lpset(1M) System Administration Commands lpset(1M)NAMElpset - set printing configuration in /etc/printers.conf or other sup‐
ported databases
SYNOPSISlpset [-n system | fnsldap] [-x]
[ [-D binddn] [-w passwd] [-h ldaphost]]
[-a key=value] [-d key] destination
DESCRIPTION
The lpset utility sets printing configuration information in the sys‐
tem configuration databases. Use lpset to create and update printing
configuration in /etc/printers.conf. See nsswitch.conf(4) and print‐
ers.conf(4).
Only a superuser or a member of Group 14 may execute lpset.
OPTIONS
The following options are supported:
-n system|ldap Create or update the configuration information for
the destination entry in /etc/printers.conf or LDAP
printer contexts. system specifies that the informa‐
tion is created or updated in /etc/printers.conf.
ldap specifies that the information is written to an
LDAP server. See .
If -n is not specified, system is the default.
-x Remove all configuration for the destination entry
from the database specified by the -n option.
-a key=value Configure the specified key=value pair for the desti‐
nation. See printers.conf(4) for information regard‐
ing the specification of key=value pairs.
-d key Delete the configuration option specified by key for
the destination entry. See printers.conf(4) for
information regarding the specification of key and
key=value pairs.
-D binddn Use the distinguished name (DN) binddn to bind to the
LDAP directory server.
-w passwd Use passwd as the password for authentication to the
LDAP directory server.
-h ldaphost Specify an alternate host on which the LDAP server is
running. This option is only used when ldap is speci‐
fied as the naming service. If this option is not
specified, the default is the current host system.
OPERANDS
The following operand is supported:
destination Specifies the entry in /etc/printers.conf, print‐
ers.org_dir, or LDAP, in which to create or modify
information. destination names a printer of class of
printers. See lpadmin(1M). Each entry in printers.conf
describes one destination. Specify destination using
atomic names. POSIX-style destination names are not
acceptable. See printers.conf(4) for information regard‐
ing the naming conventions for atomic names and stan‐
dards(5) for information regarding POSIX.
EXAMPLES
Example 1 Removing All Existing Printing Configuration Information
The following example removes all existing printing configuration
information for destination dogs from /etc/printers.conf:
example% lpset-x dogs
Example 2 Setting a key=value Pair
The following example sets the user-equivalence =true key=value pair
for destination tabloid in the NIS context:
example% lpset-n nis -a user-equivalence=true tabloid
Example 3 Setting a key=value Pair in LDAP
example% lpset-n ldap -h ldapl.xyz.com -D "cn=Directory Manager" \
-w passwd -a key1=value1 printer1
EXIT STATUS
The following exit values are returned:
0 Successful completion.
non-zero An error occurred.
FILES
/etc/printers.conf System configuration database.
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
┌─────────────────────────────┬───────────────────────────────┐
│ ATTRIBUTE TYPE │ ATTRIBUTE VALUE │
├─────────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────────┤
│Availability │print/lp/print-client-commands │
├─────────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────────┤
│Interface Stability │Committed │
└─────────────────────────────┴───────────────────────────────┘
SEE ALSOldap(1), lp(1), lpc(1B), lpq(1B), lpr(1B), lpstat(1), ldapclient(1M),
lpadmin(1M), lpget(1M), nsswitch.conf(4), printers(4), print‐
ers.conf(4), attributes(5), standards(5)NOTES
If the ldap database is used, the printer administrator should be mind‐
ful of the following when updating printer information.
1. Because the domain information for the printer being updated
is extracted from the ldapclient(1M) configuration, the LDAP
server being updated must host the same domain that is used
by the current ldapclient(1M) server.
2. If the LDAP server being updated is a replica LDAP server,
the updates will be referred to the master LDAP server and
completed there. The updates might be out of sync and not
appear immediatedly, as the replica server may not have been
updated by the master server. For example, a printer that
you deleted by using lpset may still appear in the printer
list you display with lpget until the replica is updated
from the master. Replica servers vary as to how often they
are updated from the master. See System Administration
Guide: Solaris Printing for information on LDAP server
replication.
3. Although users can use the LDAP command line utilities lda‐
padd(1) and ldapmodify(1) to update printer entries in the
directory, the preferred method is to use lpset. Otherwise,
if the ldapadd and ldapmodify utilities are used, the admin‐
istrator must ensure that the printer-name attribute value
is unique within the ou=printers container on the LDAP
server. If the value is not unique, the result of modifica‐
tions done using lpset or the Solaris Print Manager, print‐
mgr(1M) may be unpredictable.
SunOS 5.11 11 Dec 2009 lpset(1M)