Why is canon lbp-1120 not working after re-boot?

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I managed to get the canon lbp-1120 to work on Ubuntu 16.04 (64bit) using the 32 bit driver as suggested here LBP1120 on Ubuntu 14.04. However once I shutdown or re-boot, it no longer works, even though the printer is showing as installed. Is it possible that on re-boot, it is defaulting back to the 64bit driver and if so, how do I delete that driver?










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  • your printer uses an extra layer; called the ccpd daemon; so you need to start that each time; we have the an LBP too; it works well; I confess each time I start the computer; I open the terminal; find the command; (using the up arrow ..) and activate the ccpd daemon. The command is sudo /etc/init.d/ccpd start and if you edit rc.local you can place it there I believe; to automate; but I have never sat down to do that ..
    – pdc
    Jan 28 at 2:19










  • That works thanks.
    – MRNJON
    Jan 28 at 9:26










  • that is great; delighted to hear it works; I just open the terminal each time I start and use the up arrow to find the command ..
    – pdc
    Jan 28 at 17:18










  • After installing os update, i now get this message when I run sudo /etc/init.d/ccpd start: "Starting /usr/sbin/ccpd: start-stop-daemon: unable to stat /usr/sbin/ccpd (No such file or directory)". Looks like the file has dissappeared! Any suggestions?
    – MRNJON
    Jan 31 at 22:28










  • I can't understand that: you are telling the system to look in /etc/init.d which is where ccpd is; and it seems to be going off to /usr/sbin and then telling you it can't find ccpd there; which ain't surprising; as ccpd ain't there; it is one folder down in the etc folder; so you just ran the command sudo /etc/init.d/ccpd start ......... in the terminal? All I can suggest is copying this command from here; opening a terminal; and trying again ..
    – pdc
    Feb 1 at 17:42














up vote
0
down vote

favorite












I managed to get the canon lbp-1120 to work on Ubuntu 16.04 (64bit) using the 32 bit driver as suggested here LBP1120 on Ubuntu 14.04. However once I shutdown or re-boot, it no longer works, even though the printer is showing as installed. Is it possible that on re-boot, it is defaulting back to the 64bit driver and if so, how do I delete that driver?










share|improve this question





















  • your printer uses an extra layer; called the ccpd daemon; so you need to start that each time; we have the an LBP too; it works well; I confess each time I start the computer; I open the terminal; find the command; (using the up arrow ..) and activate the ccpd daemon. The command is sudo /etc/init.d/ccpd start and if you edit rc.local you can place it there I believe; to automate; but I have never sat down to do that ..
    – pdc
    Jan 28 at 2:19










  • That works thanks.
    – MRNJON
    Jan 28 at 9:26










  • that is great; delighted to hear it works; I just open the terminal each time I start and use the up arrow to find the command ..
    – pdc
    Jan 28 at 17:18










  • After installing os update, i now get this message when I run sudo /etc/init.d/ccpd start: "Starting /usr/sbin/ccpd: start-stop-daemon: unable to stat /usr/sbin/ccpd (No such file or directory)". Looks like the file has dissappeared! Any suggestions?
    – MRNJON
    Jan 31 at 22:28










  • I can't understand that: you are telling the system to look in /etc/init.d which is where ccpd is; and it seems to be going off to /usr/sbin and then telling you it can't find ccpd there; which ain't surprising; as ccpd ain't there; it is one folder down in the etc folder; so you just ran the command sudo /etc/init.d/ccpd start ......... in the terminal? All I can suggest is copying this command from here; opening a terminal; and trying again ..
    – pdc
    Feb 1 at 17:42












up vote
0
down vote

favorite









up vote
0
down vote

favorite











I managed to get the canon lbp-1120 to work on Ubuntu 16.04 (64bit) using the 32 bit driver as suggested here LBP1120 on Ubuntu 14.04. However once I shutdown or re-boot, it no longer works, even though the printer is showing as installed. Is it possible that on re-boot, it is defaulting back to the 64bit driver and if so, how do I delete that driver?










share|improve this question













I managed to get the canon lbp-1120 to work on Ubuntu 16.04 (64bit) using the 32 bit driver as suggested here LBP1120 on Ubuntu 14.04. However once I shutdown or re-boot, it no longer works, even though the printer is showing as installed. Is it possible that on re-boot, it is defaulting back to the 64bit driver and if so, how do I delete that driver?







drivers printing canon






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Jan 27 at 16:43









MRNJON

64




64











  • your printer uses an extra layer; called the ccpd daemon; so you need to start that each time; we have the an LBP too; it works well; I confess each time I start the computer; I open the terminal; find the command; (using the up arrow ..) and activate the ccpd daemon. The command is sudo /etc/init.d/ccpd start and if you edit rc.local you can place it there I believe; to automate; but I have never sat down to do that ..
    – pdc
    Jan 28 at 2:19










  • That works thanks.
    – MRNJON
    Jan 28 at 9:26










  • that is great; delighted to hear it works; I just open the terminal each time I start and use the up arrow to find the command ..
    – pdc
    Jan 28 at 17:18










  • After installing os update, i now get this message when I run sudo /etc/init.d/ccpd start: "Starting /usr/sbin/ccpd: start-stop-daemon: unable to stat /usr/sbin/ccpd (No such file or directory)". Looks like the file has dissappeared! Any suggestions?
    – MRNJON
    Jan 31 at 22:28










  • I can't understand that: you are telling the system to look in /etc/init.d which is where ccpd is; and it seems to be going off to /usr/sbin and then telling you it can't find ccpd there; which ain't surprising; as ccpd ain't there; it is one folder down in the etc folder; so you just ran the command sudo /etc/init.d/ccpd start ......... in the terminal? All I can suggest is copying this command from here; opening a terminal; and trying again ..
    – pdc
    Feb 1 at 17:42
















  • your printer uses an extra layer; called the ccpd daemon; so you need to start that each time; we have the an LBP too; it works well; I confess each time I start the computer; I open the terminal; find the command; (using the up arrow ..) and activate the ccpd daemon. The command is sudo /etc/init.d/ccpd start and if you edit rc.local you can place it there I believe; to automate; but I have never sat down to do that ..
    – pdc
    Jan 28 at 2:19










  • That works thanks.
    – MRNJON
    Jan 28 at 9:26










  • that is great; delighted to hear it works; I just open the terminal each time I start and use the up arrow to find the command ..
    – pdc
    Jan 28 at 17:18










  • After installing os update, i now get this message when I run sudo /etc/init.d/ccpd start: "Starting /usr/sbin/ccpd: start-stop-daemon: unable to stat /usr/sbin/ccpd (No such file or directory)". Looks like the file has dissappeared! Any suggestions?
    – MRNJON
    Jan 31 at 22:28










  • I can't understand that: you are telling the system to look in /etc/init.d which is where ccpd is; and it seems to be going off to /usr/sbin and then telling you it can't find ccpd there; which ain't surprising; as ccpd ain't there; it is one folder down in the etc folder; so you just ran the command sudo /etc/init.d/ccpd start ......... in the terminal? All I can suggest is copying this command from here; opening a terminal; and trying again ..
    – pdc
    Feb 1 at 17:42















your printer uses an extra layer; called the ccpd daemon; so you need to start that each time; we have the an LBP too; it works well; I confess each time I start the computer; I open the terminal; find the command; (using the up arrow ..) and activate the ccpd daemon. The command is sudo /etc/init.d/ccpd start and if you edit rc.local you can place it there I believe; to automate; but I have never sat down to do that ..
– pdc
Jan 28 at 2:19




your printer uses an extra layer; called the ccpd daemon; so you need to start that each time; we have the an LBP too; it works well; I confess each time I start the computer; I open the terminal; find the command; (using the up arrow ..) and activate the ccpd daemon. The command is sudo /etc/init.d/ccpd start and if you edit rc.local you can place it there I believe; to automate; but I have never sat down to do that ..
– pdc
Jan 28 at 2:19












That works thanks.
– MRNJON
Jan 28 at 9:26




That works thanks.
– MRNJON
Jan 28 at 9:26












that is great; delighted to hear it works; I just open the terminal each time I start and use the up arrow to find the command ..
– pdc
Jan 28 at 17:18




that is great; delighted to hear it works; I just open the terminal each time I start and use the up arrow to find the command ..
– pdc
Jan 28 at 17:18












After installing os update, i now get this message when I run sudo /etc/init.d/ccpd start: "Starting /usr/sbin/ccpd: start-stop-daemon: unable to stat /usr/sbin/ccpd (No such file or directory)". Looks like the file has dissappeared! Any suggestions?
– MRNJON
Jan 31 at 22:28




After installing os update, i now get this message when I run sudo /etc/init.d/ccpd start: "Starting /usr/sbin/ccpd: start-stop-daemon: unable to stat /usr/sbin/ccpd (No such file or directory)". Looks like the file has dissappeared! Any suggestions?
– MRNJON
Jan 31 at 22:28












I can't understand that: you are telling the system to look in /etc/init.d which is where ccpd is; and it seems to be going off to /usr/sbin and then telling you it can't find ccpd there; which ain't surprising; as ccpd ain't there; it is one folder down in the etc folder; so you just ran the command sudo /etc/init.d/ccpd start ......... in the terminal? All I can suggest is copying this command from here; opening a terminal; and trying again ..
– pdc
Feb 1 at 17:42




I can't understand that: you are telling the system to look in /etc/init.d which is where ccpd is; and it seems to be going off to /usr/sbin and then telling you it can't find ccpd there; which ain't surprising; as ccpd ain't there; it is one folder down in the etc folder; so you just ran the command sudo /etc/init.d/ccpd start ......... in the terminal? All I can suggest is copying this command from here; opening a terminal; and trying again ..
– pdc
Feb 1 at 17:42















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