8

Remotely as in via command line. Not sure if there's a reg key or something similar I can peek at to see if a user has the correct printers mapped.

2 Answers 2

11

Well, you can take a look at the Win32_Printer WMI class,

Get-WMIObject Win32_Printer -ComputerName $Comp

But, I think this will get you even better results:

New-PSSession $Comp | Enter-PSSession
Get-ChildItem Registry::\HKEY_Users\$UserSID\Printers\Connections
Exit

Without using PS Remoting, you could do this instead:

$Printers = [Microsoft.Win32.RegistryKey]::OpenRemoteBaseKey(Microsoft.Win32.RegistryHive]::Users, $ServerName)

You get the idea. Basically, you need to access that user's registry key with whatever method and enumerate whatever you find in Printers\Connections.

2
  • +1, and just for grins, check this link: powershell.com/cs/media/p/16643.aspx since they try to get all fancy with voice, etc.
    – TheCleaner
    Dec 9, 2013 at 15:58
  • The gci Registry::\.... is about to roll up nicely into a powershell function, fyi.
    – MDMoore313
    Mar 25, 2014 at 15:11
4

For anyone that's interested in what working code looks like to enumerate the accounts and get a listing of the installed printers, please see below:

Get-ChildItem Registry::\HKEY_Users | 
Where-Object { $_.PSChildName -NotMatch ".DEFAULT|S-1-5-18|S-1-5-19|S-1-5-20|_Classes" } | 
Select-Object -ExpandProperty PSChildName | 
ForEach-Object { Get-ChildItem Registry::\HKEY_Users\$_\Printers\Connections -Recurse | Select-Object -ExpandProperty Name }

This snippet first enumerates all subkeys under HKEY_Users, it then filters out the default/system account keys and the Classes keys for each user, finally it enumerates each remaining key's \Printers\Connections subkeys to output the printer information to the console.

Kudos to Ryan, so thought I would contribute via an answer.

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