Printers That Use Ports That Do Not Begin With COM, LPT, or USB Are Not Redirected in a Remote Desktop or Terminal Services Session
This article was previously published under Q302361 SYMPTOMS When you use Remote Desktop Connection or the Terminal
Services Client version 4.0 or 5.0 to connect to another Windows-based computer
from a computer that is not running Windows Server 2003, your local printers
may not be redirected. As a result, your local printers are not available in
the remote desktop or terminal services session. For example, if your Windows XP-based computer has a multifunction print device using a DOT4 port, it may not be redirected in a remote desktop session to a Windows 2000- or Windows Server 2003-based computer. CAUSEThis problem occurs because the printer port does not begin
with COM, LPT, or USB. By default, printer port names that do not begin with
COM, LPT, or USB are only redirected in Windows Server 2003. By default,
multifunction print devices may not be redirected unless you are running
Windows Server 2003 on your local computer because they use DOT4
ports. RESOLUTION To resolve this problem on a computer that is not running
Windows Server 2003, force all ports (including DOT4) on the client computer to
be filtered for redirection. To do this, add a DWORD value named
FilterQueueType to HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Terminal Server
Client\Default\AddIns\RDPDR and set its value data to FFFFFFFF.
Follow these steps, and then quit Registry Editor:
To work around this problem on a client computer that has a multifunction print device, change the port that the multifunction print device uses from DOT4 to an LPT port. For example, to configure a multifunction print device to use an LPT port on a Windows XP-based computer, follow these steps:
STATUS This
behavior is by design. MORE INFORMATION To view the port name for your printer, or to determine if
the device uses a DOT4 port, view the properties of that printer, and then
click the Ports(or the Details) tab. APPLIES TO
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