Re: Lost the wicd system tray icon...
Yup to the icon, and yup to the pipes.
I decided to replace wicd with KNetworkManger. After I installed it I could never get it out of the disabled state. Deleting the state file or setting the enable option to true had no effect. None of the remedies offered around the net worked.
After several weeks of not appearing in the system tray, wicd's icon will randomly appear, but never from a cold boot. I can ALWAYS get it by logging off and then logging back in, without rebooting. In effect, just restarting the xserver, which is one of two possible causes where I suspect the problem lies, gives me back the wicd icon, plus the HP manager icon which should have appeared too.
The last time I used my HP LaserJet Professional p1606dn duplex printer was on the 14th. Sometime between then and 22nd, it got messed up too, and no longer prints. Here is what updates:
I noticed my printer wouldn't print when I tried to use it right after the kernel update, on the 22nd. However, I don't run that kernel. I installed the 2.6.35-25-generic kernel on Jan 25th and the printer continued to work fine until the March 14th. I pinned the 35-25 kernel so I was surprised to see the 32-31 kernel install, because I had pinned the 35-25, but it did not replace the 35-25 kernel as the default.
When I initially installed the driver for the HP p1606dn USB printer I used the hplip-3.10.9.run script linked from the HP website. It installed and automatically downloaded the hplip-3.10.9-plugin.run proprietary plugin, which recognized the printer immediately and installed the driver.
To try to get the printer to work I removed the 3.10.9 driver, downloaded fresh copies of it and the proprietary plugin and reinstalled it. This time, it failed to automatically install the plugin, complaining about not being able to find the ibus, a complaint which it didn't give the first time. The ibus is my second suspect. When I ran the iBus Preferences app in the Settings menu subdirectory it stated that the ibus daemon wasn't running and did I want to start it? I said yes and it started, displayed the preferences gui and its icon in the system tray. Closing the gui I ran "sudo hp-plugin". I first let it try to connect to the HP site and automatically download and install the proprietary plugin. That failed with some errors in its python scripts (which I didn't capture), so I took the second option and selected the hplip-3.10.9-plugin.run file. The program said the plugin successfully installed, but when it opened the printer selection dialog there were no printers listed and the refresh button didn't help.
I uninstalled the 3.10.9 driver and tried the 3.11.3 driver and plugin. The results were the same.
There is another peculiarity about the printer. When I plug it in, instead of telling me it is a printer I get a notice that a CDROM device has been plugged in. It never did that before this system tray icon problem appeared, which I believe is either an xserver and/or bus problem (d? i?). Here is the CDROM info:
Yup to the icon, and yup to the pipes.
I decided to replace wicd with KNetworkManger. After I installed it I could never get it out of the disabled state. Deleting the state file or setting the enable option to true had no effect. None of the remedies offered around the net worked.
After several weeks of not appearing in the system tray, wicd's icon will randomly appear, but never from a cold boot. I can ALWAYS get it by logging off and then logging back in, without rebooting. In effect, just restarting the xserver, which is one of two possible causes where I suspect the problem lies, gives me back the wicd icon, plus the HP manager icon which should have appeared too.
The last time I used my HP LaserJet Professional p1606dn duplex printer was on the 14th. Sometime between then and 22nd, it got messed up too, and no longer prints. Here is what updates:
14th Updated: chromium-codecs-ffmpeg, chromium-browser-inspector, chromium-browser, firefox-4.0,
chromium-codecs-ffmpeg, chromium-browser-inspector, chromium-browser
15th Updated: binutils, libtiff4-dev, libtiffxx0c2, libtiff4, libtiff-tools, binutils, libtiff4, libtiffxx0c2, libtiff4-dev, libtiff-tools
16th Updated: tzdata-java, tzdata, libkrb5-dev, krb5-multidev, libk5crypto3, libgssapi-krb5-2, libkrb5-3,
libkrb5support0, libgssrpc4, libkdb5-4, libkadm5srv-mit7, libkadm5clnt-mit7, firefox-4.0, xulrunner-1.9.2,
tzdata-java, libkrb5support0, libk5crypto3, libkrb5-3, libgssapi-krb5-2, libgssrpc4, libkdb5-4,
libkadm5srv-mit7, libkadm5clnt-mit7, krb5-multidev, libkrb5-dev, firefox-4.0, xulrunner-1.9.2
17th Updated: firefox-4.0, xulrunner-1.9.2, firefox-4.0, xulrunner-1.9.2
18th Updated: firefox-4.0
19th Updated: firefox-4.0, xulrunner-1.9.2, firefox-4.0, xulrunner-1.9.2
21st Updated: xulrunner-1.9.2
22nd Installed: linux-image-2.6.32-31-generic, linux-headers-2.6.32-31, linux-headers-2.6.32-31-generic,
linux-image-2.6.32-31-generic, linux-headers-2.6.32-31, linux-headers-2.6.32-31-generic
22nd Updated: linux-generic, linux, linux-image, linux-image-generic, linux-headers-generic, linux-libc-dev,
xulrunner-1.9.2, linux-image-generic, linux-generic, linux-image, linux, linux-headers-generic, linux-libc-dev,
xulrunner-1.9.2
chromium-codecs-ffmpeg, chromium-browser-inspector, chromium-browser
15th Updated: binutils, libtiff4-dev, libtiffxx0c2, libtiff4, libtiff-tools, binutils, libtiff4, libtiffxx0c2, libtiff4-dev, libtiff-tools
16th Updated: tzdata-java, tzdata, libkrb5-dev, krb5-multidev, libk5crypto3, libgssapi-krb5-2, libkrb5-3,
libkrb5support0, libgssrpc4, libkdb5-4, libkadm5srv-mit7, libkadm5clnt-mit7, firefox-4.0, xulrunner-1.9.2,
tzdata-java, libkrb5support0, libk5crypto3, libkrb5-3, libgssapi-krb5-2, libgssrpc4, libkdb5-4,
libkadm5srv-mit7, libkadm5clnt-mit7, krb5-multidev, libkrb5-dev, firefox-4.0, xulrunner-1.9.2
17th Updated: firefox-4.0, xulrunner-1.9.2, firefox-4.0, xulrunner-1.9.2
18th Updated: firefox-4.0
19th Updated: firefox-4.0, xulrunner-1.9.2, firefox-4.0, xulrunner-1.9.2
21st Updated: xulrunner-1.9.2
22nd Installed: linux-image-2.6.32-31-generic, linux-headers-2.6.32-31, linux-headers-2.6.32-31-generic,
linux-image-2.6.32-31-generic, linux-headers-2.6.32-31, linux-headers-2.6.32-31-generic
22nd Updated: linux-generic, linux, linux-image, linux-image-generic, linux-headers-generic, linux-libc-dev,
xulrunner-1.9.2, linux-image-generic, linux-generic, linux-image, linux, linux-headers-generic, linux-libc-dev,
xulrunner-1.9.2
When I initially installed the driver for the HP p1606dn USB printer I used the hplip-3.10.9.run script linked from the HP website. It installed and automatically downloaded the hplip-3.10.9-plugin.run proprietary plugin, which recognized the printer immediately and installed the driver.
To try to get the printer to work I removed the 3.10.9 driver, downloaded fresh copies of it and the proprietary plugin and reinstalled it. This time, it failed to automatically install the plugin, complaining about not being able to find the ibus, a complaint which it didn't give the first time. The ibus is my second suspect. When I ran the iBus Preferences app in the Settings menu subdirectory it stated that the ibus daemon wasn't running and did I want to start it? I said yes and it started, displayed the preferences gui and its icon in the system tray. Closing the gui I ran "sudo hp-plugin". I first let it try to connect to the HP site and automatically download and install the proprietary plugin. That failed with some errors in its python scripts (which I didn't capture), so I took the second option and selected the hplip-3.10.9-plugin.run file. The program said the plugin successfully installed, but when it opened the printer selection dialog there were no printers listed and the refresh button didn't help.
I uninstalled the 3.10.9 driver and tried the 3.11.3 driver and plugin. The results were the same.
There is another peculiarity about the printer. When I plug it in, instead of telling me it is a printer I get a notice that a CDROM device has been plugged in. It never did that before this system tray icon problem appeared, which I believe is either an xserver and/or bus problem (d? i?). Here is the CDROM info:
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