Please read this manual thoroughly before using the machine. You can print or
view this manual from the CD-ROM at any time, please keep the CD-ROM in a
convenient place for quick and easy reference at all times.
The Brother Solutions Center (http://solutions.brother.com) is your one stop
resource for all your machine needs. Download the latest drivers and utilities for
your printers, read the FAQs and troubleshooting tips.
Some Brother machine models are network ready as standard. Other Brother
printers can be upgraded with an optional Network Print Server.
Version A
Trademarks
Brother is a registered trademark of Brother Industries, Ltd.
HP, HP/UX, JetDirect and JetAdmin are trademarks of Hewlett-Packard Company.
UNIX is a trademarks of UNIX Systems Laboratories.
Ethernet is trademark of Xerox Corporation.
Postscript is trademark of Adobe Systems Incorporated.
Netware is a trademark of Novell, Inc.
Apple, Macintosh, LaserWriter and AppleTalk are trademarks of Apple Computer,
Inc.
IBM, LAN Server, and AIX are trademarks of International Business Machines
Corporation.
LAN Manager, Windows, and MS-DOS are trademarks of Microsoft Corporation.
NC-9100h and BRAdmin Professional utility are trademarks of Brother Industries
Ltd.
All other brand and product names mentioned in this user's guide are registered
trademarks or trademarks of respective companies.
Compilation and Publication
Under the supervision of Brother Industries Ltd., this manual has been compiled and
published, covering the latest product descriptions and specifications.
The contents of this manual and the specifications of this product are subject to
change without notice.
Brother reserves the right to make changes without notice in the specifications and
materials contained herein and shall not be responsible for any damages (including
consequential) caused by reliance on the materials presented, including but not
limited to typographical and other errors relating to the publication.
If for any reason you must ship your Print/Fax server, carefully package the Print/
Fax server to avoid any damage during transit. It is recommended that you save
and use the original packaging. The print server should also be adequately
insured with the carrier.
WARNING
When shipping the Print/Fax server, put it into the anti-static bag to avoid damage.
i
IMPORTANT NOTE:For technical and operational assistance, you must call the
In USA1-800-276-7746
In Canada1-877-BROTHER
country where you purchased the machine.
Calls must be made from within that country.
In EuropeVisit http://www.brother.com for contact i nf or ma ti on on yo ur
If you have any comments or suggestions, please write to us at:
In EuropeEuropean Technical Services
In USAPrinter Customer Support
In CanadaBrother International Corporation (Canada), Ltd.
Brother fax-back system (USA)
Brother has set up an easy-to-use fax-back system so you can get instant answers
to common technical questions and information about all our products. This is
available 24 hours a day, seven days a week. You can use the system to send the
information to any fax machine.
Call the number below and follow the recorded instructions to receive a fax about
how to use the system and an Index of the subjects you can get information about.
In USA only1-800-521-2846
Service center locator (USA)
For the location of a Brother authorized service center, call 1-800-284-4357.
local Brother office.
1 Tame Street
Audenshaw
Manchester, M34 5JE
UK
Brother International Corporation
15 Musick
Irvine CA 92618
- Marketing Dept.
1, rue Hôtel de Ville
Dollard-des-Ormeaux, PQ, Canada H9B 3H6
Service center locations (Canada)
For the location of a Brother authorized service center, call 1-877-BROTHER.
Internet addresses
Brother Global Web Site: http://www.brother.com
For Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs), Product Support and Technical
Questions, and Driver Updates and Utilities: http://solutions.brother.com
(In USA Only) For Brother Accessories & Supplies: http://www.brothermall.com
ii
Introduction
Overview
The Brother NC-9100h Print / Fax Server allows your Brother
machine to be attached and shared on a 10/100Mbit Ethernet
Network. Web Based Management and Administration utilities
provide easy configuration and management of your Brother
machine. Once installed and configured, the NC-9100h allows your
machine to FAX documents over the Internet; print and scan
documents over a network. The NC-9100h is even supplied with
Brother's Peer to Peer printing software allowing you to easily share
the machine as a small department printer.
Features
Internet Fax
The Brother machine can be assigned an E-mail address allowing
you to send, receive and forward documents on a Local Area
Network and the Internet to PC's or other Internet Fax machines.
SMTP/POP3 mail server support.
Network Printing
The Print / Fax server can be utilized as a print server providing
printing services for the Windows
2000/XP, Unix Systems supporting the TCP/IP protocols, Novell
Operating Systems supporting IPX/SPX and Macintosh Networks
supporting AppleTalk or TCP/IP.
Network Scanning
You can scan documents into a PC on your Network directly or the
Brother machine can E-mail them to your PC for editing in Black &
White.
Management Utilities
The Web Based Management and BRAdmin Professional utilities provide
powerful easy to use management of Fax, network and E-mail settings.
®
95/98/Me, Windows NT®4.0/
iii
IMPORTANT INFORMATION: REGULATIONS
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Declaration
of Conformity (For U.S.A. only)
Responsible Party: Brother International Corporation
100 Somerset Corporate Boulevard
Bridgewater, NJ 08807-0911, USA
TEL: (908) 704-1700
declares, that the products
Product Name:Brother Network Card (BR-net)
Model Number: NC-9100h
complies with Part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to the following
two conditions: (1) This device may not cause harmful interference, and (2)
this device must accept any interference received, including interference that
may cause undesired operation.
This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a
Class B digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are
designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a
residential installation. This equipment generates, uses, and can radiate
radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the
instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications.
However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular
installation. If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or
television reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off
and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference b y one or
more of the following measures:
- Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna.
- Increase the separation between th e eq uip m en t an d rece ive r.
- Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to
which the receiver is connected.
- Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help.
Important
Changes or modifications not expressly approved by Brother Industries, Ltd.
could void the user's authority to operate the equipment.
Industry Canada Compliance Statement (For Canada only)
This Class B digital apparatus complies with Canadian ICES-003.
Cet appareil numérique de la classe B est conforme a la norme NMB-003
du Canada.
iv
Declaration of Conformity (Europe)
We,Brother Industries, Ltd.,
15-1, Naeshiro-cho, Mizuho-ku, Nagoya 467-8561, Japan
declare that this product is in conformity with the following normative
documents.
Safety:EN 60950,
EMC:EN 55022 Class B,EN 55024
following the provisions of the Low Voltage Directive 73/23/EEC and the
Electromagnetic Compatibility Directive 89/336/EEC (as amended by 91/
263/EEC and 92/31/EEC).
Issued by:Brother Industries, Ltd.
Information & Document Company
Caution for LAN connection
Connect this product to a LAN connection that is not subjected to overvoltages.
Intel Copyright and License Information
This products includes object code from Intel’s UPnP SDK.
The following is the copyright and licensing information for Intel UPnP SDK.
modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
* Redistributions of source code must re tain the above copyright notice this
list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
* Neither name of Intel Corporation nor the names of its contributors may
be used to endorse or promote products derived from t his software
without specific prior written permission.
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND
CONTRIBUTORS “AS IS” AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES,
INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE
DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL INTEL OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR
CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,
PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND
ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY,
OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
Brother Print/Fax servers are supplied with the Transmission Control
Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) protocol suite. Since virtually all
UNIX host computers support TCP/IP, this capability allows a printer
to be shared on a UNIX Ethernet network. As with all protocols,
TCP/IP communications can proceed concurrently while other
protocols are active, this means that UNIX, NetWare, Apple, and
other computers can share the same Brother print server over an
Ethernet network.
The Linux operating system uses the same setup procedures as
standard Berkeley UNIX systems. Refer to this chapter for a typical
GUI based Linux installation.
Quick Tips:
1
The Automatic Private IP Addressing (APIPA) protocol
automatically assigns an IP address from the range:
169.254.1.0 to 169.254.254.255. If you want to disable the
APIPA protocol, set APIPA to Off using the machine control
panel. For more information, see APIPA on page 10-9. If the
APIPA protocol is disabled, the default IP address of a Brother
Print/Fax server is 192.0.0.192. To change it, use the control
panel, the BRAdmin Professional utility, Web BRAdmin
software or let your DHCP server allocate an IP address to the
machine.
2
To learn how to configure the IP address on your machine, see
Chapter 11 of this User’s Guide.
3
The default password for Brother Print/Fax servers is access.
4
The default name for a Brother Print/Fax server is usually
BRN_xxxxxx (where xxxxxx is the last six digits of the
Ethernet address of the Print/Fax server).
UNIX PRINTING 1 - 1
5
When configuring the PRINTCAP file, pay particular attention to
the service names, BINARY_P1 and TEXT_P1.
TCP/IP
Brother Print/Fax servers appear to the network as a UNIX host
computer with a unique IP address running the lpd (line printer
daemon) protocol. As a result, any host computer that supports the
Berkeley remote LPR command can spool jobs to Brother print
servers without the need for any special software on the host
computer. For special applications, raw TCP ports are also available.
Brother Print/Fax servers also support the FTP protocol. This
protocol can be used to send print jobs from Unix systems.
The Brother Print/Fax server is pre-configured to run on a TCP/IP
network with a minimum of setup. The only mandatory configuration
of the Print/Fax server is the allocation of an IP address, which can
be either automatically assigned using DHCP, BOOTP etc., or
manually assigned using the ARP command, BRAdmin Professional
utility, or the machine control panel.
For setting the IP address of the Print/Fax server, see
Chapter 11 of this user guide or the Quick Setup Guide
General TCP/IP UNIX Host Configuration
The configuration process for most UNIX systems is described in the
following steps. As this process varies, we recommend that you refer
to your system documentation for additional information.
1
Configure the /etc/hosts file on each UNIX host that needs
to communicate with the Print/Fax server. Use your favorite
editor to add an entry to the /etc/hosts file containing the IP
address and node name of the device. For example:
192.189.207.3BRN_310107
1 - 2 UNIX PRINTING
The actual format of the entry may vary depending on your system,
check your system documentation and also note the format of other
entries in the /etc/hosts file.
The node name in this file does not necessarily need to be
the same as the one that is actually configured into the
Brother Print/Fax server (the name that appears on the
printer configuration page), however, it is good practice to
make the names the same. Some operating systems, such
as HP-UX, do not accept the “_” character in the default
name, for these systems you must use a different name).
In any case, the node name in the /etc/hosts file must match the
node name in the /etc/printcap file.
Some systems such as HP-UX and AIX allow you to enter the IP
address as the host name when setting up the print queue. If this is
the case, you do not need to configure the hosts file.
2
Choose which Print/Fax server service you want to use. There
are several types of services available on Brother Print/Fax
servers. Binary services pass data through unmodified and are
therefore required for PCL or PostScript rasterized graphics
printouts. Text services add a carriage return at the end of each
line for proper formatting of UNIX text files (which end in linefeed
and do not have carriage returns). The text service can also be
used for non-rasterized graphics, such as ASCII PostScript
graphics or many types of PCL graphics.
Choose one of the available services (a service name will be
used in step 3):
BINARY_P1 Binary data
TEXT_P1Text data (CR added)
You may set up multiple print queues on your UNIX host
computer for the same Print/Fax server, each one with a
different service name (for example, one queue for binary
graphics jobs and one for text jobs).
UNIX PRINTING 1 - 3
3
Configure the /etc/printcap file on each host computer to
specify the local print queue, the Print/Fax server name (also
called remote machine or rm), and the Print/Fax server service
name (also called remote printer, remote queue, or rp), and the
spool directory.
This step applies to the majority of UNIX systems, including
Linux, Sun OS (but not Solaris 2.xx), Silicon Graphics (lpr/lpd
option required), DEC ULTRIX, DEC OSF/1, and Digital
UNIX. SCO UNIX users should follow these steps, but should
also see SCO UNIX Configuration on page 1-10. Users of
RS/6000 AIX, HP-UX, Sun Solaris 2.xx, and other systems
that do not use the printcap file should skip to Step 4. SCO
user's should also skip to Step 4 (SCO uses the printcap file,
but this file is automatically configured via the rlpconf
command).
An example of a typical printcap file:
laser1|Printer on Floor 1:\
Make sure this information is added to the end of the printcap
file. Also make sure that the last character in the printcap file
is a colon “:”.
This will create a queue named laser1 on the host computer
that communicates to a Brother print server with a node
name (rm) of BRN_310107 and a service name (rp) of
TEXT_P1 printing text files to a Brother printer through spool
directory /usr/spool/lpd/laser1. If you are printing
binary graphics files, you would use the service BINARY_P1
instead of TEXT_P1.
1 - 4 UNIX PRINTING
The rm and rp options are not available on some UNIX
systems, so if necessary check your documentation to
determine the equivalent options.
Users of Berkeley-compatible UNIX systems can use the lpc
command to obtain the printer status:
%lpc status
laser1:
queuing is enabled
printing is enabled
no entries
no daemon present
Users of AT&T-compatible UNIX systems can generally use
the lpstat or rlpstat commands to obtain similar status
information. Because this procedure varies from system to
system, refer to your system documentation for the exact
usage.
4
Skip this section if you have completed Step 3, unless you have
an SCO UNIX system.
If you have an HP-UX system, IBM RS/6000 AIX computer, or Sun
Solaris 2.xx, there is no printcap file. This is also true for some other
AT&T-based UNIX systems, as well as many VMS-based TCP/IP
software packages (for example, UCX, TGV Multinet, etc.). On SCO
systems, there is a printcap file, but it is automatically configured by
the rlpconf command. Most of these systems generally use a printer
setup program to define the service name (remote printer), the print
server name (remote machine) or IP address, and the local queue
name (spool directory). Refer to the appropriate section depending
on your version of Unix.
UNIX PRINTING 1 - 5
Linux Configuration
If you do not wish to use the command line interface to configure your
Linux distribution, you may wish to use the Linux Printer System
Manager application on your GUI. To do this, do the following:
1
From the Linux Printer System Manager screen, click the Add
button.
2
You will now be asked to specify which Printer type you are
using, select the Remote Unix (lpd) Queue option and click
OK.
3
You must now specify the remote host name, remote queue
name and the input filter to use.
4
The Remote Host name is the IP address of the printer, or the
name from the hosts file which corresponds to the IP address of
the printer.
5
The Remote Queue name is the service name that the printer
will use when processing the data. Generally we recommend
that you use the name “BINARY_P1”, however, if you are
planning to send text documents that do not have a carriage
return and a line feed, then use “TEXT_P1”.
6
Select the appropriate Input Filter from the list of available
printers on your particular build of Linux.
In order to make your settings work, select the Restart lpd option.
As soon as the lpd server restarts, you will be able to send printed
documents from your server.
Linux Configuration Using CUPS
Many Linux systems support Common Unix Printing System
(CUPS).
1 - 6 UNIX PRINTING
HP-UX Configuration
In the case of HP-UX10.xx, the sam program is used to set up the
remote printer. The steps are as follows:
1
Execute the sam program. From the list of options, select
Printers and Plotters.
2
Select LP Spooler.
3
Select Printers and Plotters.
4
Select Actions and then Add Remote Printer/Plotter.
5
Enter any name as the Printer Name (this will be the name of
the print queue).
6
Enter the IP address of the Print/Fax server as the Remote
System Name.
7
Enter the desired Print/Fax server service name as the Remote
Printer Name.
8
Check the box next to Remote Printer is on BSD system.
9
You may accept the default values for the remaining items.
10
Click OK to configure the printer.
You should now be able to print using the lp-d command with the
printer name.
If you are using the HP distributed print service, the configuration
procedure is slightly different because you are sending the print jobs
to a file server, which in turn spools the job to the Print/Fax server.
You must therefore know the name of the file server (spooler host) in
addition to the above information. You will add a physical and a
remote printer, and then assign a logical printer to the remote printer
(a unique name that does not match any other name). To print, use
the lp -d command with the logical printer name.
UNIX PRINTING 1 - 7
Earlier versions of HP-UX use similar procedures to 10.xx users:
1
Enter sam and select Peripheral Devices and then Add
Remote Printer (not Networked printer).
2
Enter the following remote printer settings (the other settings do
not matter):
■ Line printer name (user-selectable).
■ Remote system name (the Print/Fax server name; must
match what is in hosts file or use Print/Fax server IP
address).
■ Remote printer queue (Print server binary or text service
name, e.g. BINARY_P1 or TEXT_P1).
■ Remote Printer is on a BSD System (Yes).
IBM RS/6000 AIX Configuration
The RS/6000 AIX operating system uses the smit program to set up
the remote printer. The procedure is as follows for AIX 4.0 and later:
1
Enter smit and select devices.
2
Select Printer/Plotter.
3
Select Print Spooling.
4
Select Add a Print Queue.
5
Select Remote.
6
Enter the following Remote Printer Settings:
Name of queue (user selectable)
Host name of Remote Printer (Print/Fax server name; must
match name in /etc/hosts file or use the print server IP
address)
Name of queue on remote printer (Print/Fax server binary or
text service name, eg. BINARY_P1 or TEXT_P1).
Type of print spooler. BSD (press the LIST button and choose
BSD)
1 - 8 UNIX PRINTING
The procedure for pre-V4.0 systems is as follows.
1
Enter smit and select devices.
2
Select printer/plotter.
3
Select manage remote printer subsystem.
4
Select client services.
5
Select remote printer queues.
6
Select add a remote queue.
7
Enter the following remote queue settings:
■ Name of queue to add (user selectable).
■ Activate the queue (Yes).
■ Destination host (Print/Fax server name; must match name
in /etc/hosts file or use the Print/Fax server IP address)
■ Name of queue on remote printer (Print/Fax server binary
or text service name, eg. BINARY_P1 or TEXT_P1).
■ Name of device to add (user selectable; for example lp0).
Sun Solaris 2.x Configuration
Sun Solaris 2.x uses the lpsystem and lpadmin programs for remote
printer configuration:
lpsystem -t bsd prnservername
lpadmin -p queue -s prnservername!prnserverservice
accept queue (not required on newer Solaris systems)
enable queue(not required on newer Solaris systems)
Where queue is the name of the local Print/Fax queue.
prnservername is the name of the Print/Fax server (must match the entry in the /etc/hosts file or IP address).
prnserverservice is the print server BINARY_P1 or TEXT_P1
service.
UNIX PRINTING 1 - 9
If this is the first printer configured, you must also use the lpsched
command prior to the accept command.
As an alternative, you may use Printer Manager in the Admintool
utility under OpenWindows. Select Edit, Add, and Add Access to Remote Printer. Then enter the Print/Fax server name in the format
prnservername!\prnserverservice as described above.
Make sure that the printer server OS is set to BSD (the default
setting), and click Add.
Note that we recommend that you use the /etc/hosts file for the
printer name rather than NIS or other name services. Also note that
due to a bug in the Sun lpd implementation on Solaris 2.4 and earlier
releases, you may experience problems printing very long print jobs.
If this is the case, a workaround is to use the raw TCP port software
as described later in this chapter.
SCO UNIX Configuration
To configure a printer in version Version 5.x of SCO Unix, use the
SCOADMIN program.
1
Select Printers and then Print Manager.
2
On the menu select Printer and then Add Remote followed by
Unix...
3
Enter the IP address of the Print/Fax server, and type in the
name of the printer that will be used to spool to.
4
Deselect Use External remote Printing Protocol...
5
To eject the printed page, add the command rp=lpaf to the
/etc/printcap file.
1 - 10 UNIX PRINTING
SCO UNIX requires TCP/IP V1.2 or later to work with Brother print
servers. You must first configure the /etc/hosts and /etc/printcap files as described in step 2. Then run the sysadmsh
program as follows:
1
Select Printers.
2
Select Configure.
3
Select Add.
4
Enter the name of the print queue you entered in the /etc/
printcap file as the Printer name.
5
Enter anything as the Comment, and Class name.
6
For the Use printer interface select Existing.
7
Press the F3 key to get a list of available interfaces, and select
the desired one as the Name of interface using the cursor keys
(Dumb is a good choice).
8
Select Direct as the Connection.
9
Enter the desired Device name (/dev/lp generally works).
10
Select Hardwired as the Device.
11
Select No for the Require banner field.
Older SCO Unix Systems
The Brother NC-9100h Print/Fax servers support the FTP protocol.
Earlier SCO Unix systems are often configured to print using the FTP
protocol.
IBM AS/400
To use a Brother Print/Fax server with an IBM AS/400 running IBM's
TCP/IP gateways services for OS/400 (the OS/400 system must be
v3.1 or later)
Use the CFGTCP command at your OS/400 prompt to add the Print/
Fax server's TCP/IP address to the AS/400 host table.
UNIX PRINTING 1 - 11
Use the following one-line OS/400 command to create the LPD
queue:
where <queuename> is the new AS/400 print queue name,
<service> is the Print/Fax server service name (BINARY_P1 or
TEXT_P1) <driver> is the OS/400 printer driver name (*HP4 is
recommended if in doubt), and <ipaddress> is the IP address of
the Print/Fax server. Note that the IP address and description must
be enclosed in single quotes.
Other Systems
Other systems use similar programs to set up Print/Fax servers.
These programs will generally ask for the following information:
Requested information:You should use:
remote printerBinary or Text service name
remote host computer nameAny name (must match the
name in the printcap file, if any)
or in some cases, you may enter
the Print/Fax server IP address
here
remote host IP addressIP address of Print/Fax server.
Technical support specialists for these companies can usually
answer configuration questions if you provide them with the
equivalent UNIX configuration information (tell them that the Print/
Fax server looks like a remote UNIX host computer running the lpd
line printer daemon).
1 - 12 UNIX PRINTING
If you have not created a spool directory for the Brother Print/Fax
server on your UNIX host computer, you will need to do so now (the
printer setup utilities in HP/UX, AIX, Solaris 2.xx, and other systems
will automatically create the spool directory). The lpd spool directory
is usually located in the /usr/spool directory (check with your
system manager to see if the location is different for your system). To
create a new spool directory, use the mkdir command. For
example, to create a spool directory for the queue laser1, you would
enter:
mkdir /usr/spool/lpd/laser1
On some systems it is also necessary to start the daemon. This is
done on Berkeley-compatible UNIX systems with the lpc start
command as shown in the following example:
lpc start laser1
Other Sources of Information
To learn how to configure the IP address on your machine, see
Chapter 11 of this User’s Guide.
UNIX PRINTING 1 - 13
2
2
TCP/IP Printing
Printing from Windows NT®4.0,
Windows® 2000/XP, LAN Server and
Warp Server
Overview
Users of Windows NT®4.0 can print directly to a network-ready
Brother machine using the TCP/IP protocol. Microsoft Windows
®
NT
4.0 users must install Microsoft’s “TCP/IP Printing“ protocol.
®
Windows
printer without installing any additional software. Brother's print
server also supports transparent printing from IBM LAN Server and
OS/2 Warp Server file servers, as well as from OS/2 Warp Connect
workstations using the TCP/IP protocol.
Quick Tips:
1
2000/XP users are able to send print jobs directly to the
The Automatic Private IP Addressing (APIPA) protocol
automatically assigns an IP address from the range:
169.254.1.0 to 169.254.254.255. If you want to disable the
APIPA protocol, set APIPA to Off using the machine control
panel. For more information, see APIPA on page 10-9. If the
APIPA protocol is disabled, the default IP address of a Brother
Print/Fax server is 192.0.0.192. To change it, use the control
panel, the BRAdmin Professional utility, Web BRAdmin
software or let your DHCP server allocate an IP address to the
machine.
2
The default password for Brother Print/Fax servers is access.
3
Windows NT®4.0 users must install the Microsoft “TCP/IP
Printing“ protocol.
4
Windows® 2000/XP users can print using TCP/IP using the
standard Network Printing software and IPP protocol software
built into any Windows
2 - 1 TCP/IP PRINTING
®
2000/XP installation.
5
Windows® 95/98/Me users can send print jobs using the IPP
protocol via a Windows
®
2000/XP computer provided that the
Microsoft Internet Print Services software is installed on the
®
client PC, IIS is installed and running on the Windows
2000/XP
computer and that the client PC is using version 4 or later of
Microsoft Internet Explorer. For more information, see
Windows® 2000/XP IPP Printing on page 5-9.
6
The default name for a Brother Print/Fax server is usually
BRN_xxxxxx (where xxxxxx is the last six digits of the
Ethernet address of the Print/Fax server).
Windows NT®4.0 and Windows® 2000/XP (TCP/IP)
Configuration
If you have not already done so, install the TCP/IP protocol onto you r
®
Windows NT
Control Panel window of the Windows NT
Start button on Windows NT
Panel menu). The default configuration of Windows
4.0 system. This is done via the Network icon in the
®
®
4.0 to access the Settings/Control
4.0 system (use the
®
2000/XP
automatically installs the TCP/IP protocol. Refer to the appropriate
section in this chapter for more information.
Windows® 2000/XP Printing
(Printer Driver not yet installed)
By default, Windows® 2000/XP systems install with all the necessary
software required for you to be able to print. This chapter describes
the two most commonly used configurations, Standard TCP/IP Port
printing and IPP (Internet Printing Protocol). If you have already
installed the printer driver, jump to the printer driver already
installed section.
Standard TCP/IP Port Printing
1
From the Printers folder select Add Printer. The Add Printer
Wizard will now start. Click on Next.
2
Now select the Local Printer option and deselect the
Automatically detect and install my Plug and Play printer
option.
TCP/IP PRINTING 2 - 2
3
Click on Next.
4
You must now select the correct Network printing port. Select
Create a new port and select Standard TCP/IP Port port from
the pull-down window.
5
When you have done that click Next.
6
The Add Standard TCP/IP PortWizard will now appear. Click
the Next button.
7
Enter the IP address, or name of the printer you wish to
configure. The Wizard will automatically enter the Port name
information for you.
8
Click the Next button.
9
Windows® 2000/XP will now contact the printer that you
specified. If you did not specify the correct IP address or name
then you will receive an error message.
10
Click the Finish button to complete the Wizard.
11
Now that you have configured the port, you must specify which
printer driver you wish to use. Select the appropriate driver from
the list of supported printers. If you are using a driver supplied
with the machine on CD-ROM then select the Have Disk option
to browse to the CD-ROM. You can also click the Windows Update button to connect directly to Microsoft's support Web
site to download printer drivers.
12
When the driver is installed, click the Next button.
13
Specify a name and click the Next button.
14
Now specify if you wish to share the printer, enter the share
name and click Next.
15
Continue through the Wizard clicking the Finish button when
complete.
If you have already installed the printer driver and wish to configure
it for network printing, follow these steps:
1
Select the printer driver you wish to configure.
2
Select File and then choose Properties.
3
Click the Ports tab of the driver and click Add Port.
4
Select the port that you wish to use. Typically this would be
Standard TCP/IP Port. Then click the New Port... button.
5
The standard TCP/IP Port Wizard will start. Follow the Step 6
to 10 in the Standard TCP/IP Port Printing section.
Windows NT®4.0 Printing
If you did not install the TCP/IP protocol during the installation of your
Windows NT
steps. If you have already installed the TCP/IP protocol, proceed to
the next section.
1
Go to the Start button, choose Settings, and then select
Control Panel.
2
Run the Network applet by double clicking the Network icon
and then click on the Protocols tab.
3
Select Add, and double click on the TCP/IP Protocol.
4
Ins
5
Click the
protocol bindings and then you will see the
dialog.
®
4.0 system (either workstation or server) follow these
ert the requested disk(s), or CD-ROM, to copy the required files.
Close
button. The Windows
NT®4.0
system will review
TCP/IP Properties
TCP/IP PRINTING 2 - 4
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