The Linux Print2Win mini-HOWTO
Marcelo
Pereira
da Silva
marcelo@pereira.com
v1.1
Jan 2002
This howto contains the general configuration to get Linux printing to a
Windows print share.
1.1
2002-07-19
ms
1.0
2002-01-01
ms
Introduction
As we want the print service running, we'll set up all the
environment step by step, to avoid mistakes or bad configurations.
First, set up the server; when you have the server running, configure
the clients.
Server (Windows)
There is no special rules when configuring the server. Just install the
printer driver in the Windows server, test it to verify that the printer
is running properly, and share the printer.
Client (Linux)
The client configuration is similar to Linux to Linux printing.
Standard lpr
The simplest way to do it is to add an entry to
/etc/printcap. As a quick example, the entry
for a generic matrix printer would be:
# EPSON LX300
epson:\
:sd=/var/spool/lpd/epson:\
:mx#0:\
:sh:\
:if=/var/spool/lpd/epson/filter:\
:lp=/dev/null:
Make sure you are using the correct filter, or the right generic
one.
Be sure you have created the directory
/var/spool/lpd/epson, and the users you wish
to use the printer have the right access to this.
For example, assume the Windows print server is named meriadoc, with an IP address of
192.168.1.49, and the printer is shared from
Windows as epsonLX.
So, you have to configure
/var/spool/lpd/epson/.config like this:
share='\\meriadoc\epsonLX'
hostip=192.168.1.49
Where:
share='\\windows-print-server-name\print-share-name'
hostip=windows-print-server-IP
Once your /etc/printcap is configured, you
have to enable the print share:
[localhost]$ lpc up epson
[localhost]$ lpc enable epson
If everything is ok, you can send jobs to the queue:
[localhost]$ lpr -Pepson file
/etc/printcap Tips
I have used the entry below in the first example, but this is not a
particularly good idea:
...
:lp=/dev/null:\
Because lpr does an exclusive
open on the file you specify as lp=.
It does this in order to prevent multiple processes from trying to
print to the same printer at the same time.
The side effect of this is that in your case, eng
and colour can't print at the same time, (usually more
or less transparent since they probably print quickly and since they queue
you probably don't notice) but any other process that tries to write to
/dev/null will break!
On a single user system, probably not a big problem. I have a system with
over 50 printers. It would be a problem there.
The solution is to create a dummy printer for each. Eg:
touch /dev/eng.
[localhost]$ touch /dev/eng
[localhost]$ touch /dev/colour
License
This document, Print2Win-HOWTO,
is copyrighted (c) 2001-2002 by Marcelo Pereira da Silva.
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this
document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License,
Version 1.1 or any later version published by the Free Software
Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover Texts,
and with no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license
is available at .
Credits
Thanks to all those who sent opinions about this document, to
everybody who told me some printing tips, to Rick Bressler, and a
special thanks to Harish Pillay, who wrote the first version of this
document.