The Win32_TCPIPPrinterPort class represents a TCP//IP service access point. For example a TCP/IP printer port.
Note: The SE_LOAD_DRIVER_PRIVILEGE privilege is required on this class.
'The ByteCount property, when true, causes the computer to count the number of bytes in a document before sending them to the printer and the printer to report back the number of bytes actually read. This is used for diagnostics when one discovers that bytes are missing from the print output.'
MappingStrings
['']
read
True
ByteCount property is in 1 class (Win32_TCPIPPrinterPort) of ROOT\cimv2 and in 3 namespaces
'The Protocol property has two values: 'Raw' indicates printing directly to a device and 'Lpr' indicates printing to device or print server; LPR is a legacy protocol, which will eventually be replaced by RAW. Some printers support only LPR.'
'The SNMPEnabled property, when true, indicates that this printer supports RFC1759 (Simple Network Management Protocol) and can provide rich status information from the device.'
MappingStrings
['']
read
True
SNMPEnabled property is in 1 class (Win32_TCPIPPrinterPort) of ROOT\cimv2 and in 3 namespaces
Derived properties (9) of Win32_TCPIPPrinterPort class
'CreationClassName indicates the name of the class or the subclass used in the creation of an instance. When used with the other key properties of this class, this property allows all instances of this class and its subclasses to be uniquely identified.'
'The InstallDate property is datetime value indicating when the object was installed. A lack of a value does not indicate that the object is not installed.'
'The Name property uniquely identifies the service access point and provides an indication of the functionality that is managed. This functionality is described in more detail in the object's Description property.'
'The Status property is a string indicating the current status of the object. Various operational and non-operational statuses can be defined. Operational statuses are "OK", "Degraded" and "Pred Fail". "Pred Fail" indicates that an element may be functioning properly but predicting a failure in the near future. An example is a SMART-enabled hard drive. Non-operational statuses can also be specified. These are "Error", "Starting", "Stopping" and "Service". The latter, "Service", could apply during mirror-resilvering of a disk, reload of a user permissions list, or other administrative work. Not all such work is on-line, yet the managed element is neither "OK" nor in one of the other states.'