There are the GUI tools like the KDE printer and the print manager that acquire the list of printers somehow. And there's the Konqueror "Services" "Print System Browser" section that gets a list of printers. Gnome has similar capabilities, so whatever desktop you are using should have some code you can look at and see how it operates live.

Tom Van Deun wrote:
I can't use smbclient because that means I need to do an install. That'll have to be approved etc etc and it won't get approved. If I write or use a small piece of code that's ok.

I've looked around for other tools but to be honest I can't find any. If you know of some do let me know.

Kind regards,

Tom Van Deun

On Wed, Jan 7, 2009 at 12:27 PM, Gary Dale <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

    Tom Van Deun wrote:

        Hi list

        I'm attempting to list windows shared printers in Unix. That's
        really all
        that I need and I can't install Samba on the machine I need to
        list the
        shared printers from. I started analyzing the smbclient code
        hoping to
        extract the necessary info but as you all know it's a daunting
        task.
        Certainly for a C novice.

        Which is why I want to ask if there is anyone out there who
        can help me. Be
        it suppling me the entire or partial code, provide some
        detailed steps I
        should follow so I can figure it out myself or just clues.
        Anything really,
        I'll filter it.

        Extra info:
        I relaly just need to list the printers shared on Windows 2000
        systems (as
        far as I know). I don't need authentication or anything. It
        should work more
        or less like "smbclient -L <remote system>" but it doesn't
        have to list the
        shared drives. No problem if it does though. (and no, I can't
        simply use
        smbclient =/)

        Kind regards,

        Tom
    Why not use smbclient if all you want is the list? Pipe the output
    through your favourite tool tool to remove the extra lines you
    don't want...

    However, there are other tools around that also give you a list of
    Windows (and other) printers. Have you looked at them? I don't
    think there is an "easy" way to get through the morass of SMB code
    for this.
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