Adding an EOD Command to the End of Your File
Create an output file (for example, ASCII, PCL, or PostScript file to
disk) and add your organization's standard EOD command (QMS
EOD or HP EOD) to the end of that file.
Sample output file:
Text
Text
Text
Text
%%EndOfDocument
Adding an EOD Command to a Separate File
Create an ASCII text file that contains only the EOD command. For
example, create a DOS batch file listing each print filename followed
by the EOD command filename for each file being printed. Then “run”
the batch file to print your list of files.
Sample DOS batch file:
Command Explanation
Print mktg.doc Job filename
Print end.txt EOD command filename
Print acct.doc Job filename
Print end.txt EOD command filename
If your printer is connected to a network through a PC and the PC is
acting as a print server managing the printing of shared network files,
then your system administrator must create a job separator and
associate it with a print job queue. Different network environments
have different procedures for creating the job separator, such as
initialization sequences, custom banner pages, print job headers, or
print job trailers. The print server does not necessarily send multiple
print jobs to the printer in the order that you queued them to the
printer. The network job separator is accessed with each print job, so
this ensures that network job separation is enforced. See
QMS Crown
Network Notes
for more information on how to create a network job
separator for several commonly used networks.