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Operating Systems SCO Visionfs printing Windows2003 printserver Post 302355432 by haezeban on Tuesday 22nd of September 2009 05:23:34 PM
Old 09-22-2009
Visionfs printing Windows2003 printserver

Hi,

Our printserver is migrated from WIN2000 to a WIN2003 R SP2 server.

We have a Unix SCO_SV sco1 3.2 5.0.5 i386 printing is via SCO VisionFS 3.10.911. It worked with the old printserver.

I have completely no experience with visionfs.
What we did :
- created a new printer pr 89 on the new printserver (print testpage OK).
- created a user vfsprint pasword ABC123edf
- On sco created added a printer as follows :
./visionfs print --install pr89 193.0.0.2 pr89 --user vfsprint --password ABC123edf

Printer installed successfully ad accepting request.

Then I tried to print as follows :
./visonfs print //193.0.0.2/pr89 test.txt --user vfsprint --password ABC123edf

I put the password to prevent the prompting for the password. But this doesn't help, I was prompted for the password. Again and again. It doesn't take the password, so I need to do ctrl-C to stop it. SO I cannot print.

I heard that visionfs cannot handle this pasword algorithm of WIN2003?
If this is the case how can I solve this? I do know nothing about printing with a Unix and surely not via visionfs.
I need to solve this urgently, because now we cannot print for the moment.

Thanks for help
 

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rlprd(8)						       UNIX Reference Manual							  rlprd(8)

NAME
rlprd - remote printing proxy daemon SYNOPSIS
rlprd [-nqV] [-pport] [-ttimeout] [--debug] DESCRIPTION
rlprd is a proxy which runs between the remote printing commands (rlpr(1), rlpq(1), and rlprm(1)) and standard lpd print servers in situa- tions where the remote printing commands cannot be installed setuid root. For a discussion on how to configure the remote printing com- mands, please see rlpr(1). rlprd needs to be installed setuid root - if it cannot be run this way, it is useless. rlprd works by mapping non-privileged port requests from rlpr(1) clients to privileged ports so that lpd's will listen to them. Eliminat- ing the "security" gained by having privileged ports is a non-issue, since the Internet is no longer just Unix, and Unix is the only OS that has the privileged port concept. rlprd is not a replacement for lpd(8). It merely passes data to a lpd(8) on a target machine (which is specified by an invocation of a remote printing command). However, when a client is using the rlpr suite of tools to do remote printing, the client does not need to run an lpd(8) locally. Note that once an rlprd is set up on a network (including the Internet), any host may connect to it and use its proxy services if it knows the name of the machine running it. OPTIONS
--debug Print gobs of debugging information. -n, --no-daemon Don't run rlprd as a daemon. Usually not needed. -p, --port=number Select an alternate port (instead of 7290) to listen on. Usually not needed. -q, --quiet, --silent Quiet mode - stay quiet (except for fatal errors). -t --timeout=seconds Set the inactivity timer. If the connection hangs for more than seconds seconds, then rlprd will time out the connection. Use the special value `-1' to wait forever. Default timeout is 3 seconds. -V, --version Print version and exit. SEE ALSO
rlpr(1), rlpq(1), rlprm(1), rlprrc(5) AUTHOR
meem <meem@gnu.org> BUGS
/LIMITATIONS It is not currently possible to run rlprd from inetd(8). rlpr 2.04 1999/10/28 rlprd(8)
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