T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2577.1 | | IOSG::ELLIOTTR | Russell Elliott | Tue Mar 18 1997 15:27 | 22 |
| Bruce,
You seem to have covered most things. You implied that you've checked
both foreground and background - if that's not the case then that's
worth a try.
It looks like a fundamental problem, seeing as everyone is getting the
error, with every ANSI table. The "printer attribute file error" may
therefore be a red-herring.
>> Problem is, there is nothing wrong with any of the ANSI printer at-
>> tribute tables and none of them are working - not even LP11 or A1TEXT.
What draws you to this conclusion? I know it seems unlikely, but
perhaps a rogue system manager got hold of them ;-). Have they been
modified recently?
Sorry, I can't think of anything else.
Russell.
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2577.2 | WPS-PLUS Formatter error | IOSG::NEWLAND | Richard Newland, IOSG, REO2-F/J9 | Tue Mar 18 1997 15:52 | 12 |
| From the information you have given it looks certain that the error is
coming from the WPS-PLUS formatter. Try issuing a WPS-PLUS Format
operation directly, e.g.
<FORMAT 'FILE.WPL', 'FILE.LIS', 'LP11'
and report what happens.
Is the logical name WPL$PRT which points to the directory which contains
the WPS-PLUS Printer Attribute files still set up correctly?
Richard
|
2577.3 | Answers and more info . . . | OASS::BURNAMAN_B | And now, live, from Atlanta . . . | Tue Mar 18 1997 19:31 | 24 |
| Hi Fellows,
Russ, to answer your question first, we get the error regardless of
whether we format in foreground or background. I tried foreground
formatting in hopes of getting a better error message, but did not.
Richard, when I issued the <format command, I got the error. Not
surprisingly, when I changed the WPS-PLUS FORMATTING field of the
ASCII EDT format master file record to N and printed an ASCII file
to it using an ANSI table, it worked.
I checked and found that none of the .FLC files have been modified
recently. The customer relinked ALL-IN-1 last nite, but that did
not make any difference.
Fortunately, a lot of their printer are PostScript, so they are not
_totally_ dead in the water, but people that have only ANSI printers
in their offices are pretty unhappy.
Does any of this help?
Thanks,
Bruce in Atlanta
|
2577.4 | More suggestions... | IOSG::ELLIOTTR | Russell Elliott | Wed Mar 19 1997 08:59 | 37 |
| Some info and suggestions:
Printer Tables are not part of the TXLs.
The NULL_POINTER error occurs with corrupt WPS-PLUS documents. Usually,
but not always, this error would occur during reading and printing.
The PRINT_ATTRIBUTE_FILE_ERROR error occurs when the Formatter reads in
a printer attribute file (.PRA) that is not in the correct format. It
discounts that the PRA can't be found because that would give a
different error.
You initially mentioned NULL_POINTER errors, but then mentioned a
printer attribute file error. Are you sure that the "092FF7A2" error is
the PRINT_ATTRIBUTE_FILE_ERROR? (Perhaps this is something I should
know!).
If the NULL_POINTER error is being received first then the
PRINT_ATTRIBUTE_FILE_ERROR may be a duff error following the previous
one.
To see if a PRA is correctly formatted try to edit it with the PTU
editor. You can do this either from Customization Management or from
the Printer Tables subsystem (if you create a temporary PRA). In the
test I did I got a different error when reading a corrupt PRA, but it's
still a useful test.
Using the Manage Printer Types subsystem choose a print style you know
fails and double check which PRA is being selected. Check this PRA as
described above.
Double check where WPL$PRT is pointing to.
I can't think of anything else to check at the moment.
Russ.
|
2577.5 | Bigger hammer fixed the problem | OASS::BURNAMAN_B | And now, live, from Atlanta . . . | Wed Mar 19 1997 16:45 | 22 |
| Hi Russell,
Thanks for the reply. The reason I mentioned the .TXL's is that the
problem might have been caused by someone modifying one of the script
files used in printing to allow only PS formatting and then recompiled
the TXL, thus causing the problem. I knew the .PRA and .PRC files were
ok because I could edit them in WP PT without getting blown out and I
could see the files in the ALL-IN-1 subprocess when I did a directory
of WPL$PRT - the files had size, a good date and world read/execute
(basically everything that would make ALL-IN-1 happy).
I initially suspected a corrupt document, but quickly dismissed this
when I found that the same document would print fine if the PS table
was used and, when I found that _any_ document would generate the
error. I could see one or two documents, but not all and not for all
users. This was a global problem.
Turns out, rebooting the system corrected the problem. Go figure.
Thanks anyway,
Bruce in Atlanta
|