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Re: Use network printer from NetBSD
On giu 25 14:18, Greg Troxel wrote:
> The first thing to understand is what format the printer wants. Back in
> the old days, printers were postscript, and you basically had to send
> them postscript. (Or HP's PCL.)
Yes, of couse, but how?
> I think 9100 is what HP called "jetdirect". I somewhat fuzzily think
> that connecting to that is just like sending bytes over a serial port.
Yes, it is JetDirect, an HP technology, but also adopted by other
manufacturers.
> That doesn't really surprise me if the printer expects postscript. You
> omitted the model from your email.
As in a previous answer to this thread, it is Brother MFC L2750DN.
> 0) read enough docs/etc. to find out what the printer wants
<https://download.brother.com/welcome/doc100802/cv_mfcl2750dw_uke_oug_a.pdf>
The user manual seems not to mention anything useful about queues of
accepted input formats.
How to correctly guess the requirements of a printer?
> 1) Try a postscript file.
Done with netcat. You can check out my reply to JingYuan. I also tried
it directly: `lpr testfile.ps'. The printer display lights up, shows
`Receiving data', and then nothing happens.
> 2) what you are basically trying to do is have a printer configured,
> just like it was attached, except you it isn't physically attached.
Basically yes.
> - put it on an Ethernet by itself, hooked up to an extra interface on
> a computer [...]
>
> - configure a print server that owns the printer [...]
In my case, security is not an issue and I would like not to install
something extra, even because I could move the NetBSD host to another
LAN, and I could need to use another printer.
Moreover, the way you suggest, each printer should be related to a
host with a CUPS server installed and configured. I imagine this is the
ideal scenario, but I'm afraid it could be too much, in my case.
> - make all access go through the daemon. Mutliple users accessing a
> network printer at once is a bit of a mess anyway.
This could be another issue, but I am sure that during my tests I was
the only one to access the printer.
Thanks for your suggestions,
Rocky
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