Ricoh SP 3300D 사용자 설명서

다운로드
페이지 101
TCP/IP environment
4.2
SLP
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. 
In order to locate services on the network, users of network applications 
are required to supply the host name or network address of the device 
that supplies a desired service. However, SLP eliminates the need for a 
user to know the name of a network host supporting a service. Rather, 
the user only needs to supply the desired type of service and set of 
attributes or keywords, which describe the service. 
Based on that description, SLP also resolves the network address of the 
service of the user. Administrators do not need to help clients find new 
services or to remove services when they are no longer available. SLP 
uses multicasting and can work over subnet boundaries.
Configuring SLP
You can configure SLP protocol settings through Web Image Monitor SP 
3300 Series. Select Network Settings > SLP.
• SLP Protocol: You can enable or disable SLP. 
• Port Number: The port number is fixed to 427.
• Scope 1 ~ 3: A scope is a set of services and a string used to group 
resources by location, network, or administrative category. Each 
scope should not be more than 32 characters. 
• Message Type: You can select the outgoing SLP message type sent 
to network devices. The default value is Multicast.
• Multicast Radius: You can specify the maximum number of subnets 
that SLP multicasts can travel across. This value is also called the 
“hop count” or “time-to-live” (TTL). The default value is 255. 
• Registration Lifetime: You can define the time in seconds before the 
Server Agents registration expires.
• Multicast Address: The Multicast Address value is fixed to 
239.255.255.253, 224.0.1.127.
Using SLP
Once Enabled is checked, the network print server works as a Service 
Agent and the User Agent.
Dynamic DNS (DDNS)
DNS (Domain Name System) is used for registration of domain names 
and provides Host names to an IP address resolution service. For printer 
devices, DNS may be utilised for printer domain name registration, so 
that print server clients may refer to the printer by its host name rather 
than by its IP address. Even though a printer’s IP address is changed, all 
clients can operate this printer without reconfiguration. Addressing to a 
printer device by IP address is not convenient and may often go stale if 
an IP address to a device is assigned dynamically via a DHCP server. If 
the DHCP server can provide information about a printer’s changing IP 
address to the DNS server automatically, user convenience is increased. 
The printer’s name will be used as its DNS name.
Configuring DDNS
1
Let the DHCP server provide updated information to the DNS 
server.
2
Configure the same DDNS domain through Web Image Monitor SP 
3300 Series as entered in the DNS server.
If you connect your network printer via a web browser, you can 
enable this by selecting Network Settings > TCP/IP > Dynamic 
DNS Registration
.
3
Set the IP assignment method of your network print server to 
DHCP and reboot the printer.
The DNS server will update its database and users can use the 
printer’s name instead of its IP address.
WINS
Before Dynamic DNS was defined, DNS could only be updated manually 
when DHCP servers automatically provided (or removed) IP addresses. 
As a result, DNS servers often contained obsolete listings. In response, 
Microsoft developed Windows Internet Name Service (WINS) to solve 
this problem for NetBIOS names. 
Microsoft now recommends moving to Dynamic DNS and away from 
WINS. However, many customers including Microsoft maintain WINS 
systems and need devices to interoperate with WINS. So devices must, 
at least for now, support WINS interoperability to allow for dynamic 
NetBIOS name to IP address registration and resolution. 
WINS provides a distributed database for registering and querying 
dynamic NetBIOS names to IP address mapping in a routed network 
environment. This is the best choice for NetBIOS name resolution in 
such a routed network because it is designed to solve the problems that 
occur with name resolution in complex Internet networks.
Configuring WINS
Access Web Image Monitor SP 3300 Series and select Network 
Settings
 > TCP/IP. You will configure two WINS server addresses, the 
Primary WINS Server or the Secondary WINS Server. The default value 
is 0.0.0.0.
In a DHCP server
A DHCP server can support the NBNS (NetBIOS Name Server) option. 
An administrator has to set the WINS server IP address in the NBNS 
option.
1
Set the IP assignment method of your network print server to 
DHCP.
2
Reboot the print server.
The WINS server will update the printer's NetBIOS name in its 
database. Users can use the printer name instead of its IP address.