Using
Abbreviations
for
A
ttribute
Names
and
V
alues
Resuming
a
P
aused
Queue
Resuming
a
paused
queue
allo
ws
the
sp o oler
to
sc
hedule
jobs
in
the
queue
to
ph
ysical
prin
ters.
Y
ou
can
resume
one
or
more
queues
with
a
single
command.
T
o
resume
queues
Queue1
and
Queue2 ,
en
ter:
pdresume
-c
queue
Queue1
Queue2
The
queue
states
c
hange
to
ready ,
and
HPDPS
sc
hedules
jobs
in
the
queues
to
the
ph
ysical
prin
ters
asso
ciated
with
the
queues.
Deleting
Jobs
from
Queues
and
from
the
Spooler
Y
ou
can
delete
an
y
job
whose
state
is
not
unknown
or
terminating
.
Use
the
following
pro cedures
to
delete
jobs.
Deleting
P
ending,
P
aused,
or
Held
Jobs
from
the
Queue
T
o
delete
jobs
in
a
queue
that
are
in
either
the
pending ,
paused ,
or
held
states,
p erform
the
following
steps:
Note:
Deleting
paused
or
held
jobs
might
not
alwa
ys
b e
appropriate.
Y
ou
might
w
an
t
to
determine
the
reason
the
job
is
paused
or
held
and,
if
necessary
,
p erform
tasks
so
that
the
job
will
prin
t.
See
\Deleting
a
Queue
that
Con
tains
Held
or
P
aused
Jobs"
for
further
information.
1.
P
ause
the
queue.
F
or
example:
pdpause
-c
queue
Queue3
Y
ou
pause
the
queue
so
that
an
y
jobs
that
y
ou
w
an
t
to
delete
will
not
b e
sc
heduled
for
prin
ting.
2.
Determine
whic
h
jobs
are
in
the
queue.
Refer
to
\Querying
for
Jobs
in
the
Queue"
for
a
description
of
ho
w
to
nd
out
whic
h
jobs
are
in
a
queue.
3.
Use
either
the
pdrm
or
the
pddelete
command
to
delete
a
job
or
jobs
in
the
queue.
Iden
tify
the
jobs
with
their
global
job
iden
tier
n
um
b ers.
T
o
delete
t
w
o
jobs
con
tained
in
a
queue
in
sp o oler
Spool3 ,
en
ter:
pdrm
Spool3:4628700042
Spool3:4628700035
9-18
Managing
the
Spooler,
Logical
Printers,
and
Queues