Konica Minolta 4750dn Reference Guide

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Network Printing
6-12
LLTD
The acronym for Link Layer Topology Discovery, which is a technology inves-
tigating how the devices on the network are connected. Network devices with 
this technology are recognized by Windows Vista/Server 2008 on the net-
work, and displayed as icons configured on the network map of Windows 
Vista.
LPD/LPR
LPD/LPR (Line Printer Daemon/Line Printer Request) is a platform-
independent printing protocol that runs over TCP/IP. Originally implemented 
for BSD UNIX, its use has spread into the desktop world and is now an 
industry standard. 
SLP
Traditionally, in order to locate services on the network, users had to supply 
the host name or network address of the machine providing the desired ser-
vice. This has created many administrative problems. 
However, SLP (Service Location Protocol) simplifies the discovery and use of 
network resources such as printers by automating a number of network ser-
vices. It provides a framework that allows networking applications to discover 
the existence, location, and configuration of networked services.
With SLP users no longer need to know the names of network hosts. Instead, 
they need to know only the description of the service they are interested in. 
Based on this description, SLP is able to return the URL of the desired 
service. 
Unicast, Multicast, and Broadcast
SLP is a unicast and a multicast protocol. This means that messages can be 
sent to one agent at a time (unicast) or to all agents (that are listening) at the 
same time (multicast). However, a multicast is not a broadcast. In theory, 
broadcast messages are “heard” by every node on the network. Multicast 
differs from broadcast because multicast messages are only “heard” by the 
nodes on the network that have “joined the multicast group.” 
For obvious reasons network routers filter almost all broadcast traffic. This 
means that broadcasts that are generated on one subnet will not be “routed” 
or forwarded to any of the other subnets connected to the router (from the 
router’s perspective, a subnet is all machines connected to one of its ports). 
Multicasts, on the other hand, are forwarded by routers. Multicast traffic from 
a given group is forwarded by routers to all subnets that have at least one 
machine that is interested in receiving the multicast for that group.