source: vendor/3.6.23/docs-xml/Samba3-HOWTO/TOSHARG-Printing.xml

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1<?xml version="1.0" encoding="iso-8859-1"?>
2<!DOCTYPE chapter PUBLIC "-//Samba-Team//DTD DocBook V4.2-Based Variant V1.0//EN" "http://www.samba.org/samba/DTD/samba-doc">
3<chapter id="classicalprinting">
4
5<chapterinfo>
6 <author>
7 <firstname>Kurt</firstname><surname>Pfeifle</surname>
8 <affiliation>
9 <orgname>Danka Deutschland GmbH</orgname>
10 <address><email>kpfeifle@danka.de</email></address>
11 </affiliation>
12 </author>
13 &author.jerry;
14 &author.jht;
15 <pubdate>May 31, 2003</pubdate>
16</chapterinfo>
17
18<title>Classical Printing Support</title>
19
20<sect1>
21<title>Features and Benefits</title>
22
23<para>
24<indexterm><primary>mission-critical</primary></indexterm>
25Printing is often a mission-critical service for the users. Samba can provide this service reliably and
26seamlessly for a client network consisting of Windows workstations.
27</para>
28
29<para>
30<indexterm><primary>print service</primary></indexterm>
31<indexterm><primary>domain member server</primary></indexterm>
32<indexterm><primary>standalone server</primary></indexterm>
33<indexterm><primary>file serving</primary></indexterm>
34<indexterm><primary>dedicated print server</primary></indexterm>
35<indexterm><primary>print server</primary></indexterm>
36<indexterm><primary>printing support</primary></indexterm>
37<indexterm><primary>Point'n'Print</primary></indexterm>
38<indexterm><primary>Add Printer Wizard</primary></indexterm>
39<indexterm><primary>upload drivers</primary></indexterm>
40<indexterm><primary>manage drivers</primary></indexterm>
41<indexterm><primary>install drivers</primary></indexterm>
42<indexterm><primary>print accounting</primary></indexterm>
43<indexterm><primary>Common UNIX Printing System</primary><see>CUPS</see></indexterm>
44A Samba print service may be run on a standalone or domain member server, side by side with file serving
45functions, or on a dedicated print server. It can be made as tightly or as loosely secured as needs dictate.
46Configurations may be simple or complex. Available authentication schemes are essentially the same as
47described for file services in previous chapters. Overall, Samba's printing support is now able to replace an
48NT or Windows 2000 print server full-square, with additional benefits in many cases. Clients may download and
49install drivers and printers through their familiar <literal>Point'n'Print</literal> mechanism. Printer
50installations executed by <literal>Logon Scripts</literal> are no problem. Administrators can upload and manage
51drivers to be used by clients through the familiar <literal>Add Printer Wizard</literal>. As an additional
52benefit, driver and printer management may be run from the command line or through scripts, making it more
53efficient in case of large numbers of printers. If a central accounting of print jobs (tracking every single
54page and supplying the raw data for all sorts of statistical reports) is required, this function is best
55supported by the newer Common UNIX Printing System (CUPS) as the print subsystem underneath the Samba hood.
56</para>
57
58<para>
59<indexterm><primary>BSD</primary></indexterm>
60<indexterm><primary>CUPS</primary></indexterm>
61This chapter outlines the fundamentals of Samba printing as implemented by the more traditional UNIX
62BSD- and System V-style printing systems. Much of the information in this chapter applies also to CUPS. If
63you use CUPS, you may be tempted to jump to the next chapter, but you will certainly miss a few things if you
64do. For further information refer to <link linkend="CUPS-printing">CUPS Printing Support</link>.
65</para>
66
67<note>
68<para>
69<indexterm><primary>Windows XP Professional</primary></indexterm>
70<indexterm><primary>Windows 200x/XP</primary></indexterm>
71<indexterm><primary>Windows NT4</primary></indexterm>
72Most of the following examples have been verified on Windows XP Professional clients. Where this document
73describes the responses to commands given, bear in mind that Windows 200x/XP clients are quite similar but may
74differ in minor details. Windows NT4 is somewhat different again.
75</para>
76</note>
77
78</sect1>
79
80<sect1>
81<title>Technical Introduction</title>
82
83<para>
84<indexterm><primary>printing support</primary></indexterm>
85<indexterm><primary>print subsystem</primary></indexterm>
86<indexterm><primary>printing system</primary></indexterm>
87Samba's printing support always relies on the installed print subsystem of the UNIX OS it runs on. Samba is a
88<literal>middleman.</literal> It takes print files from Windows (or other SMB) clients and passes them to the real
89printing system for further processing; therefore, it needs to communicate with both sides: the Windows print
90clients and the UNIX printing system. Hence, we must differentiate between the various client OS types, each
91of which behave differently, as well as the various UNIX print subsystems, which themselves have different
92features and are accessed differently.
93</para>
94
95<para>
96<indexterm><primary>UNIX printing</primary></indexterm>
97<indexterm><primary>CUPS</primary></indexterm>
98This chapter deals with the traditional way of UNIX printing. The next chapter covers in great detail the more
99modern CUPS.
100</para>
101
102<important><para>
103<indexterm><primary>CUPS</primary></indexterm>
104CUPS users, be warned: do not just jump on to the next chapter. You might miss important information only found here!
105</para></important>
106
107<para>
108<indexterm><primary>print configuration</primary></indexterm>
109<indexterm><primary>problematic print</primary></indexterm>
110<indexterm><primary>print processing</primary></indexterm>
111<indexterm><primary>print filtering</primary></indexterm>
112It is apparent from postings on the Samba mailing list that print configuration is one of the most problematic
113aspects of Samba administration today. Many new Samba administrators have the impression that Samba performs
114some sort of print processing. Rest assured, Samba does not perform any type of print processing. It does not
115do any form of print filtering.
116</para>
117
118<para>
119<indexterm><primary>data stream</primary></indexterm>
120<indexterm><primary>local spool area</primary></indexterm>
121<indexterm><primary>spooled file</primary></indexterm>
122<indexterm><primary>local system printing</primary></indexterm>
123Samba obtains from its clients a data stream (print job) that it spools to a local spool area. When the entire
124print job has been received, Samba invokes a local UNIX/Linux print command and passes the spooled file to it.
125It is up to the local system printing subsystems to correctly process the print job and to submit it to the
126printer.
127</para>
128
129<sect2>
130<title>Client to Samba Print Job Processing</title>
131
132<para>
133Successful printing from a Windows client via a Samba print server to a UNIX
134printer involves six (potentially seven) stages:
135</para>
136
137<orderedlist>
138 <listitem><para>Windows opens a connection to the printer share.</para></listitem>
139
140 <listitem><para>Samba must authenticate the user.</para></listitem>
141
142 <listitem><para>Windows sends a copy of the print file over the network
143 into Samba's spooling area.</para></listitem>
144
145 <listitem><para>Windows closes the connection.</para></listitem>
146
147 <listitem><para>Samba invokes the print command to hand the file over
148 to the UNIX print subsystem's spooling area.</para></listitem>
149
150 <listitem><para>The UNIX print subsystem processes the print job.</para></listitem>
151
152 <listitem><para>The print file may need to be explicitly deleted
153 from the Samba spooling area. This item depends on your print spooler
154 configuration settings.</para></listitem>
155</orderedlist>
156</sect2>
157
158<sect2>
159<title>Printing-Related Configuration Parameters</title>
160
161<para>
162<indexterm><primary>global-level</primary></indexterm>
163<indexterm><primary>service-level</primary></indexterm>
164<indexterm><primary>printing behavior</primary></indexterm>
165There are a number of configuration parameters to control Samba's printing behavior. Please refer to the man
166page for &smb.conf; for an overview of these. As with other parameters, there are global-level (tagged with a
167<emphasis>G</emphasis> in the listings) and service-level (<emphasis>S</emphasis>) parameters.
168</para>
169
170<variablelist>
171 <varlistentry><term>Global Parameters</term>
172 <listitem><para> These <emphasis>may not</emphasis> go into
173 individual share definitions. If they go in by error,
174 the <command>testparm</command> utility can discover this
175 (if you run it) and tell you so.
176 </para></listitem>
177 </varlistentry>
178
179 <varlistentry><term>Service-Level Parameters</term>
180 <listitem><para> These may be specified in the
181 <smbconfsection name="[global]"/> section of &smb.conf;.
182 In this case they define the default behavior of all individual
183 or service-level shares (provided they do not have a different
184 setting defined for the same parameter, thus overriding the
185 global default).
186 </para></listitem>
187 </varlistentry>
188</variablelist>
189</sect2>
190
191</sect1>
192
193<sect1>
194<title>Simple Print Configuration</title>
195
196<para>
197<indexterm><primary>BSD Printing</primary></indexterm>
198<indexterm><primary>simple printing</primary></indexterm>
199<indexterm><primary>enables clients to print</primary></indexterm>
200<indexterm><primary>print environment</primary></indexterm>
201<link linkend="simpleprc">Simple Configuration with BSD Printing</link> shows a simple printing configuration.
202If you compare this with your own, you may find additional parameters that have been preconfigured by your OS
203vendor. Following is a discussion and explanation of the parameters. This example does not use many
204parameters. However, in many environments these are enough to provide a valid &smb.conf; file that enables
205all clients to print.
206</para>
207
208<example id="simpleprc">
209<title>Simple Configuration with BSD Printing</title>
210<smbconfblock>
211<smbconfsection name="[global]"/>
212<smbconfoption name="printing">bsd</smbconfoption>
213<smbconfoption name="load printers">yes</smbconfoption>
214
215<smbconfsection name="[printers]"/>
216<smbconfoption name="path">/var/spool/samba</smbconfoption>
217<smbconfoption name="printable">yes</smbconfoption>
218<smbconfoption name="public">yes</smbconfoption>
219<smbconfoption name="writable">no</smbconfoption>
220</smbconfblock>
221</example>
222
223<para>
224<indexterm><primary>testparm</primary></indexterm>
225<indexterm><primary>misconfigured settings</primary></indexterm>
226<indexterm><primary>pager program</primary></indexterm>
227This is only an example configuration. Samba assigns default values to all configuration parameters. The
228defaults are conservative and sensible. When a parameter is specified in the &smb.conf; file, this overwrites
229the default value. The <command>testparm</command> utility when run as root is capable of reporting all
230settings, both default as well as &smb.conf; file settings. <command>Testparm</command> gives warnings for all
231misconfigured settings. The complete output is easily 360 lines and more, so you may want to pipe it through a
232pager program.
233</para>
234
235<para>
236<indexterm><primary>configuration syntax</primary></indexterm>
237<indexterm><primary>syntax tolerates spelling errors</primary></indexterm>
238<indexterm><primary>case-insensitive</primary></indexterm>
239The syntax for the configuration file is easy to grasp. You should know that is not very picky about its
240syntax. As has been explained elsewhere in this book, Samba tolerates some spelling errors (such as
241<smbconfoption name="browseable"/> instead of <smbconfoption name="browsable"/>), and spelling is
242case-insensitive. It is permissible to use <parameter>Yes/No</parameter> or <parameter>True/False</parameter>
243for Boolean settings. Lists of names may be separated by commas, spaces, or tabs.
244</para>
245
246<sect2>
247<title>Verifying Configuration with <command>testparm</command></title>
248
249<para>
250<indexterm><primary>printing-related settings</primary></indexterm>
251<indexterm><primary>lp</primary></indexterm>
252<indexterm><primary>print</primary></indexterm>
253<indexterm><primary>spool</primary></indexterm>
254<indexterm><primary>driver</primary></indexterm>
255<indexterm><primary>ports</primary></indexterm>
256<indexterm><primary>testparm</primary></indexterm>
257<indexterm><primary>smbd</primary></indexterm>
258<indexterm><primary>print configuration</primary></indexterm>
259<indexterm><primary>printer shares </primary></indexterm>
260<indexterm><primary>spooling path</primary></indexterm>
261To see all (or at least most) printing-related settings in Samba, including the implicitly used ones, try the
262command outlined below. This command greps for all occurrences of <constant>lp</constant>,
263<constant>print</constant>, <constant>spool</constant>, <constant>driver</constant>,
264<constant>ports</constant>, and <constant>[</constant> in <command>testparm</command>'s output. This provides
265a convenient overview of the running <command>smbd</command> print configuration. This command does not show
266individually created printer shares or the spooling paths they may use. Here is the output of my Samba setup,
267with settings shown in <link linkend="simpleprc">the example above</link>:
268<screen>
269&rootprompt;<userinput>testparm -s -v | egrep "(lp|print|spool|driver|ports|\[)"</userinput>
270 Load smb config files from /etc/samba/smb.conf
271 Processing section "[homes]"
272 Processing section "[printers]"
273
274 [global]
275 smb ports = 139 445
276 lpq cache time = 10
277 load printers = Yes
278 printcap name = /etc/printcap
279 disable spoolss = No
280 enumports command =
281 addprinter command =
282 deleteprinter command =
283 show add printer wizard = Yes
284 os2 driver map =
285 printer admin =
286 min print space = 0
287 max print jobs = 1000
288 printable = No
289 printing = bsd
290 print command = lpr -r -P'%p' %s
291 lpq command = lpq -P'%p'
292 lprm command = lprm -P'%p' %j
293 lppause command =
294 lpresume command =
295 printer name =
296 use client driver = No
297
298 [homes]
299
300 [printers]
301 path = /var/spool/samba
302 printable = Yes
303</screen>
304</para>
305
306<para>
307You can easily verify which settings were implicitly added by Samba's default behavior. <emphasis>Remember: it
308may be important in your future dealings with Samba.</emphasis>
309</para>
310
311<note><para>
312The <command>testparm</command> in Samba-3 behaves differently from that in 2.2.x: used without the
313<quote>-v</quote> switch, it only shows you the settings actually written into! To see the complete
314configuration used, add the <quote>-v</quote> parameter to testparm.
315</para></note>
316
317</sect2>
318
319<sect2>
320<title>Rapid Configuration Validation</title>
321
322<para>
323<indexterm><primary>troubleshoot</primary></indexterm>
324<indexterm><primary>testparm</primary></indexterm>
325<indexterm><primary>parameters</primary></indexterm>
326<indexterm><primary>verify</primary></indexterm>
327Should you need to troubleshoot at any stage, please always come back to this point first and verify if
328<command>testparm</command> shows the parameters you expect. To give you a warning from personal experience,
329try to just comment out the <smbconfoption name="load printers"/> parameter. If your 2.2.x system behaves like
330mine, you'll see this:
331</para>
332
333<para><screen>
334&rootprompt;grep "load printers" /etc/samba/smb.conf
335 # load printers = Yes
336 # This setting is commented out!!
337
338&rootprompt;testparm -v /etc/samba/smb.conf | egrep "(load printers)"
339 load printers = Yes
340</screen></para>
341
342<para>
343<indexterm><primary>commenting out setting</primary></indexterm>
344<indexterm><primary>publishing printers</primary></indexterm>
345I assumed that commenting out of this setting should prevent Samba from
346publishing my printers, but it still did. It took some time to figure out
347the reason. But I am no longer fooled ... at least not by this.
348<screen>
349&rootprompt;<userinput>grep -A1 "load printers" /etc/samba/smb.conf</userinput>
350 load printers = No
351 # The above setting is what I want!
352 # load printers = Yes
353 # This setting is commented out!
354
355&rootprompt;<userinput>testparm -s -v smb.conf.simpleprinting | egrep "(load printers)"</userinput>
356 load printers = No
357</screen></para>
358
359<para>
360<indexterm><primary>explicitly set</primary></indexterm>
361Only when the parameter is explicitly set to <smbconfoption name="load printers">No</smbconfoption> would
362Samba conform with my intentions. So, my strong advice is:
363</para>
364
365<itemizedlist>
366 <listitem><para>Never rely on commented-out parameters.</para></listitem>
367
368 <listitem><para>Always set parameters explicitly as you intend them to
369 behave.</para></listitem>
370
371 <listitem><para>Use <command>testparm</command> to uncover hidden
372 settings that might not reflect your intentions.</para></listitem>
373</itemizedlist>
374
375<para>
376The following is the most minimal configuration file:
377<screen>
378&rootprompt;<userinput>cat /etc/samba/smb.conf-minimal</userinput>
379 [printers]
380</screen></para>
381
382<para>
383<indexterm><primary>testparm</primary></indexterm>
384<indexterm><primary>smbd</primary></indexterm>
385This example should show that you can use <command>testparm</command> to test any Samba configuration file.
386Actually, we encourage you <emphasis>not</emphasis> to change your working system (unless you know exactly
387what you are doing). Don't rely on the assumption that changes will only take effect after you restart smbd!
388This is not the case. Samba rereads it every 60 seconds and on each new client connection. You might have to
389face changes for your production clients that you didn't intend to apply. You will now note a few more
390interesting things; <command>testparm</command> is useful to identify what the Samba print configuration would
391be if you used this minimalistic configuration. Here is what you can expect to find:
392<screen>
393&rootprompt;<userinput>testparm -v smb.conf-minimal | egrep "(print|lpq|spool|driver|ports|[)"</userinput>
394 Processing section "[printers]"
395 WARNING: [printers] service MUST be printable!
396 No path in service printers - using /tmp
397
398 lpq cache time = 10
399 load printers = Yes
400 printcap name = /etc/printcap
401 disable spoolss = No
402 enumports command =
403 addprinter command =
404 deleteprinter command =
405 show add printer wizard = Yes
406 os2 driver map =
407 printer admin =
408 min print space = 0
409 max print jobs = 1000
410 printable = No
411 printing = bsd
412 print command = lpr -r -P%p %s
413 lpq command = lpq -P%p
414 printer name =
415 use client driver = No
416
417 [printers]
418 printable = Yes
419</screen></para>
420
421<para>
422<command>testparm</command> issued two warnings:
423</para>
424
425<itemizedlist>
426 <listitem><para>We did not specify the <smbconfsection name="[printers]"/> section as printable.</para></listitem>
427 <listitem><para>We did not tell Samba which spool directory to use.</para></listitem>
428</itemizedlist>
429
430<para>
431<indexterm><primary>compile-time options</primary></indexterm>
432<indexterm><primary></primary></indexterm>
433<indexterm><primary></primary></indexterm>
434<indexterm><primary></primary></indexterm>
435However, this was not fatal, and Samba will default to values that will work. Please, do not rely on this and
436do not use this example. This was included to encourage you to be careful to design and specify your setup to
437do precisely what you require. The outcome on your system may vary for some parameters given, since Samba may
438have been built with different compile-time options. <emphasis>Warning:</emphasis> do not put a comment sign
439<emphasis>at the end</emphasis> of a valid line. It will cause the parameter to be ignored (just as if you had
440put the comment sign at the front). At first I regarded this as a bug in my Samba versions. But the man page
441clearly says: <literal>Internal whitespace in a parameter value is retained verbatim.</literal> This means
442that a line consisting of, for example,
443<smbconfblock>
444<smbconfcomment>This defines LPRng as the printing system</smbconfcomment>
445<smbconfoption name="printing"> lprng</smbconfoption>
446</smbconfblock>
447</para>
448
449<para>
450will regard the whole of the string after the <literal>=</literal> sign as the value you want to define. This
451is an invalid value that will be ignored, and a default value will be used in its place.
452</para>
453
454</sect2>
455
456</sect1>
457
458<sect1>
459<title>Extended Printing Configuration</title>
460
461<para>
462<indexterm><primary>Extended BSD Printing</primary></indexterm>
463<indexterm><primary>BSD-style printing</primary></indexterm>
464<indexterm><primary>CUPS</primary></indexterm>
465<indexterm><primary>testparm</primary></indexterm>
466<link linkend="extbsdpr">Extended BSD Printing Configuration</link> shows a more verbose configuration for
467print-related settings in a BSD-style printing environment. What follows is a discussion and explanation of
468the various parameters. We chose to use BSD-style printing here because it is still the most commonly used
469system on legacy UNIX/Linux installations. New installations predominantly use CUPS, which is discussed in a
470separate chapter. The example explicitly names many parameters that do not need to be specified because they
471are set by default. You could use a much leaner &smb.conf; file, or you can use <command>testparm</command> or
472<command>SWAT</command> to optimize the &smb.conf; file to remove all parameters that are set at default.
473</para>
474
475<example id="extbsdpr">
476<title>Extended BSD Printing Configuration</title>
477<smbconfblock>
478<smbconfsection name="[global]"/>
479<smbconfoption name="printing">bsd</smbconfoption>
480<smbconfoption name="load printers">yes</smbconfoption>
481<smbconfoption name="show add printer wizard">yes</smbconfoption>
482<smbconfoption name="printcap name">/etc/printcap</smbconfoption>
483<smbconfoption name="printer admin">@ntadmin, root</smbconfoption>
484<smbconfoption name="max print jobs">100</smbconfoption>
485<smbconfoption name="lpq cache time">20</smbconfoption>
486<smbconfoption name="use client driver">no</smbconfoption>
487
488<smbconfsection name="[printers]"/>
489<smbconfoption name="comment">All Printers</smbconfoption>
490<smbconfoption name="printable">yes</smbconfoption>
491<smbconfoption name="path">/var/spool/samba</smbconfoption>
492<smbconfoption name="browseable">no</smbconfoption>
493<smbconfoption name="guest ok">yes</smbconfoption>
494<smbconfoption name="public">yes</smbconfoption>
495<smbconfoption name="read only">yes</smbconfoption>
496<smbconfoption name="writable">no </smbconfoption>
497
498<smbconfsection name="[my_printer_name]"/>
499<smbconfoption name="comment">Printer with Restricted Access</smbconfoption>
500<smbconfoption name="path">/var/spool/samba_my_printer</smbconfoption>
501<smbconfoption name="printer admin">kurt</smbconfoption>
502<smbconfoption name="browseable">yes</smbconfoption>
503<smbconfoption name="printable">yes</smbconfoption>
504<smbconfoption name="writable">no</smbconfoption>
505<smbconfoption name="hosts allow">0.0.0.0</smbconfoption>
506<smbconfoption name="hosts deny">turbo_xp, 10.160.50.23, 10.160.51.60</smbconfoption>
507<smbconfoption name="guest ok">no</smbconfoption>
508</smbconfblock></example>
509
510<para>
511<indexterm><primary></primary></indexterm>
512<indexterm><primary></primary></indexterm>
513<indexterm><primary></primary></indexterm>
514This is an example configuration. You may not find all the settings that are in the configuration file that
515was provided by the OS vendor. Samba configuration parameters, if not explicitly set, default to a sensible
516value. To see all settings, as <constant>root</constant> use the <command>testparm</command> utility.
517<command>testparm</command> gives warnings for misconfigured settings.
518</para>
519
520<sect2>
521<title>Detailed Explanation Settings</title>
522
523<para>
524The following is a discussion of the settings from <link linkend="extbsdpr">Extended BSD Printing
525Configuration</link>.
526</para>
527
528<sect3>
529<title>The [global] Section</title>
530
531<para>
532<indexterm><primary>global section</primary></indexterm>
533<indexterm><primary>special sections</primary></indexterm>
534<indexterm><primary>individual section</primary></indexterm>
535<indexterm><primary>share</primary></indexterm>
536The <smbconfsection name="[global]"/> section is one of four special sections (along with <smbconfsection
537name="[homes]"/>, <smbconfsection name="[printers]"/>, and <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/>). The
538<smbconfsection name="[global]"/> contains all parameters that apply to the server as a whole. It is the place
539for parameters that have only a global meaning. It may also contain service-level parameters that define
540default settings for all other sections and shares. This way you can simplify the configuration and avoid
541setting the same value repeatedly. (Within each individual section or share, you may, however, override these
542globally set share settings and specify other values).
543</para>
544
545<variablelist>
546 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="printing">bsd </smbconfoption></term>
547 <listitem><para>
548<indexterm><primary>default print commands</primary></indexterm>
549<indexterm><primary>RFC 1179</primary></indexterm>
550<indexterm><primary>printing</primary></indexterm>
551<indexterm><primary>CUPS</primary></indexterm>
552<indexterm><primary>LPD</primary></indexterm>
553<indexterm><primary>LPRNG</primary></indexterm>
554<indexterm><primary>SYSV</primary></indexterm>
555<indexterm><primary>HPUX</primary></indexterm>
556<indexterm><primary>AIX</primary></indexterm>
557<indexterm><primary>QNX</primary></indexterm>
558<indexterm><primary>PLP</primary></indexterm>
559<indexterm><primary>queue control</primary></indexterm>
560 Causes Samba to use default print commands applicable for the BSD (also known as RFC 1179 style or LPR/LPD)
561 printing system. In general, the <parameter>printing</parameter> parameter informs Samba about the print
562 subsystem it should expect. Samba supports CUPS, LPD, LPRNG, SYSV, HPUX, AIX, QNX, and PLP. Each of these
563 systems defaults to a different <smbconfoption name="print command"/> (and other queue control commands).
564 </para>
565
566 <caution><para>
567<indexterm><primary>service-level</primary></indexterm>
568<indexterm><primary>SOFTQ printing system</primary></indexterm>
569 The <smbconfoption name="printing"/> parameter is normally a service-level parameter. Since it is included
570 here in the <smbconfsection name="[global]"/> section, it will take effect for all printer shares that are not
571 defined differently. Samba-3 no longer supports the SOFTQ printing system.
572 </para></caution>
573 </listitem></varlistentry>
574
575 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="load printers">yes </smbconfoption></term>
576 <listitem><para>
577<indexterm><primary>printer shares</primary></indexterm>
578<indexterm><primary>printcap</primary></indexterm>
579<indexterm><primary>separate shares</primary></indexterm>
580<indexterm><primary>UNIX printer</primary></indexterm>
581 Tells Samba to create automatically all available printer shares. Available printer shares are discovered by
582 scanning the printcap file. All created printer shares are also loaded for browsing. If you use this
583 parameter, you do not need to specify separate shares for each printer. Each automatically created printer
584 share will clone the configuration options found in the <smbconfsection name="[printers]"/> section. (The
585 <parameter>load printers = no</parameter> setting will allow you to specify each UNIX printer you want to
586 share separately, leaving out some you do not want to be publicly visible and available).
587 </para>
588 </listitem></varlistentry>
589
590 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="show add printer wizard">yes </smbconfoption></term>
591 <listitem><para>
592<indexterm><primary>Add Printer Wizard</primary></indexterm>
593<indexterm><primary>Printers</primary></indexterm>
594<indexterm><primary>Network Neighborhood</primary></indexterm>
595<indexterm><primary>net view</primary></indexterm>
596<indexterm><primary>uploaded driver</primary></indexterm>
597 Setting is normally enabled by default (even if the parameter is not specified in &smb.conf;). It causes the
598 <guiicon>Add Printer Wizard</guiicon> icon to appear in the <guiicon>Printers</guiicon> folder of the Samba
599 host's share listing (as shown in <guiicon>Network Neighborhood</guiicon> or by the <command>net
600 view</command> command). To disable it, you need to explicitly set it to <constant>no</constant> (commenting
601 it out will not suffice). The <parameter>Add Printer Wizard</parameter> lets you upload a printer driver to
602 the <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/> share and associate it with a printer (if the respective queue exists
603 before the action), or exchange a printer's driver for any other previously uploaded driver.
604 </para>
605 </listitem></varlistentry>
606
607 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="max print jobs">100 </smbconfoption></term>
608 <listitem><para>
609<indexterm><primary>print jobs</primary></indexterm>
610 Sets the upper limit to 100 print jobs being active on the Samba server at any one time. Should a client
611 submit a job that exceeds this number, a "no more space available on server" type of error message will be
612 returned by Samba to the client. A setting of zero (the default) means there is <emphasis>no</emphasis> limit
613 at all.
614 </para>
615 </listitem></varlistentry>
616
617 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="printcap name">/etc/printcap </smbconfoption></term>
618 <listitem><para>
619<indexterm><primary>CUPS</primary></indexterm>
620<indexterm><primary>available printerd</primary></indexterm>
621<indexterm><primary>printcap</primary></indexterm>
622 Tells Samba where to look for a list of available printer names. Where CUPS is used, make sure that a printcap
623 file is written. This is controlled by the <constant>Printcap</constant> directive in the
624 <filename>cupsd.conf</filename> file.
625 </para></listitem></varlistentry>
626
627 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="printer admin">@ntadmin </smbconfoption></term>
628 <listitem><para>
629<indexterm><primary>add drivers</primary></indexterm>
630<indexterm><primary>/etc/group</primary></indexterm>
631<indexterm><primary>printer share</primary></indexterm>
632<indexterm><primary>set printer properties</primary></indexterm>
633 Members of the ntadmin group should be able to add drivers and set printer properties
634 (<constant>ntadmin</constant> is only an example name; it needs to be a valid UNIX group name); root is
635 implicitly always a <smbconfoption name="printer admin"/>. The <literal>@</literal> sign precedes group names
636 in the <filename>/etc/group</filename>. A printer admin can do anything to printers via the remote
637 administration interfaces offered by MS-RPC (see <link linkend="cups-msrpc">Printing Developments Since
638 Samba-2.2</link>). In larger installations, the <smbconfoption name="printer admin"/> parameter is normally a
639 per-share parameter. This permits different groups to administer each printer share.
640 </para></listitem></varlistentry>
641
642 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="lpq cache time">20 </smbconfoption></term>
643 <listitem><para>
644<indexterm><primary>lpq command</primary></indexterm>
645<indexterm><primary>lpq cache time</primary></indexterm>
646 Controls the cache time for the results of the lpq command. It prevents the lpq command being called too often
647 and reduces the load on a heavily used print server.
648 </para></listitem></varlistentry>
649
650 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="use client driver">no </smbconfoption></term>
651 <listitem><para>
652<indexterm><primary>Windows NT/200x/XP</primary></indexterm>
653 If set to <constant>yes</constant>, only takes effect for Windows NT/200x/XP clients (and not for Win
654 95/98/ME). Its default value is <constant>No</constant> (or <constant>False</constant>). It must
655 <emphasis>not</emphasis> be enabled on print shares (with a <constant>yes</constant> or
656 <constant>true</constant> setting) that have valid drivers installed on the Samba server. For more detailed
657 explanations, see the &smb.conf; man page.
658 </para></listitem></varlistentry>
659</variablelist>
660
661</sect3>
662
663<sect3 id="ptrsect">
664<title>The [printers] Section</title>
665
666<para>
667<indexterm><primary>printers section</primary></indexterm>
668<indexterm><primary>printcap</primary></indexterm>
669The printers section is the second special section. If a section with this name appears in the &smb.conf;,
670users are able to connect to any printer specified in the Samba host's printcap file, because Samba on startup
671then creates a printer share for every printer name it finds in the printcap file. You could regard this
672section as a convenient shortcut to share all printers with minimal configuration. It is also a container for
673settings that should apply as default to all printers. (For more details, see the &smb.conf; man page.)
674Settings inside this container must be share-level parameters.
675</para>
676
677<variablelist>
678 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="comment">All printers </smbconfoption></term>
679 <listitem><para>
680 The <smbconfoption name="comment"/> is shown next to the share if
681 a client queries the server, either via <guiicon>Network Neighborhood</guiicon> or with
682 the <command>net view</command> command, to list available shares.
683 </para></listitem>
684 </varlistentry>
685
686 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="printable">yes </smbconfoption></term>
687 <listitem><para>
688 The <smbconfsection name="[printers]"/> service <emphasis>must</emphasis>
689 be declared as printable. If you specify otherwise, smbd will refuse to load at
690 startup. This parameter allows connected clients to open, write to, and submit spool files
691 into the directory specified with the <smbconfoption name="path"/>
692 parameter for this service. It is used by Samba to differentiate printer shares from
693 file shares.
694 </para></listitem>
695 </varlistentry>
696
697 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="path">/var/spool/samba </smbconfoption></term>
698 <listitem><para>
699 Must point to a directory used by Samba to spool incoming print files. <emphasis>It
700 must not be the same as the spool directory specified in the configuration of your UNIX
701 print subsystem!</emphasis> The path typically points to a directory that is world
702 writable, with the <emphasis>sticky</emphasis> bit set to it.
703 </para></listitem>
704 </varlistentry>
705
706 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="browseable">no </smbconfoption></term>
707 <listitem><para>
708 Is always set to <constant>no</constant> if
709 <smbconfoption name="printable">yes</smbconfoption>. It makes
710 the <smbconfsection name="[printer]"/> share itself invisible in the list of
711 available shares in a <command>net view</command> command or in the Explorer browse
712 list. (You will of course see the individual printers.)
713 </para></listitem>
714 </varlistentry>
715
716 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="guest ok">yes </smbconfoption></term>
717 <listitem><para>
718 If this parameter is set to <constant>yes</constant>, no password is required to
719 connect to the printer's service. Access will be granted with the privileges of the
720 <smbconfoption name="guest account"/>. On many systems the guest
721 account will map to a user named "nobody." This user will usually be found
722 in the UNIX passwd file with an empty password, but with no valid UNIX login. On some
723 systems the guest account might not have the privilege to be able to print. Test this
724 by logging in as your guest user using <command>su - guest</command> and run a system
725 print command like:
726 </para>
727
728 <para>
729 <userinput>lpr -P printername /etc/motd</userinput>
730 </para></listitem>
731 </varlistentry>
732
733 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="public">yes </smbconfoption></term>
734 <listitem><para>
735 Is a synonym for <smbconfoption name="guest ok">yes</smbconfoption>.
736 Since we have <smbconfoption name="guest ok">yes</smbconfoption>, it
737 really does not need to be here. (This leads to the interesting question, <quote>What if I
738 by accident have two contradictory settings for the same share?</quote> The answer is that the
739 last one encountered by Samba wins. <command>testparm</command> does not complain about different settings
740 of the same parameter for the same share. You can test this by setting up multiple
741 lines for the <parameter>guest account</parameter> parameter with different usernames,
742 and then run testparm to see which one is actually used by Samba.)
743 </para></listitem>
744 </varlistentry>
745
746 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="read only">yes </smbconfoption></term>
747 <listitem><para>
748 Normally (for other types of shares) prevents users from creating or modifying files
749 in the service's directory. However, in a <emphasis>printable</emphasis> service, it is
750 <emphasis>always</emphasis> allowed to write to the directory (if user privileges allow the
751 connection), but only via print spooling operations. Normal write operations are not permitted.
752 </para></listitem>
753 </varlistentry>
754
755 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="writable">no </smbconfoption></term>
756 <listitem><para>
757 Is a synonym for <smbconfoption name="read only">yes</smbconfoption>.
758 </para></listitem>
759 </varlistentry>
760</variablelist>
761</sect3>
762
763<sect3>
764<title>Any [my_printer_name] Section</title>
765
766<para>
767<indexterm><primary>loading printer drivers</primary></indexterm>
768<indexterm><primary>name conflict</primary></indexterm>
769If a <parameter>[my_printer_name]</parameter> section appears in the &smb.conf; file, which includes the
770parameter <smbconfoption name="printable">yes</smbconfoption> Samba will configure it as a printer share.
771Windows 9x/Me clients may have problems with connecting or loading printer drivers if the share name has more
772than eight characters. Do not name a printer share with a name that may conflict with an existing user or file
773share name. On client connection requests, Samba always tries to find file shares with that name first. If it
774finds one, it will connect to this and will not connect to a printer with the same name!
775</para>
776
777<?latex \newpage ?>
778<variablelist>
779 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="comment">Printer with Restricted Access </smbconfoption></term>
780 <listitem><para>
781 The comment says it all.
782 </para></listitem>
783 </varlistentry>
784
785 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="path">/var/spool/samba_my_printer </smbconfoption></term>
786 <listitem><para>
787 Sets the spooling area for this printer to a directory other than the default. It is not
788 necessary to set it differently, but the option is available.
789 </para></listitem>
790 </varlistentry>
791
792 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="printer admin">kurt </smbconfoption></term>
793 <listitem><para>
794 The printer admin definition is different for this explicitly defined printer share from the general
795 <smbconfsection name="[printers]"/> share. It is not a requirement; we did it to show that it is possible.
796 </para></listitem>
797 </varlistentry>
798
799 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="browseable">yes </smbconfoption></term>
800 <listitem><para>
801 This makes the printer browseable so the clients may conveniently find it when browsing the
802 <guiicon>Network Neighborhood</guiicon>.
803 </para></listitem>
804 </varlistentry>
805
806 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="printable">yes </smbconfoption></term>
807 <listitem><para>
808 See <link linkend="ptrsect">Section 20.4.1.2</link>.
809 </para></listitem>
810 </varlistentry>
811
812 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="writable">no </smbconfoption></term>
813 <listitem><para>
814 See <link linkend="ptrsect">Section 20.4.1.2</link>.
815 </para></listitem>
816 </varlistentry>
817
818 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="hosts allow">10.160.50.,10.160.51. </smbconfoption></term>
819 <listitem><para>
820 Here we exercise a certain degree of access control by using the <smbconfoption name="hosts allow"/>
821 and <smbconfoption name="hosts deny"/> parameters. This is not by any means a safe bet. It is not a
822 way to secure your printers. This line accepts all clients from a certain subnet in a first evaluation of
823 access control.
824 </para></listitem>
825 </varlistentry>
826
827 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="hosts deny">turbo_xp,10.160.50.23,10.160.51.60 </smbconfoption></term>
828 <listitem><para>
829 All listed hosts are not allowed here (even if they belong to the allowed subnets). As
830 you can see, you could name IP addresses as well as NetBIOS hostnames here.
831 </para></listitem>
832 </varlistentry>
833
834 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="guest ok">no </smbconfoption></term>
835 <listitem><para>
836 This printer is not open for the guest account.
837 </para></listitem>
838 </varlistentry>
839</variablelist>
840</sect3>
841
842<sect3>
843<title>Print Commands</title>
844
845<para>
846<indexterm><primary>print command</primary></indexterm>
847<indexterm><primary>print subsystem</primary></indexterm>
848<indexterm><primary>temporary location</primary></indexterm>
849<indexterm><primary>shell scripts</primary></indexterm>
850In each section defining a printer (or in the <smbconfsection name="[printers]"/> section),
851a <parameter>print command</parameter> parameter may be defined. It sets a command to process the files
852that have been placed into the Samba print spool directory for that printer. (That spool directory was,
853if you remember, set up with the <smbconfoption name="path"/> parameter). Typically,
854this command will submit the spool file to the Samba host's print subsystem, using the suitable system
855print command. But there is no requirement that this needs to be the case. For debugging or
856some other reason, you may want to do something completely different than print the file. An example is a
857command that just copies the print file to a temporary location for further investigation when you need
858to debug printing. If you craft your own print commands (or even develop print command shell scripts),
859make sure you pay attention to the need to remove the files from the Samba spool directory. Otherwise,
860your hard disk may soon suffer from shortage of free space.
861</para>
862</sect3>
863
864<sect3>
865<title>Default UNIX System Printing Commands</title>
866
867<para>
868<indexterm><primary>default print command</primary></indexterm>
869You learned earlier that Samba, in most cases, uses its built-in settings for many parameters if it cannot
870find an explicitly stated one in its configuration file. The same is true for the <smbconfoption name="print
871command"/>. The default print command varies depending on the <smbconfoption name="printing"/> parameter
872setting. In the commands listed in <link linkend="printOptions">Default Printing Settings</link> , you will
873notice some parameters of the form <emphasis>%X</emphasis> where <emphasis>X</emphasis> is <emphasis>p, s,
874J</emphasis>, and so on. These letters stand for printer name, spool file, and job ID, respectively. They are
875explained in more detail in <link linkend="printOptions">Default Printing Settings</link> presents an overview
876of key printing options but excludes the special case of CUPS, is discussed in <link
877linkend="CUPS-printing">CUPS Printing Support</link>.
878</para>
879
880<table frame='all' id="printOptions">
881 <title>Default Printing Settings</title>
882 <tgroup cols='2' align='left' colsep='1' rowsep='1'>
883 <colspec align="left"/>
884 <colspec align="left"/>
885 <thead>
886 <row>
887 <entry>Setting</entry>
888 <entry>Default Printing Commands</entry>
889 </row>
890 </thead>
891 <tbody>
892 <row>
893 <entry><smbconfoption name="printing">bsd|aix|lprng|plp</smbconfoption></entry>
894 <entry>print command is <command>lpr -r -P%p %s</command></entry>
895 </row>
896 <row>
897 <entry><smbconfoption name="printing">sysv|hpux</smbconfoption></entry>
898 <entry>print command is <command>lp -c -P%p %s; rm %s</command></entry>
899 </row>
900 <row>
901 <entry> <smbconfoption name="printing">qnx</smbconfoption></entry>
902 <entry>print command is <command>lp -r -P%p -s %s</command></entry>
903 </row>
904 <row>
905 <entry><smbconfoption name="printing">bsd|aix|lprng|plp</smbconfoption></entry>
906 <entry>lpq command is <command>lpq -P%p</command></entry>
907 </row>
908 <row>
909 <entry><smbconfoption name="printing">sysv|hpux</smbconfoption></entry>
910 <entry>lpq command is <command>lpstat -o%p</command></entry>
911 </row>
912 <row>
913 <entry><smbconfoption name="printing">qnx</smbconfoption></entry>
914 <entry>lpq command is <command>lpq -P%p</command></entry>
915 </row>
916 <row>
917 <entry><smbconfoption name="printing">bsd|aix|lprng|plp</smbconfoption></entry>
918 <entry>lprm command is <command>lprm -P%p %j</command></entry>
919 </row>
920 <row>
921 <entry><smbconfoption name="printing">sysv|hpux</smbconfoption></entry>
922 <entry>lprm command is <command>cancel %p-%j</command></entry>
923 </row>
924 <row>
925 <entry><smbconfoption name="printing">qnx</smbconfoption></entry>
926 <entry>lprm command is <command>cancel %p-%j</command></entry>
927 </row>
928 <row>
929 <entry><smbconfoption name="printing">bsd|aix|lprng|plp</smbconfoption></entry>
930 <entry>lppause command is <command>lp -i %p-%j -H hold</command></entry>
931 </row>
932 <row>
933 <entry><smbconfoption name="printing">sysv|hpux</smbconfoption></entry>
934 <entry>lppause command (...is empty)</entry>
935 </row>
936 <row>
937 <entry><smbconfoption name="printing">qnx</smbconfoption></entry>
938 <entry>lppause command (...is empty)</entry>
939 </row>
940 <row>
941 <entry><smbconfoption name="printing">bsd|aix|lprng|plp</smbconfoption></entry>
942 <entry>lpresume command is <command>lp -i %p-%j -H resume</command></entry>
943 </row>
944 <row>
945 <entry><smbconfoption name="printing">sysv|hpux</smbconfoption></entry>
946 <entry>lpresume command (...is empty)</entry>
947 </row>
948 <row>
949 <entry><smbconfoption name="printing">qnx</smbconfoption></entry>
950 <entry>lpresume command (...is empty)</entry>
951 </row>
952 </tbody>
953 </tgroup>
954</table>
955
956<para>
957<indexterm><primary>CUPS API</primary></indexterm>
958<indexterm><primary>cupsd.conf</primary></indexterm>
959<indexterm><primary>autogenerated printcap</primary></indexterm>
960<indexterm><primary>libcups</primary></indexterm>
961For <parameter>printing = CUPS</parameter>, if Samba is compiled against libcups, it uses the CUPS API to
962submit jobs. (It is a good idea also to set <smbconfoption name="printcap">cups</smbconfoption> in case your
963<filename>cupsd.conf</filename> is set to write its autogenerated printcap file to an unusual place).
964Otherwise, Samba maps to the System V printing commands with the -oraw option for printing; that is, it uses
965<command>lp -c -d%p -oraw; rm %s</command>. With <parameter>printing = cups</parameter>, and if Samba is
966compiled against libcups, any manually set print command will be ignored!
967</para>
968
969</sect3>
970
971<sect3>
972<title>Custom Print Commands</title>
973
974<para>
975<indexterm><primary>print job</primary></indexterm>
976<indexterm><primary>spooling</primary></indexterm>
977After a print job has finished spooling to a service, the <smbconfoption name="print command"/> will be used
978by Samba via a system() call to process the spool file. Usually the command specified will submit the spool
979file to the host's printing subsystem. But there is no requirement at all that this must be the case. The
980print subsystem may not remove the spool file on its own, so whatever command you specify, you should ensure
981that the spool file is deleted after it has been processed.
982</para>
983
984<para>
985<indexterm><primary>traditional printing</primary></indexterm>
986<indexterm><primary>customized print commands</primary></indexterm>
987<indexterm><primary>built-in commands</primary></indexterm>
988<indexterm><primary>macros</primary></indexterm>
989There is no difficulty with using your own customized print commands with the traditional printing systems.
990However, if you do not wish to roll your own, you should be well informed about the default built-in commands
991that Samba uses for each printing subsystem (see <link linkend="printOptions">Default Printing
992Settings</link>). In all the commands listed in the last paragraphs, you see parameters of the form
993<emphasis>%X</emphasis>. These are <emphasis>macros</emphasis>, or shortcuts, used as placeholders for the
994names of real objects. At the time of running a command with such a placeholder, Samba will insert the
995appropriate value automatically. Print commands can handle all Samba macro substitutions. In regard to
996printing, the following ones do have special relevance:
997</para>
998
999<itemizedlist>
1000 <listitem><para><parameter>%s, %f</parameter> &smbmdash; the path to the spool file name.</para></listitem>
1001 <listitem><para><parameter>%p</parameter> &smbmdash; the appropriate printer name.</para></listitem>
1002 <listitem><para><parameter>%J</parameter> &smbmdash; the job name as transmitted by the client.</para></listitem>
1003 <listitem><para><parameter>%c</parameter> &smbmdash; the number of printed pages of the spooled job (if known).</para></listitem>
1004 <listitem><para><parameter>%z</parameter> &smbmdash; the size of the spooled print job (in bytes).</para></listitem>
1005</itemizedlist>
1006
1007<para>
1008<indexterm><primary>default printer</primary></indexterm>
1009The print command must contain at least one occurrence of <parameter>%s</parameter> or
1010<parameter>%f</parameter>. The <parameter>%p</parameter> is optional. If no printer name is supplied,
1011the <parameter>%p</parameter> will be silently removed from the print command. In this case, the job is
1012sent to the default printer.
1013</para>
1014
1015<para>
1016<indexterm><primary>global print command</primary></indexterm>
1017<indexterm><primary>spool files</primary></indexterm>
1018If specified in the <smbconfsection name="[global]"/> section, the print command given will be
1019used for any printable service that does not have its own print command specified. If there is neither a
1020specified print command for a printable service nor a global print command, spool files will be created
1021but not processed! Most importantly, print files will not be removed, so they will consume disk space.
1022</para>
1023
1024<para>
1025<indexterm><primary>nobody account</primary></indexterm>
1026<indexterm><primary>guest account</primary></indexterm>
1027Printing may fail on some UNIX systems when using the <emphasis>nobody</emphasis> account. If this happens, create an
1028alternative guest account and give it the privilege to print. Set up this guest account in the
1029<smbconfsection name="[global]"/> section with the <parameter>guest account</parameter> parameter.
1030</para>
1031
1032<para>
1033<indexterm><primary>environment variables</primary></indexterm>
1034<indexterm><primary>print commands</primary></indexterm>
1035<indexterm><primary>print job</primary></indexterm>
1036You can form quite complex print commands. You need to realize that print commands are just
1037passed to a UNIX shell. The shell is able to expand the included environment variables as
1038usual. (The syntax to include a UNIX environment variable <parameter>$variable</parameter>
1039in the Samba print command is <parameter>%$variable</parameter>.) To give you a working
1040<smbconfoption name="print command"/> example, the following will log a print job
1041to <filename>/tmp/print.log</filename>, print the file, then remove it. The semicolon (<quote>;</quote>)
1042is the usual separator for commands in shell scripts:
1043</para>
1044
1045<para><smbconfblock>
1046 <smbconfoption name="print command">echo Printing %s &gt;&gt; /tmp/print.log; lpr -P %p %s; rm %s</smbconfoption>
1047</smbconfblock></para>
1048
1049<para>
1050You may have to vary your own command considerably from this example depending on how you normally print
1051files on your system. The default for the <smbconfoption name="print command"/>
1052parameter varies depending on the setting of the <smbconfoption name="printing"/>
1053parameter. Another example is:
1054</para>
1055
1056<para><smbconfblock>
1057<smbconfoption name="print command">/usr/local/samba/bin/myprintscript %p %s</smbconfoption>
1058</smbconfblock></para>
1059</sect3>
1060</sect2>
1061</sect1>
1062
1063<sect1 id="cups-msrpc">
1064<title>Printing Developments Since Samba-2.2</title>
1065
1066<para>
1067<indexterm><primary>LanMan</primary></indexterm>
1068<indexterm><primary>MS-RPC</primary></indexterm>
1069<indexterm><primary>SPOOLSS</primary></indexterm>
1070Prior to Samba-2.2.x, print server support for Windows clients was limited to <emphasis>LanMan</emphasis>
1071printing calls. This is the same protocol level as Windows 9x/Me PCs offer when they share printers.
1072Beginning with the 2.2.0 release, Samba started to support the native Windows NT printing mechanisms. These
1073are implemented via <emphasis>MS-RPC</emphasis> (Remote Procedure Calls).
1074MS-RPCs use the <emphasis>SPOOLSS</emphasis> named pipe for all printing.
1075</para>
1076
1077<para>
1078The additional functionality provided by the new SPOOLSS support includes:
1079</para>
1080
1081<itemizedlist>
1082 <listitem><para>
1083<indexterm><primary>Point'n'Print</primary></indexterm>
1084 Support for downloading printer driver files to Windows 95/98/NT/2000 clients upon
1085 demand (<emphasis>Point'n'Print</emphasis>).
1086 </para></listitem>
1087
1088 <listitem><para>
1089<indexterm><primary>Add Printer Wizard</primary></indexterm>
1090 Uploading of printer drivers via the Windows NT <emphasis>Add Printer Wizard</emphasis> (APW)
1091 or the <ulink url="http://imprints.sourceforge.net/">Imprints</ulink> tool set.
1092 </para></listitem>
1093
1094 <listitem><para>
1095<indexterm><primary>MS-RPC</primary></indexterm>
1096<indexterm><primary>printing calls</primary></indexterm>
1097<indexterm><primary>StartDocPrinter</primary></indexterm>
1098<indexterm><primary>EnumJobs()</primary></indexterm>
1099<indexterm><primary>Win32 printing API</primary></indexterm>
1100 Support for the native MS-RPC printing calls such as StartDocPrinter, EnumJobs(), and so on. (See the
1101 <ulink url="http://msdn.microsoft.com/">MSDN documentation</ulink> for more information on the
1102 Win32 printing API).
1103 </para></listitem>
1104
1105 <listitem><para>
1106<indexterm><primary>ACL</primary></indexterm>
1107<indexterm><primary>printer objects</primary></indexterm>
1108 Support for NT Access Control Lists (ACL) on printer objects.
1109 </para></listitem>
1110
1111 <listitem><para>
1112<indexterm><primary>printer queue</primary></indexterm>
1113 Improved support for printer queue manipulation through the use of internal databases for spooled
1114 job information (implemented by various <filename>*.tdb</filename> files).
1115 </para></listitem>
1116</itemizedlist>
1117
1118<para>
1119<indexterm><primary>ADS</primary></indexterm>
1120<indexterm><primary>LDAP</primary></indexterm>
1121A benefit of updating is that Samba-3 is able to publish its printers to Active Directory (or LDAP).
1122</para>
1123
1124<para>
1125<indexterm><primary>publish printers</primary></indexterm>
1126A fundamental difference exists between MS Windows NT print servers and Samba operation. Windows NT
1127permits the installation of local printers that are not shared. This is an artifact of the fact that
1128any Windows NT machine (server or client) may be used by a user as a workstation. Samba will publish all
1129printers that are made available, either by default or by specific declaration via printer-specific shares.
1130</para>
1131
1132<para>
1133<indexterm><primary>SMB</primary></indexterm>
1134<indexterm><primary>MS-RPC</primary></indexterm>
1135<indexterm><primary>Everyone group</primary></indexterm>
1136<indexterm><primary>privileges</primary></indexterm>
1137<indexterm><primary>printer default permissions</primary></indexterm>
1138Windows NT/200x/XP Professional clients do not have to use the standard SMB printer share; they can
1139print directly to any printer on another Windows NT host using MS-RPC. This, of course, assumes that
1140the client has the necessary privileges on the remote host that serves the printer resource. The
1141default permissions assigned by Windows NT to a printer gives the print permissions to the well-known
1142<emphasis>Everyone</emphasis> group. (The older clients of type Windows 9x/Me can only print to shared
1143printers.)
1144</para>
1145
1146<sect2>
1147<title>Point'n'Print Client Drivers on Samba Servers</title>
1148
1149<para>
1150<indexterm><primary>printer drivers</primary></indexterm>
1151There is much confusion about what all this means. The question is often asked, <quote>Is it or is
1152it not necessary for printer drivers to be installed on a Samba host in order to support printing from
1153Windows clients?</quote> The answer to this is no, it is not necessary.
1154</para>
1155
1156<para>
1157<indexterm><primary>install drivers</primary></indexterm>
1158<indexterm><primary>print queue</primary></indexterm>
1159Windows NT/2000 clients can, of course, also run their APW to install drivers <emphasis>locally</emphasis>
1160(which then connect to a Samba-served print queue). This is the same method used by Windows 9x/Me
1161clients. (However, a bug existed in Samba 2.2.0 that made Windows NT/2000 clients
1162require that the Samba server possess a valid driver for the printer. This was fixed in Samba 2.2.1).
1163</para>
1164
1165<para>
1166<indexterm><primary>printer drivers</primary></indexterm>
1167<indexterm><primary>uploading</primary></indexterm>
1168But it is a new capability to install the printer drivers into the <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/>
1169share of the Samba server, and a big convenience, too. Then <emphasis>all</emphasis> clients
1170(including 95/98/ME) get the driver installed when they first connect to this printer share. The
1171<emphasis>uploading</emphasis> or <emphasis>depositing</emphasis> of the driver into this
1172<smbconfsection name="[print$]"/> share and the following binding of this driver to an existing
1173Samba printer share can be achieved by different means:
1174</para>
1175
1176<itemizedlist>
1177 <listitem><para>
1178 Running the <emphasis>APW</emphasis> on an NT/200x/XP Professional client (this does not work from 95/98/ME clients).
1179 </para></listitem>
1180
1181 <listitem><para>
1182 Using the <emphasis>Imprints</emphasis> toolset.
1183 </para></listitem>
1184
1185 <listitem><para>
1186 Using the <emphasis>smbclient</emphasis> and <emphasis>rpcclient</emphasis> command-line tools.
1187 </para></listitem>
1188
1189 <listitem><para>
1190 Using <emphasis>cupsaddsmb</emphasis> (only works for the CUPS printing system, not for LPR/LPD, LPRng, and so on).
1191 </para></listitem>
1192</itemizedlist>
1193
1194<para>
1195<indexterm><primary>uploaded drivers</primary></indexterm>
1196<indexterm><primary>Point'n'Print</primary></indexterm>
1197Samba does not use these uploaded drivers in any way to process spooled files. These drivers are utilized
1198entirely by the clients who download and install them via the <quote>Point'n'Print</quote> mechanism
1199supported by Samba. The clients use these drivers to generate print files in the format the printer
1200(or the UNIX print system) requires. Print files received by Samba are handed over to the UNIX printing
1201system, which is responsible for all further processing, as needed.
1202</para>
1203</sect2>
1204
1205<sect2>
1206<title>The Obsoleted [printer$] Section</title>
1207
1208 <para>
1209<indexterm><primary>printer$ share</primary></indexterm>
1210<indexterm><primary>printer driver</primary></indexterm>
1211 Versions of Samba prior to 2.2 made it possible to use a share named <parameter>[printer$]</parameter>. This
1212 name was taken from the same named service created by Windows 9x/Me clients when a printer was shared by them.
1213 Windows 9x/Me printer servers always have a <smbconfsection name="[printer$]"/> service that provides
1214 read-only access (with no password required) to support printer driver downloads. However, Samba's initial
1215 implementation allowed for a parameter named <parameter>printer driver location</parameter> to be used on a
1216 per-share basis. This specified the location of the driver files associated with that printer. Another
1217 parameter named <parameter>printer driver</parameter> provided a means of defining the printer driver name to
1218 be sent to the client.
1219 </para>
1220
1221 <para>
1222<indexterm><primary>printer driver file</primary></indexterm>
1223<indexterm><primary>read-write access</primary></indexterm>
1224<indexterm><primary>ACLs</primary></indexterm>
1225 These parameters, including the <parameter>printer driver file</parameter> parameter,
1226 are now removed and cannot be used in installations of Samba-3. The share name
1227 <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/> is now used for the location of downloadable printer
1228 drivers. It is taken from the <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/> service created
1229 by Windows NT PCs when a printer is shared by them. Windows NT print servers always have a
1230 <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/> service that provides read-write access (in the context
1231 of its ACLs) to support printer driver downloads and uploads. This does not mean Windows
1232 9x/Me clients are now thrown aside. They can use Samba's <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/>
1233 share support just fine.
1234 </para>
1235</sect2>
1236
1237<sect2>
1238<title>Creating the [print$] Share</title>
1239
1240<para>
1241<indexterm><primary>printer driver</primary></indexterm>
1242In order to support the uploading and downloading of printer driver files, you must first configure a
1243file share named <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/>. The public name of this share is hard coded
1244in the MS Windows clients. It cannot be renamed, since Windows clients are programmed to search for a
1245service of exactly this name if they want to retrieve printer driver files.
1246</para>
1247
1248<para>
1249You should modify the server's file to add the global parameters and create the
1250<smbconfsection name="[print$]"/> file share (of course, some of the parameter values, such
1251as <smbconfoption name="path"/>, are arbitrary and should be replaced with appropriate values for your
1252site). See <link linkend="prtdollar">[print\$] Example</link>.
1253</para>
1254
1255<example id="prtdollar">
1256<title>[print$] Example</title>
1257<smbconfblock>
1258<smbconfsection name="[global]"/>
1259<smbconfcomment>members of the ntadmin group should be able to add drivers and set</smbconfcomment>
1260<smbconfcomment>printer properties. root is implicitly always a 'printer admin'.</smbconfcomment>
1261<smbconfoption name="printer admin">@ntadmin</smbconfoption>
1262<smbconfcomment>...</smbconfcomment>
1263
1264<smbconfsection name="[printers]"/>
1265<smbconfcomment>...</smbconfcomment>
1266
1267<smbconfsection name="[print$]"/>
1268<smbconfoption name="comment">Printer Driver Download Area</smbconfoption>
1269<smbconfoption name="path">/etc/samba/drivers</smbconfoption>
1270<smbconfoption name="browseable">yes</smbconfoption>
1271<smbconfoption name="guest ok">yes</smbconfoption>
1272<smbconfoption name="read only">yes</smbconfoption>
1273<smbconfoption name="write list">@ntadmin, root</smbconfoption>
1274</smbconfblock>
1275</example>
1276
1277<para>
1278Of course, you also need to ensure that the directory named by the
1279<smbconfoption name="path"/> parameter exists on the UNIX file system.
1280</para>
1281
1282</sect2>
1283
1284<sect2>
1285<title>[print$] Stanza Parameters</title>
1286
1287<para>
1288<indexterm><primary>special section</primary></indexterm>
1289<indexterm><primary>special stanza</primary></indexterm>
1290<indexterm><primary>potential printer</primary></indexterm>
1291<indexterm><primary>driver download</primary></indexterm>
1292<indexterm><primary>local print driver</primary></indexterm>
1293The <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/> is a special section in &smb.conf;. It contains settings relevant to
1294potential printer driver download and is used by Windows clients for local print driver installation.
1295The following parameters are frequently needed in this share section:
1296</para>
1297
1298<variablelist>
1299 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="comment">Printer Driver Download Area </smbconfoption></term>
1300 <listitem><para>
1301 The comment appears next to the share name if it is listed in a share list (usually Windows
1302 clients will not see it, but it will also appear up in a <command>smbclient -L sambaserver
1303 </command> output).
1304 </para></listitem>
1305 </varlistentry>
1306
1307 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="path">/etc/samba/printers </smbconfoption></term>
1308 <listitem><para>
1309 The path to the location of the Windows driver file deposit from the UNIX point of view.
1310 </para></listitem>
1311 </varlistentry>
1312
1313 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="browseable">no </smbconfoption></term>
1314 <listitem><para>
1315 Makes the <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/> share invisible to clients from the
1316 <guimenu>Network Neighborhood</guimenu>. By excuting from a <command>cmd</command> shell:
1317<screen>
1318&dosprompt; <command>net use g:\\sambaserver\print$</command>
1319</screen>
1320 you can still mount it from any client. This can also be done from the
1321 <guimenu>Connect network drive</guimenu> menu from Windows Explorer.
1322 </para></listitem>
1323 </varlistentry>
1324
1325 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="guest ok">yes </smbconfoption></term>
1326 <listitem><para>
1327 Gives read-only access to this share for all guest users. Access may be granted to
1328 download and install printer drivers on clients. The requirement for <parameter>guest ok
1329 = yes</parameter> depends on how your site is configured. If users will be guaranteed
1330 to have an account on the Samba host, then this is a non-issue.
1331 </para>
1332
1333 <note><para>
1334 If all your Windows NT users are guaranteed to be authenticated by the Samba server
1335 (for example, if Samba authenticates via an NT domain server and the user has already been
1336 validated by the domain controller in order to log on to the Windows NT session), then guest
1337 access is not necessary. Of course, in a workgroup environment where you just want
1338 to print without worrying about silly accounts and security, then configure the share for
1339 guest access. You should consider adding <smbconfoption name="map to guest">Bad User</smbconfoption>
1340 in the <smbconfsection name="[global]"/> section as well. Make sure you understand what this
1341 parameter does before using it.
1342 </para></note>
1343 </listitem>
1344 </varlistentry>
1345
1346 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="read only">yes </smbconfoption></term>
1347 <listitem><para>
1348 Because we do not want everybody to upload driver files (or even change driver settings),
1349 we tagged this share as not writable.
1350 </para></listitem>
1351 </varlistentry>
1352
1353 <varlistentry><term><smbconfoption name="write list">@ntadmin, root </smbconfoption></term>
1354 <listitem><para>
1355 The <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/> was made read-only by the previous
1356 setting so we should create a <parameter>write list</parameter> entry also. UNIX
1357 groups are denoted with a leading <quote>@</quote> character. Users listed here are allowed
1358 write-access (as an exception to the general public's read-only access), which they need to
1359 update files on the share. Normally, you will want to name only administrative-level user
1360 account in this setting. Check the file system permissions to make sure these accounts
1361 can copy files to the share. If this is a non-root account, then the account should also
1362 be mentioned in the global <smbconfoption name="printer admin"/>
1363 parameter. See the &smb.conf; man page for more information on configuring file shares.
1364 </para></listitem>
1365 </varlistentry>
1366</variablelist>
1367
1368</sect2>
1369
1370<sect2>
1371<title>The [print$] Share Directory</title>
1372
1373<para>
1374In order for a Windows NT print server to support the downloading of driver files by multiple client
1375architectures, you must create several subdirectories within the <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/>
1376service (i.e., the UNIX directory named by the <smbconfoption name="path"/>
1377parameter). These correspond to each of the supported client architectures. Samba follows this model as
1378well. Just like the name of the <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/> share itself, the subdirectories
1379must be exactly the names listed below (you may leave out the subdirectories of architectures you do
1380not need to support).
1381</para>
1382
1383<para>
1384Therefore, create a directory tree below the
1385<smbconfsection name="[print$]"/> share for each architecture you wish
1386to support like this:
1387<programlisting>
1388[print$]--+
1389 |--W32X86 # serves drivers to Windows NT x86
1390 |--WIN40 # serves drivers to Windows 95/98
1391 |--W32ALPHA # serves drivers to Windows NT Alpha_AXP
1392 |--W32MIPS # serves drivers to Windows NT R4000
1393 |--W32PPC # serves drivers to Windows NT PowerPC
1394</programlisting>
1395</para>
1396
1397<important><title>Required Permissions</title>
1398 <para>
1399 In order to add a new driver to your Samba host, one of two conditions must hold true:
1400 </para>
1401
1402 <itemizedlist>
1403 <listitem><para>
1404 The account used to connect to the Samba host must have a UID of 0 (i.e., a root account).
1405 </para></listitem>
1406
1407 <listitem><para>
1408 The account used to connect to the Samba host must be named in the <emphasis>printer admin</emphasis> list.
1409 </para></listitem>
1410 </itemizedlist>
1411
1412 <para>
1413 Of course, the connected account must still have write access to add files to the subdirectories beneath
1414 <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/>. Remember that all file shares are set to <quote>read-only</quote> by default.
1415 </para>
1416</important>
1417
1418<para>
1419Once you have created the required <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/> service and
1420associated subdirectories, go to a Windows NT 4.0/200x/XP client workstation. Open <guiicon>Network
1421Neighborhood</guiicon> or <guiicon>My Network Places</guiicon> and browse for the Samba host. Once you
1422have located the server, navigate to its <guiicon>Printers and Faxes</guiicon> folder. You should see
1423an initial listing of printers that matches the printer shares defined on your Samba host.
1424</para>
1425</sect2>
1426</sect1>
1427
1428<sect1>
1429<title>Installing Drivers into [print$]</title>
1430
1431<para>
1432Have you successfully created the <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/> share in &smb.conf;, and have you forced
1433Samba to reread its &smb.conf; file? Good. But you are not yet ready to use the new facility. The client
1434driver files need to be installed into this share. So far, it is still an empty share. Unfortunately, it is
1435not enough to just copy the driver files over. They need to be correctly installed so that appropriate records
1436for each driver will exist in the Samba internal databases so it can provide the correct drivers as they are
1437requested from MS Windows clients. And that is a bit tricky, to say the least. We now discuss two alternative
1438ways to install the drivers into <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/>:
1439</para>
1440
1441<itemizedlist>
1442 <listitem><para>
1443 Using the Samba command-line utility <command>rpcclient</command> with its various subcommands (here,
1444 <command>adddriver</command> and <command>setdriver</command>) from any UNIX workstation.
1445 </para></listitem>
1446
1447 <listitem><para>
1448 Running a GUI (<guiicon>Printer Properties</guiicon> and <guiicon>Add Printer Wizard</guiicon>)
1449 from any Windows NT/200x/XP client workstation.
1450 </para></listitem>
1451</itemizedlist>
1452
1453<para>
1454The latter option is probably the easier one (even if the process may seem a little bit weird at first).
1455</para>
1456
1457<sect2>
1458<title>Add Printer Wizard Driver Installation</title>
1459
1460<para>
1461The printers initially listed in the Samba host's <guiicon>Printers</guiicon> folder accessed from a
1462client's Explorer will have no real printer driver assigned to them. By default this driver name is set
1463to a null string. This must be changed now. The local <guiicon>Add Printer Wizard</guiicon> (APW), run from
1464NT/2000/XP clients, will help us in this task.
1465</para>
1466
1467<para>
1468Installation of a valid printer driver is not straightforward. You must attempt to view the printer properties
1469for the printer to which you want the driver assigned. Open Windows Explorer, open <guiicon>Network
1470Neighborhood</guiicon>, browse to the Samba host, open Samba's <guiicon>Printers</guiicon> folder, right-click
1471on the printer icon, and select <guimenu>Properties...</guimenu>. You are now trying to view printer and
1472driver properties for a queue that has this default <constant>NULL</constant> driver assigned. This will
1473result in the following error message: <quote> Device settings cannot be displayed. The driver for the
1474specified printer is not installed, only spooler properties will be displayed. Do you want to install the
1475driver now?</quote>
1476</para>
1477
1478<para>
1479Do <emphasis>not</emphasis> click on <guibutton>Yes</guibutton>! Instead, click on <guibutton>No</guibutton>
1480in the error dialog. Now you will be presented with the printer properties window. From here, the way to
1481assign a driver to a printer is open. You now have the choice of:
1482</para>
1483
1484<itemizedlist>
1485 <listitem><para>
1486 Select a driver from the pop-up list of installed drivers. Initially this list will be empty.
1487 </para></listitem>
1488
1489 <listitem><para>
1490 Click on <guibutton>New Driver</guibutton> to install a new printer driver (which will
1491 start up the APW).
1492 </para></listitem>
1493</itemizedlist>
1494
1495<para>
1496Once the APW is started, the procedure is exactly the same as the one you are familiar with in Windows (we
1497assume here that you are familiar with the printer driver installations procedure on Windows NT). Make sure
1498your connection is, in fact, set up as a user with <smbconfoption name="printer admin"/>
1499privileges (if in doubt, use <command>smbstatus</command> to check for this). If you wish to install
1500printer drivers for client operating systems other than <application>Windows NT x86</application>,
1501you will need to use the <guilabel>Sharing</guilabel> tab of the printer properties dialog.
1502</para>
1503
1504<para>
1505Assuming you have connected with an administrative (or root) account (as named by the
1506<smbconfoption name="printer admin"/> parameter), you will also be able to modify
1507other printer properties such as ACLs and default device settings using this dialog. For the default
1508device settings, please consider the advice given further in <link linkend="inst-rpc">Installing
1509Print Drivers Using <command>rpcclient</command></link>.
1510</para>
1511</sect2>
1512
1513<sect2 id="inst-rpc">
1514<title>Installing Print Drivers Using <command>rpcclient</command></title>
1515
1516<para>
1517The second way to install printer drivers into <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/> and set them
1518up in a valid way is to do it from the UNIX command line. This involves four distinct steps:
1519</para>
1520
1521<orderedlist>
1522 <listitem><para>
1523 Gather information about required driver files and collect the files.
1524 </para></listitem>
1525
1526 <listitem><para>
1527 Deposit the driver files into the <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/> share's correct subdirectories
1528 (possibly by using <command>smbclient</command>).
1529 </para></listitem>
1530
1531 <listitem><para>
1532 Run the <command>rpcclient</command> command-line utility once with the <command>adddriver</command>
1533 subcommand.
1534 </para></listitem>
1535
1536 <listitem><para>
1537 Run <command>rpcclient</command> a second time with the <command>setdriver</command> subcommand.
1538 </para></listitem>
1539</orderedlist>
1540
1541<para>
1542We provide detailed hints for each of these steps in the paragraphs that follow.
1543</para>
1544
1545<sect3>
1546<title>Identifying Driver Files</title>
1547
1548<para>
1549<indexterm><primary>driver files</primary></indexterm>
1550<indexterm><primary>driver CDROM</primary></indexterm>
1551<indexterm><primary>inf file</primary></indexterm>
1552To find out about the driver files, you have two options. You can check the contents of the driver
1553CDROM that came with your printer. Study the <filename>*.inf</filename> files located on the CD-ROM. This
1554may not be possible, since the <filename>*.inf</filename> file might be missing. Unfortunately, vendors have now started
1555to use their own installation programs. These installations packages are often in some Windows platform
1556archive format. Additionally, the files may be re-named during the installation process. This makes it
1557extremely difficult to identify the driver files required.
1558</para>
1559
1560<para>
1561<indexterm><primary>W32X86</primary></indexterm>
1562Then you have the second option. Install the driver locally on a Windows client and
1563investigate which filenames and paths it uses after they are installed. (You need to repeat
1564this procedure for every client platform you want to support. We show it here for the
1565<application>W32X86</application> platform only, a name used by Microsoft for all Windows NT/200x/XP
1566clients.)
1567</para>
1568
1569<para>
1570<indexterm><primary>driver files</primary></indexterm>
1571A good method to recognize the driver files is to print the test page from the driver's
1572<guilabel>Properties</guilabel> dialog (<guilabel>General</guilabel> tab). Then look at the list of
1573driver files named on the printout. You'll need to recognize what Windows (and Samba) are calling the
1574<guilabel>Driver File</guilabel>, <guilabel>Data File</guilabel>, <guilabel>Config File</guilabel>,
1575<guilabel>Help File</guilabel>, and (optionally) <guilabel>Dependent Driver Files</guilabel>
1576(this may vary slightly for Windows NT). You need to note all filenames for the next steps.
1577</para>
1578
1579<para>
1580<indexterm><primary>rpcclient</primary></indexterm>
1581<indexterm><primary>enumdrivers</primary></indexterm>
1582<indexterm><primary>getdriver</primary></indexterm>
1583Another method to quickly test the driver filenames and related paths is provided by the
1584<command>rpcclient</command> utility. Run it with <command>enumdrivers</command> or with the
1585<command>getdriver</command> subcommand, each at the <filename>3</filename> info level. In the following example,
1586<emphasis>TURBO_XP</emphasis> is the name of the Windows PC (in this case it was a Windows XP Professional
1587laptop). I installed the driver locally to TURBO_XP from a Samba server called <constant>KDE-BITSHOP</constant>.
1588We could run an interactive <command>rpcclient</command> session; then we would get an
1589<command>rpcclient /></command> prompt and would type the subcommands at this prompt. This is left as
1590a good exercise for you. For now, we use <command>rpcclient</command> with the <option>-c</option>
1591parameter to execute a single subcommand line and exit again. This is the method you use if you
1592want to create scripts to automate the procedure for a large number of printers and drivers. Note the
1593different quotation marks used to overcome the different spaces between words:
1594</para>
1595
1596<para><screen>
1597&rootprompt;<userinput>rpcclient -U'Danka%xxxx' -c \
1598 'getdriver "Heidelberg Digimaster 9110 (PS)" 3' TURBO_XP</userinput>
1599cmd = getdriver "Heidelberg Digimaster 9110 (PS)" 3
1600
1601[Windows NT x86]
1602Printer Driver Info 3:
1603 Version: [2]
1604 Driver Name: [Heidelberg Digimaster 9110 (PS)]
1605 Architecture: [Windows NT x86]
1606 Driver Path: [C:\WINNT\System32\spool\DRIVERS\W32X86\2\HDNIS01_de.DLL]
1607 Datafile: [C:\WINNT\System32\spool\DRIVERS\W32X86\2\Hddm91c1_de.ppd]
1608 Configfile: [C:\WINNT\System32\spool\DRIVERS\W32X86\2\HDNIS01U_de.DLL]
1609 Helpfile: [C:\WINNT\System32\spool\DRIVERS\W32X86\2\HDNIS01U_de.HLP]
1610
1611 Dependentfiles: [C:\WINNT\System32\spool\DRIVERS\W32X86\2\Hddm91c1_de.DLL]
1612 Dependentfiles: [C:\WINNT\System32\spool\DRIVERS\W32X86\2\Hddm91c1_de.INI]
1613 Dependentfiles: [C:\WINNT\System32\spool\DRIVERS\W32X86\2\Hddm91c1_de.dat]
1614 Dependentfiles: [C:\WINNT\System32\spool\DRIVERS\W32X86\2\Hddm91c1_de.cat]
1615 Dependentfiles: [C:\WINNT\System32\spool\DRIVERS\W32X86\2\Hddm91c1_de.def]
1616 Dependentfiles: [C:\WINNT\System32\spool\DRIVERS\W32X86\2\Hddm91c1_de.hre]
1617 Dependentfiles: [C:\WINNT\System32\spool\DRIVERS\W32X86\2\Hddm91c1_de.vnd]
1618 Dependentfiles: [C:\WINNT\System32\spool\DRIVERS\W32X86\2\Hddm91c1_de.hlp]
1619 Dependentfiles: [C:\WINNT\System32\spool\DRIVERS\W32X86\2\HDNIS01Aux.dll]
1620 Dependentfiles: [C:\WINNT\System32\spool\DRIVERS\W32X86\2\HDNIS01_de.NTF]
1621
1622 Monitorname: []
1623 Defaultdatatype: []
1624</screen></para>
1625
1626<para>
1627<indexterm><primary>Driver File</primary></indexterm>
1628<indexterm><primary>Driver Path</primary></indexterm>
1629<indexterm><primary>WIN40</primary></indexterm>
1630<indexterm><primary>W32X86</primary></indexterm>
1631You may notice that this driver has quite a large number of <guilabel>Dependent files</guilabel>
1632(there are worse cases, however). Also, strangely, the
1633<guilabel>Driver File</guilabel> is tagged here
1634<guilabel>Driver Path</guilabel>. We do not yet have support for the so-called
1635<application>WIN40</application> architecture installed. This name is used by Microsoft for the Windows
16369x/Me platforms. If we want to support these, we need to install the Windows 9x/Me driver files in
1637addition to those for <application>W32X86</application> (i.e., the Windows NT 2000/XP clients) onto a
1638Windows PC. This PC can also host the Windows 9x/Me drivers, even if it runs on Windows NT, 2000, or XP.
1639</para>
1640
1641<para>
1642<indexterm><primary>UNC notation</primary></indexterm>
1643<indexterm><primary>Windows Explorer</primary></indexterm>
1644Since the <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/> share is usually accessible through the <guiicon>Network
1645Neighborhood</guiicon>, you can also use the UNC notation from Windows Explorer to poke at it. The Windows
16469x/Me driver files will end up in subdirectory <filename>0</filename> of the <filename>WIN40</filename>
1647directory. The full path to access them is <filename>\\WINDOWSHOST\print$\WIN40\0\</filename>.
1648</para>
1649
1650<note><para>
1651More recent drivers on Windows 2000 and Windows XP are installed into the <quote>3</quote> subdirectory
1652instead of the <quote>2</quote>. The version 2 of drivers, as used in Windows NT, were running in kernel
1653mode. Windows 2000 changed this. While it still can use the kernel mode drivers (if this is enabled by
1654the Admin), its native mode for printer drivers is user mode execution. This requires drivers designed
1655for this purpose. These types of drivers install into the <quote>3</quote> subdirectory.
1656</para></note>
1657</sect3>
1658
1659<sect3>
1660<title>Obtaining Driver Files from Windows Client [print$] Shares</title>
1661
1662<para>
1663Now we need to collect all the driver files we identified in our previous step. Where do we get them
1664from? Well, why not retrieve them from the very PC and the same <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/>
1665share that we investigated in our last step to identify the files? We can use <command>smbclient</command>
1666to do this. We will use the paths and names that were leaked to us by <command>getdriver</command>. The
1667listing is edited to include line breaks for readability:
1668<screen>
1669&rootprompt;<userinput>smbclient //TURBO_XP/print\$ -U'Danka%xxxx' \
1670 -c 'cd W32X86/2;mget HD*_de.* hd*ppd Hd*_de.* Hddm*dll HDN*Aux.DLL'</userinput>
1671
1672added interface ip=10.160.51.60 bcast=10.160.51.255 nmask=255.255.252.0
1673Got a positive name query response from 10.160.50.8 ( 10.160.50.8 )
1674Domain=[DEVELOPMENT] OS=[Windows 5.1] Server=[Windows 2000 LAN Manager]
1675<prompt>Get file Hddm91c1_de.ABD? </prompt><userinput>n</userinput>
1676<prompt>Get file Hddm91c1_de.def? </prompt><userinput>y</userinput>
1677getting file \W32X86\2\Hddm91c1_de.def of size 428 as Hddm91c1_de.def
1678<prompt>Get file Hddm91c1_de.DLL? </prompt><userinput>y</userinput>
1679getting file \W32X86\2\Hddm91c1_de.DLL of size 876544 as Hddm91c1_de.DLL
1680[...]
1681</screen></para>
1682
1683<para>
1684After this command is complete, the files are in our current local directory. You probably have noticed
1685that this time we passed several commands to the <option>-c</option> parameter, separated by semicolons.
1686This ensures that all commands are executed in sequence on the remote Windows server before
1687<command>smbclient</command> exits again.
1688</para>
1689
1690<para>
1691<indexterm><primary>WIN40</primary></indexterm>
1692Remember to repeat the procedure for the <application>WIN40</application> architecture should you need to
1693support Windows 9x/Me/XP clients. Remember too, the files for these architectures are in the
1694<filename>WIN40/0/</filename> subdirectory. Once this is complete, we can run <command>smbclient. .
1695.put</command> to store the collected files on the Samba server's <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/> share.
1696</para>
1697</sect3>
1698
1699<sect3>
1700<title>Installing Driver Files into [print$]</title>
1701
1702<para>
1703We are now going to locate the driver files into the <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/> share. Remember, the
1704UNIX path to this share has been defined previously in your &smb.conf; file. You also have created
1705subdirectories for the different Windows client types you want to support. If, for example, your
1706<smbconfsection name="[print$]"/> share maps to the UNIX path <filename>/etc/samba/drivers/</filename>, your
1707driver files should now go here:
1708</para>
1709
1710<itemizedlist>
1711 <listitem><para>
1712 For all Windows NT, 2000, and XP clients, <filename>/etc/samba/drivers/W32X86/</filename> but
1713 not (yet) into the <filename>2</filename> subdirectory.
1714 </para></listitem>
1715
1716 <listitem><para>
1717 For all Windows 95, 98, and Me clients, <filename>/etc/samba/drivers/WIN40/</filename> but not
1718 (yet) into the <filename>0</filename> subdirectory.
1719 </para></listitem>
1720</itemizedlist>
1721
1722<para>
1723<indexterm><primary>smbclient</primary></indexterm>
1724<indexterm><primary>getdriver</primary></indexterm>
1725We again use smbclient to transfer the driver files across the network. We specify the same files
1726and paths as were leaked to us by running <command>getdriver</command> against the original
1727<emphasis>Windows</emphasis> install. However, now we are going to store the files into a
1728<emphasis>Samba/UNIX</emphasis> print server's <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/> share.
1729<screen>
1730&rootprompt;<userinput>smbclient //SAMBA-CUPS/print\$ -U'root%xxxx' -c \
1731 'cd W32X86; put HDNIS01_de.DLL; \
1732 put Hddm91c1_de.ppd; put HDNIS01U_de.DLL; \
1733 put HDNIS01U_de.HLP; put Hddm91c1_de.DLL; \
1734 put Hddm91c1_de.INI; put Hddm91c1KMMin.DLL; \
1735 put Hddm91c1_de.dat; put Hddm91c1_de.dat; \
1736 put Hddm91c1_de.def; put Hddm91c1_de.hre; \
1737 put Hddm91c1_de.vnd; put Hddm91c1_de.hlp; \
1738 put Hddm91c1_de_reg.HLP; put HDNIS01Aux.dll; \
1739 put HDNIS01_de.NTF'</userinput>
1740
1741added interface ip=10.160.51.60 bcast=10.160.51.255 nmask=255.255.252.0
1742Got a positive name query response from 10.160.51.162 ( 10.160.51.162 )
1743Domain=[CUPS-PRINT] OS=[UNIX] Server=[Samba 2.2.7a]
1744putting file HDNIS01_de.DLL as \W32X86\HDNIS01_de.DLL
1745putting file Hddm91c1_de.ppd as \W32X86\Hddm91c1_de.ppd
1746putting file HDNIS01U_de.DLL as \W32X86\HDNIS01U_de.DLL
1747putting file HDNIS01U_de.HLP as \W32X86\HDNIS01U_de.HLP
1748putting file Hddm91c1_de.DLL as \W32X86\Hddm91c1_de.DLL
1749putting file Hddm91c1_de.INI as \W32X86\Hddm91c1_de.INI
1750putting file Hddm91c1KMMin.DLL as \W32X86\Hddm91c1KMMin.DLL
1751putting file Hddm91c1_de.dat as \W32X86\Hddm91c1_de.dat
1752putting file Hddm91c1_de.dat as \W32X86\Hddm91c1_de.dat
1753putting file Hddm91c1_de.def as \W32X86\Hddm91c1_de.def
1754putting file Hddm91c1_de.hre as \W32X86\Hddm91c1_de.hre
1755putting file Hddm91c1_de.vnd as \W32X86\Hddm91c1_de.vnd
1756putting file Hddm91c1_de.hlp as \W32X86\Hddm91c1_de.hlp
1757putting file Hddm91c1_de_reg.HLP as \W32X86\Hddm91c1_de_reg.HLP
1758putting file HDNIS01Aux.dll as \W32X86\HDNIS01Aux.dll
1759putting file HDNIS01_de.NTF as \W32X86\HDNIS01_de.NTF
1760</screen>
1761<indexterm><primary>PPD</primary></indexterm>
1762<indexterm><primary>PostScript driver</primary></indexterm>
1763<indexterm><primary>adddriver</primary></indexterm>
1764Whew &smbmdash; that was a lot of typing! Most drivers are a lot smaller &smbmdash; many have only three generic
1765PostScript driver files plus one PPD. While we did retrieve the files from the <filename>2</filename>
1766subdirectory of the <filename>W32X86</filename> directory from the Windows box, we do not put them
1767(for now) in this same subdirectory of the Samba box. This relocation will automatically be done by the
1768<command>adddriver</command> command, which we will run shortly (and do not forget to also put the files
1769for the Windows 9x/Me architecture into the <filename>WIN40/</filename> subdirectory should you need them).
1770</para>
1771
1772</sect3>
1773
1774<sect3>
1775<title><command>smbclient</command> to Confirm Driver Installation</title>
1776
1777<para>
1778<indexterm><primary>smbclient</primary></indexterm>
1779<indexterm><primary>SSH</primary></indexterm>
1780For now we verify that our files are there. This can be done with <command>smbclient</command>, too
1781(but, of course, you can log in via SSH also and do this through a standard UNIX shell access):
1782</para>
1783
1784<para><screen>
1785&rootprompt;<userinput>smbclient //SAMBA-CUPS/print\$ -U 'root%xxxx' \
1786 -c 'cd W32X86; pwd; dir; cd 2; pwd; dir'</userinput>
1787 added interface ip=10.160.51.60 bcast=10.160.51.255 nmask=255.255.252.0
1788Got a positive name query response from 10.160.51.162 ( 10.160.51.162 )
1789Domain=[CUPS-PRINT] OS=[UNIX] Server=[Samba 2.2.8a]
1790
1791Current directory is \\SAMBA-CUPS\print$\W32X86\
1792. D 0 Sun May 4 03:56:35 2003
1793.. D 0 Thu Apr 10 23:47:40 2003
17942 D 0 Sun May 4 03:56:18 2003
1795HDNIS01Aux.dll A 15356 Sun May 4 03:58:59 2003
1796Hddm91c1KMMin.DLL A 46966 Sun May 4 03:58:59 2003
1797HDNIS01_de.DLL A 434400 Sun May 4 03:58:59 2003
1798HDNIS01_de.NTF A 790404 Sun May 4 03:56:35 2003
1799Hddm91c1_de.DLL A 876544 Sun May 4 03:58:59 2003
1800Hddm91c1_de.INI A 101 Sun May 4 03:58:59 2003
1801Hddm91c1_de.dat A 5044 Sun May 4 03:58:59 2003
1802Hddm91c1_de.def A 428 Sun May 4 03:58:59 2003
1803Hddm91c1_de.hlp A 37699 Sun May 4 03:58:59 2003
1804Hddm91c1_de.hre A 323584 Sun May 4 03:58:59 2003
1805Hddm91c1_de.ppd A 26373 Sun May 4 03:58:59 2003
1806Hddm91c1_de.vnd A 45056 Sun May 4 03:58:59 2003
1807HDNIS01U_de.DLL A 165888 Sun May 4 03:58:59 2003
1808HDNIS01U_de.HLP A 19770 Sun May 4 03:58:59 2003
1809Hddm91c1_de_reg.HLP A 228417 Sun May 4 03:58:59 2003
1810 40976 blocks of size 262144. 709 blocks available
1811
1812Current directory is \\SAMBA-CUPS\print$\W32X86\2\
1813. D 0 Sun May 4 03:56:18 2003
1814.. D 0 Sun May 4 03:56:35 2003
1815ADOBEPS5.DLL A 434400 Sat May 3 23:18:45 2003
1816laserjet4.ppd A 9639 Thu Apr 24 01:05:32 2003
1817ADOBEPSU.DLL A 109568 Sat May 3 23:18:45 2003
1818ADOBEPSU.HLP A 18082 Sat May 3 23:18:45 2003
1819PDFcreator2.PPD A 15746 Sun Apr 20 22:24:07 2003
1820 40976 blocks of size 262144. 709 blocks available
1821</screen></para>
1822
1823<para>
1824<indexterm><primary>Point'n'Print</primary></indexterm>
1825<indexterm><primary>printer driver files</primary></indexterm>
1826<indexterm><primary>print queue</primary></indexterm>
1827Notice that there are already driver files present in the <filename>2</filename> subdirectory (probably from a
1828previous installation). Once the files for the new driver are there too, you are still a few steps away from
1829being able to use them on the clients. The only thing you could do now is retrieve them from a client just
1830like you retrieve ordinary files from a file share, by opening print$ in Windows Explorer. But that wouldn't
1831install them per Point'n'Print. The reason is that Samba does not yet know that these files are something
1832special, namely <emphasis>printer driver files</emphasis>, and it does not know to which print queue(s) these
1833driver files belong.
1834</para>
1835</sect3>
1836
1837<sect3>
1838<title>Running <command>rpcclient</command> with <command>adddriver</command></title>
1839
1840<para>
1841<indexterm><primary>adddriver</primary></indexterm>
1842<indexterm><primary>register driver files</primary></indexterm>
1843<indexterm><primary>TDB database</primary></indexterm>
1844Next, you must tell Samba about the special category of the files you just uploaded into the
1845<smbconfsection name="[print$]"/> share. This is done by the <command>adddriver</command>
1846command. It will prompt Samba to register the driver files into its internal TDB database files. The
1847following command and its output has been edited for readability:
1848<screen>
1849&rootprompt;<userinput>rpcclient -Uroot%xxxx -c 'adddriver "Windows NT x86" \
1850 "dm9110:HDNIS01_de.DLL: \
1851 Hddm91c1_de.ppd:HDNIS01U_de.DLL:HDNIS01U_de.HLP: \
1852 NULL:RAW:Hddm91c1_de.DLL,Hddm91c1_de.INI, \
1853 Hddm91c1_de.dat,Hddm91c1_de.def,Hddm91c1_de.hre, \
1854 Hddm91c1_de.vnd,Hddm91c1_de.hlp,Hddm91c1KMMin.DLL, \
1855 HDNIS01Aux.dll,HDNIS01_de.NTF, \
1856 Hddm91c1_de_reg.HLP' SAMBA-CUPS</userinput>
1857
1858cmd = adddriver "Windows NT x86" \
1859 "dm9110:HDNIS01_de.DLL:Hddm91c1_de.ppd:HDNIS01U_de.DLL: \
1860 HDNIS01U_de.HLP:NULL:RAW:Hddm91c1_de.DLL,Hddm91c1_de.INI, \
1861 Hddm91c1_de.dat,Hddm91c1_de.def,Hddm91c1_de.hre, \
1862 Hddm91c1_de.vnd,Hddm91c1_de.hlp,Hddm91c1KMMin.DLL, \
1863 HDNIS01Aux.dll,HDNIS01_de.NTF,Hddm91c1_de_reg.HLP"
1864
1865Printer Driver dm9110 successfully installed.
1866</screen></para>
1867
1868<para>
1869<indexterm><primary>NT_STATUS_UNSUCCESSFUL</primary></indexterm>
1870<indexterm><primary>error message</primary></indexterm>
1871<indexterm><primary>adddriver</primary></indexterm>
1872After this step, the driver should be recognized by Samba on the print server. You need to be very
1873careful when typing the command. Don't exchange the order of the fields. Some changes would lead to
1874an <computeroutput>NT_STATUS_UNSUCCESSFUL</computeroutput> error message. These become obvious. Other
1875changes might install the driver files successfully but render the driver unworkable. So take care!
1876Hints about the syntax of the adddriver command are in the man page.
1877provides a more detailed description, should you need it.
1878</para>
1879</sect3>
1880
1881<sect3>
1882<title>Checking <command>adddriver</command> Completion</title>
1883
1884<para>
1885One indication for Samba's recognition of the files as driver files is the <computeroutput>successfully
1886installed</computeroutput> message. Another one is the fact that our files have been moved by the
1887<command>adddriver</command> command into the <filename>2</filename> subdirectory. You can check this
1888again with <command>smbclient</command>:
1889<screen>
1890&rootprompt;<userinput>smbclient //SAMBA-CUPS/print\$ -Uroot%xx \
1891 -c 'cd W32X86;dir;pwd;cd 2;dir;pwd'</userinput>
1892 added interface ip=10.160.51.162 bcast=10.160.51.255 nmask=255.255.252.0
1893 Domain=[CUPS-PRINT] OS=[UNIX] Server=[Samba 2.2.7a]
1894
1895 Current directory is \\SAMBA-CUPS\print$\W32X86\
1896 . D 0 Sun May 4 04:32:48 2003
1897 .. D 0 Thu Apr 10 23:47:40 2003
1898 2 D 0 Sun May 4 04:32:48 2003
1899 40976 blocks of size 262144. 731 blocks available
1900
1901 Current directory is \\SAMBA-CUPS\print$\W32X86\2\
1902 . D 0 Sun May 4 04:32:48 2003
1903 .. D 0 Sun May 4 04:32:48 2003
1904 DigiMaster.PPD A 148336 Thu Apr 24 01:07:00 2003
1905 ADOBEPS5.DLL A 434400 Sat May 3 23:18:45 2003
1906 laserjet4.ppd A 9639 Thu Apr 24 01:05:32 2003
1907 ADOBEPSU.DLL A 109568 Sat May 3 23:18:45 2003
1908 ADOBEPSU.HLP A 18082 Sat May 3 23:18:45 2003
1909 PDFcreator2.PPD A 15746 Sun Apr 20 22:24:07 2003
1910 HDNIS01Aux.dll A 15356 Sun May 4 04:32:18 2003
1911 Hddm91c1KMMin.DLL A 46966 Sun May 4 04:32:18 2003
1912 HDNIS01_de.DLL A 434400 Sun May 4 04:32:18 2003
1913 HDNIS01_de.NTF A 790404 Sun May 4 04:32:18 2003
1914 Hddm91c1_de.DLL A 876544 Sun May 4 04:32:18 2003
1915 Hddm91c1_de.INI A 101 Sun May 4 04:32:18 2003
1916 Hddm91c1_de.dat A 5044 Sun May 4 04:32:18 2003
1917 Hddm91c1_de.def A 428 Sun May 4 04:32:18 2003
1918 Hddm91c1_de.hlp A 37699 Sun May 4 04:32:18 2003
1919 Hddm91c1_de.hre A 323584 Sun May 4 04:32:18 2003
1920 Hddm91c1_de.ppd A 26373 Sun May 4 04:32:18 2003
1921 Hddm91c1_de.vnd A 45056 Sun May 4 04:32:18 2003
1922 HDNIS01U_de.DLL A 165888 Sun May 4 04:32:18 2003
1923 HDNIS01U_de.HLP A 19770 Sun May 4 04:32:18 2003
1924 Hddm91c1_de_reg.HLP A 228417 Sun May 4 04:32:18 2003
1925 40976 blocks of size 262144. 731 blocks available
1926</screen></para>
1927
1928<para>
1929Another verification is that the timestamp of the printing TDB files is now updated
1930(and possibly their file size has increased).
1931</para>
1932</sect3>
1933
1934<sect3>
1935<title>Check Samba for Driver Recognition</title>
1936
1937<para>
1938<indexterm><primary>registered</primary></indexterm>
1939Now the driver should be registered with Samba. We can easily verify this and will do so in a
1940moment. However, this driver is not yet associated with a particular printer. We may check the driver
1941status of the files by at least three methods:
1942</para>
1943
1944<itemizedlist>
1945 <listitem><para>
1946<indexterm><primary>Network Neighborhood</primary></indexterm>
1947<indexterm><primary>Printers and Faxes</primary></indexterm>
1948<indexterm><primary>printer icon</primary></indexterm>
1949<indexterm><primary>Windows95/98/ME</primary></indexterm>
1950<indexterm><primary>Windows NT/2000/XP</primary></indexterm>
1951 From any Windows client browse Network Neighborhood, find the Samba host, and open the Samba
1952 <guiicon>Printers and Faxes</guiicon> folder. Select any printer icon, right-click and select
1953 the printer <guimenuitem>Properties</guimenuitem>. Click the <guilabel>Advanced</guilabel>
1954 tab. Here is a field indicating the driver for that printer. A drop-down menu allows you to
1955 change that driver (be careful not to do this unwittingly). You can use this list to view
1956 all drivers known to Samba. Your new one should be among them. (Each type of client will
1957 see only its own architecture's list. If you do not have every driver installed for each platform,
1958 the list will differ if you look at it from Windows95/98/ME or Windows NT/2000/XP.)
1959 </para></listitem>
1960
1961 <listitem><para>
1962<indexterm><primary>Network Neighborhood</primary></indexterm>
1963 From a Windows 200x/XP client (not Windows NT) browse <guiicon>Network Neighborhood</guiicon>,
1964 search for the Samba server, open the server's <guiicon>Printers</guiicon> folder,
1965 and right-click on the white background (with no printer highlighted). Select <guimenuitem>Server
1966 Properties</guimenuitem>. On the <guilabel>Drivers</guilabel> tab you will see the new driver
1967 listed. This view enables you to also inspect the list of files belonging to that driver
1968 (this does not work on Windows NT, but only on Windows 2000 and Windows XP; Windows NT does not
1969 provide the <guimenuitem>Drivers</guimenuitem> tab). An alternative and much quicker method for
1970 Windows 2000/XP to start this dialog is by typing into a DOS box (you must of course adapt the
1971 name to your Samba server instead of <replaceable>SAMBA-CUPS</replaceable>):
1972 <screen>
1973 <userinput>rundll32 printui.dll,PrintUIEntry /s /t2 /n\\<replaceable>SAMBA-CUPS</replaceable></userinput>
1974 </screen>
1975 </para>
1976 </listitem>
1977
1978 <listitem><para>
1979 From a UNIX prompt, run this command (or a variant thereof), where
1980 <replaceable>SAMBA-CUPS</replaceable> is the name of the Samba host and xxxx represents the
1981 actual Samba password assigned to root:
1982 <screen>
1983 <userinput>rpcclient -U'root%xxxx' -c 'enumdrivers' <replaceable>SAMBA-CUPS</replaceable></userinput>
1984 </screen>
1985 </para>
1986
1987 <para>
1988 You will see a listing of all drivers Samba knows about. Your new one should be among
1989 them. But it is only listed under the <parameter>[Windows NT x86]</parameter> heading, not under
1990 <smbconfsection name="[Windows 4.0]"/>, since you didn't install that part. Or did you?
1991 In our example it is named <constant>dm9110</constant>. Note that the third column shows the other
1992 installed drivers twice, one time for each supported architecture. Our new driver only shows up
1993 for <application>Windows NT 4.0 or 2000</application>. To have it present for <application>Windows
1994 95, 98, and Me</application>, you'll have to repeat the whole procedure with the WIN40 architecture
1995 and subdirectory.
1996 </para></listitem>
1997</itemizedlist>
1998</sect3>
1999
2000<sect3>
2001<title>Specific Driver Name Flexibility</title>
2002
2003<para>
2004<indexterm><primary>adddriver</primary></indexterm>
2005You can name the driver as you like. If you repeat the <command>adddriver</command> step with the same
2006files as before but with a different driver name, it will work the same:
2007<screen>
2008&rootprompt;<userinput>rpcclient -Uroot%xxxx \
2009 -c 'adddriver "Windows NT x86" \
2010 "mydrivername:HDNIS01_de.DLL: \
2011 Hddm91c1_de.ppd:HDNIS01U_de.DLL:HDNIS01U_de.HLP: \
2012 NULL:RAW:Hddm91c1_de.DLL,Hddm91c1_de.INI, \
2013 Hddm91c1_de.dat,Hddm91c1_de.def,Hddm91c1_de.hre, \
2014 Hddm91c1_de.vnd,Hddm91c1_de.hlp,Hddm91c1KMMin.DLL, \
2015 HDNIS01Aux.dll,HDNIS01_de.NTF,Hddm91c1_de_reg.HLP' SAMBA-CUPS
2016 </userinput>
2017
2018cmd = adddriver "Windows NT x86" \
2019 "mydrivername:HDNIS01_de.DLL:Hddm91c1_de.ppd:HDNIS01U_de.DLL:\
2020 HDNIS01U_de.HLP:NULL:RAW:Hddm91c1_de.DLL,Hddm91c1_de.INI, \
2021 Hddm91c1_de.dat,Hddm91c1_de.def,Hddm91c1_de.hre, \
2022 Hddm91c1_de.vnd,Hddm91c1_de.hlp,Hddm91c1KMMin.DLL, \
2023 HDNIS01Aux.dll,HDNIS01_de.NTF,Hddm91c1_de_reg.HLP"
2024
2025Printer Driver mydrivername successfully installed.
2026</screen></para>
2027
2028<para>
2029<indexterm><primary>print queue</primary></indexterm>
2030<indexterm><primary>rpcclient</primary></indexterm>
2031<indexterm><primary>adddriver</primary></indexterm>
2032You will be able to bind that driver to any print queue (however, you are responsible that
2033you associate drivers to queues that make sense with respect to target printers). You cannot run the
2034<command>rpcclient</command> <command>adddriver</command> command repeatedly. Each run consumes the
2035files you had put into the <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/> share by moving them into the
2036respective subdirectories, so you must execute an <command>smbclient ... put</command> command before
2037each <command>rpcclient ... adddriver</command> command.
2038</para>
2039</sect3>
2040
2041<sect3>
2042<title>Running <command>rpcclient</command> with <command>setdriver</command></title>
2043
2044<para>
2045<indexterm><primary>mapping printer driver</primary></indexterm>
2046<indexterm><primary>TDB</primary></indexterm>
2047Samba needs to know which printer owns which driver. Create a mapping of the driver to a printer, and
2048store this information in Samba's memory, the TDB files. The <command>rpcclient setdriver</command> command
2049achieves exactly this:
2050<screen>
2051&rootprompt;<userinput>rpcclient -U'root%xxxx' -c 'setdriver dm9110 mydrivername' <replaceable>SAMBA-CUPS</replaceable></userinput>
2052 cmd = setdriver dm9110 mydrivername
2053
2054Successfully set dm9110 to driver mydrivername.
2055</screen></para>
2056
2057<para>
2058Ah, no, I did not want to do that. Repeat, this time with the name I intended:
2059<screen>
2060&rootprompt;<userinput>rpcclient -U'root%xxxx' -c 'setdriver dm9110 dm9110' <replaceable>SAMBA-CUPS</replaceable></userinput>
2061 cmd = setdriver dm9110 dm9110
2062Successfully set dm9110 to driver dm9110.
2063</screen></para>
2064
2065<para>
2066The syntax of the command is:
2067<screen>
2068<userinput>rpcclient -U'root%<replaceable>sambapassword</replaceable>' -c 'setdriver <replaceable>printername</replaceable> \
2069 <replaceable>drivername</replaceable>' <replaceable>SAMBA-Hostname</replaceable></userinput>.
2070</screen>
2071Now we have done most of the work, but not all of it.
2072</para>
2073
2074<note><para>
2075The <command>setdriver</command> command will only succeed if the printer is already known to Samba. A
2076bug in 2.2.x prevented Samba from recognizing freshly installed printers. You had to restart Samba,
2077or at least send an HUP signal to all running smbd processes to work around this: <userinput>kill -HUP
2078`pidof smbd`</userinput>.
2079</para></note>
2080</sect3>
2081</sect2>
2082</sect1>
2083
2084<sect1>
2085<title>Client Driver Installation Procedure</title>
2086
2087<para>
2088As Don Quixote said, <quote>The proof of the pudding is in the eating.</quote> The proof
2089for our setup lies in the printing. So let's install the printer driver onto the client PCs. This is
2090not as straightforward as it may seem. Read on.
2091</para>
2092
2093<sect2>
2094<title>First Client Driver Installation</title>
2095
2096<para>
2097Especially important is the installation onto the first client PC (for each architectural platform
2098separately). Once this is done correctly, all further clients are easy to set up and shouldn't need further
2099attention. What follows is a description for the recommended first procedure. You now work from a client
2100workstation. You should check that your connection is not unwittingly mapped to <emphasis>bad
2101user</emphasis> nobody. In a DOS box type:
2102</para>
2103
2104<para><userinput>net use \\<replaceable>SAMBA-SERVER</replaceable>\print$ /user:root</userinput></para>
2105
2106<para>
2107Replace root, if needed, by another valid <smbconfoption name="printer admin"/> user as given in
2108the definition. Should you already be connected as a different user, you will get an error message. There
2109is no easy way to get rid of that connection, because Windows does not seem to know a concept of logging
2110off from a share connection (do not confuse this with logging off from the local workstation; that is
2111a different matter). On Windows NT/200x, you can force a logoff from all smb/cifs connections by restarting the
2112<emphasis>workstation</emphasis> service. You can try to close all Windows file explorers and Internet Explorer for
2113Windows. As a last resort, you may have to reboot. Make sure there is no automatic reconnection set up. It may be
2114easier to go to a different workstation and try from there. After you have made sure you are connected
2115as a printer admin user (you can check this with the <command>smbstatus</command> command on Samba),
2116do this from the Windows workstation:
2117</para>
2118
2119<procedure>
2120 <step><para>
2121 Open <guiicon>Network Neighborhood</guiicon>.
2122 </para></step>
2123
2124 <step><para>
2125 Browse to Samba server.
2126 </para></step>
2127
2128 <step><para>
2129 Open its <guiicon>Printers and Faxes</guiicon> folder.
2130 </para></step>
2131
2132 <step><para>
2133 Highlight and right-click on the printer.
2134 </para></step>
2135
2136 <step><para>
2137 Select <guimenuitem>Connect</guimenuitem> (for Windows NT4/200x
2138 it is possibly <guimenuitem>Install</guimenuitem>).
2139 </para></step>
2140</procedure>
2141
2142<para>
2143A new printer (named <replaceable>printername</replaceable> on Samba server) should now have
2144appeared in your <emphasis>local</emphasis> Printer folder (check <guimenu>Start</guimenu> ->
2145<guimenuitem>Settings</guimenuitem> -> <guimenuitem>Control Panel</guimenuitem> -> <guiicon>Printers
2146and Faxes</guiicon>).
2147</para>
2148
2149<para>
2150<indexterm><primary>print test page</primary></indexterm>
2151Most likely you are tempted to try to print a test page. After all, you now can open the printer
2152properties, and on the <guimenu>General</guimenu> tab there is a button offering to do just that. But
2153chances are that you get an error message saying "<literal>Unable to print Test Page</literal>." The
2154reason might be that there is not yet a valid device mode set for the driver or that the <quote>printer
2155driver data</quote> set is still incomplete.
2156</para>
2157
2158<para>
2159You must make sure that a valid <parameter>device mode</parameter> is set for the
2160driver. We now explain what that means.
2161</para>
2162</sect2>
2163
2164<sect2 id="prt-modeset">
2165<title>Setting Device Modes on New Printers</title>
2166
2167<para>
2168For a printer to be truly usable by a Windows NT/200x/XP client, it must possess:
2169</para>
2170
2171<itemizedlist>
2172 <listitem><para>
2173<indexterm><primary>device mode</primary></indexterm>
2174 A valid <emphasis>device mode</emphasis> generated by the driver for the printer (defining things
2175 like paper size, orientation and duplex settings).
2176 </para></listitem>
2177
2178 <listitem><para>
2179<indexterm><primary>printer driver data</primary></indexterm>
2180 A complete set of <emphasis>printer driver data</emphasis> generated by the driver.
2181 </para></listitem>
2182</itemizedlist>
2183
2184<para>
2185<indexterm><primary>ntprinters.tdb</primary></indexterm>
2186<indexterm><primary>ntdrivers.tdb</primary></indexterm>
2187<indexterm><primary>printing.tdb</primary></indexterm>
2188<indexterm><primary>ntforms.tdb</primary></indexterm>
2189<indexterm><primary>TDB database files</primary></indexterm>
2190If either of these is incomplete, the clients can produce less than optimal output at best. In the
2191worst cases, unreadable garbage or nothing at all comes from the printer, or it produces a harvest of
2192error messages when attempting to print. Samba stores the named values and all printing-related information in
2193its internal TDB database files <filename>(ntprinters.tdb</filename>, <filename>ntdrivers.tdb</filename>,
2194<filename>printing.tdb</filename>, and <filename>ntforms.tdb</filename>).
2195</para>
2196
2197<para>
2198The device mode and the set of printer driver data are basically collections
2199of settings for all print queue properties, initialized in a sensible way. Device modes and
2200printer driver data should initially be set on the print server (the Samba host) to healthy
2201values so the clients can start to use them immediately. How do we set these initial healthy values?
2202This can be achieved by accessing the drivers remotely from an NT (or 200x/XP) client, as discussed
2203in the following paragraphs.
2204</para>
2205
2206<para>
2207Be aware that a valid device mode can only be initiated by a <smbconfoption name="printer admin"/> or root
2208(the reason should be obvious). Device modes can be correctly set only by executing the printer driver program
2209itself. Since Samba cannot execute this Win32 platform driver code, it sets this field initially to NULL
2210(which is not a valid setting for clients to use). Fortunately, most drivers automatically generate the
2211printer driver data that is needed when they are uploaded to the <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/> share with
2212the help of the APW or rpcclient.
2213</para>
2214
2215<para>
2216The generation and setting of a first valid device mode, however, requires some tickling from a client
2217to set it on the Samba server. The easiest means of doing so is to simply change the page orientation on
2218the server's printer. This executes enough of the printer driver program on the client for the desired
2219effect to happen and feeds back the new device mode to our Samba server. You can use the native Windows
2220NT/200x/XP printer properties page from a Window client for this:
2221</para>
2222
2223<procedure>
2224<title>Procedure to Initialize the Printer Driver Settings</title>
2225 <step><para>
2226 Browse the <guiicon>Network Neighborhood</guiicon>.
2227 </para></step>
2228
2229 <step><para>
2230 Find the Samba server.
2231 </para></step>
2232
2233 <step><para>
2234 Open the Samba server's <guiicon>Printers and Faxes</guiicon> folder.
2235 </para></step>
2236
2237 <step><para>
2238 Highlight the shared printer in question.
2239 </para></step>
2240
2241 <step><para>
2242 Right-click on the printer (you may already be here if you followed the last section's description).
2243 </para></step>
2244
2245 <step><para>
2246 At the bottom of the context menu select <guimenu>Properties</guimenu> (if the menu still offers the
2247 <guimenuitem>Connect</guimenuitem> entry further above, you
2248 need to click on that one first to achieve the driver
2249 installation, as shown in the last section).
2250 </para></step>
2251
2252 <step><para>
2253 Go to the <guilabel>Advanced</guilabel> tab; click on <guibutton>Printing Defaults</guibutton>.
2254 </para></step>
2255
2256 <step><para>
2257 Change the <guimenuitem>Portrait</guimenuitem> page setting to <guimenuitem>Landscape</guimenuitem> (and back).
2258 </para></step>
2259
2260 <step><para>
2261 Make sure to apply changes between swapping the page orientation to cause the change to actually take effect.
2262 </para></step>
2263
2264 <step><para>
2265 While you are at it, you may also want to set the desired printing defaults here, which then apply to all future
2266 client driver installations.
2267 </para></step>
2268</procedure>
2269
2270<para>
2271This procedure executes the printer driver program on the client platform and feeds back the correct
2272device mode to Samba, which now stores it in its TDB files. Once the driver is installed on the client,
2273you can follow the analogous steps by accessing the <emphasis>local</emphasis> <guiicon>Printers</guiicon>
2274folder, too, if you are a Samba printer admin user. From now on, printing should work as expected.
2275</para>
2276
2277<para>
2278<indexterm><primary>default devmode</primary></indexterm>
2279Samba includes a service-level parameter name <parameter>default devmode</parameter> for generating a default
2280device mode for a printer. Some drivers function well with Samba's default set of properties. Others
2281may crash the client's spooler service. So use this parameter with caution. It is always better to have
2282the client generate a valid device mode for the printer and store it on the server for you.
2283</para>
2284</sect2>
2285
2286<sect2>
2287<title>Additional Client Driver Installation</title>
2288
2289<para>
2290<indexterm><primary>additional driver</primary></indexterm>
2291Every additional driver may be installed in the same way as just described. Browse <command>Network
2292Neighborhood</command>, open the <guiicon>Printers</guiicon> folder on Samba server, right-click on
2293<guiicon>Printer</guiicon>, and choose <guimenuitem>Connect...</guimenuitem>. Once this completes (should be
2294not more than a few seconds, but could also take a minute, depending on network conditions), you should find
2295the new printer in your client workstation local <guiicon>Printers and Faxes</guiicon> folder.
2296</para>
2297
2298<para>
2299You can also open your local <guiicon>Printers and Faxes</guiicon> folder by
2300using this command on Windows 200x/XP Professional workstations:
2301<screen>
2302<userinput>rundll32 shell32.dll,SHHelpShortcuts_RunDLL PrintersFolder</userinput>
2303</screen>
2304or this command on Windows NT 4.0 workstations:
2305<indexterm><primary>rundll32</primary></indexterm>
2306<screen>
2307<userinput>rundll32 shell32.dll,Control_RunDLL MAIN.CPL @2</userinput>
2308</screen>
2309</para>
2310
2311<para>
2312You can enter the commands either inside a <guilabel>DOS box</guilabel> window or in the <guimenuitem>Run
2313command...</guimenuitem> field from the <guimenu>Start</guimenu> menu.
2314</para>
2315</sect2>
2316
2317<sect2>
2318<title>Always Make First Client Connection as root or <quote>printer admin</quote></title>
2319
2320<para>
2321After you installed the driver on the Samba server (in its <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/> share), you
2322should always make sure that your first client installation completes correctly. Make it a habit for yourself
2323to build the very first connection from a client as <smbconfoption name="printer admin"/>. This is to make
2324sure that:
2325</para>
2326
2327<itemizedlist>
2328 <listitem><para>
2329 A first valid <emphasis>device mode</emphasis> is really initialized (see above <link
2330 linkend="prt-modeset">Setting Device Modes on New Printers</link>) for more explanation details).
2331 </para></listitem>
2332
2333 <listitem><para>
2334 The default print settings of your printer for all further client installations are as you want them.
2335 </para></listitem>
2336</itemizedlist>
2337
2338<para>
2339Do this by changing the orientation to landscape, click on <guiicon>Apply</guiicon>, and then change it
2340back again. Next, modify the other settings (for example, you do not want the default media size set to
2341<guiicon>Letter</guiicon> when you are all using <guiicon>A4</guiicon>, right? You may want to set the
2342printer for <guiicon>duplex</guiicon> as the default, and so on).
2343</para>
2344
2345<para>
2346<indexterm><primary>runas</primary></indexterm>
2347To connect as root to a Samba printer, try this command from a Windows 200x/XP DOS box command prompt:
2348<screen>
2349&dosprompt;<userinput>runas /netonly /user:root "rundll32 printui.dll,PrintUIEntry /p /t3 /n
2350 \\<replaceable>SAMBA-SERVER</replaceable>\<replaceable>printername</replaceable>"</userinput>
2351</screen>
2352</para>
2353
2354<para>
2355You will be prompted for <constant>root</constant>'s Samba password; type it, wait a few seconds, click on
2356<guibutton>Printing Defaults</guibutton>, and proceed to set the job options that should be used as defaults
2357by all clients. Alternatively, instead of root you can name one other member of the <smbconfoption
2358name="printer admin"/> from the setting.
2359</para>
2360
2361<para>
2362Now all the other users downloading and installing the driver the same way (using
2363<literal>Point'n'Print</literal>) will have the same defaults set for them. If you miss this step, you'll get a
2364lot of help desk calls from your users, but maybe you like to talk to people.
2365</para>
2366</sect2>
2367</sect1>
2368
2369<sect1>
2370<title>Other Gotchas</title>
2371
2372<para>
2373Your driver is installed. It is now ready for Point'n'Print installation by the clients. You may have tried to
2374download and use it on your first client machine, but wait. Let's make sure you are acquainted first with a
2375few tips and tricks you may find useful. For example, suppose you did not set the defaults on the printer, as
2376advised in the preceding paragraphs. Your users complain about various issues (such as, <quote>We need to set
2377the paper size for each job from Letter to A4 and it will not store it</quote>).
2378</para>
2379
2380<sect2>
2381<title>Setting Default Print Options for Client Drivers</title>
2382
2383<para>
2384The last sentence might be viewed with mixed feelings by some users and Admins. They have struggled for hours
2385and could not arrive at a point where their settings seemed to be saved. It is not their fault. The confusing
2386thing is that in the multitabbed dialog that pops up when you right-click on the printer name and select
2387<guimenuitem>Properties</guimenuitem>, you can arrive at two dialogs that appear identical, each claiming that
2388they help you to set printer options in three different ways. Here is the definitive answer to the Samba
2389default driver setting FAQ:
2390</para>
2391
2392<formalpara><title><quote>I can not set and save default print options
2393for all users on Windows 200x/XP. Why not?</quote></title>
2394
2395<para>
2396How are you doing it? I bet the wrong way. (It is not easy to find out, though.) There are three different
2397ways to bring you to a dialog that seems to set everything. All three dialogs look the same, but only one of
2398them does what you intend. You need to be Administrator or Print Administrator to do this for all users. Here
2399is how I reproduce it in an XP Professional:
2400</para>
2401
2402<orderedlist numeration="upperalpha">
2403 <listitem><para>The first <quote>wrong</quote> way:
2404 <orderedlist numeration="arabic">
2405 <listitem><para>Open the <guiicon>Printers</guiicon> folder.</para></listitem>
2406
2407 <listitem><para>Right-click on the printer (<emphasis>remoteprinter on cupshost</emphasis>) and
2408 select in context menu <guimenu>Printing Preferences...</guimenu>.</para></listitem>
2409
2410 <listitem><para>Look at this dialog closely and remember what it looks like.</para></listitem>
2411 </orderedlist></para></listitem>
2412
2413 <listitem><para>The second <quote>wrong</quote> way:
2414 <orderedlist numeration="arabic">
2415 <listitem><para>Open the <guimenu>Printers</guimenu> folder.</para></listitem>
2416
2417 <listitem><para>Right-click on the printer (<emphasis>remoteprinter on
2418 cupshost</emphasis>) and select in the context menu
2419 <guimenuitem>Properties</guimenuitem></para></listitem>.
2420
2421 <listitem><para>Click on the <guilabel>General</guilabel>
2422 tab.</para></listitem>
2423
2424 <listitem><para>Click on the <guibutton>Printing
2425 Preferences...</guibutton> button.</para></listitem>
2426
2427 <listitem><para>A new dialog opens. Keep this dialog open and go back
2428 to the parent dialog.</para></listitem>
2429 </orderedlist>
2430 </para></listitem>
2431
2432 <listitem><para>
2433 The third and correct way (should you do this from the beginning, just carry out steps 1
2434 and 2 from the second method above):
2435 </para>
2436
2437 <orderedlist numeration="arabic">
2438 <listitem><para>Click on the <guilabel>Advanced</guilabel>
2439 tab. (If everything is <quote>grayed out,</quote> then you are not logged
2440 in as a user with enough privileges.)</para></listitem>
2441
2442 <listitem><para>Click on the <guibutton>Printing
2443 Defaults</guibutton> button.</para></listitem>
2444
2445 <listitem><para>On any of the two new tabs,
2446 click on the
2447 <guilabel>Advanced</guilabel> button.</para></listitem>
2448
2449 <listitem><para>A new dialog opens. Compare
2450 this one to the other. Are they
2451 identical when you compare one from
2452 <quote>B.5</quote> and one from A.3?</para></listitem>
2453 </orderedlist>
2454 </listitem>
2455</orderedlist>
2456
2457<para>
2458Do you see any difference in the two settings dialogs? I do not either. However, only the last one, which you
2459arrived at with steps C.1 through C.6 will permanently save any settings which will then become the defaults
2460for new users. If you want all clients to have the same defaults, you need to conduct these steps as
2461administrator (<smbconfoption name="printer admin"/>) before a client downloads the driver (the clients can
2462later set their own per-user defaults by following procedures A or B above). Windows 200x/XP allow per-user
2463default settings and the ones the administrator gives them before they set up their own. The parents of the
2464identical-looking dialogs have a slight difference in their window names; one is called
2465<computeroutput>Default Print Values for Printer Foo on Server Bar</computeroutput> (which is the one you
2466need) and the other is called <quote><computeroutput>Print Settings for Printer Foo on Server
2467Bar</computeroutput></quote>. The last one is the one you arrive at when you right-click on the printer and
2468select <guimenuitem>Print Settings...</guimenuitem>. This is the one that you were taught to use back in the
2469days of Windows NT, so it is only natural to try the same way with Windows 200x/XP. You would not dream that
2470there is now a different path to arrive at an identical-looking, but functionally different, dialog to set
2471defaults for all users.
2472</para></formalpara>
2473
2474<tip><para>Try (on Windows 200x/XP) to run this command (as a user with the right privileges):
2475<indexterm><primary>rundll32</primary></indexterm>
2476</para>
2477
2478<para><userinput>
2479rundll32 printui.dll,PrintUIEntry /p /t3 /n\\<replaceable>SAMBA-SERVER</replaceable>\<replaceable>printersharename</replaceable>
2480</userinput></para>
2481
2482<para>
2483To see the tab with the <guilabel>Printing Defaults</guilabel> button (the one you need), also run this command:
2484</para>
2485
2486<para><userinput>
2487rundll32 printui.dll,PrintUIEntry /p /t0 /n\\<replaceable>SAMBA-SERVER</replaceable>\<replaceable>printersharename</replaceable>
2488</userinput></para>
2489
2490<para>
2491To see the tab with the <guilabel>Printing Preferences</guilabel>
2492button (the one that does not set systemwide defaults), you can
2493start the commands from inside a DOS box or from <guimenu>Start</guimenu> -> <guimenuitem>Run</guimenuitem>.
2494</para>
2495</tip>
2496
2497</sect2>
2498
2499<sect2>
2500<title>Supporting Large Numbers of Printers</title>
2501
2502<para>
2503One issue that has arisen during the recent development phase of Samba is the need to support driver
2504downloads for hundreds of printers. Using Windows NT APW for this task is somewhat awkward (to say the least). If
2505you do not want to acquire RSS pains from the printer installation clicking orgy alone, you need
2506to think about a non-interactive script.
2507</para>
2508
2509<para>
2510If more than one printer is using the same driver, the <command>rpcclient setdriver</command>
2511command can be used to set the driver associated with an installed queue. If the driver is uploaded to
2512<smbconfsection name="[print$]"/> once and registered with the printing TDBs, it can be used by
2513multiple print queues. In this case, you just need to repeat the <command>setprinter</command> subcommand of
2514<command>rpcclient</command> for every queue (without the need to conduct the <command>adddriver</command>
2515repeatedly). The following is an example of how this can be accomplished:
2516</para>
2517
2518<para><screen>
2519&rootprompt;<userinput>rpcclient <replaceable>SAMBA-CUPS</replaceable> -U root%<replaceable>secret</replaceable> -c 'enumdrivers'</userinput>
2520 cmd = enumdrivers
2521
2522 [Windows NT x86]
2523 Printer Driver Info 1:
2524 Driver Name: [infotec IS 2075 PCL 6]
2525
2526 Printer Driver Info 1:
2527 Driver Name: [DANKA InfoStream]
2528
2529 Printer Driver Info 1:
2530 Driver Name: [Heidelberg Digimaster 9110 (PS)]
2531
2532 Printer Driver Info 1:
2533 Driver Name: [dm9110]
2534
2535 Printer Driver Info 1:
2536 Driver Name: [mydrivername]
2537
2538 [....]
2539</screen>
2540
2541<screen>
2542&rootprompt;<userinput>rpcclient <replaceable>SAMBA-CUPS</replaceable> -U root%<replaceable>secret</replaceable> -c 'enumprinters'</userinput>
2543 cmd = enumprinters
2544 flags:[0x800000]
2545 name:[\\SAMBA-CUPS\dm9110]
2546 description:[\\SAMBA-CUPS\dm9110,,110ppm HiVolume DANKA Stuttgart]
2547 comment:[110 ppm HiVolume DANKA Stuttgart]
2548 [....]
2549</screen>
2550
2551<screen>
2552&rootprompt;<userinput>rpcclient <replaceable>SAMBA-CUPS</replaceable> -U root%<replaceable>secret</replaceable> -c \
2553 'setdriver <replaceable>dm9110</replaceable> "<replaceable>Heidelberg Digimaster 9110 (PS)</replaceable>"'</userinput>
2554 cmd = setdriver dm9110 Heidelberg Digimaster 9110 (PPD)
2555 Successfully set dm9110 to driver Heidelberg Digimaster 9110 (PS).
2556</screen>
2557
2558<screen>
2559&rootprompt;<userinput>rpcclient <replaceable>SAMBA-CUPS</replaceable> -U root%<replaceable>secret</replaceable> -c 'enumprinters'</userinput>
2560 cmd = enumprinters
2561 flags:[0x800000]
2562 name:[\\SAMBA-CUPS\dm9110]
2563 description:[\\SAMBA-CUPS\dm9110,Heidelberg Digimaster 9110 (PS),\
2564 110ppm HiVolume DANKA Stuttgart]
2565 comment:[110ppm HiVolume DANKA Stuttgart]
2566 [....]
2567</screen>
2568
2569<screen>
2570&rootprompt;<userinput>rpcclient <replaceable>SAMBA-CUPS</replaceable> -U root%<replaceable>secret</replaceable> -c 'setdriver <replaceable>dm9110</replaceable> <replaceable>mydrivername</replaceable>'</userinput>
2571 cmd = setdriver dm9110 mydrivername
2572 Successfully set dm9110 to mydrivername.
2573</screen>
2574
2575<screen>
2576&rootprompt;<userinput>rpcclient <replaceable>SAMBA-CUPS</replaceable> -U root%<replaceable>secret</replaceable> -c 'enumprinters'</userinput>
2577 cmd = enumprinters
2578 flags:[0x800000]
2579 name:[\\SAMBA-CUPS\dm9110]
2580 description:[\\SAMBA-CUPS\dm9110,mydrivername,\
2581 110ppm HiVolume DANKA Stuttgart]
2582 comment:[110ppm HiVolume DANKA Stuttgart]
2583 [....]
2584</screen></para>
2585
2586<para>
2587It may not be easy to recognize that the first call to <command>enumprinters</command> showed the
2588<quote>dm9110</quote> printer with an empty string where the driver should have been listed (between
2589the two commas in the description field). After the <command>setdriver</command> command
2590succeeds, all is well.
2591</para>
2592</sect2>
2593
2594<sect2>
2595<title>Adding New Printers with the Windows NT APW</title>
2596
2597<para>
2598By default, Samba exhibits all printer shares defined in &smb.conf; in the <guiicon>Printers</guiicon>
2599folder. Also located in this folder is the Windows NT Add Printer Wizard icon. The APW will be shown only if:
2600</para>
2601
2602<itemizedlist>
2603 <listitem><para>
2604 The connected user is able to successfully execute an <command>OpenPrinterEx(\\server)</command> with
2605 administrative privileges (i.e., root or <smbconfoption name="printer admin"/>).
2606 </para>
2607
2608 <tip><para> Try this from a Windows 200x/XP DOS box command prompt:
2609 </para>
2610
2611 <para><userinput>
2612 runas /netonly /user:root rundll32 printui.dll,PrintUIEntry /p /t0 /n \\<replaceable>SAMBA-SERVER</replaceable>\<replaceable>printersharename</replaceable>
2613 </userinput></para>
2614
2615 <para>
2616 Click on <guibutton>Printing Preferences</guibutton>.
2617 </para></tip></listitem>
2618
2619 <listitem><para>... contains the setting
2620 <smbconfoption name="show add printer wizard">yes</smbconfoption> (the
2621 default).</para></listitem>
2622</itemizedlist>
2623
2624<para>
2625The APW can do various things:
2626</para>
2627
2628<itemizedlist>
2629 <listitem><para>
2630 Upload a new driver to the Samba <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/> share.
2631 </para></listitem>
2632
2633 <listitem><para>
2634 Associate an uploaded driver with an existing (but still driverless) print queue.
2635 </para></listitem>
2636
2637 <listitem><para>
2638 Exchange the currently used driver for an existing print queue with one that has been uploaded before.
2639 </para></listitem>
2640
2641 <listitem><para>
2642 Add an entirely new printer to the Samba host (only in conjunction with a working
2643 <smbconfoption name="add printer command"/>. A corresponding
2644 <smbconfoption name="delete printer command"/> for removing entries from the
2645 <guiicon>Printers</guiicon> folder may also be provided).
2646 </para></listitem>
2647</itemizedlist>
2648
2649<para>
2650The last one (add a new printer) requires more effort than the previous ones. To use the APW to successfully
2651add a printer to a Samba server, the <smbconfoption name="add printer command"/> must have a defined value.
2652The program hook must successfully add the printer to the UNIX print system (i.e., to
2653<filename>/etc/printcap</filename>, <filename>/etc/cups/printers.conf</filename> or other appropriate files)
2654and to &smb.conf; if necessary.
2655</para>
2656
2657<para>
2658When using the APW from a client, if the named printer share does not exist, smbd will execute the
2659<smbconfoption name="add printer command"/> and reparse to attempt to locate the new printer share. If the
2660share is still not defined, an error of "<errorname>Access Denied"</errorname> is returned to the client. The
2661<smbconfoption name="add printer command"/> is executed under the context of the connected user, not
2662necessarily a root account. A <smbconfoption name="map to guest">bad user</smbconfoption> may have connected
2663you unwittingly under the wrong privilege. You should check it by using the <command>smbstatus</command>
2664command.
2665</para>
2666
2667</sect2>
2668
2669<sect2>
2670<title>Error Message: <quote>Cannot connect under a different Name</quote></title>
2671
2672<para>
2673Once you are connected with the wrong credentials, there is no means to reverse the situation other than
2674to close all Explorer windows, and perhaps reboot.
2675</para>
2676
2677<itemizedlist>
2678 <listitem><para>
2679<indexterm><primary>net use</primary></indexterm>
2680 The <command>net use \\SAMBA-SERVER\sharename /user:root</command> gives you an error message:
2681 <quote>Multiple connections to a server or a shared resource by the same user utilizing
2682 several user names are not allowed. Disconnect all previous connections to the server,
2683 esp. the shared resource, and try again.</quote>
2684 </para></listitem>
2685
2686 <listitem><para>
2687 Every attempt to <quote>connect a network drive</quote> to <filename>\\SAMBASERVER\\print$</filename>
2688 to <constant>z:</constant> is countered by the pertinacious message: <quote>This
2689 network folder is currently connected under different credentials (username and password).
2690 Disconnect first any existing connection to this network share in order to connect again under
2691 a different username and password</quote>.
2692 </para></listitem>
2693</itemizedlist>
2694
2695<para>
2696So you close all connections. You try again. You get the same message. You check from the Samba side, using
2697<command>smbstatus</command>. Yes, there are more connections. You kill them all. The client still gives you
2698the same error message. You watch the smbd.log file on a high debug level and try reconnect. Same error
2699message, but not a single line in the log. You start to wonder if there was a connection attempt at all. You
2700run ethereal and tcpdump while you try to connect. Result: not a single byte goes on the wire. Windows still
2701gives the error message. You close all Explorer windows and start it again. You try to connect &smbmdash; and
2702this times it works! Windows seems to cache connection information somewhere and does not keep it up to date
2703(if you are unlucky, you might need to reboot to get rid of the error message).
2704</para>
2705
2706<para>
2707The easiest way to forcefully terminate all connections from your client to a server is by executing:
2708<screen>
2709&dosprompt; net use * /delete
2710</screen>
2711This will also disconnect all mapped drives and will allow you create fresh connection as required.
2712</para>
2713</sect2>
2714
2715<sect2>
2716<title>Take Care When Assembling Driver Files</title>
2717
2718<para>
2719You need to be extremely careful when you take notes about the files belonging to a particular
2720driver. Don't confuse the files for driver version <quote>0</quote> (for Windows 9x/Me, going into
2721<filename>[print$]/WIN/0/</filename>), driver version <filename>2</filename> (kernel mode driver for Windows NT,
2722going into <filename>[print$]/W32X86/2/</filename>; may be used on Windows 200x/XP also), and
2723driver version <quote>3</quote> (non-kernel mode driver going into <filename>[print$]/W32X86/3/</filename>;
2724cannot be used on Windows NT). Quite often these different driver versions contain
2725files that have the same name but actually are very different. If you look at them from
2726the Windows Explorer (they reside in <filename>%WINDOWS%\system32\spool\drivers\W32X86\</filename>),
2727you will probably see names in capital letters, while an <command>enumdrivers</command> command from Samba
2728would show mixed or lowercase letters, so it is easy to confuse them. If you install them manually using
2729<command>rpcclient</command> and subcommands, you may even succeed without an error message. Only later,
2730when you try install on a client, you will encounter error messages like <computeroutput>This server
2731has no appropriate driver for the printer</computeroutput>.
2732</para>
2733
2734<para>
2735Here is an example. You are invited to look closely at the various files, compare their names and
2736their spelling, and discover the differences in the composition of the version 2 and 3 sets. Note: the
2737version 0 set contained 40 <parameter>Dependentfiles</parameter>, so I left it out for space reasons:
2738</para>
2739
2740<para><screen>
2741&rootprompt;<userinput>rpcclient -U 'Administrator%<replaceable>secret</replaceable>' -c 'enumdrivers 3' 10.160.50.8 </userinput>
2742
2743 Printer Driver Info 3:
2744 Version: [3]
2745 Driver Name: [Canon iR8500 PS3]
2746 Architecture: [Windows NT x86]
2747 Driver Path: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\cns3g.dll]
2748 Datafile: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\iR8500sg.xpd]
2749 Configfile: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\cns3gui.dll]
2750 Helpfile: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\cns3g.hlp]
2751
2752 Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\aucplmNT.dll]
2753 Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\ucs32p.dll]
2754 Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\tnl32.dll]
2755 Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\aussdrv.dll]
2756 Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\cnspdc.dll]
2757 Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\aussapi.dat]
2758 Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\cns3407.dll]
2759 Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\CnS3G.cnt]
2760 Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\NBAPI.DLL]
2761 Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\NBIPC.DLL]
2762 Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\cpcview.exe]
2763 Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\cpcdspl.exe]
2764 Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\cpcedit.dll]
2765 Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\cpcqm.exe]
2766 Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\cpcspl.dll]
2767 Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\cfine32.dll]
2768 Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\cpcr407.dll]
2769 Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\Cpcqm407.hlp]
2770 Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\cpcqm407.cnt]
2771 Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\3\cns3ggr.dll]
2772
2773 Monitorname: []
2774 Defaultdatatype: []
2775
2776 Printer Driver Info 3:
2777 Version: [2]
2778 Driver Name: [Canon iR5000-6000 PS3]
2779 Architecture: [Windows NT x86]
2780 Driver Path: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\2\cns3g.dll]
2781 Datafile: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\2\IR5000sg.xpd]
2782 Configfile: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\2\cns3gui.dll]
2783 Helpfile: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\2\cns3g.hlp]
2784
2785 Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\2\AUCPLMNT.DLL]
2786 Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\2\aussdrv.dll]
2787 Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\2\cnspdc.dll]
2788 Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\2\aussapi.dat]
2789 Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\2\cns3407.dll]
2790 Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\2\CnS3G.cnt]
2791 Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\2\NBAPI.DLL]
2792 Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\2\NBIPC.DLL]
2793 Dependentfiles: [\\10.160.50.8\print$\W32X86\2\cns3gum.dll]
2794
2795 Monitorname: [CPCA Language Monitor2]
2796 Defaultdatatype: []
2797
2798</screen></para>
2799
2800<para>
2801If we write the <quote>version 2</quote> files and the <quote>version 3</quote> files
2802into different text files and compare the result, we see this
2803picture:
2804</para>
2805
2806<para><screen>
2807&rootprompt;<userinput>sdiff 2-files 3-files</userinput>
2808
2809<![CDATA[
2810 cns3g.dll cns3g.dll
2811 iR8500sg.xpd iR8500sg.xpd
2812 cns3gui.dll cns3gui.dll
2813 cns3g.hlp cns3g.hlp
2814 AUCPLMNT.DLL | aucplmNT.dll
2815 > ucs32p.dll
2816 > tnl32.dll
2817 aussdrv.dll aussdrv.dll
2818 cnspdc.dll cnspdc.dll
2819 aussapi.dat aussapi.dat
2820 cns3407.dll cns3407.dll
2821 CnS3G.cnt CnS3G.cnt
2822 NBAPI.DLL NBAPI.DLL
2823 NBIPC.DLL NBIPC.DLL
2824 cns3gum.dll | cpcview.exe
2825 > cpcdspl.exe
2826 > cpcqm.exe
2827 > cpcspl.dll
2828 > cfine32.dll
2829 > cpcr407.dll
2830 > Cpcqm407.hlp
2831 > cpcqm407.cnt
2832 > cns3ggr.dll
2833]]>
2834</screen>
2835
2836Do not be fooled! Driver files for each version with identical
2837names may be different in their content, as you can see from this size
2838comparison:
2839</para>
2840
2841<para><screen>
2842&rootprompt;<userinput>for i in cns3g.hlp cns3gui.dll cns3g.dll; do \
2843 smbclient //10.160.50.8/print\$ -U 'Administrator%xxxx' \
2844 -c "cd W32X86/3; dir $i; cd .. ; cd 2; dir $i"; \
2845 done</userinput>
2846
2847 CNS3G.HLP A 122981 Thu May 30 02:31:00 2002
2848 CNS3G.HLP A 99948 Thu May 30 02:31:00 2002
2849
2850 CNS3GUI.DLL A 1805824 Thu May 30 02:31:00 2002
2851 CNS3GUI.DLL A 1785344 Thu May 30 02:31:00 2002
2852
2853 CNS3G.DLL A 1145088 Thu May 30 02:31:00 2002
2854 CNS3G.DLL A 15872 Thu May 30 02:31:00 2002
2855</screen></para>
2856
2857<para>
2858In my example were even more differences than shown here. Conclusion: you must be careful to select the
2859correct driver files for each driver version. Don't rely on the names alone, and don't interchange files
2860belonging to different driver versions.
2861</para>
2862</sect2>
2863
2864<sect2>
2865<title>Samba and Printer Ports</title>
2866
2867<para>
2868<indexterm><primary>LPT1:</primary></indexterm>
2869<indexterm><primary>COM1:</primary></indexterm>
2870<indexterm><primary>FILE:</primary></indexterm>
2871<indexterm><primary>available port</primary></indexterm>
2872Windows NT/2000 print servers associate a port with each printer. These normally take the form of
2873<filename>LPT1:</filename>, <filename>COM1:</filename>, <filename>FILE:</filename>, and so on. Samba must also
2874support the concept of ports associated with a printer. By default, only one printer port, named <quote>Samba
2875Printer Port</quote>, exists on a system. Samba does not really need such a <quote>port</quote> in order to
2876print; rather it is a requirement of Windows clients. They insist on being told about an available port when
2877they request this information; otherwise, they throw an error message at you. So Samba fakes the port
2878information to keep the Windows clients happy.
2879</para>
2880
2881<para>
2882<indexterm><primary>Printer Pooling</primary></indexterm>
2883Samba does not support the concept of <constant>Printer Pooling</constant> internally either. Printer
2884pooling assigns a logical printer to multiple ports as a form of load balancing or failover.
2885</para>
2886
2887<para>
2888If you require multiple ports to be defined for some reason or another (my users and my boss should not know
2889that they are working with Samba), configure the <smbconfoption name="enumports command"/>,
2890which can be used to define an external program that generates a listing of ports on a system.
2891</para>
2892</sect2>
2893
2894<sect2>
2895<title>Avoiding Common Client Driver Misconfiguration</title>
2896
2897<para>
2898So now the printing works, but there are still problems. Most jobs print well, some do not print at
2899all. Some jobs have problems with fonts, which do not look good. Some jobs print fast and some
2900are dead-slow. We cannot cover it all, but we want to encourage you to read the brief paragraph about
2901<quote>Avoiding the Wrong PostScript Driver Settings</quote> in <link linkend="CUPS-printing">CUPS Printing
2902Chapter</link>, <link linkend="cups-avoidps1">Avoiding Critical PostScript Driver Settings on the
2903Client</link>.
2904</para>
2905</sect2>
2906</sect1>
2907
2908<sect1>
2909<title>The Imprints Toolset</title>
2910
2911<para>
2912<indexterm><primary>Imprints</primary></indexterm>
2913The Imprints tool set provides a UNIX equivalent of the Windows NT APW. For complete information, please
2914refer to the <ulink url="http://imprints.sourceforge.net/">Imprints</ulink> Web site as well as the
2915documentation included with the Imprints source distribution. This section provides only a brief introduction
2916to the features of Imprints.
2917</para>
2918
2919<para>
2920Unfortunately, the Imprints toolset is no longer maintained. As of December 2000, the project is in
2921need of a new maintainer. The most important skill to have is Perl coding and an interest in MS-RPC-based
2922printing used in Samba. If you wish to volunteer, please coordinate your efforts on the Samba technical
2923mailing list. The toolset is still in usable form, but only for a series of older printer models where
2924there are prepared packages to use. Packages for more up-to-date print devices are needed if Imprints
2925should have a future. Information regarding the Imprints toolset can be obtained from the <ulink
2926url="http://imprints.sourceforge.net/">Imprints</ulink> home page.
2927</para>
2928
2929<sect2>
2930<title>What Is Imprints?</title>
2931
2932<para>
2933Imprints is a collection of tools for supporting these goals:
2934</para>
2935
2936<itemizedlist>
2937 <listitem><para>
2938 Providing a central repository of information regarding Windows NT and 95/98 printer driver packages.
2939 </para></listitem>
2940
2941 <listitem><para>
2942 Providing the tools necessary for creating the Imprints printer driver packages.
2943 </para></listitem>
2944
2945 <listitem><para>
2946 Providing an installation client that will obtain printer drivers from a central Internet (or intranet) Imprints Server
2947 repository and install them on remote Samba and Windows NT4 print servers.
2948 </para></listitem>
2949</itemizedlist>
2950</sect2>
2951
2952<sect2>
2953<title>Creating Printer Driver Packages</title>
2954
2955<para>
2956The process of creating printer driver packages is beyond the scope of this document (refer to Imprints.txt,
2957included with the Samba distribution for more information). In short, an Imprints driver package
2958is a gzipped tarball containing the driver files, related INF files, and a control file needed by the
2959installation client.
2960</para>
2961</sect2>
2962
2963<sect2>
2964<title>The Imprints Server</title>
2965
2966<para>
2967The Imprints server is really a database server that may be queried via standard HTTP mechanisms. Each
2968printer entry in the database has an associated URL for the actual downloading of the package. Each
2969package is digitally signed via GnuPG, which can be used to verify that
2970the package downloaded is actually
2971the one referred in the Imprints database. It is strongly recommended that this security check
2972not be disabled.
2973</para>
2974</sect2>
2975
2976<sect2>
2977<title>The Installation Client</title>
2978
2979<para>
2980More information regarding the Imprints installation client is available from the documentation file
2981<filename>Imprints-Client-HOWTO.ps</filename> that is included with the Imprints source package. The Imprints
2982installation client comes in two forms:
2983</para>
2984
2985<itemizedlist>
2986 <listitem><para>A set of command-line Perl scripts.</para></listitem>
2987 <listitem><para>A GTK+-based graphical interface to the command-line Perl scripts.</para></listitem>
2988</itemizedlist>
2989
2990<para>
2991The installation client (in both forms) provides a means of querying the Imprints database server for
2992a matching list of known printer model names as well as a means to download and install the drivers on
2993remote Samba and Windows NT print servers.
2994</para>
2995
2996<para>
2997The basic installation process is in four steps, and Perl code is wrapped around smbclient and rpcclient.
2998</para>
2999
3000<itemizedlist>
3001 <listitem><para>
3002 For each supported architecture for a given driver:
3003 <orderedlist>
3004 <listitem><para>rpcclient: Get the appropriate upload directory on the remote server.</para></listitem>
3005 <listitem><para>smbclient: Upload the driver files.</para></listitem>
3006 <listitem><para>rpcclient: Issues an AddPrinterDriver() MS-RPC.</para></listitem>
3007 </orderedlist>
3008 </para></listitem>
3009
3010 <listitem><para>rpcclient: Issues an AddPrinterEx() MS-RPC to actually create the printer.</para></listitem>
3011</itemizedlist>
3012
3013<para>
3014One of the problems encountered when implementing the Imprints tool set was the namespace issues between
3015various supported client architectures. For example, Windows NT includes a driver named <quote>Apple LaserWriter
3016II NTX v51.8</quote>, and Windows 95 calls its version of this driver <quote>Apple LaserWriter II NTX</quote>.
3017</para>
3018
3019<para>
3020The problem is how to know what client drivers have been uploaded for a printer. An astute reader will
3021remember that the Windows NT Printer Properties dialog only includes space for one printer driver name. A
3022quick look in the Windows NT 4.0 system registry at:
3023</para>
3024
3025<para><filename>
3026 HKLM\System\CurrentControlSet\Control\Print\Environment
3027</filename></para>
3028
3029<para>
3030will reveal that Windows NT always uses the NT driver name. This is okay because Windows NT always requires
3031that at least the Windows NT version of the printer driver is present. Samba does not have the
3032requirement internally; therefore, <quote>How can you use the NT driver name if it has not already been installed?</quote>
3033</para>
3034
3035<para>
3036The way of sidestepping this limitation is to require that all Imprints printer driver packages include both the Intel Windows NT and
303795/98 printer drivers and that the NT driver is installed first.
3038</para>
3039</sect2>
3040</sect1>
3041
3042<sect1>
3043<title>Adding Network Printers without User Interaction</title>
3044
3045<para>
3046The following MS Knowledge Base article may be of some help if you need to handle Windows 2000 clients:
3047<emphasis>How to Add Printers with No User Interaction in Windows 2000,</emphasis> (<ulink
3048url="http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;189105">Microsoft KB 189105</ulink>). It also
3049applies to Windows XP Professional clients. The ideas sketched out in this section are inspired by this
3050article, which describes a command-line method that can be applied to install network and local printers and
3051their drivers. This is most useful if integrated in Logon Scripts. You can see what options are available by
3052typing in the command prompt (<command>DOS box</command>):
3053</para>
3054
3055<para><userinput>rundll32 printui.dll,PrintUIEntry /?</userinput></para>
3056
3057<para>
3058A window pops up that shows you all of the command-line switches available. An extensive list of examples
3059is also provided. This is only for Windows 200x/XP; it does not work on Windows NT. Windows NT probably has
3060some other tools in the respective Resource Kit. Here is a suggestion about what a client logon script
3061might contain, with a short explanation of what the lines actually do (it works if 200x/XP Windows
3062clients access printers via Samba, and works for Windows-based print servers too):
3063</para>
3064
3065<para><screen>
3066<userinput>rundll32 printui.dll,PrintUIEntry /dn /n "\\cupsserver\infotec2105-IPDS" /q</userinput>
3067<userinput>rundll32 printui.dll,PrintUIEntry /in /n "\\cupsserver\infotec2105-PS"</userinput>
3068<userinput>rundll32 printui.dll,PrintUIEntry /y /n "\\cupsserver\infotec2105-PS"</userinput>
3069</screen></para>
3070
3071<para>
3072Here is a list of the used command-line parameters:
3073</para>
3074
3075<variablelist>
3076 <varlistentry><term>/dn</term>
3077 <listitem><para>deletes a network printer.</para></listitem>
3078 </varlistentry>
3079 <varlistentry><term>/q</term>
3080 <listitem><para>quiet modus.</para></listitem>
3081 </varlistentry>
3082 <varlistentry><term>/n</term>
3083 <listitem><para>names a printer.</para></listitem>
3084 </varlistentry>
3085 <varlistentry><term>/in</term>
3086 <listitem><para>adds a network printer connection.</para></listitem>
3087 </varlistentry>
3088 <varlistentry><term>/y</term>
3089 <listitem><para>sets printer as default printer.</para></listitem>
3090 </varlistentry>
3091</variablelist>
3092
3093<itemizedlist>
3094 <listitem><para>
3095 Line 1 deletes a possibly existing previous network printer <emphasis>infotec2105-IPDS</emphasis>
3096 (which had used native Windows drivers with LPRng that were removed from the server that was
3097 converted to CUPS). The <command>/q</command> at the end prevents confirm
3098 or error dialog boxes from popping up. They should not be presented to the user logging on.
3099 </para></listitem>
3100
3101 <listitem><para>
3102 Line 2 adds the new printer
3103 <emphasis>infotec2105-PS</emphasis> (which actually is the same
3104 physical device but is now run by the new CUPS printing system and associated with the
3105 CUPS/Adobe PS drivers). The printer and its driver must have been added to Samba prior to
3106 the user logging in (e.g., by a procedure as discussed earlier in this chapter or by running
3107 <command>cupsaddsmb</command>). The driver is now autodownloaded to the client PC where the
3108 user is about to log in.
3109 </para></listitem>
3110
3111 <listitem><para>
3112 Line 3 sets the default printer to this new network printer (there might be several other
3113 printers installed with this same method, and some may be local as well, so we decide for a
3114 default printer). The default printer selection may, of course, be different for different users.
3115 </para></listitem>
3116</itemizedlist>
3117
3118<para>
3119The second line only works if the printer <emphasis>infotec2105-PS</emphasis> has an already working
3120print queue on the <constant>cupsserver</constant> and if the
3121printer drivers have been successfully uploaded
3122(via the <command>APW</command>, <command>smbclient/rpcclient</command>, or <command>cupsaddsmb</command>)
3123into the <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/> driver repository of Samba. Some Samba versions
3124prior to version 3.0 required a restart of smbd after the printer install and the driver upload;
3125otherwise the script (or any other client driver download) would fail.
3126</para>
3127
3128<para>
3129Since there is no easy way to test for the existence of an installed network printer from the logon script,
3130do not bother checking. Just allow the de-installation/re-installation to occur every time a user logs in;
3131it's really quick anyway (1 to 2 seconds).
3132</para>
3133
3134<para>
3135The additional benefits for this are:
3136</para>
3137
3138<itemizedlist>
3139 <listitem><para>
3140 It puts in place any printer default setup changes automatically at every user logon.
3141 </para></listitem>
3142
3143 <listitem><para>
3144 It allows for <quote>roaming</quote> users' login to the domain from different workstations.
3145 </para></listitem>
3146</itemizedlist>
3147
3148<para>
3149Since network printers are installed per user, this much simplifies the process of keeping the installation
3150up to date. The few extra seconds at logon time will not really be noticeable. Printers can be centrally
3151added, changed, and deleted at will on the server with no user intervention required from the clients
3152(you just need to keep the logon scripts up to date).
3153</para>
3154</sect1>
3155
3156<sect1>
3157<title>The <command>addprinter</command> Command</title>
3158
3159<para>
3160The <command>addprinter</command> command can be configured to be a shell script or program executed by
3161Samba. It is triggered by running the APW from a client against the Samba print server. The APW asks
3162the user to fill in several fields (such as printer name, driver to be used, comment, port monitor,
3163and so on). These parameters are passed on to Samba by the APW. If the addprinter command is designed in a
3164way that it can create a new printer (through writing correct printcap entries on legacy systems or
3165by executing the <command>lpadmin</command> command on more modern systems) and create the associated share,
3166then the APW will in effect really create a new printer on Samba and the UNIX print subsystem!
3167</para>
3168</sect1>
3169
3170<sect1>
3171<title>Migration of Classical Printing to Samba</title>
3172
3173<para>
3174The basic NT-style printer driver management has not changed considerably in 3.0 over the 2.2.x releases
3175(apart from many small improvements). Here migration should be quite easy, especially if you followed
3176previous advice to stop using deprecated parameters in your setup. For migrations from an existing 2.0.x
3177setup, or if you continued Windows 9x/Me-style printing in your Samba 2.2 installations, it is more of
3178an effort. Please read the appropriate release notes and the HOWTO Collection for Samba-2.2.x. You can
3179follow several paths. Here are possible scenarios for migration:
3180</para>
3181
3182<itemizedlist>
3183 <listitem><para>
3184 You need to study and apply the new Windows NT printer and driver support. Previously used
3185 parameters <parameter>printer driver file</parameter>, <parameter>printer driver</parameter>,
3186 and <parameter>printer driver location</parameter> are no longer supported.
3187 </para></listitem>
3188
3189 <listitem><para>
3190 If you want to take advantage of Windows NT printer driver support, you also need to migrate the
3191 Windows 9x/Me drivers to the new setup.
3192 </para></listitem>
3193
3194 <listitem><para>
3195 An existing <filename>printers.def</filename> file (the one specified in the now removed parameter
3196 <parameter>printer driver file</parameter>) will no longer work with Samba-3. In 3.0, smbd attempts
3197 to locate Windows 9x/Me driver files for the printer in <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/>
3198 and additional settings in the TDB and only there; if it fails, it will <emphasis>not</emphasis>
3199 (as 2.2.x used to do) drop down to using a <filename>printers.def</filename> (and all associated
3200 parameters). The make_printerdef tool is removed and there is no backward compatibility for this.
3201 </para></listitem>
3202
3203 <listitem><para>You need to install a Windows 9x/Me driver into the
3204 <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/> share for a printer on your Samba
3205 host. The driver files will be stored in the <quote>WIN40/0</quote> subdirectory of
3206 <smbconfsection name="[print$]"/>, and some other settings and information go
3207 into the printing-related TDBs.</para></listitem>
3208
3209 <listitem><para>
3210 If you want to migrate an existing <filename>printers.def</filename> file into the new setup, the only current
3211 solution is to use the Windows NT APW to install the NT drivers and the 9x/Me drivers. This can be scripted
3212 using smbclient and rpcclient. See the Imprints installation client on the <ulink noescape="1"
3213 url="http://imprints.sourceforge.net/">Imprints</ulink> web site for example. See also the discussion of
3214 rpcclient usage in <link linkend="CUPS-printing">CUPS Printing</link>.
3215 </para></listitem>
3216</itemizedlist>
3217</sect1>
3218
3219<sect1>
3220<title>Publishing Printer Information in Active Directory or LDAP</title>
3221
3222<para>
3223This topic has also been addressed in <link linkend="NetCommand">Remote and Local Management &smbmdash; The
3224Net Command</link>. If you wish to volunteer your services to help document this further, please contact
3225<ulink url="mail://jht@samba.org">John H. Terpstra</ulink>.
3226</para>
3227</sect1>
3228
3229<sect1>
3230<title>Common Errors</title>
3231
3232<sect2>
3233<title>I Give My Root Password but I Do Not Get Access</title>
3234
3235<para>
3236Do not confuse the root password, which is valid for the UNIX system (and in most cases stored in the
3237form of a one-way hash in a file named <filename>/etc/shadow</filename>), with the password used to
3238authenticate against Samba. Samba does not know the UNIX password. Root access to Samba resources
3239requires that a Samba account for root must first be created. This is done with the <command>smbpasswd</command>
3240command as follows:
3241<screen>
3242&rootprompt; smbpasswd -a root
3243New SMB password: secret
3244Retype new SMB password: secret
3245</screen>
3246</para>
3247
3248</sect2>
3249
3250<sect2>
3251<title>My Print Jobs Get Spooled into the Spooling Directory, but Then Get Lost</title>
3252
3253<para>
3254Do not use the existing UNIX print system spool directory for the Samba spool directory. It may seem
3255convenient and a savings of space, but it only leads to problems. The two must be separate. The UNIX/Linux
3256system print spool directory (e.g., <filename>/var/spool/cups</filename>) is typically owned by a
3257non-privileged user such as <literal>cups</literal> or <literal>lp</literal>. Additionally. the permissions on
3258the spool directory are typically restrictive to the owner and/or group. On the other hand, the Samba
3259spool directory must be world writable, and should have the 't' bit set to ensure that only a temporary
3260spool file owner can change or delete the file.
3261</para>
3262
3263<para>
3264Depending on the type of print spooling system in use on the UNIX/Linux host, files that the spool
3265management application finds and that are not currently part of job queue that it is managing can be deleted.
3266This may explain the observation that jobs are spooled (by Samba) into this directory and just disappear.
3267</para>
3268
3269</sect2>
3270</sect1>
3271
3272</chapter>
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