LPRM(1) | MidnightBSD General Commands Manual | LPRM(1) |
lprm
— remove jobs
from the line printer spooling queue
lprm |
[-P printer]
[- ] [job # ...] [user
...] |
The lprm
utility will remove a job, or
jobs, from a printer's spool queue. Since the spooling directory is
protected from users, using lprm
is normally the
only method by which a user may remove a job. The owner of a job is
determined by the user's login name and host name on the machine where the
lpr(1) command was
invoked.
Options and arguments:
-P
printer-
-
’ is given,
lprm
will remove all jobs which a user owns. If
the super-user employs this flag, the spool queue will be emptied
entirely.lprm
to attempt to remove any jobs queued
belonging to that user (or users). This form of invoking
lprm
is useful only to the super-user.% lpq -l 1st:ken [job #013ucbarpa] (standard input) 100 bytes % lprm 13
If neither arguments or options are given,
lprm
will delete the currently active job if it is
owned by the user who invoked lprm
.
The lprm
utility announces the names of
any files it removes and is silent if there are no jobs in the queue which
match the request list.
The lprm
utility will kill off an active
daemon, if necessary, before removing any spooling files. If a daemon is
killed, a new one is automatically restarted upon completion of file
removals.
If the following environment variable exists, it is utilized by
lprm
.
PRINTER
PRINTER
exists, and a
printer has not been specified with the -P
option,
the default printer is assumed from PRINTER
.``Permission denied" if the user tries to remove files other than his own.
The lprm
command appeared in
3.0BSD.
Since there are race conditions possible in the update of the lock file, the currently active job may be incorrectly identified.
June 6, 1993 | midnightbsd-3.1 |