiptop.
Je vais essayer de faire quelques lignes dans le wiki si je trouve le temps.


La liberté ne s'use que si l'on ne s'en sert pas.

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#14 Le 29/06/2006, à 21:52

Smarter

Re : Imprimante en partage avec Mac OSX, quelle option?

au fait pour utilise vim c'est: i pour pouvoir taper du texte (mode insertion), puis échap pour quitter le mode insertion et :wq pour sauvegarder et quitter wink

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#15 Le 07/07/2006, à 17:45

nerve

Re : Imprimante en partage avec Mac OSX, quelle option?

xenophon a écrit :

Ca refonctionne de nouveau !!!! big_smile Après avoir passé une nuit à programmer :
- sur l'iBook j'ai remis un /etc/cups/cupsd.conf propre (sans aucune modification)
- dans /etc/cups/client.conf j'ai rajouté l'ip du server :
ServerName 192.168.1.1
- dans /etc/hosts, j'ai mis ceci :
192.168.1.1 ubuntu
ce qui correspond au nom du serveur sur mon réseau
- en reconfigurant l'imprimante, dans emplacement de l'imprimante, j'ai rajouté ceci :
ipp://192.168.1.1/printers/Stylus-C64
- j'ai redémarré les taches de l'imprimante


Et maintenant je peux imprimer sans soucis sur l'imprimante Stylus-C64 qui est gérée par le serveur cups de ma ubuntu

Voilà, si ça peut t'aider tongue

Merci beaucoup, en 2min c'est configurer et le macbook pro imprime sur ma dapper et pas besoin de samba !

j'adore !!!!


Staff TvFreeplayer
http://www.tvfreeplayer.com/
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#16 Le 01/10/2008, à 02:23

silencio

Re : Imprimante en partage avec Mac OSX, quelle option?

Bonjour,

Je fais remonter ce message vieux de deux ans!!! Que le temps passe!!! tongue
En ce qui concerne mon imprimante, à l'époque j'avais laisse tombé car mon laptop IBM m'avait laché, et j'ai basculé complètement chez Apple en achetant un MacBook.
Mais entre temps une belle et fabuleuse jeune femme a fait son apparition dans ma vie, avec sous le bras un laptop Toshiba tournant sous Win XP. cool
Au bout d'un an et demi Win XP est totalement dans les choux, et de ce fait je lui ai installé Ubuntu histoire de redoppé le Toshiba.
Tout marche à peu près bien, mais toujours des soucis d'impression. Pour mémoire, j'ai un Mac Mini sur lequel est connecté en USB une imprimante HP Tout-en-un PSC 1510.  Sur le laptop Ubuntu, lorsque je lance le module d'impression de Gnome (Système/Administration/Impression), je trouve mon imprimante via ipp. Je fais un test avec OOo, en tapant un petit texte et en l'imprimant. L'impression se lance, mais le texte se retrouve tout en haut en gauche de la page, complètement au bord. La police est la bonne (style et taille). J'ai vérifié les paramètres aussi bien dans OOo que dans le module Impression, mais tous me semble correcte.
Est-ce que quelqu'un aurait une idée?

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