Intermate100 and Intermate101 Print Server Administration Manual 161
Services in “Input Control”: Raw Socket (= “Port 9100" = Reverse Telnet)
and 49100.
Figure 17. Example: Four different Raw Socket Services
Note about the individual examples in
Figure 17.
Example: TCP Port # 1 set to 9100.
Raw Socket is an increasingly common print protocol on IP
networks. Most printing environments that can print Raw
Socket use port 9100 as default, so you should always give at
least one of your TCP Port # settings a port # value = 9100.
Where you want the output directed depends entirely on your
setup. In the example we show the output directed to Logical
Printer 0, which permits no pre-processing, post-processing, or
string substitution, and which always sends output to the Sys-
tem Target Printer (
“System Target Printer” [page108]
).
Example: TCP Port # 2 set to 29100
In the older print servers, it is not possible to choose a network
destination printer directly. The example assumes that output
is to be directed to Network Destination / Network Printer # 3
and that no pre-processing, post-processing or string substitu-
tion is to be performed. Further, the example assumes that log-
ical printer 7 has been defined to send output to network
printer #3 without any special processing.
Example: TCP Port # 3 set to 39100
This example is fully parallel to TCP Port #2. The target is net-
work printer # 4 and logical printer 8 has been set up to reach
this printer without any special processing.
Field:
TCP Port # Port # Value
(a designation) Output To / Logical Printer
(Newer print servers / Older print server)
1 9100 Logical Printer 0 / PR0
2 29100 Network Destination 3 / PR7
3 39100 Network Destination 4 / PR8
4 49100 Logical Printer 1 / PR1