IBM 4400-006 User Manual - Page 171

Pserver Setup, Enp Info

Page 171 highlights

PSERVER Setup • Try a debug nest pserver telnet command (or find the "PSERVER" section on the Novell HTML status page). Look for a valid queue under the "EPS QUEUES" section. If the printer field contains a number, and there is a valid file server but no queue, then you probably made an error in the setup. At this point try again. If it is an NDS PSERVER setup, look for a line with the following type of message: "Could not login to NDS Tree as

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PSERVER Setup
171
Try a
debug nest pserver
telnet command (or find the
“PSERVER” section on the Novell HTML status page). Look for
a valid queue under the “EPS QUEUES” section. If the printer
field contains a number, and there is a valid file server but no
queue, then you probably made an error in the setup. At this
point try again. If it is an NDS PSERVER setup, look for a line
with the following type of message: “Could not login to NDS
Tree <TREE> as <PSERVER.<CONTEXT>”. This indicates
one of the following: the tree is wrong; the context stored on the
Ethernet Interface for the print server object is wrong; the print
server object password is wrong; or the print server object
name is wrong.
Try a
debug nest rprinter
telnet command (or find the
“RPRINTER” section on the Novell HTML status page). Look
for the following type of line: “(0:ENPReadConfig):[0:213]
Destination = <
X
>”, where <
X
> is between 0 and 3. If they all
read: “Destination = 65536,” then the PSERVER setup did not
complete properly. If there was a valid queue under “EPS
QUEUES” in the
debug nest pserver
command, then the
printer name probably does not match an existing destination
name on the Ethernet Interface, or Novell has been disabled for
that destination. If there is a valid “Destination =” line, then
double check that there is an entry for this number under the
“ENP INFO” section.
NOTE:
Debug messages for the PSERVER setup are in the
RPRINTER section here because the PSERVER setup on
the Ethernet Interface shares some code with the
RPRINTER setup.
Try a
debug nest logs
telnet command (or find the “General
Messages” section on the Novell HTML status page). Look for
a valid entry for the printer. It will look something like this:
“(0:InitSinglePrinter): printer=<
X
> name=<NAME>”. Then look
for the following lines: “(0:Printf): RemoteMonitor(<
X
>); printer
is” and “(0:Printf): WAITING_FOR_JOB”. If you see these lines,
the Ethernet Interface is set up properly, and the problem
points to a setup issue on the workstation.