CUPS/Printer sharing

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< CUPS

This article contains instruction on sharing printers from a GNU/Linux system.

Client support
Protocol Linux Windows macOS
Discovery (DNS-SD/mDNS) CUPS with Avahi Native support since Windows 10 Bonjour
Internet Printing Protocol CUPS Control Panel > Programs > Turn Windows features on or off > Print and Document Services > Internet Printing Client Native support
SMB shared printer Samba with CUPS Native support Native support
Line Printer Daemon protocol CUPS Control Panel > Programs > Turn Windows features on or off > Print services >
LPD Print Service and LPR Port Monitor
Native support

Creating class for multiple printers

In CUPS, a class is a group of printers which appears to clients as a single printer. When a client selects to print to the class, CUPS selects any printer in the group to accept the print job. This may be especially useful when one printer from the class must be removed. If it is excluded from the class, end users will not notice any change because the print job will be queued to another printer in the class. Creating and managing classes can be done from CUPS Web GUI.

Printer sharing

This article or section needs expansion.

Reason: List ports which need to be opened in the firewall.[1] (Discuss in Talk:CUPS/Printer sharing)

DNS-SD advertisement

To announce the printer to the network over DNS-SD/mDNS (Bonjour in Apple world), Avahi must be installed and running on the server.

To enable it, either select Share printers connected to this system in the web interface, or manually set Browsing Yes in /etc/cups/cupsd.conf:

/etc/cups/cupsd.conf
...
Browsing Yes
...

Afterwards restart cups.service.

Note that "browsing" at the print server is a different thing from "browsing" at a remote networked host. On the print server, cupsd provides the DNS-SD protocol support which the avahi-daemon broadcasts. The cups-browsed service is unnecessary on the print server, unless also broadcasting the old CUPS protocol, or the print server is also "browsing" for other networked printers. On the remote networked host, the cups-browsed service is required to "browse" for network broadcasts of print services, and running cups-browsed will also automatically start cupsd.

The cups.service service will be automatically started when a USB printer is plugged in, however this may not be the case for other connection types. If cups.service is not running, avahi-daemon does not broadcast the print services, so in that case the systemd unit service file must be modified to start on boot, and then the service must again be "enabled/installed" with the new dependency. To do this, edit the service file [Install] section to add a WantedBy=default.target dependency, and then enable and start the cups.service service.

Sharing via Internet Printing Protocol

The server can be configured using either the web interface or by manually editing /etc/cups/cupsd.conf.

Open up the web interface to the server, select the Administration tab, look under the Server heading, and enable the "Share printers connected to this system" option. Save your change by clicking on the Change Settings button. The server will automatically restart.

On the server computer (the one directly connected to the printer), allow access to the server by modifying the location directive. For instance:

/etc/cups/cupsd.conf
<Location />
    Order allow,deny
    Allow localhost
    Allow 192.168.0.*
</Location>
...

Also make sure the server is listening on the IP address the client will use:

/etc/cups/cupsd.conf
...
Listen <hostname>:631
...

There are more configuration possibilities, including automatic methods, which are described in detail in Using Network Printers and cupsd.conf(5).

After making any modifications, restart cups.service.

If CUPS is started using socket activation, create a drop-in snippet for cups.socket so that socket activation also works for remote connections:

/etc/systemd/system/cups.socket.d/override.conf
[Socket]
ListenStream=631

Sharing via Samba

Samba is an implementation of the Windows file and printer sharing protocols, even the most vintage ones.

To configure Samba on the Linux server, edit /etc/samba/smb.conf file to allow access to printers. File smb.conf can look something like this:

/etc/samba/smb.conf
[global]
...
printing = CUPS
...

[printers]
    comment = All Printers
    path = /var/spool/samba
    browseable = yes
    # to allow user 'guest account' to print.
    guest ok = no
    writable = no
    printable = yes
    create mode = 0700
    write list = root @adm @wheel yourusername

That should be enough to share the printer, yet adding an individual printer entry may be desirable:

/etc/samba/smb.conf
[ML1250]
    comment = Samsung ML-1250 Laser Printer
    printer = ml1250
    path = /var/spool/samba
    printing = cups
    printable = yes
    user client driver = yes
    # to allow user 'guest account' to print.
    guest ok = no
    writable = no
    write list = root @adm @wheel yourusername
    valid users = root @adm @wheel yourusername

Please note that this assumes configuration was made so that users must have a valid account to access the printer. To have a public printer, set guest ok to yes, and remove the valid users line. To add accounts, set up a regular GNU/Linux account and then set up a Samba password on the server. See Samba#User management.

After this, restart smb.service and nmb.service.

See Samba's documentation Setting up Samba as a Print Server for more details.

Sharing via Line Printer Daemon protocol

Warning: cups-lpd does not perform any access control based on the settings in /etc/cups/cupsd.conf. Therefore, running cups-lpd on your server will allow any computer on your network (and perhaps the entire Internet) to print to your server.

Enable and start cups-lpd.socket.

Remote administration

Once the server is set up as described in #Printer sharing, it can also be configured so that it can be remotely administered. Add the allowed hosts to the <Location /admin> block in /etc/cups/cupsd.conf, using the same syntax as described in #Sharing via Internet Printing Protocol. Note that three levels of access can be granted:

<Location />           #access to the server
<Location /admin>	#access to the admin pages
<Location /admin/conf>	#access to configuration files

To give remote hosts access to one of these levels, add an Allow statement to that level's section. An Allow statement can take one or more of the forms listed below:

Allow from all
Allow from host.domain.com
Allow from *.domain.com
Allow from ip-address
Allow from ip-address/netmask
Allow from @LOCAL

Deny statements can also be used. For example, to give full access to all hosts on your local network interfaces, edit /etc/cups/cupsd.conf to include this:

# Restrict access to the server...
# By default only localhost connections are possible
<Location />
   Order allow,deny
   Allow from @LOCAL
</Location>

# Restrict access to the admin pages...
<Location /admin>
   Order allow,deny
   Allow from @LOCAL
</Location>

# Restrict access to configuration files...
<Location /admin/conf>
   AuthType Basic
   Require user @SYSTEM
   Order allow,deny
   Allow from @LOCAL
</Location>

You might also need to disable the HTTPS requirement, when using the default self-signed certificate generated by CUPS:

DefaultEncryption IfRequested

This should avoid the error: 426 - Upgrade Required when using the CUPS web interface from a remote machine.

Kerberos

Kerberos can be used to authenticate users accessing a remote CUPS server. This assumes that your machine has a keytab and it will need a ticket for "HTTP". Instead of using http://localhost:631 you must use https://host.example.co.uk:631 - encryption is required for auth (hence https) and the full hostname is needed so that Kerberos/Negotiate can work. In addition, the server must be configured in /etc/cups/cupsd.conf to use a DefaultAuthType of Negotiate.

If you are using Samba's winbind NSS support, you can add an AD group name to /etc/cups/cups-files.conf - in the following example sysadmin might be an AD group:

/etc/cups/cups-files.conf
SystemGroup sys root sysadmin

Troubleshooting

See CUPS/Troubleshooting for general troubleshooting tips.

Cannot print with GTK applications

If you get a getting printer information failed message when you try to print from GTK applications, add this line to your /etc/hosts:

/etc/hosts
serverip 	some.name.tld 	ServersHostname

Permission errors on Windows

Some users fixed NT_STATUS_ACCESS_DENIED (Windows clients) errors by using a slightly different syntax:

smb://workgroup/username:password@hostname/printer_name

Local Printing is fine, but no printing via Network

Depending on the printer (Especially for unidirectional label-printers) one side must be configured with the raw-driver to be able to print

Other operating systems

More information on interfacing CUPS with other printing systems can be found in the CUPS manual, e.g. on http://localhost:631/help/network.html.