Lexmark W810 用户指南

下载
页码 236
Managing memory
173
Occasionally, however, circumstances can prevent a spooled job from printing. This may 
happen if:
An incoming print job is larger than the free space available in the job buffering 
partition.
The printer deletes the job from the hard disk. 
Someone selects Cancel Job from the Job Menu while a job is being spooled.
This flushes the current job. None of the remaining jobs on the disk or in the link 
buffers is deleted. They are printed after the printer resets. 
A job stored on the disk never receives a correct End-of-Job command.
If the Jam Recovery, Page Protect, and Collation features are normally set on in 
your standard printer configuration, they should be left on when job buffering is 
enabled. Otherwise, the job buffering code does not receive a correct End-of-Job 
command in the event of an error. The job is considered incomplete and is not 
printed.
To flush jobs already stored on the disk, you must issue the appropriate NPA commands 
through MarkVision. You cannot delete jobs stored on the disk from the operator panel. 
Moving a disk from one printer to another
Unlike the majority of printer settings, job buffering settings are stored directly on the hard 
disk, not in the printer’s nonvolatile memory. Therefore, if you remove a disk from one 
printer and install it in another printer, the job buffering settings are automatically estab-
lished for the new printer.
Suppose, for example, that you set a 60% partition for job buffering and then enabled the 
function on the parallel and network ports. If you turn off the printer and transfer the disk 
to another printer, those settings automatically take effect on the new printer. The first 
printer no longer has job buffering enabled on any port.
This means that if a printer fails, you can remove the hard disk, place the disk in another 
printer, and print the jobs that are stored on the disk.