telnet or ssh to the CyberGuard SG appliance and log in. For each partition, run the
appropriate mkfs command. To create FAT32 on our two example partitions, we use:
mkfs.vfat –F 32 /dev/sda1
then
mkfs.vfat –F 32 /dev/sda2
From the web management console, select Advanced from the System menu, and click
Reboot. The partitions are now ready to use.
USB Printers
The CyberGuard SG appliance's print server allows you to share attached USB printers
with your LAN. After the printer server has been configured, the CyberGuard unit and
printer are displayed when you browse your Windows workgroup or domain.
Mac OSX, Linux and other UNIX-based or UNIX-like machines on the network can use
the LPR / LPD protocol for remote printing.
This section describes how to configure the CyberGuard SG565 to share a USB printer,
and how to set up remote printing on a Windows PC.
Warning
Many inexpensive printers do not work with the CyberGuard SG's Print Server, as their
drivers expect the printer to be attached directly to the PC you are printing from, or the
printer itself relies on utilizing the PC's CPU for processing print jobs (host-based/GDI
printers). Due to these technical limitations, we simply cannot support these types of
printers.
It is therefore strongly recommended that you use a business grade printer with
the CyberGuard SG's print server. Non-business grade printers may work, but we are
unable to provide support if they do not; see the Troubleshooting section at the end of
this chapter for suggestions.
Additionally, advanced features such as cartridge status reporting may not function
correctly. Multifunction and all-in-one printers are not supported.
USB
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