A small printer daemon intended for diskless platforms that does not spool to disk but passes the job directly to the printer. Normally a lpr daemon on a spooling host connects to it with a TCP connection on port 910n (where n=0, 1, or 2 for lp0, 1 and 2 respectively).
p910nd is particularly useful for diskless platforms. Common Unix Printing System (CUPS) supports this protocol, it's called the AppSocket protocol and has the scheme
socket://remotehost:PORT
Windows and Mac Os X (via CUPS) also supports this protocol.
You need to allow p910nd access to the usb printer by connecting the raw-usb snap interface
snap connect p910nd-ogra:raw-usb
... else the daemon will not start.
optionally you can configure the following settings though snap set commands:
snap set p910nd-ogra device="/dev/usb/lp0"
snap set p910nd-ogra bindaddr="192.168.1.5"
additionally enabling/disabling bidirectional communication can be done with:
snap set p910nd-ogra bidirectional=true
snap set p910nd-ogra bidirectional=''
Note: some printers tend to automatically suspend the USB bus, to prevent /dev/usb/lp* from going away after a while, set usbcore.autosuspend=0 on your kernel cmdline.
Thank you for your report. Information you provided will help us investigate further.
There was an error while sending your report. Please try again later.
You are about to open
Do you wish to proceed?
Snaps are applications packaged with all their dependencies to run on all popular Linux distributions from a single build. They update automatically and roll back gracefully.
Snaps are discoverable and installable from the Snap Store, an app store with an audience of millions.
Snapd can be installed from Manjaro’s Add/Remove Software application (Pamac), found in the launch menu. From the application, search for snapd, select the result, and click Apply.
Alternatively, snapd can be installed from the command line:
sudo pacman -S snapd
Once installed, the systemd unit that manages the main snap communication socket needs to be enabled:
sudo systemctl enable --now snapd.socket
To enable classic snap support, enter the following to create a symbolic link between /var/lib/snapd/snap
and /snap
:
sudo ln -s /var/lib/snapd/snap /snap
Either log out and back in again, or restart your system, to ensure snap’s paths are updated correctly.
To install p910nd-ogra, simply use the following command:
sudo snap install p910nd-ogra --edge
Browse and find snaps from the convenience of your desktop using the snap store snap.
Interested to find out more about snaps? Want to publish your own application? Visit snapcraft.io now.
Get to know Canonical, the company behind the products.
The world's favourite Linux OS for servers, desktops and IoT.
One subscription for security maintenance, support, FIPS and other compliance certifications.
The app store for Linux: secure packages and ultra-reliable updates.
A pure-container hypervisor. Run system containers and VMs at scale.
Build a bare metal cloud with super fast server provisioning.
Upgrades, maintenance, support, and fully managed options for long-term, low-cost infra.
Software-defined storage that lowers your total cost of ownership.
App portability for K8s on VMware, Amazon, Azure, Google, Oracle, IBM and bare metal.
Deploy, integrate and manage applications at any scale, on any infrastructure.
Stream Android applications to any device.
The software collaboration platform behind Ubuntu.
Optimised Ubuntu for public clouds.
Spin up Ubuntu VMs on Windows, Mac and Linux.
Control and customise your cloud instances.
Systems management and security patching for Ubuntu.
Simplify and standardise complex network configuration.
AI and MLOps at any scale, on any cloud.
Deploy a fully functional cloud in minutes.