Samsung CLP-550N Manual De Usuario

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S
OLVING
 P
ROBLEMS
7.33
7
Common Linux Problems
Problem
Possible Cause and Solution
I can’t change settings in 
the configuration tool.
You need to have administrator privileges to be able to change 
global settings.
I am using the KDE 
desktop but the 
configuration tool and 
LLPR won’t start.
You may not have the GTK libraries installed. These usually 
come with most Linux distributions, but you may have to 
install them manually. Refer to your distribution’s installation 
manual for more details about installing additional packages.
I just installed this 
package but can’t find 
entries in the KDE/Gnome 
menus.
Some versions of the KDE or GNOME desktop environments 
may require that you restart your session for the changes to 
take effect.
I get a “Some options are 
not selected” error 
message while editing the 
printer settings.
Some printers have conflicting settings, meaning that some 
settings for two options can’t be selected at the same time. 
When you change a setting and the Printer Package detects 
such a conflict, the conflicting option is changed to a “No 
Choice” value. You have to choose an option that does not 
conflict before being able to submit the changes.
I can’t make a printer the 
system default.
In some conditions, it may not be possible to change the 
default queue. This happens with some variants of LPRng, 
especially on recent RedHat systems that use the “printconf” 
database of queues.
When using printconf, the /etc./printcap file is 
automatically refreshed from the database of printers 
managed by the system (usually through the “printtool” 
command), and the queues in /etc./printcap.local are 
appended to the resulting file. The default queue in LPRng is 
defined as the first queue in /etc./printcap, therefore it is 
not possible for the Linux Printer Package to change the 
default when some queues have otherwise been defined using 
printtool.
LPD systems identify the default queue as the one named “lp”. 
Thus, if there is already a queue by this name, and if it 
doesn’t have any alias, then you won’t be able to change the 
default. To work around this, you can either delete the queue 
or rename it by manually editing the /etc./printcap file.
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.