I'm managing around 60 Ricoh Multifunction Printers (MFPs) and I'm currently working with CAP. I have automated the Address Book using SOAP and PowerShell, and printer deployment with PCL6 drivers is fully automated too. However, I'm struggling with CAP users, as they seem to be tied locally to the device without an API available. There's a CSV import option, but it's not very automation-friendly. Is there a way to create users, assign badges, or link scan destinations without needing to use Ricoh's server stack? Is CAP-ES the only viable alternative, or are there any supported workarounds? I'm also open to unsupported hacks if that's the best route available.
6 Answers
Have you considered trying Ricoh Streamline? It might offer you some help with managing those devices, allowing you to sync a global address book and track print volumes. We don't use it for authentication, but I heard that it might support that too.
You're not missing out on much here. CAP local users are pretty much locked down. Most automation enthusiasts either generate CSV files for manual imports or scrape the web UI using tools like Selenium. Just remember, that method can break with firmware updates. If this is crucial for production, going for CAP-ES or using LDAP for authentication might be the safest choice.
Some folks have had success by exporting the CAP configuration files from one printer, tweaking the XML structure, and then pushing it back through FTP or SMB. It can be pretty fragile and might break with firmware updates, so I suggest you test it on a single device first before making changes in production.
CAP feels like it's pushing you to pay for the enterprise solution if you want to avoid these local issues. Your CSV import is really the only supported hack, while everything else seems to involve a lot of reverse engineering or simply resigning to the limitations.
Honestly, save yourself the headache and go with PaperCut. It's a straightforward solution that makes managing these devices much easier.
At your scale, you definitely need some kind of MFP management system. I manage around 650 MFDs and using solutions like Uniflow or Ricoh's own offerings has really simplified things for us. PaperCut is also a solid option.

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