Samsung ML-1610 User Manual

Page 70

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S

OLVING

P

ROBLEMS

5.19

5

The N-up setting does not

work correctly for some

of my documents.

The N-up feature is achieved through post-processing of

the PostScript data that is being sent to the printing

system. However, such post-processing can only be

adequately achieved if the PostScript data conforms to the

Adobe Document Structing Conventions. Problems may

arise when using N-up and other features relying on post-

processing if the document being printed isn’t compliant.

I am using BSD lpr

(Slackware, Debian, older

distributions) and some

options chosen in LLPR

don’t seem to take effect.

Legacy BSD lpr systems have a hard limitation on the

length of the option string that can be passed to the

printing system. As such, if you selected a number of

different options, the length of the options may be

exceeded and some of your choices won’t be passed to the

programs responsible for implementing them. Try to select

less options that deviate from the defaults, to save on

memory usage.

I am trying to print a

document in Landscape

mode, but it prints

rotated and cropped.

Most Unix applications that offer a Landscape orientation

option in their printing options will generate correct

PostScript code that should be printed as is. In that case,

you need to make sure that you leave the LLPR option to

its default Portrait setting, to avoid unwanted rotations of

the page that would result in a cropped output.

Some pages come out all

white (nothing is

printed), and I am using

CUPS.

If the data being sent is in Encapsulated PostScript (EPS)

format, some earlier versions of CUPS (1.1.10 and before)

have a bug preventing them from being processed

correctly. When going through LLPR to print, the Printer

Package will work around this issue by converting the data

to regular PostScript. However, if your application

bypasses LLPR and feeds EPS data to CUPS, the document

may not print correctly.

I can’t print to a SMB

(Windows) printer.

To be able to configure and use SMB-shared printers (such

as printers shared on a Windows machine), you need to

have a correct installation of the SAMBA package that

enables that feature. The “smbclient” command should be

available and usable on your system.

My application seems to

be frozen while LLPR is

running.

Most Unix applications will expect a command like the

regular “lpr” command to be non-interactive and thus

return immediately. Since LLPR is waiting for user input

before passing the job on to the print spooler, very often

the application will wait for the process to return, and thus

will appear to be frozen (its windows won’t refresh). This is

normal and the application should resume functioning

correctly after the user exits LLPR.

Problem

Possible Cause and Solution

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