Network User's Guide
Table Of Contents
- Network User’s Guide
- Introduction
- IMPORTANT INFORMATION: REGULATIONS
- Table of Contents
- 1 Unix Printing
- 2 TCP/IP Printing
- Printing from Windows NT® 4.0, Windows® 2000/XP, LAN Server and Warp Server
- Overview
- Windows NT® 4.0 and Windows® 2000/XP (TCP/IP) Configuration
- Windows® 2000/XP Printing (Printer Driver not yet installed)
- Windows® 2000/XP Printing (Printer Driver already installed)
- Windows NT® 4.0 Printing
- Windows NT® 4.0 Printing Installing the Brother Peer to Peer Software
- Windows NT® 4.0 Printing Associating to the Printer
- Windows NT® 4.0 Printing Adding a Second Brother LPR Port
- Other Sources of Information
- Printing from Windows NT® 4.0, Windows® 2000/XP, LAN Server and Warp Server
- 3 Peer to Peer Printing
- 4 NetBIOS Peer to Peer Printing
- How to Print Using NetBIOS in Windows® 95/98/Me/2000/XP, Windows NT® 4.0, LAN Server and OS/2 Warp Server
- 5 Configuring Internet Printing for Windows®
- Internet Printing Installation
- Overview
- Brother Internet Print General Information
- Brother Internet Print: Configuring the Brother Print/Fax Server
- Brother Internet Print: Using BRAdmin Professional utility to Configure the Print Server
- Brother Internet Print: Using a Web Browser to Configure the Print Server
- Brother Internet Print: Installing the BIP software on Windows® 95/98/Me/2000/XP and Windows NT® 4.0
- Adding a Second Brother Internet Port
- Windows® 2000/XP IPP Printing
- Specifying a Different URL
- Other Sources of Information
- Internet Printing Installation
- 6 Novell NetWare Printing
- How to Configure Novell NetWare Printing
- Overview
- General Information
- Creating a NDPS Printer Using NWADMIN for NetWare5
- NDPS Manager
- NDPS Broker
- Creating a Printer Agent
- Configuring NetWare 3 and NetWare 4 systems
- Creating a Network Print Server (Bindery Queue Server) using BRAdmin Professional utility
- Creating a Network Print Server (NDS Queue Server) using BRAdmin Professional utility
- Creating a Network Print Server (NDS Queue Server) using Novell NWADMIN and BRAdmin Professional utility
- Creating a Network Print Server (NDS Remote Printer) using Novell NWAdmin and BRAdmin Professional utility
- Other Sources of Information
- How to Configure Novell NetWare Printing
- 7 Printing from a Macintosh®
- Printing from a Macintosh® Using AppleTalk® and TCP/IP or Simple Network Configuration capabilities
- Overview
- Macintosh® Configuration (Mac OS® 8.6 - 9.2)
- How to Select the Print Server (AppleTalk/EtherTalk)
- How to Select the Print Server (TCP/IP)
- Macintosh Configuration (Mac OS® X 10.1-10.2.1 or greater)
- How to Select the Print Server (AppleTalk/EtherTalk)
- How to Select the Print Server (TCP/IP)
- Changing the Configuration
- Other Sources of Information
- Printing from a Macintosh® using Simple Network Configuration capabilities of Mac OS® X
- Printing from a Macintosh® Using AppleTalk® and TCP/IP or Simple Network Configuration capabilities
- 8 DLC Printing
- 9 Web Based Management
- 10 Front Panel Setup Menu
- 11 TCP/IP Configuration
- Assigning TCP/IP Information
- Overview
- Using the machine control panel to allocate an IP address (Models with LCD panels only)
- Changing the IP Address using the BRAdmin Professional utility
- Using BRAdmin Professional utility and the IPX/ SPX Protocol to set the IP address
- Using BRAdmin Professional utility and the TCP/ IP Protocol to set the IP address
- Using DHCP to Configure the IP address
- Using APIPA to Configure the IP Address
- Using ARP to Configure the Print/Fax Server IP Address
- Using RARP to Configure the IP Address
- Using BOOTP to Configure the IP Address
- Assigning TCP/IP Information
- 12 Internet FAX (MFC Only)
- 13 Troubleshooting
- Overview
- Installation problems
- Resetting the Print/Fax Sever back to factory settings (Test Switch)
- Intermittent Problems
- TCP/IP Troubleshooting
- UNIX Troubleshooting
- Windows NT® 4.0/LAN Server (TCP/IP) Troubleshooting
- Windows® 95/98/Me Peer to Peer Print (LPR) Troubleshooting
- Windows® 95/98/Me Peer-to-Peer (HP JetAdmin compatible method) Troubleshooting
- Windows® 95/98/Me/2000/XP and Windows NT® 4.0 Peer-to-Peer Print (NetBIOS) Troubleshooting
- Brother Internet Print (TCP/IP) Troubleshooting
- Windows® 95/98/Me/2000/XP IPP Troubleshooting
- Novell NetWare Troubleshooting
- AppleTalk Troubleshooting
- DLC/LLC Troubleshooting
- Web Browser Troubleshooting (TCP/IP)
- Internet Fax Troubleshooting
- 14 Brother Internet Fax Printing Software
- Appendix
- INDEX
CONFIGURING INTERNET PRINTING FOR WINDOWS
®
5 - 2
5
Windows
®
95/98/Me users can send print jobs using the IPP
protocol via Windows
®
2000 computer, provided that the
Microsoft Internet Print Services software is installed on the
client PC, Internet Information Server (IIS) is installed and
running on the server and that the client PC is using version 4
or later of Microsoft Internet Explorer.
Brother Internet Print General Information
The BIP software is installed using a standard Windows
®
95/98/Me/
2000/XP and Windows NT
®
4.0 Installation Wizard. It creates a
virtual port on the Windows
®
95/98/Me/2000/XP and Windows NT
®
4.0 PC that operates in a similar way to the standard LPT1 printer
port from the application program point of view. The user can use the
Windows
®
95/98/Me/2000/XP and Windows NT
®
4.0 Print Manager
to create a printer that uses this port along with a standard Windows
®
95/98/Me/2000/XP and Windows NT
®
4.0-compatible printer. Any
Windows
®
95/98/Me/2000/XP and Windows NT
®
4.0 applications
program can therefore print to this printer (and hence to the virtual
port) without modification or operational procedure.
When a job is printed to the BIP virtual port, it is actually MIME-
encoded (converted to a standard Internet E-mail message) and sent
out to a Brother Print/Fax server at the remote location. This means
that BIP is compatible with most common E-mail software packages.
The only requirement is that the E-mail server be capable of sending
E-mail message over the Internet.
In more detail, the procedure works in the following way:
■
If you are connected to a Local Area Network, the E-mail message
is passed to the E-mail server, which in turn transmits the
message out over the Internet using the SMTP protocol (Simple
Mail Transport Protocol) to the remote Print/Fax server.
■
If you are connecting via a modem directly to an Internet Service
Provider (ISP), the ISP handles the routing of the E-mail to the
remote Print/Fax server.