Lexmark W810 Guia Do Utilizador

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Connectivity and network management
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Restarting port rotation
How port rotation restarts after a print job has completed depends on a number of factors:
The port being used
Whether or not the input buffer for that port is completely empty
How the print job is terminated
The critical factor in restarting port rotation is whether or not the input buffer for the port 
currently printing is completely empty after the current job has completed. If the input 
buffer 
is not empty, the printer does not restart port rotation. The print job next in queue 
on the current port is printed. If the input buffer 
is empty and the print job is correctly ter-
minated, port rotation starts immediately. If the input buffer is empty and the print job was 
not correctly terminated, the printer prints whatever is left of the current job in the print 
buffer. It then waits for a set period of time after which, if no more data is received on the 
port, it immediately restarts port rotation.
As soon as a network port or the LocalTalk port has control of the printer, port rotation is 
disabled. As soon as the network port or LocalTalk port has completed a job, it sends the 
printer an End-of-Job command. When the printer receives the End-of-Job command, the 
printer correctly terminates the current job. If the input buffer is not empty, the printer does 
not restart port rotation. The next print job in the queue on the current port is printed. If 
the input buffer 
is empty, port rotation starts immediately.
Note: If more than one print server is installed, each is treated independently.