Panasonic DP-C106 All in One Printer User Manual


 
Setting Up the Network Server
6–7
Setting Up a NetWare Print Queue for Bindery
For NetWare 3.x and for 4.x or 5.x in emulation mode, the NetWare
print server and print queue for DP-C106 are created and configured
from NetWare Print Console (PCONSOLE), a utility that is stored in the
NetWare Public directory.
As with NDS, create several NetWare entities on a Novell server, then
select them in the Network Setup.
Setting Up NetWare Windows Clients for Printing
Before setting up client workstations for printing, ensure that you
perform Network Setup on the DP-C106 and that the settings reflect
the entities you created in the NetWare administrator utilities.
For printing to the DP-C106, connect all Windows clients to a Novell
NetWare server and permit them to connect to the NetWare print server or
servers on which you defined a print queue.
After the Novell server and the DP-C106 have been set up, client setup
consists of the following:
Installing the networking protocol, binding it to the network
adapter card, and permitting the client to log in to the NetWare file
server.
On Windows 95/98/Me and Windows 2000 workstations, both the
IPX/SPX-compatible protocol and the Client for NetWare
Networks should be loaded from the Network Control Panel.
On Windows NT workstations, Client Service for NetWare
(CSNW) should be installed. Use the CSNW option in the Control
Panel to set printing options and specify a preferred NetWare
server.
Setting up the DP-C106 as a PostScript or PCL printer by
installing a PostScript or PCL printer driver and the DP-C106 PPD
or PDD (PostScript or PCL printer description file).
Adding a network port and connecting the workstation to one or
more NetWare queues that have been defined for the DP-C106.
Refer to the chapter Connecting to the Network for details on how
to connect to Windows 95/98/Me and Windows NT 4.0
workstations
Installing other Fiery software, such as Color Reference files.
Refer to Installing the Fiery Software for Windows and Macintosh
for details.