How to identify a specific printer driver you are using in Windows 10











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I have to add a printer to a laptop. Other windows 10 units have the printer installed already (for a long time). Hp no longer supports this old printer (laserjet 5) and so it has recently been removed from the default install list or windows update. I would like to harvest the driver from the units that are already working and put it on the other windows 10 64bit that doesn't and can't get it. How can I identify which driver I'm using out of the hundreds present in the repository folder (“C:WindowsSystem32DriverStoreFileRepository”.)? I do not want to have to buy software to do this and the target machine is Windows 10 Home (cannot import using printermanagement).



HP in cahoots with MS dropped this from the default printer install list sometime in the last 6 months (See most recent comments noting this disappearance):



https://h30434.www3.hp.com/t5/Printer-Software-and-Drivers/hp-laserjet-5-printer-driver-for-windows-10/td-p/5557309



https://h30434.www3.hp.com/t5/LaserJet-Printing/HP-Laserjet-5-printer-driver-for-Windows-10-ver-1803-not/td-p/6761697



Update 3 December 2018: So far, the furthest progress I've made has been with CraftyB's answer. Here is the output from his PowershellOutput instructions. It identified the .inf file for my printer as prnhp001.inf. I don't think this is a "default driver" as some have suspected. Also perhaps worth noting is this is purely a network printer on my home network.



Update -- Mission Complete. Using CraftyB's answer, I took the entire folder indicated in the "InfPath" results of his 2nd block of code and browsed there at the "Have Disk" prompt during install and it worked. For those who many not have a working pc to harvest the driver from in order to get their laserjet5 working on Windows 10, I provide them here.










share|improve this question
























  • The properties of the device, within Device Manager, should indicate the driver being used. However, Windows 10 has the ability, to use a generic printer driver for most legacy printers. So that is most likely the driver being used, so looking at the properties of the device, won't likely provide any insight on how to configure the machine to use the printer.
    – Ramhound
    Nov 27 at 3:15








  • 1




    A HP Laserjet 5 will not require additional drivers. Windows 10 will install it automatically. If it isn’t, you’ve got other problems that need to be addressed.
    – Appleoddity
    Nov 27 at 4:31










  • @ Appleoddity: Your comment would have been true some months ago, but this has changed recently. See the most recent comments on pages like this: h30434.www3.hp.com/t5/Printer-Software-and-Drivers/… OR h30434.www3.hp.com/t5/LaserJet-Printing/… Or anywhere else this is addressed since about August of this year.
    – Flotsam N. Jetsam
    Nov 27 at 15:57












  • @ Ramhound : I tried the properties in DM, but all I could find that looked like a driver was Device SWDPRINTENUM{B92ECC91-621D-4277-8817-48C4FC21E450} in info under events tab. I searched for "B92" in my repositories folder and got nothing so I concluded this can't be it. Am I missing something?
    – Flotsam N. Jetsam
    Nov 27 at 16:03










  • Flotsam - You said you already confirmed that ftp.hp.com/pub/softlib/UPD/hp-upd-6.1.0.20062/… will not work then, right? I just want to be sure that that is accurate otherwise, give that driver right from HP a shot just in case. And just in case, give this one a shot too: ftp.hp.com/pub/softlib/UPD/hp-upd-6.6.5.23510/…. If you want, look over ftp.hp.com/pub/softlib/UPD and try even older versions from the HP FTP site for the correlated package. Maybe you will find a version that'll work; process of elimination.
    – Pimp Juice IT
    Nov 29 at 14:42

















up vote
5
down vote

favorite
2












I have to add a printer to a laptop. Other windows 10 units have the printer installed already (for a long time). Hp no longer supports this old printer (laserjet 5) and so it has recently been removed from the default install list or windows update. I would like to harvest the driver from the units that are already working and put it on the other windows 10 64bit that doesn't and can't get it. How can I identify which driver I'm using out of the hundreds present in the repository folder (“C:WindowsSystem32DriverStoreFileRepository”.)? I do not want to have to buy software to do this and the target machine is Windows 10 Home (cannot import using printermanagement).



HP in cahoots with MS dropped this from the default printer install list sometime in the last 6 months (See most recent comments noting this disappearance):



https://h30434.www3.hp.com/t5/Printer-Software-and-Drivers/hp-laserjet-5-printer-driver-for-windows-10/td-p/5557309



https://h30434.www3.hp.com/t5/LaserJet-Printing/HP-Laserjet-5-printer-driver-for-Windows-10-ver-1803-not/td-p/6761697



Update 3 December 2018: So far, the furthest progress I've made has been with CraftyB's answer. Here is the output from his PowershellOutput instructions. It identified the .inf file for my printer as prnhp001.inf. I don't think this is a "default driver" as some have suspected. Also perhaps worth noting is this is purely a network printer on my home network.



Update -- Mission Complete. Using CraftyB's answer, I took the entire folder indicated in the "InfPath" results of his 2nd block of code and browsed there at the "Have Disk" prompt during install and it worked. For those who many not have a working pc to harvest the driver from in order to get their laserjet5 working on Windows 10, I provide them here.










share|improve this question
























  • The properties of the device, within Device Manager, should indicate the driver being used. However, Windows 10 has the ability, to use a generic printer driver for most legacy printers. So that is most likely the driver being used, so looking at the properties of the device, won't likely provide any insight on how to configure the machine to use the printer.
    – Ramhound
    Nov 27 at 3:15








  • 1




    A HP Laserjet 5 will not require additional drivers. Windows 10 will install it automatically. If it isn’t, you’ve got other problems that need to be addressed.
    – Appleoddity
    Nov 27 at 4:31










  • @ Appleoddity: Your comment would have been true some months ago, but this has changed recently. See the most recent comments on pages like this: h30434.www3.hp.com/t5/Printer-Software-and-Drivers/… OR h30434.www3.hp.com/t5/LaserJet-Printing/… Or anywhere else this is addressed since about August of this year.
    – Flotsam N. Jetsam
    Nov 27 at 15:57












  • @ Ramhound : I tried the properties in DM, but all I could find that looked like a driver was Device SWDPRINTENUM{B92ECC91-621D-4277-8817-48C4FC21E450} in info under events tab. I searched for "B92" in my repositories folder and got nothing so I concluded this can't be it. Am I missing something?
    – Flotsam N. Jetsam
    Nov 27 at 16:03










  • Flotsam - You said you already confirmed that ftp.hp.com/pub/softlib/UPD/hp-upd-6.1.0.20062/… will not work then, right? I just want to be sure that that is accurate otherwise, give that driver right from HP a shot just in case. And just in case, give this one a shot too: ftp.hp.com/pub/softlib/UPD/hp-upd-6.6.5.23510/…. If you want, look over ftp.hp.com/pub/softlib/UPD and try even older versions from the HP FTP site for the correlated package. Maybe you will find a version that'll work; process of elimination.
    – Pimp Juice IT
    Nov 29 at 14:42















up vote
5
down vote

favorite
2









up vote
5
down vote

favorite
2






2





I have to add a printer to a laptop. Other windows 10 units have the printer installed already (for a long time). Hp no longer supports this old printer (laserjet 5) and so it has recently been removed from the default install list or windows update. I would like to harvest the driver from the units that are already working and put it on the other windows 10 64bit that doesn't and can't get it. How can I identify which driver I'm using out of the hundreds present in the repository folder (“C:WindowsSystem32DriverStoreFileRepository”.)? I do not want to have to buy software to do this and the target machine is Windows 10 Home (cannot import using printermanagement).



HP in cahoots with MS dropped this from the default printer install list sometime in the last 6 months (See most recent comments noting this disappearance):



https://h30434.www3.hp.com/t5/Printer-Software-and-Drivers/hp-laserjet-5-printer-driver-for-windows-10/td-p/5557309



https://h30434.www3.hp.com/t5/LaserJet-Printing/HP-Laserjet-5-printer-driver-for-Windows-10-ver-1803-not/td-p/6761697



Update 3 December 2018: So far, the furthest progress I've made has been with CraftyB's answer. Here is the output from his PowershellOutput instructions. It identified the .inf file for my printer as prnhp001.inf. I don't think this is a "default driver" as some have suspected. Also perhaps worth noting is this is purely a network printer on my home network.



Update -- Mission Complete. Using CraftyB's answer, I took the entire folder indicated in the "InfPath" results of his 2nd block of code and browsed there at the "Have Disk" prompt during install and it worked. For those who many not have a working pc to harvest the driver from in order to get their laserjet5 working on Windows 10, I provide them here.










share|improve this question















I have to add a printer to a laptop. Other windows 10 units have the printer installed already (for a long time). Hp no longer supports this old printer (laserjet 5) and so it has recently been removed from the default install list or windows update. I would like to harvest the driver from the units that are already working and put it on the other windows 10 64bit that doesn't and can't get it. How can I identify which driver I'm using out of the hundreds present in the repository folder (“C:WindowsSystem32DriverStoreFileRepository”.)? I do not want to have to buy software to do this and the target machine is Windows 10 Home (cannot import using printermanagement).



HP in cahoots with MS dropped this from the default printer install list sometime in the last 6 months (See most recent comments noting this disappearance):



https://h30434.www3.hp.com/t5/Printer-Software-and-Drivers/hp-laserjet-5-printer-driver-for-windows-10/td-p/5557309



https://h30434.www3.hp.com/t5/LaserJet-Printing/HP-Laserjet-5-printer-driver-for-Windows-10-ver-1803-not/td-p/6761697



Update 3 December 2018: So far, the furthest progress I've made has been with CraftyB's answer. Here is the output from his PowershellOutput instructions. It identified the .inf file for my printer as prnhp001.inf. I don't think this is a "default driver" as some have suspected. Also perhaps worth noting is this is purely a network printer on my home network.



Update -- Mission Complete. Using CraftyB's answer, I took the entire folder indicated in the "InfPath" results of his 2nd block of code and browsed there at the "Have Disk" prompt during install and it worked. For those who many not have a working pc to harvest the driver from in order to get their laserjet5 working on Windows 10, I provide them here.







windows-10 drivers printer






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Dec 5 at 13:57

























asked Nov 27 at 2:01









Flotsam N. Jetsam

68851732




68851732












  • The properties of the device, within Device Manager, should indicate the driver being used. However, Windows 10 has the ability, to use a generic printer driver for most legacy printers. So that is most likely the driver being used, so looking at the properties of the device, won't likely provide any insight on how to configure the machine to use the printer.
    – Ramhound
    Nov 27 at 3:15








  • 1




    A HP Laserjet 5 will not require additional drivers. Windows 10 will install it automatically. If it isn’t, you’ve got other problems that need to be addressed.
    – Appleoddity
    Nov 27 at 4:31










  • @ Appleoddity: Your comment would have been true some months ago, but this has changed recently. See the most recent comments on pages like this: h30434.www3.hp.com/t5/Printer-Software-and-Drivers/… OR h30434.www3.hp.com/t5/LaserJet-Printing/… Or anywhere else this is addressed since about August of this year.
    – Flotsam N. Jetsam
    Nov 27 at 15:57












  • @ Ramhound : I tried the properties in DM, but all I could find that looked like a driver was Device SWDPRINTENUM{B92ECC91-621D-4277-8817-48C4FC21E450} in info under events tab. I searched for "B92" in my repositories folder and got nothing so I concluded this can't be it. Am I missing something?
    – Flotsam N. Jetsam
    Nov 27 at 16:03










  • Flotsam - You said you already confirmed that ftp.hp.com/pub/softlib/UPD/hp-upd-6.1.0.20062/… will not work then, right? I just want to be sure that that is accurate otherwise, give that driver right from HP a shot just in case. And just in case, give this one a shot too: ftp.hp.com/pub/softlib/UPD/hp-upd-6.6.5.23510/…. If you want, look over ftp.hp.com/pub/softlib/UPD and try even older versions from the HP FTP site for the correlated package. Maybe you will find a version that'll work; process of elimination.
    – Pimp Juice IT
    Nov 29 at 14:42




















  • The properties of the device, within Device Manager, should indicate the driver being used. However, Windows 10 has the ability, to use a generic printer driver for most legacy printers. So that is most likely the driver being used, so looking at the properties of the device, won't likely provide any insight on how to configure the machine to use the printer.
    – Ramhound
    Nov 27 at 3:15








  • 1




    A HP Laserjet 5 will not require additional drivers. Windows 10 will install it automatically. If it isn’t, you’ve got other problems that need to be addressed.
    – Appleoddity
    Nov 27 at 4:31










  • @ Appleoddity: Your comment would have been true some months ago, but this has changed recently. See the most recent comments on pages like this: h30434.www3.hp.com/t5/Printer-Software-and-Drivers/… OR h30434.www3.hp.com/t5/LaserJet-Printing/… Or anywhere else this is addressed since about August of this year.
    – Flotsam N. Jetsam
    Nov 27 at 15:57












  • @ Ramhound : I tried the properties in DM, but all I could find that looked like a driver was Device SWDPRINTENUM{B92ECC91-621D-4277-8817-48C4FC21E450} in info under events tab. I searched for "B92" in my repositories folder and got nothing so I concluded this can't be it. Am I missing something?
    – Flotsam N. Jetsam
    Nov 27 at 16:03










  • Flotsam - You said you already confirmed that ftp.hp.com/pub/softlib/UPD/hp-upd-6.1.0.20062/… will not work then, right? I just want to be sure that that is accurate otherwise, give that driver right from HP a shot just in case. And just in case, give this one a shot too: ftp.hp.com/pub/softlib/UPD/hp-upd-6.6.5.23510/…. If you want, look over ftp.hp.com/pub/softlib/UPD and try even older versions from the HP FTP site for the correlated package. Maybe you will find a version that'll work; process of elimination.
    – Pimp Juice IT
    Nov 29 at 14:42


















The properties of the device, within Device Manager, should indicate the driver being used. However, Windows 10 has the ability, to use a generic printer driver for most legacy printers. So that is most likely the driver being used, so looking at the properties of the device, won't likely provide any insight on how to configure the machine to use the printer.
– Ramhound
Nov 27 at 3:15






The properties of the device, within Device Manager, should indicate the driver being used. However, Windows 10 has the ability, to use a generic printer driver for most legacy printers. So that is most likely the driver being used, so looking at the properties of the device, won't likely provide any insight on how to configure the machine to use the printer.
– Ramhound
Nov 27 at 3:15






1




1




A HP Laserjet 5 will not require additional drivers. Windows 10 will install it automatically. If it isn’t, you’ve got other problems that need to be addressed.
– Appleoddity
Nov 27 at 4:31




A HP Laserjet 5 will not require additional drivers. Windows 10 will install it automatically. If it isn’t, you’ve got other problems that need to be addressed.
– Appleoddity
Nov 27 at 4:31












@ Appleoddity: Your comment would have been true some months ago, but this has changed recently. See the most recent comments on pages like this: h30434.www3.hp.com/t5/Printer-Software-and-Drivers/… OR h30434.www3.hp.com/t5/LaserJet-Printing/… Or anywhere else this is addressed since about August of this year.
– Flotsam N. Jetsam
Nov 27 at 15:57






@ Appleoddity: Your comment would have been true some months ago, but this has changed recently. See the most recent comments on pages like this: h30434.www3.hp.com/t5/Printer-Software-and-Drivers/… OR h30434.www3.hp.com/t5/LaserJet-Printing/… Or anywhere else this is addressed since about August of this year.
– Flotsam N. Jetsam
Nov 27 at 15:57














@ Ramhound : I tried the properties in DM, but all I could find that looked like a driver was Device SWDPRINTENUM{B92ECC91-621D-4277-8817-48C4FC21E450} in info under events tab. I searched for "B92" in my repositories folder and got nothing so I concluded this can't be it. Am I missing something?
– Flotsam N. Jetsam
Nov 27 at 16:03




@ Ramhound : I tried the properties in DM, but all I could find that looked like a driver was Device SWDPRINTENUM{B92ECC91-621D-4277-8817-48C4FC21E450} in info under events tab. I searched for "B92" in my repositories folder and got nothing so I concluded this can't be it. Am I missing something?
– Flotsam N. Jetsam
Nov 27 at 16:03












Flotsam - You said you already confirmed that ftp.hp.com/pub/softlib/UPD/hp-upd-6.1.0.20062/… will not work then, right? I just want to be sure that that is accurate otherwise, give that driver right from HP a shot just in case. And just in case, give this one a shot too: ftp.hp.com/pub/softlib/UPD/hp-upd-6.6.5.23510/…. If you want, look over ftp.hp.com/pub/softlib/UPD and try even older versions from the HP FTP site for the correlated package. Maybe you will find a version that'll work; process of elimination.
– Pimp Juice IT
Nov 29 at 14:42






Flotsam - You said you already confirmed that ftp.hp.com/pub/softlib/UPD/hp-upd-6.1.0.20062/… will not work then, right? I just want to be sure that that is accurate otherwise, give that driver right from HP a shot just in case. And just in case, give this one a shot too: ftp.hp.com/pub/softlib/UPD/hp-upd-6.6.5.23510/…. If you want, look over ftp.hp.com/pub/softlib/UPD and try even older versions from the HP FTP site for the correlated package. Maybe you will find a version that'll work; process of elimination.
– Pimp Juice IT
Nov 29 at 14:42












8 Answers
8






active

oldest

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up vote
8
down vote



accepted
+500










I would personally suggest trying to use powershell:



Identify the name of the printer by using this cmdlet:



get-printer


This will list the names of the printer and the corresponding driver.



Now to use the printer name to get the driver locations:



$Printer = get-printer <name of printer> | Select *
get-printerdriver $printer.drivername | select *


Replace name of printer and remove the angle brackets, if the name has a space in it please put in double quotes - "name of printer".



This will produce a list that will show you the locations of the drivers and dependant files under the following properties:



Path
DependentFiles
InfPath


To get the full list of dependant files:



Get-PrinterDriver $Printer.DriverName | Select DependentFiles -ExpandProperty DependentFiles


The below is a script that will copy all the files above, you just need to insert the name of printer and it will put the files into "c:DriverBackup'name of printer'".



$PrinterName = "Name of printer"

$DriverBackupLocation = "c:DriverBackup$PrinterName"

mkdir $DriverBackupLocation

$Printer = Get-Printer $PrinterName | Select *
$PrinterDriver = Get-PrinterDriver $Printer.DriverName | Select *

Copy-Item -path ($PrinterDriver.InfPath | Split-Path -Parent) -Destination $DriverBackupLocation -Recurse





share|improve this answer























  • I'm not at the location where I need to deploy, but I already ran the above and it pointed to the .inf file in the repository folder, which I believe is the ticket I'm looking for. Thank you already!
    – Flotsam N. Jetsam
    Nov 29 at 16:35










  • You're very welcome, let me know how it goes and if I can help any further.
    – CraftyB
    Nov 29 at 16:51






  • 1




    Nice answer......
    – Pimp Juice IT
    Nov 29 at 17:17










  • I was not able to use your coded harvest of files on the target pc. It kept saying file not found like it was still missing something. However, I copied the entire folder identified in the "InfPath" results of your 2nd block of code and browsed there at the "Have Disk" prompt during install and it worked. Unless you can edit your script somehow to collect everything, I think just narrowing your answer to copying that InfPath folder is the ticket.
    – Flotsam N. Jetsam
    Dec 4 at 2:25






  • 1




    I have modified the script so it copies the parent folder of the inf file into "c:DriverBackup'Name of printer'", I was testing with a random printer driver on my PC, of which all the files were listed in the dependent files, this may not always be the case but as you spotted the folder the inf file resides in should have all the components to be able to reinstall.
    – CraftyB
    Dec 4 at 14:34




















up vote
2
down vote













printer server




  1. Click on print server properties


drivers




  1. Then goto drivers.

  2. Click Properties


and there it is, the driver path.



Note: The driver path is scrollable! If left click on the text, and hold the mouse down you can drag to the right and it will scroll over revealing the rest of the path.



enter image description here






share|improve this answer





















  • In my case, the driver path did not contain a .inf file, which I am prompted to navigate to when installing on the target pc. For sanity, I doublechecked that I can print from the pc where I am trying to harvest the driver from.
    – Flotsam N. Jetsam
    Dec 4 at 1:56


















up vote
2
down vote













According to the hp laserjet 5 printer driver for windows 10 there is a comment that indicates a specific HP Universal Print Driver worked to resolve this problem. . .





  • The driver file is "upd-pcl5-x64-6.1.0.20062.exe", I could not find
    it on HP's support site, so I did a search, and found several
    locations listing this universal driver set. I found a site that
    didn't charge, but did plant a cookie ... which I will now have to
    elliminate. BUT, IT WORKS!!! I can't guarantee that it will work for
    you, but I suspect that it will work for several PCL printers "no
    longer supported".




A few things to mention specifically. . .




  1. That post suggests using the
    upd-pcl5-x64-6.1.0.20062.exe
    driver package in particular


  2. The latest version on the HP FTP site seems to be upd-pcl6-x64-6.6.5.23510.exe so you might try that if the suggested driver package doesn't resolve.



  3. If all else fails, go right to the HP FTP website to the /UDP folder and download any of the available package versions from there and go through one by one in case any do work




    • This may be a time consuming and tedious process, but potentially a helpful one that could possibly work to resolve the problem using a trivial process of elimination tactic.


    enter image description here








share|improve this answer






























    up vote
    1
    down vote













    If you persist in struggling to get it to work in Windows (despite the very generous bounty), you could buy a cheap Raspberry pi and install CUPS on it. The Laserjet 5 is listed as perfectly working with Linux (and equally macOS):



    HP Laserjet 5 in the OpenPrinting database



    You should then be able to add it as an IPP (internet printing protocol) printer and print over the network from your Windows clients. Here are more verbose instructions for printing to a CUPS printer from Windows:



    https://zedt.eu/tech/windows/installing-an-ipp-printer-in-windows-10/






    share|improve this answer




























      up vote
      0
      down vote













      Try the following way:




      1. Open Run, type control admintools, click Enter.


      2. Control PanelSystem and SecurityAdministrative Tools->Printer Management->Printer server->local printer->Action->select Export printer to a file



      enter image description here




      1. In laptop, copy this printer driver, when adding a printer we select the printer driver.






      share|improve this answer





















      • It looks like this will work, I was able to export but I'm not at the location of the problem pc right now. What it produces does not appear to be a driver however. It is a xxxx.printerExport file that I guess must be imported using what you directed above. If that importing is as easy as exporting, this will work. The best solution would be to somehow isolate only the printer driver I want. This gets every printer existing on the export pc. Looks like it will work though. Thanks.
        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
        Nov 27 at 15:46






      • 1




        It didn't work, because the target pc is home edition and doesn't have the printmanagement snap in. Also doesn't have printbrm. Is there any other way to import?
        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
        Nov 28 at 2:30










      • Try to use Driver Genius Pro tool to back up the printer driver, then install it in laptop.
        – Daisy Zhou
        Nov 28 at 14:17


















      up vote
      0
      down vote













      You can use DISM to export all currently-installed drivers:



      dism /online /export-driver /destination:C:drivers





      share|improve this answer

















      • 1




        That produced a folder full of indistinguishable files much like the repository folder I had mentioned finding in my OP. How can I identify just the printer driver I'm actually using?
        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
        Nov 27 at 15:48


















      up vote
      0
      down vote













      A very simple answer, and not a long and complicated one, but...



      You can try Double Driver. If your device is not using the default print driver, then it'll show up on the list, and you can then export and restore it using the tool.






      share|improve this answer























      • I tried this. I can see where it could be very useful. However, the result didn't identify the driver. Here is the PowershellOutput from CraftyB's answer listing my target driver. Notice the dir at the end showing the output from CraftyB's coded harvest solution showing the files needed just for my printer. You claimed that if the output of DoubleDriver didn't obviously name my printer then that meant I must be using the default driver. Can you positively identify any of those as the default driver?
        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
        Dec 3 at 14:20










      • @FlotsamN.Jetsam I can't, but give this a shot: copy those files to a folder on your new PC, connect the printer, In device manager, manually scan for drivers by right-clicking in the device and navigate to that folder. This might just work.
        – rahuldottech
        Dec 3 at 16:26




















      up vote
      0
      down vote













      Forensics : Locating the driver .inf file and installation files via registry



      You may find the name of the .inf file in the registry under the key
      HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINEDRIVERSDriverDatabaseDeviceIds{PRINTR-NAME}.

      You will find there entries whose name is that of the file-name.
      For my printer the name was oem15.inf.



      The .inf file is then found at C:WindowsINFoem15.inf and can
      be copied from there.



      Going then to the key
      HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINEDRIVERSDriverDatabaseDriverInfFilesoem15.inf,
      you can extract the value of (Default), which for me was
      mx920p6.inf_amd64_8ba71b07bf815680.



      The driver's files can be found in the folder
      C:WindowsSystem32DriverStoreFileRepositorymx920p6.inf_amd64_8ba71b07bf815680.



      These files, together with the .inf file, should be enough to install
      the driver.



      Automatically extracting the .inf and driver files



      A utility that worked for me for exporting the driver of my printer:




      • Download the old but still working and open-source
        DriverBackup!

      • Unpack into a folder

      • Execute DrvBK.exe and wait for it to populate the list

      • Unselect everything, which I did by right-click on any entry and selecting
        Cancel selection

      • Open the Printers section

      • Tick the printer.

        On the lower pane you will see displayed the name of the .inf file
        of the printer, that you can find in C:WindowsINF.

      • Click Start Backup

      • Enter suitable data in the dialog of "Backup selected devices"
        including the path to where to store

      • Click Start Backup!


      When it finished I had a .inf file and lots of DLLs and other files,
      which I assume were my driver's files.
      (But I didn't try to install them, just in case.)






      share|improve this answer























      • I do not have a "printers section" when I run this. Could it be because this is a network--not local--printer? I did update my OP with info about the actual driver found by using CraftyB's answer.
        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
        Dec 3 at 14:58










      • According to the information you posted, the .inf file should be at C:WindowsINFprnhp001.inf and the driver installation files at C:WINDOWSSystem32DriverStoreFileRepositoryprnhp001.inf_amd64_081cf2b90ec9e6d5prnhp001.i. If you stored them all in one folder, you should be able to install the driver on another computer.
        – harrymc
        Dec 3 at 15:04












      • Right, I'm only responding to your post in order to try to see if I can get to the solution using your method. I'd like to prove out as many answers as possible, pick the best one and then hopefully have the others as back up if the best becomes obsolete in the future. The inf was found using another answer.
        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
        Dec 3 at 15:11












      • That information as retrieved from the registry is the main part of my answer. DriverBackup! was a convenience toll, and I was still doubtful about it because of its age.
        – harrymc
        Dec 3 at 15:15










      • OK, I missed that. Interesting. The registry has hundreds of HP laserjet drivers that seem similar yet have different instances of where the underscore is, but have laserjet 5 in the name. All seem to name "oem14.inf", which is different from the inf obtained by powershell. I wonder what that means...
        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
        Dec 3 at 15:23











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      8 Answers
      8






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      8 Answers
      8






      active

      oldest

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      oldest

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      active

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      up vote
      8
      down vote



      accepted
      +500










      I would personally suggest trying to use powershell:



      Identify the name of the printer by using this cmdlet:



      get-printer


      This will list the names of the printer and the corresponding driver.



      Now to use the printer name to get the driver locations:



      $Printer = get-printer <name of printer> | Select *
      get-printerdriver $printer.drivername | select *


      Replace name of printer and remove the angle brackets, if the name has a space in it please put in double quotes - "name of printer".



      This will produce a list that will show you the locations of the drivers and dependant files under the following properties:



      Path
      DependentFiles
      InfPath


      To get the full list of dependant files:



      Get-PrinterDriver $Printer.DriverName | Select DependentFiles -ExpandProperty DependentFiles


      The below is a script that will copy all the files above, you just need to insert the name of printer and it will put the files into "c:DriverBackup'name of printer'".



      $PrinterName = "Name of printer"

      $DriverBackupLocation = "c:DriverBackup$PrinterName"

      mkdir $DriverBackupLocation

      $Printer = Get-Printer $PrinterName | Select *
      $PrinterDriver = Get-PrinterDriver $Printer.DriverName | Select *

      Copy-Item -path ($PrinterDriver.InfPath | Split-Path -Parent) -Destination $DriverBackupLocation -Recurse





      share|improve this answer























      • I'm not at the location where I need to deploy, but I already ran the above and it pointed to the .inf file in the repository folder, which I believe is the ticket I'm looking for. Thank you already!
        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
        Nov 29 at 16:35










      • You're very welcome, let me know how it goes and if I can help any further.
        – CraftyB
        Nov 29 at 16:51






      • 1




        Nice answer......
        – Pimp Juice IT
        Nov 29 at 17:17










      • I was not able to use your coded harvest of files on the target pc. It kept saying file not found like it was still missing something. However, I copied the entire folder identified in the "InfPath" results of your 2nd block of code and browsed there at the "Have Disk" prompt during install and it worked. Unless you can edit your script somehow to collect everything, I think just narrowing your answer to copying that InfPath folder is the ticket.
        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
        Dec 4 at 2:25






      • 1




        I have modified the script so it copies the parent folder of the inf file into "c:DriverBackup'Name of printer'", I was testing with a random printer driver on my PC, of which all the files were listed in the dependent files, this may not always be the case but as you spotted the folder the inf file resides in should have all the components to be able to reinstall.
        – CraftyB
        Dec 4 at 14:34

















      up vote
      8
      down vote



      accepted
      +500










      I would personally suggest trying to use powershell:



      Identify the name of the printer by using this cmdlet:



      get-printer


      This will list the names of the printer and the corresponding driver.



      Now to use the printer name to get the driver locations:



      $Printer = get-printer <name of printer> | Select *
      get-printerdriver $printer.drivername | select *


      Replace name of printer and remove the angle brackets, if the name has a space in it please put in double quotes - "name of printer".



      This will produce a list that will show you the locations of the drivers and dependant files under the following properties:



      Path
      DependentFiles
      InfPath


      To get the full list of dependant files:



      Get-PrinterDriver $Printer.DriverName | Select DependentFiles -ExpandProperty DependentFiles


      The below is a script that will copy all the files above, you just need to insert the name of printer and it will put the files into "c:DriverBackup'name of printer'".



      $PrinterName = "Name of printer"

      $DriverBackupLocation = "c:DriverBackup$PrinterName"

      mkdir $DriverBackupLocation

      $Printer = Get-Printer $PrinterName | Select *
      $PrinterDriver = Get-PrinterDriver $Printer.DriverName | Select *

      Copy-Item -path ($PrinterDriver.InfPath | Split-Path -Parent) -Destination $DriverBackupLocation -Recurse





      share|improve this answer























      • I'm not at the location where I need to deploy, but I already ran the above and it pointed to the .inf file in the repository folder, which I believe is the ticket I'm looking for. Thank you already!
        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
        Nov 29 at 16:35










      • You're very welcome, let me know how it goes and if I can help any further.
        – CraftyB
        Nov 29 at 16:51






      • 1




        Nice answer......
        – Pimp Juice IT
        Nov 29 at 17:17










      • I was not able to use your coded harvest of files on the target pc. It kept saying file not found like it was still missing something. However, I copied the entire folder identified in the "InfPath" results of your 2nd block of code and browsed there at the "Have Disk" prompt during install and it worked. Unless you can edit your script somehow to collect everything, I think just narrowing your answer to copying that InfPath folder is the ticket.
        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
        Dec 4 at 2:25






      • 1




        I have modified the script so it copies the parent folder of the inf file into "c:DriverBackup'Name of printer'", I was testing with a random printer driver on my PC, of which all the files were listed in the dependent files, this may not always be the case but as you spotted the folder the inf file resides in should have all the components to be able to reinstall.
        – CraftyB
        Dec 4 at 14:34















      up vote
      8
      down vote



      accepted
      +500







      up vote
      8
      down vote



      accepted
      +500




      +500




      I would personally suggest trying to use powershell:



      Identify the name of the printer by using this cmdlet:



      get-printer


      This will list the names of the printer and the corresponding driver.



      Now to use the printer name to get the driver locations:



      $Printer = get-printer <name of printer> | Select *
      get-printerdriver $printer.drivername | select *


      Replace name of printer and remove the angle brackets, if the name has a space in it please put in double quotes - "name of printer".



      This will produce a list that will show you the locations of the drivers and dependant files under the following properties:



      Path
      DependentFiles
      InfPath


      To get the full list of dependant files:



      Get-PrinterDriver $Printer.DriverName | Select DependentFiles -ExpandProperty DependentFiles


      The below is a script that will copy all the files above, you just need to insert the name of printer and it will put the files into "c:DriverBackup'name of printer'".



      $PrinterName = "Name of printer"

      $DriverBackupLocation = "c:DriverBackup$PrinterName"

      mkdir $DriverBackupLocation

      $Printer = Get-Printer $PrinterName | Select *
      $PrinterDriver = Get-PrinterDriver $Printer.DriverName | Select *

      Copy-Item -path ($PrinterDriver.InfPath | Split-Path -Parent) -Destination $DriverBackupLocation -Recurse





      share|improve this answer














      I would personally suggest trying to use powershell:



      Identify the name of the printer by using this cmdlet:



      get-printer


      This will list the names of the printer and the corresponding driver.



      Now to use the printer name to get the driver locations:



      $Printer = get-printer <name of printer> | Select *
      get-printerdriver $printer.drivername | select *


      Replace name of printer and remove the angle brackets, if the name has a space in it please put in double quotes - "name of printer".



      This will produce a list that will show you the locations of the drivers and dependant files under the following properties:



      Path
      DependentFiles
      InfPath


      To get the full list of dependant files:



      Get-PrinterDriver $Printer.DriverName | Select DependentFiles -ExpandProperty DependentFiles


      The below is a script that will copy all the files above, you just need to insert the name of printer and it will put the files into "c:DriverBackup'name of printer'".



      $PrinterName = "Name of printer"

      $DriverBackupLocation = "c:DriverBackup$PrinterName"

      mkdir $DriverBackupLocation

      $Printer = Get-Printer $PrinterName | Select *
      $PrinterDriver = Get-PrinterDriver $Printer.DriverName | Select *

      Copy-Item -path ($PrinterDriver.InfPath | Split-Path -Parent) -Destination $DriverBackupLocation -Recurse






      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited Dec 4 at 14:27

























      answered Nov 29 at 15:22









      CraftyB

      86429




      86429












      • I'm not at the location where I need to deploy, but I already ran the above and it pointed to the .inf file in the repository folder, which I believe is the ticket I'm looking for. Thank you already!
        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
        Nov 29 at 16:35










      • You're very welcome, let me know how it goes and if I can help any further.
        – CraftyB
        Nov 29 at 16:51






      • 1




        Nice answer......
        – Pimp Juice IT
        Nov 29 at 17:17










      • I was not able to use your coded harvest of files on the target pc. It kept saying file not found like it was still missing something. However, I copied the entire folder identified in the "InfPath" results of your 2nd block of code and browsed there at the "Have Disk" prompt during install and it worked. Unless you can edit your script somehow to collect everything, I think just narrowing your answer to copying that InfPath folder is the ticket.
        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
        Dec 4 at 2:25






      • 1




        I have modified the script so it copies the parent folder of the inf file into "c:DriverBackup'Name of printer'", I was testing with a random printer driver on my PC, of which all the files were listed in the dependent files, this may not always be the case but as you spotted the folder the inf file resides in should have all the components to be able to reinstall.
        – CraftyB
        Dec 4 at 14:34




















      • I'm not at the location where I need to deploy, but I already ran the above and it pointed to the .inf file in the repository folder, which I believe is the ticket I'm looking for. Thank you already!
        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
        Nov 29 at 16:35










      • You're very welcome, let me know how it goes and if I can help any further.
        – CraftyB
        Nov 29 at 16:51






      • 1




        Nice answer......
        – Pimp Juice IT
        Nov 29 at 17:17










      • I was not able to use your coded harvest of files on the target pc. It kept saying file not found like it was still missing something. However, I copied the entire folder identified in the "InfPath" results of your 2nd block of code and browsed there at the "Have Disk" prompt during install and it worked. Unless you can edit your script somehow to collect everything, I think just narrowing your answer to copying that InfPath folder is the ticket.
        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
        Dec 4 at 2:25






      • 1




        I have modified the script so it copies the parent folder of the inf file into "c:DriverBackup'Name of printer'", I was testing with a random printer driver on my PC, of which all the files were listed in the dependent files, this may not always be the case but as you spotted the folder the inf file resides in should have all the components to be able to reinstall.
        – CraftyB
        Dec 4 at 14:34


















      I'm not at the location where I need to deploy, but I already ran the above and it pointed to the .inf file in the repository folder, which I believe is the ticket I'm looking for. Thank you already!
      – Flotsam N. Jetsam
      Nov 29 at 16:35




      I'm not at the location where I need to deploy, but I already ran the above and it pointed to the .inf file in the repository folder, which I believe is the ticket I'm looking for. Thank you already!
      – Flotsam N. Jetsam
      Nov 29 at 16:35












      You're very welcome, let me know how it goes and if I can help any further.
      – CraftyB
      Nov 29 at 16:51




      You're very welcome, let me know how it goes and if I can help any further.
      – CraftyB
      Nov 29 at 16:51




      1




      1




      Nice answer......
      – Pimp Juice IT
      Nov 29 at 17:17




      Nice answer......
      – Pimp Juice IT
      Nov 29 at 17:17












      I was not able to use your coded harvest of files on the target pc. It kept saying file not found like it was still missing something. However, I copied the entire folder identified in the "InfPath" results of your 2nd block of code and browsed there at the "Have Disk" prompt during install and it worked. Unless you can edit your script somehow to collect everything, I think just narrowing your answer to copying that InfPath folder is the ticket.
      – Flotsam N. Jetsam
      Dec 4 at 2:25




      I was not able to use your coded harvest of files on the target pc. It kept saying file not found like it was still missing something. However, I copied the entire folder identified in the "InfPath" results of your 2nd block of code and browsed there at the "Have Disk" prompt during install and it worked. Unless you can edit your script somehow to collect everything, I think just narrowing your answer to copying that InfPath folder is the ticket.
      – Flotsam N. Jetsam
      Dec 4 at 2:25




      1




      1




      I have modified the script so it copies the parent folder of the inf file into "c:DriverBackup'Name of printer'", I was testing with a random printer driver on my PC, of which all the files were listed in the dependent files, this may not always be the case but as you spotted the folder the inf file resides in should have all the components to be able to reinstall.
      – CraftyB
      Dec 4 at 14:34






      I have modified the script so it copies the parent folder of the inf file into "c:DriverBackup'Name of printer'", I was testing with a random printer driver on my PC, of which all the files were listed in the dependent files, this may not always be the case but as you spotted the folder the inf file resides in should have all the components to be able to reinstall.
      – CraftyB
      Dec 4 at 14:34














      up vote
      2
      down vote













      printer server




      1. Click on print server properties


      drivers




      1. Then goto drivers.

      2. Click Properties


      and there it is, the driver path.



      Note: The driver path is scrollable! If left click on the text, and hold the mouse down you can drag to the right and it will scroll over revealing the rest of the path.



      enter image description here






      share|improve this answer





















      • In my case, the driver path did not contain a .inf file, which I am prompted to navigate to when installing on the target pc. For sanity, I doublechecked that I can print from the pc where I am trying to harvest the driver from.
        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
        Dec 4 at 1:56















      up vote
      2
      down vote













      printer server




      1. Click on print server properties


      drivers




      1. Then goto drivers.

      2. Click Properties


      and there it is, the driver path.



      Note: The driver path is scrollable! If left click on the text, and hold the mouse down you can drag to the right and it will scroll over revealing the rest of the path.



      enter image description here






      share|improve this answer





















      • In my case, the driver path did not contain a .inf file, which I am prompted to navigate to when installing on the target pc. For sanity, I doublechecked that I can print from the pc where I am trying to harvest the driver from.
        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
        Dec 4 at 1:56













      up vote
      2
      down vote










      up vote
      2
      down vote









      printer server




      1. Click on print server properties


      drivers




      1. Then goto drivers.

      2. Click Properties


      and there it is, the driver path.



      Note: The driver path is scrollable! If left click on the text, and hold the mouse down you can drag to the right and it will scroll over revealing the rest of the path.



      enter image description here






      share|improve this answer












      printer server




      1. Click on print server properties


      drivers




      1. Then goto drivers.

      2. Click Properties


      and there it is, the driver path.



      Note: The driver path is scrollable! If left click on the text, and hold the mouse down you can drag to the right and it will scroll over revealing the rest of the path.



      enter image description here







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered Nov 29 at 19:59









      cybernard

      9,72131423




      9,72131423












      • In my case, the driver path did not contain a .inf file, which I am prompted to navigate to when installing on the target pc. For sanity, I doublechecked that I can print from the pc where I am trying to harvest the driver from.
        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
        Dec 4 at 1:56


















      • In my case, the driver path did not contain a .inf file, which I am prompted to navigate to when installing on the target pc. For sanity, I doublechecked that I can print from the pc where I am trying to harvest the driver from.
        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
        Dec 4 at 1:56
















      In my case, the driver path did not contain a .inf file, which I am prompted to navigate to when installing on the target pc. For sanity, I doublechecked that I can print from the pc where I am trying to harvest the driver from.
      – Flotsam N. Jetsam
      Dec 4 at 1:56




      In my case, the driver path did not contain a .inf file, which I am prompted to navigate to when installing on the target pc. For sanity, I doublechecked that I can print from the pc where I am trying to harvest the driver from.
      – Flotsam N. Jetsam
      Dec 4 at 1:56










      up vote
      2
      down vote













      According to the hp laserjet 5 printer driver for windows 10 there is a comment that indicates a specific HP Universal Print Driver worked to resolve this problem. . .





      • The driver file is "upd-pcl5-x64-6.1.0.20062.exe", I could not find
        it on HP's support site, so I did a search, and found several
        locations listing this universal driver set. I found a site that
        didn't charge, but did plant a cookie ... which I will now have to
        elliminate. BUT, IT WORKS!!! I can't guarantee that it will work for
        you, but I suspect that it will work for several PCL printers "no
        longer supported".




      A few things to mention specifically. . .




      1. That post suggests using the
        upd-pcl5-x64-6.1.0.20062.exe
        driver package in particular


      2. The latest version on the HP FTP site seems to be upd-pcl6-x64-6.6.5.23510.exe so you might try that if the suggested driver package doesn't resolve.



      3. If all else fails, go right to the HP FTP website to the /UDP folder and download any of the available package versions from there and go through one by one in case any do work




        • This may be a time consuming and tedious process, but potentially a helpful one that could possibly work to resolve the problem using a trivial process of elimination tactic.


        enter image description here








      share|improve this answer



























        up vote
        2
        down vote













        According to the hp laserjet 5 printer driver for windows 10 there is a comment that indicates a specific HP Universal Print Driver worked to resolve this problem. . .





        • The driver file is "upd-pcl5-x64-6.1.0.20062.exe", I could not find
          it on HP's support site, so I did a search, and found several
          locations listing this universal driver set. I found a site that
          didn't charge, but did plant a cookie ... which I will now have to
          elliminate. BUT, IT WORKS!!! I can't guarantee that it will work for
          you, but I suspect that it will work for several PCL printers "no
          longer supported".




        A few things to mention specifically. . .




        1. That post suggests using the
          upd-pcl5-x64-6.1.0.20062.exe
          driver package in particular


        2. The latest version on the HP FTP site seems to be upd-pcl6-x64-6.6.5.23510.exe so you might try that if the suggested driver package doesn't resolve.



        3. If all else fails, go right to the HP FTP website to the /UDP folder and download any of the available package versions from there and go through one by one in case any do work




          • This may be a time consuming and tedious process, but potentially a helpful one that could possibly work to resolve the problem using a trivial process of elimination tactic.


          enter image description here








        share|improve this answer

























          up vote
          2
          down vote










          up vote
          2
          down vote









          According to the hp laserjet 5 printer driver for windows 10 there is a comment that indicates a specific HP Universal Print Driver worked to resolve this problem. . .





          • The driver file is "upd-pcl5-x64-6.1.0.20062.exe", I could not find
            it on HP's support site, so I did a search, and found several
            locations listing this universal driver set. I found a site that
            didn't charge, but did plant a cookie ... which I will now have to
            elliminate. BUT, IT WORKS!!! I can't guarantee that it will work for
            you, but I suspect that it will work for several PCL printers "no
            longer supported".




          A few things to mention specifically. . .




          1. That post suggests using the
            upd-pcl5-x64-6.1.0.20062.exe
            driver package in particular


          2. The latest version on the HP FTP site seems to be upd-pcl6-x64-6.6.5.23510.exe so you might try that if the suggested driver package doesn't resolve.



          3. If all else fails, go right to the HP FTP website to the /UDP folder and download any of the available package versions from there and go through one by one in case any do work




            • This may be a time consuming and tedious process, but potentially a helpful one that could possibly work to resolve the problem using a trivial process of elimination tactic.


            enter image description here








          share|improve this answer














          According to the hp laserjet 5 printer driver for windows 10 there is a comment that indicates a specific HP Universal Print Driver worked to resolve this problem. . .





          • The driver file is "upd-pcl5-x64-6.1.0.20062.exe", I could not find
            it on HP's support site, so I did a search, and found several
            locations listing this universal driver set. I found a site that
            didn't charge, but did plant a cookie ... which I will now have to
            elliminate. BUT, IT WORKS!!! I can't guarantee that it will work for
            you, but I suspect that it will work for several PCL printers "no
            longer supported".




          A few things to mention specifically. . .




          1. That post suggests using the
            upd-pcl5-x64-6.1.0.20062.exe
            driver package in particular


          2. The latest version on the HP FTP site seems to be upd-pcl6-x64-6.6.5.23510.exe so you might try that if the suggested driver package doesn't resolve.



          3. If all else fails, go right to the HP FTP website to the /UDP folder and download any of the available package versions from there and go through one by one in case any do work




            • This may be a time consuming and tedious process, but potentially a helpful one that could possibly work to resolve the problem using a trivial process of elimination tactic.


            enter image description here









          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Dec 2 at 5:37

























          answered Nov 29 at 15:44









          Pimp Juice IT

          22.7k113869




          22.7k113869






















              up vote
              1
              down vote













              If you persist in struggling to get it to work in Windows (despite the very generous bounty), you could buy a cheap Raspberry pi and install CUPS on it. The Laserjet 5 is listed as perfectly working with Linux (and equally macOS):



              HP Laserjet 5 in the OpenPrinting database



              You should then be able to add it as an IPP (internet printing protocol) printer and print over the network from your Windows clients. Here are more verbose instructions for printing to a CUPS printer from Windows:



              https://zedt.eu/tech/windows/installing-an-ipp-printer-in-windows-10/






              share|improve this answer

























                up vote
                1
                down vote













                If you persist in struggling to get it to work in Windows (despite the very generous bounty), you could buy a cheap Raspberry pi and install CUPS on it. The Laserjet 5 is listed as perfectly working with Linux (and equally macOS):



                HP Laserjet 5 in the OpenPrinting database



                You should then be able to add it as an IPP (internet printing protocol) printer and print over the network from your Windows clients. Here are more verbose instructions for printing to a CUPS printer from Windows:



                https://zedt.eu/tech/windows/installing-an-ipp-printer-in-windows-10/






                share|improve this answer























                  up vote
                  1
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  1
                  down vote









                  If you persist in struggling to get it to work in Windows (despite the very generous bounty), you could buy a cheap Raspberry pi and install CUPS on it. The Laserjet 5 is listed as perfectly working with Linux (and equally macOS):



                  HP Laserjet 5 in the OpenPrinting database



                  You should then be able to add it as an IPP (internet printing protocol) printer and print over the network from your Windows clients. Here are more verbose instructions for printing to a CUPS printer from Windows:



                  https://zedt.eu/tech/windows/installing-an-ipp-printer-in-windows-10/






                  share|improve this answer












                  If you persist in struggling to get it to work in Windows (despite the very generous bounty), you could buy a cheap Raspberry pi and install CUPS on it. The Laserjet 5 is listed as perfectly working with Linux (and equally macOS):



                  HP Laserjet 5 in the OpenPrinting database



                  You should then be able to add it as an IPP (internet printing protocol) printer and print over the network from your Windows clients. Here are more verbose instructions for printing to a CUPS printer from Windows:



                  https://zedt.eu/tech/windows/installing-an-ipp-printer-in-windows-10/







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Nov 29 at 15:42









                  Mark

                  1135




                  1135






















                      up vote
                      0
                      down vote













                      Try the following way:




                      1. Open Run, type control admintools, click Enter.


                      2. Control PanelSystem and SecurityAdministrative Tools->Printer Management->Printer server->local printer->Action->select Export printer to a file



                      enter image description here




                      1. In laptop, copy this printer driver, when adding a printer we select the printer driver.






                      share|improve this answer





















                      • It looks like this will work, I was able to export but I'm not at the location of the problem pc right now. What it produces does not appear to be a driver however. It is a xxxx.printerExport file that I guess must be imported using what you directed above. If that importing is as easy as exporting, this will work. The best solution would be to somehow isolate only the printer driver I want. This gets every printer existing on the export pc. Looks like it will work though. Thanks.
                        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                        Nov 27 at 15:46






                      • 1




                        It didn't work, because the target pc is home edition and doesn't have the printmanagement snap in. Also doesn't have printbrm. Is there any other way to import?
                        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                        Nov 28 at 2:30










                      • Try to use Driver Genius Pro tool to back up the printer driver, then install it in laptop.
                        – Daisy Zhou
                        Nov 28 at 14:17















                      up vote
                      0
                      down vote













                      Try the following way:




                      1. Open Run, type control admintools, click Enter.


                      2. Control PanelSystem and SecurityAdministrative Tools->Printer Management->Printer server->local printer->Action->select Export printer to a file



                      enter image description here




                      1. In laptop, copy this printer driver, when adding a printer we select the printer driver.






                      share|improve this answer





















                      • It looks like this will work, I was able to export but I'm not at the location of the problem pc right now. What it produces does not appear to be a driver however. It is a xxxx.printerExport file that I guess must be imported using what you directed above. If that importing is as easy as exporting, this will work. The best solution would be to somehow isolate only the printer driver I want. This gets every printer existing on the export pc. Looks like it will work though. Thanks.
                        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                        Nov 27 at 15:46






                      • 1




                        It didn't work, because the target pc is home edition and doesn't have the printmanagement snap in. Also doesn't have printbrm. Is there any other way to import?
                        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                        Nov 28 at 2:30










                      • Try to use Driver Genius Pro tool to back up the printer driver, then install it in laptop.
                        – Daisy Zhou
                        Nov 28 at 14:17













                      up vote
                      0
                      down vote










                      up vote
                      0
                      down vote









                      Try the following way:




                      1. Open Run, type control admintools, click Enter.


                      2. Control PanelSystem and SecurityAdministrative Tools->Printer Management->Printer server->local printer->Action->select Export printer to a file



                      enter image description here




                      1. In laptop, copy this printer driver, when adding a printer we select the printer driver.






                      share|improve this answer












                      Try the following way:




                      1. Open Run, type control admintools, click Enter.


                      2. Control PanelSystem and SecurityAdministrative Tools->Printer Management->Printer server->local printer->Action->select Export printer to a file



                      enter image description here




                      1. In laptop, copy this printer driver, when adding a printer we select the printer driver.







                      share|improve this answer












                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer










                      answered Nov 27 at 10:17









                      Daisy Zhou

                      575114




                      575114












                      • It looks like this will work, I was able to export but I'm not at the location of the problem pc right now. What it produces does not appear to be a driver however. It is a xxxx.printerExport file that I guess must be imported using what you directed above. If that importing is as easy as exporting, this will work. The best solution would be to somehow isolate only the printer driver I want. This gets every printer existing on the export pc. Looks like it will work though. Thanks.
                        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                        Nov 27 at 15:46






                      • 1




                        It didn't work, because the target pc is home edition and doesn't have the printmanagement snap in. Also doesn't have printbrm. Is there any other way to import?
                        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                        Nov 28 at 2:30










                      • Try to use Driver Genius Pro tool to back up the printer driver, then install it in laptop.
                        – Daisy Zhou
                        Nov 28 at 14:17


















                      • It looks like this will work, I was able to export but I'm not at the location of the problem pc right now. What it produces does not appear to be a driver however. It is a xxxx.printerExport file that I guess must be imported using what you directed above. If that importing is as easy as exporting, this will work. The best solution would be to somehow isolate only the printer driver I want. This gets every printer existing on the export pc. Looks like it will work though. Thanks.
                        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                        Nov 27 at 15:46






                      • 1




                        It didn't work, because the target pc is home edition and doesn't have the printmanagement snap in. Also doesn't have printbrm. Is there any other way to import?
                        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                        Nov 28 at 2:30










                      • Try to use Driver Genius Pro tool to back up the printer driver, then install it in laptop.
                        – Daisy Zhou
                        Nov 28 at 14:17
















                      It looks like this will work, I was able to export but I'm not at the location of the problem pc right now. What it produces does not appear to be a driver however. It is a xxxx.printerExport file that I guess must be imported using what you directed above. If that importing is as easy as exporting, this will work. The best solution would be to somehow isolate only the printer driver I want. This gets every printer existing on the export pc. Looks like it will work though. Thanks.
                      – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                      Nov 27 at 15:46




                      It looks like this will work, I was able to export but I'm not at the location of the problem pc right now. What it produces does not appear to be a driver however. It is a xxxx.printerExport file that I guess must be imported using what you directed above. If that importing is as easy as exporting, this will work. The best solution would be to somehow isolate only the printer driver I want. This gets every printer existing on the export pc. Looks like it will work though. Thanks.
                      – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                      Nov 27 at 15:46




                      1




                      1




                      It didn't work, because the target pc is home edition and doesn't have the printmanagement snap in. Also doesn't have printbrm. Is there any other way to import?
                      – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                      Nov 28 at 2:30




                      It didn't work, because the target pc is home edition and doesn't have the printmanagement snap in. Also doesn't have printbrm. Is there any other way to import?
                      – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                      Nov 28 at 2:30












                      Try to use Driver Genius Pro tool to back up the printer driver, then install it in laptop.
                      – Daisy Zhou
                      Nov 28 at 14:17




                      Try to use Driver Genius Pro tool to back up the printer driver, then install it in laptop.
                      – Daisy Zhou
                      Nov 28 at 14:17










                      up vote
                      0
                      down vote













                      You can use DISM to export all currently-installed drivers:



                      dism /online /export-driver /destination:C:drivers





                      share|improve this answer

















                      • 1




                        That produced a folder full of indistinguishable files much like the repository folder I had mentioned finding in my OP. How can I identify just the printer driver I'm actually using?
                        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                        Nov 27 at 15:48















                      up vote
                      0
                      down vote













                      You can use DISM to export all currently-installed drivers:



                      dism /online /export-driver /destination:C:drivers





                      share|improve this answer

















                      • 1




                        That produced a folder full of indistinguishable files much like the repository folder I had mentioned finding in my OP. How can I identify just the printer driver I'm actually using?
                        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                        Nov 27 at 15:48













                      up vote
                      0
                      down vote










                      up vote
                      0
                      down vote









                      You can use DISM to export all currently-installed drivers:



                      dism /online /export-driver /destination:C:drivers





                      share|improve this answer












                      You can use DISM to export all currently-installed drivers:



                      dism /online /export-driver /destination:C:drivers






                      share|improve this answer












                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer










                      answered Nov 27 at 10:28









                      grawity

                      230k35486544




                      230k35486544








                      • 1




                        That produced a folder full of indistinguishable files much like the repository folder I had mentioned finding in my OP. How can I identify just the printer driver I'm actually using?
                        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                        Nov 27 at 15:48














                      • 1




                        That produced a folder full of indistinguishable files much like the repository folder I had mentioned finding in my OP. How can I identify just the printer driver I'm actually using?
                        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                        Nov 27 at 15:48








                      1




                      1




                      That produced a folder full of indistinguishable files much like the repository folder I had mentioned finding in my OP. How can I identify just the printer driver I'm actually using?
                      – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                      Nov 27 at 15:48




                      That produced a folder full of indistinguishable files much like the repository folder I had mentioned finding in my OP. How can I identify just the printer driver I'm actually using?
                      – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                      Nov 27 at 15:48










                      up vote
                      0
                      down vote













                      A very simple answer, and not a long and complicated one, but...



                      You can try Double Driver. If your device is not using the default print driver, then it'll show up on the list, and you can then export and restore it using the tool.






                      share|improve this answer























                      • I tried this. I can see where it could be very useful. However, the result didn't identify the driver. Here is the PowershellOutput from CraftyB's answer listing my target driver. Notice the dir at the end showing the output from CraftyB's coded harvest solution showing the files needed just for my printer. You claimed that if the output of DoubleDriver didn't obviously name my printer then that meant I must be using the default driver. Can you positively identify any of those as the default driver?
                        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                        Dec 3 at 14:20










                      • @FlotsamN.Jetsam I can't, but give this a shot: copy those files to a folder on your new PC, connect the printer, In device manager, manually scan for drivers by right-clicking in the device and navigate to that folder. This might just work.
                        – rahuldottech
                        Dec 3 at 16:26

















                      up vote
                      0
                      down vote













                      A very simple answer, and not a long and complicated one, but...



                      You can try Double Driver. If your device is not using the default print driver, then it'll show up on the list, and you can then export and restore it using the tool.






                      share|improve this answer























                      • I tried this. I can see where it could be very useful. However, the result didn't identify the driver. Here is the PowershellOutput from CraftyB's answer listing my target driver. Notice the dir at the end showing the output from CraftyB's coded harvest solution showing the files needed just for my printer. You claimed that if the output of DoubleDriver didn't obviously name my printer then that meant I must be using the default driver. Can you positively identify any of those as the default driver?
                        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                        Dec 3 at 14:20










                      • @FlotsamN.Jetsam I can't, but give this a shot: copy those files to a folder on your new PC, connect the printer, In device manager, manually scan for drivers by right-clicking in the device and navigate to that folder. This might just work.
                        – rahuldottech
                        Dec 3 at 16:26















                      up vote
                      0
                      down vote










                      up vote
                      0
                      down vote









                      A very simple answer, and not a long and complicated one, but...



                      You can try Double Driver. If your device is not using the default print driver, then it'll show up on the list, and you can then export and restore it using the tool.






                      share|improve this answer














                      A very simple answer, and not a long and complicated one, but...



                      You can try Double Driver. If your device is not using the default print driver, then it'll show up on the list, and you can then export and restore it using the tool.







                      share|improve this answer














                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer








                      edited Dec 1 at 18:36

























                      answered Dec 1 at 18:30









                      rahuldottech

                      3,30932547




                      3,30932547












                      • I tried this. I can see where it could be very useful. However, the result didn't identify the driver. Here is the PowershellOutput from CraftyB's answer listing my target driver. Notice the dir at the end showing the output from CraftyB's coded harvest solution showing the files needed just for my printer. You claimed that if the output of DoubleDriver didn't obviously name my printer then that meant I must be using the default driver. Can you positively identify any of those as the default driver?
                        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                        Dec 3 at 14:20










                      • @FlotsamN.Jetsam I can't, but give this a shot: copy those files to a folder on your new PC, connect the printer, In device manager, manually scan for drivers by right-clicking in the device and navigate to that folder. This might just work.
                        – rahuldottech
                        Dec 3 at 16:26




















                      • I tried this. I can see where it could be very useful. However, the result didn't identify the driver. Here is the PowershellOutput from CraftyB's answer listing my target driver. Notice the dir at the end showing the output from CraftyB's coded harvest solution showing the files needed just for my printer. You claimed that if the output of DoubleDriver didn't obviously name my printer then that meant I must be using the default driver. Can you positively identify any of those as the default driver?
                        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                        Dec 3 at 14:20










                      • @FlotsamN.Jetsam I can't, but give this a shot: copy those files to a folder on your new PC, connect the printer, In device manager, manually scan for drivers by right-clicking in the device and navigate to that folder. This might just work.
                        – rahuldottech
                        Dec 3 at 16:26


















                      I tried this. I can see where it could be very useful. However, the result didn't identify the driver. Here is the PowershellOutput from CraftyB's answer listing my target driver. Notice the dir at the end showing the output from CraftyB's coded harvest solution showing the files needed just for my printer. You claimed that if the output of DoubleDriver didn't obviously name my printer then that meant I must be using the default driver. Can you positively identify any of those as the default driver?
                      – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                      Dec 3 at 14:20




                      I tried this. I can see where it could be very useful. However, the result didn't identify the driver. Here is the PowershellOutput from CraftyB's answer listing my target driver. Notice the dir at the end showing the output from CraftyB's coded harvest solution showing the files needed just for my printer. You claimed that if the output of DoubleDriver didn't obviously name my printer then that meant I must be using the default driver. Can you positively identify any of those as the default driver?
                      – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                      Dec 3 at 14:20












                      @FlotsamN.Jetsam I can't, but give this a shot: copy those files to a folder on your new PC, connect the printer, In device manager, manually scan for drivers by right-clicking in the device and navigate to that folder. This might just work.
                      – rahuldottech
                      Dec 3 at 16:26






                      @FlotsamN.Jetsam I can't, but give this a shot: copy those files to a folder on your new PC, connect the printer, In device manager, manually scan for drivers by right-clicking in the device and navigate to that folder. This might just work.
                      – rahuldottech
                      Dec 3 at 16:26












                      up vote
                      0
                      down vote













                      Forensics : Locating the driver .inf file and installation files via registry



                      You may find the name of the .inf file in the registry under the key
                      HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINEDRIVERSDriverDatabaseDeviceIds{PRINTR-NAME}.

                      You will find there entries whose name is that of the file-name.
                      For my printer the name was oem15.inf.



                      The .inf file is then found at C:WindowsINFoem15.inf and can
                      be copied from there.



                      Going then to the key
                      HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINEDRIVERSDriverDatabaseDriverInfFilesoem15.inf,
                      you can extract the value of (Default), which for me was
                      mx920p6.inf_amd64_8ba71b07bf815680.



                      The driver's files can be found in the folder
                      C:WindowsSystem32DriverStoreFileRepositorymx920p6.inf_amd64_8ba71b07bf815680.



                      These files, together with the .inf file, should be enough to install
                      the driver.



                      Automatically extracting the .inf and driver files



                      A utility that worked for me for exporting the driver of my printer:




                      • Download the old but still working and open-source
                        DriverBackup!

                      • Unpack into a folder

                      • Execute DrvBK.exe and wait for it to populate the list

                      • Unselect everything, which I did by right-click on any entry and selecting
                        Cancel selection

                      • Open the Printers section

                      • Tick the printer.

                        On the lower pane you will see displayed the name of the .inf file
                        of the printer, that you can find in C:WindowsINF.

                      • Click Start Backup

                      • Enter suitable data in the dialog of "Backup selected devices"
                        including the path to where to store

                      • Click Start Backup!


                      When it finished I had a .inf file and lots of DLLs and other files,
                      which I assume were my driver's files.
                      (But I didn't try to install them, just in case.)






                      share|improve this answer























                      • I do not have a "printers section" when I run this. Could it be because this is a network--not local--printer? I did update my OP with info about the actual driver found by using CraftyB's answer.
                        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                        Dec 3 at 14:58










                      • According to the information you posted, the .inf file should be at C:WindowsINFprnhp001.inf and the driver installation files at C:WINDOWSSystem32DriverStoreFileRepositoryprnhp001.inf_amd64_081cf2b90ec9e6d5prnhp001.i. If you stored them all in one folder, you should be able to install the driver on another computer.
                        – harrymc
                        Dec 3 at 15:04












                      • Right, I'm only responding to your post in order to try to see if I can get to the solution using your method. I'd like to prove out as many answers as possible, pick the best one and then hopefully have the others as back up if the best becomes obsolete in the future. The inf was found using another answer.
                        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                        Dec 3 at 15:11












                      • That information as retrieved from the registry is the main part of my answer. DriverBackup! was a convenience toll, and I was still doubtful about it because of its age.
                        – harrymc
                        Dec 3 at 15:15










                      • OK, I missed that. Interesting. The registry has hundreds of HP laserjet drivers that seem similar yet have different instances of where the underscore is, but have laserjet 5 in the name. All seem to name "oem14.inf", which is different from the inf obtained by powershell. I wonder what that means...
                        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                        Dec 3 at 15:23















                      up vote
                      0
                      down vote













                      Forensics : Locating the driver .inf file and installation files via registry



                      You may find the name of the .inf file in the registry under the key
                      HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINEDRIVERSDriverDatabaseDeviceIds{PRINTR-NAME}.

                      You will find there entries whose name is that of the file-name.
                      For my printer the name was oem15.inf.



                      The .inf file is then found at C:WindowsINFoem15.inf and can
                      be copied from there.



                      Going then to the key
                      HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINEDRIVERSDriverDatabaseDriverInfFilesoem15.inf,
                      you can extract the value of (Default), which for me was
                      mx920p6.inf_amd64_8ba71b07bf815680.



                      The driver's files can be found in the folder
                      C:WindowsSystem32DriverStoreFileRepositorymx920p6.inf_amd64_8ba71b07bf815680.



                      These files, together with the .inf file, should be enough to install
                      the driver.



                      Automatically extracting the .inf and driver files



                      A utility that worked for me for exporting the driver of my printer:




                      • Download the old but still working and open-source
                        DriverBackup!

                      • Unpack into a folder

                      • Execute DrvBK.exe and wait for it to populate the list

                      • Unselect everything, which I did by right-click on any entry and selecting
                        Cancel selection

                      • Open the Printers section

                      • Tick the printer.

                        On the lower pane you will see displayed the name of the .inf file
                        of the printer, that you can find in C:WindowsINF.

                      • Click Start Backup

                      • Enter suitable data in the dialog of "Backup selected devices"
                        including the path to where to store

                      • Click Start Backup!


                      When it finished I had a .inf file and lots of DLLs and other files,
                      which I assume were my driver's files.
                      (But I didn't try to install them, just in case.)






                      share|improve this answer























                      • I do not have a "printers section" when I run this. Could it be because this is a network--not local--printer? I did update my OP with info about the actual driver found by using CraftyB's answer.
                        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                        Dec 3 at 14:58










                      • According to the information you posted, the .inf file should be at C:WindowsINFprnhp001.inf and the driver installation files at C:WINDOWSSystem32DriverStoreFileRepositoryprnhp001.inf_amd64_081cf2b90ec9e6d5prnhp001.i. If you stored them all in one folder, you should be able to install the driver on another computer.
                        – harrymc
                        Dec 3 at 15:04












                      • Right, I'm only responding to your post in order to try to see if I can get to the solution using your method. I'd like to prove out as many answers as possible, pick the best one and then hopefully have the others as back up if the best becomes obsolete in the future. The inf was found using another answer.
                        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                        Dec 3 at 15:11












                      • That information as retrieved from the registry is the main part of my answer. DriverBackup! was a convenience toll, and I was still doubtful about it because of its age.
                        – harrymc
                        Dec 3 at 15:15










                      • OK, I missed that. Interesting. The registry has hundreds of HP laserjet drivers that seem similar yet have different instances of where the underscore is, but have laserjet 5 in the name. All seem to name "oem14.inf", which is different from the inf obtained by powershell. I wonder what that means...
                        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                        Dec 3 at 15:23













                      up vote
                      0
                      down vote










                      up vote
                      0
                      down vote









                      Forensics : Locating the driver .inf file and installation files via registry



                      You may find the name of the .inf file in the registry under the key
                      HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINEDRIVERSDriverDatabaseDeviceIds{PRINTR-NAME}.

                      You will find there entries whose name is that of the file-name.
                      For my printer the name was oem15.inf.



                      The .inf file is then found at C:WindowsINFoem15.inf and can
                      be copied from there.



                      Going then to the key
                      HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINEDRIVERSDriverDatabaseDriverInfFilesoem15.inf,
                      you can extract the value of (Default), which for me was
                      mx920p6.inf_amd64_8ba71b07bf815680.



                      The driver's files can be found in the folder
                      C:WindowsSystem32DriverStoreFileRepositorymx920p6.inf_amd64_8ba71b07bf815680.



                      These files, together with the .inf file, should be enough to install
                      the driver.



                      Automatically extracting the .inf and driver files



                      A utility that worked for me for exporting the driver of my printer:




                      • Download the old but still working and open-source
                        DriverBackup!

                      • Unpack into a folder

                      • Execute DrvBK.exe and wait for it to populate the list

                      • Unselect everything, which I did by right-click on any entry and selecting
                        Cancel selection

                      • Open the Printers section

                      • Tick the printer.

                        On the lower pane you will see displayed the name of the .inf file
                        of the printer, that you can find in C:WindowsINF.

                      • Click Start Backup

                      • Enter suitable data in the dialog of "Backup selected devices"
                        including the path to where to store

                      • Click Start Backup!


                      When it finished I had a .inf file and lots of DLLs and other files,
                      which I assume were my driver's files.
                      (But I didn't try to install them, just in case.)






                      share|improve this answer














                      Forensics : Locating the driver .inf file and installation files via registry



                      You may find the name of the .inf file in the registry under the key
                      HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINEDRIVERSDriverDatabaseDeviceIds{PRINTR-NAME}.

                      You will find there entries whose name is that of the file-name.
                      For my printer the name was oem15.inf.



                      The .inf file is then found at C:WindowsINFoem15.inf and can
                      be copied from there.



                      Going then to the key
                      HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINEDRIVERSDriverDatabaseDriverInfFilesoem15.inf,
                      you can extract the value of (Default), which for me was
                      mx920p6.inf_amd64_8ba71b07bf815680.



                      The driver's files can be found in the folder
                      C:WindowsSystem32DriverStoreFileRepositorymx920p6.inf_amd64_8ba71b07bf815680.



                      These files, together with the .inf file, should be enough to install
                      the driver.



                      Automatically extracting the .inf and driver files



                      A utility that worked for me for exporting the driver of my printer:




                      • Download the old but still working and open-source
                        DriverBackup!

                      • Unpack into a folder

                      • Execute DrvBK.exe and wait for it to populate the list

                      • Unselect everything, which I did by right-click on any entry and selecting
                        Cancel selection

                      • Open the Printers section

                      • Tick the printer.

                        On the lower pane you will see displayed the name of the .inf file
                        of the printer, that you can find in C:WindowsINF.

                      • Click Start Backup

                      • Enter suitable data in the dialog of "Backup selected devices"
                        including the path to where to store

                      • Click Start Backup!


                      When it finished I had a .inf file and lots of DLLs and other files,
                      which I assume were my driver's files.
                      (But I didn't try to install them, just in case.)







                      share|improve this answer














                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer








                      edited Dec 1 at 18:54

























                      answered Nov 29 at 15:32









                      harrymc

                      251k11259558




                      251k11259558












                      • I do not have a "printers section" when I run this. Could it be because this is a network--not local--printer? I did update my OP with info about the actual driver found by using CraftyB's answer.
                        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                        Dec 3 at 14:58










                      • According to the information you posted, the .inf file should be at C:WindowsINFprnhp001.inf and the driver installation files at C:WINDOWSSystem32DriverStoreFileRepositoryprnhp001.inf_amd64_081cf2b90ec9e6d5prnhp001.i. If you stored them all in one folder, you should be able to install the driver on another computer.
                        – harrymc
                        Dec 3 at 15:04












                      • Right, I'm only responding to your post in order to try to see if I can get to the solution using your method. I'd like to prove out as many answers as possible, pick the best one and then hopefully have the others as back up if the best becomes obsolete in the future. The inf was found using another answer.
                        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                        Dec 3 at 15:11












                      • That information as retrieved from the registry is the main part of my answer. DriverBackup! was a convenience toll, and I was still doubtful about it because of its age.
                        – harrymc
                        Dec 3 at 15:15










                      • OK, I missed that. Interesting. The registry has hundreds of HP laserjet drivers that seem similar yet have different instances of where the underscore is, but have laserjet 5 in the name. All seem to name "oem14.inf", which is different from the inf obtained by powershell. I wonder what that means...
                        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                        Dec 3 at 15:23


















                      • I do not have a "printers section" when I run this. Could it be because this is a network--not local--printer? I did update my OP with info about the actual driver found by using CraftyB's answer.
                        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                        Dec 3 at 14:58










                      • According to the information you posted, the .inf file should be at C:WindowsINFprnhp001.inf and the driver installation files at C:WINDOWSSystem32DriverStoreFileRepositoryprnhp001.inf_amd64_081cf2b90ec9e6d5prnhp001.i. If you stored them all in one folder, you should be able to install the driver on another computer.
                        – harrymc
                        Dec 3 at 15:04












                      • Right, I'm only responding to your post in order to try to see if I can get to the solution using your method. I'd like to prove out as many answers as possible, pick the best one and then hopefully have the others as back up if the best becomes obsolete in the future. The inf was found using another answer.
                        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                        Dec 3 at 15:11












                      • That information as retrieved from the registry is the main part of my answer. DriverBackup! was a convenience toll, and I was still doubtful about it because of its age.
                        – harrymc
                        Dec 3 at 15:15










                      • OK, I missed that. Interesting. The registry has hundreds of HP laserjet drivers that seem similar yet have different instances of where the underscore is, but have laserjet 5 in the name. All seem to name "oem14.inf", which is different from the inf obtained by powershell. I wonder what that means...
                        – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                        Dec 3 at 15:23
















                      I do not have a "printers section" when I run this. Could it be because this is a network--not local--printer? I did update my OP with info about the actual driver found by using CraftyB's answer.
                      – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                      Dec 3 at 14:58




                      I do not have a "printers section" when I run this. Could it be because this is a network--not local--printer? I did update my OP with info about the actual driver found by using CraftyB's answer.
                      – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                      Dec 3 at 14:58












                      According to the information you posted, the .inf file should be at C:WindowsINFprnhp001.inf and the driver installation files at C:WINDOWSSystem32DriverStoreFileRepositoryprnhp001.inf_amd64_081cf2b90ec9e6d5prnhp001.i. If you stored them all in one folder, you should be able to install the driver on another computer.
                      – harrymc
                      Dec 3 at 15:04






                      According to the information you posted, the .inf file should be at C:WindowsINFprnhp001.inf and the driver installation files at C:WINDOWSSystem32DriverStoreFileRepositoryprnhp001.inf_amd64_081cf2b90ec9e6d5prnhp001.i. If you stored them all in one folder, you should be able to install the driver on another computer.
                      – harrymc
                      Dec 3 at 15:04














                      Right, I'm only responding to your post in order to try to see if I can get to the solution using your method. I'd like to prove out as many answers as possible, pick the best one and then hopefully have the others as back up if the best becomes obsolete in the future. The inf was found using another answer.
                      – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                      Dec 3 at 15:11






                      Right, I'm only responding to your post in order to try to see if I can get to the solution using your method. I'd like to prove out as many answers as possible, pick the best one and then hopefully have the others as back up if the best becomes obsolete in the future. The inf was found using another answer.
                      – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                      Dec 3 at 15:11














                      That information as retrieved from the registry is the main part of my answer. DriverBackup! was a convenience toll, and I was still doubtful about it because of its age.
                      – harrymc
                      Dec 3 at 15:15




                      That information as retrieved from the registry is the main part of my answer. DriverBackup! was a convenience toll, and I was still doubtful about it because of its age.
                      – harrymc
                      Dec 3 at 15:15












                      OK, I missed that. Interesting. The registry has hundreds of HP laserjet drivers that seem similar yet have different instances of where the underscore is, but have laserjet 5 in the name. All seem to name "oem14.inf", which is different from the inf obtained by powershell. I wonder what that means...
                      – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                      Dec 3 at 15:23




                      OK, I missed that. Interesting. The registry has hundreds of HP laserjet drivers that seem similar yet have different instances of where the underscore is, but have laserjet 5 in the name. All seem to name "oem14.inf", which is different from the inf obtained by powershell. I wonder what that means...
                      – Flotsam N. Jetsam
                      Dec 3 at 15:23


















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