This guide is provided for information purposes only. All information included herein is subject to change without notice. Samsung Electronics is not responsible for any damages, direct or indirect, arising from or related to use of this manual. © 2005 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. All rights reserved. • Samsung logo and SyncThruTM are trademarks of Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd.
CONTENTS 1. Getting started Introduction .......................................................................................................................... Supported network environments ............................................................................................. Samsung Network Printer Card ................................................................................................ Package contents ................................................................................
7. Appendix Specifications ........................................................................................................................ Wireless specifications ............................................................................................................ OpenSSL Statements .............................................................................................................. OpenSSL License .....................................................................................
United States of America Wireless devices that may be in your system are only qualified for use in the European Union or associated areas if a CE mark with a Notified Body Registration Number and the Alert Symbol is on the system label. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Intentional emitter per FCC Part 15 The power output of the wireless device or devices that may be embedded in you printer is well below the RF exposure limits as set by the European Commission through the R&TTE directive.
Some circumstances require restrictions n wireless devices. Examples of common restrictions are listed below: Radio frequency wireless communication can interfere with equipment on commercial aircraft. Current aviation regulations require wireless devices to be turned off while traveling in an airplane. IEEE 802.11 (also known as wireless Ethernet) and Bluetooth communication devices are examples of devices that provide wireless communication.
1 Operating system Getting started Network environment Printing protocol Unix AT&T system V (Rel 4.2), BSD4.3, HP-UX (Rel 9.x & Rel 10.x), SCO 5.x, SUNOS 5.5, Sparc or Solaris 2.5. TCP/IP, LPD (LPR) See Chapter 3, “TCP/IP environment.” Novell NetWare NetWare versions 3.x, 4.x, 5.x, 6.x IPX/SPX See Chapter 4, “NetWare environment.” Macintosh Macintosh 8.6 ~ 9.2, 10.1 ~ 10.3, or higher TCP/IP, EtherTalk, Bonjour See Chapter 5, “EtherTalk environment.
System requirements The following hardware is required to configure a Samsung printer for network applications. Computer Requirements IBM compatible PC • 80486 CPU or higher • Minimum of 16 MB of RAM • 2 MB of free disk space Macintosh • PowerPC 68020 or higher • Minimum of 8 MB of RAM • 2 MB of free disk space Installing your Network Printer Card Before installing the Samsung Network Printer Card, you must have administrator or root privileges on the local system.
2 Uninstalling software Programs supplied on the Network Utilities CD You should remove the Network utilities if you are upgrading the software or if the installation fails. NOTE: Close all programs before uninstalling software. The CD-ROM supplied with your printer card provides you with: • SyncThru Web Admin Service: A web-based printer management solution for network administrators.
Using SetIP IP address setup 1 Before using your network print server in your network, you must set TCP/IP addresses for the print server. You will need your printer card’s MAC address, IP address, subnet mask, and gateway address. First, check with your network administrator for the TCP/IP addresses. From the Windows Start menu, select Programs Æ Samsung Network Printer Utilities Æ SetIP Æ SetIP. The program automatically detects and displays new and configured print servers on your network.
3 5 Click Devices Æ Add device. Enter your print server’s TCP/IP addresses and click Apply. If you click Devices, SWAS would search out the printer connected to network. Thus you need to wait for a while. 4 Enter the IP address or DNS name of the network printer card and click OK. Your network print server is added to the device list. NOTE: You can set SyncThru Web Admin Service to automatically detect print servers on the network.
3 HTTP TCP/IP environment Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) is an application layer protocol for distributed, collaborative, hypermedia information systems. It is a generic, stateless protocol which can be used for many tasks beyond its use for hypertext, such as with name servers and distributed object management systems. You are using HTTP when you connect your network printer via a web browser.
SLP Dynamic DNS (DDNS) Service Location Protocol (SLP) is an Internet standard network protocol that provides a framework to allow networking applications to discover the existence, location, and configuration of networked services in enterprise networks, such as printers, Web servers, fax machines, video cameras, file systems, backup devices (tape drives), databases, directories, mail servers, and calendars.
Configuring WINS means a device can dynamically join a network, obtain an IP address, convey its capabilities, and learn about the presence and capabilities of other devices. DHCP and DNS servers are optional and are used only if available on the network, while a device can leave a network smoothly and automatically without leaving any unwanted state issues behind. Access SyncThru Web Service and select Network Settings Æ TCP/IP.
LPR port Printing protocols Before setting the network printing ports, you must install the printer driver with the local port (LPT) on the system. Refer to your printer user’s guide. LPD, Line Printer Daemon, is the protocol associated with lineprinter spooling services. Users can use the printing service from LPD running on a Samsung network print server through the LPR port. Most operating systems, such as Microsoft Windows NT/2000/XP/2003, Linux, and Unix, support LPR port printing.
5 Click New Port. 6 6 Enter the IP address or DNS name of the printer and the name of a user-defined print queue. 7 Click OK. 8 Follow the onscreen instructions to complete installation. IPP port Internet Printing Protocol (IPP) allows printing across the Internet, meaning that you can send a print job to your printer from a remote place if you are an Internet user, no matter what operating system you use or where you are.
Configuring a Windows client Additional functions After the network administrator has configured the network print server, each printer user must install the printer driver and set the print port to Samsung IPP 1.1 Port Monitor. The following are additional functions you can use through SyncThru Web Service or SyncThru Web Admin Service. NOTE: Before following the steps below, each printer user should install the printer driver.
3 Configure an IP filter. • IP Filtering: You can enable or disable IP filtering. • IP Address1 ~ Address10: You can enter filtered IP addresses. Users having the IP addresses set here are able to access the network print server. 4 Click Apply. Only system administrators or authorised users can set, via SyncThru Web Service, IP addresses that can access the device. Up to 10 addresses or ranges of address choices can be made and set.
4 NetWare environment Configuring NetWare NetWare Setup allows you to enter the names of the NetWare objects that are concerned with network print jobs. The NetWare print queues must be assigned to the NetWare print servers you have set up for printing to the network printer card. When you enable NetWare Setup, you can set up NDS (Novell Directory Services), Bindery Services, or both. NDS is used with NetWare 4.x/5.x/6.x; Bindery Services are used with NetWare 3.x or with NetWare 4.x/5.x/6.
NOTE: Use NDS Setup if your network uses NetWare 4.x/5.x/ 6.x in native mode. Use Bindery Setup if your network uses NetWare 3.X or uses NetWare 4.x/5.x/6.x in bindery emulation mode. Printing in NetWare To print to your network printer on a NetWare workstation, you need to add a print queue. NOTE: To use bindery emulation, you must log on to a Bindery server as an administrator. In the NDS mode, log on to target text of the NDS tree where you have administrator privileges.
5 • Last Error Occurred: shows the last error. EtherTalk environment • RTMP: allows you to set the time in seconds after which the routing table entry maintained by the RTMP protocol times out. EtherTalk is AppleTalk used in an Ethernet network. This protocol is widely used in Macintosh network environments. Microsoft Windows system also supports this protocol. Like TCP/IP, EtherTalk also provides packet transmission and routing functionality. • ZIP (current zone): shows the AppleTalk Zone name.
TCP/IP printing Bonjour printer Apple added TCP/IP printing to all versions including and after OS 8.6. Usually used in Macintosh networks to search for network devices, Bonjour consists of IPv4 Link-Local Addressing, Multicast DNS, and DNS Service Discovery. Known as zero configuration networking, Bonjour uses industry standard IP protocols to allow devices to automatically find each other without the need to enter IP addresses or configure DNS servers. NOTE: Ensure that the Macintosh has version 8.
6 • Infrastructure mode: In Infrastructure mode, wireless devices or workstations communicate with each other through an access point (AP). The access point acts like a hub, providing connectivity for wireless computers. In Infrastructure mode, wireless devices can communicate with each other or can communicate with a wired network. On Apple networks, Infrastructure mode is called Airport Network mode.
IEEE 802.11 authentication • EAP-MSCHAPv2: EAP-MSCHAPv2 uses the MS-CHAPv2 authentication protocol to create a strong encryption key initially for MMPE (Microsoft Point-to-Point Encryption) and to use a different encryption key during communication. IEEE 802.11 authentication is a process of identifying an individual who is attempting to access a wireless LAN or an access point. The IEEE 802.
Network Printer Card, a root certificate must be in the form of Base64 Encoded X.509 with a .cer extension and be less than 3,072 bytes. You can check the current network settings with the Network Configuration page. For details, please refer to the printer user's guide. • Client Certificate: A client certificate is used to validate the identity of the Samsung Network Printer Card from a network authentication server, such as RADIUS, while the EAP-TLS authentication method is performed.
Wireless basic settings Wireless security settings These are the basic parameters required to make wireless connections found on the Wireless page of SyncThru Web Service. Click Apply after changing parameters. This section describes how to configure wireless security for your wireless network. The Samsung Network Printer Card supports several security features, such as static WEP, IEEE 802.
Security mode Authentication method employed Static WEP Open System, Shared key, or optionally 802.1x authentication (EAP-MD5 or EAPMSCHAPv2) if needed. Static WEP encryption Enhanced Security WPA-PSK Using dynamic key management TKIP, and AES EAP-TLS EAP-TTLS PEAP • WEP Encryption: Choose either 64-bit WEP or 128-bit WEP. If your network uses WEP encryption keys, you must configure the encryption keys.
• Inner Authentication Protocol: EAP-TTLS and PEAP allow for standard RADIUS protocols within their inner tunnel. User authentication is performed by a password. The password credentials are transported in a securely encrypted tunnel that is established using the server certificate. EAPTTLS supports EAP-MD5, CHAP, MS-CHAP, and MS-CHAPv2. PEAP supports EAP-MD5 and MSCHAPv2 as inner authentications. NOTE: You can make a certificate into a file using Windows Console: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
5 6 Install a root certificate. A root certificate must be issued by the Certificate Authority (CA) who signed the authentication server’s certificate and be in the form of Base64 Encoded X.509 with a .cer extension. It must also be less than 3,072 bytes. Install a client certificate. A client certificate must be issued by the trusted Certificate Authority (CA) and is used for the RADIUS server to validate print server's identity. It must be in the form of PKCS #12 / Personal Information Exchange with a .
7 Appendix Wireless specifications Items Frequency band* Specifications Items Supported networks Specifications • Windows: 98, NT, ME, 2000, XP, 2003 • Linux: Red Hat 8.0 ~ 9.0, Fedora Core 1 ~ 3, Mandrake 9.0 ~ 10.2, SuSE 8.2 ~ 9.2 • Unix: AT&T system V (Rel 4.2), BSD4.3, HPUX (Rel 9.x & Rel 10.x), SCO 5.x, SUNOS 5.5, Sparc or Solaris 2.5. • Novel NetWare: NetWare versions 3.x, 4.x, 5.x, 6.x • Macintosh: Macintosh 8.6 ~ 9.2, 10.1 ~ 10.
ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. OpenSSL Statements This product includes cryptographic software written by Eric Young (eay@cryptsoft.com). This product includes software written by Tim Hudson (tjh@cryptsoft.com). OpenSSL License Copyright © 1998-2000 The OpenSSL Project. All rights reserved.
INDEX LPR port 3.4 N NetWare adding a printer 4.2 adding a queue 4.2 Bindery configuration 4.1 configuring Netware 4.1 NDS configuration 4.1 printing architecture 4.1 Network administration software, install 2.1 Network environments, supported 1.1 A Ad hoc (peer-to-peer) mode 6.1 B Bonjour 5.2 BOOTP 3.1 C Certificates client certificate 6.3, 6.6 making files 6.6 root certificate 6.2, 6.6 Channels 6.1, 6.4 Client certificate 6.3 installing 6.6 P D S PEAP 6.2, 6.4, 6.7 R Resetting 6.4, 6.
channels 6.1, 6.4, 7.1 Enhanced Security 6.4, 6.5 frequency 6.4 IEEE 802.11 authentication 6.2 IEEE 802.1x 6.2 operation mode 6.1, 6.4 security settings 6.4 SSID 6.1, 6.4 Static WEP 6.4 WEP encryption 6.2 WPA (Wi-Fi Protected Access) 6.2 Wireless specifications 7.1 WPA-PSK 6.4, 6.
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