How to Install Brother Printers and Scanners
I cannot comment on the state of your network, but here is what I tested.
1. From my regular computer, I disconnected eth0.
2. I logged into my wireless router.
3.This got me an IP on my LAN, as usual.
4. I ran arp-scan --localnet
5. Even though I was now connected through wlan0 instead of eth0, it saw all the devices on the LAN, including a shared printer.
1. From my regular computer, I disconnected eth0.
2. I logged into my wireless router.
3.This got me an IP on my LAN, as usual.
4. I ran arp-scan --localnet
5. Even though I was now connected through wlan0 instead of eth0, it saw all the devices on the LAN, including a shared printer.
You can delete the printer using CUPS. The two debs do not register in the PPM, so you would need to delete their files manually. But their content has ZERO side effects on a stable system.
IIRC, Carolina Vanguard has integrated Frisbee. If you are trying to disable it and use SNS instead, good luck to you.
IIRC, Carolina Vanguard has integrated Frisbee. If you are trying to disable it and use SNS instead, good luck to you.
Reinstalled the printer and the DEBs. No luck.
Caro Vanguard comes with SNS, Dougal's Network Setup, and Frisbee. Frisbee is enabled by default. I can't stand the interface. I've been using SNS on this system, in a nearly identical install, for about a year now. It's been fine.
Further suggestions, before I go bald?
Caro Vanguard comes with SNS, Dougal's Network Setup, and Frisbee. Frisbee is enabled by default. I can't stand the interface. I've been using SNS on this system, in a nearly identical install, for about a year now. It's been fine.
Further suggestions, before I go bald?
Alright... tell me, if it works over USB but not over WLAN, how does that help? Particularly given that Mom and I bought the printer specifically to be a whole-house network printer...
If I understand it a little better... maybe I can be convinced to drag out the 'active' cable (it has a stupid power-hogging signal booster in it) to see if the dang thing works...
If I understand it a little better... maybe I can be convinced to drag out the 'active' cable (it has a stupid power-hogging signal booster in it) to see if the dang thing works...
It guarantees that you have the driver installed correctly. It then narrows the problem down to a networking issue.starhawk wrote:Alright... tell me, if it works over USB but not over WLAN, how does that help?
You can buy a USB printer cable for $1. Why complicate the issue with a non-standard cable?
I have plenty of standard cables that won't go the distance... literally. They're not long enough.
...and actually, come to think of it, that 'active' cable won't work. It's an extension... male 'a' to female 'a'. Printer takes a male 'b'.
Oh well, back to square one.
EDIT: oh, and I actually don't have the money to buy even a $1 cable right now. Not kidding, sadly.
...and actually, come to think of it, that 'active' cable won't work. It's an extension... male 'a' to female 'a'. Printer takes a male 'b'.
Oh well, back to square one.
EDIT: oh, and I actually don't have the money to buy even a $1 cable right now. Not kidding, sadly.
Hey, rc, I might be able to do this after all...
Mom used to have a Canon multifunction printer / scanner / copier / fax / Broadway stage (seriously, that thing is very big and very heavy) in here, about where that dang Brother is now. She insisted on it being USB connected to her computer at the time for reasons I neither recall nor care to. There's a bunch of boxes and crap left over from that era on the floor here (yay cluttertastic living spaces... not!) and I dug around and found what has to be about the world's longest USB printer cable. I'm not saying it works... I'm saying it may be long enough... if not, I've got a little extension cord that may help out as well. (Thankfully not an 'active' one -- IIRC, it came with a Kodak card reader that I gave away a few weeks ago. Kept the cord tho.)
Tell me how to do this and I'll see what I can arrange here.
Mom used to have a Canon multifunction printer / scanner / copier / fax / Broadway stage (seriously, that thing is very big and very heavy) in here, about where that dang Brother is now. She insisted on it being USB connected to her computer at the time for reasons I neither recall nor care to. There's a bunch of boxes and crap left over from that era on the floor here (yay cluttertastic living spaces... not!) and I dug around and found what has to be about the world's longest USB printer cable. I'm not saying it works... I'm saying it may be long enough... if not, I've got a little extension cord that may help out as well. (Thankfully not an 'active' one -- IIRC, it came with a Kodak card reader that I gave away a few weeks ago. Kept the cord tho.)
Tell me how to do this and I'll see what I can arrange here.
Seriously... I know how to put the cable in, of course, but I'm a little confused after that. Do I alter the current printer install (to what?)? or do I install a new printer?
Further, there are two identically-named drivers that show up natively in CUPS, and there's a third option of manually installing from /opt/brother/.../[...].ppd -- and I don't know which to try first, second, and third.
...so a little guidance here would be deeply appreciated.
Further, there are two identically-named drivers that show up natively in CUPS, and there's a third option of manually installing from /opt/brother/.../[...].ppd -- and I don't know which to try first, second, and third.
...so a little guidance here would be deeply appreciated.
This is a standard USB install - plug in the printer and let CUPS auto-detect it. If you are seeing two printers, it may be that CUPS detects it both as the direct USB device and as the networked device (if its WiFi is still turned on).
I don't remember how CUPS 1.3 handles this, but you should be able to tell one from the other.
I don't remember how CUPS 1.3 handles this, but you should be able to tell one from the other.
I'm referring to what you see in the attached.
- Attachments
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- Printer Drivers.png
- (14.21 KiB) Downloaded 317 times
Why do you need a reply? I told you what to do above.
This duplication of models names should not be a surprise. It was also present when you previously set up the printer using IP4CUPS. It comes from the Debian driver packages, which put their PPD files in two different locations.
BTW, why is your Brother section so empty? All standard Puppies come with the Gutenprint driver which supports a large collection of Brother models.
By insisting on using Carolina, you are making this situation more frustrating for everyone. This really isn't a Brother printer problem - it's a Carolina problem. They have their own forum section.
This duplication of models names should not be a surprise. It was also present when you previously set up the printer using IP4CUPS. It comes from the Debian driver packages, which put their PPD files in two different locations.
BTW, why is your Brother section so empty? All standard Puppies come with the Gutenprint driver which supports a large collection of Brother models.
By insisting on using Carolina, you are making this situation more frustrating for everyone. This really isn't a Brother printer problem - it's a Carolina problem. They have their own forum section.