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¥When logged in to an NDS environment as an NDS Print Server, you should conÞgure the print server with only one NDS Printer object. You specify parameters, such as which port to send data (LPT or COM) by creating special queue name sufÞxes.

The major differences between conÞguring a Kodak printer/NIC to service bindery or NDS queues areÑ

¥When using Bindery queues, users may modify the setting in the printer/NIC called Preferred Server. This refers to the Bindery File Server that holds the conÞguration Þle.

¥When servicing NDS queues, the printer must be conÞgured with a context name, and may be conÞgured (optionally) with a tree name. This can be done with FastManage.

¥When conÞgured for NDS, the printer does not use a conÞguration Þle. It logs into the context where it was conÞgured, locates the printer and queues that it should service.

¥Regarding manual conÞguration of print server, queues, and printers (within PCONSOLE or NWadmin): Bindery print servers are directly attached to bindery print queues. NDS print servers are attached to a single printer, which in turn is potentially attached to many print queues.

When conÞgured to service both Bindery and NDS queues, the NIC does the following:

1.At startup, the NIC tries to locate an NDS server.

2.Once it locates the server, the NIC looks at the context it has been conÞgured with, and tries to log in as print server KDxxxxxx (the xxxs are the six-digit hardware address).

3.Once successful, the NIC gets the printer attribute of that print server, and then gets the list of print queues that the printer should service.

4.The NIC attaches to those print queues and moves on to the next phase.

Note: If a context was not speciÞed in the NIC NVRAM, the NIC will not log into the NDS tree.

5. The NIC then tries to locate normal Bindery Þle servers.

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July 1998

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Kodak Kodak 10/100 Network Interface Card, 3H0610 manual V E L L R E