Canon C2880I Printer User Manual


 
Specifying Destinations Using the New Address Tab
2-13
2
Basic Sending Methods
3
Specify each setting press [OK].
If you select [Windows (SMB)] or [NetWare (IPX)] as the server protocol, you can
specify the file server by pressing [Browse]. For instructions on using the Browse
key, see "Using the Browse Key (Windows (SMB))," on p. 2-14, or "Using the
Browse Key (NetWare (IPX))," on p. 2-16.
If you select [Windows (SMB)] as the server protocol, you can specify the file
server by pressing [Host Search]. For instructions on using the Host Server key,
see "Using the Host Search Key (Windows (SMB))," on p. 2-19.
[Host Name]:
Press [Host Name] enter a host name press [OK].
A host name is a name assigned to a host computer that provides services on
the Internet. A specific host name is assigned to each host computer to identify it
on the Internet. In this entry box, enter the name of the file server on the network
as the destination of the send job.
When [FTP] or [WebDAV] is selected as the server protocol, you can also specify
a port number after the host name address by entering a colon (:) and the port
number.
Example: 192.168.100.50:21000
When [FTP] is selected as the server protocol, make sure to enter the same port
number for the Host Name as the one specified for the FTP server to which you
are sending your documents.
When [WebDAV] is selected as the server protocol, the HTTP protocol is used if
you specify 'HTTP://' as the scheme at the start of the host name, and the SSL +
HTTP (HTTPS) protocol is used if you specify 'HTTPS://' as the scheme at the
start of the host name. Specifying 'HTTPS://' as the scheme enables SSL
communications between the server and the machine. However, the route
between the server and the machine is only encrypted, and a server certificate
validity check is not performed using a CA certificate.
WebDAV
Sun Solaris V.2.6 or later,
Red Hat Enterprise Linux
AS/ES/WS 4.0 or later,
Windows 2000 Server,
Windows XP Professional,
or Windows Server 2003
Apache 2.0
Mac OS X Apache 1.3
Windows 2000
Professional/Server
Internet Information Services 5.0
Windows XP Professional Internet Information Services 5.1
Windows Server 2003 Internet Information Services 6.0
Protocol System Requirements Application