Xerox M24 Manual Suplementario

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TCP/IP Troubleshooting
At the workstation, experiencing the communication problem, perform these tasks:
1.  
Open your Web browser and enter the TCP/IP address of the Printer in the Address or Location field. 
Press ENTER. If the Printer's Internet Services (web pages) begin to display on the workstation, you are 
communicating with the Printer. If NOT, make sure that your web browser is not set to use a proxy 
server and repeat the procedure. If unsuccessful, perform the next step.
2.  
Verify that the workstation has been assigned an IP address, subnet mask, and gateway address by 
running a Command (DOS) prompt, typing ipconfig/all (Windows NT) or winipcfg (Windows 
95/98/Me), and pressing ENTER. If any of the addresses are incorrect or missing, right mouse click on 
the Network Neighborhood icon (My Network Places in Windows Me and 2000) and make sure that the 
TCP/IP protocol is installed and properly configured for IP addressing.
3.  
Run a Command (DOS) prompt on the workstation and perform ping tests to verify successful packet 
transmission first to the workstation's NIC, then to the Gateway (if being used), then to the Printer's NIC. 
To run Ping Tests, at the Command (DOS) prompt, type: ping xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx and press ENTER. Note 
that there is a space between the word "ping" and the first xxx. Let xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx first represent the 
workstation's IP address, then the IP address of the default gateway, and finally the IP address of the 
Printer. If successful, you will receive a reply such as: "Reply from xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx: bytes=32 
time<10ms TTL=128." If you receive "Time Out" or "0 bytes received" notifications, the device being 
pinged is incorrectly configured or malfunctioning.
4.  
If Web browser and Ping Tests are successful but you are still unable to print to the Printer, verify that 
the driver is using the correct LPR Port to print through. On Windows desktops, select StartSettings
Printers, right click on the Printer's icon, and select Properties. Select the Ports Tab (NT4 and 2000) or 
the Details Tab (95/98/Me) and verify that the LPR Port being printed through matches the IP Address 
of the Printer. If the IP address does NOT match, you are printing to the wrong device on the network. 
Either select the correct port from the displayed list, or use the Add Port button to create a new port 
with an IP Address matching that of your Printer.
Note: When you select a port from the list in Windows NT4, make sure that the checkbox next to the 
Port name is selected with a check mark.
5.  
If the correct Port is being used by the driver but you are still unable to print, perform the following 
procedure. In Windows NT 4, right mouse click on the Network Neighborhood icon and verify that 
Microsoft TCP/IP Printing services are installed in the workstation. In Windows 2000, follow the 
instructions for TCP/IP Peer to Peer (LPR) Printing, under the Print Drivers Tab of this guide, to verify 
that Print Services for Unix are installed in the workstation. For Windows 95/98/Me, verify that you 
have properly installed an LPR Print Utility (spooler) on the workstation and that it is currently running.
6.  
Note that access to this Printer's Services can be restricted by Host IP addresses. As this feature could 
cause communications to appear to fail in certain instances, see the Restricting Printer Access 
procedure under the Internet Services Tab of this guide for further details.
7.  
To assure successful printing, make sure that the Printer is configured to support the Page Description 
Language (PDL) being used by your driver. To check the PDL being used by the driver, print a test job 
"to file." Open and view the job in a program such as Notepad. The PDL being used by the driver will be 
displayed in the first few lines of Printer Language. Next, check the Page Description Languages being 
supported by the Printer's ports by following the instructions supplied under the Setting PDL 
Emulations
 procedure in the Internet Services section of this guide. The PDL being used by the driver, 
and the PDL supported by the Port you are printing to, MUST match for successful printing to occur.
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