Xerox Phaser 790 用户指南

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8.  Setting up the network server
Xerox Phaser 790
8–3
Overview of IPX printing to the Phaser 790
Setting up the Phaser 790 is similar to setting up any other PostScript
printer on the network. The following information is useful for
experienced system administrators.
The Phaser 790 with IPX connections has these characteristics:
 
NetWare 3.x, 4.x and 5.x are supported directly. NetWare 4.x is
also supported through bindery emulation.
 
A minimum connection to the Phaser 790 consists of a NetWare
file server, a NetWare print server, and a NetWare queue.
 
A single directory tree (for NetWare 4.x) and up to eight bindery
servers can be configured simultaneously. This limit is the same
for Ethernet or Token Ring configurations.
 
The Phaser 790 searches for print jobs on one NetWare print
server per bindery server.
 
Each print server can store jobs for any print connection on the
Phaser 790.
 
Windows 95/98 and Windows NT 4.0 workstations (whether a
Novell server is present or not) can use IPX/SPX protocols for
communicating with the printer directly or use Fiery utilities.
NetWare file servers support the creation of print queues, which are
storage areas for print jobs. When a client on a remote workstation
decides to print, the job is directed to a print queue on the NetWare file
server and spooled to the NetWare server disk, freeing up the client
workstation.
The queues on the NetWare server must be named to match the Direct
connection, Print queue, and Hold queue on the printer. The NetWare
queue names should be given one of the following lower case
extensions in English:
_print
_hold
_direct