.Why does Julia's game have a team of pokemon lead by a Zoroark named Onyx- is she playing Amelia's copy. Aurora:.Preparing all of her glamorous pokemon for battle. Alexander: Julia, do you want to battle me or Aurora first?
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I held documents in print queue for several weeks while I had my printer packed for moving. System still backed up using Time Machine during this time. Before I reconnected printer, in trying to resolve another issue, I used Onyx software and deleted the cache (which apparently included the print queue). Now I want to recover the documents in the print queue from my time Machine back up but I am unable to find them.Where does OS X 10.6 put the data to print documents from the print queue? What is the name of the file or folder where they are stored? I think the misunderstanding is in using the term printer cache. I am not sure what you mean by that.
I took a look at Onyx in Lion and the only item I could find that might be what you mean is CUPS jobs. Is this what you mean?At least in Lion, when only the CUPS jobs was checked, it did not delete the jobs that were queued up to print.The only way to be sure if yoiur print jobs were retained is to use the Terminal command:sudo ls /private/var/spool/cupsYou will be prompted for your password which will not appear as you type it. Any files that begin with the letter ' d' are your queued print jobs. Any files that begin with the letter ' c' are the parameters for the corresponding print job.If you don't find any queued print jobs by using that Terminal command, you have lost your print jobs. Time Machine does not back up any of the spooled jobs or the control files from /var/spool/cups.
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I think the misunderstanding is in using the term printer cache. I am not sure what you mean by that. I took a look at Onyx in Lion and the only item I could find that might be what you mean is CUPS jobs. Is this what you mean?At least in Lion, when only the CUPS jobs was checked, it did not delete the jobs that were queued up to print.The only way to be sure if yoiur print jobs were retained is to use the Terminal command:sudo ls /private/var/spool/cupsYou will be prompted for your password which will not appear as you type it. Any files that begin with the letter ' d' are your queued print jobs. Any files that begin with the letter ' c' are the parameters for the corresponding print job.If you don't find any queued print jobs by using that Terminal command, you have lost your print jobs.
Time Machine does not back up any of the spooled jobs or the control files from /var/spool/cups. Tomfromflagstaff wrote:Yes, I assume that the CUPS job is what caused my difficulty.And they are gone.As I mentioned, I only tried Onyx in 10.7.x. Deleting the cache for the CUPS jobs did not actually remove a print job I had spooled. I was able to 'see' the file beginning the the ' d' in /private/var/spool/cups and move it to my Desktop.Did you try the Terminal comand I had in my last post to see if there are any files in the spool directory? You will not be able to see the files themselves as even administrators do not have enough privileges to view that directory. The best you can do is use the sudo command to list the files.The long and short of it is that if the files are not in /private/var/spool/cups, they are gone.If I understand you correctly, restoring my system to the Time Machine back-up prior to performing this maintenance will not restore my system to it's state (including these print files) at the time of the back-up?
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How can that be? My understanding was that Time Machine backed-up everything.Are there other vital files that Time Machine does not back up?That is my understanding based on what I see in 10.7.x.
Time Machine does not back up any caches or any of the files in /private/var/spool/cups. Time Machine will also not back up any other caches or system logs. I don't have a list of what it does not back up. I am not even sure if there is such a list available to users. Apple Footer.This site contains user submitted content, comments and opinions and is for informational purposes only. Apple may provide or recommend responses as a possible solution based on the information provided; every potential issue may involve several factors not detailed in the conversations captured in an electronic forum and Apple can therefore provide no guarantee as to the efficacy of any proposed solutions on the community forums. Apple disclaims any and all liability for the acts, omissions and conduct of any third parties in connection with or related to your use of the site.
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January 2023
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