Printing
Printing in NixOS is done via the services.printing
module, to configure the local printing services which is provided by the software CUPS. Setting up physical printer devices is done using hardware.printers
option.
Installation
To enable the local print service on your machine, simply add following lines to your configuration
services.printing.enable = true;
Usage
After enabling the printing service you'll be able to configure and add network printers via http://localhost:631. You may need to authenticate with your local user when you add the printer.
Depending on your desktop environment, there are several graphical tools available which will connect to this backend service and allow you a more convenient printer management, for example system-config-printer
.
Configuration
Enable autodiscovery of network printers
Most printers manufactured after 2013 support the IPP Everywhere protocol, i.e. printing without installing drivers. This is notably the case of all WiFi printers marketed as Apple-compatible (list).
To detect these printers, add the following to your system configuration:
services.avahi = {
enable = true;
nssmdns = true;
openFirewall = true;
};
Discovery is done via the opened UDP port 5353
. Printers should get automatically detected and visible in your printer configuration client.
Adding printers
Beside manually adding printers with client tools, it is possible to permanently add printers to your system configuration. The following example configures a network printer called Dell_1250c
to your local system, reachable via IPP at http://192.168.178.2:631/printers/Dell_1250c
hardware.printers = {
ensurePrinters = [
{
name = "Dell_1250c";
location = "Home";
deviceUri = "http://192.168.178.2:631/printers/Dell_1250c";
model = "drv:///sample.drv/generic.ppd";
ppdOptions = {
PageSize = "A4";
};
}
];
ensureDefaultPrinter = "Dell_1250c";
};
To add a local printer, connected via USB, change the deviceUri
to a USB address and optionally define which driver to use by adding the model
option.
hardware.printers = {
ensurePrinters = [
{
name = "Dell_1250c";
location = "Home";
deviceUri = "usb://Dell/1250c%20Color%20Printer?serial=YNP023240";
model = "Dell-1250c.ppd.gz";
ppdOptions = {
PageSize = "A4";
};
}
];
};
Some local or network printers might need additional drivers. You can add them using the drivers
option
services.printing.drivers = [ YOUR_DRIVER ];
where YOUR_DRIVER
is the driver package appropriate for your printer. Commonly used driver packages include:
- pkgs.gutenprint — Drivers for many different printers from many different vendors.
- pkgs.gutenprintBin — Additional, binary-only drivers for some printers.
- pkgs.hplip — Drivers for HP printers.
- pkgs.hplipWithPlugin — Drivers for HP printers, with the proprietary plugin. Use
NIXPKGS_ALLOW_UNFREE=1 nix-shell -p hplipWithPlugin --run 'sudo -E hp-setup'
to add the printer, regular CUPS UI doesn't seem to work. - pkgs.postscript-lexmark — Postscript drivers for Lexmark
- pkgs.samsung-unified-linux-driver — Proprietary Samsung Drivers
- pkgs.splix — Drivers for printers supporting SPL (Samsung Printer Language).
- pkgs.brlaser — Drivers for some Brother printers
- pkgs.brgenml1lpr and pkgs.brgenml1cupswrapper — Generic drivers for more Brother printers [1]
- pkgs.cnijfilter2 — Drivers for some Canon Pixma devices (Proprietary driver)
Search for other printer drivers in the NixOS package directory: the official list of packages is here. Add the driver to services.printing.drivers
, not environment.systemPackages
.
Printer sharing
Enable network sharing of the default local printer, also known as "AirPrinting". Note that listenAddresses = [ "*:631" ];
, allowFrom = [ "all" ];
and openFirewall = true;
will enable anonymous access to your printer on all interfaces, you might want to restrict this.
services.avahi = {
enable = true;
nssmdns = true;
openFirewall = true;
publish = {
enable = true;
userServices = true;
};
};
services.printing = {
listenAddresses = [ "*:631" ];
allowFrom = [ "all" ];
browsing = true;
defaultShared = true;
openFirewall = true;
};
Once printer sharing is enabled, it could be additionally advertised in the home network via the Samba protocol, see.
Tips and tricks
Manually supplying printer driver
Provide the PPD imperatively
If no driver is found for your printer, even when services.printing.drivers
is correctly populated (see above),
you can try to give cups a PPD file.
- Download the required PPD file, for example from openprinting.org
- Open the PPD as a text file, and check that it does not mention FHS paths like
/usr/bin
. If it does, this method is unlikely to work, as the PPD file depends on executables not present on your system. You can certainly install the binaries yourself and point to the new binary, but it is certainly easier to patch the executables in a derivation (see below) to avoid garbage collection of your binaries. - add the printer with
system-config-printer
(for example) and at the 'choose driver' screen choose 'provide PPD file'
Provide the PPD declaratively
You can also declaratively add the PPD as a new driver by creating a simple derivation. You just need to create a derivation that puts the PPD file in $out/share/cups/model/yourfile.ppd
(you can also put it in a subfolder like $out/share/cups/model/HP/yourfile.ppd
to limit conflicts between ppd having the same name). Note that the name of the file does not change the way cups will list it as the model/manufacturer is written inside the (text) ppd.
As in the imperative method, first check that your file does not contain any reference to binaries outside the store like /bin/
or /usr/
. If it does not contain any reference then you should be able to simply do this:
{
...
services.printing.enable = true;
services.printing.drivers = [
(writeTextDir "share/cups/model/yourppd.ppd" (builtins.readFile ./yourppd.ppd))
];
...
}
If your ppd contains links to external binaries, you can instead patch the file using for instance substituteInPlace
. For that, create a file, say, myPrinter.nix
containing something like:
{ stdenv }:
stdenv.mkDerivation rec {
name = "myprinter-${version}";
version = "1.0";
src = ./.;
installPhase = ''
mkdir -p $out/share/cups/model/
cp myprinter.ppd $out/share/cups/model/
# If you need to patch the path to files outside the nix store, you can do it this way
# (if the ppd also comes with executables you may need to also patch the executables)
substituteInPlace $out/share/cups/model/myprinter.ppd \
--replace "/usr/yourProgram/" "${yourProgram}/bin/yourProgram"
'';
}
Of course update the name of the files and adapt the substituteInPlace command to your needs. Then add your driver as:
{
...
services.printing.enable = true;
services.printing.drivers = [
(pkgs.callPackage ./myPrinter.nix {})
];
...
}
Your PPD file should now appear next to the other PPD files installed on your system when you add a new printer.
For debugging purpose, it may be interesting to note that the data folder used by cups (containing the drivers and more) can be obtained by looking in the environment $CUPS_DATADIR
(the contents of $out/share/cups/
contained in your drivers are linked in this folder).
Troubleshooting
Adding network printer "Name or service not known"
If CUPS complains about "Impossible to connect to XXX.local: Name or service not known" even if services.avahi.nssmdns
is enabled as shown above, the reason could be that mdns does not work properly with IPv6 in your network. In such a case, switching to mdns4-only setup can help:
{
...
services.avahi.nssmdns = false; # Use the settings from below
# settings from avahi-daemon.nix where mdns is replaced with mdns4
system.nssModules = pkgs.lib.optional (!config.services.avahi.nssmdns) pkgs.nssmdns;
system.nssDatabases.hosts = with pkgs.lib; optionals (!config.services.avahi.nssmdns) (mkMerge [
(mkBefore [ "mdns4_minimal [NOTFOUND=return]" ]) # before resolve
(mkAfter [ "mdns4" ]) # after dns
]);
}
See this bug report for details.
Upgrade required
Described in: Github issue 23993
Problem
Using the cups web interface, the page tells you "Upgrade Required" and then redirects you to a page that fails to load.
Cause
When you are using http and cups wants authentication it will redirect you to a https version by default.
In order to use https it needs ssl keys. However it is possible that cups fails to generate these keys, and then the page will fail to load.
Solution
Either we can help cups to get ssl keys, or we can tell it to not use https at all.
Generating ssl keys:
First make sure the directory /etc/cups/ssl exists:
sudo mkdir -p /etc/cups/ssl
Try restarting cups and using the web interface again. This might be enough to get it working.
If this didn't help, then check if cups has generated ssl keys in /etc/cups/ssl
Disabling ssl:
Edit your /etc/nixos/configuration.nix
and add the following lines:
services.printing.extraConf = ''
DefaultEncryption Never
'';
Unable to launch Ghostscript: gs: No such file or directory
Described in: Github issue 20806
and issues 22062
Problem
When printing, cups will report an error: Unable to launch Ghostscript: gs: No such file or directory
Cause
Some drivers use the ghostscript binary.
Cups will look for the binary path in it's config file: cupsd.conf
This file is normally a link. But it can be overwritten, and consequentially become outdated.
Solution
You could try to manually fix the path variable in /var/lib/cups/cupsd.conf
Alternatively you could try to delete the file and run sudo nixos-rebuild switch
File is missing (Gnome 3)
When you add an printer in Gnome (using gnome-control-center printers
) you create a profile for your printer.
Problem
But, later you may experience an error like "/nix/store/.../lib/cups/filter/pstospl not available: No such file or directory".
Cause
When you create a printer profile you get a freeze version of cups filter and when cups is updated, because you have upgraded your system, and garbage collected this version is gone.
Solution
Go into the gnome-control-center printers
settings, remove the printer and recreate it.
Debugging a broken printer driver
Add to /etc/nixos/configuration.nix
services.printing.logLevel = "debug";
Rebuild
sudo nixos-rebuild switch
Watch the cups logs
$ journalctl --follow --unit=cups
or
$ journalctl --follow --unit=cups | grep -C10 --color=always -i -e 'No such file or directory' -e 'error:'
Start a print job
Now watch the cups logs for errors like No such file or directory