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author | Gerald Carter <jerry@samba.org> | 2003-07-16 05:34:56 +0000 |
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committer | Gerald Carter <jerry@samba.org> | 2003-07-16 05:34:56 +0000 |
commit | 4a090ba06a54f5da179ac02bb307cc03d08831bf (patch) | |
tree | ed652ef36be7f16682c358816334f969a22f1c27 /docs/htmldocs/printing.html | |
parent | 95fe82670032a3a43571b46d7bbf2c26bc8cdcd9 (diff) | |
download | samba-4a090ba06a54f5da179ac02bb307cc03d08831bf.tar.gz samba-4a090ba06a54f5da179ac02bb307cc03d08831bf.tar.bz2 samba-4a090ba06a54f5da179ac02bb307cc03d08831bf.zip |
trying to get HEAD building again. If you want the code
prior to this merge, checkout HEAD_PRE_3_0_0_BETA_3_MERGE
(This used to be commit adb98e7b7cd0f025b52c570e4034eebf4047b1ad)
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/htmldocs/printing.html')
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1 files changed, 2219 insertions, 560 deletions
diff --git a/docs/htmldocs/printing.html b/docs/htmldocs/printing.html index 620aa5e8ba..089bba6e0f 100644 --- a/docs/htmldocs/printing.html +++ b/docs/htmldocs/printing.html @@ -1,581 +1,2240 @@ -<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd"> -<html><head><meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1"><title>Chapter�13.�Printing Support</title><link rel="stylesheet" href="samba.css" type="text/css"><meta name="generator" content="DocBook XSL Stylesheets V1.59.1"><link rel="home" href="index.html" title="SAMBA Project Documentation"><link rel="up" href="optional.html" title="Part�III.�Advanced Configuration"><link rel="previous" href="groupmapping.html" title="Chapter�12.�Configuring Group Mapping"><link rel="next" href="CUPS-printing.html" title="Chapter�14.�CUPS Printing Support"></head><body bgcolor="white" text="black" link="#0000FF" vlink="#840084" alink="#0000FF"><div class="navheader"><table width="100%" summary="Navigation header"><tr><th colspan="3" align="center">Chapter�13.�Printing Support</th></tr><tr><td width="20%" align="left"><a accesskey="p" href="groupmapping.html">Prev</a>�</td><th width="60%" align="center">Part�III.�Advanced Configuration</th><td width="20%" align="right">�<a accesskey="n" href="CUPS-printing.html">Next</a></td></tr></table><hr></div><div class="chapter" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><h2 class="title"><a name="printing"></a>Chapter�13.�Printing Support</h2></div><div><div class="author"><h3 class="author">Gerald (Jerry) Carter</h3><div class="affiliation"><span class="orgname">Samba Team<br></span><div class="address"><p><tt><<a href="mailto:jerry@samba.org">jerry@samba.org</a>></tt></p></div></div></div></div><div><div class="author"><h3 class="author">Patrick Powell</h3><div class="affiliation"><div class="address"><p><tt><<a href="mailto:papowell@lprng.org">papowell@lprng.org</a>></tt></p></div></div></div></div><div><p class="pubdate"> (3 May 2001) </p></div></div><div class="toc"><p><b>Table of Contents</b></p><dl><dt><a href="printing.html#id2886394">Introduction</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2886510">Configuration</a></dt><dd><dl><dt><a href="printing.html#id2886557">Creating [print$]</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2886789">Setting Drivers for Existing Printers</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2886888">Support a large number of printers</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2886995">Adding New Printers via the Windows NT APW</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2887127">Samba and Printer Ports</a></dt></dl></dd><dt><a href="printing.html#id2886128">The Imprints Toolset</a></dt><dd><dl><dt><a href="printing.html#id2886155">What is Imprints?</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2887231">Creating Printer Driver Packages</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2887251">The Imprints server</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2887275">The Installation Client</a></dt></dl></dd><dt><a href="printing.html#id2886236">Diagnosis</a></dt><dd><dl><dt><a href="printing.html#id2886243">Introduction</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2887448">Debugging printer problems</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2887515">What printers do I have?</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2887557">Setting up printcap and print servers</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2887691">Job sent, no output</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2888240">Job sent, strange output</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2888316">Raw PostScript printed</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2888334">Advanced Printing</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2888360">Real debugging</a></dt></dl></dd></dl></div><div class="sect1" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both"><a name="id2886394"></a>Introduction</h2></div></div><p>Beginning with the 2.2.0 release, Samba supports -the native Windows NT printing mechanisms implemented via -MS-RPC (i.e. the SPOOLSS named pipe). Previous versions of -Samba only supported LanMan printing calls.</p><p>The additional functionality provided by the new -SPOOLSS support includes:</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p>Support for downloading printer driver - files to Windows 95/98/NT/2000 clients upon demand. - </p></li><li><p>Uploading of printer drivers via the - Windows NT Add Printer Wizard (APW) or the - Imprints tool set (refer to <a href="http://imprints.sourceforge.net" target="_top">http://imprints.sourceforge.net</a>). - </p></li><li><p>Support for the native MS-RPC printing - calls such as StartDocPrinter, EnumJobs(), etc... (See - the MSDN documentation at <a href="http://msdn.microsoft.com/" target="_top">http://msdn.microsoft.com/</a> - for more information on the Win32 printing API) - </p></li><li><p>Support for NT Access Control Lists (ACL) - on printer objects</p></li><li><p>Improved support for printer queue manipulation - through the use of an internal databases for spooled job - information</p></li></ul></div><p> -There has been some initial confusion about what all this means -and whether or not it is a requirement for printer drivers to be -installed on a Samba host in order to support printing from Windows -clients. As a side note, Samba does not use these drivers in any way to process -spooled files. They are utilized entirely by the clients. -</p><p> -The following MS KB article, may be of some help if you are dealing with -Windows 2000 clients: <span class="emphasis"><em>How to Add Printers with No User -Interaction in Windows 2000</em></span> -</p><p> -<a href="http://support.microsoft.com/support/kb/articles/Q189/1/05.ASP" target="_top">http://support.microsoft.com/support/kb/articles/Q189/1/05.ASP</a> -</p></div><div class="sect1" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both"><a name="id2886510"></a>Configuration</h2></div></div><div class="warning" style="margin-left: 0.5in; margin-right: 0.5in;"><h3 class="title">[print$] vs. [printer$]</h3><p> -Previous versions of Samba recommended using a share named [printer$]. -This name was taken from the printer$ service created by Windows 9x -clients when a printer was shared. Windows 9x printer servers always have -a printer$ service which provides read-only access via no -password in order to support printer driver downloads. -</p><p> -However, the initial implementation allowed for a -parameter named <i><tt>printer driver location</tt></i> -to be used on a per share basis to specify the location of -the driver files associated with that printer. Another -parameter named <i><tt>printer driver</tt></i> provided -a means of defining the printer driver name to be sent to -the client. -</p></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2886557"></a>Creating [print$]</h3></div></div><p> -In order to support the uploading of printer driver -files, you must first configure a file share named [print$]. -The name of this share is hard coded in Samba's internals so -the name is very important (print$ is the service used by -Windows NT print servers to provide support for printer driver -download). -</p><p>You should modify the server's smb.conf file to add the global -parameters and to create the -following file share (of course, some of the parameter values, -such as 'path' are arbitrary and should be replaced with -appropriate values for your site):</p><pre class="programlisting"> -[global] - ; members of the ntadmin group should be able - ; to add drivers and set printer properties - ; root is implicitly a 'printer admin' - printer admin = @ntadmin - -[print$] - path = /usr/local/samba/printers - guest ok = yes - browseable = yes - read only = yes - ; since this share is configured as read only, then we need - ; a 'write list'. Check the file system permissions to make - ; sure this account can copy files to the share. If this - ; is setup to a non-root account, then it should also exist - ; as a 'printer admin' - write list = @ntadmin,root -</pre><p>The <a href="smb.conf.5.html#WRITELIST" target="_top"><i><tt> -write list</tt></i></a> is used to allow administrative -level user accounts to have write access in order to update files -on the share. See the <a href="smb.conf.5.html" target="_top">smb.conf(5) -man page</a> for more information on configuring file shares.</p><p>The requirement for <a href="smb.conf.5.html#GUESTOK" target="_top"><b>guest -ok = yes</b></a> depends upon how your -site is configured. If users will be guaranteed to have -an account on the Samba host, then this is a non-issue.</p><div class="note" style="margin-left: 0.5in; margin-right: 0.5in;"><h3 class="title">Author's Note</h3><p> -The non-issue is that if all your Windows NT users are guaranteed to be -authenticated by the Samba server (such as a domain member server and the NT -user has already been validated by the Domain Controller in -order to logon to the Windows NT console), then guest access -is not necessary. Of course, in a workgroup environment where -you just want to be able to print without worrying about -silly accounts and security, then configure the share for -guest access. You'll probably want to add <a href="smb.conf.5.html#MAPTOGUEST" target="_top"><b>map to guest = Bad User -</b></a> in the [global] section as well. Make sure -you understand what this parameter does before using it -though. --jerry -</p></div><p>In order for a Windows NT print server to support -the downloading of driver files by multiple client architectures, -it must create subdirectories within the [print$] service -which correspond to each of the supported client architectures. -Samba follows this model as well.</p><p>Next create the directory tree below the [print$] share -for each architecture you wish to support.</p><p><tt> -[print$]----- - |-W32X86 ; "Windows NT x86" - |-WIN40 ; "Windows 95/98" - |-W32ALPHA ; "Windows NT Alpha_AXP" - |-W32MIPS ; "Windows NT R4000" - |-W32PPC ; "Windows NT PowerPC" -</tt></p><div class="warning" style="margin-left: 0.5in; margin-right: 0.5in;"><h3 class="title">ATTENTION! REQUIRED PERMISSIONS</h3><p> -In order to currently add a new driver to you Samba host, -one of two conditions must hold true: -</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p>The account used to connect to the Samba host - must have a uid of 0 (i.e. a root account)</p></li><li><p>The account used to connect to the Samba host - must be a member of the <a href="smb.conf.5.html#PRINTERADMIN" target="_top"><i><tt>printer - admin</tt></i></a> list.</p></li></ul></div><p> -Of course, the connected account must still possess access -to add files to the subdirectories beneath [print$]. Remember -that all file shares are set to 'read only' by default. -</p></div><p> -Once you have created the required [print$] service and -associated subdirectories, simply log onto the Samba server using -a root (or <i><tt>printer admin</tt></i>) account -from a Windows NT 4.0/2k client. Open "Network Neighbourhood" or -"My Network Places" and browse for the Samba host. Once you have located -the server, navigate to the "Printers..." folder. -You should see an initial listing of printers -that matches the printer shares defined on your Samba host. -</p></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2886789"></a>Setting Drivers for Existing Printers</h3></div></div><p>The initial listing of printers in the Samba host's -Printers folder will have no real printer driver assigned -to them. This defaults to a NULL string to allow the use -of the local Add Printer Wizard on NT/2000 clients. -Attempting to view the printer properties for a printer -which has this default driver assigned will result in -the error message:</p><p> -<span class="emphasis"><em>Device settings cannot be displayed. The driver -for the specified printer is not installed, only spooler -properties will be displayed. Do you want to install the -driver now?</em></span> -</p><p> -Click "No" in the error dialog and you will be presented with -the printer properties window. The way to assign a driver to a -printer is to either -</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p>Use the "New Driver..." button to install - a new printer driver, or</p></li><li><p>Select a driver from the popup list of - installed drivers. Initially this list will be empty.</p></li></ul></div><p>If you wish to install printer drivers for client -operating systems other than "Windows NT x86", you will need -to use the "Sharing" tab of the printer properties dialog.</p><p>Assuming you have connected with a root account, you -will also be able modify other printer properties such as -ACLs and device settings using this dialog box.</p><p>A few closing comments for this section, it is possible -on a Windows NT print server to have printers -listed in the Printers folder which are not shared. Samba does -not make this distinction. By definition, the only printers of -which Samba is aware are those which are specified as shares in -<tt>smb.conf</tt>.</p><p>Another interesting side note is that Windows NT clients do -not use the SMB printer share, but rather can print directly -to any printer on another Windows NT host using MS-RPC. This -of course assumes that the printing client has the necessary -privileges on the remote host serving the printer. The default -permissions assigned by Windows NT to a printer gives the "Print" -permissions to the "Everyone" well-known group. -</p></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2886888"></a>Support a large number of printers</h3></div></div><p>One issue that has arisen during the development -phase of Samba 2.2 is the need to support driver downloads for -100's of printers. Using the Windows NT APW is somewhat -awkward to say the list. If more than one printer are using the -same driver, the <a href="rpcclient.1.html" target="_top"><b>rpcclient's -setdriver command</b></a> can be used to set the driver -associated with an installed driver. The following is example -of how this could be accomplished:</p><p> -<tt>$ </tt><b><tt>rpcclient pogo -U root%secret -c "enumdrivers"</tt></b> -</p><pre class="programlisting"> -Domain=[NARNIA] OS=[Unix] Server=[Samba 2.2.0-alpha3] - -[Windows NT x86] -Printer Driver Info 1: - Driver Name: [HP LaserJet 4000 Series PS] - -Printer Driver Info 1: - Driver Name: [HP LaserJet 2100 Series PS] - -Printer Driver Info 1: - Driver Name: [HP LaserJet 4Si/4SiMX PS] -</pre><p> -<tt>$ </tt><b><tt>rpcclient pogo -U root%secret -c "enumprinters"</tt></b> +<html><head><meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1"><title>Chapter�18.�Classical Printing Support</title><link rel="stylesheet" href="samba.css" type="text/css"><meta name="generator" content="DocBook XSL Stylesheets V1.60.1"><link rel="home" href="index.html" title="SAMBA Project Documentation"><link rel="up" href="optional.html" title="Part�III.�Advanced Configuration"><link rel="previous" href="msdfs.html" title="Chapter�17.�Hosting a Microsoft Distributed File System tree on Samba"><link rel="next" href="CUPS-printing.html" title="Chapter�19.�CUPS Printing Support in Samba 3.0"></head><body bgcolor="white" text="black" link="#0000FF" vlink="#840084" alink="#0000FF"><div class="navheader"><table width="100%" summary="Navigation header"><tr><th colspan="3" align="center">Chapter�18.�Classical Printing Support</th></tr><tr><td width="20%" align="left"><a accesskey="p" href="msdfs.html">Prev</a>�</td><th width="60%" align="center">Part�III.�Advanced Configuration</th><td width="20%" align="right">�<a accesskey="n" href="CUPS-printing.html">Next</a></td></tr></table><hr></div><div class="chapter" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h2 class="title"><a name="printing"></a>Chapter�18.�Classical Printing Support</h2></div><div><div class="author"><h3 class="author"><span class="firstname">Kurt</span> <span class="surname">Pfeifle</span></h3><div class="affiliation"><span class="orgname"> Danka Deutschland GmbH <br></span><div class="address"><p><tt class="email"><<a href="mailto:kpfeifle@danka.de">kpfeifle@danka.de</a>></tt></p></div></div></div></div><div><div class="author"><h3 class="author"><span class="firstname">Gerald</span> <span class="othername">(Jerry)</span> <span class="surname">Carter</span></h3><div class="affiliation"><span class="orgname">Samba Team<br></span><div class="address"><p><tt class="email"><<a href="mailto:jerry@samba.org">jerry@samba.org</a>></tt></p></div></div></div></div><div><p class="pubdate">May 32, 2003</p></div></div><div></div></div><div class="toc"><p><b>Table of Contents</b></p><dl><dt><a href="printing.html#id2934522">Features and Benefits</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2934590">Technical Introduction</a></dt><dd><dl><dt><a href="printing.html#id2934627">What happens if you send a Job from a Client</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2934698">Printing Related Configuration Parameters</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2935615">Parameters Recommended for Use</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2935946">Parameters for Backwards Compatibility</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2936054">Parameters no longer in use</a></dt></dl></dd><dt><a href="printing.html#id2936147">A simple Configuration to Print with Samba-3</a></dt><dd><dl><dt><a href="printing.html#id2936216">Verification of "Settings in Use" with testparm</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2936305">A little Experiment to warn you</a></dt></dl></dd><dt><a href="printing.html#id2936612">Extended Sample Configuration to Print with Samba-3</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2936715">Detailed Explanation of the Example's Settings</a></dt><dd><dl><dt><a href="printing.html#id2936728">The [global] Section</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2937111">The [printers] Section</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2937440">Any [my_printer_name] Section</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2937660">Print Commands</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2937711">Default Print Commands for various Unix Print Subsystems</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2938236">Setting up your own Print Commands</a></dt></dl></dd><dt><a href="printing.html#id2938516">Innovations in Samba Printing since 2.2</a></dt><dd><dl><dt><a href="printing.html#id2938681">Client Drivers on Samba Server for Point'n'Print</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2938833">The [printer$] Section is removed from Samba-3</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2938945">Creating the [print$] Share</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2939016">Parameters in the [print$] Section</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2939247">Subdirectory Structure in [print$]</a></dt></dl></dd><dt><a href="printing.html#id2939408">Installing Drivers into [print$]</a></dt><dd><dl><dt><a href="printing.html#id2939503">Setting Drivers for existing Printers with a Client GUI</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2939686">Setting Drivers for existing Printers with +rpcclient</a></dt></dl></dd><dt><a href="printing.html#id2941408">"The Proof of the Pudding lies in the Eating" (Client Driver Install +Procedure)</a></dt><dd><dl><dt><a href="printing.html#id2941428">The first Client Driver Installation</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2941626">IMPORTANT! Setting Device Modes on new Printers</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2941915">Further Client Driver Install Procedures</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2942010">Always make first Client Connection as root or "printer admin"</a></dt></dl></dd><dt><a href="printing.html#id2942152">Other Gotchas</a></dt><dd><dl><dt><a href="printing.html#id2942185">Setting Default Print Options for the Client Drivers</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2942622">Supporting large Numbers of Printers</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2942924">Adding new Printers with the Windows NT APW</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2943168">Weird Error Message Cannot connect under a +different Name</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2943267">Be careful when assembling Driver Files</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2943612">Samba and Printer Ports</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2943683">Avoiding the most common Misconfigurations of the Client Driver</a></dt></dl></dd><dt><a href="printing.html#id2943705">The Imprints Toolset</a></dt><dd><dl><dt><a href="printing.html#id2943751">What is Imprints?</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2943792">Creating Printer Driver Packages</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2943811">The Imprints Server</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2943835">The Installation Client</a></dt></dl></dd><dt><a href="printing.html#id2943987">Add Network Printers at Logon without User Interaction</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2944316">The addprinter command</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2944362">Migration of "Classical" printing to Samba-3</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2944531">Publishing Printer Information in Active Directory or LDAP</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2944545">Common Errors and Problems</a></dt><dd><dl><dt><a href="printing.html#id2944558">I give my root password but I don't get access</a></dt><dt><a href="printing.html#id2944591">My printjobs get spooled into the spooling directory, but then get lost</a></dt></dl></dd></dl></div><div class="sect1" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both"><a name="id2934522"></a>Features and Benefits</h2></div></div><div></div></div><p> +Printing is often a mission-critical service for the users. Samba can +provide this service reliably and seamlessly for a client network +consisting of Windows workstations. +</p><p> +A Samba-3.0 print service may be run on a Standalone or a Domain +member server, side by side with file serving functions, or on a +dedicated print server. It can be made as tight or as loosely secured +as needs dictate. Configurations may be simple or complex. Available +authentication schemes are essentially the same as described for file +services in previous chapters. Overall, Samba's printing support is +now able to replace an NT or Windows 2000 print server full-square, +with additional benefits in many cases. Clients may download and +install drivers and printers through their familiar "Point'n'Print" +mechanism. Printer installations executed by "Logon Scripts" are no +problem. Administrators can upload and manage drivers to be used by +clients through the familiar "Add Printer Wizard". As an additional +benefit, driver and printer management may be run from the command line +or through scripts, making it more efficient in case of large numbers +of printers. If a central accounting of print jobs (tracking every +single page and supplying the raw data for all sorts of statistical +reports) is required, this is best supported by CUPS as the print +subsystem underneath the Samba hood. +</p><p> +This chapter deals with the foundations of Samba printing, as they +implemented by the more traditional UNIX (BSD- and System V-style) +printing systems. Many things apply to CUPS, the newer Common UNIX +Printing System, too; so if you use CUPS, you might be tempted to jump +to the next chapter -- but you will certainly miss a few things if you +do so. Better read this chapter too. +</p><div class="note" style="margin-left: 0.5in; margin-right: 0.5in;"><h3 class="title">Note</h3><p> +Most of the given examples have been verified on Windows XP +Professional clients. Where this document describes the responses to +commands given, bear in mind that Windows 2000 clients are very +similar, but may differ in details. Windows NT is somewhat different +again. +</p></div></div><div class="sect1" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both"><a name="id2934590"></a>Technical Introduction</h2></div></div><div></div></div><p> +Samba's printing support always relies on the installed print +subsystem of the Unix OS it runs on. Samba is a "middleman". It takes +printfiles from Windows (or other SMB) clients and passes them to the +real printing system for further processing. Therefore it needs to +"talk" to two sides: to the Windows print clients and to the Unix +printing system. Hence we must differentiate between the various +client OS types each of which behave differently, as well as the +various UNIX print subsystems, which themselves have different +features and are accessed differently. This part of the Samba HOWTO +Collection deals with the "traditional" way of Unix printing first; +the next chapter covers in great detail the more modern +<span class="emphasis"><em>Common UNIX Printing System</em></span> +(CUPS). + +</p><div class="important" style="margin-left: 0.5in; margin-right: 0.5in;"><h3 class="title">Important</h3><p>CUPS users, be warned: don't just jump on to the next +chapter. You might miss important information contained only +here!</p></div><p> +</p><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2934627"></a>What happens if you send a Job from a Client</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +To successfully print a job from a Windows client via a Samba +print server to a UNIX printer, there are 6 (potentially 7) +stages: +</p><div class="orderedlist"><ol type="1"><li><p>Windows opens a connection to the printershare</p></li><li><p>Samba must authenticate the user</p></li><li><p>Windows sends a copy of the printfile over the network +into Samba's spooling area</p></li><li><p>Windows closes the connection again</p></li><li><p>Samba invokes the print command to hand the file over +to the UNIX print subsystem's spooling area</p></li><li><p>The Unix print subsystem processes the print +job</p></li><li><p>The printfile may need to be explicitly deleted +from the Samba spooling area.</p></li></ol></div></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2934698"></a>Printing Related Configuration Parameters</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +There are a number of configuration parameters in + controlling Samba's printing +behaviour. Please also refer to the man page for smb.conf to +acquire an overview about these. As with other parameters, there are +Global Level (tagged with a "<span class="emphasis"><em>G</em></span>" in the listings) and +Service Level ("<span class="emphasis"><em>S</em></span>") parameters. +</p><div class="variablelist"><dl><dt><span class="term">Service Level Parameters</span></dt><dd><p>These <span class="emphasis"><em>may</em></span> go into the +<i class="parameter"><tt>[global]</tt></i> section of +. In this case they define the default +behaviour of all individual or service level shares (provided those +don't have a different setting defined for the same parameter, thus +overriding the global default).</p></dd><dt><span class="term">Global Parameters</span></dt><dd><p>These <span class="emphasis"><em>may not</em></span> go into individual +shares. If they go in by error, the "testparm" utility can discover +this (if you run it) and tell you so.</p></dd></dl></div></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2935615"></a>Parameters Recommended for Use</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p>The following <tt class="filename">smb.conf</tt> parameters directly +related to printing are used in Samba-3. See also the +<tt class="filename">smb.conf</tt> man page for detailed explanations: +</p><p><b>List of printing related parameters in Samba-3.�</b> +</p><div class="itemizedlist"><p class="title"><b>Global level parameters:</b></p><ul type="disc"><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>addprinter command (G)</tt></i></p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>deleteprinter command (G)</tt></i></p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>disable spoolss (G)</tt></i></p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>enumports command (G)</tt></i></p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>load printers (G)</tt></i></p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>lpq cache time (G)</tt></i></p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>os2 driver map (G)</tt></i></p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>printcap name (G), printcap (G)</tt></i></p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>show add printer wizard (G)</tt></i></p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>total print jobs (G)</tt></i></p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>use client driver (G)</tt></i></p></li></ul></div><p> + +</p><div class="itemizedlist"><p class="title"><b>Service level parameters:</b></p><ul type="disc"><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>hosts allow (S)</tt></i></p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>hosts deny (S)</tt></i></p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>lppause command (S)</tt></i></p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>lpq command (S)</tt></i></p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>lpresume command (S)</tt></i></p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>lprm command (S)</tt></i></p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>max print jobs (S)</tt></i></p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>min print space (S)</tt></i></p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>print command (S)</tt></i></p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>printable (S), print ok (S)</tt></i></p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>printer name (S), printer (S)</tt></i></p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>printer admin (S)</tt></i></p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>printing = [cups|bsd|lprng...] (S)</tt></i></p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>queuepause command (S)</tt></i></p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>queueresume command (S)</tt></i></p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>total print jobs (S)</tt></i></p></li></ul></div><p> +</p><p> +Samba's printing support implements the Microsoft Remote Procedure +Calls (MS-RPC) methods for printing. These are used by Windows NT (and +later) print servers. The old "LanMan" protocol is still supported as +a fallback resort, and for older clients to use. More details will +follow further beneath. +</p></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2935946"></a>Parameters for Backwards Compatibility</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +Two new parameters that were added in Samba 2.2.2, are still present +in Samba-3.0. Both of these options are described in the +<tt class="filename">smb.conf</tt> man page and are disabled by +default. <span class="emphasis"><em>Use them with caution!</em></span> +</p><div class="variablelist"><dl><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>disable spoolss(G)</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p> This is +provided for better support of Samba 2.0.x backwards capability. It +will disable Samba's support for MS-RPC printing and yield identical +printing behaviour to Samba 2.0.x.</p></dd><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>use client driver (G)</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p> was provided +for using local printer drivers on Windows NT/2000 clients. It does +not apply to Windows 95/98/ME clients.</p></dd></dl></div><p><b>Parameters "for backward compatibility only", use with caution.�</b> +</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>disable spoolss (G)</tt></i></p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>use client driver (S)</tt></i></p></li></ul></div><p> +</p></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2936054"></a>Parameters no longer in use</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +Samba users upgrading from 2.2.x to 3.0 need to be aware that some +previously available settings are no longer supported (as was +announced some time ago). Here is a list of them: +</p><p><b>"old" parameters, removed in Samba-3.�</b> +The following <tt class="filename">smb.conf</tt> parameters have been +deprecated already in Samba 2.2 and are now completely removed from +Samba-3. You cannot use them in new 3.0 installations: + +</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>printer driver file (G)</tt></i></p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>total print jobs (G)</tt></i></p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>postscript (S)</tt></i></p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>printer driver (S)</tt></i></p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>printer driver location (S)</tt></i></p></li></ul></div><p> +</p></div></div><div class="sect1" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both"><a name="id2936147"></a>A simple Configuration to Print with Samba-3</h2></div></div><div></div></div><p> +Here is a very simple example configuration for print related settings +in the file. If you compare it with your +own system's , you probably find some +additional parameters included there (as pre-configured by your OS +vendor). Further below is a discussion and explanation of the +parameters. Note, that this example doesn't use many parameters. +However, in many environments these are enough to provide a valid + which enables all clients to print. </p><pre class="programlisting"> -Domain=[NARNIA] OS=[Unix] Server=[Samba 2.2.0-alpha3] - flags:[0x800000] - name:[\\POGO\hp-print] - description:[POGO\\POGO\hp-print,NO DRIVER AVAILABLE FOR THIS PRINTER,] - comment:[] - + [global] + printing = bsd + load printers = yes + + [printers] + path = /var/spool/samba + printable = yes + public = yes + writable = no </pre><p> -<tt>$ </tt><b><tt>rpcclient pogo -U root%secret -c "setdriver hp-print \"HP LaserJet 4000 Series PS\""</tt></b> -</p><pre class="programlisting"> -Domain=[NARNIA] OS=[Unix] Server=[Samba 2.2.0-alpha3] -Successfully set hp-print to driver HP LaserJet 4000 Series PS. -</pre></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2886995"></a>Adding New Printers via the Windows NT APW</h3></div></div><p> -By default, Samba offers all printer shares defined in <tt>smb.conf</tt> -in the "Printers..." folder. Also existing in this folder is the Windows NT -Add Printer Wizard icon. The APW will be show only if -</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p>The connected user is able to successfully - execute an OpenPrinterEx(\\server) with administrative - privileges (i.e. root or <i><tt>printer admin</tt></i>). - </p></li><li><p><a href="smb.conf.5.html#SHOWADDPRINTERWIZARD" target="_top"><i><tt>show - add printer wizard = yes</tt></i></a> (the default). - </p></li></ul></div><p> -In order to be able to use the APW to successfully add a printer to a Samba -server, the <a href="smb.conf.5.html#ADDPRINTERCOMMAND" target="_top"><i><tt>add -printer command</tt></i></a> must have a defined value. The program -hook must successfully add the printer to the system (i.e. -<tt>/etc/printcap</tt> or appropriate files) and -<tt>smb.conf</tt> if necessary. -</p><p> -When using the APW from a client, if the named printer share does -not exist, <b>smbd</b> will execute the <i><tt>add printer -command</tt></i> and reparse to the <tt>smb.conf</tt> -to attempt to locate the new printer share. If the share is still not defined, -an error of "Access Denied" is returned to the client. Note that the -<i><tt>add printer program</tt></i> is executed under the context -of the connected user, not necessarily a root account. -</p><p> -There is a complementary <a href="smb.conf.5.html#DELETEPRINTERCOMMAND" target="_top"><i><tt>delete -printer command</tt></i></a> for removing entries from the "Printers..." -folder. -</p><p> -The following is an example <a href="smb.conf.5.html#ADDPRINTERCOMMAN" target="_top"><i><tt>add printer command</tt></i></a> script. It adds the appropriate entries to <tt>/etc/printcap.local</tt> (change that to what you need) and returns a line of 'Done' which is needed for the whole process to work. -</p><pre class="programlisting"> -#!/bin/sh - -# Script to insert a new printer entry into printcap.local -# -# $1, printer name, used as the descriptive name -# $2, share name, used as the printer name for Linux -# $3, port name -# $4, driver name -# $5, location, used for the device file of the printer -# $6, win9x location - -# -# Make sure we use the location that RedHat uses for local printer defs -PRINTCAP=/etc/printcap.local -DATE=`date +%Y%m%d-%H%M%S` -LP=lp -RESTART="service lpd restart" - -# Keep a copy -cp $PRINTCAP $PRINTCAP.$DATE -# Add the printer to $PRINTCAP -echo "" >> $PRINTCAP -echo "$2|$1:\\" >> $PRINTCAP -echo " :sd=/var/spool/lpd/$2:\\" >> $PRINTCAP -echo " :mx=0:ml=0:sh:\\" >> $PRINTCAP -echo " :lp=/usr/local/samba/var/print/$5.prn:" >> $PRINTCAP - -touch "/usr/local/samba/var/print/$5.prn" >> /tmp/printadd.$$ 2>&1 -chown $LP "/usr/local/samba/var/print/$5.prn" >> /tmp/printadd.$$ 2>&1 - -mkdir /var/spool/lpd/$2 -chmod 700 /var/spool/lpd/$2 -chown $LP /var/spool/lpd/$2 -#echo $1 >> "/usr/local/samba/var/print/$5.prn" -#echo $2 >> "/usr/local/samba/var/print/$5.prn" -#echo $3 >> "/usr/local/samba/var/print/$5.prn" -#echo $4 >> "/usr/local/samba/var/print/$5.prn" -#echo $5 >> "/usr/local/samba/var/print/$5.prn" -#echo $6 >> "/usr/local/samba/var/print/$5.prn" -$RESTART >> "/usr/local/samba/var/print/$5.prn" -# Not sure if this is needed -touch /usr/local/samba/lib/smb.conf -# -# You need to return a value, but I am not sure what it means. -# -echo "Done" -exit 0 -</pre></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2887127"></a>Samba and Printer Ports</h3></div></div><p> -Windows NT/2000 print servers associate a port with each printer. These normally -take the form of LPT1:, COM1:, FILE:, etc... Samba must also support the -concept of ports associated with a printer. By default, only one printer port, -named "Samba Printer Port", exists on a system. Samba does not really a port in -order to print, rather it is a requirement of Windows clients. -</p><p> -Note that Samba does not support the concept of "Printer Pooling" internally -either. This is when a logical printer is assigned to multiple ports as -a form of load balancing or fail over. -</p><p> -If you require that multiple ports be defined for some reason, -<tt>smb.conf</tt> possesses a <a href="smb.conf.5.html#ENUMPORTSCOMMAND" target="_top"><i><tt>enumports -command</tt></i></a> which can be used to define an external program -that generates a listing of ports on a system. -</p></div></div><div class="sect1" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both"><a name="id2886128"></a>The Imprints Toolset</h2></div></div><p>The Imprints tool set provides a UNIX equivalent of the - Windows NT Add Printer Wizard. For complete information, please - refer to the Imprints web site at <a href="http://imprints.sourceforge.net/" target="_top"> - http://imprints.sourceforge.net/</a> as well as the documentation - included with the imprints source distribution. This section will - only provide a brief introduction to the features of Imprints.</p><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2886155"></a>What is Imprints?</h3></div></div><p>Imprints is a collection of tools for supporting the goals - of</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p>Providing a central repository information - regarding Windows NT and 95/98 printer driver packages</p></li><li><p>Providing the tools necessary for creating - the Imprints printer driver packages.</p></li><li><p>Providing an installation client which - will obtain and install printer drivers on remote Samba - and Windows NT 4 print servers.</p></li></ul></div></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2887231"></a>Creating Printer Driver Packages</h3></div></div><p>The process of creating printer driver packages is beyond - the scope of this document (refer to Imprints.txt also included - with the Samba distribution for more information). In short, - an Imprints driver package is a gzipped tarball containing the - driver files, related INF files, and a control file needed by the - installation client.</p></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2887251"></a>The Imprints server</h3></div></div><p>The Imprints server is really a database server that - may be queried via standard HTTP mechanisms. Each printer - entry in the database has an associated URL for the actual - downloading of the package. Each package is digitally signed - via GnuPG which can be used to verify that package downloaded - is actually the one referred in the Imprints database. It is - <span class="emphasis"><em>not</em></span> recommended that this security check - be disabled.</p></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2887275"></a>The Installation Client</h3></div></div><p>More information regarding the Imprints installation client - is available in the <tt>Imprints-Client-HOWTO.ps</tt> - file included with the imprints source package.</p><p>The Imprints installation client comes in two forms.</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p>a set of command line Perl scripts</p></li><li><p>a GTK+ based graphical interface to - the command line perl scripts</p></li></ul></div><p>The installation client (in both forms) provides a means - of querying the Imprints database server for a matching - list of known printer model names as well as a means to - download and install the drivers on remote Samba and Windows - NT print servers.</p><p>The basic installation process is in four steps and - perl code is wrapped around <b>smbclient</b> - and <b>rpcclient</b>.</p><pre class="programlisting"> -foreach (supported architecture for a given driver) -{ - 1. rpcclient: Get the appropriate upload directory - on the remote server - 2. smbclient: Upload the driver files - 3. rpcclient: Issues an AddPrinterDriver() MS-RPC -} - -4. rpcclient: Issue an AddPrinterEx() MS-RPC to actually - create the printer -</pre><p>One of the problems encountered when implementing - the Imprints tool set was the name space issues between - various supported client architectures. For example, Windows - NT includes a driver named "Apple LaserWriter II NTX v51.8" - and Windows 95 calls its version of this driver "Apple - LaserWriter II NTX"</p><p>The problem is how to know what client drivers have - been uploaded for a printer. As astute reader will remember - that the Windows NT Printer Properties dialog only includes - space for one printer driver name. A quick look in the - Windows NT 4.0 system registry at</p><p><tt>HKLM\System\CurrentControlSet\Control\Print\Environment - </tt></p><p>will reveal that Windows NT always uses the NT driver - name. This is ok as Windows NT always requires that at least - the Windows NT version of the printer driver is present. - However, Samba does not have the requirement internally. - Therefore, how can you use the NT driver name if is has not - already been installed?</p><p>The way of sidestepping this limitation is to require - that all Imprints printer driver packages include both the Intel - Windows NT and 95/98 printer drivers and that NT driver is - installed first.</p></div></div><div class="sect1" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both"><a name="id2886236"></a>Diagnosis</h2></div></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2886243"></a>Introduction</h3></div></div><p> -This is a short description of how to debug printing problems with -Samba. This describes how to debug problems with printing from a SMB -client to a Samba server, not the other way around. For the reverse -see the examples/printing directory. -</p><p> -Ok, so you want to print to a Samba server from your PC. The first -thing you need to understand is that Samba does not actually do any -printing itself, it just acts as a middleman between your PC client -and your Unix printing subsystem. Samba receives the file from the PC -then passes the file to a external "print command". What print command -you use is up to you. -</p><p> -The whole things is controlled using options in smb.conf. The most -relevant options (which you should look up in the smb.conf man page) -are: -</p><pre class="programlisting"> - [global] - print command - send a file to a spooler - lpq command - get spool queue status - lprm command - remove a job - [printers] - path = /var/spool/lpd/samba +This is only an example configuration. Many settings, if not +explicitly set to a specific value, are used and set by Samba +implicitly to its own default, because these have been compiled in. +To see all settings, let root use the <b class="command">testparm</b> +utility. <b class="command">testparm</b> also gives warnings if you have +mis-configured certain things. Its complete output is easily 340 lines +and more. You may want to pipe it through a pager program. +</p><p> +The syntax for the configuration file is easy to grasp. You should +know that is not very picky about its +syntax. It has been explained elsewhere in this document. A short +reminder: It even tolerates some spelling errors (like "browsable" +instead of "browseable"). Most spelling is case-insensitive. Also, you +can use "Yes|No" or "True|False" for boolean settings. Lists of names +may be separated by commas, spaces or tabs. +</p><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2936216"></a>Verification of "Settings in Use" with <b class="command">testparm</b></h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +To see all (or at least most) printing related settings in Samba, +including the implicitly used ones, try the command outlined below +(hit "ENTER" twice!). It greps for all occurrences of "lp", "print", +"spool", "driver", "ports" and "[" in testparm's output and gives you +a nice overview about the running smbd's print configuration. (Note +that this command does not show individually created printer shares, +or the spooling paths in each case). Here is the output of my Samba +setup, with exactly the same settings in +as shown above: +</p><pre class="screen"> +<tt class="prompt">root# </tt><b class="userinput"><tt>testparm -v | egrep "(lp|print|spool|driver|ports|\[)"</tt></b> + Load smb config files from /etc/samba/smb.conf.simpleprinting + Processing section "[homes]" + Processing section "[printers]" + + [global] + smb ports = 445 139 + lpq cache time = 10 + total print jobs = 0 + load printers = Yes + printcap name = /etc/printcap + disable spoolss = No + enumports command = + addprinter command = + deleteprinter command = + show add printer wizard = Yes + os2 driver map = + printer admin = + min print space = 0 + max print jobs = 1000 + printable = No + printing = bsd + print command = lpr -r -P'%p' %s + lpq command = lpq -P'%p' + lprm command = lprm -P'%p' %j + lppause command = + lpresume command = + printer name = + use client driver = No + + [homes] + + [printers] + path = /var/spool/samba + printable = Yes + </pre><p> -The following are nice to know about: -</p><pre class="programlisting"> - queuepause command - stop a printer or print queue - queueresume command - start a printer or print queue +You can easily verify which settings were implicitly added by Samba's +default behaviour. <span class="emphasis"><em>Don't forget about this point: it may +be important in your future dealings with Samba.</em></span> +</p><div class="note" style="margin-left: 0.5in; margin-right: 0.5in;"><h3 class="title">Note</h3><p> testparm in Samba-3.0 behaves differently from 2.2.x: used +without the "-v" switch it only shows you the settings actually +written into ! To see the complete +configuration used, add the "-v" parameter to testparm.</p></div></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2936305"></a>A little Experiment to warn you</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +Should you need to troubleshoot at any stage, please always come back +to this point first and verify if "testparm" shows the parameters you +expect! To give you an example from personal experience as a warning, +try to just "comment out" the <i class="parameter"><tt>load printers</tt></i>" +parameter. If your 2.2.x system behaves like mine, you'll see this: +</p><pre class="screen"> +<tt class="prompt">root# </tt>grep "load printers" /etc/samba/smb.conf + # load printers = Yes + # This setting is commented ooouuuuut!! + +<tt class="prompt">root# </tt>testparm -v /etc/samba/smb.conf | egrep "(load printers)" + load printers = Yes + </pre><p> -Example: -</p><pre class="programlisting"> - print command = /usr/bin/lpr -r -P%p %s - lpq command = /usr/bin/lpq -P%p %s - lprm command = /usr/bin/lprm -P%p %j - queuepause command = /usr/sbin/lpc -P%p stop - queuepause command = /usr/sbin/lpc -P%p start +Despite my imagination that the commenting out of this setting should +prevent Samba from publishing my printers, it still did! Oh Boy -- it +cost me quite some time to find out the reason. But I am not fooled +any more... at least not by this ;-) +</p><pre class="screen"> +<tt class="prompt">root# </tt><b class="userinput"><tt>grep -A1 "load printers" /etc/samba/smb.conf</tt></b> + load printers = No + # This setting is what I mean!! + # load printers = Yes + # This setting is commented ooouuuuut!! + +<tt class="prompt">root# </tt><b class="userinput"><tt>testparm -v smb.conf.simpleprinting | egrep "(load printers)"</tt></b> + load printers = No + </pre><p> -Samba should set reasonable defaults for these depending on your -system type, but it isn't clairvoyant. It is not uncommon that you -have to tweak these for local conditions. The commands should -always have fully specified pathnames, as the smdb may not have -the correct PATH values. -</p><p> -When you send a job to Samba to be printed, it will make a temporary -copy of it in the directory specified in the [printers] section. -and it should be periodically cleaned out. The lpr -r option -requests that the temporary copy be removed after printing; If -printing fails then you might find leftover files in this directory, -and it should be periodically cleaned out. Samba used the lpq -command to determine the "job number" assigned to your print job -by the spooler. -</p><p> -The %>letter< are "macros" that get dynamically replaced with appropriate -values when they are used. The %s gets replaced with the name of the spool -file that Samba creates and the %p gets replaced with the name of the -printer. The %j gets replaced with the "job number" which comes from -the lpq output. -</p></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2887448"></a>Debugging printer problems</h3></div></div><p> -One way to debug printing problems is to start by replacing these -command with shell scripts that record the arguments and the contents -of the print file. A simple example of this kind of things might -be: -</p><pre class="programlisting"> - print command = /tmp/saveprint %p %s - - #!/bin/saveprint - # we make sure that we are the right user - /usr/bin/id -p >/tmp/tmp.print - # we run the command and save the error messages - # replace the command with the one appropriate for your system - /usr/bin/lpr -r -P$1 $2 2>>&/tmp/tmp.print +Only when setting the parameter explicitly to +"<i class="parameter"><tt>load printers = No</tt></i>" +would Samba recognize my intentions. So my strong advice is: +</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p>Never rely on "commented out" parameters!</p></li><li><p>Always set it up explicitly as you intend it to +behave.</p></li><li><p>Use <b class="command">testparm</b> to uncover hidden +settings which might not reflect your intentions.</p></li></ul></div><p> +You can have a working Samba print configuration with this +minimal : +</p><pre class="screen"> +<tt class="prompt">root# </tt><b class="userinput"><tt>cat /etc/samba/smb.conf-minimal</tt></b> + [printers] + </pre><p> -Then you print a file and try removing it. You may find that the -print queue needs to be stopped in order to see the queue status -and remove the job: -</p><pre class="programlisting"> +This example should show you that you can use testparm to test any +filename for fitness as a Samba configuration. Actually, we want to +encourage you <span class="emphasis"><em>not</em></span> to change your + on a working system (unless you know +exactly what you are doing)! Don't rely on an assumption that changes +will only take effect after you re-start smbd! This is not the +case. Samba re-reads its every 60 +seconds and on each new client connection. You might have to face +changes for your production clients that you didn't intend to apply at +this time! You will now note a few more interesting things. Let's now +ask <b class="command">testparm</b> what the Samba print configuration +would be, if you used this minimalistic file as your real +: +</p><pre class="screen"> +<tt class="prompt">root# </tt><b class="userinput"><tt> testparm -v /etc/samba/smb.conf-minimal | egrep "(print|lpq|spool|driver|ports|[)"</tt></b> + Processing section "[printers]" + WARNING: [printers] service MUST be printable! + No path in service printers - using /tmp + + lpq cache time = 10 + total print jobs = 0 + load printers = Yes + printcap name = /etc/printcap + disable spoolss = No + enumports command = + addprinter command = + deleteprinter command = + show add printer wizard = Yes + os2 driver map = + printer admin = + min print space = 0 + max print jobs = 1000 + printable = No + printing = bsd + print command = lpr -r -P%p %s + lpq command = lpq -P%p + printer name = + use client driver = No + [printers] + printable = Yes -h4: {42} % echo hi >/tmp/hi -h4: {43} % smbclient //localhost/lw4 -added interface ip=10.0.0.4 bcast=10.0.0.255 nmask=255.255.255.0 -Password: -Domain=[ASTART] OS=[Unix] Server=[Samba 2.0.7] -smb: \> print /tmp/hi -putting file /tmp/hi as hi-17534 (0.0 kb/s) (average 0.0 kb/s) -smb: \> queue -1049 3 hi-17534 -smb: \> cancel 1049 -Error cancelling job 1049 : code 0 -smb: \> cancel 1049 -Job 1049 cancelled -smb: \> queue -smb: \> exit </pre><p> -The 'code 0' indicates that the job was removed. The comment -by the smbclient is a bit misleading on this. -You can observe the command output and then and look at the -/tmp/tmp.print file to see what the results are. You can quickly -find out if the problem is with your printing system. Often people -have problems with their /etc/printcap file or permissions on -various print queues. -</p></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2887515"></a>What printers do I have?</h3></div></div><p> -You can use the 'testprns' program to check to see if the printer -name you are using is recognized by Samba. For example, you can -use: +testparm issued 2 warnings: +</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p>because we didn't specify the +<i class="parameter"><tt>[printers]</tt></i> section as printable, +and</p></li><li><p>because we didn't tell it which spool directory to +use.</p></li></ul></div><p> +However, this was not fatal, and Samba-3.0 will default to values that +will work here. But, please!, don't rely on this and don't use this +example! This was only meant to make you careful to design and specify +your setup to be what you really want it to be. The outcome on your +system may vary for some parameters, since you may have a Samba built +with a different compile-time configuration. +<span class="emphasis"><em>Warning:</em></span> don't put a comment sign <span class="emphasis"><em>at +the end</em></span> of a valid line. It +will cause the parameter to be ignored (just as if you had put the +comment sign at the front). At first I regarded this as a bug in my +Samba version(s). But the man page states: “<span class="quote">Internal whitespace +in a parameter value is retained verbatim.</span>” This means that a +line consisting of, for example, +</p><pre class="screen"> +printing = lprng #This defines LPRng as the printing system" +</pre><p> +will regard the whole of the string after the "=" +sign as the value you want to define. And this is an invalid value +that will be ignored, and a default value used instead.] +</p></div></div><div class="sect1" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both"><a name="id2936612"></a>Extended Sample Configuration to Print with Samba-3</h2></div></div><div></div></div><p> +Here we show a more verbose example configuration for print related +settings in an . Below is a discussion +and explanation of the various parameters. We chose to use BSD-style +printing here, because we guess it is still the most commonly used +system on legacy Linux installations (new installs now predominantly +have CUPS, which is discussed entirely in the next chapter of this +document). Note, that this example explicitly names many parameters +which don't need to be stated because they are set by default. You +might be able to do with a leaner .</p><div class="tip" style="margin-left: 0.5in; margin-right: 0.5in;"><h3 class="title">Tip</h3><p> +if you read access it with the Samba Web Administration Tool (SWAT), +and then write it to disk again, it will be optimized in a way such +that it doesn't contain any superfluous parameters and comments. SWAT +organizes the file for best performance. Remember that each smbd +re-reads the Samba configuration once a minute, and that each +connection spawns an smbd process of its own, so it is not a bad idea +to optimize the in environments with +hundreds or thousands of clients.</p></div><pre class="programlisting"> + [global] + printing = bsd + load printers = yes + show add printer wizard = yes + printcap name = /etc/printcap + printer admin = @ntadmin, root + total print jobs = 100 + lpq cache time = 20 + use client driver = no + + [printers] + comment = All Printers + printable = yes + path = /var/spool/samba + browseable = no + guest ok = yes + public = yes + read only = yes + writable = no + + [my_printer_name] + comment = Printer with Restricted Access + path = /var/spool/samba_my_printer + printer admin = kurt + browseable = yes + printable = yes + writeable = no + hosts allow = 0.0.0.0 + hosts deny = turbo_xp, 10.160.50.23, 10.160.51.60 + guest ok = no +</pre><p> +This <span class="emphasis"><em>also</em></span> is only an example configuration. You +may not find all the settings in your own + (as pre-configured by your OS +vendor). Many configuration parameters, if not explicitly set to a +specific value, are used and set by Samba implicitly to its own +default, because these have been compiled in. To see all settings, let +root use the <b class="command">testparm</b> +utility. <b class="command">testparm</b> also gives warnings if you have +mis-configured certain things.. +</p></div><div class="sect1" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both"><a name="id2936715"></a>Detailed Explanation of the Example's Settings</h2></div></div><div></div></div><p> +Following is a discussion of the settings from above shown example. +</p><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2936728"></a>The [global] Section</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +The <i class="parameter"><tt>[global]</tt></i> section is one of 4 special +sections (along with [<i class="parameter"><tt>[homes]</tt></i>, +<i class="parameter"><tt>[printers]</tt></i> and +<i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i>...) It contains all parameters which +apply to the server as a whole. It is the place for parameters which +have only a "global" meaning (G). It may also contain service level +parameters (S) which then define default settings for all other +sections and shares. This way you can simplify the configuration and +avoid setting the same value repeatedly. (Within each individual +section or share you may however override these globally set "share +level" settings and specify other values). +</p><div class="variablelist"><dl><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>printing = bsd</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p> this causes Samba to use default print commands +applicable for the BSD (a.k.a. RFC 1179 style or LPR/LPD) printing +system. In general, the "printing" parameter informs Samba about the +print subsystem it should expect. Samba supports CUPS, LPD, LPRNG, +SYSV, HPUX, AIX, QNX and PLP. Each of these systems defaults to a +different <i class="parameter"><tt>print command</tt></i> (and other queue control +commands).</p><div class="caution" style="margin-left: 0.5in; margin-right: 0.5in;"><h3 class="title">Caution</h3><p>The <i class="parameter"><tt>printing</tt></i> parameter is +normally a service level parameter. Since it is included here in the +<i class="parameter"><tt>[global]</tt></i> section, it will take effect for all +printer shares that are not defined differently. Samba-3.0 no longer +supports the SOFTQ printing system.</p></div></dd><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>load printers = yes</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p> this tells Samba to create automatically all +available printer shares. "Available" printer shares are discovered by +scanning the printcap file. All created printer shares are also loaded +for browsing. If you use this parameter, you do not need to specify +separate shares for each printer. Each automatically created printer +share will clone the configuration options found in the +<i class="parameter"><tt>[printers]</tt></i> section. (A <i class="parameter"><tt>load printers += no</tt></i> setting will allow you to specify each UNIX printer +you want to share separately, leaving out some you don't want to be +publicly visible and available). </p></dd><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>show add printer wizard = +yes</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p> this setting is normally +enabled by default (even if the parameter is not written into the +). It makes the <span class="guiicon">Add Printer Wizard</span> icon +show up in the <span class="guiicon">Printers</span> folder of the Samba host's +share listing (as shown in <span class="guiicon">Network Neighbourhood</span> or +by the <b class="command">net view</b> command). To disable it, you need to +explicitly set it to <tt class="constant">no</tt> (commenting it out +will not suffice!). The Add Printer Wizard lets you upload printer +drivers to the <i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> share and associate it +with a printer (if the respective queue exists there before the +action), or exchange a printer's driver against any other previously +uploaded driver. </p></dd><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>total print jobs = 100</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p> this setting sets the upper limit to 100 print jobs +being active on the Samba server at any one time. Should a client +submit a job which exceeds this number, a “<span class="quote">no more space +available on server</span>” type of error message will be returned by +Samba to the client. A setting of "0" (the default) means there is +<span class="emphasis"><em>no</em></span> limit at all! +</p></dd><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>printcap name = /etc/printcap</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p> this tells Samba where to look for a list of +available printer names. (If you use CUPS, make sure that a printcap +file is written: this is controlled by the "Printcap" directive of +<tt class="filename">cupsd.conf</tt>). +</p></dd><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>printer admin = @ntadmin</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p> members of the ntadmin group should be able to add +drivers and set printer properties ("ntadmin" is only an example name, +it needs to be a valid UNIX group name); root is implicitly always a +<i class="parameter"><tt>printer admin</tt></i>. The "@" sign precedes group names in +. A printer admin can do anything to +printers via the remote administration interfaces offered by MS-RPC +(see below). Note that the <i class="parameter"><tt>printer admin</tt></i> +parameter is normally a share level parameter, so you may associate +different groups to different printer shares in larger installations, +if you use the <i class="parameter"><tt>printer admin</tt></i> parameter on the +share levels). +</p></dd><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>lpq cache time = 20</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p> this controls the cache time for the results of the +lpq command. It prevents the lpq command being called too often and +reduces load on a heavily used print server. +</p></dd><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>use client driver = no</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p> if set to <tt class="constant">yes</tt>, this setting only +takes effect for Win NT/2k/XP clients (and not for Win 95/98/ME). Its +default value is <tt class="constant">No</tt> (or <tt class="constant">False</tt>). +It must <span class="emphasis"><em>not</em></span> be enabled on print shares +(with a <tt class="constant">yes</tt> or <tt class="constant">true</tt> setting) which +have valid drivers installed on the Samba server! For more detailed +explanations see the man page of <tt class="filename">smb.conf</tt>. +</p></dd></dl></div></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2937111"></a>The [printers] Section</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +This is the second special section. If a section with this name +appears in the <tt class="filename">smb.conf</tt>, users are able to +connect to any printer specified in the Samba host's printcap file, +because Samba on startup then creates a printer share for every +printername it finds in the printcap file. You could regard this +section as a general convenience shortcut to share all printers with +minimal configuration. It is also a container for settings which +should apply as default to all printers. (For more details see the +<tt class="filename">smb.conf</tt> man page.) Settings inside this +container must be share level parameters (S). +</p><div class="variablelist"><dl><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>comment = All printers</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p> the <i class="parameter"><tt>comment</tt></i> is shown next to +the share if a client queries the server, either via <span class="guiicon">Network +Neighbourhood</span> or with the <b class="command">net view</b> command to list +available shares. +</p></dd><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>printable = yes</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p> please note well, that the +<i class="parameter"><tt>[printers]</tt></i> service <span class="emphasis"><em>must</em></span> be +declared as printable. If you specify otherwise, smbd will refuse to +load at startup. This parameter allows +connected clients to open, write to and submit spool files into the +directory specified with the <i class="parameter"><tt>path</tt></i> parameter for +this service. It is used by Samba to differentiate printer shares from +file shares. </p></dd><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>path = /var/spool/samba</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p>this must point to a directory used by Samba to spool +incoming print files. <span class="emphasis"><em>It must not be the same as the spool +directory specified in the configuration of your UNIX print +subsystem!</em></span> The path would typically point to a directory +which is world writeable, with the "sticky" bit set to it. +</p></dd><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>browseable = no</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p> this is always set to <tt class="constant">no</tt> if +<i class="parameter"><tt>printable = yes</tt></i>. It makes the +<i class="parameter"><tt>[printer]</tt></i> share itself invisible in the +list of available shares in a <b class="command">net view</b> command or +in the Explorer browse list. (Note that you will of course see the +individual printers). +</p></dd><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>guest ok = yes</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p> +if set to <tt class="constant">yes</tt>, then no password is required to +connect to the printers service. Access will be granted with the +privileges of the <i class="parameter"><tt>guest account</tt></i>. On many systems the +guest account will map to a user named "nobody". This user is in the UNIX +passwd file with an empty password, but with no valid UNIX login. +(Note: on some systems the guest account might not have the +privilege to be able to print. Test this by logging in as your +guest user using <b class="command">su - guest</b> and run a system print +command like +</p><p><b class="userinput"><tt>lpr -P printername /etc/motd</tt></b></p></dd><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>public = yes</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p> this is a synonym for <i class="parameter"><tt>guest ok = +yes</tt></i>. Since we have <i class="parameter"><tt>guest ok = yes</tt></i>, +it really doesn't need to be here! (This leads to the interesting +question: “<span class="quote">What, if I by accident have to contradictory settings +for the same share?</span>” The answer is: the last one encountered by +Samba wins. The "winner" is shown by testparm. Testparm doesn't +complain about different settings of the same parameter for the same +share! You can test this by setting up multiple lines for the "guest +account" parameter with different usernames, and then run testparm to +see which one is actually used by Samba.) +</p></dd><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>read only = yes</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p>this normally (for other types of shares) prevents +users creating or modifying files in the service's directory. However, +in a "printable" service, it is <span class="emphasis"><em>always</em></span> allowed to +write to the directory (if user privileges allow the connection), but +only via print spooling operations. "Normal" write operations are not +allowed. </p></dd><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>writeable = no</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p> +synonym for <i class="parameter"><tt>read only = yes</tt></i> +</p></dd></dl></div></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2937440"></a>Any [my_printer_name] Section</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +If a section appears in the , which is +tagged as <i class="parameter"><tt>printable = yes</tt></i>, Samba presents it as +a printer share to its clients. Note, that Win95/98/ME clients may +have problems with connecting or loading printer drivers if the share +name has more than 8 characters! Also be very careful if you give a +printer the same name as an existing user or file share name: upon a +client's connection request to a certain sharename, Samba always tries +to find file shares with that name first; if it finds one, it will +connect to this and will never ultimately connect to a printer with +the same name! +</p><div class="variablelist"><dl><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>comment = Printer with Restricted Access</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p> the comment says it all. +</p></dd><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>path = /var/spool/samba_my_printer</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p> here we set the spooling area for this printer to +another directory than the default. It is not a requirement to set it +differently, but the option is available. +</p></dd><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>printer admin = kurt</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p> the printer admin definition is different for this +explicitly defined printer share from the general +<i class="parameter"><tt>[printers]</tt></i> share. It is not a requirement; we +did it to show that it is possible if you want it. +</p></dd><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>browseable = yes</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p> we also made this printer browseable (so that the +clients may conveniently find it when browsing the <span class="guiicon">Network +Neighbourhood</span>). +</p></dd><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>printable = yes</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p>see explanation in last subsection. +</p></dd><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>writeable = no</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p>see explanation in last subsection. +</p></dd><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>hosts allow = 10.160.50.,10.160.51.</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p>here we exercise a certain degree of access control +by using the <i class="parameter"><tt>hosts allow</tt></i> and <i class="parameter"><tt>hosts deny</tt></i> parameters. Note, that +this is not by any means a safe bet. It is not a way to secure your +printers. This line accepts all clients from a certain subnet in a +first evaluation of access control +</p></dd><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>hosts deny = turbo_xp,10.160.50.23,10.160.51.60 +</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p>all listed hosts are not allowed here (even if they +belong to the "allowed subnets"). As you can see, you could name IP +addresses as well as NetBIOS hostnames +here. +</p></dd><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>guest ok = no</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p>this printer is not open for the guest account! +</p></dd></dl></div></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2937660"></a>Print Commands</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +In each section defining a printer (or in the +<i class="parameter"><tt>[printers]</tt></i> section), a <i class="parameter"><tt>print +command</tt></i> parameter may be defined. It sets a command to +process the files which have been placed into the Samba print spool +directory for that printer. (That spool directory was, if you +remember, set up with the <i class="parameter"><tt>path</tt></i> +parameter). Typically, this command will submit the spool file to the +Samba host's print subsystem, using the suitable system print +command. But there is no requirement that this needs to be the +case. For debugging purposes or some other reason you may want to do +something completely different than "print" the file. An example is a +command that just copies the print file to a temporary location for +further investigation when you need to debug printing. If you craft +your own print commands (or even develop print command shell scripts), +make sure you pay attention to the need to remove the files from the +Samba spool directory. Otherwise your hard disk may soon suffer from +shortage of free space. +</p></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2937711"></a>Default Print Commands for various Unix Print Subsystems</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +You learned earlier on, that Samba in most cases uses its built-in +settings for many parameters if it can not find an explicitly stated +one in its configuration file. The same is true for the +<i class="parameter"><tt>print command</tt></i>. The default print command varies +depending on the <i class="parameter"><tt>printing =...</tt></i> parameter +setting. In the commands listed below, you will notice some parameters +of the form <span class="emphasis"><em>%X</em></span> where <span class="emphasis"><em>X</em></span> is +<span class="emphasis"><em>p, s, J</em></span> etc. These letters stand for +"printername", "spoolfile" and "job ID" respectively. They are +explained in more detail further below. Here is an overview (excluding +the special case of CUPS, which is discussed in the next chapter): +</p><div class="informaltable"><table border="1"><colgroup><col><col></colgroup><thead><tr><th align="left">If this setting is active...</th><th align="left">...this is used in lieu of an explicit command:</th></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td align="left"><i class="parameter"><tt>printing = bsd|aix|lprng|plp</tt></i></td><td align="left">print command is <b class="command">lpr -r -P%p %s</b></td></tr><tr><td align="left"><i class="parameter"><tt>printing = sysv|hpux</tt></i></td><td align="left">print command is <b class="command">lp -c -P%p %s; rm %s</b></td></tr><tr><td align="left"><i class="parameter"><tt>printing = qnx</tt></i></td><td align="left">print command is <b class="command">lp -r -P%p -s %s</b></td></tr><tr><td align="left"><i class="parameter"><tt>printing = bsd|aix|lprng|plp</tt></i></td><td align="left">lpq command is <b class="command">lpq -P%p</b></td></tr><tr><td align="left"><i class="parameter"><tt>printing = sysv|hpux</tt></i></td><td align="left">lpq command is <b class="command">lpstat -o%p</b></td></tr><tr><td align="left"><i class="parameter"><tt>printing = qnx</tt></i></td><td align="left">lpq command is <b class="command">lpq -P%p</b></td></tr><tr><td align="left"><i class="parameter"><tt>printing = bsd|aix|lprng|plp</tt></i></td><td align="left">lprm command is <b class="command">lprm -P%p %j</b></td></tr><tr><td align="left"><i class="parameter"><tt>printing = sysv|hpux</tt></i></td><td align="left">lprm command is <b class="command">cancel %p-%j</b></td></tr><tr><td align="left"><i class="parameter"><tt>printing = qnx</tt></i></td><td align="left">lprm command is <b class="command">cancel %p-%j</b></td></tr><tr><td align="left"><i class="parameter"><tt>printing = bsd|aix|lprng|plp</tt></i></td><td align="left">lppause command is <b class="command">lp -i %p-%j -H hold</b></td></tr><tr><td align="left"><i class="parameter"><tt>printing = sysv|hpux</tt></i></td><td align="left">lppause command (...is empty)</td></tr><tr><td align="left"><i class="parameter"><tt>printing = qnx</tt></i></td><td align="left">lppause command (...is empty)</td></tr><tr><td align="left"><i class="parameter"><tt>printing = bsd|aix|lprng|plp</tt></i></td><td align="left">lpresume command is <b class="command">lp -i %p-%j -H resume</b></td></tr><tr><td align="left"><i class="parameter"><tt>printing = sysv|hpux</tt></i></td><td align="left">lpresume command (...is empty)</td></tr><tr><td align="left"><i class="parameter"><tt>printing = qnx</tt></i></td><td align="left">lpresume command (...is empty)</td></tr></tbody></table></div><p> +We excluded the special CUPS case here, because it is discussed in the +next chapter. Just a short summary. For <i class="parameter"><tt>printing = +CUPS</tt></i>: If SAMBA is compiled against libcups, it uses the +CUPS API to submit jobs, etc. (It is a good idea also to set +<i class="parameter"><tt>printcap = cups</tt></i> in case your +<tt class="filename">cupsd.conf</tt> is set to write its autogenerated +printcap file to an unusual place). Otherwise Samba maps to the System +V printing commands with the -oraw option for printing, i.e. it uses +<b class="command">lp -c -d%p -oraw; rm %s</b> With <i class="parameter"><tt>printing = +cups</tt></i> , and if SAMBA is compiled against libcups, any +manually set print command will be ignored! +</p><p> +Having listed the above mappings here, you should note that there used +to be a <span class="emphasis"><em>bug</em></span> in recent 2.2.x versions which +prevented the mapping from taking effect. It lead to the +"bsd|aix|lprng|plp" settings taking effect for all other systems, for +the most important commands (the <b class="command">print</b> command, the +<b class="command">lpq</b> command and the <b class="command">lprm</b> +command). The <b class="command">lppause</b> command and the +<b class="command">lpresume</b> command remained empty. Of course, these +commands worked on bsd|aix|lprng|plp but they didn't work on +sysv|hpux|qnx systems. To work around this bug, you need to +explicitly set the commands. Use <b class="command">testparm -v</b> to +check which command takes effect. Then check that this command is +adequate and actually works for your installed print subsystem. It is +always a good idea to explicitly set up your configuration files the +way you want them to work and not rely on any built-in defaults. +</p></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2938236"></a>Setting up your own Print Commands</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +After a print job has finished spooling to a service, the +<i class="parameter"><tt>print command</tt></i> will be used by Samba via a +<span class="emphasis"><em>system()</em></span> call to process the spool file. Usually +the command specified will submit the spool file to the host's +printing subsystem. But there is no requirement at all that this must +be the case. The print subsystem will probably not remove the spool +file on its own. So whatever command you specify on your own you +should ensure that the spool file is deleted after it has been +processed. +</p><p> +There is no difficulty with using your own customized print commands +with the traditional printing systems. However, if you don't wish to +"roll your own", you should be well informed about the default +built-in commands that Samba uses for each printing subsystem (see the +table above). In all the commands listed in the last paragraphs you +see parameters of the form <span class="emphasis"><em>%X</em></span> These are +<span class="emphasis"><em>macros</em></span>, or shortcuts, used as place holders for +the names of real objects. At the time of running a command with such +a placeholder, Samba will insert the appropriate value +automatically. Print commands can handle all Samba macro +substitutions. In regard to printing, the following ones do have +special relevance: +</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>%s, %f</tt></i> - the path to the spool +file name</p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>%p</tt></i> - the appropriate printer +name</p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>%J</tt></i> - the job name as +transmitted by the client.</p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>%c</tt></i> - the number of printed +pages of the spooled job (if known).</p></li><li><p><i class="parameter"><tt>%z</tt></i> - the size of the spooled +print job (in bytes)</p></li></ul></div><p> +The print command MUST contain at least one occurrence of +<i class="parameter"><tt>%s</tt></i> or <i class="parameter"><tt>%f</tt></i>. -- The +<i class="parameter"><tt>%p</tt></i> is optional. If no printer name is supplied, +the <i class="parameter"><tt>%p</tt></i> will be silently removed from the print +command. In this case the job is sent to the default printer. +</p><p> +If specified in the <i class="parameter"><tt>[global]</tt></i> section, the print +command given will be used for any printable service that does not +have its own print command specified. If there is neither a specified +print command for a printable service nor a global print command, +spool files will be created but not processed! And (most importantly): +print files will not be removed, so they will start filling your Samba +hard disk. +</p><p> +Note that printing may fail on some UNIXes from the "nobody" +account. If this happens, create an alternative guest account and +supply it with the privilege to print. Set up this guest account in +the <i class="parameter"><tt>[global]</tt></i> section with the <i class="parameter"><tt>guest +account</tt></i> parameter. +</p><p> +You can form quite complex print commands. You need to realize that +print commands are just passed to a UNIX shell. The shell is able to +expand the included environment variables as usual. (The syntax to +include a UNIX environment variable <i class="parameter"><tt>$variable</tt></i> +in or in the Samba print command is +<i class="parameter"><tt>%$variable</tt></i>.) To give you a working +<i class="parameter"><tt>print command</tt></i> example, the following will log a +print job to <tt class="filename">/tmp/print.log</tt>, print the file, then +remove it. Note that ';' is the usual separator for commands in shell +scripts: </p><pre class="programlisting"> - testprns printer /etc/printcap + + print command = echo Printing %s >> /tmp/print.log; lpr -P %p %s; rm %s + </pre><p> -Samba can get its printcap information from a file or from a program. -You can try the following to see the format of the extracted -information: +You may have to vary your own command considerably from this example +depending on how you normally print files on your system. The default +for the <i class="parameter"><tt>print command</tt></i> parameter varies depending on the setting of +the <i class="parameter"><tt>printing</tt></i> parameter. Another example is: </p><pre class="programlisting"> - testprns -a printer /etc/printcap + print command = /usr/local/samba/bin/myprintscript %p %s +</pre></div></div><div class="sect1" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both"><a name="id2938516"></a>Innovations in Samba Printing since 2.2</h2></div></div><div></div></div><p> +Before version 2.2.0, Samba's print server support for Windows clients +was limited to the level of <span class="emphasis"><em>LanMan</em></span> printing +calls. This is the same protocol level as Windows 9x PCs offer when +they share printers. Beginning with the 2.2.0 release, Samba started +to support the native Windows NT printing mechanisms. These are +implemented via <span class="emphasis"><em>MS-RPC</em></span> (RPC = <span class="emphasis"><em>Remote +Procedure Calls</em></span> ). MS-RPCs use the +<span class="emphasis"><em>SPOOLSS</em></span> named pipe for all printing. +</p><p> +The additional functionality provided by the new SPOOLSS support includes: +</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p>Support for downloading printer driver files to Windows +95/98/NT/2000 clients upon demand (<span class="emphasis"><em>Point'n'Print</em></span>); +</p></li><li><p>Uploading of printer drivers via the Windows NT +<span class="emphasis"><em>Add Printer Wizard</em></span> (APW) or the +<span class="emphasis"><em>Imprints</em></span> tool set (refer to <a href="http://imprints.sourceforge.net/" target="_top">http://imprints.sourceforge.net</a>); +</p></li><li><p>Support for the native MS-RPC printing calls such as +StartDocPrinter, EnumJobs(), etc... (See the MSDN documentation +at <a href="http://msdn.microsoft.com/" target="_top">http://msdn.microsoft.com/</a> +for more information on the Win32 printing API);</p></li><li><p>Support for NT <span class="emphasis"><em>Access Control +Lists</em></span> (ACL) on printer objects;</p></li><li><p>Improved support for printer queue manipulation +through the use of internal databases for spooled job information +(implemented by various <tt class="filename">*.tdb</tt> +files).</p></li></ul></div><p> +One other benefit of an update is this: Samba-3 is able to publish +all its printers in Active Directory (or LDAP)! +</p><p> +One slight difference is here: it is possible on a Windows NT print +server to have printers listed in the Printers folder which are +<span class="emphasis"><em>not</em></span> shared. Samba does not make this +distinction. By definition, the only printers of which Samba is aware +are those which are specified as shares in +. The reason is that Windows NT/200x/XP Professional +clients do not normally need to use the standard SMB printer share; +rather they can print directly to any printer on another Windows NT +host using MS-RPC. This of course assumes that the printing client has +the necessary privileges on the remote host serving the printer. The +default permissions assigned by Windows NT to a printer gives the +"Print" permissions to the well-known <span class="emphasis"><em>Everyone</em></span> +group. (The older clients of type Win9x can only print to "shared" +printers). +</p><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2938681"></a>Client Drivers on Samba Server for <span class="emphasis"><em>Point'n'Print</em></span></h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +There is still confusion about what all this means: <span class="emphasis"><em>Is it or +is it not a requirement for printer drivers to be installed on a Samba +host in order to support printing from Windows clients?</em></span> The +answer to this is: No, it is not a +<span class="emphasis"><em>requirement</em></span>. Windows NT/2000 clients can, of +course, also run their APW to install drivers +<span class="emphasis"><em>locally</em></span> (which then connect to a Samba served +print queue). This is the same method as used by Windows 9x +clients. (However, a <span class="emphasis"><em>bug</em></span> existed in Samba 2.2.0 +which made Windows NT/2000 clients require that the Samba server +possess a valid driver for the printer. This was fixed in Samba +2.2.1). +</p><p> +But it is a new <span class="emphasis"><em>option</em></span> to install the printer +drivers into the <i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> share of the Samba +server, and a big convenience too. Then <span class="emphasis"><em>all</em></span> +clients (including 95/98/ME) get the driver installed when they first +connect to this printer share. The <span class="emphasis"><em>uploading</em></span> or +<span class="emphasis"><em>depositing</em></span> of the driver into this +<i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> share, and the following binding of +this driver to an existing Samba printer share can be achieved by +different means: +</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p>running the <span class="emphasis"><em>APW</em></span> on an +NT/200x/XP Professional client (this doesn't work from 95/98/ME +clients);</p></li><li><p>using the <span class="emphasis"><em>Imprints</em></span> +toolset;</p></li><li><p>using the <span class="emphasis"><em>smbclient</em></span> and +<span class="emphasis"><em>rpcclient</em></span> commandline tools;</p></li><li><p>using <span class="emphasis"><em>cupsaddsmb</em></span>(only works for +the CUPS printing system, not for LPR/LPD, LPRng +etc.).</p></li></ul></div><p> +Please take additional note of the following fact: <span class="emphasis"><em>Samba +does not use these uploaded drivers in any way to process spooled +files</em></span>. Drivers are utilized entirely by the clients, who +download and install them via the "Point'n'Print" mechanism supported +by Samba. The clients use these drivers to generate print files in the +format the printer (or the Unix print system) requires. Print files +received by Samba are handed over to the Unix printing system, which +is responsible for all further processing, if needed. +</p></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2938833"></a>The [printer$] Section is removed from Samba-3</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p><b> +<i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> vs. <i class="parameter"><tt>[printer$]</tt></i> +.�</b> +Versions of Samba prior to 2.2 made it possible to use a share +named <span class="emphasis"><em>[printer$]</em></span>. This name was taken from the +same named service created by Windows 9x clients when a printer was +shared by them. Windows 9x printer servers always have a +<i class="parameter"><tt>[printer$]</tt></i> service which provides read-only +access (with no password required) in order to support printer driver +downloads. However, Samba's initial implementation allowed for a +parameter named <i class="parameter"><tt>printer driver location</tt></i> to be +used on a per share basis. This specified the location of the driver +files associated with that printer. Another parameter named +<i class="parameter"><tt>printer driver</tt></i> provided a means of defining the +printer driver name to be sent to the client. These parameters, +including the <i class="parameter"><tt>printer driver file</tt></i> parameter, +are now removed and can not be used in installations of Samba-3.0. +Now the share name <i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> is used for the +location of downloadable printer drivers. It is taken from the +<i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> service created by Windows NT PCs when +a printer is shared by them. Windows NT print servers always have a +<i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> service which provides read-write +access (in the context of its ACLs) in order to support printer driver +down- and uploads. Don't fear -- this does not mean Windows 9x +clients are thrown aside now. They can use Samba's +<i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> share support just fine. +</p></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2938945"></a>Creating the [print$] Share</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +In order to support the up- and downloading of printer driver files, +you must first configure a file share named +<i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i>. The "public" name of this share is +hard coded in Samba's internals (because it is hard coded in the MS +Windows clients too). It cannot be renamed since Windows clients are +programmed to search for a service of exactly this name if they want +to retrieve printer driver files. +</p><p> +You should modify the server's file to +add the global parameters and create the +<i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> file share (of course, some of the +parameter values, such as 'path' are arbitrary and should be replaced +with appropriate values for your site): +</p><pre class="screen"> + [global] + ; members of the ntadmin group should be able to add drivers and set + ; printer properties. root is implicitly always a 'printer admin'. + printer admin = @ntadmin + [....] - testprns -a printer '|/bin/cat printcap' -</pre></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2887557"></a>Setting up printcap and print servers</h3></div></div><p> -You may need to set up some printcaps for your Samba system to use. -It is strongly recommended that you use the facilities provided by -the print spooler to set up queues and printcap information. + [printers] + [....] + + [print$] + comment = Printer Driver Download Area + path = /etc/samba/drivers + browseable = yes + guest ok = yes + read only = yes + write list = @ntadmin, root +</pre><p> +Of course, you also need to ensure that the directory named by the +<i class="parameter"><tt>path</tt></i> parameter exists on the Unix file system. +</p></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2939016"></a>Parameters in the [print$] Section</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +<i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> is a special section in +. It contains settings relevant to +potential printer driver download and local installation by clients. +</p><div class="variablelist"><dl><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>comment = Printer Driver +Download Area</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p> the comment appears next to the share name if it is +listed in a share list (usually Windows clients won't see it often but +it will also appear up in a <b class="command">smbclient -L sambaserver +</b> output). </p></dd><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>path = /etc/samba/printers</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p> this is the path to the location of the Windows +driver file deposit from the UNIX point of +view.</p></dd><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>browseable = no</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p> this makes the <i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> share +"invisible" in Network Neighbourhood to clients. However, you can +still "mount" it from any client using the <b class="command">net use +g:\\sambaserver\print$</b> command in a "DOS box" or the +"Connect network drive" menu from Windows +Explorer.</p></dd><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>guest ok = yes</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p>this gives read only access to this share for all +guest users. Access may be used to download and install printer +drivers on clients. The requirement for <i class="parameter"><tt>guest ok = +yes</tt></i> depends upon how your site is configured. If users +will be guaranteed to have an account on the Samba host, then this is +a non-issue.</p><div class="note" style="margin-left: 0.5in; margin-right: 0.5in;"><h3 class="title">Note</h3><p> +The non-issue is this: if all your Windows NT users are guaranteed to +be authenticated by the Samba server (for example if Samba +authenticates via an NT domain server and the NT user has already been +validated by the Domain Controller in order to logon to the Windows NT +session), then guest access is not necessary. Of course, in a +workgroup environment where you just want to be able to print without +worrying about silly accounts and security, then configure the share +for guest access. You'll probably want to add <i class="parameter"><tt>map to guest += Bad User</tt></i> in the <i class="parameter"><tt>[global]</tt></i> section +as well. Make sure you understand what this parameter does before +using it. +</p></div></dd><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>read only = yes</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p>as we don't want everybody to upload driver files (or +even change driver settings) we tagged this share as not +writeable.</p></dd><dt><span class="term"><i class="parameter"><tt>write list = @ntadmin,root</tt></i></span></dt><dd><p>since the <i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> was made +read only by the previous setting, we need to create a "write list" +also. UNIX groups (denoted with a leading "@" character) and users +listed here are allowed write access (as an exception to the general +public's "read-only" access), which they need to update files on the +share. Normally you will want to only name administrative level user +accounts in this setting. Check the file system permissions to make +sure these accounts can copy files to the share. If this is a non-root +account, then the account should also be mentioned in the global +<i class="parameter"><tt>printer admin </tt></i> parameter. See the + man page for more information on +configuring file shares. </p></dd></dl></div></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2939247"></a>Subdirectory Structure in [print$]</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +In order for a Windows NT print server to support the downloading of +driver files by multiple client architectures, you must create several +subdirectories within the <i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> service +(i.e. the Unix directory named by the <i class="parameter"><tt>path</tt></i> +parameter). These correspond to each of the supported client +architectures. Samba follows this model as well. Just like the name of +the <i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> share itself, the subdirectories +*must* be exactly the names listed below (you may leave out the +subdirectories of architectures you don't want to support). </p><p> -Samba requires either a printcap or program to deliver printcap -information. This printcap information has the format: +Therefore, create a directory tree below the +<i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> share for each architecture you wish +to support. </p><pre class="programlisting"> - name|alias1|alias2...:option=value:... +[print$]--+-- + |--W32X86 # serves drivers to "Windows NT x86" + |--WIN40 # serves drivers to "Windows 95/98" + |--W32ALPHA # serves drivers to "Windows NT Alpha_AXP" + |--W32MIPS # serves drivers to "Windows NT R4000" + |--W32PPC # serves drivers to "Windows NT PowerPC" +</pre><div class="important" style="margin-left: 0.5in; margin-right: 0.5in;"><h3 class="title">Required permissions</h3><p> +In order to add a new driver to your Samba host, one of two conditions +must hold true: +</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p>The account used to connect to the Samba host must +have a UID of 0 (i.e. a root account)</p></li><li><p>The account used to connect to the Samba host must be +named in the <span class="emphasis"><em>printer admin</em></span>list.</p></li></ul></div><p> +Of course, the connected account must still possess access to add +files to the subdirectories beneath +<i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i>. Remember that all file shares are set +to 'read only' by default. +</p></div><p> +Once you have created the required <i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> +service and associated subdirectories, go to a Windows NT 4.0/2k/XP +client workstation. Open <span class="guiicon">Network Neighbourhood</span> or +<span class="guiicon">My Network Places</span> and browse for the Samba host. +Once you have located the server, navigate to its <span class="guiicon">Printers and +Faxes</span> folder. You should see an initial listing of printers +that matches the printer shares defined on your Samba host. +</p></div></div><div class="sect1" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both"><a name="id2939408"></a>Installing Drivers into [print$]</h2></div></div><div></div></div><p> +You have successfully created the <i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> +share in ? And Samba has re-read its +configuration? Good. But you are not yet ready to take off. The +<span class="emphasis"><em>driver files</em></span> need to be present in this share, +too! So far it is still an empty share. Unfortunately, it is not enough +to just copy the driver files over. They need to be <span class="emphasis"><em>set +up</em></span> too. And that is a bit tricky, to say the least. We +will now discuss two alternative ways to install the drivers into +<i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i>: +</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p>using the Samba commandline utility +<b class="command">rpcclient</b> with its various subcommands (here: +<b class="command">adddriver</b> and <b class="command">setdriver</b>) from +any UNIX workstation;</p></li><li><p>running a GUI (<span class="emphasis"><em>Printer +Properties</em></span> and <span class="emphasis"><em>Add Printer Wizard</em></span>) +from any Windows NT/2k/XP client workstation.</p></li></ul></div><p> +The latter option is probably the easier one (even if the only +entrance to this realm seems a little bit weird at first). +</p><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2939503"></a>Setting Drivers for existing Printers with a Client GUI</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +The initial listing of printers in the Samba host's +<span class="guiicon">Printers</span> folder accessed from a client's Explorer +will have no real printer driver assigned to them. By default, in +Samba-3 (as in 2.2.1 and later) this driver name is set to a NULL +string. This must be changed now. The local <span class="emphasis"><em>Add Printer +Wizard</em></span>, run from NT/2000/XP clients, will help us in this +task. +</p><p> +However, the job to set a valid driver for the printer is not a +straightforward one: You must attempt to view the printer properties +for the printer to which you want the driver assigned. Open the +Windows Explorer, open Network Neighbourhood, browse to the Samba +host, open Samba's <span class="guiicon">Printers</span> folder, right-click the printer icon and +select <span class="guimenu">Properties...</span>. You are now trying to view printer and driver +properties for a queue which has this default <tt class="constant">NULL</tt> driver +assigned. This will result in an error message (this is normal here): +</p><p><span class="errorname"> Device settings cannot be displayed. The driver +for the specified printer is not installed, only spooler properties +will be displayed. Do you want to install the driver +now?</span></p><p> +<span class="emphasis"><em>Important:</em></span>Don't click <span class="guibutton">Yes</span>! Instead, +<span class="emphasis"><em>click <span class="guibutton">No</span></em></span> in the error dialog. +Only now you will be presented with the printer properties window. From here, +the way to assign a driver to a printer is open to us. You have now the choice +either: +</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p>select a driver from the pop-up list of installed +drivers. <span class="emphasis"><em>Initially this list will be empty.</em></span> +Or</p></li><li><p>use the <span class="guibutton">New Driver...</span> button to +install a new printer driver (which will in fact start up the +APW).</p></li></ul></div><p> +Once the APW is started, the procedure is exactly the same as the one +you are familiar with in Windows (we assume here that you are +familiar with the printer driver installations procedure on Windows +NT). Make sure your connection is in fact setup as a user with +<i class="parameter"><tt>printer admin</tt></i> privileges (if in doubt, use +<b class="command">smbstatus</b> to check for this). If you wish to +install printer drivers for client operating systems other than +<span class="application">Windows NT x86</span>, you will need to use the +<span class="guilabel">Sharing</span> tab of the printer properties dialog. +</p><p> +Assuming you have connected with an administrative (or root) account +(as named by the <i class="parameter"><tt>printer admin</tt></i> parameter), +you will also be able to modify other printer properties such as ACLs +and default device settings using this dialog. For the default device +settings, please consider the advice given further below. +</p></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2939686"></a>Setting Drivers for existing Printers with +<b class="command">rpcclient</b></h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +The second way to install printer drivers into +<i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> and set them up in a valid way can be +done from the UNIX command line. This involves four distinct steps: +</p><div class="orderedlist"><ol type="1"><li><p>gathering the info about the required driver files +and collecting the files together;</p></li><li><p>deposit the driver files into the +<i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> share's correct subdirectories +(possibly by using <b class="command">smbclient</b>);</p></li><li><p>running the <b class="command">rpcclient</b> +commandline utility once with the <b class="command">adddriver</b> +subcommand,</p></li><li><p>running <b class="command">rpcclient</b> a second +time with the <b class="command">setdriver</b> +subcommand.</p></li></ol></div><p> +We will provide detailed hints for each of these steps in the next few +paragraphs. +</p><div class="sect3" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h4 class="title"><a name="id2939795"></a>Identifying the Driver Files</h4></div></div><div></div></div><p> +To find out about the driver files, you have two options: you could +investigate the driver CD which comes with your printer. Study the +<tt class="filename">*.inf</tt> file on the CD, if it is contained. This +may not be the possible, since the *.inf file might be +missing. Unfortunately, many vendors have now started to use their own +installation programs. These installations packages are often some +sort of Windows platform archive format, plus, the files may get +re-named during the installation process. This makes it extremely +difficult to identify the driver files you need. +</p><p> +Then you only have the second option: install the driver first on a +Windows client *locally* and investigate which file names and paths it +uses after they are installed. (Note, that you need to repeat this +procedure for every client platform you want to support. We are going +to show it here for the <span class="application">W32X86</span> platform only, a +name used by Microsoft for all WinNT/2k/XP clients...) +</p><p> +A good method to recognize the driver files this is to print the test +page from the driver's <span class="guilabel">Properties</span> Dialog +(<span class="guilabel">General</span> tab). Then look at the list of driver +files named on the printout. You'll need to recognize what Windows +(and Samba) are calling the <span class="guilabel">Driver File</span> , the +<span class="guilabel">Data File</span>, the <span class="guilabel">Config File</span>, +the <span class="guilabel">Help File</span> and (optionally) the +<span class="guilabel">Dependent Driver Files</span> (this may vary slightly +for Windows NT). You need to remember all names (or better take a +note) for the next steps. +</p><p> +Another method to quickly test the driver filenames and related paths +is provided by the <b class="command">rpcclient</b> utility. Run it with +<b class="command">enumdrivers</b> or with the +<b class="command">getdriver</b> subcommand, each in the +<span class="emphasis"><em>3</em></span> level. In the following example, +<span class="emphasis"><em>TURBO_XP</em></span> is the name of the Windows PC (in this +case it was a Windows XP Professional laptop, BTW). I had installed +the driver locally to TURBO_XP while <span class="emphasis"><em>kde-bitshop</em></span> is +the name of the Linux host from which I am working. We could run an +<span class="emphasis"><em>interactive</em></span> <b class="command">rpcclient</b> session; +then we'd get an <span class="emphasis"><em>rpcclient /></em></span> prompt and would +type the subcommands at this prompt. This is left as a good exercise +to the reader. For now we use <b class="command">rpcclient</b> with the +<tt class="option">-c</tt> parameter to execute a single subcommand +line and exit again. This is the method you would use if you want to +create scripts to automate the procedure for a large number of +printers and drivers. Note the different quotes used to overcome the +different spaces in between words: +</p><pre class="screen"> +<tt class="prompt">root# </tt><b class="userinput"><tt>rpcclient -U'Danka%xxxx' -c 'getdriver "Heidelberg Digimaster 9110 (PS)" 3' TURBO_XP</tt></b> + cmd = getdriver "Heidelberg Digimaster 9110 (PS)" 3 + + [Windows NT x86] + Printer Driver Info 3: + Version: [2] + Driver Name: [Heidelberg Digimaster 9110 (PS)] + Architecture: [Windows NT x86] + Driver Path: [C:\WINNT\System32\spool\DRIVERS\W32X86\2\HDNIS01_de.DLL] + Datafile: [C:\WINNT\System32\spool\DRIVERS\W32X86\2\Hddm91c1_de.ppd] + Configfile: [C:\WINNT\System32\spool\DRIVERS\W32X86\2\HDNIS01U_de.DLL] + Helpfile: [C:\WINNT\System32\spool\DRIVERS\W32X86\2\HDNIS01U_de.HLP] + + Dependentfiles: [C:\WINNT\System32\spool\DRIVERS\W32X86\2\Hddm91c1_de.DLL] + Dependentfiles: [C:\WINNT\System32\spool\DRIVERS\W32X86\2\Hddm91c1_de.INI] + Dependentfiles: [C:\WINNT\System32\spool\DRIVERS\W32X86\2\Hddm91c1KMMin.DLL] + Dependentfiles: [C:\WINNT\System32\spool\DRIVERS\W32X86\2\Hddm91c1_de.dat] + Dependentfiles: [C:\WINNT\System32\spool\DRIVERS\W32X86\2\Hddm91c1_de.cat] + Dependentfiles: [C:\WINNT\System32\spool\DRIVERS\W32X86\2\Hddm91c1_de.def] + Dependentfiles: [C:\WINNT\System32\spool\DRIVERS\W32X86\2\Hddm91c1_de.hre] + Dependentfiles: [C:\WINNT\System32\spool\DRIVERS\W32X86\2\Hddm91c1_de.vnd] + Dependentfiles: [C:\WINNT\System32\spool\DRIVERS\W32X86\2\Hddm91c1_de.hlp] + Dependentfiles: [C:\WINNT\System32\spool\DRIVERS\W32X86\2\Hddm91c1_de_reg.HLP] + Dependentfiles: [C:\WINNT\System32\spool\DRIVERS\W32X86\2\HDNIS01Aux.dll] + Dependentfiles: [C:\WINNT\System32\spool\DRIVERS\W32X86\2\HDNIS01_de.NTF] + + Monitorname: [] + Defaultdatatype: [] + +</pre><p> +You may notice, that this driver has quite a big number of +<span class="guilabel">Dependentfiles</span> (I know worse cases however). Also, +strangely, the <span class="guilabel">Driver File</span> is here tagged as +<span class="guilabel">Driver Path</span>.... oh, well. Here we don't have yet +support for the so-called <span class="application">WIN40</span> architecture +installed. This name is used by Microsoft for the Win95/98/ME platforms. +If we want to support these, we need to install the Win95/98/ME driver +files in addition to those for <span class="application">W32X86</span> +(i.e. the WinNT72000/XP clients) onto a Windows PC. This PC +can also host the Win9x drivers, even if itself runs on Windows NT, +2000 or XP. +</p><p> +Since the <i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> share is usually accessible +through the <span class="guiicon">Network Neighbourhood</span>, you can also use the UNC notation +from Windows Explorer to poke at it. The Win9x driver files will end +up in subdirectory "0" of the "WIN40" directory. The full path to +access them will be +<tt class="filename">\\WINDOWSHOST\print$\WIN40\0\</tt>. +</p><div class="note" style="margin-left: 0.5in; margin-right: 0.5in;"><h3 class="title">Note</h3><p> more recent drivers on Windows 2000 and Windows XP are +installed into the "3" subdirectory instead of the "2". The version 2 +of drivers, as used in Windows NT, were running in Kernel Mode. +Windows 2000 changed this. While it still can use the Kernel Mode +drivers (if this is enabled by the Admin), its native mode for printer +drivers is User Mode execution. This requires drivers designed for +this. These type of drivers install into the "3" subdirectory. +</p></div></div><div class="sect3" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h4 class="title"><a name="id2940123"></a>Collecting the Driver Files from a Windows Host's +[print$] Share</h4></div></div><div></div></div><p> +Now we need to collect all the driver files we identified. in our +previous step. Where do we get them from? Well, why not retrieve them +from the very PC and the same <i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> share +which we investigated in our last step to identify the files? We can +use <b class="command">smbclient</b> to do this. We will use the paths and +names which were leaked to us by <b class="command">getdriver</b>. The +listing is edited to include linebreaks for readability: +</p><pre class="screen"> +<tt class="prompt">root# </tt><b class="userinput"><tt>smbclient //TURBO_XP/print\$ -U'Danka%xxxx' \ + -c 'cd W32X86/2;mget HD*_de.* \ + hd*ppd Hd*_de.* Hddm*dll HDN*Aux.DLL'</tt></b> + added interface ip=10.160.51.60 bcast=10.160.51.255 nmask=255.255.252.0 + Got a positive name query response from 10.160.50.8 ( 10.160.50.8 ) + Domain=[DEVELOPMENT] OS=[Windows 5.1] Server=[Windows 2000 LAN Manager] + <tt class="prompt">Get file Hddm91c1_de.ABD? </tt><b class="userinput"><tt>n</tt></b> + <tt class="prompt">Get file Hddm91c1_de.def? </tt><b class="userinput"><tt>y</tt></b> + getting file \W32X86\2\Hddm91c1_de.def of size 428 as Hddm91c1_de.def (22.0 kb/s) (average 22.0 kb/s) + <tt class="prompt">Get file Hddm91c1_de.DLL? </tt><b class="userinput"><tt>y</tt></b> + getting file \W32X86\2\Hddm91c1_de.DLL of size 876544 as Hddm91c1_de.DLL (737.3 kb/s) (average 737.3 kb/s) + [...] + +</pre><p> +After this command is complete, the files are in our current local +directory. You probably have noticed that this time we passed several +commands to the <tt class="option">-c</tt> parameter, separated by semi-colons. This +effects that all commands are executed in sequence on the remote +Windows server before smbclient exits again. +</p><p> +Don't forget to repeat the procedure for the <span class="application">WIN40</span> +architecture should you need to support Win95/98/XP clients. Remember, the +files for these architectures are in the WIN40/0/ subdir. Once we are +complete, we can run <b class="command">smbclient ... put</b> to store +the collected files on the Samba server's +<i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> share. +</p></div><div class="sect3" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h4 class="title"><a name="id2940276"></a>Depositing the Driver Files into [print$]</h4></div></div><div></div></div><p> +So, now we are going to put the driver files into the +<i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> share. Remember, the UNIX path to this +share has been defined previously in your +. You also have created subdirectories +for the different Windows client types you want to support. Supposing +your <i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> share maps to the UNIX path +<tt class="filename">/etc/samba/drivers/</tt>, your driver files should now +go here: +</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p>for all Windows NT, 2000 and XP clients into +<tt class="filename">/etc/samba/drivers/W32X86/</tt> <span class="emphasis"><em>but +*not*(yet) into the "2" subdir</em></span>!</p></li><li><p>for all Windows 95, 98 and ME clients into +<tt class="filename">/etc/samba/drivers/WIN40/</tt> -- <span class="emphasis"><em>but *not* +(yet) into the "0" subdir</em></span>!</p></li></ul></div><p> +We again use smbclient to transfer the driver files across the +network. We specify the same files and paths as were leaked to us by +running <b class="command">getdriver</b> against the original +<span class="emphasis"><em>Windows</em></span> install. However, now we are going to +store the files into a <span class="emphasis"><em>Samba/UNIX</em></span> print server's +<i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> share... +</p><pre class="screen"> +<tt class="prompt">root# </tt><b class="userinput"><tt>smbclient //SAMBA-CUPS/print\$ -U'root%xxxx' -c 'cd W32X86; put HDNIS01_de.DLL; \ + put Hddm91c1_de.ppd; put HDNIS01U_de.DLL; \ + put HDNIS01U_de.HLP; put Hddm91c1_de.DLL; \ + put Hddm91c1_de.INI; put Hddm91c1KMMin.DLL; \ + put Hddm91c1_de.dat; put Hddm91c1_de.dat; \ + put Hddm91c1_de.def; put Hddm91c1_de.hre; \ + put Hddm91c1_de.vnd; put Hddm91c1_de.hlp; \ + put Hddm91c1_de_reg.HLP; put HDNIS01Aux.dll; \ + put HDNIS01_de.NTF'</tt></b> + added interface ip=10.160.51.60 bcast=10.160.51.255 nmask=255.255.252.0 + Got a positive name query response from 10.160.51.162 ( 10.160.51.162 ) + Domain=[CUPS-PRINT] OS=[Unix] Server=[Samba 2.2.7a] + putting file HDNIS01_de.DLL as \W32X86\HDNIS01_de.DLL (4465.5 kb/s) (average 4465.5 kb/s) + putting file Hddm91c1_de.ppd as \W32X86\Hddm91c1_de.ppd (12876.8 kb/s) (average 4638.9 kb/s) + putting file HDNIS01U_de.DLL as \W32X86\HDNIS01U_de.DLL (20249.8 kb/s) (average 5828.3 kb/s) + putting file HDNIS01U_de.HLP as \W32X86\HDNIS01U_de.HLP (9652.8 kb/s) (average 5899.8 kb/s) + putting file Hddm91c1_de.DLL as \W32X86\Hddm91c1_de.DLL (23777.7 kb/s) (average 10400.6 kb/s) + putting file Hddm91c1_de.INI as \W32X86\Hddm91c1_de.INI (98.6 kb/s) (average 10329.0 kb/s) + putting file Hddm91c1KMMin.DLL as \W32X86\Hddm91c1KMMin.DLL (22931.5 kb/s) (average 10501.7 kb/s) + putting file Hddm91c1_de.dat as \W32X86\Hddm91c1_de.dat (2462.8 kb/s) (average 10393.0 kb/s) + putting file Hddm91c1_de.dat as \W32X86\Hddm91c1_de.dat (4925.3 kb/s) (average 10356.3 kb/s) + putting file Hddm91c1_de.def as \W32X86\Hddm91c1_de.def (417.9 kb/s) (average 10290.1 kb/s) + putting file Hddm91c1_de.hre as \W32X86\Hddm91c1_de.hre (22571.3 kb/s) (average 11338.5 kb/s) + putting file Hddm91c1_de.vnd as \W32X86\Hddm91c1_de.vnd (3384.6 kb/s) (average 10754.3 kb/s) + putting file Hddm91c1_de.hlp as \W32X86\Hddm91c1_de.hlp (18406.8 kb/s) (average 10839.8 kb/s) + putting file Hddm91c1_de_reg.HLP as \W32X86\Hddm91c1_de_reg.HLP (20278.3 kb/s) (average 11386.3 kb/s) + putting file HDNIS01Aux.dll as \W32X86\HDNIS01Aux.dll (14994.6 kb/s) (average 11405.2 kb/s) + putting file HDNIS01_de.NTF as \W32X86\HDNIS01_de.NTF (23390.2 kb/s) (average 13170.8 kb/s) + +</pre><p> +Phewww -- that was a lot of typing! Most drivers are a lot smaller -- +many only having 3 generic PostScript driver files plus 1 PPD. Note, +that while we did retrieve the files from the "2" subdirectory of the +"W32X86" directory from the Windows box, we <span class="emphasis"><em>don't</em></span> +put them (for now) in this same subdirectory of the Samba box! This +re-location will automatically be done by the +<b class="command">adddriver</b> command which we will run shortly (and +don't forget to also put the files for the Win95/98/ME architecture +into the <tt class="filename">WIN40/</tt> subdirectory should you need +them). +</p></div><div class="sect3" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h4 class="title"><a name="id2940512"></a>Check if the Driver Files are there (with smbclient)</h4></div></div><div></div></div><p> +For now we verify that our files are there. This can be done with +<b class="command">smbclient</b> too (but of course you can log in via SSH +also and do this through a standard UNIX shell access too): +</p><pre class="screen"> +<tt class="prompt">root# </tt><b class="userinput"><tt>smbclient //SAMBA-CUPS/print\$ -U 'root%xxxx' -c 'cd W32X86; pwd; dir; cd 2; pwd; dir'</tt></b> + added interface ip=10.160.51.60 bcast=10.160.51.255 nmask=255.255.252.0 + Got a positive name query response from 10.160.51.162 ( 10.160.51.162 ) + Domain=[CUPS-PRINT] OS=[Unix] Server=[Samba 2.2.7a] + + Current directory is \\SAMBA-CUPS\print$\W32X86\ + . D 0 Sun May 4 03:56:35 2003 + .. D 0 Thu Apr 10 23:47:40 2003 + 2 D 0 Sun May 4 03:56:18 2003 + HDNIS01Aux.dll A 15356 Sun May 4 03:58:59 2003 + Hddm91c1KMMin.DLL A 46966 Sun May 4 03:58:59 2003 + HDNIS01_de.DLL A 434400 Sun May 4 03:58:59 2003 + HDNIS01_de.NTF A 790404 Sun May 4 03:56:35 2003 + Hddm91c1_de.DLL A 876544 Sun May 4 03:58:59 2003 + Hddm91c1_de.INI A 101 Sun May 4 03:58:59 2003 + Hddm91c1_de.dat A 5044 Sun May 4 03:58:59 2003 + Hddm91c1_de.def A 428 Sun May 4 03:58:59 2003 + Hddm91c1_de.hlp A 37699 Sun May 4 03:58:59 2003 + Hddm91c1_de.hre A 323584 Sun May 4 03:58:59 2003 + Hddm91c1_de.ppd A 26373 Sun May 4 03:58:59 2003 + Hddm91c1_de.vnd A 45056 Sun May 4 03:58:59 2003 + HDNIS01U_de.DLL A 165888 Sun May 4 03:58:59 2003 + HDNIS01U_de.HLP A 19770 Sun May 4 03:58:59 2003 + Hddm91c1_de_reg.HLP A 228417 Sun May 4 03:58:59 2003 + 40976 blocks of size 262144. 709 blocks available + + Current directory is \\SAMBA-CUPS\print$\W32X86\2\ + . D 0 Sun May 4 03:56:18 2003 + .. D 0 Sun May 4 03:56:35 2003 + ADOBEPS5.DLL A 434400 Sat May 3 23:18:45 2003 + laserjet4.ppd A 9639 Thu Apr 24 01:05:32 2003 + ADOBEPSU.DLL A 109568 Sat May 3 23:18:45 2003 + ADOBEPSU.HLP A 18082 Sat May 3 23:18:45 2003 + PDFcreator2.PPD A 15746 Sun Apr 20 22:24:07 2003 + 40976 blocks of size 262144. 709 blocks available + </pre><p> -For almost all printing systems, the printer 'name' must be composed -only of alphanumeric or underscore '_' characters. Some systems also -allow hyphens ('-') as well. An alias is an alternative name for the -printer, and an alias with a space in it is used as a 'comment' -about the printer. The printcap format optionally uses a \ at the end of lines -to extend the printcap to multiple lines. -</p><p> -Here are some examples of printcap files: -</p><p> -</p><div class="orderedlist"><ol type="1"><li><p> -pr just printer name -</p></li><li><p> -pr|alias printer name and alias -</p></li><li><p> -pr|My Printer printer name, alias used as comment -</p></li><li><p> -pr:sh:\ Same as pr:sh:cm= testing - :cm= \ - testing -</p></li><li><p> -pr:sh Same as pr:sh:cm= testing - :cm= testing +Notice that there are already driver files present in the +<tt class="filename">2</tt> subdir (probably from a previous +installation). Once the files for the new driver are there too, you +are still a few steps away from being able to use them on the +clients. The only thing you could do *now* is to retrieve them from a +client just like you retrieve ordinary files from a file share, by +opening print$ in Windows Explorer. But that wouldn't install them per +Point'n'Print. The reason is: Samba doesn't know yet that these files +are something special, namely <span class="emphasis"><em>printer driver +files</em></span> and it doesn't know yet to which print queue(s) these +driver files belong. +</p></div><div class="sect3" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h4 class="title"><a name="id2940672"></a>Running <b class="command">rpcclient</b> with +<b class="command">adddriver</b></h4></div></div><div></div></div><p> +So, next you must tell Samba about the special category of the files +you just uploaded into the <i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> share. This +is done by the <b class="command">adddriver</b> command. It will +prompt Samba to register the driver files into its internal TDB +database files. The following command and its output has been edited, +again, for readability: +</p><pre class="screen"> +<tt class="prompt">root# </tt><b class="userinput"><tt>rpcclient -Uroot%xxxx -c 'adddriver "Windows NT x86" "dm9110:HDNIS01_de.DLL: \ + Hddm91c1_de.ppd:HDNIS01U_de.DLL:HDNIS01U_de.HLP: \ + NULL:RAW:Hddm91c1_de.DLL,Hddm91c1_de.INI, \ + Hddm91c1_de.dat,Hddm91c1_de.def,Hddm91c1_de.hre, \ + Hddm91c1_de.vnd,Hddm91c1_de.hlp,Hddm91c1KMMin.DLL, \ + HDNIS01Aux.dll,HDNIS01_de.NTF, \ + Hddm91c1_de_reg.HLP' SAMBA-CUPS</tt></b> + + cmd = adddriver "Windows NT x86" "dm9110:HDNIS01_de.DLL:Hddm91c1_de.ppd:HDNIS01U_de.DLL: \ + HDNIS01U_de.HLP:NULL:RAW:Hddm91c1_de.DLL,Hddm91c1_de.INI, \ + Hddm91c1_de.dat,Hddm91c1_de.def,Hddm91c1_de.hre, \ + Hddm91c1_de.vnd,Hddm91c1_de.hlp,Hddm91c1KMMin.DLL, \ + HDNIS01Aux.dll,HDNIS01_de.NTF,Hddm91c1_de_reg.HLP" + + Printer Driver dm9110 successfully installed. + +</pre><p> +After this step the driver should be recognized by Samba on the print +server. You need to be very careful when typing the command. Don't +exchange the order of the fields. Some changes would lead to a +<tt class="computeroutput">NT_STATUS_UNSUCCESSFUL</tt> error +message. These become obvious. Other changes might install the driver +files successfully, but render the driver unworkable. So take care! +Hints about the syntax of the adddriver command are in the man +page. The CUPS printing chapter of this HOWTO collection provides a +more detailed description, if you should need it. +</p></div><div class="sect3" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h4 class="title"><a name="id2940772"></a>Check how Driver Files have been moved after +<b class="command">adddriver</b> finished</h4></div></div><div></div></div><p> +One indication for Samba's recognition of the files as driver files is +the <tt class="computeroutput">successfully installed</tt> message. +Another one is the fact, that our files have been moved by the +<b class="command">adddriver</b> command into the <tt class="filename">2</tt> +subdirectory. You can check this again with +<b class="command">smbclient</b>: +</p><pre class="screen"> +<tt class="prompt">root# </tt><b class="userinput"><tt>smbclient //SAMBA-CUPS/print\$ -Uroot%xxxx -c 'cd W32X86;dir;pwd;cd 2;dir;pwd'</tt></b> + added interface ip=10.160.51.162 bcast=10.160.51.255 nmask=255.255.252.0 + Domain=[CUPS-PRINT] OS=[Unix] Server=[Samba 2.2.7a] + + Current directory is \\SAMBA-CUPS\print$\W32X86\ + . D 0 Sun May 4 04:32:48 2003 + .. D 0 Thu Apr 10 23:47:40 2003 + 2 D 0 Sun May 4 04:32:48 2003 + 40976 blocks of size 262144. 731 blocks available + + Current directory is \\SAMBA-CUPS\print$\W32X86\2\ + . D 0 Sun May 4 04:32:48 2003 + .. D 0 Sun May 4 04:32:48 2003 + DigiMaster.PPD A 148336 Thu Apr 24 01:07:00 2003 + ADOBEPS5.DLL A 434400 Sat May 3 23:18:45 2003 + laserjet4.ppd A 9639 Thu Apr 24 01:05:32 2003 + ADOBEPSU.DLL A 109568 Sat May 3 23:18:45 2003 + ADOBEPSU.HLP A 18082 Sat May 3 23:18:45 2003 + PDFcreator2.PPD A 15746 Sun Apr 20 22:24:07 2003 + HDNIS01Aux.dll A 15356 Sun May 4 04:32:18 2003 + Hddm91c1KMMin.DLL A 46966 Sun May 4 04:32:18 2003 + HDNIS01_de.DLL A 434400 Sun May 4 04:32:18 2003 + HDNIS01_de.NTF A 790404 Sun May 4 04:32:18 2003 + Hddm91c1_de.DLL A 876544 Sun May 4 04:32:18 2003 + Hddm91c1_de.INI A 101 Sun May 4 04:32:18 2003 + Hddm91c1_de.dat A 5044 Sun May 4 04:32:18 2003 + Hddm91c1_de.def A 428 Sun May 4 04:32:18 2003 + Hddm91c1_de.hlp A 37699 Sun May 4 04:32:18 2003 + Hddm91c1_de.hre A 323584 Sun May 4 04:32:18 2003 + Hddm91c1_de.ppd A 26373 Sun May 4 04:32:18 2003 + Hddm91c1_de.vnd A 45056 Sun May 4 04:32:18 2003 + HDNIS01U_de.DLL A 165888 Sun May 4 04:32:18 2003 + HDNIS01U_de.HLP A 19770 Sun May 4 04:32:18 2003 + Hddm91c1_de_reg.HLP A 228417 Sun May 4 04:32:18 2003 + 40976 blocks of size 262144. 731 blocks available + +</pre><p> +Another verification is that the timestamp of the printing TDB files +is now updated (and possibly their filesize has increased). +</p></div><div class="sect3" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h4 class="title"><a name="id2940941"></a>Check if the Driver is recognized by Samba</h4></div></div><div></div></div><p> +Now the driver should be registered with Samba. We can easily verify +this, and will do so in a moment. However, this driver is +<span class="emphasis"><em>not yet</em></span> associated with a particular +<span class="emphasis"><em>printer</em></span>. We may check the driver status of the +files by at least three methods: +</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p>from any Windows client browse Network Neighbourhood, +find the Samba host and open the Samba <span class="guiicon">Printers and +Faxes</span> folder. Select any printer icon, right-click and +select the printer <span class="guimenuitem">Properties</span>. Click on the +<span class="guilabel">Advanced</span> tab. Here is a field indicating the +driver for that printer. A drop down menu allows you to change that +driver (be careful to not do this unwittingly.). You can use this +list to view all drivers know to Samba. Your new one should be amongst +them. (Each type of client will only see his own architecture's +list. If you don't have every driver installed for each platform, the +list will differ if you look at it from Windows95/98/ME or +WindowsNT/2000/XP.)</p></li><li><p>from a Windows 2000 or XP client (not WinNT) browse +<span class="guiicon">Network Neighbourhood</span>, search for the Samba +server and open the server's <span class="guiicon">Printers</span> folder, +right-click the white background (with no printer highlighted). Select +<span class="guimenuitem">Server Properties</span>. On the +<span class="guilabel">Drivers</span> tab you will see the new driver listed +now. This view enables you to also inspect the list of files belonging +to that driver<span class="emphasis"><em> (this doesn't work on Windows NT, but only on +Windows 2000 and Windows XP. WinNT doesn't provide the "Drivers" +tab).</em></span>. An alternative, much quicker method for Windows +2000/XP to start this dialog is by typing into a DOS box (you must of +course adapt the name to your Samba server instead of <i class="replaceable"><tt>SAMBA-CUPS</tt></i>): +</p><p><b class="userinput"><tt> rundll32 printui.dll,PrintUIEntry /s /t2 /n\\<i class="replaceable"><tt>SAMBA-CUPS</tt></i></tt></b></p></li><li><p>from a UNIX prompt run this command (or a variant +thereof), where <i class="replaceable"><tt>SAMBA-CUPS</tt></i> is the name of the Samba +host and "xxxx" represents the actual Samba password assigned to root: +</p><p><b class="userinput"><tt>rpcclient -U'root%xxxx' -c 'enumdrivers' <i class="replaceable"><tt>SAMBA-CUPS</tt></i></tt></b></p><p> +You will see a listing of all drivers Samba knows about. Your new one +should be amongst them. But it is only listed under the <i class="parameter"><tt>[Windows NT +x86]</tt></i> heading, not under <i class="parameter"><tt>[Windows 4.0]</tt></i>, +since we didn't install that part. Or did *you*? -- You will see a listing of +all drivers Samba knows about. Your new one should be amongst them. In our +example it is named <span class="emphasis"><em>dm9110</em></span>. Note that the 3rd column +shows the other installed drivers twice, for each supported architecture one +time. Our new driver only shows up for +<span class="application">Windows NT 4.0 or 2000</span>. To +have it present for <span class="application">Windows 95, 98 and ME</span> you'll +have to repeat the whole procedure with the WIN40 architecture and subdirectory. +</p></li></ul></div></div><div class="sect3" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h4 class="title"><a name="id2941145"></a>A side note: you are not bound to specific driver names</h4></div></div><div></div></div><p> +You can name the driver as you like. If you repeat the +<b class="command">adddriver</b> step, with the same files as before, but +with a different driver name, it will work the same: +</p><pre class="screen"> +<tt class="prompt">root# </tt><b class="userinput"><tt>rpcclient -Uroot%xxxx \ + -c 'adddriver "Windows NT x86" \ + "myphantasydrivername:HDNIS01_de.DLL: \ + Hddm91c1_de.ppd:HDNIS01U_de.DLL:HDNIS01U_de.HLP: \ + NULL:RAW:Hddm91c1_de.DLL,Hddm91c1_de.INI, \ + Hddm91c1_de.dat,Hddm91c1_de.def,Hddm91c1_de.hre, \ + Hddm91c1_de.vnd,Hddm91c1_de.hlp,Hddm91c1KMMin.DLL, \ + HDNIS01Aux.dll,HDNIS01_de.NTF,Hddm91c1_de_reg.HLP' SAMBA-CUPS + </tt></b> + + cmd = adddriver "Windows NT x86" + "myphantasydrivername:HDNIS01_de.DLL:Hddm91c1_de.ppd:HDNIS01U_de.DLL:\ + HDNIS01U_de.HLP:NULL:RAW:Hddm91c1_de.DLL,Hddm91c1_de.INI, \ + Hddm91c1_de.dat,Hddm91c1_de.def,Hddm91c1_de.hre, \ + Hddm91c1_de.vnd,Hddm91c1_de.hlp,Hddm91c1KMMin.DLL, \ + HDNIS01Aux.dll,HDNIS01_de.NTF,Hddm91c1_de_reg.HLP" + + Printer Driver myphantasydrivername successfully installed. + +</pre><p> +You will also be able to bind that driver to any print queue (however, +you are responsible yourself that you associate drivers to queues +which make sense to the target printer). Note, that you can't run the +<b class="command">rpcclient</b> <b class="command">adddriver</b> command +repeatedly. Each run "consumes" the files you had put into the +<i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> share by moving them into the +respective subdirectories. So you <span class="emphasis"><em>must</em></span> precede an +<b class="command">smbclient ... put</b> command before each +<b class="command">rpcclient ... adddriver</b>" command. +</p></div><div class="sect3" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h4 class="title"><a name="id2941256"></a>La Grande Finale: Running <b class="command">rpcclient</b> with +<b class="command">setdriver</b></h4></div></div><div></div></div><p> +Samba still needs to know <span class="emphasis"><em>which</em></span> printer's driver +this is. It needs to create a mapping of the driver to a printer, and +store this info in its "memory", the TDB files. The <b class="command">rpcclient +setdriver</b> command achieves exactly this: +</p><pre class="screen"> +<tt class="prompt">root# </tt><b class="userinput"><tt>rpcclient -U'root%xxxx' -c 'setdriver dm9110 myphantasydrivername' <i class="replaceable"><tt>SAMBA-CUPS</tt></i></tt></b> + cmd = setdriver dm9110 myphantasydrivername + Successfully set dm9110 to driver myphantasydrivername. +</pre><p> +Ahhhhh -- no, I didn't want to do that. Repeat, this time with the +name I intended: +</p><pre class="screen"> +<tt class="prompt">root# </tt><b class="userinput"><tt>rpcclient -U'root%xxxx' -c 'setdriver dm9110 dm9110' <i class="replaceable"><tt>SAMBA-CUPS</tt></i></tt></b> + cmd = setdriver dm9110 dm9110 + Successfully set dm9110 to driver dm9110. +</pre><p> +The syntax of the command is <b class="userinput"><tt>rpcclient +-U'root%<i class="replaceable"><tt>sambapassword</tt></i>' -c 'setdriver +"<i class="replaceable"><tt>printername</tt></i>" +"<i class="replaceable"><tt>drivername</tt></i>' +<i class="replaceable"><tt>SAMBA-Hostname</tt></i></tt></b> . -- +Now we have done *most* of the work. But not yet all.... +</p><div class="note" style="margin-left: 0.5in; margin-right: 0.5in;"><h3 class="title">Note</h3><p> +the <b class="command">setdriver</b> command will only succeed if the printer is +known to +Samba already. A bug in 2.2.x prevented Samba from recognizing freshly +installed printers. You had to restart Samba, or at least send a HUP +signal to all running smbd processes to work around this: +<b class="userinput"><tt>kill -HUP `pidof smbd`</tt></b>. </p></div></div></div></div><div class="sect1" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both"><a name="id2941408"></a>"The Proof of the Pudding lies in the Eating" (Client Driver Install +Procedure)</h2></div></div><div></div></div><p> +A famous philosopher said once: “<span class="quote">The Proof of the Pudding lies +in the Eating</span>”. The proof for our setup lies in the printing. +So let's install the printer driver onto the client PCs. This is not +as straightforward as it may seem. Read on. +</p><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2941428"></a>The first Client Driver Installation</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +Especially important is the installation onto the first client PC (for +each architectural platform separately). Once this is done correctly, +all further clients are easy to setup and shouldn't need further +attention. What follows is a description for the recommended first +procedure. You work now from a client workstation. First you should +guarantee that your connection is not unwittingly mapped to +<i class="parameter"><tt>bad user</tt></i> "nobody". In a DOS box type: +</p><p><b class="userinput"><tt>net use \\<i class="replaceable"><tt>SAMBA-SERVER</tt></i>\print$ /user:root</tt></b></p><p> +Replace root, if needed, by another valid +<i class="replaceable"><tt>printer admin</tt></i> user as given in the definition. +Should you already be connected as a different user, you'll get an error +message. There is no easy way to get rid of that connection, because +Windows doesn't seem to know a concept of "logging off" from a share +connection (don't confuse this with logging off from the local +workstation; that is a different matter). You can try to close +<span class="emphasis"><em>all</em></span> Windows file explorer and Internet Explorer +windows. As a last resort, you may have to reboot. Make sure there is +no automatic re-connection set up. It may be easier to go to a +different workstation and try from there. After you have made sure you +are connected as a printer admin user (you can check this with the +<b class="command">smbstatus</b> command on Samba) do this from the +Windows workstation: +</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p>Open <span class="guiicon">Network +Neighbourhood</span></p></li><li><p>Browse to Samba server</p></li><li><p>Open its <span class="guiicon">Printers and +Faxes</span> folder</p></li><li><p>Highlight and right-click the printer</p></li><li><p>Select <span class="guimenuitem">Connect...</span> (for WinNT4/2K +it is possibly <span class="guimenuitem">Install...</span>)</p></li></ul></div><p> +A new printer (named <i class="replaceable"><tt>printername</tt></i> on +samba-server) should now have appeared in your +<span class="emphasis"><em>local</em></span> Printer folder (check <span class="guimenu">Start</span> -- +<span class="guimenuitem">Settings</span> -- <span class="guimenuitem">Control Panel</span> +-- <span class="guiicon">Printers and Faxes</span>). +</p><p> +Most likely you are now tempted to try and print a test page. After +all, you now can open the printer properties and on the "General" tab, +there is a button offering to do just that. But chances are that you +get an error message saying <span class="errorname">Unable to print Test +Page</span>. The reason might be that there is not yet a +valid Device Mode set for the driver, or that the "Printer Driver +Data" set is still incomplete. +</p><p> +You must now make sure that a valid "Device Mode" is set for the +driver. Don't fear -- we will explain now what that means. +</p></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2941626"></a>IMPORTANT! Setting Device Modes on new Printers</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +In order for a printer to be truly usable by a Windows NT/2K/XP +client, it must possess: +</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p>a valid <span class="emphasis"><em>Device Mode</em></span> generated by +the driver for the printer (defining things like paper size, +orientation and duplex settings), and</p></li><li><p>a complete set of +<span class="emphasis"><em>Printer Driver Data</em></span> generated by the +driver.</p></li></ul></div><p> +If either one of these is incomplete, the clients can produce less +than optimal output at best. In the worst cases, unreadable garbage or +nothing at all comes from the printer or they produce a harvest of +error messages when attempting to print. Samba stores the named values +and all printing related info in its internal TDB database files +<tt class="filename">(ntprinters.tdb</tt>, +<tt class="filename">ntdrivers.tdb</tt>, <tt class="filename">printing.tdb</tt> +and <tt class="filename">ntforms.tdb</tt>). +</p><p> +What do these two words stand for? Basically, the Device Mode and the +set of Printer Driver Data is a collection of settings for all print +queue properties, initialized in a sensible way. Device Modes and +Printer Driver Data should initially be set on the print server (that is +here: the Samba host) to healthy values so that the clients can start +to use them immediately. How do we set these initial healthy values? +This can be achieved by accessing the drivers remotely from an NT (or +2k/XP) client, as is discussed in the next paragraphs. +</p><p> +Be aware, that a valid Device Mode can only be initiated by a +<i class="parameter"><tt>printer admin</tt></i>, or root (the reason should be +obvious). Device Modes can only correctly be set by executing the +printer driver program itself. Since Samba can not execute this Win32 +platform driver code, it sets this field initially to NULL (which is +not a valid setting for clients to use). Fortunately, most drivers +generate themselves the Printer Driver Data that is needed, when they +are uploaded to the <i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> share with the +help of the APW or rpcclient. +</p><p> +The generation and setting of a first valid Device Mode however +requires some "tickling" from a client, to set it on the Samba +server. The easiest means of doing so is to simply change the page +orientation on the server's printer. This "executes" enough of the +printer driver program on the client for the desired effect to happen, +and feeds back the new Device Mode to our Samba server. You can use the +native Windows NT/2K/XP printer properties page from a Window client +for this: +</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p>Browse the <span class="guiicon">Network Neighbourhood</span></p></li><li><p>Find the Samba server</p></li><li><p>Open the Samba server's <span class="guiicon">Printers and + Faxes</span> folder</p></li><li><p>Highlight the shared printer in question</p></li><li><p>Right-click the printer (you may already be here, if you +followed the last section's description)</p></li><li><p>At the bottom of the context menu select +<span class="guimenu">Properties....</span> (if the menu still offers the +<span class="guimenuitem">Connect...</span> entry +further above, you need to click that one first to achieve the driver +installation as shown in the last section)</p></li><li><p>Go to the <span class="guilabel">Advanced</span> tab; click on +<span class="guibutton">Printing Defaults...</span></p></li><li><p>Change the "Portrait" page setting to "Landscape" (and +back)</p></li><li><p>(Oh, and make sure to <span class="emphasis"><em>apply</em></span> +changes between swapping the page orientation to cause the change to +actually take effect...).</p></li><li><p>While you're at it, you may optionally also want to +set the desired printing defaults here, which then apply to all future +client driver installations on the remaining from now +on.</p></li></ul></div><p> +This procedure has executed the printer driver program on the client +platform and fed back the correct Device Mode to Samba, which now +stored it in its TDB files. Once the driver is installed on the +client, you can follow the analogous steps by accessing the +<span class="emphasis"><em>local</em></span> <span class="guiicon">Printers</span> folder too if you are +a Samba printer admin user. From now on printing should work as expected. +</p><p> +Samba also includes a service level parameter name <i class="parameter"><tt>default +devmode</tt></i> for generating a default Device Mode for a +printer. Some drivers will function well with Samba's default set of +properties. Others may crash the client's spooler service. So use this +parameter with caution. It is always better to have the client +generate a valid device mode for the printer and store it on the +server for you. +</p></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2941915"></a>Further Client Driver Install Procedures</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +Every further driver may be done by any user, along the lines +described above: Browse network, open printers folder on Samba server, +right-click printer and choose <span class="guimenuitem">Connect...</span>. Once +this completes (should be not more than a few seconds, but could also take +a minute, depending on network conditions), you should find the new printer in +your client workstation local <span class="guiicon">Printers and +Faxes</span> folder. +</p><p> +You can also open your local <span class="guiicon">Printers and Faxes</span> folder by +using this command on Windows 2000 and Windows XP Professional workstations: +</p><p><b class="userinput"><tt>rundll32 shell32.dll,SHHelpShortcuts_RunDLL PrintersFolder +</tt></b></p><p> +or this command on Windows NT 4.0 workstations: +</p><p><b class="userinput"><tt> +rundll32 shell32.dll,Control_RunDLL MAIN.CPL @2 +</tt></b></p><p> +You can enter the commands either inside a <span class="guilabel">DOS box</span> window +or in the <span class="guimenuitem">Run command...</span> field from the +<span class="guimenu">Start</span> menu. +</p></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2942010"></a>Always make first Client Connection as root or "printer admin"</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +After you installed the driver on the Samba server (in its +<i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> share, you should always make sure +that your first client installation completes correctly. Make it a habit for +yourself to build that the very first connection from a client as +<i class="parameter"><tt>printer admin</tt></i>. This is to make sure that: +</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p> a first valid <span class="emphasis"><em>Device Mode</em></span> is +really initialized (see above for more explanation details), and +that</p></li><li><p> the default print settings of your printer for all +further client installations are as you want them</p></li></ul></div><p> +Do this by changing the orientation to landscape, click +<span class="emphasis"><em>Apply</em></span>, and then change it back again. Then modify +the other settings (for example, you don't want the default media size +set to <span class="emphasis"><em>Letter</em></span>, when you are all using +<span class="emphasis"><em>A4</em></span>, right? You may want to set the printer for +<span class="emphasis"><em>duplex</em></span> as the default; etc.). +</p><p> +To connect as root to a Samba printer, try this command from a Windows +2K/XP DOS box command prompt: +</p><p><b class="userinput"><tt>runas /netonly /user:root "rundll32 printui.dll,PrintUIEntry /p /t3 /n \\<i class="replaceable"><tt>SAMBA-SERVER</tt></i>\<i class="replaceable"><tt>printername</tt></i>"</tt></b> +</p><p> +You will be prompted for root's Samba-password; type it, wait a few +seconds, click on <span class="guibutton">Printing Defaults...</span> and +proceed to set the job options as should be used as defaults by all +clients. Alternatively, instead of root you can name one other member +of the <i class="parameter"><tt>printer admins</tt></i> from the setting. +</p><p> +Now all the other users downloading and installing the driver +the same way (called <span class="emphasis"><em>Point'n'Print</em></span>) will +have the same defaults set for them. If you miss this step you'll +get a lot of helpdesk calls from your users. But maybe you like to +talk to people.... ;-) +</p></div></div><div class="sect1" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both"><a name="id2942152"></a>Other Gotchas</h2></div></div><div></div></div><p> +Your driver is installed. It is ready for +<span class="emphasis"><em>Point'n'Print</em></span> installation by the clients +now. You <span class="emphasis"><em>may</em></span> have tried to download and use it +onto your first client machine now. But wait... let's make you +acquainted first with a few tips and tricks you may find useful. For +example, suppose you didn't manage to "set the defaults" on the +printer, as advised in the preceding paragraphs? And your users +complain about various issues (such as “<span class="quote">We need to set the paper +size for each job from Letter to A4 and it won't store it!</span>”) +</p><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2942185"></a>Setting Default Print Options for the Client Drivers</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +The last sentence might be viewed with mixed feelings by some users and +admins. They have struggled for hours and hours and couldn't arrive at +a point were their settings seemed to be saved. It is not their +fault. The confusing thing is this: in the multi-tabbed dialog that pops +up when you right-click the printer name and select +<span class="guimenuitem">Properties...</span>, you can arrive at two identically +looking dialogs, each claiming that they help you to set printer options, +in three different ways. Here is the definite answer to the "Samba +Default Driver Setting FAQ": +</p><p><b>“<span class="quote">I can't set and save default print options +for all users on Win2K/XP! Why not?</span>”�</b> +How are you doing it? I bet the wrong way.... (it is not very +easy to find out, though). There are 3 different ways to bring you to +a dialog that <span class="emphasis"><em>seems</em></span> to set everything. All three +dialogs <span class="emphasis"><em>look</em></span> the same. Only one of them +<span class="emphasis"><em>does</em></span> what you intend. +<span class="emphasis"><em>Important:</em></span> you need to be Administrator or Print +Administrator to do this for all users. Here is how I reproduce it in +on XP Professional: + +</p><div class="orderedlist"><ol type="A"><li><p>The first "wrong" way: + +</p><div class="orderedlist"><ol type="1"><li><p>Open the <span class="guiicon">Printers</span> +folder.</p></li><li><p>Right-click on the printer +(<span class="emphasis"><em>remoteprinter on cupshost</em></span>) and +select in context menu <span class="guimenu">Printing +Preferences...</span></p></li><li><p>Look at this dialog closely and remember what it looks +like.</p></li></ol></div><p> +</p></li><li><p>The second "wrong" way: + +</p><div class="orderedlist"><ol type="1"><li><p>Open the <span class="guimenu">Printers</span> +folder.</p></li><li><p>Right-click on the printer (<span class="emphasis"><em>remoteprinter on +cupshost</em></span>) and select in the context menu +<span class="guimenuitem">Properties</span></p></li><li><p>Click on the <span class="guilabel">General</span> +tab</p></li><li><p>Click on the button <span class="guibutton">Printing +Preferences...</span></p></li><li><p>A new dialog opens. Keep this dialog open and go back +to the parent dialog.</p></li></ol></div><p> +</p></li><li><p>The third, the "correct" way: (should you do +this from the beginning, just carry out steps 1. and 2. from second +"way" above) + +</p><div class="orderedlist"><ol type="1"><li><p>Click on the <span class="guilabel">Advanced</span> +tab. (Hmmm... if everything is "Grayed Out", then you are not logged +in as a user with enough privileges).</p></li><li><p>Click on the <span class="guibutton">Printing +Defaults...</span> button.</p></li><li><p>On any of the two new tabs, click on the +<span class="guilabel">Advanced...</span> button.</p></li><li><p>A new dialog opens. Compare this one to the other, +identical looking one from "B.5" or A.3".</p></li></ol></div><p> </p></li></ol></div><p> + +Do you see any difference in the two settings dialogs? I don't +either. However, only the last one, which you arrived at with steps +C.1.-6. will permanently save any settings which will then become the +defaults for new users. If you want all clients to have the same +defaults, you need to conduct these steps as administrator +(<i class="parameter"><tt>printer admin</tt></i> in ) +<span class="emphasis"><em>before</em></span> a client downloads the driver (the clients +can later set their own <span class="emphasis"><em>per-user defaults</em></span> by +following the procedures <span class="emphasis"><em>A.</em></span> +or <span class="emphasis"><em>B.</em></span> above...). (This is new: Windows 2000 and +Windows XP allow <span class="emphasis"><em>per-user</em></span> default settings and +the ones the administrator gives them, before they set up their own). +The "parents" of the identically looking dialogs have a slight +difference in their window names: one is called +<tt class="computeroutput">Default Print Values for Printer Foo on Server +Bar"</tt> (which is the one you need) and the other is +called "<tt class="computeroutput">Print Settings for Printer Foo on Server +Bar</tt>". The last one is the one you arrive at when you +right-click on the printer and select <span class="guimenuitem">Print +Settings...</span>. This is the one what you were +taught to use back in the days of Windows NT! So it is only natural to +try the same way with Win2k or WinXP. You wouldn't dream +that there is now a different "clicking path" to arrive at an +identically looking, but functionally different dialog to set defaults +for all users! +</p><div class="tip" style="margin-left: 0.5in; margin-right: 0.5in;"><h3 class="title">Tip</h3><p>Try (on Win2000 and WinXP) to run this command (as a user +with the right privileges): +</p><p><b class="userinput"><tt> +rundll32 printui.dll,PrintUIEntry /p /t3 /n\\<i class="replaceable"><tt>SAMBA-SERVER</tt></i>\<i class="replaceable"><tt>printersharename</tt></i> +</tt></b></p><p> +to see the tab with the <span class="guilabel">Printing Defaults...</span> +button (the one you need). Also run this command: +</p><p><b class="userinput"><tt> +rundll32 printui.dll,PrintUIEntry /p /t0 /n\\<i class="replaceable"><tt>SAMBA-SERVER</tt></i>\<i class="replaceable"><tt>printersharename</tt></i> +</tt></b></p><p> +to see the tab with the <span class="guilabel">Printing Preferences...</span> +button (the one which doesn't set system-wide defaults). You can +start the commands from inside a DOS box" or from the <span class="guimenu">Start</span> +-- <span class="guimenuitem">Run...</span> menu. +</p></div></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2942622"></a>Supporting large Numbers of Printers</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +One issue that has arisen during the recent development phase of Samba +is the need to support driver downloads for 100's of printers. Using +Windows NT APW here is somewhat awkward (to say the least). If you +don't want to acquire RSS pains from such the printer installation +clicking orgy alone, you need to think about a non-interactive script. </p><p> -Samba reads the printcap information when first started. If you make -changes in the printcap information, then you must do the following: -</p><div class="orderedlist"><ol type="1"><li><p> -make sure that the print spooler is aware of these changes. -The LPRng system uses the 'lpc reread' command to do this. -</p></li><li><p> -make sure that the spool queues, etc., exist and have the -correct permissions. The LPRng system uses the 'checkpc -f' -command to do this. -</p></li><li><p> -You now should send a SIGHUP signal to the smbd server to have -it reread the printcap information. -</p></li></ol></div></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2887691"></a>Job sent, no output</h3></div></div><p> -This is the most frustrating part of printing. You may have sent the -job, verified that the job was forwarded, set up a wrapper around -the command to send the file, but there was no output from the printer. -</p><p> -First, check to make sure that the job REALLY is getting to the -right print queue. If you are using a BSD or LPRng print spooler, -you can temporarily stop the printing of jobs. Jobs can still be -submitted, but they will not be printed. Use: -</p><pre class="programlisting"> - lpc -Pprinter stop +If more than one printer is using the same driver, the +<b class="command">rpcclient setdriver</b> command can be used to set the +driver associated with an installed queue. If the driver is uploaded +to <i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> once and registered with the +printing TDBs, it can be used by multiple print queues. In this case +you just need to repeat the <b class="command">setprinter</b> subcommand +of <b class="command">rpcclient</b> for every queue (without the need to +conduct the <b class="command">adddriver</b> again and again). The +following is an example of how this could be accomplished: +</p><pre class="screen"> +<tt class="prompt">root# </tt><b class="userinput"><tt>rpcclient <i class="replaceable"><tt>SAMBA-CUPS</tt></i> -U root%<i class="replaceable"><tt>secret</tt></i> -c 'enumdrivers'</tt></b> + cmd = enumdrivers + + [Windows NT x86] + Printer Driver Info 1: + Driver Name: [infotec IS 2075 PCL 6] + + Printer Driver Info 1: + Driver Name: [DANKA InfoStream] + + Printer Driver Info 1: + Driver Name: [Heidelberg Digimaster 9110 (PS)] + + Printer Driver Info 1: + Driver Name: [dm9110] + + Printer Driver Info 1: + Driver Name: [myphantasydrivername] + + [....] </pre><p> -Now submit a print job and then use 'lpq -Pprinter' to see if the -job is in the print queue. If it is not in the print queue then -you will have to find out why it is not being accepted for printing. -</p><p> -Next, you may want to check to see what the format of the job really -was. With the assistance of the system administrator you can view -the submitted jobs files. You may be surprised to find that these -are not in what you would expect to call a printable format. -You can use the UNIX 'file' utitily to determine what the job -format actually is: -</p><pre class="programlisting"> - cd /var/spool/lpd/printer # spool directory of print jobs - ls # find job files - file dfA001myhost + +</p><pre class="screen"> +<tt class="prompt">root# </tt><b class="userinput"><tt>rpcclient <i class="replaceable"><tt>SAMBA-CUPS</tt></i> -U root%<i class="replaceable"><tt>secret</tt></i> -c 'enumprinters'</tt></b> + cmd = enumprinters + flags:[0x800000] + name:[\\SAMBA-CUPS\dm9110] + description:[\\SAMBA-CUPS\dm9110,,110ppm HiVolume DANKA Stuttgart] + comment:[110 ppm HiVolume DANKA Stuttgart] + [....] </pre><p> -You should make sure that your printer supports this format OR that -your system administrator has installed a 'print filter' that will -convert the file to a format appropriate for your printer. -</p></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2888240"></a>Job sent, strange output</h3></div></div><p> -Once you have the job printing, you can then start worrying about -making it print nicely. -</p><p> -The most common problem is extra pages of output: banner pages -OR blank pages at the end. -</p><p> -If you are getting banner pages, check and make sure that the -printcap option or printer option is configured for no banners. -If you have a printcap, this is the :sh (suppress header or banner -page) option. You should have the following in your printer. -</p><pre class="programlisting"> - printer: ... :sh + +</p><pre class="screen"> +<tt class="prompt">root# </tt><b class="userinput"><tt>rpcclient <i class="replaceable"><tt>SAMBA-CUPS</tt></i> -U root%<i class="replaceable"><tt>secret</tt></i> -c 'setdriver <i class="replaceable"><tt>dm9110</tt></i> "<i class="replaceable"><tt>Heidelberg Digimaster 9110 (PS)</tt></i>"'</tt></b> + cmd = setdriver dm9110 Heidelberg Digimaster 9110 (PPD) + Successfully set dm9110 to driver Heidelberg Digimaster 9110 (PS). </pre><p> -If you have this option and are still getting banner pages, there -is a strong chance that your printer is generating them for you -automatically. You should make sure that banner printing is disabled -for the printer. This usually requires using the printer setup software -or procedures supplied by the printer manufacturer. -</p><p> -If you get an extra page of output, this could be due to problems -with your job format, or if you are generating PostScript jobs, -incorrect setting on your printer driver on the MicroSoft client. -For example, under Win95 there is a option: -</p><pre class="programlisting"> - Printers|Printer Name|(Right Click)Properties|Postscript|Advanced| + +</p><pre class="screen"> +<tt class="prompt">root# </tt><b class="userinput"><tt>rpcclient <i class="replaceable"><tt>SAMBA-CUPS</tt></i> -U root%<i class="replaceable"><tt>secret</tt></i> -c 'enumprinters'</tt></b> + cmd = enumprinters + flags:[0x800000] + name:[\\SAMBA-CUPS\dm9110] + description:[\\SAMBA-CUPS\dm9110,Heidelberg Digimaster 9110 (PS),110ppm HiVolume DANKA Stuttgart] + comment:[110ppm HiVolume DANKA Stuttgart] + [....] </pre><p> -that allows you to choose if a Ctrl-D is appended to all jobs. -This is a very bad thing to do, as most spooling systems will -automatically add a ^D to the end of the job if it is detected as -PostScript. The multiple ^D may cause an additional page of output. -</p></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2888316"></a>Raw PostScript printed</h3></div></div><p> -This is a problem that is usually caused by either the print spooling -system putting information at the start of the print job that makes -the printer think the job is a text file, or your printer simply -does not support PostScript. You may need to enable 'Automatic -Format Detection' on your printer. -</p></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2888334"></a>Advanced Printing</h3></div></div><p> -Note that you can do some pretty magic things by using your -imagination with the "print command" option and some shell scripts. -Doing print accounting is easy by passing the %U option to a print -command shell script. You could even make the print command detect -the type of output and its size and send it to an appropriate -printer. -</p></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2888360"></a>Real debugging</h3></div></div><p> -If the above debug tips don't help, then maybe you need to bring in -the bug guns, system tracing. See Tracing.txt in this directory. -</p></div></div></div><div class="navfooter"><hr><table width="100%" summary="Navigation footer"><tr><td width="40%" align="left"><a accesskey="p" href="groupmapping.html">Prev</a>�</td><td width="20%" align="center"><a accesskey="u" href="optional.html">Up</a></td><td width="40%" align="right">�<a accesskey="n" href="CUPS-printing.html">Next</a></td></tr><tr><td width="40%" align="left" valign="top">Chapter�12.�Configuring Group Mapping�</td><td width="20%" align="center"><a accesskey="h" href="index.html">Home</a></td><td width="40%" align="right" valign="top">�Chapter�14.�CUPS Printing Support</td></tr></table></div></body></html> + +</p><pre class="screen"> +<tt class="prompt">root# </tt><b class="userinput"><tt>rpcclient <i class="replaceable"><tt>SAMBA-CUPS</tt></i> -U root%<i class="replaceable"><tt>secret</tt></i> -c 'setdriver <i class="replaceable"><tt>dm9110</tt></i> <i class="replaceable"><tt>myphantasydrivername</tt></i>'</tt></b> + cmd = setdriver dm9110 myphantasydrivername + Successfully set dm9110 to myphantasydrivername. +</pre><p> + +</p><pre class="screen"> +<tt class="prompt">root# </tt><b class="userinput"><tt>rpcclient <i class="replaceable"><tt>SAMBA-CUPS</tt></i> -U root%<i class="replaceable"><tt>secret</tt></i> -c 'enumprinters'</tt></b> + cmd = enumprinters + flags:[0x800000] + name:[\\SAMBA-CUPS\dm9110] + description:[\\SAMBA-CUPS\dm9110,myphantasydrivername,110ppm HiVolume DANKA Stuttgart] + comment:[110ppm HiVolume DANKA Stuttgart] + [....] +</pre><p> +It may be not easy to recognize: but the first call to +<b class="command">enumprinters</b> showed the "dm9110" printer with an +empty string where the driver should have been listed (between the 2 +commas in the "description" field). After the +<b class="command">setdriver</b> command succeeded, all is well. (The +CUPS Printing chapter has more info about the installation of printer +drivers with the help of <b class="command">rpcclient</b>). +</p></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2942924"></a>Adding new Printers with the Windows NT APW</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +By default, Samba exhibits all printer shares defined in +<tt class="filename">smb.conf</tt> in the +<span class="guiicon">Printers...</span> folder. Also located in this folder +is the Windows NT Add Printer Wizard icon. The APW will be shown only +if: +</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p>...the connected user is able to successfully execute +an <b class="command">OpenPrinterEx(\\server)</b> with administrative +privileges (i.e. root or <i class="parameter"><tt>printer admin</tt></i>). +</p><div class="tip" style="margin-left: 0.5in; margin-right: 0.5in;"><h3 class="title">Tip</h3><p> Try this from a Windows 2K/XP DOS box command prompt: +</p><p><b class="userinput"><tt> +runas /netonly /user:root rundll32 printui.dll,PrintUIEntry /p /t0 /n \\<i class="replaceable"><tt>SAMBA-SERVER</tt></i>\<i class="replaceable"><tt>printersharename</tt></i> +</tt></b></p><p> +and click on <span class="guibutton">Printing Preferences...</span> +</p></div></li><li><p>... contains the setting +<i class="parameter"><tt>show add printer wizard = yes</tt></i> (the +default).</p></li></ul></div><p> +The APW can do various things: +</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p>upload a new driver to the Samba +<i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> share;</p></li><li><p>associate an uploaded driver with an existing (but +still "driverless") print queue;</p></li><li><p>exchange the currently used driver for an existing +print queue with one that has been uploaded before;</p></li><li><p>add an entirely new printer to the Samba host (only in +conjunction with a working <i class="parameter"><tt>add printer command</tt></i>; +a corresponding <i class="parameter"><tt>delete printer command</tt></i> for +removing entries from the <span class="guiicon">Printers...</span> folder +may be provided too)</p></li></ul></div><p> +The last one (add a new printer) requires more effort than the +previous ones. In order to use the APW to successfully add a printer +to a Samba server, the <i class="parameter"><tt>add printer command</tt></i> must +have a defined value. The program hook must successfully add the +printer to the Unix print system (i.e. to +<tt class="filename">/etc/printcap</tt>, +<tt class="filename">/etc/cups/printers.conf</tt> or other appropriate +files) and to if necessary. +</p><p> +When using the APW from a client, if the named printer share does not +exist, smbd will execute the <i class="parameter"><tt>add printer +command</tt></i> and reparse to the +to attempt to locate the new printer share. If the share is still not +defined, an error of <span class="errorname">Access Denied</span> is +returned to the client. Note that the <i class="parameter"><tt>add printer +command</tt></i> is executed under the context of the connected +user, not necessarily a root account. A <i class="parameter"><tt>map to guest = bad +user</tt></i> may have connected you unwittingly under the wrong +privilege; you should check it by using the +<b class="command">smbstatus</b> command. +</p></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2943168"></a>Weird Error Message <span class="errorname">Cannot connect under a +different Name</span></h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +Once you are connected with the wrong credentials, there is no means +to reverse the situation other than to close all Explorer windows, and +perhaps reboot. +</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p>The <b class="command">net use \\SAMBA-SERVER\sharename +/user:root</b> gives you an error message: <tt class="computeroutput">Multiple +connections to a server or a shared resource by the same user +utilizing the several user names are not allowed. Disconnect all +previous connections to the server, resp. the shared resource, and try +again.</tt></p></li><li><p>Every attempt to "connect a network drive" to +<tt class="filename">\\SAMBASERVER\\print$</tt> to z: is countered by the +pertinacious message. <tt class="computeroutput">This network folder is currently +connected under different credentials (username and password). +Disconnect first any existing connection to this network share in +order to connect again under a different username and +password</tt>.</p></li></ul></div><p> +So you close all connections. You try again. You get the same +message. You check from the Samba side, using +<b class="command">smbstatus</b>. Yes, there are some more +connections. You kill them all. The client still gives you the same +error message. You watch the smbd.log file on a very high debug level +and try re-connect. Same error message, but not a single line in the +log. You start to wonder if there was a connection attempt at all. You +run ethereal and tcpdump while you try to connect. Result: not a +single byte goes on the wire. Windows still gives the error +message. You close all Explorer Windows and start it again. You try to +connect - and this times it works! Windows seems to cache connection +info somewhere and doesn't keep it up to date (if you are unlucky you +might need to reboot to get rid of the error message). +</p></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2943267"></a>Be careful when assembling Driver Files</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +You need to be very careful when you take notes about the files and +belonging to a particular driver. Don't confuse the files for driver +version "0" (for Win95/98/ME, going into +<tt class="filename">[print$]/WIN/0/</tt>), driver version "2" (Kernel Mode +driver for WinNT, going into <tt class="filename">[print$]/W32X86/2/</tt> +<span class="emphasis"><em>may</em></span> be used on Win2K/XP too), and driver version +"3" (non-Kernel Mode driver going into +<tt class="filename">[print$]/W32X86/3/</tt> <span class="emphasis"><em>can not</em></span> +be used on WinNT). Very often these different driver versions contain +files carrying the same name; but still the files are very different! +Also, if you look at them from the Windows Explorer (they reside in +<tt class="filename">%WINDOWS%\system32\spool\drivers\W32X86\</tt>) you +will probably see names in capital letters, while an "enumdrivers" +command from Samba would show mixed or lower case letters. So it is +easy to confuse them. If you install them manually using +<b class="command">rpcclient</b> and subcommands, you may even succeed +without an error message. Only later, when you try install on a +client, you will encounter error messages like <tt class="computeroutput">This +server has no appropriate driver for the printer</tt>. +</p><p> +Here is an example. You are invited to look very closely at the +various files, compare their names and their spelling, and discover +the differences in the composition of the version-2 and -3 sets +Note: the version-0 set contained 40 (!) +<i class="parameter"><tt>Dependentfiles</tt></i>, so I left it out for space +reasons: +</p><pre class="screen"> +<tt class="prompt">root# </tt><b class="userinput"><tt>rpcclient -U 'Administrator%<i class="replaceable"><tt>secret</tt></i>' -c 'enumdrivers 3' 10.160.50.8 </tt></b> + + Printer Driver Info 3: + Version: [3] + Driver Name: [Canon iR8500 PS3] + Architecture: [Windows NT x86] + Driver Path: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\cns3g.dll] + Datafile: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\iR8500sg.xpd] + Configfile: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\cns3gui.dll] + Helpfile: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\cns3g.hlp] + + Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\aucplmNT.dll] + Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\ucs32p.dll] + Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\tnl32.dll] + Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\aussdrv.dll] + Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\cnspdc.dll] + Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\aussapi.dat] + Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\cns3407.dll] + Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\CnS3G.cnt] + Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\NBAPI.DLL] + Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\NBIPC.DLL] + Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\cpcview.exe] + Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\cpcdspl.exe] + Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\cpcedit.dll] + Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\cpcqm.exe] + Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\cpcspl.dll] + Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\cfine32.dll] + Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\cpcr407.dll] + Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\Cpcqm407.hlp] + Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\cpcqm407.cnt] + Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\cns3ggr.dll] + + Monitorname: [] + Defaultdatatype: [] + + Printer Driver Info 3: + Version: [2] + Driver Name: [Canon iR5000-6000 PS3] + Architecture: [Windows NT x86] + Driver Path: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\2\cns3g.dll] + Datafile: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\2\IR5000sg.xpd] + Configfile: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\2\cns3gui.dll] + Helpfile: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\2\cns3g.hlp] + + Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\2\AUCPLMNT.DLL] + Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\2\aussdrv.dll] + Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\2\cnspdc.dll] + Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\2\aussapi.dat] + Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\2\cns3407.dll] + Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\2\CnS3G.cnt] + Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\2\NBAPI.DLL] + Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\2\NBIPC.DLL] + Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\2\cns3gum.dll] + + Monitorname: [CPCA Language Monitor2] + Defaultdatatype: [] + +</pre><p> +If we write the "version 2" files and the "version 3" files +into different text files and compare the result, we see this +picture: +</p><pre class="screen"> +<tt class="prompt">root# </tt><b class="userinput"><tt>sdiff 2-files 3-files</tt></b> + + + cns3g.dll cns3g.dll + iR8500sg.xpd iR8500sg.xpd + cns3gui.dll cns3gui.dll + cns3g.hlp cns3g.hlp + AUCPLMNT.DLL | aucplmNT.dll + > ucs32p.dll + > tnl32.dll + aussdrv.dll aussdrv.dll + cnspdc.dll cnspdc.dll + aussapi.dat aussapi.dat + cns3407.dll cns3407.dll + CnS3G.cnt CnS3G.cnt + NBAPI.DLL NBAPI.DLL + NBIPC.DLL NBIPC.DLL + cns3gum.dll | cpcview.exe + > cpcdspl.exe + > cpcqm.exe + > cpcspl.dll + > cfine32.dll + > cpcr407.dll + > Cpcqm407.hlp + > cpcqm407.cnt + > cns3ggr.dll + +</pre><p> +Don't be fooled though! Driver files for each version with identical +names may be different in their content, as you can see from this size +comparison: +</p><pre class="screen"> +<tt class="prompt">root# </tt><b class="userinput"><tt>for i in cns3g.hlp cns3gui.dll cns3g.dll; do \ + smbclient //10.160.50.8/print\$ -U 'Administrator%xxxx' \ + -c "cd W32X86/3; dir $i; cd .. ; cd 2; dir $i"; \ + done</tt></b> + + CNS3G.HLP A 122981 Thu May 30 02:31:00 2002 + CNS3G.HLP A 99948 Thu May 30 02:31:00 2002 + + CNS3GUI.DLL A 1805824 Thu May 30 02:31:00 2002 + CNS3GUI.DLL A 1785344 Thu May 30 02:31:00 2002 + + CNS3G.DLL A 1145088 Thu May 30 02:31:00 2002 + CNS3G.DLL A 15872 Thu May 30 02:31:00 2002 + +</pre><p> +In my example were even more differences than shown here. Conclusion: +you must be very careful to select the correct driver files for each +driver version. Don't rely on the names alone. Don't interchange files +belonging to different driver versions. +</p></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2943612"></a>Samba and Printer Ports</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +Windows NT/2000 print servers associate a port with each +printer. These normally take the form of <tt class="filename">LPT1:</tt>, +<tt class="filename">COM1:</tt>, <tt class="filename">FILE:</tt>, etc. Samba +must also support the concept of ports associated with a printer. By +default, only one printer port, named "Samba Printer Port", exists on +a system. Samba does not really need such a "port" in order to print; +it rather is a requirement of Windows clients. They insist on being +told about an available port when they request this info, otherwise +they throw an error message at you. So Samba fakes the port +information to keep the Windows clients happy. +</p><p> +Note that Samba does not support the concept of "Printer Pooling" +internally either. Printer Pooling assigns a logical printer to +multiple ports as a form of load balancing or fail over. +</p><p> +If you require that multiple ports be defined for some reason or +another (“<span class="quote">My users and my Boss should not know that they are +working with Samba</span>”), possesses a +<i class="parameter"><tt>enumports command</tt></i> which can be used to define +an external program that generates a listing of ports on a system. +</p></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2943683"></a>Avoiding the most common Misconfigurations of the Client Driver</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +So - printing works, but there are still problems. Most jobs print +well, some don't print at all. Some jobs have problems with fonts, +which don't look good at all. Some jobs print fast, and some are +dead-slow. We can't cover it all; but we want to encourage you to read +the little paragraph about "Avoiding the wrong PostScript Driver +Settings" in the CUPS Printing part of this document. +</p></div></div><div class="sect1" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both"><a name="id2943705"></a>The Imprints Toolset</h2></div></div><div></div></div><p> +The Imprints tool set provides a UNIX equivalent of the +Windows NT Add Printer Wizard. For complete information, please +refer to the Imprints web site +at<a href="http://imprints.sourceforge.net/" target="_top">http://imprints.sourceforge.net/</a> +as well as the documentation included with the imprints source +distribution. This section will only provide a brief introduction +to the features of Imprints. +</p><p><b>Attention! Maintainer required.�</b> +Unfortunately, the Imprints toolset is no longer maintained. As of +December, 2000, the project is in need of a new maintainer. The most +important skill to have is decent perl coding and an interest in +MS-RPC based printing using Samba. If you wish to volunteer, please +coordinate your efforts on the samba-technical mailing list. The +toolset is still in usable form; but only for a series of older +printer models, where there are prepared packages to use. Packages for +more up to date print devices are needed if Imprints should have a +future.</p><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2943751"></a>What is Imprints?</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +Imprints is a collection of tools for supporting these goals: +</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p>Providing a central repository information regarding +Windows NT and 95/98 printer driver packages</p></li><li><p>Providing the tools necessary for creating the +Imprints printer driver packages.</p></li><li><p>Providing an installation client which will obtain +printer drivers from a central internet (or intranet) Imprints Server +repository and install them on remote Samba and Windows NT4 print +servers.</p></li></ul></div></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2943792"></a>Creating Printer Driver Packages</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +The process of creating printer driver packages is beyond the scope of +this document (refer to Imprints.txt also included with the Samba +distribution for more information). In short, an Imprints driver +package is a gzipped tarball containing the driver files, related INF +files, and a control file needed by the installation client. +</p></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2943811"></a>The Imprints Server</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +The Imprints server is really a database server that may be queried +via standard HTTP mechanisms. Each printer entry in the database has +an associated URL for the actual downloading of the package. Each +package is digitally signed via GnuPG which can be used to verify that +package downloaded is actually the one referred in the Imprints +database. It is strongly recommended that this security check +<span class="emphasis"><em>not</em></span> be disabled. +</p></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2943835"></a>The Installation Client</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +More information regarding the Imprints installation client is +available in the <tt class="filename">Imprints-Client-HOWTO.ps</tt> file +included with the imprints source package. +</p><p> +The Imprints installation client comes in two forms. +</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p>a set of command line Perl scripts</p></li><li><p>a GTK+ based graphical interface to the command line Perl +scripts</p></li></ul></div><p> +The installation client (in both forms) provides a means of querying +the Imprints database server for a matching list of known printer +model names as well as a means to download and install the drivers on +remote Samba and Windows NT print servers. +</p><p> +The basic installation process is in four steps and perl code is +wrapped around smbclient and rpcclient +</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p> + foreach (supported architecture for a given driver) + </p><div class="orderedlist"><ol type="1"><li><p>rpcclient: Get the appropriate upload directory on the remote server</p></li><li><p>smbclient: Upload the driver files</p></li><li><p>rpcclient: Issues an AddPrinterDriver() MS-RPC</p></li></ol></div><p> + </p></li><li><p>rpcclient: Issue an AddPrinterEx() MS-RPC to actually create the printer</p></li></ul></div><p> +One of the problems encountered when implementing the Imprints tool +set was the name space issues between various supported client +architectures. For example, Windows NT includes a driver named "Apple +LaserWriter II NTX v51.8" and Windows 95 calls its version of this +driver "Apple LaserWriter II NTX" +</p><p> +The problem is how to know what client drivers have been uploaded for +a printer. An astute reader will remember that the Windows NT Printer +Properties dialog only includes space for one printer driver name. A +quick look in the Windows NT 4.0 system registry at +</p><p><tt class="filename"> + HKLM\System\CurrentControlSet\Control\Print\Environment +</tt></p><p> +will reveal that Windows NT always uses the NT driver name. This is +ok as Windows NT always requires that at least the Windows NT version +of the printer driver is present. However, Samba does not have the +requirement internally. Therefore, how can you use the NT driver name +if is has not already been installed? +</p><p> +The way of sidestepping this limitation is to require that all +Imprints printer driver packages include both the Intel Windows NT and +95/98 printer drivers and that NT driver is installed first. +</p></div></div><div class="sect1" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both"><a name="id2943987"></a>Add Network Printers at Logon without User Interaction</h2></div></div><div></div></div><p> +The following MS Knowledge Base article may be of some help if you +need to handle Windows 2000 clients: <span class="emphasis"><em>How to Add Printers +with No User Interaction in Windows 2000.</em></span> ( <a href="http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;189105" target="_top">http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;189105</a> +). It also applies to Windows XP Professional clients. +</p><p> +The ideas sketched out below are inspired by this article. It +describes a commandline method which can be applied to install +network and local printers and their drivers. This is most useful +if integrated in Logon Scripts. You can see what options are +available by typing in a command prompt ("DOS box") this: +</p><p><b class="userinput"><tt>rundll32 printui.dll,PrintUIEntry /?</tt></b></p><p> +A window pops up which shows you all of the commandline switches +available. An extensive list of examples is also provided. This is +only for Win 2k/XP. It doesn't work on WinNT. WinNT has probably some +other tools in the respective Resource Kit. Here is a suggestion about +what a client logon script might contain, with a short explanation of +what the lines actually do (it works if 2k/XP Windows clients access +printers via Samba, but works for Windows-based print servers too): +</p><pre class="screen"> +<b class="userinput"><tt>rundll32 printui.dll,PrintUIEntry /dn /n "\\sambacupsserver\infotec2105-IPDS" /q</tt></b> +<b class="userinput"><tt>rundll32 printui.dll,PrintUIEntry /in /n "\\sambacupsserver\infotec2105-PS"</tt></b> +<b class="userinput"><tt>rundll32 printui.dll,PrintUIEntry /y /n "\\sambacupsserver\infotec2105-PS"</tt></b> +</pre><p> +Here is a list of the used commandline parameters: +</p><div class="variablelist"><dl><dt><span class="term">/dn</span></dt><dd><p>deletes a network printer</p></dd><dt><span class="term">/q</span></dt><dd><p>quiet modus</p></dd><dt><span class="term">/n</span></dt><dd><p>names a printer</p></dd><dt><span class="term">/in</span></dt><dd><p>adds a network printer connection</p></dd><dt><span class="term">/y</span></dt><dd><p>sets printer as default printer</p></dd></dl></div><p> +I have tested this with a Samba 2.2.7a and a Samba-3alpha24 +installation and Windows XP Professional clients. Note that this +specific command set works with network print queues (installing +local print queues requires different parameters, but this is of no +interest here). +</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p>Line 1 deletes a possibly existing previous network +printer <span class="emphasis"><em>infotec2105-IPDS</em></span> (which had used native +Windows drivers with LPRng that were removed from the server which was +converted to CUPS). The <b class="command">/q</b> at the end eliminates +"Confirm" or error dialog boxes popping up. They should not be +presented to the user logging on.</p></li><li><p>Line 2 adds the new printer +<span class="emphasis"><em>infotec2105-PS</em></span> (which actually is same physical +device but is now run by the new CUPS printing system and associated +with the CUPS/Adobe PS drivers). The printer and its driver +<span class="emphasis"><em>must</em></span> have been added to Samba prior to the user +logging in (e.g. by a procedure as discussed earlier in this chapter, +or by running <b class="command">cupsaddsmb</b>). The driver is now +auto-downloaded to the client PC where the user is about to log +in.</p></li><li><p>Line 3 sets the default printer to this new network +printer (there might be several other printers installed with this +same method and some may be local as well -- so we decide for a +default printer). The default printer selection may of course be +different for different users.</p></li></ul></div><p> +Note that the second line only works if the printer +<span class="emphasis"><em>infotec2105-PS</em></span> has an already working print queue +on "sambacupsserver", and if the printer drivers have successfully been +uploaded (via <b class="command">APW</b> , +<b class="command">smbclient/rpcclient</b> or +<b class="command">cupsaddsmb</b>) into the +<i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> driver repository of Samba. Also, some +Samba versions prior to version 3.0 required a re-start of smbd after +the printer install and the driver upload, otherwise the script (or +any other client driver download) would fail. +</p><p> +Since there no easy way to test for the existence of an installed +network printer from the logon script, the suggestion is: don't bother +checking and just allow the deinstallation/reinstallation to occur +every time a user logs in; it's really quick anyway (1 to 2 seconds). +</p><p> +The additional benefits for this are: +</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p>It puts in place any printer default setup changes +automatically at every user logon.</p></li><li><p>It allows for "roaming" users' login into the domain from +different workstations.</p></li></ul></div><p> +Since network printers are installed per user this much simplifies the +process of keeping the installation up-to-date. The extra few seconds +at logon time will not really be noticeable. Printers can be centrally +added, changed, and deleted at will on the server with no user +intervention required on the clients (you just need to keep the logon +scripts up to date). +</p></div><div class="sect1" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both"><a name="id2944316"></a>The <b class="command">addprinter</b> command</h2></div></div><div></div></div><p> +The <b class="command">addprinter</b> command can be configured to be a +shell script or program executed by Samba. It is triggered by running +the APW from a client against the Samba print server. The APW asks the +user to fill in several fields (such as printer name, driver to be +used, comment, port monitor, etc.). These parameters are passed on to +Samba by the APW. If the addprinter command is designed in a way that +it can create a new printer (through writing correct printcap entries +on legacy systems, or execute the <b class="command">lpadmin</b> command +on more modern systems) and create the associated share in +, then the APW will in effect really +create a new printer on Samba and the UNIX print subsystem! +</p></div><div class="sect1" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both"><a name="id2944362"></a>Migration of "Classical" printing to Samba-3</h2></div></div><div></div></div><p> +The basic "NT-style" printer driver management has not changed +considerably in 3.0 over the 2.2.x releases (apart from many small +improvements). Here migration should be quite easy, especially if you +followed previous advice to stop using deprecated parameters in your +setup. For migrations from an existing 2.0.x setup, or if you +continued "Win9x-style" printing in your Samba 2.2 installations, it +is more of an effort. Please read the appropriate release notes and +the HOWTO Collection for 2.2. You can follow several paths. Here are +possible scenarios for migration: +</p><div class="itemizedlist"><ul type="disc"><li><p>You need to study and apply the new Windows NT printer +and driver support. Previously used parameters "<i class="parameter"><tt>printer +driver file</tt></i>", " <i class="parameter"><tt>printer driver</tt></i>" and +"<i class="parameter"><tt>printer driver location</tt></i>" are no longer +supported.</p></li><li><p>If you want to take advantage of WinNT printer driver +support you also need to migrate the Win9x/ME drivers to the new +setup.</p></li><li><p>An existing <tt class="filename">printers.def</tt> file +(the one specified in the now removed parameter <i class="parameter"><tt>printer +driver file = ...</tt></i>) will work no longer with Samba-3.0. In +3.0, smbd attempts to locate a Win9x/ME driver files for the printer +in <i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> and additional settings in the TDB +and only there; if it fails it will <span class="emphasis"><em>not</em></span> (as 2.2.x +used to do) drop down to using a <tt class="filename">printers.def</tt> +(and all associated parameters). The make_printerdef tool is removed +and there is no backwards compatibility for this.</p></li><li><p>You need to install a Windows 9x driver into the +<i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i> share for a printer on your Samba +host. The driver files will be stored in the "WIN40/0" subdirectory of +<i class="parameter"><tt>[print$]</tt></i>, and some other settings and info go +into the printing-related TDBs.</p></li><li><p>If you want to migrate an existing +<tt class="filename">printers.def</tt> file into the new setup, the current +only solution is to use the Windows NT APW to install the NT drivers +and the 9x drivers. This can be scripted using smbclient and +rpcclient. See the Imprints installation client at: +</p><p> +<a href="http://imprints.sourceforge.net/" target="_top"><span class="emphasis"><em>http://imprints.sourceforge.net/</em></span></a> +</p><p> +for an example. See also the discussion of rpcclient usage in the +"CUPS Printing" section.</p></li></ul></div></div><div class="sect1" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both"><a name="id2944531"></a>Publishing Printer Information in Active Directory or LDAP</h2></div></div><div></div></div><p> +We will publish an update to this section shortly. +</p></div><div class="sect1" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h2 class="title" style="clear: both"><a name="id2944545"></a>Common Errors and Problems</h2></div></div><div></div></div><p> +Here are a few typical errors and problems people have +encountered. You can avoid them. Read on. +</p><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2944558"></a>I give my root password but I don't get access</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +Don't confuse the root password which is valid for the Unix system +(and in most cases stored in the form of a one-way hash in a file +named <tt class="filename">/etc/shadow</tt>) with the password used to +authenticate against Samba!. Samba doesn't know the UNIX password; for +root to access Samba resources via Samba-type access, a Samba account +for root must be created first. This is often done with the +<b class="command">smbpasswd</b> command. +</p></div><div class="sect2" lang="en"><div class="titlepage"><div><div><h3 class="title"><a name="id2944591"></a>My printjobs get spooled into the spooling directory, but then get lost</h3></div></div><div></div></div><p> +Don't use the existing Unix print system spool directory for the Samba +spool directory. It may seem convenient and a saving of space, but it +only leads to problems. The two <span class="emphasis"><em>must</em></span> be separate. +</p></div></div></div><div class="navfooter"><hr><table width="100%" summary="Navigation footer"><tr><td width="40%" align="left"><a accesskey="p" href="msdfs.html">Prev</a>�</td><td width="20%" align="center"><a accesskey="u" href="optional.html">Up</a></td><td width="40%" align="right">�<a accesskey="n" href="CUPS-printing.html">Next</a></td></tr><tr><td width="40%" align="left" valign="top">Chapter�17.�Hosting a Microsoft Distributed File System tree on Samba�</td><td width="20%" align="center"><a accesskey="h" href="index.html">Home</a></td><td width="40%" align="right" valign="top">�Chapter�19.�CUPS Printing Support in Samba 3.0</td></tr></table></div></body></html> |