Black Box Network Card LE3700A R2 User Manual

SEPTEMBER 1999  
LE3700A-R2  
Ethernet Print Server  
1 2 V  
1 0 B A S E - T  
# A U I  
POWER  
POLARITY  
GOOD LINK  
ETHERNET  
VER  
PRINT SER  
MP-1  
OK  
NETWORK  
ARALLEL  
P
SERIAL  
SERIAL  
ARALLEL  
P
CUSTOMER  
SUPPORT  
INFORMATION  
Order toll-free in the U.S.: Call 877-877-BBOX (outside U.S. call 724-746-5500)  
FREE technical support 24 hours a day, 7 days a week: Call 724-746-5500 or fax 724-746-0746  
Mailing address: Black Box Corporation, 1000 Park Drive, Lawrence, PA 15055-1018  
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ETHERNET PRINT SERVER  
NORMAS OFICIALES MEXICANAS (NOM)  
ELECTRICAL SAFETY STATEMENT  
INSTRUCCIONES DE SEGURIDAD  
1. Todas las instrucciones de seguridad y operación deberán ser leídas antes de  
que el aparato eléctrico sea operado.  
2. Las instrucciones de seguridad y operación deberán ser guardadas para  
referencia futura.  
3. Todas las advertencias en el aparato eléctrico y en sus instrucciones de  
operación deben ser respetadas.  
4. Todas las instrucciones de operación y uso deben ser seguidas.  
5. El aparato eléctrico no deberá ser usado cerca del agua—por ejemplo, cerca  
de la tina de baño, lavabo, sótano mojado o cerca de una alberca, etc..  
6. El aparato eléctrico debe ser usado únicamente con carritos o pedestales que  
sean recomendados por el fabricante.  
7. El aparato eléctrico debe ser montado a la pared o al techo sólo como sea  
recomendado por el fabricante.  
8. Servicio—El usuario no debe intentar dar servicio al equipo eléctrico más allá  
a lo descrito en las instrucciones de operación. Todo otro servicio deberá ser  
referido a personal de servicio calificado.  
9. El aparato eléctrico debe ser situado de tal manera que su posición no  
interfiera su uso. La colocación del aparato eléctrico sobre una cama, sofá,  
alfombra o superficie similar puede bloquea la ventilación, no se debe colocar  
en libreros o gabinetes que impidan el flujo de aire por los orificios de  
ventilación.  
10. El equipo eléctrico deber ser situado fuera del alcance de fuentes de calor  
como radiadores, registros de calor, estufas u otros aparatos (incluyendo  
amplificadores) que producen calor.  
11. El aparato eléctrico deberá ser connectado a una fuente de poder sólo del  
tipo descrito en el instructivo de operación, o como se indique en el aparato.  
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NOM STATEMENT  
12. Precaución debe ser tomada de tal manera que la tierra fisica y la polarización  
del equipo no sea eliminada.  
13. Los cables de la fuente de poder deben ser guiados de tal manera que no  
sean pisados ni pellizcados por objetos colocados sobre o contra ellos,  
poniendo particular atención a los contactos y receptáculos donde salen del  
aparato.  
14. El equipo eléctrico debe ser limpiado únicamente de acuerdo a las  
recomendaciones del fabricante.  
15. En caso de existir, una antena externa deberá ser localizada lejos de las lineas  
de energia.  
16. El cable de corriente deberá ser desconectado del cuando el equipo no sea  
usado por un largo periodo de tiempo.  
17. Cuidado debe ser tomado de tal manera que objectos liquidos no sean  
derramados sobre la cubierta u orificios de ventilación.  
18. Servicio por personal calificado deberá ser provisto cuando:  
A: El cable de poder o el contacto ha sido dañado; u  
B: Objectos han caído o líquido ha sido derramado dentro del aparato; o  
C: El aparato ha sido expuesto a la lluvia; o  
D: El aparato parece no operar normalmente o muestra un cambio en su  
desempeño; o  
E: El aparato ha sido tirado o su cubierta ha sido dañada.  
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ETHERNET PRINT SERVER  
TRADEMARKS USED IN THIS MANUAL  
®
IBM is a registered trademark of International Business Machines  
Corporation.  
®
HP is a registered trademark of Hewlett-Packard.  
DEC™, VMS™, ULTRIX™, LAT™, and MicroVAX™ are trademarks of  
Digital Equipment Corporation.  
LocalTalk™and EtherTalk™ are trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc.  
®
®
®
®
®
®
Macintosh , AppleTalk , TokenTalk , Apple , PostScript and LaserWriter  
are registered trademarks of Apple Computer, Inc.  
®
Centronics is a registered trademark of Centronics Corporation.  
®
Dataproducts is a registered trademark of Dataproducts Corporation.  
®
®
NOVELL and NetWare are registered trademarks of Novell Incorporated.  
®
UNIX is a registered trademark of AT&T.  
Any other trademarks mentioned in this manual are acknowledged to be the property of the  
trademark owners.  
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TABLE OF CONTENTS  
Contents  
Chapter  
Page  
1. Specifications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7  
2. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8  
2.1 Description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8  
2.2 Protocols Supported . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9  
2.3 Additional Software You May Need . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9  
2.4 EPS Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10  
2.5 Printing from the Host to the EPS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10  
3. Installation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12  
3.1 How Do I Know It’s Working? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15  
3.2 Power-Up Troubleshooting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15  
4. Host Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17  
4.1 NetWare Host Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17  
4.2 TCP/IP Host Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .23  
4.3 Optional RTEL Functionality . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .25  
4.4 AppleTalk Host Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .25  
4.5 LAT Host Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .26  
4.6 Troubleshooting the Printing Process . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .28  
5. Protocol Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .31  
5.1 NetWare . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32  
5.2 TCP/IP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32  
5.3 AppleTalk . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .33  
5.4 LAT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .34  
6. EPS Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .36  
6.1 Server Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .36  
6.2 Passwords . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .37  
6.3 Port Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .38  
6.4 Service Settings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .38  
6.5 NetWare Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .40  
6.6 TCP/IP Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .40  
6.7 AppleTalk Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .40  
6.8 LAT Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .41  
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ETHERNET PRINT SERVER  
Contents (continued)  
Chapter  
Page  
7. UNIX/RTEL Host Setup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .43  
7.1 Reverse Telnet Background . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .43  
7.2 Installing the Reverse Telnet Software . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .45  
7.3 Reverse Telnet for Unsupported UNIX Machines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .45  
7.4 Installation Procedure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .45  
7.5 Setting Up the RTEL Interfaces . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .46  
7.6 Creating RTEL Print Queues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .47  
7.7 Deleting RTEL Print Queues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .49  
7.8 Creating RTEL Pseudo-Devices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .50  
7.9 Queuing with the RTEL Software . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .51  
7.10 RTEL Troubleshooting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .52  
7.11 Connecting to a Specific Port Using Telnet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .53  
Appendix A: RJ-45 Adapter Pinout . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .54  
Appendix B: Cable Limits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .56  
Appendix C: Power-Up Tests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .57  
Appendix D: Network Logins . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .60  
Appendix E: Quick-Start Guide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .62  
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CHAPTER 1: Specifications  
1. Specifications  
Protocol — NetWare IPX/SPX 2.2 or 3.x, TCP/IP, AppleTalk, LAT  
System Requirements — Ethernet-based network running one or  
more of the following: NetWare, TCP/IP,  
AppleTalk, or LAT  
Logical Connections — Any combination of NetWare, TCP/IP, AppleTalk,  
or LAT  
Number of Lines — 1 serial and 1 parallel  
Serial Line Formats — Characters: 7 or 8 data bits; Stop Bits: 1 or 2;  
Parity: Odd, even, mark, space, or none  
Data Rates — 300 to 64K baud  
Flow Control — X-ON/X-OFF and or hardware (RTS/CTS)  
Modem Control — 4 modem control lines, DSR/DTR and RTS/CTS  
Environment — Operating Temperature: 41 to 122°F (5 to 50°C); Storage  
Temperature: -40 to +151°F (-40 to +66°C); Heat Dissipation:  
10 watts  
Indicators — (7) LEDs: Power, Polarity, Good Link, OK, Network,  
Parallel, Serial  
Connectors — (1) DB25 female for Centronics or Dataproducts parallel,  
(1) DB15 female AUI, (2) RJ-45 (one RS-423 [RS-232C  
compatible] for the serial link, and one for the 10BASE-T  
network connection)  
Power — 12.7–18 VDC, 1 amp (AC converter included)  
Size — 0.9"H x 3"W x 5.3"D (2.3 x 7.7 x 13.5 cm)  
Weight — 0.5 lb. (0.2 kg)  
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ETHERNET PRINT SERVER  
2. Introduction  
2.1 Description  
The Ethernet Print Server (EPS) is a multiprotocol print server. It provides  
network access to printers for a variety of network protocols and operating  
systems. It has an AUI port for connection to an external Ethernet  
transceiver, and an RJ-45 connector for use with 10BASE-T. It provides one  
serial port and one parallel port to which network nodes can spool print jobs.  
The Ethernet Print Server queues multiple pending jobs, and services print  
requests in the order they are received from the hosts. The serial port can  
also provide an outgoing modem service instead of a print service.  
Each Ethernet Print Server has a unique name and network address,  
printed on the rear of the unit. This name is important for configuring print  
queues later; make a note of it before you install the unit.  
There are 4 DIP switches on the rear of the Ethernet Print Server that are  
used for power-up options. As shipped, all switches are in the Off position.  
They function as follows (On = 1):  
Sw1:  
Off:  
On:  
Off:  
EPS will use the 10BASE-T network port.  
EPS will use the AUI network port.  
Sw2:  
EPS will print status information to the serial port at boot  
time. It will send a PostScript compatible print job to the  
serial and parallel ports after loading code to test the physical  
ports. It will also send several broadcast network packets to  
check the network connection. You can also use the serial  
port as a login device (DYNAMIC access, see Section 6.3).  
On:  
The serial port will be usable only via network connections  
(REMOTE access) and the EPS will not print any status  
information to the serial port at boot time, unless it cannot  
boot.  
Sw3:  
Sw4:  
Currently unused.  
Off:  
On:  
Saved EPS settings are used.  
EPS is restored to factory defaults at power-up time.  
The EPS checks switches only at power-up time, so changing them while  
the unit is operating will not have any effect. After you connect the serial  
port to a print device and you configure the EPS, move Sw2 to the On  
position. Otherwise, the EPS may interpret any data from the printer  
as a login attempt and you won’t be able to use the serial port.  
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CHAPTER 2: Introduction  
If you cannot move a switch by hand, use a small screwdriver or pen to  
gently flip the switch. Make sure each switch is fully in the On or Off position;  
inconsistent operation may result if the switch is between settings.  
2.2 Protocols Supported  
A network protocol is a method of communicating over the Ethernet—each  
protocol specifies a certain arrangement of data in the Ethernet packets,  
and provides different services for its users. Many protocols also allow other  
protocols to run “on top” of them. Some network nodes provide support for  
®
only one protocol set—for example, Macintosh computers typically only  
®
speak AppleTalk .  
The EPS supports 4 major protocols:  
®
®
• NOVELL NetWare  
• TCP/IP  
• Apple Computer’s AppleTalk (EtherTalk™)  
• Digital Equipment Corporation’s LAT™  
The EPS supports enough of each protocol to provide printer support  
for nodes of that type. For example, for AppleTalk, the EPS provides PAP  
(Printer Access Protocol) support, but not AFP (AppleTalk Filing Protocol).  
The EPS can use and interpret all 4 protocols at once, and can queue print  
requests from hosts using any of the 4 protocols simultaneously.  
NOTE: The EPS does not allow outgoing connections to hosts from the EPS—it solely  
services requests from network hosts.  
2.3 Additional Software You May Need  
For NetWare, AppleTalk, and LAT, you can use the EPS as a print server  
with no additional host software and little or no configuration on the EPS.  
The EPS will allow printing on the serial and parallel port by default when  
it begins operating.  
For TCP/IP systems, the EPS provides Berkeley remote-LPR support,  
which needs no EPS configuration or additional host software. If you cannot  
or choose not to use remote-LPR, you can use your host’s local LP or LPR  
printing via the RTEL host software. RTEL is discussed later.  
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ETHERNET PRINT SERVER  
2.4 EPS Configuration  
Depending on your network, the EPS might work properly right out of the  
box with no additional configuration. If your network installation will use  
the AUI port instead of 10BASE-T, you will need to change one of the DIP  
switches before you install the unit. Remember, you need no configuration  
if you’re using NetWare, AppleTalk, and LAT. For TCP/IP, the unit needs  
an IP address and may use a specific IP gateway host.  
There are several ways to configure the EPS settings:  
1. The DIP switches, discussed above.  
2. Using the EPS command line via a terminal attached to the serial port.  
3. Logging into the EPS over the network, via NetWare, Telnet/Rlogin or  
LAT. Context-sensitive help and command completion are included to  
make setup via the command line easier.  
4. BOOTP replies from a TCP/IP network host (the IP address, gateway,  
and download filename are settable this way).  
5. The included EPSCON NetWare utility, run on a NetWare file server.  
6. A configuration file, downloaded from a TCP/IP, LAT, or NetWare host  
at boot time, containing EPS1 commands to execute.  
The EPS stores its executable code in Flash (rewritable) ROMs, meaning  
that it does not need to download software from a host each time it boots.  
You need to download host software only when you need to update the code  
in the Flash-ROMs with a new version of the software. When new versions of  
the EPS software do become available, reloading the Flash-ROMs requires  
only one command.  
2.5 Printing from the host to the EPS  
The EPS was designed to make printing as simple as possible—in most cases,  
as easy as printing to any directly connected printer.  
Under AppleTalk, the EPS shows up on Macintosh computers under the  
Chooser. The EPS is also usable by hosts running third-party AppleTalk  
software packages.  
Under NetWare and LAT, the EPS can be used as any other network print  
server. You simply configure the print queue on the host to use the EPS’s  
print ports.  
Under TCP/IP, Berkeley remote LPR is supported with no additional host  
software. Lp, lpr, and a generic tty interface are supported via the optional  
RTEL software.  
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CHAPTER 2: Introduction  
In all three cases, the EPS is transparent to the user and uses normal print  
syntax from the host—simply specify the file and queue name in the print  
command.  
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ETHERNET PRINT SERVER  
3. Installation  
This chapter covers only the installation of the EPS in the network and  
attaching the print devices. For details on installing the optional RTEL  
software or installing a new download image (to re-load the EPS’s code  
in the Flash-ROMs) see Appendix E.  
This section assumes a basic understanding of network installations,  
and host setup in NetWare, TCP/IP, AppleTalk, or LAT environments.  
We strongly recommend reading this entire section completely before  
starting the installation.  
1. Unpack the EPS, and check for any damage or abnormal wear.  
2. Pick a location for the server. Keep in mind the cabling restrictions  
discussed in Appendix A.  
3. Attach the server to the network, via 10BASE-T cable, transceiver,  
or AUI cable. Refer to Fig. 3-1.  
Thick Ethernet  
10BASE-T  
Hub  
ThinNet  
Hub  
EPS  
Parallel Printer  
EPS  
EPS  
MicroVAX™  
Serial  
Printer  
NetWare  
File  
Server  
Parallel Laser  
Printer  
Serial  
Printer  
Sun  
Macintosh  
Fig. 3-1. EPS Network Installation.  
You will need to change the DIP switch for AUI (external transceiver)  
operation. By default, the EPS will use the 10BASE-T (RJ-45) port.  
See the EPS label for information on changing the switch position.  
The EPS must have a valid network connection to boot fully. If it detects a  
network fault, it will not boot. If you wish to boot the EPS without attaching  
to your network, you can either connect a terminated transceiver to the AUI  
port or connect the 10BASE-T port to a disabled port on a hub.  
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CHAPTER 3: Installation  
4. If Sw2 is off, the EPS will print status information to the serial port as it  
boots. Attach a console device (we recommend using a terminal) to the  
serial port of the server. The default serial port settings are 9600 baud,  
8 bit characters, and no parity. You can also attach the parallel port to  
a print device at this time.  
NOTE: You can change the console device to a printer once you boot the EPS, but we  
recommend using a terminal the first time in case the EPS needs configuration  
information. After the server is running to your satisfaction, you can replace the  
terminal with a printer.  
5. If you wish to provide an IP address for the EPS via BOOTP or RARP,  
add the EPS to your host’s BOOTP/RARP configuration table. See your  
host’s documentation for details. Many BOOTP hosts will not reply to a  
BOOTP request if the download filename in the configuration file is not  
available for downloading. If this is the case, you can create a null file in  
the download path to get BOOTP to reply.  
6. Power up the EPS—plug the AC adapter into the wall and then into  
the EPS.  
7. The EPS will go through 3 steps to begin normal operation:  
1. It will run through a set of power-up diagnostics for approximately  
12 seconds. The lower 4 LEDs will show varying patterns  
corresponding to the test the EPS is running.  
2. It will then try to obtain TCP/IP configuration information via BOOTP  
and RARP; this will take approximately 15 seconds if no hosts answer  
the requests. During this step, the OK LED will blink approximately 3  
times per second and the Network LED will blink occasionally as  
network requests are transmitted.  
3. The EPS will then check that the code in the Flash-ROMs is valid.  
If so, it will load that code and begin normal execution.  
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ETHERNET PRINT SERVER  
After the EPS loads the Flash code and the unit is running normally, the  
OK LED will blink once each 2 seconds. Depending on SW2’s position,  
the EPS will print a greeting to the serial port when the unit is operational:  
Ethernet Address: xx-xx-xx-xx-xx-xx IP Address:  
undefined  
Lantronix EPS1 Print Server  
Diagnostics Report:  
Interface:  
Memory:  
Gate Array:  
10BASE-T  
256KB  
Vers 3  
Errors Reported:None  
Attempting BOOTP: no reply received.  
Attempting RARP: no reply received.  
Checking 2 sections from flash:  
From address .... -> not copied.  
From address .....  
Loaded 310260 bytes.  
Load Completed - Boot in Progress  
[10 lines of PostScript comments]  
Lantronix EPS1 Print Server  
Ethernet Address: xx-xx-xx-xx-xx-xx  
undefined  
IP Address:  
Fig. 3-2. Print Server Screen.  
The server is now running normally. It will set the IP address if discovered via  
BOOTP or RARP (or previously DEFINEd on the EPS). If the screen shown  
in Fig. 3-2 does not appear, see Troubleshooting, Section 4.6. If garbled  
characters appear on the console, check the terminal settings and the serial  
cable and cycle power to the server.  
When the screen in Fig. 3-2 appears, you can try to log into the EPS. Press  
<Return> on the console and you will get a “Username>” prompt. Enter any  
username and press <Return>. You will then be at the “Local>” prompt, and  
can type “HELP” to get a list of EPS commands. See Section 4.0, Host  
Configuration, or log out and attach your serial print device to the console  
port. Remember to change SW2 to the On position if you will only attach a  
print device to the serial port. Otherwise, the EPS will echo boot diagnostics  
to the printer.  
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CHAPTER 3: Installation  
3.1 How Do I Know It’s Working?  
If the EPS appears to be working (OK LED is blinking slowly) and the unit  
is connected to the network, there are various ways to confirm that the unit  
is visible to network hosts:  
• If the EPS has an IP address, you can PING it from a TCP/IP host—  
the EPS should respond correctly.  
• From a NetWare host, the EPSCON utility (provided on the enclosed  
NetWare utilities disk) will show available print servers (including the  
EPS) if you enter EPSCON with no options. See Appendix C for more  
information.  
• From a Macintosh, the EPS should show up as a LaserWriter device  
under the Chooser. It will appear as a device named “EPS_xxxxxx_S1.”  
If multiple zones are running, it will appear in the default zone.  
• From a LAT node (such as a terminal server) the EPS name will show  
up as an available service. It will also be visible from NCP or TSM,  
if the server name is added as a node.  
Any of these methods will confirm that the unit booted successfully.  
3.2 Power-Up Troubleshooting  
If the unit does not display the welcome message or the LEDs do not appear  
correct, there are several possible errors:  
1. Power-up diagnostic failure: the LEDs will remian in one pattern and you  
will not be able to use the console. This generally indicates a hardware  
fault that the EPS cannot continue past. The LED error codes are  
included in Appendix C; if the error is not a setup error, call Technical  
Support.  
2. Power-up error detected: If the power-up tests detect a non-fatal error,  
the EPS will boot but will not try to load the Flash-ROM code. Instead,  
it will print a diagnostic screen to the serial port and wait at the “Boot>”  
prompt for user action. Note the error reported and try to correct the  
cause of the error. If the error is not obvious, contact Technical Support.  
Remember that the EPS must have a valid network connection to boot  
fully—this is the most common reason for boot failure. You need to  
change the first DIP switch if you are using the AUI port instead of the  
default RJ-45 10BASE-T port.  
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ETHERNET PRINT SERVER  
If a terminal is not attached to the serial port, you can still detect a boot  
error (typically network-related) via the LEDs. If the OK and network  
LEDs are blinking rapidly (2-3 times per second) in unison, a boot failure  
occurred. Once the EPS boots and is running normally, the OK LED will  
blink once every 2 seconds.  
3. If all the tests pass successfully, but the code in the Flash-ROMs is corrupt,  
the EPS will attempt to download new code from a network host. Both  
the OK and Parallel LEDs will blink at the same time in this case. The  
screen shown in Fig. 3-3 will print to the serial port.  
Checking 2 sections from flash: invalid checksum  
found.  
Erasing flash....done.  
Attempting TFTP boot....  
Attempting NetWare boot.....  
Attempting MOP boot....  
Will wait 1 minute for next download attempt...  
Fig. 3-3. Code in Flash ROMs is Corrupt.  
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CHAPTER 4: Host Configuration  
4. Host Configuration  
Host configuration is broken down by protocol, since none of the procedures  
are common to any of the protocols. You must enable the protocol on the  
EPS service before clients will be able to see and use that service.  
You should be familiar with the protocol and host setup; refer to the  
documentation that came with your operating system software for more  
details.  
You must remember 3 resource names as you configure the EPS and  
host(s). Each EPS has a unique name and hardware address printed on  
the rear of the unit. The last 3 pairs of digits in the address are used for  
the EPS name and its service names. The EPS name is EPS_xxxxxx, where  
xxxxxx are the last 3 pairs of digits in the unit’s hardware address. Address  
00-80-a3-45-7e-5a becomes the name EPS_457e5a, for example. The 2 local  
print resources configured by default are EPS_xxxxxx_S1 (for port 1, the  
serial port) and EPS_xxxxxx_P1 (for port 2, the parallel port). Using address  
00-80-a3-45-7e-5a again results in resources (“services”) EPS_457e5a_S1  
and EPS_457e5a_P1. The EPS name is needed for LAT and NetWare  
configuration. The service names are available to other hosts to connect  
and print to. In general, the resource names are not case-sensitive. You can  
change the service names from their default names, but we don’t recommend  
doing so if not necessary.  
4.1 NetWare Host Configuration  
To process NetWare print jobs, the EPS logs into the file server and then  
queries the server for pending jobs. The Print Server logs in under the EPS’s  
name, not the names of the EPS services. For this reason, you must enter the  
EPS name with the service name in the steps below. The EPS name also has a  
password associated with it; the EPS will provide this password when it tries to  
log into the file server. You can configure the EPS via the PCONSOLE utility  
on the file server(s).  
NetWare configuration involves 4 major steps:  
1. If necessary, allow unencrypted passwords on the file server.  
2. Tell the NetWare file server which print resources are on the EPS.  
3. Assign print queues on the file server to use the EPS resources.  
4. Tell the EPS to re-poll the file servers because of the updated queue  
information.  
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ETHERNET PRINT SERVER  
You must perform these steps on each file sever that will need access to the  
EPS queues. Users on each file server wishing to print will specify the file  
server’s queue name; the file server and EPS will decide which, if any, of the  
EPS’s queues can service the requests.  
Note the name of the EPS from the back label. The following steps refer to  
NetWare v3.11, but are similar for v2.x:  
1. Log in as Supervisor on the file server, and change directory to \SYSTEM:  
f: cd \system  
1a. If you have not already done so, you may need to tell the file server to  
allow unencrypted passwords—the EPS will not use encrypted passwords.  
This feature was added to NetWare 386 as a security option. By default,  
encryption is required, so the EPS will not be able to log in and accept  
jobs.  
If you did not already have the following line in the startup file, you need  
to change this setting by hand and add it to your startup file (so it’s set for  
each boot). Use the file server console command line (“:”) prompt and  
type:  
: SET ALLOW UNENCRYPTED PASSWORDS = ON <Enter>  
1b. To make this command permanent, you can add a line to your  
AUTOEXEC.NCF startup file via the SYSCON utility. To run SYSCON,  
type:  
F: SYSCON<Enter>  
The following menu appears:  
Available Topics  
Accounting  
Change current server  
File server information  
Group Information  
-> Supervisor Options  
User Information  
Fig. 4-1. Available Topics Menu.  
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CHAPTER 4: Host Configuration  
Use the arrow keys to select “Supervisor Options,” and press <Enter>:  
Supervisor Options  
Default Account Balance/Restrictions  
Default Fine Restrictions  
-> Edit System Autoexec file  
File Server Console Operators  
Intruder Detection/Lockout  
System Login Script  
View File Server Error Log  
Workgroup Managers  
Fig. 4-2. Supervisor Options Menu.  
Select “Edit System Autoexec File” and press <Enter>. The current startup  
file will be shown. Add this command line anywhere in the file:  
SET ALLOW UNENCRYPTED PASSWORDS = ON  
Press <Escape> to exit the editor, and use the Save Changes menu to save  
the file. Press <Escape> and exit the SYSCON utility.  
2. Perform the remaining steps via the PCONSOLE utility. To run  
PCONSOLE, you need to be SUPERVISOR on the file server you will be  
changing. Type PCONSOLE at the F: prompt to start the utility.  
F: PCONSOLE<Enter>  
2a. You must tell the file server what print resources are on the network.  
Select “Print Server Information” from the “Available Options” menu  
(see Fig. 4-3).  
Available Options  
Change Current File Server  
Print Queue Information  
-> Print Server Information  
Fig. 4-3. Available Options Menu.  
2b. You will be shown a list of current print servers. You need to enter the  
EPS’s server name and the names of the resources on the EPS that will be  
visible to the file server. After adding the EPS resources, you will see  
them in this list.  
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ETHERNET PRINT SERVER  
Press <Insert> to create a new entry and add the EPS1 name (EPS_xxxxxx  
by default) and hit <Enter>.  
Enter Print Server Name:EPS_xxxxxx  
This is the name that the EPS will log in as when querying the file server’s  
print queues. If you later change the EPS’s name, you will need to update the  
file server(s).  
NOTE: If you ever change the login password on the EPS, you will need to add a password for  
the entry you just added. Highlighting the EPS name and pressing <Enter> shows the  
“Print Server Information” menu, where you change the password for the EPS name.  
If the EPS1 password is the factory default, it is not sent to the fileserver and therefore  
does not need to be added explicitly.  
2c. Use <Insert> to add the name EPS_xxxxxx_S1 and press <Enter>.  
2d. Use <Insert> to add the name EPS_xxxxxx_P1 and press <Enter>.  
Return to the main “Available Options” menu by pressing <Esc>.  
3. Create a print queue on the file server and associate it with the EPS  
services. Select the “Print Queue Information” menu option under  
“Available Options” and press <Enter> (see Fig. 4-4).  
Available Options  
Change Current File Server  
-> Print Queue Information  
Print Server Information  
Fig. 4-4. Available Options.  
This shows a list of configured print queues on the file server. Press  
<Insert> to create a new queue on the file server, type the new queue name  
and press <Enter>.  
New Print Queue Name:EPS1Q[for example]  
The name does not have to be related to the name of the EPS resources,  
but should be short and convenient for users to remember.  
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CHAPTER 4: Host Configuration  
3a. Highlight the queue you just entered and press <Enter> to configure the  
queue itself. The menu shown in Fig. 3-5 will appear.  
Print Queue Information  
Current Print job entries  
Current Queue Status  
Currently Attached Servers  
Print Queue ID  
Queue Operators  
-> Queue Servers  
Queue Users  
Fig. 4-5. Print Queue Information.  
Select “Queue Servers” and press <Enter> to specify which network print  
servers can print jobs from this print queue. The list will be empty, since  
you haven’t selected any yet. If you press <Insert>, the EPS_xxxxxx,  
EPS_xxxxxx_S1 and EPS_xxxxxx_P1 resources entered above should  
appear in a selection list:  
Queue Server Candidates  
...  
EPS_xxxxxx  
EPS_xxxxxx_P1  
EPS_xxxxxx_S1  
...  
Fig. 4-6. Queue Server Candidates.  
You need to add both the EPS name (EPS_xxxxxx) and one of the EPS print  
services. The EPS name is used to log in, and the print service determines to  
which EPS port the jobs will be sent.  
3b. Highlight the EPS_xxxxxx name and press <Enter>.  
3c. Press <Insert> again, highlight either the serial (EPS_xxxxxx_S1)  
or parallel (EPS_xxxxxx_P1) service name (depending on where  
you will attach the printer) and press <Enter> again.  
3d. Press <Escape> to return to the list of print queues and repeat step 3,  
as needed, to create any other file server queues. Each queue must  
include the EPS name as one of the Queue Servers.  
3e. Press <Escape> to return to the “Available Options” menu.  
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ETHERNET PRINT SERVER  
4. When you desire no other configuration, you need to tell the EPS to  
re-scan the file server queues since you modified them. Return to the  
main “Available Options” menu, highlight “Print Server Information,”  
and press <Enter>.  
Available Options  
Change Current File Server  
Print Queue Information  
-> Print Server Information  
Fig. 4-7. Available Options.  
Select the EPS1 name (EPS_xxxxxx) and press <Enter>. This menu shown  
in Fig. 4-8 will appear.  
Print Server Information  
Change Password  
Full Name  
Print Server Configuration  
Print Server ID  
Print Server Operators  
-> Print Server Status/Control  
Print Server Users  
Fig. 4-8. Print Server Information Menu.  
Highlight “Print Server Status/Control” and press <Enter>. The menu  
shown in Fig. 4-9 appears.  
Print Server Status/Control  
File servers being serviced  
Notify list for printer  
Printer Status  
Queues Serviced by Printer  
-> Server Info  
Fig. 4-9. Print Server Status/Control Menu.  
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CHAPTER 4: Host Configuration  
Highlight “Server Info” and press <Enter>. The menu shown in Fig. 4-10  
appears.  
Print Server Info/Status  
Print Server Version: 3.0.xx  
Print Server Type:Dedicated DOS  
# of Printers  
Queue service modes  
n
0
-> Current Server Status Running  
Serial Number 066497  
Fig. 4-10. Print Server Info/Status Screen.  
Highlight “Current Server Status” and press <Enter>. Select “Down” and  
press <Enter>. This will not reboot the EPS—it will only force it to re-scan the  
available file servers for new queue entries.  
5. Press <Escape> repeatedly to exit the PCONSOLE utility.  
6. Test the queue by using “nprint”:  
C:> nprint c:\autoexec.bat/queue=eps1q  
where eps1q is one of the file server queues created in step 3. The file will  
be spooled to the EPS for printing and should appear on the proper physical  
port. If the print port is in use, the NetWare job should be visible in the  
SHOW QUEUE display on the EPS. See the discussion of the EPSCON utility  
in Appendix D for information on monitoring the EPS status by actually  
logging into the EPS. See also the Troubleshooting section at the end of this  
chapter for help solving printing problems.  
4.2 TCP/IP Host Configuration  
Since the method of printing under UNIX and TCP/IP hosts varies widely,  
different styles will be discussed below. For all of the methods, the EPS must  
have an IP address that is in the host’s local host table (usually /etc/hosts) or  
resolvable via a nameserver.  
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ETHERNET PRINT SERVER  
The Berkeley remote printing system is supported on many machines, and  
is simple to configure for the EPS. You need to add the host queue name into  
/etc/printcap, and then specify the remote nodename (EPS) and the service  
name on the EPS. For example, if you wish to add a print queue for an EPS  
with a hardware address of 00-80-A3-56-00-3E, you might add its IP address  
192.70.10.10  
eps1_lab  
to the /etc/hosts file, and  
r_eps1|Printer on LAB  
:rm=eps1_lab:\  
EPS1:\  
:rp=EPS_56003e_S1:  
to the printcap file. This will create a queue named r_eps1 on the host and  
link it to the EPS’s serial port - notice the EPS_xxxxxx_S1 queuename. The  
setting for rm is the name of the EPS in the host’s address file, not necessarily  
what the EPS1’s own name is. The rm and rp options (remote nodename and  
queuename, respectively) are system-dependent and may have different  
names on your system. See your host’s documentation (or man pages) for  
details.  
After adding the EPS queue to the printcap file, it should be visible via the  
“lpc status” command:  
% lpc status  
r_eps:  
queuing is enabled  
printing is enabled  
no entries  
no daemon present  
Printing uses the normal “lpr” command:  
% lpr -Pr_eps1 filename  
Remember, r_eps1 is whatever name you gave the queue in the printcap  
file. Note that the EPS does not implement all the lpr options, because the  
print job information is not available until the print job is completed. Simple  
options such as banner page and tab expansion may be provided by the EPS,  
but will depend on the host’s implementation of remote-lpr.  
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CHAPTER 4: Host Configuration  
4.3 Optional RTEL Functionality  
Using the native lp or lpr print utilities requires installing and configuring  
the RTEL software on the host—see Chapter 7 for details. After installing  
the software and configuring connections to the EPS1, print commands  
will look like normal printing commands.  
% lp -deps1_queue filename  
or  
% lpr -Peps1_queue filename  
Normal queue utilities (lpc, lpstat, etc.) will also be usable. The RTEL  
software also provides detailed error logging should a print request fail  
for some reason.  
To print to the EPS without lp or lpr (using third-party software packages,  
for example), it may be necessary to create terminal devices on the host that  
connect transparently to the EPS. The RTEL software also provides this  
functionality. The created device, called a “pseudo-tty,” allows programs  
®
to send data directly to a device on the UNIX host without needing any  
knowledge of how to connect to the EPS. If the pseudo-tty device created is  
“/dev/ttyp7,” for example, you can specify “ttyp7” in an application (word-  
processing, spreadsheet, etc.) as the printer channel. Any data sent to that  
channel will automatically be forwarded to the service on the EPS. The  
pseudo-ttys can also be used with the lp or lpr methods discussed above.  
You will need to consider which of these RTEL methods you wish to use as  
you install the RTEL software; you may end up needing both for different  
purposes.  
4.4 AppleTalk Host Configuration  
AppleTalk configuration is extremely simple for EtherTalk nodes such as  
Macintosh computers. If you enable AppleTalk on the EPS services (as it is by  
default on the serial port service EPS_xxxxxx_S1) the service should be visible  
via the Chooser on all networked Macintosh computers. This assumes that  
the Macintosh accessing the Chooser has access to the AppleTalk zone that  
the EPS is a part of. If there is only one zone or the default zone is the  
correct one, the Macintosh should see the EPS_xxxxxx_S1 service under the  
®
LaserWriter selection of the Chooser. Selecting this LaserWriter will cause  
any printing to be sent to the EPS. If there are multiple zones running on  
the network, the EPS can be configured to be part of a specific zone.  
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ETHERNET PRINT SERVER  
Macintosh computers that do not support EtherTalk will need either an  
Ethernet card or an EtherTalk-to-LocalTalk™ router to use the EPS. If you  
use a router, it will provide an EtherTalk zone on the LocalTalk network, and  
the EPS devices will appear under that zone. If an Ethernet board is installed  
in the Macintosh, change from “Built-In” to “EtherTalk” on the Networking  
Control Panel, and then the EPS queue(s) should be visible.  
Since EPS printers aren’t directly connected to the network, any programs  
or utilities that attempt to modify the printer’s AppleTalk settings will fail.  
The EPS controls all AppleTalk parameters, such as zone name and job  
timeouts, so modifying these settings on the printer itself will have no effect.  
You need to reflect changes to the printer’s serial port on the EPS port  
setting. Many printers are set to use 7-bit serial characters by default; change  
this to 8 if possible.  
Printing to a LaserWriter via AppleTalk generally requires bi-directional  
PostScript data flow. The EPS parallel port does not have AppleTalk enabled  
®
because the parallel port is an output-only port. Also, if the PostScript  
printer attached to the EPS cannot provide responses to the printing host,  
AppleTalk printing will likely fail. AppleTalk print hosts typically require  
responses to PostScript queries sent to the printer.  
If you are using a third-party software that provides AppleTalk for UNIX  
(or VMS™, etc.), the EPS should be visible like any other AppleTalk device.  
Print queues should be able to access the EPS as any other AppleTalk printer.  
Because of the variety of software packages and their configurations, setup  
details cannot be shown here—see your local documentation for details.  
Recall that native Unix and TCP/IP printing methods (lp, lpr, etc.) are  
generally easier to setup and administer than non-native AppleTalk printing;  
you should use them when possible.  
4.5 LAT Host Configuration  
Configuring a LAT print queue on your VMS host machine is a two-step  
process. You have to create a LAT application port (device) that references  
the EPS print resource, and then create a print queue that uses that LAT  
application port. ULTRIX™ hosts can also use the LATCP utility, but queue  
setup is slightly different.  
The LATCP program is used to create the application port and set it to the  
appropriate EPS node and service. The following sequence of commands  
shows the steps necessary to create an application port. You must be a  
privileged user to run LATCP on your host.  
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CHAPTER 4: Host Configuration  
$ RUN SYS$SYSTEM:LATCP  
LCP> CREATE PORT LTAnnnn/APPLICATION  
LCP> SET PORT LTAnnnn/node=nodename/port  
=portname  
LCP> SHOW PORT LTAnnnn  
LCP> EXIT  
Above, nodename is the name of the EPS (EPS_xxxxxx) and portname is the  
name of the EPS print port to use (Port_1 is the serial port, Port_2 is the  
parallel port). The SET PORT command actually maps the LAT port to a  
service connection on the EPS, so that data sent to this port will be  
transparently forwarded to the EPS. You do not use the service names  
(EPS_xxxxxx_S1, etc.) in this example.  
LAT is disabled by default on the EPS services out of network traffic  
considerations—active services result in LAT multicasts. If you do enable LAT  
on the EPS services, you can then use the EPS’s service names instead of the  
port name. For example  
LCP> SET PORT LTA1278/node=EPS_00452a/port=Port_1  
can also be set up as  
LCP> SET PORT  
LTA1278/node=EPS_00452a/service=EPS_00452a_S1  
because Port_1 is the name of the port that service EPS_xxxxxx_S1 (the serial  
port service) refers to. This method can also be used to reference Port_2, the  
parallel port. If you change the port or service names on the EPS1, you will  
need to modify the LATCP SET PORT command to reflect the new names.  
Also, LATCP ports are not permanent on the host, so you will need to  
configure them after every reboot or add the configuration to the host’s  
startup file.  
For example, if you want to create a new LAT device LTA1234 that accesses  
print service EPS_043ea1_P1 on the EPS1 named EPS_043ea1 using VMS  
queue EPS_PARALLEL enter the following commands:  
$ RUN SYS$SYSTEM:LATCP  
LCP> CREATE PORT LTA1234/APPLICATION  
LCP> SET PORT LTA1234/NODE=EPS_00452a/SERV=EPS_00452a_P1  
LCP> EXIT  
Then start the VMS queue with the command:  
$ INIT/QUEUE/START/ON=LTA1234:/PROCESS=LATSYM  
EPS_PARALLEL  
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ETHERNET PRINT SERVER  
A print request might then look like  
$ PRINT/QUEUE=EPS_PARALLEL filename.txt  
Using the SHOW QUEUE/FULL command under VMS will show the setup  
characteristics of the VMS queue and what jobs are pending in the queue.  
4.6 Troubleshooting the Printing Process  
You can troubleshoot print queues in a number of steps. The first few  
suggestions apply to all protocols, since they relate to how the EPS handles  
print requests.  
Keep in mind the most importatn part of the printing process—the print  
resource on the EPS must be available. The easiest way to check this is a  
SHOW SERVICE LOCAL CHARACTERISTICS, either from the terminal  
attached to port 1 or from a network login. This will show all services on the  
EPS and their ratings, which indicate whether the service is in use. A network  
node can use the service only when the rating is non-zero. If the rating is zero,  
the physical port is either not accessible (access is set to LOCAL) or is being  
used by a local user or by another network host. Use the SHOW PORT ALL  
and SHOW QUEUE commands to figure out why the port is busy instead of  
idle. Then either cancel the network connection from the network node or  
LOGOUT the port to clear the login condition. If you are logged in on the  
serial port, that port is not available for network connections, and logging  
that port out will log you out.  
The first time you setup a queue on the EPS, we recommend having a  
terminal attached to port 1 and using that as the print “device.” Since you  
used it to log into the EPS, you know the serial port is configured correctly  
and data should be getting to the device. The EPS does not care what is  
attached to the serial port—you can dump a print job to a terminal as easily as  
to a printer. You must be logged out of the EPS for the serial port to be  
available for connections; if you are not, the serial port will be busy and print  
connections will be queued or rejected. If you wish to monitor the EPS while  
connecting to port 1, you will need to use Telnet, Rlogin, LAT, NetWare, or  
TSM/NCP to establish a connection to the EPS and monitor the job  
queueing.  
If you send a print job and it never appears, try to trace where the job  
stopped.  
1. Examine the queues on the host to see if the job is waiting on the host or  
if it was sent to the EPS.  
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CHAPTER 4: Host Configuration  
If printing from NetWare, make sure you entered the server’s name and  
login password correctly under the PCONSOLE setup. If the EPS cannot  
log into the file server correctly, your job will not print. Also, make sure  
the EPS server name is one of the Queue Servers for each queue—if it is  
not, you will be able to log in, but the EPS will not be able to obtain  
information about queued jobs, so it will never print the jobs.  
If printing from AppleTalk, make sure you use a consistent version of the  
LaserPrep file. If this is not possible, try testing from only one workstation  
to reduce version conflicts until printing is working.  
2. If your host has an error log file, check that for new error messages.  
3. Log into the EPS (via Telnet, LAT, or NetWare) and do a SHOW QUEUE  
to see if any jobs are pending on the EPS. If so, try to figure out why they  
might not be printing—is the physical port in use (i.e., logged in)? Use  
SHOW PORT ALL to see what both ports are doing—the ports must be  
“Idle” before print jobs are accepted, and will be in “Job Service” if they  
have a service connection.  
4. If the port is trying to print but no data is appearing, check the  
connection to the EPS. Are the serial or parallel parameters set properly?  
Is the print device configured properly and on-line?  
If you are unsure of the printer’s connection to the EPS, DIP switch 2 will  
send test jobs to the serial and parallel ports. Powering the EPS up with  
Option 2 set to “0” causes a set of PostScript comment lines that should be  
visible on both PostScript and ASCII print devices. If the data is not  
coming out one or both ports, check both the EPS and printer setups.  
The EPS serial port defaults to 9600 baud, 8-bit, no parity; the parallel  
port defaults to Centronics mode.  
5. The NETSTAT command will give a complete, if cryptic, list of all current  
network connections to the EPS. It will show what hosts are connected via  
which protocols, and may help diagnose connection problems.  
PostScript compatible printers introduce their own set of problems, since they  
will silently abort the current job if they receive a print job with errors. The  
typical example of this is a printer that accepts the print job, claims to process  
the job for a few seconds, and then returns to the ready state without ejecting  
any paper or showing any error messages. If this is the problem:  
• Recheck the serial port settings on the printer and EPS to make sure the  
devices agree on the baud rate, parity settings, and the type of flow  
control.  
• Make sure you are using 8-bit characters. If special characters, such as the  
trademark symbol, aren’t printing correctly, this could be the problem.  
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ETHERNET PRINT SERVER  
• Check that flow control of some sort is enabled. Characters dropped  
during a PostScript job will generally cause the job to fail.  
You might also try attaching a terminal to the EPS print port and sending a  
small print job, and observe any obviously missing or corrupt data. PostScript  
is mostly plain-English text, so you may notice large errors on the terminal  
screen.  
If you still have problems, contact Technical Support.  
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CHAPTER 5: Protocol Overview  
5. Protocol Overview  
The EPS supports 4 major protocols: NetWare, TCP/IP, AppleTalk  
(EtherTalk), and LAT. The 4 protocols provide varying support for printing,  
and each is discussed below.  
For all 4 protocols: On the EPS, the term “service” denotes a printing  
resource that another node can access. Services must be attached to the EPS  
before a network node can access the print devices. You can disable certain  
protocols on a specific service. For example, you could prevent NetWare  
users from using the parallel port service. By default, there are 2 services on  
the EPS—one for the serial port and one for the parallel port. Normally, LAT  
is disabled on both services, while AppleTalk is disabled on the parallel port  
service. The explanations for these defaults are described in Sections 5.1  
through 5.4.  
TCP/IP is the only protocol that you need to configure with an explicit  
address. AppleTalk chooses an address dynamically, and LAT and NetWare  
use the server’s hardware address as the network address.  
The protocols supported advertise themselves in different ways. For this  
reason, you may see a protocol that you don’t use coming from the EPS.  
For example, you might see a NetWare packet even though you only have  
AppleTalk traffic on your network. That’s because the EPS needs to:  
1. Find any other nodes that might happen to start operation, and  
2. Alert any other nodes that it will service these various protocols.  
The EPS will do this regardless of whether it recognizes any hosts of that  
type on the network. In general, TCP/IP and AppleTalk will not generate any  
extra traffic, and respond only to queries from other nodes. NetWare and  
LAT will generate any occasional (every 10-120 seconds) packet to alert other  
nodes of the EPS’s presence. Also, the EPS will send an occasional NetWare  
broadcast to locate any other NetWare file servers. The EPS will also send a  
broadcast for the MOP (DECnet) remote console. You can eliminate some  
or all of these, since there will be no NetWare or LAT announcements if the  
protocol is not enabled on any of the EPS’s services. You cannot disable the  
MOP broadcasts, but they should only appear every 10 minutes.  
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ETHERNET PRINT SERVER  
5.1 NetWare  
NetWare allows any networked node (a “client,” usually a PC) to access  
another node (a fileserver) as if it were locally attached. You can use hard  
disks, printers, and other devices as if they were directly attached to the client  
station. You can assign access rights, passwords, and privileges to prevent  
unauthorized use of the file server’s resources.  
File servers are essential to the NetWare concept, and the system cannot  
function without at least one file server on the network. Users typically have  
to log into a file server to use the NetWare function. The file servers also  
provide print spooling for the clients—they will accept print jobs and hold  
them locally until the print resource is available to print the job. In this case,  
the EPS appears as a print resource, and will occasionally contact the file  
servers on the network to see if they have jobs that the EPS can service.  
Each file server that needs to use the EPS’s print services must be  
configured with a print queue that the EPS can service. Users then send their  
print requests to the file server’s print queue, and the jobs are spooled until  
the EPS prints them. Since the file server controls the queue, all NetWare  
access restrictions and permissions are enforced, and only jobs that are  
privileged to use the EPS are permitted to do so. You can enforce different  
methods of queueing priority on the file server, and the EPS requires no  
knowledge of them. Some options are passed to the EPS (such as number of  
copies to print, banner page, etc.) and those are handled locally by the EPS.  
The EPS services the NetWare hosts in two steps. Every minute, it sends  
a broadcast to try to locate all the file servers on the network. Also, it will  
contact each file server at least once per minute to see if there are any  
pending jobs that it can service. If there are no NetWare-enabled services  
on the EPS, the EPS will not contact the file servers, and the EPS will not  
broadcast to find the available servers.  
5.2 TCP/IP  
The TCP/IP protocol provides a guaranteed data stream between two hosts,  
but does not specify what is carried in the stream and how it should be  
handled. Various other applications and protocols use TCP/IP, so the  
sending and receiving hosts must agree on how certain connections will be  
treated. The interpretation done on any particular stream is usually based  
on which “port” the connection is made to. For example, a connection to  
TCP/IP port 511 means that the sender wants to send an LPR print stream  
to the receiver.  
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CHAPTER 5: Protocol Overview  
The EPS provides two major methods of printing via TCP/IP. Berkeley  
Remote LPR is supported, as is the RTEL software. Both methods provide  
queueing of jobs on the host if the host is busy with another job. The remote  
LPR software allows the EPS to look like another host that can spool and print  
files, and hosts wishing to print to the EPS simply send the print data and  
assume the EPS will handle it properly. The RTEL software, which you must  
install and configure on the host, provides more functionality than remote-  
LPR. It allows the host’s lp or lpr printing system to transparently use the  
EPS’s print devices, and also allows you to create tty devices on the host that  
map to the EPS.  
The EPS’s IP address must be set before you can use any of the TCP/IP  
functionality. You can set the address by hand or via BOOTP or RARP—  
see Chapter 3 for more details. In general, you must tell the EPS’s address  
to any host wishing to access the EPS. You can usually configure this via a file  
(/etc/hosts) containing all the local IP addresses, or a nameserver on the  
network. Specifying a gateway IP address on the EPS allows the server to reply  
correctly to non-local network connections.  
TCP/IP print services are entirely host driven—the EPS does nothing until  
a host connects to it and requests a print job. The service does not check to  
see if the EPS and the print resource exists on the host until you queue a  
print job. The only time the EPS will initiate a connection is to tell a host  
to start a previously queued job.  
5.3 AppleTalk  
AppleTalk includes a variety of network media types. LocalTalk is frequently  
used to refer to AppleTalk running over 230 kbps serial lines. All Macintosh  
computers provide LocalTalk support, but the EPS does not. The other two  
types, EtherTalk and TokenTalk, provide AppleTalk over Ethernet and Token  
Ring, respectively. The EPS supports only EtherTalk, so most Macintosh  
computers will need either an Ethernet card or a LocalTalk-to-EtherTalk  
router to connect to the EPS’s services. TokenTalk users wishing to use the  
EPS print services have to have an Ethernet-Token Ring bridge or router to  
connect the two networks. In the following discussions, AppleTalk refers only  
to EtherTalk.  
The EPS provides only enough of the AppleTalk protocol stack to provide  
printing. You can only access the EPS as a LaserWriter from an AppleTalk  
client (Chooser menu, etc.) The device name that shows up in the Chooser  
menu is the name of the service defined on the EPS. If the EPS service name  
is “LAB_SERIAL,” that’s what will show up in the client Macintosh computer’s  
Chooser menus.  
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ETHERNET PRINT SERVER  
An AppleTalk zone name is configurable, in case there are multiple zones  
on the LAN to which the EPS is connected. If you are using the default zone  
or only one zone, you do not need to configure any information on the EPS.  
Only AppleTalk routers provide zones, so if you have no router on your  
network, you will not need a zone configuration.  
Many third-party packages are available that provide AppleTalk support on  
UNIX or other operating systems. You can use these to print to the EPS via  
AppleTalk, but it is typically more efficient and easier to configure printing  
via the native UNIX or TCP/IP print utilities (lp or lpr).  
Like TCP/IP, AppleTalk is passive regarding printing jobs. When a client  
wishes to print, it will send out a broadcast asking what print resources are  
available. The EPS will answer, and the client will request a print job to the  
EPS. If the print resource is available, the print job will complete normally.  
If the print resource is busy, however, the EPS will enter a prolonged  
“arbitration” phase to keep track of which print client has been waiting for  
the resource the longest. In this phase, multiple clients may be sending  
packets to the EPS once every 2-5 seconds until the resource is available  
and their jobs are serviced.  
The parallel port service does not have AppleTalk enabled. AppleTalk  
printing typically requires a bi-directional data path, so the printing node  
must be able to receive data from the printer port as well as send to it. Since  
the parallel port on the EPS is not bi-directional, AppleTalk clients will not  
be able to print to it. This is not a PostScript or printer limitation, but an  
AppleTalk limitation. You can use any PostScript printer with the parallel  
port if the host does not need information returned from the printer.  
5.4 LAT  
Like AppleTalk, LAT was designed to let nodes on a LAN quickly and easily  
access other nodes’ resources. There is, however, little support for raw data  
streams, file services, or other operating-system related items. LAT is more  
intended for host connections to limited-function nodes (printers, terminal  
servers, etc.). Central to LAT is the concept of “services,” or resources that  
another LAT node can use. Services on the EPS can be associated with one  
or both physical ports, and each port can be associated with multiple services.  
LAT nodes typically send out announcements (“multicasts”) telling what  
resources they provide. Other LAT nodes listen to these periodic  
announcements, and will connect to the node to use these services whenever  
requested.  
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CHAPTER 5: Protocol Overview  
LAT is disabled by default on services provided by the EPS. This is because  
many network managers object to the frequent LAT service announcements.  
If you desire LAT on these services, you can easily turn it on. You can also  
configure LAT hosts to connect directly to a physical port on the EPS,  
eliminating the need for service announcements, but still providing LAT  
printing.  
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ETHERNET PRINT SERVER  
6. EPS Configuration  
In many cases, you may not need to configure the EPS to use it as a print  
server. Using NetWare and AppleTalk is especially simple. To print using  
LAT and TCP/IP, you may need to follow some of the setup instructions  
listed below.  
You can configure the EPS either via a terminal attached to the serial port  
or via a network login. See Appendix D for details on logging into the EPS  
from the network.  
This manual discusses configuration in two parts. The first is for  
parameters that are common to all protocols, such as the server name,  
passwords, serial and parallel port configuration, and service settings. The  
second section covers each individual protocol and discusses both settable  
parameters and the various SHOW commands that monitor the server’s  
counters and status.  
You must be a privileged user to change the server and service parameters.  
The default privileged password on the EPS is “SYSTEM;” you can change it  
with the SET/DEFINE SERVER PRIVILEGED PASSWORD command.  
You can restore factory defaults on the EPS via the command line or the  
configuration DIP switches. From the command line, “INIT FACTORY” will  
restore the factory settings. To use the DIP switches, simply reboot the EPS  
with the SW4 switch in the “FACTORY NVR” position, and then change it  
back to the “NORMAL” setting after the EPS is running. Returning to factory  
defaults will erase all configuration information except the unit’s hardware  
address, so you may need to reconfigure the unit.  
There is a fundamental difference between the SET and DEFINE  
commands. SET commands take effect immediately, but are not permanent.  
DEFINE commands are permanent, but do not take effect until you restart  
the system. A restart is a server reboot for DEFINE SERVER and DEFINE  
SERVICE commands or a port logout for DEFINE PORT and DEFINE  
PRINTER commands. The SAVE command will take all current settings and  
make them permanent. Likewise, SHOW shows current characteristics, while  
LIST displays the characteristics that will take effect after a restart.  
6.1 Server Characteristics  
In general, you do not need to change server characteristics. The only  
exceptions to this are LAT and TCP/IP parameters:  
You may need to adjust timers (SET SERVER KEEPALIVE, MULTICAST,  
RETRANSMIT LIMIT, etc.) for your network.  
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CHAPTER 6: EPS Configuration  
TCP/IP users may want to set a TCP/IP address or gateway host (SET  
SERVER IPADDRESS or GATEWAY commands). You might need a  
gateway host if you have routers on your network and wish to print from  
non-local networks. The EPS will listen for routing packets (RIP, OSPF,  
etc.) to auto-select a router, but if these packets are not on your network,  
you must set a gateway host.  
All four protocols use the server’s buffer size (SET/DEFINE SERVER  
BUFFER) to control what size network buffers to use to read and write data.  
The factory defaults should be adequate, but you may wish to change the  
default value to see if performance improves.  
NetWare, TCP/IP, and LAT users can actually log into the EPS from the  
network to manage or monitor the server. You can allow, prevent, or require  
a password for this via the SET SERVER INCOMING command.  
6.2 Passwords  
There are 4 passwords on the EPS: the privileged password, login password,  
maintenance password, and service passwords.  
• The privileged password is the password you must enter to become the  
privileged user. It defaults to “SYSTEM” and can be changed via  
SET/DEFINE SERVER PRIVILEGED PASSWORD.  
• You must enter the login password to log into the EPS “console” (via  
EPSCON, TSM, or Telnet). It defaults to “ACCESS” and can be changed  
via SET/DEFINE SERVER LOGIN PASSWORD.  
The EPS also uses the login password to log into NetWare file servers. If  
you change the login password, you must also change any NetWare print  
queue setups to reflect the new password.  
• The maintenance password is a hexadecimal string required to allow the  
MOP/NCP/TSM users access to the EPS. You can change it via  
SET/DEFINE SERVER MAINTENANCE PASSWORD. The default is “0”  
(zero).  
• You need service passwords to access a service via LAT or TCP/IP. The  
passwords are specific to each service; you can change them via the  
SET/DEFINE SERVICE PASSWORD command. The default is no  
password. NetWare and AppleTalk have no way to specify a queue  
password, so password protection is not enforced for those protocols.  
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ETHERNET PRINT SERVER  
6.3 Port Characteristics  
You can change all port settings via the SET (or DEFINE) PORT commands.  
Since the ports logout after each print job, you will generally want to use only  
DEFINE to configure them. You can LOGOUT the port to force the new  
settings to take effect. There are 4 basic groups of port settings that you can  
change:  
1. Serial characteristics: baud rate, parity, flow control, and character size.  
The default settings are 9600, None, X-on/X-off, and 8-bit, respectively.  
You may change all 4, but note the warnings below under AppleTalk. Set  
the port speed as high as the printer will allow, especially for PostScript  
printers.  
2. Parallel settings: you can set the type of parallel port to CENTRONICS  
(default) or DATAPRODUCTS. See the SET/DEFINE PRINTER  
command.  
3. Access mode: controls who has access to the port in question. Access can  
be LOCAL (no network connections), DYNAMIC (either network or local  
serial users), or REMOTE (network users only). By default, the parallel  
port is REMOTE, since you cannot log into the EPS from that port. If  
SW2 is in the OFF position, the serial port is DYNAMIC, allowing both  
logins on that port and service connections from network hosts. Ports in  
LOCAL mode are not available as printer ports to network hosts, and thus  
print requests to that port will be queued or will fail. If you will be using  
the serial port only as a print port (and never for configuration), you will  
want to set the serial port to REMOTE by turning SW2 to the ON  
position. This will prevent any characters from the printer from being  
interpreted as a login attempt and thus preventing network access to the  
printer. If you define the serial port to be REMOTE, you must have  
another way (LAT, Telnet, TSM/NCP, EPSCON) to access the EPS in  
case of problems.  
4. Print mode: if you will use the serial port exclusively for printing  
PostScript jobs to an interactive printer, doing a DEFINE PORT 1  
POSTSCRIPT ENABLED may help prevent problems. In this mode, the  
EPS will attempt to confirm that the printer finished a job before  
accepting a new one.  
6.4 Service Settings  
The service settings control which protocols can use the EPS’s ports and how  
these ports appear to the network users. In general, there has to be at least  
one service associated with a port before network users can use the port.  
(LAT and TCP/IP, the exceptions to this, are discussed in Sections 6.6 and  
6.8.) Multiple services can refer to the same port, and one service can also  
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CHAPTER 6: EPS Configuration  
refer to both physical ports. For example, you might want an AppleTalk  
service named “LAB_APPLE” and a NetWare service named “NETW_LASER,”  
both pointing to the serial port on the EPS. Both queues will accept jobs  
simultaneously, and jobs from both queues will print on the serial port in the  
order in which they were queued.  
There are five major attributes for a service. All are settable via the  
SET/DEFINE SERVICE command. You can view current configuration via  
the SHOW/LIST SERVICE LOCAL CHARACTERISTICS command.  
• Each service has a name that shows up under each protocol. In the  
examples above, Macintosh users would see “LAB_APPLE” under their  
Choosers, while NetWare users would reference “NETW_LASER” when  
configuring their queues. You can use the same name for all 4 protocols.  
The default service names are “EPS_xxxxxx_S1” and “EPS_xxxxxx_P1”  
for the serial and parallel ports, respectively. There is no service common  
to both ports by default. The “xxxxxx” will be the same as the last 6  
characters of the server’s hardware address (on the rear of the unit).  
• Each queue may have an identification string used by LAT to display a  
more verbose description of the service. An example identification string  
is “Laserprinter in Lab 17, fourth floor.” The description may be up to 40  
characters long.  
• A password can be associated with a service. This is only enforced under  
TCP/IP and LAT printing, since AppleTalk and NetWare have no  
method of providing this password. By default, there are no passwords on  
the EPS services.  
• You can selectively enable or disable queueing and connections for each  
service. Disabling connections means that the service will still be  
advertised on the network, but connection attempts will fail. Disabling  
queueing will cause any print job request coming in while the service is in  
use to be rejected rather than queued. If queueing and connections are  
not enabled on services, unpredictable behavior under AppleTalk and  
NetWare can result.  
• There is a protocol list associated with each service. By default, TCP/IP  
and NetWare are always enabled on both services. AppleTalk is not  
enabled on the parallel (EPS_xxxxxx_P1 service, and LAT is not allowed  
on either service. Since you can configure LAT hosts to connect directly  
to the physical ports, this only prevents LAT service connects, not all LAT  
access. If a protocol is not enabled on a service, users will not see that  
service from their nodes since the service announcements will be turned  
off.  
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ETHERNET PRINT SERVER  
6.5 NetWare Configuration  
You do not need to configure the EPS for use with NetWare. The NetWare  
address is the EPS’s hardware address, and the EPS discovers the network by  
listening to network traffic. The EPS contacts file servers in the same way.  
You do need to specify a file server to contact to download new EPS software  
if the Flash-ROMs ever need reloading. You can do this via the DEFINE  
SERVER NETWARE LOADHOST command. If a NetWare file server is  
configured after the EPS boots, you can use the SET SERVER NETWARE  
RESET command to force the EPS to re-scan the available file server queues.  
See also the EPSCON utility description in Appendix C. The SHOW  
PROTOCOLS NETWARE command shows all current configuration and  
counters for the NetWare protocol handler on the EPS. SHOW QUEUE  
will show any currently queued or active NetWare print jobs.  
6.6 TCP/IP Configuration  
To configure the EPS for TCP/IP, you only need to set the EPS’s IP address  
(via BOOTP, RARP, or SET/DEFINE SERVER IPADDRESS). The SET  
SERVER INCOMING command controls whether you can Telnet into the  
EPS from the network and whether those logins are password-protected.  
The SHOW PROTOCOLS TCPIP command shows all current configuration  
and counters for the TCP/IP protocol handler on the EPS. SHOW QUEUE  
will show any currently queued or active TCP/IP print jobs. The SHOW  
HOSTS command will show the names and IP addresses of any other TCP/IP  
hosts the EPS has learned of by listening to network traffic.  
6.7 AppleTalk Configuration  
To configure the EPS for AppleTalk, you only need to specify which  
AppleTalk zone the EPS will be a part of. If only one zone is running on your  
network, the EPS will choose that zone by default at network startup time.  
If more than one zone is running on your network, use the SET/DEFINE  
PROTOCOL APPLETALK ZONE command to specify the new zone name.  
Any program or utility that attempts to change the zone of the printer  
attached to the EPS (if it’s an AppleTalk compatible printer) will have no  
effect, since the EPS will still control the zone setting. Finally, if no router  
exists on your network, the EPS will not accept AppleTalk print jobs for the  
60 seconds after booting, while it searches for a router.  
There are three constraints on the serial port when using a PostScript-  
compatible printer with the EPS. Some or all of these might not be the  
default on the printer as it is delivered.  
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CHAPTER 6: EPS Configuration  
1. Flow control must be enabled; if any characters are lost in transmission,  
the entire job will likely fail and the printer may hang. X-ON/X-OFF  
(the default on the EPS) is acceptable.  
2. 8-bit characters (also the default) must be enabled for PostScript jobs to  
be sent to the printer correctly. Again, your jobs may be corrupted if the  
printer uses 7-bit characters. Many printers have 7-bit as the default, so  
consult your printer documentation.  
3. PostScript is a “verbose” print language, and download images are  
frequently very large. For better printing performance, set the speed  
of the printer and EPS serial port as high as possible.  
The SHOW PROTOCOLS APPLETALK command shows all current  
configuration and counters for the AppleTalk protocol handler on the EPS.  
SHOW QUEUE will show any currently queued or active AppleTalk print  
jobs. Because of the handling of AppleTalk jobs, the node shown as queued  
in the SHOW QUEUE display may not be the next one that ends up printing.  
Any AppleTalk client that has been waiting longer will gain control of the  
print resource, regardless of ranking in the SHOW display.  
6.8 LAT Configuration  
You may wish to change the EPS’s node name and/or identification string  
(SET/DEFINE SERVER NAME or IDENTIFICATION) to make configuration  
of your LAT hosts more convenient.  
Depending on your network, you may also wish to change the LAT timers  
and limits (multicast, keepalive, retransmit limit, and node limit) to suit your  
site.  
You can change the group codes for both the server and ports (SET  
SERVER GROUPS, DEFINE PORT AUTHORIZED GROUPS) to restrict  
access to a subset of the LAT nodes on the network.  
Since the EPS’s services do not have LAT enabled by default, the EPS will  
not announce their names and thus the service names will be invisible to  
other LAT nodes. If you wish to make the services visible, use the SET  
SERVICE LAT ENABLED command to re-enable LAT access.  
You can configure your LAT hosts to use the EPS’s port names rather than  
the service names, so LAT access is still possible even if the service multicasts  
are disabled.  
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ETHERNET PRINT SERVER  
The SHOW PROTOCOLS LAT command shows all current configuration  
and counters for the LAT protocol handler on the EPS. SHOW QUEUE will  
show any currently queued or active LAT print jobs. SHOW NODES and  
SHOW SERVICES will show other available LAT resources, and is an easy  
check of your LAT network.  
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CHAPTER 7: UNIX/RTEL Host Setup  
7. UNIX/RTEL Host Setup  
This chapter explains how to set up your UNIX host to take advantage of  
the Reverse Telnet software. Reverse Telnet allows your UNIX host to form  
connections to the EPS, through the host’s print queueing system, a device  
interface, or with applications such as Telnet and Rlogin. Read through the  
entire installation procedure before beginning. You must have the EPS in  
your system’s host table to use the RTEL features. The table is usually a file  
called “/etc/hosts” that should contain the name and IP address for your  
server, as well as all the hosts on your network. For example, to add server  
eps1 at IP address 192.67.8.22, include this line in your /etc/hosts file:  
192.67.8.22  
eps1  
One of the most common causes of IP network problems is duplicate IP  
addresses. Make sure that your EPS has a unique IP address.  
7.1 Reverse Telnet Background  
The RTEL software provides the ability to form connections from UNIX hosts  
to EPS server. You can create these connections either through a backend for  
the hosts’ lp or lpr printing, or as a device file that any application can access.  
Queueing can be enabled so that connections to a busy service are queued for  
later processing. RTEL jobs can also be interspersed with LAT connections to  
the same service.  
There are two methods of connecting between the UNIX host and the EPS.  
1. You can link the RTEL software to your host’s printing system, so that  
jobs queued for printing can be sent to a printer on the EPS for  
processing. This path provides options to support PostScript output,  
plotter (and other non-ASCII data) files, and automatic banner page  
generation and tab expansion.  
2. You can use a pseudo-tty device file (such as /dev/ttyp1) on the UNIX  
host which is mapped to the RTEL software. Any user or application  
using that device can be connected to an EPS service. For example, if a  
word processor is told that a printer is on device /dev/ttyp1 and that  
device is connected to an EPS via RTEL, output from the word processor  
will be sent to the EPS automatically. Communications programs, such as  
Kermit, can also benefit. If an EPS is offering a modem service, users on  
the UNIX host can access that modem via RTEL without having the  
modem directly attached to their host. Since the device interface is just a  
“pipe” through which data is transferred from a host to an EPS, it does  
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not support all the data-processing options that the printer interface does.  
It cannot be configured to generate a banner page, for example, or  
perform tab expansion. The options for the printer-interface method are  
not valid with the device interface method.  
The setup for the two RTEL methods is similar, but not identical. Both  
methods take advantage of the “server_hosts” file to read configuration  
information. This file shows the host’s print queues and devices, and controls  
which service/port and server connections will map to. It is also used to  
specify options for processing the data sent to the EPS. For example, you can  
add a banner page to a particular print queue. In the case of device files,  
options to the rteld command line can also be specified in the “server_hosts”  
file.  
To use the printer-backend method, you must run a shell script (mkprt)  
that will add a new printer queue on the host and link any executables RTEL  
needs to start RTEL connections. The script can also add new entries to the  
“server_hosts” file if you desire. For lpr-style printers, the host’s /etc/printcap  
file can be updated by mkprt. Mkprt will also offer to add your EPS’ IP  
address to the host table (/etc/hosts) if it is not there already. You can enter  
addresses to these files by hand instead of automatically, if desired. You need  
to configure the EPS separately (for service and/or port setups). After these  
2 steps, you can use the EPS as a print device from the host, and it will  
support queued jobs, etc.  
Using the device-file interface involves less initial setup, but is potentially  
more complicated for multiple devices. It does allow more flexibility and  
functionality than the printer-backend method. To setup the device  
interface, you must run the rteld program for each device desired. In  
general, the rteld program allocates a pseudo-tty device pair and attempts to  
connect them to the specified EPS and service. Once the program creates  
this pair, any user or application can use the tty device as a connection to the  
EPS. Applications can then print directly to the device, users can echo data to  
the connection, and communications programs can use the device as if it was  
a physical device on the host. See the rteld man page in the RTEL/source  
distribution directory for a detailed list of available rteld options.  
There are 2 main executables that are used for the RTEL handling:  
1. The lp_filter and lpr_filter programs are backend filters for your host’s lp  
or lpr print spooler. When using the print queue interface, the EPS calls  
these programs to actually connect to the EPS and output the job to a  
serial port. They can also be configured to do limited data processing,  
such as tab expansion.  
2. The rteld program is run whenever a device interface to an EPS service  
is created, used, or deleted. It can also be run at system startup time to  
establish any “permanent” pseudo-device connections.  
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CHAPTER 7: UNIX/RTEL Host Setup  
In general, rteld is the only application that users might have to run  
interactively. The lp and lpr filters are called by the host’s printing subsystem.  
7.2 Installing the Reverse Telnet Software  
This section describes the procedure used to install the Reverse Telnet  
software (RTEL) on a UNIX host machine.  
If you received the distribution on DOS-format floppy disks, you will have  
to recreate the RTEL file structure on a UNIX machine. The DOS floppies  
contain all the download files (*.SYS), a single tar archive containing the  
RTEL source files (rtel_src.tar) and the RTEL executables for all system types  
(lp_filter.*, lpr_filter.*, rteld.* and talk.*). Because of DOS filename length  
restrictions, you will have to rename the lp and lpr filter executables with the  
correct UNIX file names. When the tar archive is untarred (using tar xvf  
./rtel_src.tar), the resulting file names will be correct.  
The EPS includes reverse Telnet executables for the following operating  
systems: MIPS RISC/os, SunOS (68xxx and SPARC based), Digital ULTRIX  
®
(RISC-based, non-VAX), IBM AIX (on RS6000-style machines), SCO UNIX  
®
(for 80386- and 80486-based machines), and HP -UX (68xxx-based). You  
should read the README files (included with the distribution media) for  
a detailed list of the supported environments and software version levels.  
7.3 Reverse Telnet for Unsupported UNIX Machines  
If your operating system is not one of those listed above, you must modify  
the distributed software and compile executable code for your machine.  
For more information, refer to the README files in the /tmp/rtel and  
/tmp/rtel/source subdirectories. Recompiling the software for your machine  
should be largely uneventful, unless your machine is missing system include  
files or libraries. If you encounter problems building the software and cannot  
resolve them with the help of the README files, contact Technical Support.  
7.4 Installation Procedure  
The lpinstall script you will use in this procedure creates and links necessary  
files and directories if they do not already exist.  
There is also an uninstall script that will remove the binaries and source  
code from the system area, stop the queueing daemon, and restore the system  
to the pre-installation state.  
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To install and configure the RTEL software:  
1. Log into the host machine as the super-user. Set your current directory  
to /tmp/rtel (or whichever directory the ETS software was initially loaded  
into).  
2. Execute the RTEL install script by typing “./lpinstall” at your local  
prompt. This script will then prompt you for your machine type (SUN,  
SPARC, MIPS, HP, DEC, SCO, AIX, or OTHER) and the type of spooling  
system to install (lp or lpr). If you choose “OTHER” for your machine  
type, the EPS will ask you to enter the file suffix for the unsupported  
machine.  
At the end of the lpinstall script you will see the message, “Installation of  
Reverse Telnet Application Package complete.”  
3. After the lpinstall script has been executed, you may delete the /tmp/rtel  
directory tree. All files needed for normal system operation have been  
moved into the /usr/spool/rtel directory. Unless you need the space, we  
suggest leaving it (or moving it to an archive area) in case you need to  
make changes or you wish to refer to the source code.  
7.5 Setting up the RTEL Interfaces  
The two methods of RTEL interfacing are described next. The printer-  
backend interface is described first. Because it is easy to configure and  
maintain, it is preferred for systems where only a printer interface is needed.  
If you need a special printer backend filter, or an application program needs  
to use a physical device, you will have to use the rteld interface.  
Remember that you must set up the target services (if services are being  
used) and ports on the EPS to complete the configuration. Follow these  
steps:  
1. Assign an IP address (SET/DEFINE SERVER IPADDRESS) to the EPS  
2. Create the service (again, if services are being used) (SET/DEFINE  
SERVICE)  
3. Make sure the port(s) is available to network connections ( DEFINE  
PORT DYNAMIC or REMOTE).  
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CHAPTER 7: UNIX/RTEL Host Setup  
NOTE: The target print service does NOT have to be local to the EPS. The EPS will search  
remote services if the service specified is not local. You can access any available LAT  
service through the EPS in this manner. For example, if a printer connected to the  
network provides its own LAT service (for example, laser1), laser1 could be placed in  
the server_hosts file as the service to use and the EPS will attempt to print jobs to  
laser1, even though the EPS is not providing the service. This provides an interface to  
devices (modems, printers, terminal servers) that do not provide the RTEL capability  
themselves.  
7.6 Creating RTEL Print Queues  
The script file /usr/spool/rtel/mkprt is used to create remote print queues.  
To create a print queue, execute the following steps:  
1. Log into the host machine as the super-user.  
2. Set your current directory to the RTEL directory:  
% cd /usr/spool/rtel  
3. Execute the printer installation script by typing “./mkprt” at the shell  
prompt. To install a new print queue, you must stop the LP print  
spooling subsystem. This will abort jobs that are currently being spooled.  
The script file will ask if you want to stop the printer queuing system.  
Answering “yes” will continue the installation. Answering no will abort it.  
The mkprt script will then prompt for the name of the UNIX print queue  
to create. It will create and enable the new print queue so users can  
access it just as they would access any other printer. In the steps below,  
note that the UNIX print queue name and server name are case-sensitive,  
and any options must be in lowercase. The other parameters are case-  
insensitive.  
Mkprt will also offer to update the server_hosts file with the queue and  
service names, target node, and queue options. If you wish to add these  
by hand, you can decline the automatic update. Mkprt will also offer to  
update the /etc/printcap (for lpr systems) and /etc/hosts file (if your  
EPS is not found in the file). If you allow mkprt to update these files,  
you can skip to step 7 below. We suggest you read through steps 4-6  
for reference.  
4. Add the IP address and name of the server which will be providing the  
printer service to the /etc/hosts file (if it is not already there).  
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5. The mkprt script will add the following information to the  
/usr/spool/rtel/server_hosts file:  
queue_nameserver  
passwd options  
service  
Queue_name is the name of the UNIX print queue; passwd and options  
are configurable parameters for the print queue. Server and service are  
the EPS and EPS service that will be providing the printer. Note that the  
queue and server names are case-sensitive. The example entry below will  
configure print queue rprint1 to use service prt_srvc on server eps1 with  
no password and with the banner option enabled:  
rprint1  
eps1  
prt_srvc null banner  
Service can be either a service name or a string of the form :n, where n is  
the number of port to connect to. This second form bypasses the service  
name and attempts a direct physical port connect, much like the 2000+n  
Telnet connections. This example will set the same options, but will request a  
direct connection to serial port 3 on the ETS rather than using a service.  
rprint1  
eps1  
:3  
nullbanner  
If you desire password protection on the print service, you can place a  
password in the password field; a password of “null” indicates no password is  
to be used. The password must be six characters or fewer, because of the  
server’s string length limit. The password corresponds to that set with the  
ETS’ SET SERVICE PASSWORD command.  
The options field specifies which (if any) of the print options are enabled.  
The choices are one or more of the following:  
• none—No options are enabled.  
• banner—A banner page prints before each job. The banner will show the  
date, name of the job, and name of the user who requested it.  
• binary—The EPS performs No Line Feed processing. This is useful for  
non-text files (such as plotter or graphics files).  
• expandtabs—Change tabs into space characters. Eight space tabs are  
assumed.  
• postscript—A ctrl-D (ASCII 4) is used to terminate a print job, rather than  
the standard formfeed (ASCII 12).  
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CHAPTER 7: UNIX/RTEL Host Setup  
There must be an entry in the options field (use “none” if no options are  
desired). Multiple options can be specified, separated by commas. Options  
must be specified in lower case characters.  
There must be an entry in the server_hosts file for each EPS print queue  
you wish to use. You may have multiple UNIX print queues using the same  
EPS print queue (using different sets of options, for example) but a UNIX  
print queue cannot use multiple EPS queues.  
6. If your system uses lpr spooling, add the following information to the  
/etc/printcap file (this example will add printer rprint1):  
rprint1|RTEL printer:\  
:lp=/usr/spool/rtel/rprint1_dev:\  
:sd=/usr/spool/rtel/rprint1_sd:\  
:of=/usr/spool/rtel/rprint1  
This entry specifies the physical device, spool directory, and output filter  
to use to access the printer device. The name of the queue (rprint1) must  
be similar to the entries in the sd and of fields—a queue named rprint1  
and an sd entry of dummy_device will not work.  
7. Use the “lpstat -t” command (for lp spooling systems) or the “lpc status”  
command (for lpr spooling systems) to make sure the printer was created  
correctly. For example, if we created printer rprint1 on our lp spooling  
system, entering the “lpstat -t” command might display the following  
information:  
% lpstat -t  
scheduler is running  
device for rprint1: /dev/null  
rprint1 accepting requests since Apr 18 15:44  
printer rprint1 is idle. enabled since Apr 18 15:44  
7.7 Deleting RTEL Print Queues  
For UNIX systems that use the lp spooling system, enter the following  
command to delete a print queue (you must generally be super-user to run  
these):  
% /usr/lib/lpshut  
% /usr/lib/lpadmin  
% /usr/lib/lpsched  
-xqueue_name  
These lines will, respectively, stop the print scheduler, delete the queue,  
and restart the scheduler.  
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For UNIX systems that use the lpr spooling system, delete the entry for the  
printer in the “/etc/printcap” file. You also may want to delete the entry for  
the printer in the RTEL directory.  
7.8 Creating RTEL Pseudo-Devices  
For each RTEL pseudo-device you wish to create, the EPS must execute the  
rteld command. The command tells the host which EPS and service to use  
and specifies any options to apply to the tty device pair. Options provide  
control over the service and host to connect to, the device to use, etc. A short  
synopsis appears in Table 7-1.  
Table 7-1. Available Options.  
Option  
Description  
Usage  
b
c
d
f
rteld spawned as a system daemon  
specify a host and service to connect to  
specify a connection to a particular device  
force removal of stale rteld files  
-b  
-cservice@host  
-d/dev/ttyXX  
-f  
h
i
help screen  
-h  
immediate connection to the target service  
disconnect the specified device connection  
specify a password for the remote service  
allow queueing if the target service is busy  
shows all active rteld sessions  
-i  
k
p
q
r
-kttyXX  
-ppassword  
-q  
-r  
s
t
start all rteld processes from server_hosts file -s  
Use and interpret telnet IAC codes  
Show version of RTEL software  
-t  
v
-v  
You will have to recreate devices created via the rteld command each time  
your system boots. Running the rteld command with the startup (-s) option  
at system boot time will read each device entry from the server_hosts file and  
create an rteld process for it. Each device is specified with the server and  
service/port to connect to, an optional password, and any rteld command  
line options. For example:  
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CHAPTER 7: UNIX/RTEL Host Setup  
queue_name server  
rprint1 eps1  
/dev/ttyq1 eps2  
/dev/ttyq6 eps2  
service  
passwdoptions  
prt_srvc  
mod_srvc  
:4  
null  
null  
null  
banner  
-q  
-q  
The second line will request a connection to EPS “eps2” and service  
“mod_srvc”, using pseudo-device ttyq1. No password will be specified, and  
queueing will be enabled. The third line will attempt a connection from  
device ttyq6 directly to port 4 on “eps2,” bypassing the service name syntax.  
Running  
% rteld -s  
in this case would be the same as  
% rteld -d/dev/ttyq1 -cmod_srvc@ets2 -q  
% rteld -d/dev/ttyq6 -c:4@ets2 -q  
You can use the 3 different configuration lines (for both printer and device  
setups) in the same server_hosts file. You do not need any special handling or  
ordering.  
Once the EPS starts the rteld process, you should be able to use the pseudo-  
device as any other physical device on the host. The EPS can echo files to it,  
dump applications programs output to it, etc.  
Two other rteld options provide information and a means of removing the  
rteld process for a particular tty pair. The -r option will display the rteld  
devices in use and their destinations. The -k option will remove the RTEL  
handler for a particular device, or for all devices if the “all” is specified as the  
device name. See the supplied rteld man page for a complete list and  
description of the rteld options.  
7.9 Queueing with the RTEL Software  
You can queue a job in two places— in the host’s print system (lp or lpr, etc)  
or in the EPS itself. If you are only printing to one queue from one host to  
one EPS service, the host provides the queueing, since it will not release a new  
job to the EPS until the previous job completes. The second case occurs  
when multiple print queues (possibly on more than one host) point to the  
same EPS queue. In this case, the hosts will provide local queueing, but you  
may still have multiple jobs attempting to access the EPS. In this case, the EPS  
will provide queueing among the hosts. Jobs from multiple hosts are handled  
in order, without regard to size or any priority, so if a particular host’s queue  
seems to stop for an extended time, this may be an explanation. The SHOW  
QUEUE display on the EPS will show the order of jobs pending on the EPS—  
you must use the host’s lp or lpr utilities to show jobs queued by the host.  
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7.10 RTEL Troubleshooting  
There is a diagnostic file in the /usr/spool/rtel directory that may be helpful  
in finding problems. The job_status file contains any errors that occurred on  
a particular print job, such as job aborted, invalid service name, or incorrect  
password (for passworded services).This file should be examined if the RTEL  
queue is not performing correctly. Entries in this file are time-stamped to  
indicate when the error(s) took place; make sure when you look at these  
error logs that the errors shown are for roughly the same time as the  
problem(s) occurred. In addition, each error name in the log files has a  
name that identifies roughly where the error took place, as follows:  
• %Exxxxxx—Error reported by the host operating system itself. Error  
names generally correspond to values for errors. See your system’s  
documentation for more details.  
• %LAT_xxxx—A reject code from the server. Generally indicates a  
problem with the ETS setup or the server_hosts file.  
• %PTY_xxxx—An error reported by the pty-specific startup routines.  
• %RTEL_xxxxx—The host system could not initiate the connection  
to the server properly. The message should indicate the reason.  
The accompanying text should further isolate the error.  
If a remote print queue does not work function properly, check the following  
items:  
1. Verify that the server’s correct name and IP address are in the /etc/hosts  
file.  
2. On the terminal server, verify that the server name and IP address match  
the information obtained in step one. The server information should be  
both SET and DEFINEd to the correct values.  
3. Verify that the protections on the /usr/spool/rtel and  
/usr/spool/rtel/files directories allow world read, write and execute.  
4. If printing from an LPR type system, verify that the spooling directory  
/usr/spool/rtel/queue_sd exists and is world writeable.  
5. Verify that a link has been made from the lp or lpr filter program  
(lp_filter or lpr_filter) to the file /usr/spool/rtel/queue_name. The  
executable filter name is used to make the association between the queue  
queue_name and the corresponding entry in the server_hosts file.  
6. On the terminal server, verify that the service name specified matches  
the name specified in the /usr/spool/rtel/server_hosts file.  
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CHAPTER 7: UNIX/RTEL Host Setup  
In addition, verify that the service is available. Issue the server command  
SHOW SERVICE serv_name CHARACTERISTICS. The service port  
should be the port the printer is physically connected to and the service  
rating should be non-zero.  
If the service rating is zero, the service is not available. Verify that the  
port is set to access remote or dynamic (see the server commands define  
port n access remote or define port n access dynamic).  
Log the port out using the command LOGOUT PORT n. This will force  
the server to re-evaluate the service rating for port n.  
7. Verify that the port characteristics (baud rate, parity, flow control) match  
the settings needed for the printer. Remember that these characteristics  
need to be both SET and DEFINEd.  
8. On the server, use the MONITOR QUEUE command to see if the UNIX  
host is attempting to make a connection. When a job is active, the a  
queue entry from the UNIX host to the specified service should appear.  
9. As a last resort, connect a terminal to port n and see if data is appearing  
on the terminal when the EPS attempts a print job. You should also try  
connecting to the service locally to verify the ETS’ setup is correct.  
If the printer still does not function properly after verifying these  
conditions, contact Technical Support.  
7.11 Connecting to a Specific Port Using Telnet  
You can connect to a specific port on the EPS by using the Telnet command  
with the “port number” parameter. For example, to connect to serial port 3  
on the EPS, first make sure the port is set to ACCESS REMOTE or ACCESS  
DYNAMIC, then issue the command:  
% telnet server_name 2003  
The number 2003 is the EPS’ base port address 2000 plus the actual port  
number 3. For more information about the TELNET command, refer to your  
host’s documentation for TELNET. Note also that “raw” TCP connections  
(no Telnet character interpretation) are available by using the ports starting  
at 3001. Connecting in this manner attaches the telnet session directly to the  
port, allowing access to the modem, printer, or terminal device attached to  
that port. The EPS will not echo characters unless the device attached to the  
serial port echoes data.  
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Appendix A: RJ-45 Adapter Pinout  
DB25 Female Connector  
13  
25  
1
14  
Reverse side of  
RJ12 (or MMJ)  
RJ12  
(or MMJ)  
5
3 1  
123456  
6 4 2  
1 2 3 4 5 6  
(to LE3700A)  
RJ12 (or MMJ)  
Connector  
Fig. A-1. RJ-45 Adapter.  
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APPENDIX A: RJ-45 Adapter Pinout  
Table A-1. RJ-45 Adapter Pinout.  
Pin #  
(at EPS)  
Signal Name  
(at EPS)*  
Pin #  
at adapter  
DB25 to  
terminal/  
printer  
DB25 to  
modem  
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
CTS (in)  
DSR (in)  
Receive  
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
4
5
20  
2
6
3
Rx Return  
Tx Return  
Transmit  
DTR (out)  
RTS (out)  
7
7
7
7
3
2
6
20  
4
5
*This table assumes that you are using a swapped cable, in which pin 1 at one end  
goes to pin 8 at the other end. The diagram shows a terminal/printer (non-modem)  
example. You can use the inner 6 pins (2-7) with existing RJ-12 connectors, but they  
will not provide RTS/CTS flow control.  
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Appendix B: Cable Limits  
B.1 Network/Cable Limits  
Thinwire (10BASE2) segments can be no longer than 185 m (600 ft.), and  
can have taps no closer together than 0.5 m (1.5 ft.) apart. These can be  
no more than 30 taps per segment.  
Thickwire segments can be no longer than 500 m (1650 ft.). Taps must  
be increments of 2.5 m (8 ft.) apart. There can be no more than 100 taps  
per segment.  
10BASE-T segments can be no longer than 100 m (330 ft.). Longer  
segments may work in some instances, but we do not recommend them.  
Cable is phone grade (or better) unshielded twisted-pair (UTP) cable, RJ-45  
connectors.  
AUI cables can be no longer than 50 m (165 ft.).  
For all media types, a total of 4 repeaters are allowed between any two  
nodes connected by 5 segments of cable. A maximum of 3 segments between  
any two nodes can have taps on them—the others must be point-to-point links  
(10BASE-T or fiber). For example, if you use 5 segments to go across 4  
repeaters between 2 nodes, 2 of the segments (5-3=2) must have NO taps.  
B.2 Serial Cables  
The EPS complies to the RS-423 specification. If you connect the EPS to an  
RS-232 device, it is subject to the RS-232 limits shown below. If you connect  
the EPS to an RS-422 device, it is subject to the RS-422 limitations.  
• RS-232 lines are limited to 15 m (50 ft.) in length.  
• RS-422 lines are limited to 300 m (1000 ft.).  
B.3 Parallel Cables  
Parallel cables (Centronics or Dataproducts) can be no longer than  
6.1 m (20 ft.).  
All parallel cables must be internally twisted (each signal with its return  
signal) for the interfaces to function properly. If you don’t follow this rule,  
the EPS may lose data.  
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APPENDIX C: Power-Up Tests  
Appendix C: Power-Up Tests  
When you power up the server, it goes through the power-up diagnostics.  
These diagnostics first blink the LEDs to indicate that the processor can  
execute firmware correctly and that you can individually address the LEDs.  
It then tests RAM, the serial channels, and the Ethernet controller. After this,  
it checksums the NVR (non-volatile RAM) to verify that the saved data,  
including its Ethernet address, has not been corrupted. If the checksum test  
fails, the EPS sets the Ethernet address to 00-00-00-00-00-00 (which is a known  
invalid address) and resets other server parameters to factory-default values,  
and calculates a new checksum.  
After the EPS completes power-up diagnostics, it will attempt to boot.  
If the installed Ethernet address is not valid, as in the case above, the server  
will enter the boot monitor.  
C.1 Connections and Termination  
To successfully complete power-up diagnostics, you must have a valid network  
connection. If you are using the AUI port, you must connect it to a properly  
terminated transceiver or an AUI cable connected to a thickwire tap.. If  
you are using 10BASE-T, you must connect the port to a 10BASE-T hub or  
another host. A faulty transceiver or improperly terminated Ethernet may  
interfere with the server’s power-up diagnostics. At power-up time, the server  
does not care if there are any devices connected to the serial or parallel ports;  
however, if it detects errors, it will attempt to report the problem to a device  
connected to the serial port.  
C.2 LED Patterns  
As power-up tests progress, the EPS will output testing status to the LEDs in  
the following sequence (although they may change too quickly to observer  
when the tests pass). If a pattern is continuous, then the diagnostics have  
detected an error during that test. When the EPS detects an error, it writes  
the error code to the LEDs and then attempts to write a failure message out  
of port 1 at 9600 baud, 8 bits, no parity, to notify the user. Depending on the  
nature of the error, this may not be possible. In each of the situations  
described below, the four LEDs are shown in Table C-1 as being on (•) or  
off (-).  
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Table C-1. LED Patterns.  
LED State  
Meaning  
• - - - (1/2 second)  
- • - - (1/2 second)  
- - • - (1/2 second)  
- - - • (1/2 second)  
First test. “Hello” message. Indicates that code is running  
and that the LEDs themselves are functional.  
• • • • (Continuous) The EPS detected an error accessing the gate array.  
- - - -  
Performing checksum tests on ROM.  
- - - •  
- - • -  
Testing RAM bank 0 (0s, 1s, and addresses).  
- - • •  
- • - -  
Testing RAM bank 1 (0s, 1s, and addresses).  
- • - •  
- • • -  
Testing for shorts or opens on low order address lines.  
Testing address mapping for errors on high address lines.  
Starting UART internal loopback tests.  
- • • •  
• - - -  
• - - •  
• - • -  
• - • •  
Starting Ethernet controller internal loopback tests.  
• • - -  
• • - •  
Starting parallel loopback test.  
Checking NVR checksum.  
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APPENDIX C: Power-Up Tests  
Table C-1. LED Patterns (continued).  
LED State  
Meaning  
• • • - (3 seconds)  
NVR check sum error: Ethernet address and other server  
parameters are set to factory defaults. You will have to  
restore the Ethernet address from the back label before  
you can use the server. Contact Technical Support.  
• • • • (3 seconds)  
Power-up tests passed. NVR checksum good, ready to  
boot the terminal server.  
• - - - (1/2 second)  
- • - - (1/2 second)  
- - • - (1/2 second)  
- - - • (1/2 second)  
Indicates that the server has detected a factory default  
Ethernet address (00-00-00-00-00-00), and is  
investigating whether factory test hardware is present. It  
will attempt normal boot procedures within 3 seconds.  
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ETHERNET PRINT SERVER  
Appendix D: Network Logins  
Configuring the EPS from the network is rather simple. You can log into the  
EPS via LAT, TCP/IP, and NetWare, and you will have a command “shell”  
with which to configure the EPS. The EPS provides utilities to allow you to  
configure it from AppleTalk and NetWare nodes without logging in.  
If you do log in to the EPS, it will give you a “#” prompt. You must enter the  
EPS’s login password and press <Return>. The default password is “ACCESS,”  
and you can change it via the SET/DEFINE SERVER LOGIN PASSWORD  
command. The EPS will then ask you for a username. Choose any name and  
press <Return>. From the “Local>” prompt, type HELP to get a list of EPS  
commands and get in-depth help on each command.  
For NetWare, the EPS provides a utility called EPSCON on a floppy disk.  
Copy it onto your workstation to use it. With EPSCON, you can either log  
into an EPS or just send individual commands to it. There are 3 formats:  
C:> EPSCON [?]  
If you do not specify a host, the utility lists all available print servers. Using ?  
will show the various EPSCON syntax options.  
C:> EPSCON eps1_name  
This command opens a login session to the EPS. The file server learns of any  
EPSs via network broadcasts—it does not need any configuration to be able to  
connect to it. At login, the utility displays the “#” password prompt. Type  
“ACCESS” and press <Enter>. Then, enter a username and press <Enter>.  
You will then be at the EPS local prompt, and can type HELP for a command  
list.  
C:> EPSCON host [SHOW | RESET | SERVERNAME]  
This command prompts for the EPS login password (“ACCESS” by default)  
and then sends a single command to the EPS without logging in. SHOW will  
show NetWare activity on the EPS, RESET will force the EPS to re-scan the  
file servers on the network, and SERVERNAME will attempt to change the  
EPS’s server name. If it changes the server name, the names of any default  
(EPS_xxxxxx_xx) service will also change to use the new server name and the  
_xx suffix. For TCP/IP, you can use Telnet or Rlogin to connect to the EPS.  
If the EPS’s IP address is 192.77.23.42, doing a  
% telnet 192.77.23.42  
will place you at the password (“#”) prompt.  
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APPENDIX D: Network Logins  
From LAT devices, the server’s name (EPS_xxxxxx) should appear as a  
service on LAT-enabled hosts. If you connect to that service, you will be  
connected at the password prompt. For example:  
VMS> SET HOS/LAT EPS_45E23A  
to connect from a VMS LAT host, or  
Local> CONNECT EPS_45E32A  
to connect from LAT devices such as other servers.  
To configure the EPS under control of a Macintosh workstation, the utility  
provides an optional application. When you run it, it will open a window and  
wait for you to specify the EPS name and password. You can then configure  
various EPS settings until you exit the application or select a different EPS.  
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ETHERNET PRINT SERVER  
Appendix E: Quick-Start Guide  
NOTE: Read this appendix only if you are loading a new boot image on the print server.  
If you’re a manager who has installed print/terminal servers before and are  
very familiar with BOOTP, RARP, TFTP, NetWare, and/or MOP downloading  
configuration, read this chapter to set your EPS up quickly.  
If you’ve never installed a server before, read the full installation  
instructions in Chapter 3.  
Experienced managers can follow these steps to quickly setup the EPS:  
1. Attach the server to the network, via transceiver, AUI cable, or 10BASE-T  
cable.  
2. Attach the console device (we recommend a terminal) to the server. The  
server will expect a console device connected to port 1, at 9600 baud, 8-bit  
characters, and no parity.  
3. If you have not yet installed the server software, do so now. Installing the  
software will require approximately 5 megabytes of disk space.  
• VMS: Use vminstal to install in the contents of the distribution tape. The  
.SYS files will be installed in SYS$SYSROOT:[MOM$SYSTEM] by default.  
Ensure that this directory is in the MOM$LOAD search path and that  
MOP downloading is enabled.  
• NetWare: Copy the download file(s) (PS1.SYS) from the enclosed floppy  
disks onto your file server. The files will gave to be in the login directory  
for this file server (generally SYS:\LOGIN). Also, there is an 11-character  
limit on the EPS pathname—make sure the login directory conforms to  
this limit.  
• UNIX: tar the tape into the /tmp directory. You will then have to place  
the download file (ETS.SYS, SPS.SYS, and/or PS1.SYS) file in whichever  
directory your host’s TFTP server will look for them. If TFTP requires no  
default directory, the EPS itself will allow only 15 characters of path  
information, so place the files in a directory adhering to this limit. The  
directory and files must have world read privileges.  
If your host supports BOOTP, you may wish to add the server to the host’s  
BOOTP configuration file (usually /usr/etc/bootptab). You will have to  
add the server’s hardware address (from the rear of the unit), its IP  
address, and the filename to download (PS1.SYS for the EPS). For  
example:  
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APPENDIX E: Quick-Start Guide  
#Note that #s are typically comment characters.  
#host htyp hardware address IP address bootfile  
eps1 1 00:80:a3:04:19:4c 192.1.240 /tftpboot/PS1.SYS  
Recall that in BOOTP and TFTP, the path and filename are case-sensitive.  
If your host supports RARP instead of BOOTP, you can configure the host  
to reply to the EPS’s RARP requests and give the EPS its IP address. In  
general, the EPS needs to be in the host’s /etc/hosts and /etc/ethers files  
for the host to reply. Since RARP provides no filename information,  
TFTP will request the default filename with no path. If you need a  
specific path for the download file, you will have to use BOOTP or  
manual configuration. The EPS will use the RARP reply host as the  
loadhost.  
4. Configure the EPS: Power on the unit. The EPS will always attempt a  
BOOTP configuration; if the BOOTP is not answered, it will send a  
broadcast RARP request as well. It will then attempt a TFTP download if  
it has an IP address and a loadhost. If the TFTP fails or the EPS does not  
attempt it, the EPS will attempt NetWare if you’ve specified a file server.  
If you did not set a file server, or if the download fails, the EPS will try  
MOP. If you use BOOTP, RARP, or MOP, the server should discover its  
load host automatically and download the file successfully.  
If garbage characters appear on the console, check the terminal settings  
and serial line configuration.  
If you are using NetWare to download, or if the EPS cannot discover its  
filename or IP address via TFTP, you will have to configure it manually.  
If the server is not displaying the “Boot>” prompt, press Return or Break  
when it is waiting between download attempts. You should get the  
“Boot>” prompt and be able to type on the console device. What you  
configure depends on the download method:  
• TFTP: You will need to configure the server’s and loadhost’s IP addresses,  
and the path and filename of the download file:  
Boot> SET SERVER IPADDRESS w.x.y.z  
Boot> SET SERVER LOADHOST a.b.c.d  
Boot> SET SERVER SOFTWARE /directory/ps1.sys  
Boot> FLASH  
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• NetWare: You need to specify the file server to load from and the path  
and filename of the download file. The download file must be in the  
login directory of the file server you are loading from (because of login  
restrictions).  
Boot> SET SERVER NETWSERVER fileserver  
Boot> SET SERVER SOFTWARE SYS:\LOGIN\PS1.SYS  
Boot> FLASH  
NOTE: The path and filename are case-sensitive for TFTP, and are not case-sensitive for  
NetWare.  
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NOTES  
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© Copyright 2002. Black Box Corporation. All rights reserved.  
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Lawrence, PA 15055-1018  
724-746-5500  
Fax 724-746-0746  
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