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Trying to print an ASP.NET Charting control behind the scenes in my web app. I think it is a permissions issue with the printer as everything is ok up until the point where my code calls:

chart.Printing.Print(false);
bool finished = false;
while (!finished)
{
    finished = File.Exists(settings.GetValue("statusfile")); // file which indicates document was printed
    System.Threading.Thread.Sleep(1000);
}

At this point the page just freezes (or continues to load endlessly - infinite loop!) Understandably this is happening because I am 100% relying on the document being printed. I do intend to add a timeout, however, at the moment I am just trying to figure out why exactly the document is never being set to the printer!

I have given the account (which the AppPool is running under) permissions to all the relevant folders and even the pdf printer itself...Still nothing.

Am I missing something? Is there any issues with printing on the server side via ASP.NET? I have encountered some issues doing this via WindowsServices in the past not sure if it is a similar problem with ASP.NET websites.

Update

As suggested I updated the AppPool to give myself (admin) permissions and it is the same issue. So by the looks of things the job is never being sent to the printer. I can't seem to figure out why though...

Probably should have mentioned this in my original post....but I am invoking the printer through a referenced DLL, this code is not being called directly from my application (incase it matters). Also this runs fine on my Development machine which is running Windows 7 IIS7.0 where as the server is running Windows 2003 server with IIS6.0.

Update 2

I removed the while loop and just left in the chart.Printing.Print(false) line and turns out the document IS being sent to the printer. So the issue must be with the settings file not getting written which is why the loop never breaks out!

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  • Does the same issue occur when running this through Visual Studio where the application runs under your credentials?
    – Jacob
    Feb 9, 2010 at 23:16
  • @Jacob no it works perfectly fine. Only when I publish the website to the server and run it.
    – James
    Feb 10, 2010 at 9:02
  • What does settings.GetValue("statusfile") evaluate to on the server?
    – Jacob
    Feb 18, 2010 at 14:32
  • It is the path to a statusfile which the printer creates once the job is complete. This is essentially the problem as the statusfile is never created. It is like the document is never getting sent to the printer. I am unsure as to why though (I thought permissions). However, I gave admin rights to the relevant account and it still wasn't sending. It works on my dev machine tho....so I do think it is permissions, perhaps that of IIS?
    – James
    Feb 18, 2010 at 14:54

1 Answer 1

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To isolate if this is indeed a permissions issue, you could try running the application using the Visual Studio web development server, which will run under your credentials. Or if that's not an option, temporarily change the IIS app pool so it uses your credentials. If things still do not work, you may have another issue. I'm not sure which charting library you're using (is it the newish Microsoft one?), but maybe Print wants to show a printer dialog.

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  • @Jacob no the Print method takes in a parameter to say whether or not you want the dialog to display. I am passing in false. Yes it is the ASP.NET Charting control.
    – James
    Feb 10, 2010 at 9:04
  • As per my update I changed the permissions of the app pool and still getting the same result. Basically the document is never being sent to the printer. Can't seem to figure out why though.
    – James
    Feb 10, 2010 at 9:36
  • Is there a default printer set for the user(s) on the server?
    – Jacob
    Feb 10, 2010 at 17:50
  • yes it is always set to the printer I am trying to print to. Also I set the default printer at runtime aswell so it is definetly getting the correct one. Also I run this on my Dev machine and it works fine (which is Windows 7 x64) however as soon as I publish it to Win 2k3 it fails.
    – James
    Feb 18, 2010 at 12:51
  • Turns out the document is getting sent to the printer, it seems like the settings file is never being written to file. Need to investigate this further.
    – James
    Feb 21, 2010 at 16:52

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