A friend is trying to find out how to create a network PGP file and install it on all the workstations.
I read the pro and con arguments in the discussion here but there was no hint of how to do it.
From what I can determine - you need to go to each workstation and delete the exising pgp file, create a PGP file on the network and modify the options>files>support to point to the network location of the pgp file.
Is that correct?
Please don't answer with pros and cons.
Solved! Go to Solution.
Solved by PaulMunford. Go to Solution.
Thanks Paul, but they are looking for the pgp file, not the lsp
And it turns out that what I thought was the corrrect method is the correct method - - or at least it works!
Sorry - I didn't explain myself very well. You wanted to know how to install a single PGP without having to visit every machine?
My answer is to set each users Acad.lsp file to load your own 'setup.lsp' file off the network.
Now, when ever you want to make a change on every machine (For example point them toward a single PGP file), you only have to put the relevant code into your 'setup.lsp' and it will be loaded the next time your user starts up AutoCAD.
Does that strategy sound useful?
Thanks for expanding Paul.
It still sounds as if you have to go to each workstation to point to the setup.lsp
Dunno, and not sure how to put the code in to setup.lsp to point to the network PGP file either!
Thanks though
Jeff
You don't need to delete any PGP files. Just ensure the one you want in use is in a folder that is high up in the support file search path. In either case, you will need a method of standardizing the search paths or you're a) walking around touching each computer or b) relying on users to do it for you.
That is what my friend found, he did not rename or otherwise touch his local PGP file, just copied it to a network location and put that location at the top of the search path
The idea is that you network peoples AutoCAD at the time of installation, then you don't need to re-visit peoples machines to push out updates in future. You make changes to the ACAD.lsp file, and it loads in your tool palette's, CUI, block library's or what ever else you want to change.
Here - Let me pass you on to Robert Green. He explains it much better than I do 😉
http://au.autodesk.com/au-online/classes-on-demand/class-catalog/2013/autocad/cm3190