Posted on 08-09-2012 03:35 PM
I have been unable to add IP printers via DNS host names with Mountain Lion, but this appears to work in Lion and Snow Leopard. The host name does resolve properly elsewhere, it just appears to be a problem in the printers interface. Anyone else seeing this or know of a why?
Posted on 08-10-2012 08:37 AM
Are you using just the printer's host name or its fully qualified domain name? Does FQDN work?
Posted on 08-10-2012 08:47 AM
We're using FQDN.
Posted on 10-10-2012 05:24 AM
Seeing that here too… We get feedback that the name is "Invalid or Incomplete Address" unless we use the FQDN. 10.8.2 did not resolve the issue.
Posted on 10-10-2012 08:04 AM
What happens if you nslookup your printer?
Posted on 10-26-2012 12:53 PM
Craig,
I'm seeing the same odd behavior that you are seeing. If I type in the FDQN of the printer I will get "Incomplete and invalid address". Here is where it gets strange though, if I type in the IP address of the printer first I will get "Complete and valid address" and if I delete out the IP address and type in the FDQN I then will get it to say "Complete and valid address" for the FQDN of the printer. I can even quit out of system preferences and open it back up and just type in the FDQN of the printer and it will say "Complete and valid address". I have verified this behavior with a brand new MacBook Pro 13" Mid 2012 using the version of the OS that shipped with the computer which was 10.8 by the way. I'm experiencing the same behavior with a 10.8.2 image I created. Is anyone else besides Craig and I seeing this sort of behavior and know what is causing it and how to fix it?
Mike
Posted on 10-26-2012 02:40 PM
yep, i'm seeing it too.
Seems to just be a UI bug- I ignored the error, and my HP printer driver was auto-selected and and the printer installed without any issues.
Posted on 10-29-2012 01:43 PM
We are seeing this issue too.
Posted on 10-29-2012 03:20 PM
Yep me too. Never mind though ive always just added printers via a script.
Posted on 11-13-2012 09:46 AM
We have 1,200 printers. Our users add and remove them all of the time. Or at least they could until now. As Michael stated previously, we too can add by IP address and then swap the IP for the FQDN and it will still work, including auto-detect the printer type and location information.
There is definitely some kind of OS bug here. We had the problem with 10.8 and now 10.8.2.
Posted on 11-13-2012 11:19 AM
I filed a bug report with Apple on this issue. They requested some additional information, which I provided, and now I am waiting for a response from them. I will update my post as soon as I hear back from them. But feel free to lodge a complaint/bug report with Apple. Maybe they will fix the bug faster if more people complain. ;-)
Posted on 11-13-2012 11:57 AM
Just yesterday, we added a new printer using the FQDN and it came back with the same message you all have seen. I let it show the error and completed the setup and the printing is just fine. I suggest it is a visual error as the printer printed just fine.
Posted on 11-13-2012 12:16 PM
@mconnors, yeah, if you complete the adding of the printer and ignore the message you can specify the print driver and other parameters and the printer will work properly. I think it's a bit more than a visual error though as the computer never communicates with the printer like it should to properly choose the printer driver. So not only does the end user have to assume they didn't make a typo when they typed in the address they must also know how to properly choose the model of the printer. For my staff, those are two things I'd rather not leave to chance. This "issue" has never been a problem in any of the previous versions of the Mac OS. We've been adding printers using this method since the first release of Mac OS X. Hopefully Apple will identify and fix the issue.
Posted on 11-13-2012 01:17 PM
@mpermann- in my testing the printer driver selection DID take place despite the error.
Posted on 11-14-2012 06:23 AM
@nkalister - That's interesting. It seems to be very inconsistent as to what does and doesn't work for people. My test system is a 13" MacBook Pro 9,2 that I did a manual install using Mac OS 10.8.2 downloaded from the App Store and driver installs from Apple's download site. I didn't want to use a system that was imaged using Casper in case the problem was being caused by Casper. Do you know what you're running your DNS servers on? Ours is hosted on Windows 2003 server.
Posted on 10-24-2013 06:26 AM
I received an email from Apple on 10-22-2013 stating they believe this bug is fixed in the latest release of Mavericks. I installed a fresh Mac OS 10.9 on the test box and was able to successfully add printers using the FQDN without the oddities that I had experienced under Mac OS 10.8.x. I guess this means they have no plans to actually fix the issue under 10.8.x.