User guide
Table Of Contents
- Contents
- About This Document
- Introduction
- Installation
- Getting Started
- Before You Begin
- Printing a Configuration Label — External ZebraNet 10/100 Print Server
- Printing a Network Configuration Label — Internal ZebraNet 10/100 Print Server and Wireless Print Servers
- Configuration of Wireless Securities
- View Wireless Status through the Control Panel
- Determining the Active Print Server
- Assigning an IP Address on any Print Server
- Setting and Monitoring Alerts on any Print Server
- .
- Checking Print Server Configuration Settings
- Enabling Protocols
- Defaulting ALL Print Servers
- Using WebView
- Using ZebraNet Bridge
- Using a ZPL Command
- Defaulting the ZebraNet 10/100 Print Server on the 105SL, S4M, PAX4 and External Devices
- Defaulting the Wireless Print Server on the S4M
- Defaulting the Print Servers on the ZM400 and ZM600 Printers
- Defaulting the Print Servers on the ZP Series, LP/TLP 2824 Plus, and G-Series Printers
- Defaulting the Print Servers on the HC100 Printers
- Defaulting the Print Servers on the 105SL, PAX4, Xi4, and ZE500 Printers
- Defaulting the Print Servers on the ZT210 and ZT220 Printers
- Defaulting the Print Servers on the ZT230 Printers
- Printing Queues
- Using Printing Protocols
- ZebraLink WebView
- Print Server Web Pages
- Control Panel
- Hardware Troubleshooting
- Troubleshooting the External 10/100 Print Server
- Troubleshooting the Internal ZebraNet 10/100 Print Server
- Troubleshooting the Wireless Print Server
- ZebraNet Bridge Discovery or Configuration Problems
- Unable to Print
- Unable to Configure Device
- HP JetAdmin or HP Web JetAdmin
- Wireless Error Messages
- General Wireless Issues
- Encryption and Authentication Issues
- IP Issues
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Glossary
- Index

02/28/2012 P1043301-002
Glossary
10BASE-T A type of Ethernet that uses unshielded twisted pair cable.
100BASE-T A type of Ethernet that can transmit 100Mb of data per second with a
twisted-pair cable.
ARP The standard TCP/IP method for determining the actual network address of a device
based on its IP address.
ASCII A standard for the binary representation of characters.
BOOTP BOOTP (Bootstrap Protocol) is a protocol that lets a network user be automatically
configured (receive an IP address) and have an operating system booted (initiated) without
user involvement. The BootP server automatically configures the following information: IP
address, gateway, subnet, system name, name server, and more from a pool of pre-determined
addresses for a certain duration of time. BootP is the basis for a more advanced network
manager protocol, the DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol).
broadcast In a network, a situation when all destinations on the network receive a given
packet.
client A workstation or PC in a client/server environment.
community For SNMP, a relationship between an agent and a set of SNMP managers that
defines security characteristics. The community concept is a local one, defined at the agent.
Each community is given a unique community name.
current mode (parallel port) A mode that the printer and print server negotiate.
DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) DHCP is an alternative to another
network IP management protocol, Bootstrap Protocol (BOOTP). Like BOOTP, DHCP can
configure an IP address, gateway, subnet, system name, and name server. When speaking
about any print server, BOOTP, and DHCP configure the same options.