This cross-platform based administration service is comprised of two components, the HELIOS Admin server and the HELIOS Admin client.
The HELIOS Admin client is a convenient tool that allows configuring users, groups, volumes, printer queues, etc., and which is supported for various client platforms due to its Java heritage. For details see the chapter “HELIOS Admin” in the HELIOS Base manual.
In this manual we focus on the EtherShare related usage of HELIOS Admin, such as configuring AFP volume settings or PAP printer settings.
EtherShare administration server and EtherShare Admin are being phased out by HELIOS, so it is recommended to use the cross-platform HELIOS Admin instead. For details on EtherShare Admin, refer to the EtherShare 2.6 manual on the HELIOS product CD or in the “HELIOS Applications” volume.
This chapter describes the use of the application HELIOS Admin to perform EtherShare related configuration from any workstation in a convenient and secure way.
In order to use HELIOS Admin, the HELIOS Admin server must already be running on the host you want to configure. The HELIOS Service Controller is configured to start this service automatically when the system is booted.
Other chapters in this manual describe how administrative work, which is required to configure and maintain the EtherShare system, can be done directly on the host, e.g. by using “prefvalue” (see “HELIOS utility programs” in the HELIOS Base manual). However, most of these tasks can be carried out much easier using HELIOS Admin from one of the workstations.
HELIOS Admin offers a high degree of convenience to the system administrator. The application allows the host configuration to be represented graphically with lists and windows. Using HELIOS Admin from any workstation, server users, groups, volumes, and printers can be installed, configured and deleted. You can also interrogate each PostScript printer for available resident fonts and install downloadable fonts to the print server.
HELIOS Admin accesses and modifies the “Preferences” configuration file just as if the changes had been made manually. However, HELIOS Admin and the HELIOS Admin server have built-in safety checks to avoid conflicting or invalid configuration settings.
HELIOS Admin has the additional advantage that almost all changes are immediately effective, without having to restart the affected service.
Benefits:
Any new suffix mappings or changes to existing ones will be available immediately.
Any new HELIOS volume or printer will be available immediately.
Any changes to HELIOS volumes, e.g. setting groups membership, will be available immediately.
Potential drawbacks:
Any changes to HELIOS volumes, e.g. removing or changing mount points, switching characteristics to read-only or changes in groups membership may result in side effects for EtherShare clients, in case the volume is still mounted. This may range from write errors to volumes getting dismounted(!).
Especially important – Removing access rights to volumes for clients that still have documents open on that volume might cause damaged or only partially saved documents.
Make it a habit to check the Active Users
list
prior to making any changes that might affect connected users.
Use the HELIOS Admin feature to send messages to connected
clients to notify them in advance of potentially damaging
changes. In the Active Users
list you can verify
which users have certain volumes in access.
In the Settings > Server Settings
window (Fig. 3.1), in
the Mac
tab, you can specify the Server Name
(if no server name is specified here, the system uses the host name)
and select the AppleTalk Zone
and the Default Client Charset
.
From the IP Access
pop-up menu choose the desired IP access
list for the server. The chapter “HELIOS Admin” in the HELIOS Base manual
describes in detail how to edit the default IP access list according to your needs.
If you wish to share HELIOS server volumes on a Mac OS X server
platform running native AFP file sharing, the HELIOS server should
be assigned a Mac server name (Server Name
in Fig. 3.1) that is different from the
OS X server name.
This chapter refers to AFP related volume settings only. For general information on volume settings and instructions on how to change them see “Volume settings” in the “HELIOS Admin” chapter of the HELIOS Base manual.
The Volumes
list shows
all HELIOS volumes on the host (Fig. 3.2).
The HELIOS Admin server automatically creates
this list by inspecting volume-related entries in the “Preferences”
file (see “Volume preference keys” in the HELIOS Base manual).
Choose the Volumes
tab. If it is not available, activate
it in the Lists
menu.
Before changing AFP volume data, make sure that the volume is not in use. All users should unmount the volume, because changes take effect immediately and this could lead to strange effects.
Select the volume name, and choose Open
from the
File
menu (or double-click the volume name).
The Mac
tab displays the AFP information about the
selected volume (Fig. 3.3).
The Mac Visible
checkbox determines whether the volume
is visible at all in the Mac Connect To Server...
dialog.
The AFP Name
field allows specifying the name by which the volume
is published in an AFP environment, and which is visible in the
“AFP Name” column (Fig. 3.2).
The Password
field allows specifying a volume specific password,
which Mac clients must enter prior to mounting the volume.
The Password
option remains without effect on Windows users in case the
volume is also published in the Windows environment!
From the AFP Charset
pop-up menu you can choose the AFP
character set which is used by the volume:
EUC-KR
MacArabic
MacCentralEurRoman
MacCyrillic
MacGreek
MacIcelandic
MacRoman
MacRomanian
MacTurkish
SJIS
This setting does only affect Mac clients that do not support Unicode.
If AFP UNIX Permissions
is NOT active (default),
a folder inherits the permissions of the parent folder when
used with Mac OS X clients.
The Time Machine Backup
checkbox (see Server setup
in 6.7 “Time Machine”) must be activated to enable Time Machine backups for the
volume.
This chapter refers to AppleTalk “papsrv” settings only (see papsrv in 7.1 “The print server programs”). For general information on printer settings, e.g. how to create and delete printers see “HELIOS Admin” in the HELIOS Base manual.
The Printers
list shows
all HELIOS printer queues on the host (Fig. 3.2).
The HELIOS Admin server automatically creates this list by inspecting
printer-related entries in the “Preferences” file (see “Printer preference
keys” in the HELIOS Base manual).
Choose the Printers
tab. If it is not available,
activate it in the Lists
menu.
Before changing printer data, make sure that the printer is currently not in use.
Select the printer, and choose Settings
from the
Printer
menu (or double-click the printer name
while holding down the key).
The Mac
tab displays information about the selected
printer (Fig. 3.5).
The name of the AppleTalk
PAP printer (PAP Name
) is specified
in the Mac – PAP
section. This is the name by which it
is known to the network. In addition, an AppleTalk Zone
– if
available – can be chosen from the pop-up menu.
The AppleTalk name of the printer only becomes visible in
the network if the Mac – PAP
checkbox is active.
Mac OS 8/9 clients only: If the Require Authentication
checkbox is activated, print jobs to a LaserWriter queue can only be issued
after user name and password have been entered.
For basic printing without any queue setup and without PPD synchronization,
the LPR Bonjour Registration
can be enabled. Then the printers
will appear automatically in the Mac OS print dialog (Printer >
Bonjour Printers/Nearby Printers > ...
) menu. No additional client setup is required.
The TCP Name
field in the TCP Printer
section specifies the name by which the TCP printer
is registered by HELIOS mDNS (“Bonjour”), and by which this
printer can be reached via the master TCP port. The TCP name of the
printer only becomes visible in the network if the
TCP Printer
checkbox is active.
For instructions on how to create and configure a HELIOS TCP Printer see 7.3.2 “Mac OS 8/9 client configuration” and 7.3.1 “Mac OS X client configuration”.
Optionally, a dedicated TCP/IP port can be set:
Specify a port number for the TCP printer in the Port
field.
Defining a port may be helpful to share a TCP/IP queue over the internet. By default all EtherShare printer queues are handled on port 2007.
AppleTalk
(Fig. 3.6) connects a printer
to the server via AppleTalk.
To set the printer type to AppleTalk PAP (see papif in
7.1 “The print server programs”) choose AppleTalk
from the
pop-up menu in the Interface
tab (Fig. 3.6).
Then the AppleTalk type, zone and name of the printer
must be specified. You only need to change the default Type
(LaserWriter)
if printers of other types, such as AppleTalk
ImageWriter
printers, are available.
Choose the Zone
in the pop-up menu and then click on
the Name
menu to pop up a list of all devices of the specified
type that are available in the selected zone.
The list is determined by interrogating the network for all printers. Accordingly, the printer you wish to configure must be connected and online.
Choose a printer and click Save
.
Make sure that you choose a physical printer from the list, and not another printer queue!
The Hide Printer
option – which is only available with the
printer type “LaserWriter” selected in the Type
pop-up
menu – may be checked if you want to prevent the printer
from being displayed in Apple’s “Printer Setup Utility”.
Thus, users cannot choose this printer and thus cannot print
directly to the output device. This is reasonable because
printing to an output device both directly and through a
spool queue may lead to long waiting periods on the Mac,
e.g. if the printer is executing a large job from a queue and
the job that has been sent directly is not accepted instantly.
If any of the entries in Zone/Name
is displayed in italics,
this indicates that this zone or device is currently not available.
You should make sure that the desired printer is connected and online.