Grandmaster All American 10829 Posts user info edit post |
This may or may not be enough information to provide me with a solution, but I'm having some issues printing to a PCL5/PCLXL/PS laser through a telnet session [PuTTY]. I know that there is some kind of extremely simple passthrough script that a 3rd party vendor has whipped up and hardcoded into their application. Strangely enough I can get the formatting to work fine when the printer is assigned via USB001. I can also share and specify within putty the network name and printer and it works fine on other machines.
However, if I use Standard TCPIP or Lexmark TCPIP, 1 page of output turns into 10 and there are all kinds of weird and random line breaks. I watch the spooler when this happens and it queues multiple pages if not connected to USB. I have been able to duplicate the issue with a Lexmark T650 and a Phaser 6120. Strangely enough, at some point while messing around with the T650 I somehow broke the USB configuration and could not print correctly unless I switched the driver to the previously installed T630.
I have found the following whitepaper on Anzio's site, but have not had a time to do any testing with SecureCRT or Anzio yet. Does anyone have experience with this specifically? Does it make any sense to ask how I can make the TCPIP printer port exactly emulate the virtual USB port? Or I assume Parallel may be the more logical choice? At any rate, this has become increasingly frustrating and any ideas would be appreciated.
http://www.anzio.com/support/documentation/anzio/A Guide to Anzio Passthrough Printing.htm
Thanks, TT. 9/22/2010 7:28:30 AM |
Noen All American 31346 Posts user info edit post |
Take this with a grain of salt.
In all of my experience with print drivers and network printers, this:
Quote : | "Does it make any sense to ask how I can make the TCPIP printer port exactly emulate the virtual USB port?" |
Doesn't ever work. The problem is that every (or damn near every) printer has completely separate hardware for network spooling and USB/Parallel spooling. They are entirely independent systems. You can definitely emulate the virtual USB port through Parallel (and vice versa), but it's a completely different ballgame to print via TCPIP.9/22/2010 5:35:53 PM |