Multi-Protocol Print Server Network User's Guide
Table Of Contents
- Table of Contents
- 1 Unix Printing 1-1
- 2 TCP/IP Printing 2-1
- 3 Peer to Peer Printing 3-1
- 4 NetBIOS Peer to Peer Printing 4-1
- 5 Configuring Internet Printing for Windows® 5-1
- 6 Novell NetWare Printing 6-1
- 7 Printing From a Macintosh® 7-1
- 8 DLC Printing 8-1
- 9 Web Based Management 9-1
- 10 TCP/IP Configuration 10-1
- 11 Troubleshooting 11-1
- 12 Appendix A-1
- 13 INDEX 1-1
- IMPORTANT INFORMATION: REGULATIONS
- Unix Printing
- TCP/IP Printing
- Printing from Windows NT®4.0, Windows® 2000/XP, LAN Server and Warp Server
- Overview
- Windows NT®4.0 and Windows® 2000/XP (TCP/IP) Configuration
- Windows® 2000/XP Printing (Printer Driver not yet installed)
- Windows® 2000/XP Printing (Printer Driver already installed)
- Windows NT®4.0 Printing
- Windows NT®4.0 Printing: Installing the Brother Peer to Peer Software
- Windows NT®4.0 Printing: Associating to the Printer
- Windows NT®4.0 Printing: Adding a Second Brother LPR Port
- LAN Server, OS/2 Warp Server Configuration
- Other Sources of Information
- Printing from Windows NT®4.0, Windows® 2000/XP, LAN Server and Warp Server
- Peer to Peer Printing
- NetBIOS Peer to Peer Printing
- How to Print Using NetBIOS in Windows® 95/98/Me/2000/XP, Windows NT®4.0, LAN Server and OS/2 Warp Server
- Overview
- Print Server Configuration
- Changing the Workgroup/Domain Name Using TELNET or BRCONFIG or a Web Browser
- NetBIOS Port Monitor for Windows® 95/98/Me/ 2000/XP and Windows NT®4.0
- Installing the Brother NetBIOS Port Monitor
- Associating the Printer
- Adding a Second NetBIOS Print Port
- LAN Server/OS/2 Warp Server Configuration
- Other Sources of Information
- How to Print Using NetBIOS in Windows® 95/98/Me/2000/XP, Windows NT®4.0, LAN Server and OS/2 Warp Server
- Configuring Internet Printing for Windows®
- Internet Printing Installation
- Overview
- Brother Internet Print General Information
- Brother Internet Print: Configuring the Brother Print Server
- Brother Internet Print: Using BRAdmin to Configure the Print Server
- Brother Internet Print: Using a Web Browser to Configure the Print Server
- Brother Internet Print: Using TELNET to Configure the Print Server
- Brother Internet Print: Installing the BIP Software on Windows® 95/98/Me/2000/XP and Windows NT®4.0
- Adding a Second Brother Internet Port
- Windows® 2000/XP IPP Printing
- Specifying a Different URL
- Other Sources of Information
- Internet Printing Installation
- Novell NetWare Printing
- How to Configure Novell NetWare Printing
- Overview
- General Information
- Creating a NDPS Printer Using NWADMIN for NetWare5
- NDPS Manager
- NDPS Broker
- Creating a Printer Agent
- Configuring NetWare 3 and NetWare 4 Systems
- Configuring the Brother Print Server (Queue Server Mode in Bindery Emulation Mode) Using BRAdmin
- Configuring the Brother Print Server (Queue Server Mode in NDS mode) Using BRAdmin
- Configuring the Brother Print Server (Queue Server Mode in NDS Mode) Using Novell NWADMIN and BRAdmin
- Configuring the Brother Print Server (Remote Printer Mode in NDS mode) Using Novell NWAdmin and BRAdmin
- Configuring the Brother Print Server (Queue Server Mode in Bindery Emulation Mode) Using PCONSOLE and BRCONFIG
- Configuring the Brother Print Server (Queue Server Mode in NDS Mode) Using PCONSOLE and BRCONFIG
- Configuring the Brother Print Server (Remote Printer Mode) Using PCONSOLE and BRCONFIG
- Other Sources of Information
- How to Configure Novell NetWare Printing
- Printing From a Macintosh®
- DLC Printing
- Web Based Management
- TCP/IP Configuration
- Assigning TCP/IP Information
- Overview
- Using the Printer Control Panel to Allocate an IP Address (Printers with LCD Panels Only)
- Changing the IP Address Using the BRAdmin Application
- Using BRAdmin and the IPX/SPX Protocol to Set the IP Address
- Using BRAdmin and the TCP/IP Protocol to Set the IP Address
- Using DHCP to Configure the IP Address
- Using APIPA to Configure the IP Address
- Using ARP to Configure the Print Server IP Address
- Using RARP to Configure the IP Address
- Using BOOTP to Configure the IP Address
- Configuring the IP Address with BRCONFIG
- Changing the IP Address Settings with the TELNET Console
- Assigning TCP/IP Information
- Troubleshooting
- Overview
- Installation Problems
- Intermittent Problems
- TCP/IP Troubleshooting
- UNIX Troubleshooting
- Windows NT®4.0/LAN Server (TCP/IP) Troubleshooting
- Windows® 95/98/Me Peer to Peer Print (LPR) Troubleshooting
- Windows® 95/98/Me Peer-to-Peer (HP JetAdmin Compatible Method) Troubleshooting
- Windows® 95/98/Me and Windows NT®4.0 Peer-to- Peer Print (NetBIOS) Troubleshooting
- Brother Internet Print (TCP/IP) Troubleshooting
- Windows® 95/98/Me/2000/XP IPP Troubleshooting
- Novell NetWare Troubleshooting
- AppleTalk Troubleshooting
- DLC/LLC Troubleshooting
- Web Browser Troubleshooting (TCP/IP)
- Appendix
- INDEX
1 - 3 UNIX PRINTING
The actual format of the entry may vary depending on your system,
check your system documentation and also note the format of other
entries in the /etc/hosts file.
In any case, the node name in the /etc/hosts file must match the
node name in the /etc/printcap file.
Some systems such as HP-UX and AIX allow you to enter the IP
address as the host name when setting up the print queue. If this is
the case, you do not need to configure the hosts file.
2
Choose which print server service you want to use. There are
several types of services available on Brother print servers.
Binary services pass data through unmodified and are therefore
required for PCL or PostScript rasterized graphics printouts.
Text services add a carriage return at the end of each line for
proper formatting of UNIX text files (which end in linefeed and
do not have carriage returns). The text service can also be used
for non-rasterized graphics, such as ASCII PostScript graphics
or many types of PCL graphics.
Choose one of the available services (a service name will be
used in step 3):
BINARY_P1 Binary data
TEXT_P1 Text data (CR added)
You may set up multiple print queues on your UNIX host
computer for the same print server, each one with a different
service name (for example, one queue for binary graphics jobs
and one for text jobs).
The node name in this file does not necessarily need to be
the same as the one that is actually configured into the
Brother print server (the name that appears on the printer
settings page), however, it is good practice to make the
names the same. Some operating systems, such as HP-UX,
do not accept the "_" character in the default name, for these
systems you must use a different name).










