You are not logged in.
I have a fresh installation of Archlinux on my laptop (installed last week). I installed Gnome 3 with gnome-shell.
I installed cups, added cups daemon in rc.conf.
Goal : install a network printer
First try :
- go to gnome-control-center
- clic on "printers" icon
- unlock the interface and enter admin password
- click on the plus icon to add a new printer
- wait for printer discovery
- click on "network" menu
- there I can see network printers (I also see multiple times the same printer in the list, I don't know if this is a normal behavior?)
- I choose one and click on "add"
- then nothing happen for about 10 seconds, then the window disappear and I'm back to the home printer window and
- I don't have any other windows or wizards
- my printer is not added
Second try:
- I directly go to the cups admin web interface (http://localhost:631)
- I then go into the admin page, search, add a new printer, choose the driver I want to use and the printer is successfully added
Other issue :
I have an HP Photosmart C6300 at home connected to the LAN by WIFI (this is a wifi printer). When I print on it I get a gnome notification that tells me the printer is not connected, but in the same time it print successfully on it! It talks about dns-sd and I don't know if I can install something related to that?
If someone have the same issue or know a howto related to printing in gnome 3 it would be nice to help me.
Many thanks!
Offline
I was having similar problems with gnome3 until I installed system-config-printer-gnome, a CUPS gtk frontend. Seemed to do the trick well enough.
Offline
Hi,
then the window disappear and I'm back to the home printer window and I don't have any other windows or wizards
Had the exact same issue with my HP Photosmart C4780.
I just installed cups, hpoj and hplip (as explained in the wiki BTW https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Cups#Installing), started cupsd and next time I clicked on "OK" or whatever the label of that button was the printer was added.
Other issue : [...] When I print on it I get a gnome notification that tells me the printer is not connected, but in the same time it print successfully on it!
Same here. As the pages get printed I won't have a look at this but still interested to know if someone has a fix.
Offline
I was having similar problems with gnome3 until I installed system-config-printer-gnome, a CUPS gtk frontend. Seemed to do the trick well enough.
This package correct the same problem for me. Thanks!
Offline
Thank you! I also had to install this package to make my HP Photosmart C7280 All-in-one printer work. Still can't get hp-toolbox to load though. It complains theat "warning: Qt/PyQt 4 initialization failed". I'm still looking into it. But hey... I got the printer going for now. Thanks again.
Arch x86_64 as of 01/01/2013
Offline
@PTBM133A4X: Might not be that but have you checked that the application you are talking of requires python2 ou 3? Same for Qt's version.
Offline
Thank you! I also had to install this package to make my HP Photosmart C7280 All-in-one printer work. Still can't get hp-toolbox to load though. It complains theat "warning: Qt/PyQt 4 initialization failed". I'm still looking into it. But hey... I got the printer going for now. Thanks again.
Have you checked that python2 is started instead of python3?
When I was installing the HP proprietary drivers that was one of the problems.
Offline
@PTBM133A4X: Have you seen this:
New optional dependencies for hplip
python2-gobject2: for running hp-toolbox
Offline
Still the same problem. Solved it by installing hplip and the system-config-printer package.
Last edited by TheChosenOne (2014-10-08 12:02:38)
Offline
I was having similar problems with gnome3 until I installed system-config-printer-gnome, a CUPS gtk frontend. Seemed to do the trick well enough.
This worked after failing to add google cloud printers on arch. Minor difference: it was 'system-config-printer' without the 'gnome' portion, which is probably a simple rename.
Offline
cojoda wrote:I was having similar problems with gnome3 until I installed system-config-printer-gnome, a CUPS gtk frontend. Seemed to do the trick well enough.
This worked after failing to add google cloud printers on arch. Minor difference: it was 'system-config-printer' without the 'gnome' portion, which is probably a simple rename.
Actually the name of the package is: extra/system-config-printer
Offline