Is it advisable to remove Avahi and CUPS-browse?
Clash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP
From time to time, Avahi takes 100% CPU and CUPS-browse delays the system shutdown with the message "a stop job is running for make remote cups printers available locally".
I know Avahi finds printers, as Xfce shows me 16 printers. I also know I don't need 16 printers. On the other hand, I'm not sure what cups-browsed
is doing.
I do use a network printer. But I know its IP and model. With that in mind, can I just replace Avahi and CUPS-browse with something more simple instead of fixing them?
debian cups avahi
add a comment |
From time to time, Avahi takes 100% CPU and CUPS-browse delays the system shutdown with the message "a stop job is running for make remote cups printers available locally".
I know Avahi finds printers, as Xfce shows me 16 printers. I also know I don't need 16 printers. On the other hand, I'm not sure what cups-browsed
is doing.
I do use a network printer. But I know its IP and model. With that in mind, can I just replace Avahi and CUPS-browse with something more simple instead of fixing them?
debian cups avahi
cups can be configured without avahi ; it depends on your infra-structure setup. However, cups tends to eat memory and should be restarted once in a while.
– Rui F Ribeiro
Feb 15 at 19:48
add a comment |
From time to time, Avahi takes 100% CPU and CUPS-browse delays the system shutdown with the message "a stop job is running for make remote cups printers available locally".
I know Avahi finds printers, as Xfce shows me 16 printers. I also know I don't need 16 printers. On the other hand, I'm not sure what cups-browsed
is doing.
I do use a network printer. But I know its IP and model. With that in mind, can I just replace Avahi and CUPS-browse with something more simple instead of fixing them?
debian cups avahi
From time to time, Avahi takes 100% CPU and CUPS-browse delays the system shutdown with the message "a stop job is running for make remote cups printers available locally".
I know Avahi finds printers, as Xfce shows me 16 printers. I also know I don't need 16 printers. On the other hand, I'm not sure what cups-browsed
is doing.
I do use a network printer. But I know its IP and model. With that in mind, can I just replace Avahi and CUPS-browse with something more simple instead of fixing them?
debian cups avahi
debian cups avahi
asked Feb 15 at 18:42
giustigiusti
681419
681419
cups can be configured without avahi ; it depends on your infra-structure setup. However, cups tends to eat memory and should be restarted once in a while.
– Rui F Ribeiro
Feb 15 at 19:48
add a comment |
cups can be configured without avahi ; it depends on your infra-structure setup. However, cups tends to eat memory and should be restarted once in a while.
– Rui F Ribeiro
Feb 15 at 19:48
cups can be configured without avahi ; it depends on your infra-structure setup. However, cups tends to eat memory and should be restarted once in a while.
– Rui F Ribeiro
Feb 15 at 19:48
cups can be configured without avahi ; it depends on your infra-structure setup. However, cups tends to eat memory and should be restarted once in a while.
– Rui F Ribeiro
Feb 15 at 19:48
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
Given your use case, you don’t need either package, and you don’t need to replace them with anything — CUPS on its own will be able to provide access to your network printer.
cups-browsed
is the CUPS component which finds printers on your network, by interpreting Bonjour broadcasts. Since you don’t need to automatically find printers, it’s safe to remove it; you can add the printer you need manually using whichever CUPS printer configuration tool you want. Nothing in Debian strictly depends on cups-browsed
so you can easily remove it. (As a side note, cups-browsed
is the component which provides access to driver-less printers, if you enable CreateIPPPrinterQueues
in /etc/cups/cups-browsed.conf
; it will then automatically create printer queues for IPP printers on the network. It turns out printing can be simple, in some cases.)
avahi-daemon
is a Bonjour server; it broadcasts your computer’s information on the network, and allows other applications to publish and resolve Bonjour information. Since you’re using Xfce you should be able to remove it too, if you don’t need its services. (GNOME on Debian depends on avahi-daemon
but Xfce doesn’t.) The Bonjour client for most applications is provided by libavahi-client3
, and you won’t be able to easily remove that because many packages depend on it, including CUPS.
add a comment |
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Given your use case, you don’t need either package, and you don’t need to replace them with anything — CUPS on its own will be able to provide access to your network printer.
cups-browsed
is the CUPS component which finds printers on your network, by interpreting Bonjour broadcasts. Since you don’t need to automatically find printers, it’s safe to remove it; you can add the printer you need manually using whichever CUPS printer configuration tool you want. Nothing in Debian strictly depends on cups-browsed
so you can easily remove it. (As a side note, cups-browsed
is the component which provides access to driver-less printers, if you enable CreateIPPPrinterQueues
in /etc/cups/cups-browsed.conf
; it will then automatically create printer queues for IPP printers on the network. It turns out printing can be simple, in some cases.)
avahi-daemon
is a Bonjour server; it broadcasts your computer’s information on the network, and allows other applications to publish and resolve Bonjour information. Since you’re using Xfce you should be able to remove it too, if you don’t need its services. (GNOME on Debian depends on avahi-daemon
but Xfce doesn’t.) The Bonjour client for most applications is provided by libavahi-client3
, and you won’t be able to easily remove that because many packages depend on it, including CUPS.
add a comment |
Given your use case, you don’t need either package, and you don’t need to replace them with anything — CUPS on its own will be able to provide access to your network printer.
cups-browsed
is the CUPS component which finds printers on your network, by interpreting Bonjour broadcasts. Since you don’t need to automatically find printers, it’s safe to remove it; you can add the printer you need manually using whichever CUPS printer configuration tool you want. Nothing in Debian strictly depends on cups-browsed
so you can easily remove it. (As a side note, cups-browsed
is the component which provides access to driver-less printers, if you enable CreateIPPPrinterQueues
in /etc/cups/cups-browsed.conf
; it will then automatically create printer queues for IPP printers on the network. It turns out printing can be simple, in some cases.)
avahi-daemon
is a Bonjour server; it broadcasts your computer’s information on the network, and allows other applications to publish and resolve Bonjour information. Since you’re using Xfce you should be able to remove it too, if you don’t need its services. (GNOME on Debian depends on avahi-daemon
but Xfce doesn’t.) The Bonjour client for most applications is provided by libavahi-client3
, and you won’t be able to easily remove that because many packages depend on it, including CUPS.
add a comment |
Given your use case, you don’t need either package, and you don’t need to replace them with anything — CUPS on its own will be able to provide access to your network printer.
cups-browsed
is the CUPS component which finds printers on your network, by interpreting Bonjour broadcasts. Since you don’t need to automatically find printers, it’s safe to remove it; you can add the printer you need manually using whichever CUPS printer configuration tool you want. Nothing in Debian strictly depends on cups-browsed
so you can easily remove it. (As a side note, cups-browsed
is the component which provides access to driver-less printers, if you enable CreateIPPPrinterQueues
in /etc/cups/cups-browsed.conf
; it will then automatically create printer queues for IPP printers on the network. It turns out printing can be simple, in some cases.)
avahi-daemon
is a Bonjour server; it broadcasts your computer’s information on the network, and allows other applications to publish and resolve Bonjour information. Since you’re using Xfce you should be able to remove it too, if you don’t need its services. (GNOME on Debian depends on avahi-daemon
but Xfce doesn’t.) The Bonjour client for most applications is provided by libavahi-client3
, and you won’t be able to easily remove that because many packages depend on it, including CUPS.
Given your use case, you don’t need either package, and you don’t need to replace them with anything — CUPS on its own will be able to provide access to your network printer.
cups-browsed
is the CUPS component which finds printers on your network, by interpreting Bonjour broadcasts. Since you don’t need to automatically find printers, it’s safe to remove it; you can add the printer you need manually using whichever CUPS printer configuration tool you want. Nothing in Debian strictly depends on cups-browsed
so you can easily remove it. (As a side note, cups-browsed
is the component which provides access to driver-less printers, if you enable CreateIPPPrinterQueues
in /etc/cups/cups-browsed.conf
; it will then automatically create printer queues for IPP printers on the network. It turns out printing can be simple, in some cases.)
avahi-daemon
is a Bonjour server; it broadcasts your computer’s information on the network, and allows other applications to publish and resolve Bonjour information. Since you’re using Xfce you should be able to remove it too, if you don’t need its services. (GNOME on Debian depends on avahi-daemon
but Xfce doesn’t.) The Bonjour client for most applications is provided by libavahi-client3
, and you won’t be able to easily remove that because many packages depend on it, including CUPS.
answered Feb 16 at 13:28
Stephen KittStephen Kitt
175k24400478
175k24400478
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cups can be configured without avahi ; it depends on your infra-structure setup. However, cups tends to eat memory and should be restarted once in a while.
– Rui F Ribeiro
Feb 15 at 19:48