Brother Printers and cups-browsed — HOW TO
Posted: Tue Jan 11, 2022 5:26 pm
I've just solved an issue that has been bugging me for some time, and the solution was so easy!!
What follows may not apply to all Brother printers but is worth a try if you're having the same issue as I did. Read on...
I have a Brother Printer/Scanner, a MFC-J5320DW. It's easy to install, using a script downloaded from the Brother site. However, if you don't do this, you see that a printer has been detected. The problem is, the automatically detected one doesn't work! If you do run the Brother script, you end up with two printer options, one doesn't work, one does. You can unmark "Enabled" on the bad one, but it still shows up in dialogue boxes.
The second, non-working, printer cannot be deleted, it just comes back again. It is "detected" by a background program called cups-browsed. It's simple to disable, just go into MXPI or Synaptic, and uninstall it! If this causes any problems, you can simply re-install it. But I'm pretty sure that it won't.
The purpose of cups-browsed is to detect printers on the network. If you don't have it installed, you have to manually install your printer. If you have other Linux devices, like a laptop, the Brother script can detect and install a Brother printer on the network.
Perhaps one day Brother printers will work without a driver, but for now, my one at least, does not.
What follows may not apply to all Brother printers but is worth a try if you're having the same issue as I did. Read on...
I have a Brother Printer/Scanner, a MFC-J5320DW. It's easy to install, using a script downloaded from the Brother site. However, if you don't do this, you see that a printer has been detected. The problem is, the automatically detected one doesn't work! If you do run the Brother script, you end up with two printer options, one doesn't work, one does. You can unmark "Enabled" on the bad one, but it still shows up in dialogue boxes.
The second, non-working, printer cannot be deleted, it just comes back again. It is "detected" by a background program called cups-browsed. It's simple to disable, just go into MXPI or Synaptic, and uninstall it! If this causes any problems, you can simply re-install it. But I'm pretty sure that it won't.
The purpose of cups-browsed is to detect printers on the network. If you don't have it installed, you have to manually install your printer. If you have other Linux devices, like a laptop, the Brother script can detect and install a Brother printer on the network.
Perhaps one day Brother printers will work without a driver, but for now, my one at least, does not.