 













                     Compaq_DECprint_Supervisor_(DCPS)_for_OpenVMS_
                     System Manager's Guide

                     Order Number: AA-PSVEG-TE


                     July 2002

                     This manual describes how system maintainers
                     (system managers, data center operators, and
                     application programmers) with system privileges can
                     create DECprint Supervisor print queues to provide
                     printing services for the users of PostScript
                     printers, customize the DECprint Supervisor
                     printing system, and test the printing system.
                     This manual also describes common problems with
                     PostScript printing and how to solve them.





                     Revision/Update Information: This guide supersedes
                                                  AA-PSVEF-TE.

                     Operating System & Versions: OpenVMS Alpha,
                                                  Version 6.2, 7.2-
                                                  2, 7.3 or 7.3-1
                                                  OpenVMS VAX, Version
                                                  5.5-2, 7.2 or 7.3

                     Software Version:            Compaq DECprint
                                                  Supervisor (DCPS)
                                                  for OpenVMS, Version
                                                  2.1

                     Compaq Computer Corporation
                     Houston, Texas

 






           __________________________________________________________

            2002 Compaq Information Technologies Group, L.P.

           Compaq, the Compaq logo, Alpha, DCPS, DECnet, OpenVMS, VAX
           and VMS are trademarks of Compaq Information Technologies
           Group, L.P. in the U.S. and/or other countries.

           Microsoft and Windows are trademarks of Microsoft
           Corporation in the U.S. and/or other countries.

           All other product names mentioned herin may be trademarks
           of their respective companies.

           Confidential computer software. Valid license from Compaq
           required for possession, use, or copying. Consistent
           with FAR 12.211 and 12.212, Commercial Computer Software,
           Computer Software Documentation, and Technical Data for
           Commercial Items are licensed to the U.S. Government under
           vendor's standard commercial license.

           Compaq shall not be liable for technical or editorial
           errors or omissions contained herein. The information
           is provided "as is" without warranty of any kind and is
           subject to change without notice. The warranties for
           Compaq products are set forth in the express limited
           warranty statements accompanying such products. Nothing
           herein should be construed as constituting an additional
           warranty.

           The DECprint Supervisor documentation set is available on
           CD-ROM.

 













   ________________________________________________________________

                                                           Contents


   Preface..................................................   xiii


   1  DECprint Supervisor Overview

         1.1   Purpose of the DECprint Supervisor
               Software.....................................    1-1
         1.2   DECprint Supervisor Software Components......    1-3
         1.2.1     The Print Symbiont.......................    1-4
         1.2.2     Device Control Libraries.................    1-5
         1.2.3     Translators..............................    1-5

   2  Setting Up Printers

         2.1   Non-PrintServer Printers.....................    2-1
         2.1.1     Networked Printers.......................    2-2
         2.1.1.1     Raw TCP/IP Printers....................    2-3
         2.1.1.2     LAT Printers...........................    2-4
         2.1.1.2.1    Configuring the Printer for LAT
                      Access................................    2-4
         2.1.1.2.2    Setting DECserver LAT Port
                      Characteristics.......................    2-5
         2.1.1.2.3    Editing the LAT Configuration File....    2-7
         2.1.1.2.4    Setting the Communications Speed......   2-10
         2.1.1.3     AppleTalk Printers.....................   2-10
         2.1.2     Directly-Connected Serial Printers.......   2-10
         2.1.3     General Information......................   2-11
         2.1.3.1     Supported Printers.....................   2-11
         2.1.3.2     Setting the printer timeout............   2-12
         2.1.3.3     Changing the Printer Password..........   2-12
         2.1.3.4     Setting the Printer Name...............   2-13
         2.2   DIGITAL PrintServer Printers.................   2-14


                                                                iii

 






           2.2.1     Defining PrintServer TCP/IP Network
                     Nodes....................................   2-14
           2.2.2     Defining PrintServer DECnet Network
                     Nodes....................................   2-14
           2.2.3     Deleting the PrintServer Client Startup
                     File.....................................   2-15


     3  Creating and Modifying Print Queues

           3.1   If You Are Installing the Software for the
                 First Time...................................    3-1
           3.2   If You Are Upgrading From DECprint Printing
                 Services Software (CPS)......................    3-1
           3.3   Setting Up Execution Queues..................    3-1
           3.3.1     Supplying the Name of the Execution Queue
                     (P1).....................................    3-4
           3.3.2     Supplying the Printer Device Name (P2)...    3-4
           3.3.2.1     If Your Printer Is On a TCP/IP Network
                       and Uses Raw TCP/IP Sockets ...........    3-6
           3.3.2.2     If Your Printer Is On a LAT Network or
                       Directly Connected.....................    3-7
           3.3.2.3     If Your PrintServer Printer Is Part of
                       a TCP/IP Network ......................    3-8
           3.3.2.4     If Your PrintServer Printer Is Part of
                       a DECnet Network ......................    3-8
           3.3.2.5     If Your Printer Is Part of an AppleTalk
                       Network................................    3-8
           3.3.3     Supplying the Library Logical Name
                     (P3).....................................    3-9
           3.3.4     Assigning Default PRINT Command
                     Parameters to the Queue (P4).............    3-9
           3.3.5     Supplying Default Queue Attributes
                     (P5).....................................   3-11
           3.3.6     Setting the Speed for Serial Printers
                     (P6).....................................   3-12
           3.3.7     Supplying SET DEVICE Qualifiers to the
                     Queue (P7)...............................   3-12
           3.3.8     Enabling SET VERIFY When Initializing the
                     Queue (P8)...............................   3-12
           3.4   Customizing Execution Queue Behavior.........   3-13




     iv

 






              3.4.1     Running DCPS as a Multistreamed
                        Process..................................   3-13
              3.4.1.1     Managing Print Queues When Running
                          Multistreamed..........................   3-14
              3.4.1.2     Changing the DCPS Environment When
                          Running Multistreamed..................   3-14
              3.4.1.3     Determing the Proper Value for
                          DCPS$MAX_STREAMS.......................   3-15
              3.4.2     Interrupting Busy Printers When a Job
                        Starts...................................   3-16
              3.4.3     Suppressing PostScript Synchronization
                        When a Job Starts........................   3-16
              3.4.4     Purging the Symbiont Process's Working
                        Set......................................   3-17
              3.4.5     Suppressing the OPCOM Message
                        USERNOTFOUND.............................   3-17
              3.4.6     Using Old ANSI Translator Page Size for
                        A4 Landscape ............................   3-18
              3.5   Setting Up Generic Queues....................   3-18
              3.6   Activating Changes to the Queue
                    Definitions..................................   3-20
              3.7   Testing the Printing System..................   3-21


        4  Providing Automatic Data Type Detection

              4.1   How DCPS Automatically Detects Data Type.....    4-1
              4.2   Specifying Automatic Data Type Detection.....    4-2
              4.2.1     Linking File Extensions with Data
                        Types....................................    4-2
              4.2.2     Specifying Default Data Types for the
                        System and Queues........................    4-3
              4.2.3     How Users Control Data Type Detection....    4-4

        5  Manipulating Print Jobs and Print Queues

              5.1   Displaying Print Job Status..................    5-1
              5.2   Deleting a Print Job.........................    5-2
              5.3   Releasing a Print Job in the Holding State...    5-3
              5.4   Requeuing Print Jobs.........................    5-4
              5.4.1     Requeuing Pending Print Jobs.............    5-4
              5.4.2     Requeuing the Currently Printing Job to
                        Another Queue............................    5-4


                                                                       v

 






           5.4.3     Requeuing Current and Future Print Jobs
                     in a Queue...............................    5-4
           5.5   Modifying the Attributes of a Print Job......    5-5
           5.6   Displaying a Queue...........................    5-5
           5.7   Pausing a Queue..............................    5-6
           5.8   Starting a Queue.............................    5-7
           5.9   Modifying the Attributes of a Queue..........    5-8
           5.10  Preventing Users from Printing to a Queue....    5-8
           5.11  Deleting a Queue.............................    5-9
           5.12  Responding to a Stalled Queue................    5-9
           5.13  Stopping and Starting the Queue Manager......   5-10


     6  Specifying Separation, Log, and Error Pages

           6.1   What Are Separation Pages?...................    6-1
           6.2   Enabling Job Separation Pages................    6-2
           6.2.1     Error Messages on the Trailer Page.......    6-3
           6.2.2     Suppressing Job Trailer Pages............    6-3
           6.2.3     Specifying a Special Input Tray for Job
                     Burst and Flag Pages ....................    6-4
           6.3   Enabling File Separation Pages...............    6-7
           6.4   Adding a System Message to Separator Pages...    6-7
           6.5   Extended File Specifications.................    6-8
           6.6   Requesting Job Log Pages.....................    6-8
           6.7   The File Error Page..........................    6-8

     7  Creating Setup Modules and Device Control Libraries

           7.1   What Is a Setup Module?......................    7-1
           7.2   Locating Setup Modules.......................    7-1
           7.2.1     Locating Custom Setup Modules............    7-2
           7.2.2     Displaying the Contents of a Setup
                     Module...................................    7-3
           7.3   Creating Custom Setup Modules................    7-3
           7.4   Creating Device Control Libraries............    7-4
           7.4.1     Putting Setup Modules in Libraries.......    7-5
           7.4.2     Specifying a Library Search List ........    7-5
           7.4.3     Device Control Libraries Must Exist for
                     Queue to Start ..........................    7-7
           7.4.4     Preserving Custom Setup Modules During
                     Upgrades.................................    7-8
           7.5   Including Setup Modules in Print Job.........    7-8
           7.6   Persistently Loading PostScript Resources ...    7-9

     vi

 






              7.7   Changing the Default Character Set for PCL
                    and Proprinter Print Jobs....................   7-11
              7.8   Specifying Printer Resolution with Setup
                    Module.......................................   7-12
              7.9   Modifying DECimage Parameters with Setup
                    Modules......................................   7-13
              7.10  Providing Access to Font Cartridge
                    Emulation....................................   7-15
              7.11  Device Control Library Cache Feature.........   7-16
              7.12  Printing on Unrecognized Printers............   7-17


        8  Creating and Maintaining Form Definitions

              8.1   Associating Setup Modules with Forms.........    8-1
              8.2   Associating a Form with a Print Queue........    8-2
              8.3   Creating Form Definitions for ANSI Files.....    8-3
              8.4   Displaying Forms and Their Attributes........    8-5
              8.5   Deleting a Form..............................    8-5
              8.6   Using the Default ANSI Form Definition.......    8-6

        9  Charging Users for Printer Resources

              9.1   Accounting Information Supplied by the
                    DECprint Supervisor Software.................    9-1
              9.2   Accounting Information Supplied by the Job
                    Controller...................................    9-2
              9.2.1     Accounting Fields Left Blank by the Job
                        Controller...............................    9-3
              9.2.2     Accounting Fields Filled with Zeros by
                        the Job Controller.......................    9-4
              9.3   Accuracy of DCPS Page Counts.................    9-4
              9.4   Compatibility with Mechanical Page
                    Counters.....................................    9-5

        10  Printer-Specific Information

              10.1  Apple LaserWriter Plus Printer...............   10-1
              10.1.1    LPS$PERSISTENT_RESOURCES Not Supported...   10-1
              10.2  Compaq Laser Printer LN16 and GENICOM
                    microLaser 170...............................   10-1
              10.2.1    Printer Configuration Setting............   10-1
              10.2.2    LAT and AppleTalk Configuration..........   10-2


                                                                     vii

 






           10.3  Compaq Laser Printer LN32 and LNM40; GENICOM
                 Intelliprint mL, LN and microLaser Series....   10-3
           10.3.1    Printer Configuration Settings...........   10-3
           10.3.1.1    Language-Sensing Mode..................   10-3
           10.3.1.2    Printer Setting May Cause Stalled
                       Queues.................................   10-3
           10.3.2    LAT and AppleTalk Configuration..........   10-4
           10.3.3    Queue Aborts When Using TCPware..........   10-4
           10.4  DIGITAL Colorwriter LSR 2000 Printer.........   10-4
           10.4.1    NIC Does Not Work with Raw TCP/IP........   10-4
           10.5  DIGITAL DECcolorwriter 1000 Printer..........   10-5
           10.5.1    Printer-Specific Setup Files.............   10-5
           10.6  DIGITAL DEClaser 3500 Printer................   10-6
           10.6.1    Job Remains in Starting State............   10-6
           10.6.2    Interaction Between Communication
                     Protocol and Native PCL Support..........   10-6
           10.6.3    NIC Does Not Work with Raw TCP/IP........   10-6
           10.7  DIGITAL DEClaser 5100 Printer................   10-7
           10.7.1    Native PCL Is Unavailable with EtherTalk
                     Protocol on NIC .........................   10-7
           10.7.2    NIC Does Not Work with Raw TCP/IP........   10-7
           10.7.3    Downloading and Deleting Fonts...........   10-7
           10.7.4    Error Page Feature.......................   10-7
           10.8  DIGITAL Laser Printer LN15+..................   10-8
           10.8.1    Printer Configuration Settings...........   10-8
           10.9  DIGITAL Laser Printer LN17+ps................   10-9
           10.9.1    Job Remains in Starting State............   10-9
           10.9.2    Incorrect Sheet Count....................   10-9
           10.9.3    Downloading and Deleting Fonts...........  10-10
           10.9.4    Colored Separator Pages and Tray
                     Switching................................  10-10
           10.10 DIGITAL Laser Printer LN20...................  10-10
           10.10.1   Incorrect Sheet Count....................  10-10
           10.11 DIGITAL Laser Printer LN40...................  10-10
           10.11.1   Incorrect Sheet Count....................  10-10
           10.12 Compaq and DIGITAL Laser Printer LNC02.......  10-11
           10.12.1   Minimum Firmware Version.................  10-11
           10.12.2   Incorrect Sheet Count....................  10-11
           10.13 DIGITAL PrintServer 17 Printer...............  10-11
           10.13.1   Colored Separator Pages and Tray
                     Switching................................  10-11
           10.14 HP LaserJet IIID Printer.....................  10-12
           10.14.1   Job Remains in Starting State............  10-12


     viii

 






              10.14.2   Incorrect Sheet Count on Duplex Jobs.....  10-12
              10.15 HP LaserJet IIISi Printer....................  10-12
              10.15.1   Incorrect Sheet Count on Native PCL
                        Jobs.....................................  10-12
              10.15.2   Incorrect Sheet Count on Duplex Jobs.....  10-13
              10.16 HP LaserJet 4SiMX Printer....................  10-13
              10.16.1   Incorrect Sheet Count on Duplex Jobs.....  10-13
              10.17 HP LaserJet 5M Printer.......................  10-13
              10.17.1   Problems Selecting an Input Tray.........  10-13
              10.17.2   Incorrect Sheet Count on Duplex Jobs.....  10-13
              10.18 HP LaserJet 5SiMX Printer....................  10-13
              10.18.1   Job Trailer Pages Print in Next Bin......  10-13
              10.18.2   Tray Is Not Available Due to Lack of
                        Memory for Loaded Paper .................  10-14
              10.18.3   Duplex Not Supported Due to Lack of
                        Memory for Loaded Paper .................  10-14
              10.18.4   Incorrect Sheet Count on Duplex Jobs.....  10-14
              10.19 HP LaserJet 4000, 4050 and 5000..............  10-14
              10.19.1   Minimum Firmware Version.................  10-14
              10.20 HP LaserJet 8000, 8100 and 8150..............  10-15
              10.20.1   Optional Mailbox.........................  10-15
              10.20.2   Problems Starting Queues.................  10-15
              10.20.3   Minimum Firmware Version.................  10-15
              10.21 HP LaserJet 9000.............................  10-15
              10.21.1   Optional Stapler.........................  10-15
              10.22 HP XL300 Printer.............................  10-16
              10.22.1   Communication Problem....................  10-16
              10.23 Lexmark Optra Rt+ Printer....................  10-16
              10.23.1   Tray Linking and INPUT_TRAY..............  10-16
              10.24 Lexmark Optra S, Optra T and T Series........  10-16
              10.24.1   Problems Starting Queues.................  10-16
              10.25 Tektronix Phaser.............................  10-16
              10.25.1   Printer Configuration Settings...........  10-17


        11  Troubleshooting Procedures

              11.1  What to Do if a Raw TCP/IP Printer is Not
                    Printing.....................................   11-1
              11.1.1    Job Remains in Starting State for Raw
                        TCP/IP or LAT Queue .....................   11-1
              11.1.2    Job Remains in Starting State for Raw
                        TCP/IP Queue.............................   11-2


                                                                      ix

 






           11.1.3    Connection Terminations for Raw TCP/IP
                     Queue....................................   11-2
           11.1.4    NOT_READY Warnings for Unavailable Raw
                     TCP/IP Printer...........................   11-3
           11.2  What to Do if a PrintServer Printer Is Not
                 Printing.....................................   11-4
           11.3  What to Do if a Serial Printer Is Not
                 Printing.....................................   11-5
           11.3.1    What to Do if a Locally-Connected Serial
                     Printer Will Not Start Printing..........   11-5
           11.3.2    What to Do if a Locally-Connected Serial
                     Printer Has Stopped Printing.............  11-10
           11.3.3    What to Do if a LAT Printer Is Not
                     Printing.................................  11-11
           11.3.3.1    How to Determine Which Host Controls
                       the Printer............................  11-12
           11.3.3.2    How to Troubleshoot Printer
                       Communications Problems................  11-16
           11.3.3.3    Common LAT Error Messages..............  11-16
           11.3.4    How to Eliminate Excess Login Dialog on
                     Serial Printers..........................  11-19
           11.4  What to Do if Printing Is Slower than
                 Expected.....................................  11-20
           11.5  What to Do if Layup Definition Files Are Not
                 Found........................................  11-21
           11.6  What to Do if Files Are Printed with
                 Unexpected Results...........................  11-21
           11.6.1    What to Do if Default Queue Parameters
                     Are Not Effective........................  11-21
           11.6.2    What to Do if a File Data Type Is Not
                     Recognized...............................  11-22


     A  Printing System Management Commands

           A.1   Overview of Management Commands .............    A-1
           A.2   Use of SET PRINTER with DCPS ................    A-3








     x

 






        B  Logical Names used by DCPS


        C  Downloading and Deleting Fonts

        D  DECprint Supervisor (DCPS) and DECprint Printing
           Services Software (CPS)

              D.1   DCPS/CPS Coexistence.........................    D-1
              D.2   Printer Support..............................    D-1
              D.3   Upgrading from CPS to DCPS...................    D-1
              D.4   DCPS$ Prefix.................................    D-2
              D.5   Startup File Converter.......................    D-3
              D.6   Eliminating Generic Queues...................    D-3
              D.7   Page Scaling.................................    D-3
              D.8   Layup for PS Level 2 Printers & Layup
                    Fixes........................................    D-4
              D.9   Layup Options on PRINT Command Line..........    D-4
              D.10  Page Sizes...................................    D-4
              D.11  Selecting Separator Pages from Alternate
                    Tray.........................................    D-5
              D.12  Stopping Unreachable PrintServer.............    D-5
              D.13  Overwriting First Line.......................    D-5
              D.14  Stall Timeouts...............................    D-5
              D.15  Requeuing a Job..............................    D-5
              D.16  Reading Stream Files.........................    D-6
              D.17  Copies Start on New Sheets...................    D-6
              D.18  Generic Queues Restarted.....................    D-6
              D.19  Proprinter Translator........................    D-6
              D.20  DCPS and PATHWORKS Libraries.................    D-6
              D.21  Printing with Macintosh and PC Files.........    D-7
              D.22  Improved Color Function for Colormate PS.....    D-7
              D.23  Printing Security Messages...................    D-7

        E  Ordering Additional Documentation

              E.1   DECprint Supervisor (DCPS) for OpenVMS.......    E-1
              E.2   PostScript Programming.......................    E-2
              E.3   DIGITAL ANSI-Compliant Level 3 Printing
                    Protocol.....................................    E-2
              E.4   PrintServer Software.........................    E-3




                                                                      xi

 






     Index


     Examples

           3-1       Creation of an Execution Queue Entry for
                     a Raw TCP/IP Printer ....................    3-2

           3-2       Creation of an Execution Queue Entry for
                     a PrintServer Printer ...................    3-2

           3-3       Setting Up a Generic Queue...............   3-19

           7-1       Search List for Device Control
                     Libraries................................    7-5

           8-1       Sample Form Definition, CONFIDENTIAL.....    8-1

     Tables

           2-1       DECserver Port Characteristics...........    2-6

           2-2       Printer-Required DECserver Port
                     Characteristics..........................    2-7

           3-1       Parameter Values for Execution Queues....    3-3

           3-2       Raw TCP/IP Port Numbers..................    3-6

           3-3       Parameter Values for Generic Queues......   3-19

           3-4       IVP Files with Different Data Types......   3-21

           5-1       Commands to Display Queues...............    5-6

           6-1       Tray Number Values.......................    6-4

           7-1       Printer Resolution Setup Modules.........   7-13

           7-2       Enabling and Disabling DECimage .........   7-13

           7-3       DECimage Setup Modules-Combined
                     Parameters...............................   7-14

           7-4       DECimage Setup Modules-Individual
                     Parameters...............................   7-15

           8-1       DEFINE/FORM Qualifiers for ANSI Files....    8-4

           10-1      Valid Language Sensing Configurations....   10-3

           10-2      LN15 Configuration Settings..............   10-8

           10-3      Tektronix Phaser Configuration
                     Settings.................................  10-17

           A-1       Printing System Management Commands......    A-1

           A-2       SET PRINTER Qualifier Equivalents for
                     DECprint Supervisor Queues...............    A-5

     xii

 






              B-1       DCPS Logical Names.......................    B-2












































                                                                    xiii

 











        ________________________________________________________________

                                                                 Preface



        Intended Audience

              This manual is for OpenVMS system managers and data center
              operators. Using this guide, you can create and modify
              print queues, maintain the print jobs and print queues,
              and set up printing environments to meet the needs of the
              printing system users.

              This guide is also intended for advanced users and
              applications programmers who customize the printing
              system using form definitions, setup modules, and layup
              definition files. The DECprint Supervisor for OpenVMS
              User's Guide describes how users access the features of
              the printing system.

              Be sure to read the DECprint Supervisor for OpenVMS
              Software Installation Guide if you have not installed
              the DECprint Supervisor software.

        Associated Documents

              For information about additional PostScript printing
              documentation and how to order documentation, refer to
              the Ordering Additional Documentation appendix in this
              manual.









                                                                    xiii

 






     Conventions

           The following conventions are used throughout this
           document:

           __________________________________________________________
           Convention__Meaning_______________________________________

           UPPERCASE   Uppercase characters indicate DCL commands,
                       qualifiers, and parameters.

           italics     Italic characters in command examples indicate
                       that you are to substitute a word or value of
                       your choice.

           bold        Bold characters are PostScript operators or
                       error message prefix strings. Bold in examples
                       shows the characters that you should enter as
                       part of the procedure.

           []          Brackets indicate that the enclosed item is
                       optional.

           Ctrl/x      This symbol indicates a control key sequence.
                       Press the key labeled Ctrl while you
                       simultaneously press another key, represented
                       by x.

           <Return>    This symbol indicates that you should press
           ____________the_Return_key._______________________________















     xiv

 









                                                                       1
        ________________________________________________________________

                                            DECprint Supervisor Overview



        1.1 Purpose of the DECprint Supervisor Software

              The DECprint Supervisor software allows people to use
              and manage networked PostScript printers. For example, it
              allows users to:

              o  Print customized documents, print two-sided, and select
                 input trays.

              o  Modify printed documents without changing the files
                 that are printed, which saves paper and allows the
                 production of custom printed documents.

              o  Print different types of files on the PostScript
                 printers.

              o  Access printers from the OpenVMS Alpha and VAX
                 operating systems and from personal computers (PCs)
                 and Macintosh systems.

              The system manager makes the printing system easier to use
              by providing:

              o  Default queue attributes, so users do not have to
                 specify certain parameters, such as duplex printing

              o  Setup modules, which are stored in device control
                 libraries and are used to modify the printing
                 environment for print jobs

              o  Form definitions, specifying sets of print attributes
                 and including setup modules to make them all easier for
                 users to access

              o  Layup definition files, which you can create to
                 customize the way print jobs are printed on the media

                                        DECprint Supervisor Overview 1-1

 






              ________________________Note ________________________

              Starting with DCPS V2.0, the need for DCPS-OPEN and
              DCPS-PLUS licenses has been eliminated. The right
              to use all features of DCPS is now included with the
              OpenVMS operating system license.

              _____________________________________________________

           DCPS also provides the following features:

           o  Document Formatting

              DCPS allows users to:

              -  Change the size of pages as they are printed to
                 fit the physical size of media, using the following
                 command:

                 $ PRINT/PARAMETERS=(PAGE_SIZE=n,SHEET_SIZE=m) file-spec

              -  Specify page layup handling as the file is printed,
                 using the following command:

                 $ PRINT/PARAMETERS=(LAYUP=option=value)

              -  Save paper, using one of the following commands:

                 $ PRINT/PARAMETERS=(PAGE_LIMIT="n,m")
                 $ PRINT/PARAMETERS=(NUMBER_UP=n)

              -  Print multiple uncollated copies of each sheet via
                 the SHEET_COUNT parameter.

              -  Use device control modules for all data types via
                 the /SETUP qualifier. ANSI modules may include
                 control sequences. PCL modules may include binary
                 font data.

           o  Data Type Translation

              DCPS lets users print additional file data types,
              including:

              -  PCL 4 (Printer Control Language) files generated for
                 printing on Hewlett-Packard LaserJet IID devices

              -  Proprinter files generated for printing on IBM
                 Proprinter XL24 devices

              -  ReGIS graphics files (monochrome output only)

     1-2 DECprint Supervisor Overview

 






                 -  TEKTRONIX files, generated for printing on TEKTRONIX
                    4010/4014 devices

                 -  ASCII text files, to be printed with line numbers,
                    page headers, and alternating groups of gray and
                    white bars

                 -  DIGITAL Document Interchange Format (DDIF) bitonal
                    image files

              o  Automatic Data Type Detection

                 Users do not need to specify the data type of the
                 print file, in most cases. DCPS recognizes files of
                 the supported data types and automatically translates
                 them to PostScript before printing.

                 DCPS can print files that contain both text (ANSI,
                 PCL, or Proprinter data) and PostScript data. For
                 example, users can print electronic mail messages that
                 contain PostScript files. The user submits the print
                 job without specifying any data type. The DECprint
                 Supervisor software begins printing the file as text
                 and automatically recognizes the change to PostScript,
                 printing the file properly.

                 See Chapter 4 for information about customizing the
                 printing system to recognize and print the files
                 generated by users at your site.

              DCPS Version

              The version of DCPS software currently running on your
              system is printed on job and file separator pages, as well
              as in the logical name DCPS$VERSION. If DCPS$VERSION is
              undefined, DCPS has not been started on the system.

        1.2 DECprint Supervisor Software Components

              The DECprint Supervisor software includes the following
              components:

              o  A print symbiont, which processes print requests from
                 OpenVMS print queues assigned to the printer

              o  Queue management services, as described in Chapter 5

              o  Data type translators to translate non-PostScript files
                 for printing on PostScript devices

                                        DECprint Supervisor Overview 1-3

 






           o  A device control library for setup modules that affect
              the printing of files, as described in Chapter 7

           The DECprint Supervisor symbiont is used in place of
           the OpenVMS print symbiont, PRTSMB. The software is
           distributed as executable image files, text, and help
           files.

           Figure 1-1 illustrates the process by which print jobs
           are produced on an OpenVMS system and delivered to the
           printer.

           The software components of a DECprint Supervisor printing
           system are described in the following sections.

     1.2.1 The Print Symbiont

           Users send jobs to the printer using the DCL PRINT command
           or using an application program that generates the OpenVMS
           system service call SYS$SNDJBC. The print symbiont manages
           the print jobs. The DECprint Supervisor software performs
           the following operations:

           o  Maintains resources

           o  Sends control data to the printer

           o  Sends the data file to the printer

           o  Monitors printer progress

           o  Reports printer status

           o  Handles exceptions

           For example, suppose a user issues the following PRINT
           command:

           $ PRINT/QUEUE=POST3/NOTIFY THORNTON.TXT

           The PRINT command line is translated to system service
           calls, which are sent to the job controller. The calls
           are converted to job controller data structures, which are
           then passed to the symbiont for processing. The symbiont
           sends the processed arguments and file data to the printer
           and notifies the user by displaying messages about the
           status of the print job.

           See the DECprint Supervisor for OpenVMS User's Guide for
           information about the PRINT command and its qualifiers.

     1-4 DECprint Supervisor Overview

 






        1.2.2 Device Control Libraries

              A device control library is an OpenVMS text library that
              contains setup modules. The symbiont uses modules from
              the device control library to implement the various PRINT
              parameters. The DECprint Supervisor software extracts the
              appropriate module, depending on the qualifier that either
              appears on the PRINT command line or is associated with a
              print queue, and inserts the module into the data stream.

              The device control library also contains modules that the
              symbiont does not automatically use. Some of these modules
              contain PostScript procedures, for example, to include
              an error handler in a print job or to extend the findfont
              procedure to recognize alternate character encodings.
              These are described in the DECprint Supervisor for OpenVMS
              User's Guide.

              You can create setup modules to be used on your own
              systems. When you create setup modules, you must
              store them in a device control library other than the
              DCPS$DEVCTL library. Create a device control library as
              described in Chapter 7 and add your library to the device
              control library search list defined in DCPS$STARTUP.COM.

              When you create a site-specific device control library for
              your custom setup modules, the contents of your library
              are retained from one version of the DECprint Supervisor
              software to the next. The standard device control library,
              DCPS$DEVCTL, is overwritten when you upgrade from one
              version of the software to the next.

        1.2.3 Translators

              When a print job submits a print file that is not
              PostScript (or PCL, if your printer has a native PCL
              interpreter), the symbiont invokes a translator to
              translate the user's input file into PostScript. (Refer
              to Chapter 4 for more information about customizing the
              printing system for certain types of files.)

              DECprint Supervisor software can detect the file data
              type automatically. You need not specify the data type
              on the PRINT command line. Translation to PostScript for
              successful printing is automatic. It is not necessary to
              maintain generic print queues for default data types.

                                        DECprint Supervisor Overview 1-5

 






           The system manager can associate a default data type with
           a generic print queue, allowing users to print files by
           specifying the generic queue name. See Chapter 3 for more
           information.

           If DCPS incorrectly identifies the data type of a file,
           you can identify the data type on the command line:

           $ PRINT MYFILE.MEM /PARAMETERS=DATA_TYPE=ANSI
           $ PRINT MYFILE.POST /PARAMETERS=DATA_TYPE=POSTSCRIPT



































     1-6 DECprint Supervisor Overview

 









                                                                       2
        ________________________________________________________________

                                                     Setting Up Printers



              If you are installing DECprint Supervisor for the first
              time, or installing new printers, read this chapter. You
              may also find this chapter useful if you are changing
              the setup of an existing printer. The following sections
              describe how to set up your printers to work with DECprint
              Supervisor software.

              Non-PrintServer printers        Section 2.1

              DIGITAL PrintServer printers    Section 2.2

                ________________________Note  ________________________

                If you are changing the setup of a printer for which
                a DECprint Supervisor queue already exists, you
                must first stop the associated queue using the STOP
                /QUEUE /NEXT or STOP /QUEUE /RESET command.

                _____________________________________________________

        2.1 Non-PrintServer Printers

              You can connect PostScript printers other than DIGITAL
              PrintServer printers to your OpenVMS system in a number of
              ways:

              o  If your printer contains a network interface card
                 (NIC) that supports the bi-directional raw TCP/IP,
                 LAT, or AppleTalk protocol, you can communicate with
                 your printer via the network.

              o  If your printer uses a serial connection, you can
                 connect the printer directly to your OpenVMS system,
                 or connect it to a print server or terminal server and
                 communicate with it via the network.

                                                 Setting Up Printers 2-1

 






           o  If your printer uses a bi-directional Centronics
              parallel connection, you can connect it to a print
              server or terminal server and communicate with it via
              the network.

           If your printer is connected via the network, multiple
           systems can access it.

           The devices that can be used with DECprint Supervisor
           software are listed in the Software Product Description
           (SPD).

              ________________________Note ________________________

              DCPS requires that the entire communication path
              between your OpenVMS system and your printer be
              bi-directional. For a networked printer, this
              communication path includes the connection between
              the printer and the network device as well as
              the connection between the network device and
              your OpenVMS system. LAT and AppleTalk network
              devices, and serial interfaces, usually provide
              bi-directional communication. Raw TCP/IP network
              devices, and parallel ports on a printer, terminal
              server, or print server, may not satisfy this
              requirement. The DCPS software will not work with
              a connection that does not allow status messages
              and other information to be sent from the printer to
              your OpenVMS system.

              _____________________________________________________

     2.1.1 Networked Printers

           Your printer may contain a network interface card (NIC) or
           may be accessable to the network via a print server of a
           terminal server.

           Printers can be configured as network printers if:

           o  The printer is connected to a NIC, print server, or
              terminal server.



     2-2 Setting Up Printers

 






              o  Every host system using the printer is running DECprint
                 Supervisor software. If any host system accesses the
                 printer by any other means, the printer system may
                 fail.

              Network printing has the following implications:

              o  The printer may be used from multiple systems.

              o  There is no centralized accounting for the printer.
                 Each system maintains separate accounting information
                 for the printing performed by that system.

              o  Multiple systems running DECprint Supervisor software
                 contend for the same printer.

              o  There is no centralized print queue for the printer,
                 which means:

                 -  The SHOW QUEUE command does not display the queues
                    located on other nodes in the network.

                 -  The system does not provide print job scheduling
                    or load balancing among printers or nodes in the
                    network.

        2.1.1.1 Raw TCP/IP Printers

              Raw TCP/IP is a network protocol that utilizes the TCP/IP
              protocol directly without any additional interpretation
              of the TCP data stream. It is supported by many printer
              Network Interface Cards (NICs), print servers, and
              terminal servers.

              There are other printer protocols that layer upon TCP/IP,
              including CPAP (Common Printer Access Protocol), LPD,
              and Telnet. DCPS uses CPAP to communicate with DIGITAL
              PrintServer printers.

                ________________________Note  ________________________

                DCPS does not support the Telnet or LPD protocols.

                _____________________________________________________

              To communicate with your printer using raw TCP/IP, the
              NIC, print server, or terminal server that you use to
              connect your printer to the network must provide a raw
              TCP/IP port. Further, this raw TCP/IP port must support

                                                 Setting Up Printers 2-3

 






           bi-directional communication between the printer and your
           OpenVMS system. DCPS does not work with unidirectional
           ports, such as those found on the NICs for the DEClaser
           3500 and 5100 printers, the RapidPrint 200, and Hewlett-
           Packard JetDirect cards that interface with the printer
           via its XIO (versus MIO) slot.

           Before you can communicate with your printer via TCP/IP,
           you must define an IP address for it. You may also assign
           a name to the address. Refer to the printer documentation
           for information on setting the printer's IP address.
           Refer to Compaq TCP/IP Services for OpenVMS, Process
           Software MultiNet for OpenVMS, or Process Software
           TCPware documentation for information on configuring your
           OpenVMS system's TCP/IP environment. If your printer is
           connected through a print server or terminal server, you
           must configure the IP address of the server. You also
           need to configure the connection between the printer and
           the server (for example, you may need to perform actions
           similar to those described in Section 2.1.1.2.2 for LAT
           printers). Refer to documentation for your terminal server
           or printer server for information on configuring its
           network and printer interfaces.

     2.1.1.2 LAT Printers

           2.1.1.2.1 Configuring the Printer for LAT Access   To
           configure serial printers as network printers through a
           LAT connection to the Ethernet, change the following:

           1. If you are using a serial printer connected via a
              terminal server, set the necessary port and server
              characteristics for the printer (see Section 2.1.1.2.2
              for DECserver devices).

           2. Make the necessary changes to SYS$STARTUP:LAT$SYSTARTUP.COM
              (see Section 2.1.1.2.3).

           3. Set the communications speed (see Section 2.1.1.2.4).

           You can also change the printer password and printer
           name. These changes are optional and explained in
           Section 2.1.3.3 and Section 2.1.3.4.


     2-4 Setting Up Printers

 






              2.1.1.2.2 Setting DECserver LAT Port Characteristics

                ________________________Note  ________________________

                The process for configuring non-DECserver LAT
                devices is not described here, but many LAT devices
                use the same commands used by a DECserver device.
                Refer to the online help or other documentation for
                your NIC, terminal server, or print server for more
                information.

                _____________________________________________________

              To change DECserver port characteristics, you need
              privileged status on the DECserver device. Once you
              have privileged status, use the DEFINE PORT and SET PORT
              commands.

              The DEFINE command changes the port's characteristics in
              the server's permanent database. These changes do not take
              effect until the next login for the port.

              SET commands take effect immediately, but only alter
              the port's characteristics for the current session. For
              example, to change the INPUT SPEED and OUTPUT SPEED values
              on PORT_6 to 19200 baud (on a DECserver 200), issue the
              following commands from the console server manager:

              LOCAL> SET PRIVILEGED
              PASSWORD> password

              LOCAL> SET PORT 6 SPEED 19200
              LOCAL> DEFINE PORT 6 SPEED 19200

                ________________________Note  ________________________

                DECprint Supervisor supplies a sample command file
                for this purpose, if using LAT. This command file
                sets the characteristics for a DECserver with the
                Terminal Server Manager (TSM) software, and records
                data in the TSM database. (TSM is a software product
                available separately from Compaq.) The command file
                is:


                                                 Setting Up Printers 2-5

 






              SYS$COMMON:[SYSHLP.EXAMPLES.DCPS]DCPS$CONFIG-PRINTER-PORT.COM

              This command file provides examples of characteris-
              tics for
              DECserver 100, DECserver 200, and DECserver 500
              devices.

              _____________________________________________________

           For information about the commands and procedures for
           your DECserver device, refer to your DECserver management
           guide.

           Make sure the DECserver port characteristics match the
           settings on your printer. Table 2-1 and Table 2-2 list
           DECserver port characteristics that must match the
           settings on your printer.

           Table_2-1_DECserver_Port_Characteristics__________________

           Character     8
           size

           Parity        None

           Input speed   9600

           Output_speed__9600________________________________________

           Make sure the queue limit is not set to 0, which disables
           queuing.














     2-6 Setting Up Printers

 






              Table_2-2_Printer-Required_DECserver_Port_Characteristics_

              Characteristic_____________Default_Settings_______________

              ACCESS                     REMOTE

              AUTOBAUD                   DISABLED

              AUTOCONNECT                DISABLED

              AUTOPROMPT                 DISABLED

              BREAK                      DISABLED

              BROADCAST                  DISABLED

              FLOW CONTROL               XON

              INPUT FLOW CONTROL[1]      ENABLED

              OUTPUT FLOW CONTROL[1]     ENABLED

              INACTIVITY LOGOUT          DISABLED

              LOSS NOTIFICATION          DISABLED

              MESSAGE CODES              DISABLED

              QUEUING                    ENABLED

              VERIFICATION               DISABLED
              [1]Characteristic_not_supported_by_the_DECserver_500______

              server.
              __________________________________________________________

                ________________________Note  ________________________

                On many versions of DECserver devices, QUEUING
                is not a port characteristic, but is a server
                characteristic whose default is ENABLED.

                _____________________________________________________

              2.1.1.2.3 Editing the LAT Configuration File   The LAT
              configuration file (SYS$STARTUP:LAT$SYSTARTUP.COM) defines
              host node service characteristics. Before you start the
              print queues, make sure the LAT driver is running and
              ports are available.

                ________________________Note  ________________________

                Commands referenced in this section are LATCP
                commands. For more information on LATCP commands,

                                                 Setting Up Printers 2-7

 






              refer to the OpenVMS System Management Utilities
              Reference Manual.

              _____________________________________________________

           1. Edit LAT$SYSTARTUP.COM and add the following command to
              create an applications port on the host node (service
              node) that will support your printer:

              $ CREATE PORT LTAd:/NOLOG/APPLICATION

              In this command format, you supply the number of the
              applications port for d, which must be a unique number
              from 1-9999.

              ________________________Note ________________________

              LTA devices are not always dedicated to printers;
              they may be shared with other devices. Connections
              to the LTA device from the other devices are
              established dynamically among the lowest available
              ports. If you assign a higher port number to the
              printer, you can help secure the port for the
              printer and prevent interference from connections
              to other devices.

              _____________________________________________________

           2. In LAT$SYSTARTUP.COM, add the following command to
              associate the applications port with a remote port on a
              server:

              $ SET PORT LTAd:/NODE=server_name/PORT=port_name/QUEUE/APPLICATION

              In the command format, you supply the following values:

              LTAd:     Name of the application port

              server_   Name assigned to the LAT device
              name

              port_     LAT device's port name
              name


     2-8 Setting Up Printers

 






                 The following example associates application port
                 LTA9000: with port PORT_7 on a remote DECserver 200
                 named LN03RDS:

                 $ SET PORT LTA9000:/NODE=LN03RDS/PORT=PORT_7/QUEUE/APPLICATION

                 If the LAT device is dedicated to printing services,
                 you can define the LAT connection for the printer in
                 the DCPS$STARTUP.COM file. This makes it easier for
                 you to solve configuration problems because all the
                 information is in one file. However, if the LAT device
                 also supports devices other than printers, you should
                 define the port in the LAT$SYSTARTUP.COM file.

              3. To make a successful LAT connection, you must make sure
                 the following lists of groups have at least one LAT
                 group in common:

                 o  On the LAT port, authorized groups and current
                    groups

                 o  On the service node, enabled groups

                 If you did not set up these groups correctly, you
                 receive the following error message when a print job is
                 submitted:

                 %DCPS-E-LRJACCESSDENIED, Access denied

                 You can use LATCP commands to include the necessary LAT
                 group designations. For additional information, refer
                 to the OpenVMS System Management Utilities Reference
                 Manual.

                ________________________Note  ________________________

                This information is not required for the DECserver
                90L device.

                _____________________________________________________





                                                 Setting Up Printers 2-9

 






           2.1.1.2.4 Setting the Communications Speed   Make sure the
           serial printer communications speed is set to the default
           (9600 baud). If you want the printer to run at a different
           baud rate, use the following procedure.

           If the printer is on a DECserver device, use the following
           steps:

           1. Set the printer to the appropriate baud rate (see your
              printer hardware installation guide).

           2. Set the DECserver communications speed (see your
              terminal server installation guide).

           3. Power on the printer. Wait for the printer to eject
              the power-up test page, and then check the test page to
              ensure that the desired settings are indicated on the
              test page.

     2.1.1.3 AppleTalk Printers

           If you use your printer in an AppleTalk network, the
           address of the printer in the AppleTalk network is
           normally the printer's PostScript printername. If two
           or more printers have the same printername and are on
           the same zone of the AppleTalk network, the actual node
           names for these printers will be depend on the order in
           which the printers are powered up. Printers of the same
           product type will have the same printername until it is
           explicity changed. Therefore, it is necessary to change a
           printer's printername to ensure the printer is uniquely
           and consistently identified on the network. Use the tools
           provided with your printer, and/or your PC or Macintosh to
           change the name of your printer.

     2.1.2 Directly-Connected Serial Printers

           For your printer and OpenVMS system to be able to
           communicate, you must set the baud rate of your printer
           and system's serial interfaces to the same values. Also,
           your printer should be set for eight-bit characters with
           no parity.

              ________________________Note ________________________

              When choosing a baud rate other than the default of
              9600 baud, consider the following limitations:

     2-10 Setting Up Printers

 






                o  OpenVMS drivers do not support baud rates of 3600
                   and 7200 baud.

                o  DMZ32 serial interfaces, Revision E or lower,
                   require a speed of 4800 baud or less.

                o  If you select an improper speed, the printer may
                   not operate or may stop unexpectedly.

                _____________________________________________________

              Refer to your printer's hardware installation guide for
              information on configuring its serial interface. After you
              have made the necessary changes, turn the printer off and
              back on. Then manually print a test page and verify that
              the reported settings are as desired.

              Set the baud rate of your OpenVMS system's serial
              interface by specifying a value for P6 when setting
              up the corresponding DCPS print queue, as described in
              Section 3.3.6.

                ________________________Note  ________________________

                CSA0: (printer port 0 on VAXstation II and VAXstation
                II/GPX systems) is not a supported interface for
                serial printers.

                DEClaser printers may require an H8571-E adapter
                if you are using a DECconnect serial cable.
                Refer to your printer installation guide for more
                information.

                _____________________________________________________

        2.1.3 General Information

        2.1.3.1 Supported Printers

              You can use DCPS with many PostScript printers. Consult
              the SPD for the list of supported by the DECprint
              Supervisor software. You may also be able to use DCPS
              in an unsupported fashion with printers not listed in the
              SPD (see Section 7.12).

              Before installing a printer, perform the following:

              o  Install a PostScript option if your printer requires
                 one.

                                                Setting Up Printers 2-11

 






           o  Install at least the minimum amount of memory for
              PostScript printing.

           Printing legal size paper or printing duplex requires more
           memory than the base configuration. Consult your printer
           manual for your minimum requirements.

     2.1.3.2 Setting the printer timeout

           The printer may abort a print job if it does not receive
           data for a specified period of time. Compaq recommends
           that you change the timeout value to zero (0), which means
           no timeout.

           You may be able to set the timeout value through the front
           panel, as documented in the operator's guide for your
           printer.

           You can also change the printer timeout value with the
           setdefaulttimeouts PostScript operator. Modify the stan-
           dard file
           SYS$COMMON:[SYSHLP.EXAMPLES.DCPS]LPS$SET_TIMEOUT.PS to
           change the timeout value to 0. Print the file using the
           DATA_TYPE=POSTSCRIPT parameter to change the timeout value
           in the printer's nonvolatile memory to 0, thus preventing
           timeout conditions on the printer.

           To submit the file for printing as a PostScript job, use
           the following command:

           $ PRINT/QUEUE=queuename/PARAMETER=(DATA_TYPE=POSTSCRIPT) LPS$SET_TIMEOUT.PS

           When the print job is processed, a page is printed to
           indicate that the timeout was successfully changed.

     2.1.3.3 Changing the Printer Password

           PostScript printers have passwords that restrict access
           to certain functions. You can change the password for
           your printer from the default value. For serial printers,
           submit a print job that includes the current password as
           well as the new password. Refer to the PostScript Printers
           Programmer's Supplement for information about changing
           your printer's password.

     2-12 Setting Up Printers

 






              The default password for ScriptPrinters is (LN03R),
              with the parentheses required. The default password
              for DEClaser printers is 0 (the number zero), without
              parentheses. If you change the printer password from the
              default, print jobs may take longer to print, because
              the printer password is required to persistently load
              PostScript prologues for ANSI files and separation pages.

        2.1.3.4 Setting the Printer Name

              Some system messages include the printer name. If you
              have not set a unique printer name, these messages contain
              the default printer name. The default printer name for a
              ScriptPrinter printer is LN03R. The default printer name
              for a DEClaser printer is DEClaser. For example, on a
              DEClaser printer where the name has not been changed, the
              following message reflects the default printer name:

              %DCPS-I-TRAYSUBST, Output will be delivered to the only tray on DEClaser

              If you change the DEClaser printer name to SNUFFY, the
              same error message reflects the unique new printer name:

              %DCPS-I-TRAYSUBST, Output will be delivered to the only tray on SNUFFY

              For non-PrintServer printers, the printer name is stored
              in the printer's nonvolatile memory. To set the printer
              name, edit a copy of the file LPS$SET_PRINTER_NAME.PS
              found in
              SYS$COMMON:[SYSHLP.EXAMPLES.DCPS] to include the desired
              name and password. Select a printer name of 31 characters
              or less.

              Then submit the file for printing as a PostScript job:

              $ PRINT/QUEUE=queuename /PARAMETER=(DATA_TYPE=POSTSCRIPT) -
              LPS$SET_PRINTER_NAME.PS

              Edit and submit a copy of LPS$SET_PRINTER_NAME.PS for each
              printer that requires a unique name.





                                                Setting Up Printers 2-13

 






     2.2 DIGITAL PrintServer Printers

           DIGITAL PrintServer printers are network printers. They
           require the OpenVMS DECnet, Compaq TCP/IP Services for
           OpenVMS, Process Software MultiNet for OpenVMS or Process
           Software TCPware for OpenVMS software to be running on the
           OpenVMS systems where the DECprint Supervisor software is
           running.

              ________________________Note ________________________

              Make sure that PrintServer Software is running on
              the PrintServer printer before starting DECprint
              Supervisor.

              _____________________________________________________

           The following procedures allow users to access PrintServer
           printers on TCP/IP and DECnet networks.

     2.2.1 Defining PrintServer TCP/IP Network Nodes

           Before you can communicate with your DIGITAL PrintServer
           printer via TCP/IP, you must assign an IP address to it.
           You may also associate a name with the address.

           Refer to the PrintServer documentation for information
           on setting the printer's IP address. Refer to Compaq
           TCP/IP Services for OpenVMS, Process Software MultiNet
           for OpenVMS or Process Software TCPware for OpenVMS
           documentation for information on configuring your OpenVMS
           system's TCP/IP environment.

     2.2.2 Defining PrintServer DECnet Network Nodes

           Before you can communicate with your DIGITAL PrintServer
           printer via DECnet, you must assign a DECnet address to
           it. You may also associate a name with the address.

           Refer to the PrintServer documentation for information on
           setting the printer's DECnet address.

           To associate a DECnet node name name with the printer's
           DECnet address, use the NCP command if you are running
           DECnet Phase IV software, or the DECNET_REGISTER command
           if you are running DECnet-Plus (formerly DECnet/OSI)
           software. Refer to the OpenVMS DECnet documentation for
           more information about node names and these commands.

     2-14 Setting Up Printers

 






        2.2.3 Deleting the PrintServer Client Startup File

              An existing LPS$STARTUP.COM file, if any, is no longer
              used and is not compatible with DECprint Supervisor.
              Delete this file after you edit DCPS$STARTUP.COM. To
              delete this file, follow this procedure:

                ________________________Note  ________________________

                Delete all generic queues before deleting the
                execution queue.

                _____________________________________________________

              1. Stop existing print queues with the STOP/QUEUE/RESET
                 command.

              2. Delete existing PrintServer print queues.

              3. Add new print queues to DCPS$STARTUP.COM for PrintServer
                 printers.

              4. If you have any customized definitions in the
                 LPS$STARTUP.COM file, copy the changes into SYS$STARTUP:DCPS$STARTUP.COM.

              5. Edit SYS$MANAGER:SYSTARTUP_VMS.COM, removing the
                 reference to SYS$MANAGER:LPS$STARTUP.COM.

              6. Delete LPS$STARTUP.COM. You can delete this and other
                 files that are no longer needed for PrintServer print-
                 ing using the following command file:
                 SYS$COMMON:[SYSHLP.EXAMPLES.DCPS]DCPS$DELETE-LPS-
                 CLIENT.COM












                                                Setting Up Printers 2-15

 









                                                                       3
        ________________________________________________________________

                                     Creating and Modifying Print Queues



              This chapter explains how to start up the printing system
              and test the printer.

                ________________________Note  ________________________

                Make sure the system queue manager is running before
                creating queues.

                _____________________________________________________

        3.1 If You Are Installing the Software for the First Time

              If this is a new installation, you can use the startup
              template file to help you set up your queues. Copy the
              printer startup template file as follows:

              $ COPY SYS$COMMON:[SYS$STARTUP]DCPS$STARTUP.TEMPLATE -
              $_ SYS$COMMON:[SYS$STARTUP].COM

        3.2 If You Are Upgrading From DECprint Printing Services
            Software (CPS)

              DECprint Printing Services (CPS) is the predecessor
              software to DECprint Supervisor (DCPS). If you are
              upgrading from CPS to DCPS, see Section D.3 for more
              information.

        3.3 Setting Up Execution Queues

              You must create an execution queue for each PostScript
              printer. Execution queues schedule jobs for processing and
              deliver the print jobs to a printer. An execution queue is
              associated with a particular printer.


                                 Creating and Modifying Print Queues 3-1

 






           When you create an execution queue, you supply information
           about the queue, including its name and default param-
           eters. Example 3-1 shows creation of an execution queue
           for a raw TCP/IP printer. Example 3-2 shows creation of an
           execution queue for a PrintServer printer. These commands
           are placed in DCPS$STARTUP.COM.


     Example 3-1 Creation of an Execution Queue Entry for a Raw
                 TCP/IP Printer

         $ @SYS$STARTUP:DCPS$EXECUTION_QUEUE -
             2UP -                           ! P1 - Execution queue name
             "IP_RAWTCP/lnm40.my.com" -      ! P2 - Interconnect protocol/device name
             DCPS_LIB -                      ! P3 - Logical name for library(ies)
             "NUMBER_UP=2" -                 ! P4 - Default queue parameters
             "/DEFAULT=(FLAG,FORM=MYFORM)" - ! P5 - Default queue qualifiers
             "" -                            ! P6 - Communication speed (serial only)
             "" -                            ! P7 - Device characteristics
             ""                              ! P8 - Verify on/off

           This queue is called 2UP and uses raw TCP/IP to the
           printer called lnm40.my.com. Jobs printed to this queue
           print two pages to a sheet, with a flag page and include
           the code in the form MYFORM.

     Example 3-2 Creation of an Execution Queue Entry for a
                 PrintServer Printer

         $ @SYS$STARTUP:DCPS$EXECUTION_QUEUE -
             LPS20$BULL09 -                  ! P1 - Execution queue name
             "DECNET/BULL09" -               ! P2 - Interconnect protocol/device name
             DCPS_LIB -                      ! P3 - Logical name for library(ies)
             "SIDES=2" -                     ! P4 - Default queue parameters
             "" -                            ! P5 - Default queue qualifiers
             "" -                            ! P6 - Communication speed (serial only)
             "" -                            ! P7 - Device characteristics
             ""                              ! P8 - Verify on/off

           This queue is called LPS20$BULL09 and uses DECnet to a
           PrintServer printer called BULL09. Jobs printed to this
           queue print in duplex.



     3-2 Creating and Modifying Print Queues

 






                ________________________Note  ________________________

                Configure your system so that required software
                is started before you start your execution queues.
                For example, for a networked printer, ensure that
                the corresponding TCP/IP, LAT, DECnet, AppleTalk,
                or PrintServer Supporting Host software is started
                first.

                Also, if you invoke DCPS$EXECUTION_QUEUE.COM
                directly, and neglect to add the same command to
                DCPS$STARTUP.COM, some DCPS queues may not work
                after your OpenVMS system reboots.

                _____________________________________________________

              The following sections describe each item of information
              you need to supply to DCPS$EXECUTION_QUEUE.COM, as
              outlined in Table 3-1.

        Table_3-1_Parameter_Values_for_Execution_Queues_________________

        Parameter___Value_______________________________________________

        P1          Name of the execution queue
        (required)

        P2          Printer device description, including some or all of
        (required)  the following:

                    Node name if in an OpenVMS Cluster and you want to
                    specify the system on which the DCPS queue is to be
                    run

                    Interconnect protocol

                    Port number for raw TCP/IP printers

                    AppleTalk zone for AppleTalk printers and zone name
                    is required

                    AppleTalk printer type for AppleTalk printers and
                    printer type is required

        P3          Logical name pointing to device control library(ies)
        (required)

                                 Creating and Modifying Print Queues 3-3

 






     Table_3-1_(Cont.)_Parameter_Values_for_Execution_Queues_________

     Parameter___Value_______________________________________________

     P4          Default queue parameters
     (optional)

     P5          Default queue qualifiers
     (optional)

     P6          Communication speed (for directly-connected serial
     (optional)  devices only)

     P7          Device characteristics
     (optional)

     P8          Verification setting for debugging
     (optional)______________________________________________________

     3.3.1 Supplying the Name of the Execution Queue (P1)

           An execution queue name can have 1-31 characters,
           including uppercase and lowercase alphabetical characters,
           digits, the dollar sign ($), and the underscore character
           (_). The queue name must include at least one alphabetical
           character and cannot have intervening spaces.

     3.3.2 Supplying the Printer Device Name (P2)

           The printer device name specifies the interconnect and
           device used to access the printer, and the VMScluster
           member node on which it resides.

           Specify the device name in the following format:

               node::"interconnect/interconnect_specific_device_address"

           where:

           o  node is the name of the VMScluster member on which the
              queue executes. If the OpenVMS system is not a member
              of a cluster, then node:: can be omitted.

           o  interconnect specifies the interconnect type. You can
              specify one of the following:

     3-4 Creating and Modifying Print Queues

 





                 _______________________________________________________
                                               Specify . . .
                 For_._._._______________________________See_._._.______

                 Printers that connect with    IP_       Section 3.3.2.1
                 raw TCP/IP sockets            RAWTCP

                 Printers that connect         SERIAL    Section 3.3.2.2
                 directly or with LAT

                 PrintServer printers that     IP_CPAP   Section 3.3.2.4
                 connect with TCP/IP using
                 the CPAP protocol and TCP/IP

                 PrintServer printers that     DECNET    Section 3.3.2.3
                 connect with DECnet using
                 the CPAP protocol and DECnet

                 Printers that connect with    APPLETALK Section 3.3.2.5
                 EtherTalk and LocalTalk
                 protocols______________________________________________

              o  interconnect_specific_device_address is the actual
                 address of the printer.

              There are other printer protocols that layer upon TCP/IP,
              including CPAP (Common Printer Access Protocol), LPD,
              and Telnet. DCPS uses CPAP to communicate with DIGITAL
              PrintServer printers. DCPS does not use LPD or Telnet.

              To communicate with your printer using raw TCP/IP, the
              NIC, print server or terminal server that you use to
              connect your printer to the network must provide a raw
              TCP/IP port. Further, this raw TCP/IP port must support
              bidirectional communication between the printer and your
              OpenVMS system. DCPS does not work with unidirectional
              ports, such as those found on the NICs for the DEClaser
              3500 and 5100 printers, the RapidPrint 200 and 500, and HP
              JetDirect cards that interface with the printer via its
              XIO (versus MIO) slot.

                ________________________Note  ________________________

                The device specification syntax allows a device
                name to be longer than 39 characters. Those
                device names that are longer than 39 characters
                display as "DCPS$" for the value of the /ON

                                 Creating and Modifying Print Queues 3-5

 






              qualifier. The device name is stored in logical name
              DCPS$queuename_DEVICE_NAME.

              _____________________________________________________

     3.3.2.1 If Your Printer Is On a TCP/IP Network and Uses Raw
             TCP/IP Sockets

           Enter the device information in the following format:

               "IP_RAWTCP/address:port"

           where:

           address is the IP address of your NIC, print server, or
           terminal server in either a named or numeric format.

           port is the number of the raw TCP port for your network
           device. Check the documentation for your NIC, print
           server, or terminal server to determine what number to
           use. Table 3-2 shows the port numbers for some commonly-
           used devices.

           Table_3-2_Raw_TCP/IP_Port_Numbers_________________________

              20nn  DECserver terminal servers, where "nn" is the
                    physical port number
              2501  DIGITAL LN17ps and DIGITAL Laser Printer LN17+ps
                    Emulex NICs
              3001  DIGITAL Laser Printer LN15 and LN15+
                    DIGITAL RapidPrint 500 print server
              6869  Compaq Laser Printer LNC02
                    DIGITAL Laser Printer LN20, LN40 and LNC02
              9100  Compaq Laser Printer LN16, LN32 and LNM40
                    GENICOM Intelliprint mL, LN and microLaser
                    printers
                    GENICOM RapidPrint MPS100 print server
                    HP LaserJet printers
                    IBM InfoPrint printers
                    Lexmark C, Optra, S, Optra T, T and W series
                    printers
                    Tektronix Phaser printers
                    Xerox DocuPrint N printers
           _________HP_JetDirect,_Lexmark_and_XCD_print_servers______

     3-6 Creating and Modifying Print Queues

 






              For example, a raw TCP/IP printer could be specified by
              either of the following:

                  "IP_RAWTCP/lnm40.my.org:9100"
                  "IP_RAWTCP/8.9.10.11:9100"

                ________________________Note  ________________________

                If you specify the wrong port number for the
                printer, DCPS is unable to communicate with the
                printer. However, because the symptoms are no
                different than if the printer were busy or offline,
                you do not receive any indication that the port
                number is wrong.

                _____________________________________________________

        3.3.2.2 If Your Printer Is On a LAT Network or Directly
                Connected

              Use the following format for serial printers:

        ________________________________________________________________
        If Your
        Serial      Use This
        Printer is  Format . . .
        On_._._.________________Where_._._._____________________________

        A local     "SERIAL     x is the printer type code, y is the
        serial      /Txyn"      controller name, and n is the host
        line                    system unit number.

        A LAT port  "SERIAL     n is the host system unit number.
        ____________/LTAn"______________________________________________

                ________________________Note  ________________________

                The SET TERMINAL and SET DEVICE commands translate
                the name of the printer for serial printers. To
                prevent the commands from translating the printer
                name, prefix the printer name with an underscore (_
                ).

                _____________________________________________________

                                 Creating and Modifying Print Queues 3-7

 






     3.3.2.3 If Your PrintServer Printer Is Part of a TCP/IP Network

           Enter the device information in the following format:

               "IP_CPAP/address"

           where address is the IP address of your DIGITAL PrintServer
           printer in either a named or numeric format.

           For example, a PrintServer TCP/IP node could be specified
           by either of the following:

               "IP_CPAP/garmnd.dsg.dec.com"
               "IP_CPAP/16.128.144.11"

     3.3.2.4 If Your PrintServer Printer Is Part of a DECnet Network

           Enter the device information in the following format:

               "DECNET/nodename"

           where nodename is the DECnet node name of your DIGITAL
           PrintServer printer.

           For example, a PrintServer DECnet node could be specified
           by:

               "DECNET/GARMND"

     3.3.2.5 If Your Printer Is Part of an AppleTalk Network

           You can include printers in your printing system that are
           connected to an AppleTalk network. To make an AppleTalk
           printer a network sharable device, the PATHWORKS for
           OpenVMS (Macintosh) software must be running on the same
           node that is running the DCPS queue.

           Enter the device information in the following format:

               "APPLETALK/printername@zone@type"

           where:

           o  printername is the AppleTalk node name assigned to
              the printer. This is the PostScript printer name. This
              value is required.

           o  zone is the zone that includes the printer. This value
              is optional. The default is the AppleTalk zone for
              the network segment of the OpenVMS system on which the
              print queue is running.

     3-8 Creating and Modifying Print Queues

 






              o  type describes the printer's accessibility. This value
                 is optional. Generally, the type is LaserWriter.

              When only printername is required, the information
              provided for P2 would be just "APPLETALK/printername".

              For example, an AppleTalk printer could be specified by
              any of the following:

                  "APPLETALK/Paul's Printer"
                  "APPLETALK/Paul's Printer@MRO"
                  "APPLETALK/Paul's Printer@MRO@LaserWriter"

                ________________________Note  ________________________

                PATHWORKS for OpenVMS (Macintosh) has been retired
                and is no longer supported.

                _____________________________________________________

        3.3.3 Supplying the Library Logical Name (P3)

              The name of the standard device control library is
              DCPS$DEVCTL. This is the default library name if
              this parameter is blank. Refer to Chapter 7 for more
              information about creating device control libraries and
              defining the device control library logical name.

        3.3.4 Assigning Default PRINT Command Parameters to the Queue
              (P4)

              You can specify default PRINT command parameters to
              associate with the queue. Any PRINT parameter can be
              associated by default with a queue. Default PRINT
              parameters are used when the print job prints on the
              specified queue, unless the user specifies different
              parameter values in the PRINT command line. The parameter
              values specified in the PRINT command line override the
              default queue parameters.

              Place quotes around default PRINT parameters, as shown in
              the following example:



                                 Creating and Modifying Print Queues 3-9

 






           $ @SYS$STARTUP:DCPS$EXECUTION_QUEUE -
               2UP -                               ! P1 - Execution queue name
               "SERIAL/TTB4:" -                    ! P2 - Interconnect protocol/Device name
               DCPS_LIB -                          ! P3 - Logical name for library(ies)
               "SIDES=2"                           ! P4 - Default queue parameters

           How DECprint Supervisor Prioritizes PRINT Parameters

           Parameters set by the /PARAMETERS qualifier of the PRINT
           command override any defaults set for the queue. DECprint
           Supervisor uses default values for parameters, from
           highest to lowest priority, as follows:

           1. Parameters specified in the PRINT command

           2. Queue defaults specified for the generic queue

           3. Queue defaults specified for the execution queue

           4. Defaults built into the DCPS software:

                 DATA_TYPE=AUTOMATIC
                 INPUT_TRAY=printer-specific[1]
                 LAYUP_DEFINITION=no default layup definition
                 MESSAGES=NOMESSAGES
                 NUMBER_UP=0
                 OUTPUT_TRAY=printer-specific[1]
                 PAGE_LIMIT=no limit
                 PAGE_ORIENTATION=PORTRAIT
                 PAGE_SIZE=(same as SHEET_SIZE)
                 NOPUNCH
                 SHEET_COUNT=1
                 SHEET_SIZE=printer-specific[1]
                 SIDES=printer-specific[1]
                 STAPLE=NONE
                 TAB=NOTAB

           Some parameter values are controlled by the printer
           hardware and can be set through means other than the
           DECprint Supervisor software. DIGITAL PrintServer printers
           are affected by the PrintServer Software. Other printers
           are controlled through the printer control panel or
           switches.

           ___________________
           [1]These  settings depend on the setting of the printer's

               PostScript interpreter.

     3-10 Creating and Modifying Print Queues

 






        3.3.5 Supplying Default Queue Attributes (P5)

              You can supply a value to override or add to the default
              queue attributes. Do not use the INITIALIZE/QUEUE command
              to set these qualifiers. Enter them into the queue
              definition instead.

              By default, the printer startup command procedure creates
              print queues with the following INITIALIZE/QUEUE qualifier
              settings:

              o  /SEPARATE=(BURST,TRAILER,NORESET)

                 The /SEPARATE qualifier is used to specify job
                 separation pages. The default setting specifies:

                 -  Job burst pages.

                 -  Job trailer pages.

                 -  No reset module is sent between print jobs
                    (NORESET). This setting is included for compati-
                    bility with sites upgrading from PrintServer client
                    software.

              o  /FORM_MOUNTED=DCPS$DEFAULT

                 This qualifier allows you to include a default form
                 definition assumed to be mounted on the printer. The
                 default form for ANSI jobs only is DCPS$DEFAULT. If
                 you include a form definition with the /FORM_MOUNTED
                 qualifier, specify the same form definition in the
                 /DEFAULT qualifier as well.

              o  /DEFAULT=(NOFEED)

                 The /DEFAULT qualifier specifies default PRINT
                 qualifiers. The standard queue definition specifies a
                 default setting of NOFEED on print jobs. You can modify
                 this command line to include any PRINT qualifiers. For
                 example, you can include your own form to be applied to
                 print jobs when a form definition is required:

                 /DEFAULT=(FORM=MYFORM,NOFEED)

                 If you specify the /DEFAULT qualifier, be sure to
                 include the FORM and NOFEED keywords. If they are not
                 included, the values revert to the OpenVMS defaults,
                 which are not compatible with the DECprint Supervisor
                 software.

                                Creating and Modifying Print Queues 3-11

 






              ________________________Note ________________________

              If you include more than one qualifier in the queue
              definition, enclose the values in quotation marks.

              _____________________________________________________

     3.3.6 Setting the Speed for Serial Printers (P6)

           You can set the communications speed for serial printers
           attached directly to your OpenVMS system. If this
           parameter is blank, the default is 9600 baud. To change
           the speed, replace the null string ("") with a value, such
           as "19200". For printers that utilize network connections,
           this parameter is ignored.

     3.3.7 Supplying SET DEVICE Qualifiers to the Queue (P7)

           You can specify the SET DEVICE command qualifiers for this
           queue. For example, to enable error logging, include the
           following string:

           "/ERROR_LOGGING"

           Now, all error messages reported by the printer are
           recorded in the error log file, SYS$ERRORLOG:ERRLOG.SYS.
           You can read this file using the ANALYZE/ERROR command.

           This parameter is valid for serial printers only.

     3.3.8 Enabling SET VERIFY When Initializing the Queue (P8)

           You can specify the setting of the SET VERIFY command
           for the DCPS$EXECUTION_QUEUE.COM command procedure. The
           default setting is NOVERIFY, to save log file space and
           console log space. If P8 contains 1, then SET VERIFY is
           enabled, which is useful for diagnosing problems in the
           printer startup file. (Refer to the OpenVMS DCL Dictionary
           for more information about the SET [NO]VERIFY command.)






     3-12 Creating and Modifying Print Queues

 






        3.4 Customizing Execution Queue Behavior

              You can alter the behavior of DCPS print symbionts and
              their corresponding execution queues in a number of ways,
              several of which are described in this section. Other
              options are listed in Appendix B, along with general
              guidelines for making the changes. Some customizations
              apply to all DCPS queues while others apply only to queues
              that you specify.

        3.4.1 Running DCPS as a Multistreamed Process

              DECthreads is used to implement the numerous functions
              of DCPS. All processes that use DECthreads execute
              periodically to determine if any threads can run. Even
              when no jobs are printing, DECthreads causes a DCPS
              process to run to determine if any threads can run.
              If there are many DCPS queues started on a system, the
              scheduling and periodic execution of all these processes
              can use a significant amount of CPU time. This problem
              is resolved by running DCPS as a multistreamed process,
              thereby reducing the number of symbiont processes that
              must execute.

              When running multistreamed, one DCPS process can run more
              than one DCPS execution queue. A new DCPS process is not
              started every time a DCPS print queue is started, but
              only when all current processes are supporting a specified
              maximum number of queues ("streams"). The number of queues
              that a DCPS symbiont process will support is determined by
              the value of the logical name DCPS$MAX_STREAMS when the
              process is started.

              DCPS can be configured to support up to 32 execution
              queues per DCPS symbiont process. The logical name
              DCPS$MAX_STREAMS is used to specify the number of queues
              per DCPS symbiont process. To define this logical, specify
              the following command in your DCPS$STARTUP.COM file
              (a template is provided in DCPS$STARTUP.TEMPLATE) and
              substitute the number of queues per process to use. If
              this logical name is not defined, a DCPS process will
              support only one (1) execution queue.

              $ DEFINE /EXECUTIVE_MODE /SYSTEM DCPS$MAX_STREAMS max-number

                                Creating and Modifying Print Queues 3-13

 






           Execute your DCPS$STARTUP.COM file to define this logical
           name and start your queues with DCPS as a multistreamed
           process.

           A DCPS process terminates only when all queues associated
           with the process are stopped.

     3.4.1.1 Managing Print Queues When Running Multistreamed

           The OpenVMS Queue Manager controls when a symbiont process
           is created and terminated. Generally a new DCPS symbiont
           process is created when there are no free streams in all
           existing DCPS symbiont processes.

           The set of print queues that a DCPS symbiont process
           supports is determined by the order in which queues are
           started, and by any subsequent stopping (STOP /QUEUE
           /RESET or STOP /QUEUE /NEXT) and starting (START /QUEUE)
           of queues. DCPS defines a logical name which identifies
           the process ID for a queue (Section 5.8). You can use
           these logical names to determine the process that supports
           a queue and the set of queues that are supported by the
           same process.

           Although not likely, a problem observed with one queue
           could be the result of a problem that exists with another
           queue, because both queues are supported by the same
           process. It may not be sufficient to examine the state
           of one job on one queue to identify a problem. You may
           need to look at the state of the first job on all the
           queues supported by that DCPS process.

           A DCPS queue should not be stopped by stopping the DCPS
           process that supports that queue. Stopping a DCPS symbiont
           process with STOP /IDENTIFICATION will stop all of the
           queues supported by that process.

     3.4.1.2 Changing the DCPS Environment When Running
             Multistreamed

           With a single-streamed DCPS symbiont process, changes
           to DCPS logicals names and other aspects of the DCPS
           environment may not take effect until after you have
           issued a STOP /QUEUE /RESET and then a START /QUEUE
           command for the associated queue, depending on what you
           are trying to change.

     3-14 Creating and Modifying Print Queues

 






              To change the behavior for a single DCPS queue that is
              associated with a multistreamed process, you may need to
              stop all the DCPS queues associated with that symbiont
              process and then restart them before the change will take
              effect. This is because some aspects of the environment
              are determined only when the DCPS symbiont process starts
              (rather than when a DCPS queue starts) and the symbiont
              process does not stop until all of its associated queues
              are stopped.

        3.4.1.3 Determing the Proper Value for DCPS$MAX_STREAMS

              There are several factors to consider to determine an
              appropriate number of queues per DCPS symbiont process
              including:

              o  You can reduce the number of process slots taken by
                 DCPS by increasing the number of queues per process.
                 This will free up process slots. By reducing the number
                 of DCPS symbiont processes, you reduce the number of
                 DECthread processes that must run periodically, which
                 improves system performance.

              o  Even though a DECprint Supervisor process can be
                 configured to support more than one execution queue,
                 DCPS can translate only one file at a time. To avoid
                 contention for translators, when a stream (queue) in a
                 process needs a translator that is already in use, the
                 translator for that stream is started in a separate
                 temporary process. This can impact performance if
                 your site primarily uses one translator, and print
                 queues are generally busy. To reduce the likelihood
                 of a impact on performance, choose a smaller value for
                 DCPS$MAX_STREAMS.

              o  The maximum number of queues per process is 32. This
                 limit is imposed by the OpenVMS queue manager.

              o  A DECprint Supervisor process running multiple print
                 queues represents a potential single point of failure.
                 If the supervisor process fails, or someone stops the
                 process, then several queues are affected.



                                Creating and Modifying Print Queues 3-15

 






     3.4.2 Interrupting Busy Printers When a Job Starts

           DCPS normally waits for a raw TCP/IP, LAT, or serial
           printer to be idle before sending a new job to it. This
           is especially important in a networked environment where
           a printer connected through a DECserver device or other
           network terminal server can be shared among DCPS queues,
           LATSYM queues, Windows and UNIX hosts, etc.

           Prior to version V1.2, DCPS used an aggressive syn-
           chronization sequence to gain control of a printer's
           PostScript interpreter. This scheme worked well in an
           all-DCPS environment, but in a multi-host environment
           it sometimes caused print jobs from other systems to
           terminate prematurely.

           If you rely on DCPS's earlier behavior to abort errant
           PostScript jobs on one queue by starting a job on another
           queue, you can define the following system logical name to
           restore the more aggressive behavior:

           $ DEFINE /EXECUTIVE_MODE /SYSTEM DCPS$queuename_INTERRUPT_WHEN_BUSY TRUE

     3.4.3 Suppressing PostScript Synchronization When a Job Starts

           DCPS begins a job on a raw TCP/IP, LAT, or serial printer
           by synchronizing with its PostScript interpreter to
           ensure that the interpreter is ready to accept commands.
           However, some PostScript printers are not always in a
           state where they can recognize the synchronization control
           characters. In particular, some printers that support
           additional printer languages like PCL do not correctly
           respond to this sequence under certain circumstances. For
           example, the DEClaser 3500, when in PS/PCL sensing mode,
           inadvertently switches to PCL mode when DCPS sends a Ctrl
           /T character to its serial port. The printer, then out of
           the PostScript mode, does not respond, and the print job
           gets stuck in the "starting" state.

           You can define a logical name to cause the DCPS symbiont
           to avoid using its usual synchronization sequence for
           printers that use a raw TCP/IP, LAT, or serial connection.
           The logical name has no effect when using printers
           connected via other means. Refer to Chapter 10 for
           printer-specific recommendations.

     3-16 Creating and Modifying Print Queues

 






              To disable the synchronization sequence for a print queue,
              use the following command:

              $ DEFINE /EXECUTIVE_MODE /SYSTEM DCPS$queuename_NO_SYNC TRUE

              The absence of the synchronization step is not generally
              a problem for most modern serially-connected printers
              because such printers use flow control to hold off data
              when the interpreter is not ready to accept data. However,
              the printer is more vulnerable to printing "garbage" or
              losing jobs if communication parameters, such as baud rate
              and stop bits, are not set correctly. Depending on the
              configuration, it's also possible to lose print jobs if
              the printer data cable is disconnected or the printer is
              powered off.

        3.4.4 Purging the Symbiont Process's Working Set

              The DCPS symbiont purges its working set after it has
              been idle for a period of time in order to conserve system
              resources. The time delay is intended to help prevent the
              system from thrashing by keeping the program in physical
              memory while more work is apt to arrive.

              By default, DCPS waits ten (10) minutes after becoming
              idle before purging its working set. You can increase this
              value, if desired, by defining a system-wide logical name:

              $ DEFINE /EXECUTIVE_MODE /SYSTEM DCPS$PURGE_TIME "0 hh:mm:ss.00"

              where hh:mm:ss.00 is an OpenVMS delta-time value
              specifying the desired time delay. If the value is less
              than the default of ten seconds, the default is used.

        3.4.5 Suppressing the OPCOM Message USERNOTFOUND

              If DCPS is running on an OpenVMS cluster that has more
              than one User Authorization file (UAF), it is possible the
              user submitting a print job does not have a UAF record on
              the system running the DCPS queue. DCPS prints the job but
              issues a USERNOTFOUND operator message:




                                Creating and Modifying Print Queues 3-17

 






               %%%%%%%%%%%  OPCOM   1-MAR-2002 18:43:55.87  %%%%%%%%%%%
               Message from user SYSTEM on LITERA
               Queue SHARIE: %DCPS-W-USERNOTFOUND, user name FOO not found, no log files created
               -RMS-E-RNF, record not found

           Because the username cannot be found, DCPS cannot perform
           the MESSAGES=KEEP or MESSAGES=PRINT parameter request.

           To prevent this OPCOM message from being displayed for
           every job, define one of the following logical names,
           depending on whether you want the message suppressed for
           one print queue or all queues:

           $ DEFINE /EXECUTIVE_MODE /SYSTEM DCPS$queuename_IGNORE_UNKNOWN_USER TRUE
           $ DEFINE /EXECUTIVE_MODE /SYSTEM DCPS$IGNORE_UNKNOWN_USER TRUE

     3.4.6 Using Old ANSI Translator Page Size for A4 Landscape

           All versions of the ANSI translator prior to DCPS V1.1A
           had a problem printing 66 lines of text in landscape mode
           on A4 paper. Certain printers have slightly smaller than
           average print areas when using A4 paper, which resulted
           in the 66th line being lost or clipped when using print
           parameters of PAGE_SIZE=A4,PAGE_ORIENTATION=LANDSCAPE.

           The ANSI translator now correctly prints 66 lines of
           text in landscape mode on A4 paper. The fix involved
           changing the vertical spacing of the font used (SGR 15)
           and correcting the maximum printable area for A4 paper.

           If you use preprinted forms that depend on the old
           translator's behavior, you can retain the old behavior
           by defining a DCPS logical name:

           $ DEFINE /EXECUTIVE_MODE /SYSTEM DCPS$queuename_OLD_ANSI_PAGE_SIZES TRUE

     3.5 Setting Up Generic Queues

           Generic queues are not associated with a specific printer;
           rather, they point to the execution queues. Generic queues
           can be associated with more than one execution queue and
           can distribute print jobs among queues, or they can be
           used to associate specific DECprint Supervisor functions
           with a print job. Generic queues are optional.

     3-18 Creating and Modifying Print Queues

 






              Example 3-3 shows how to set up a generic queue for
              printing with a layup definition file. This generic queue
              feeds print jobs to either of two ScriptPrinter execution
              queues.


              Example 3-3 Setting Up a Generic Queue

              $ @SYS$STARTUP:DCPS$GENERIC_QUEUE -
                  DRAFT_DOCS -                                 ! P1 - Generic queue name
                  "LN03R_TTB4,LN03R_TTB7" -                    ! P2 - Execution queue name(s)
                  "LAYUP=LPS$SINGLEHOLES"                      ! P3 - Default queue parameters

        Table_3-3_Parameter_Values_for_Generic_Queues___________________

        Parameter________Value__________________________________________

        P1 (required)    Name of the generic queue.

                         In Example 3-3, DRAFT_DOCS is the generic queue
                         to which users will send print jobs.

        P2 (required)    Name of the execution queue(s) to which the
                         generic queue can send jobs. You must supply at
                         least one execution queue name for each generic
                         queue definition.

                         In Example 3-3, the generic queue will send
                         print jobs to two execution queues: LN03R_TTB4
                         and LN03R_TTB7.

        P3 (optional)    Default PRINT parameters.

                         In Example 3-3, LAYUP=LPS$SINGLEHOLES provides
                         a default layup definition file for the generic
                         queue.

        P4 (optional)    Explicit INITIALIZE/QUEUE qualifiers.

        P5 (optional)    Setting of the SET VERIFY command. The default
        _________________is_SET_NOVERIFY._______________________________




                                Creating and Modifying Print Queues 3-19

 






     3.6 Activating Changes to the Queue Definitions

           When you create or modify the DCPS$STARTUP.COM file, you
           must activate the changes for the DECprint Supervisor
           to use the new queue definitions. You can wait until
           you stop and restart the system, or you can execute the
           DCPS$STARTUP.COM file, as follows:

           1. Stop the print queues that you modified. If any of
              the modified queues are running on a multistreamed
              symbiont, stop all other queues that are using that
              same symbiont (see Section 3.4.1.2). To stop the
              queues, enter the following command for each print
              queue:

              $ STOP /QUEUE /NEXT queuename

           2. Edit the system startup file SYS$MANAGER:SYSTARTUP_
              VMS.COM to include a command that invokes DCPS$STARTUP.COM.

              Look for the following command in the system startup
              file:

              $ @SYS$STARTUP:DCPS$STARTUP

              If this command is not in the system startup file, add
              it to the file. Use the following guidelines:

              o  If you are using a printer with TCP/IP, add the new
                 line after TCP/IP is started.

              o  If you are using a printer with LAT, add the new
                 line after LAT is started.

              o  If you are using a printer with AppleTalk, add the
                 new line after AppleTalk is started.

              o  If you are using a PrintServer printer with DECnet,
                 add the new line after the command to invoke
                 STARTNET.COM. PrintServer Software must be running
                 on the PrintServer host system before you start the
                 queues.

              o  If the system startup file includes a command to
                 start
                 LPS$STARTUP.COM, replace it with the command to
                 start DCPS$STARTUP.COM.

     3-20 Creating and Modifying Print Queues

 






                 o  If you are upgrading from DECprint Printing Services
                    (CPS), delete the command to start CPS$STARTUP.COM
                    from the system startup file.

              3. Execute the printer startup command file:

                 $ @SYS$STARTUP:DCPS$STARTUP

              If the queues are on a VMScluster system, you should
              execute the command above from all nodes in the cluster.

              The print queues are started by the printer startup
              command file. See Section 3.7 for information on testing
              your new queue definitions.

        3.7 Testing the Printing System

                ________________________Note  ________________________

                Execution of the IVP (@SYS$TEST:DCPS$IVP) does not
                cause anything to print.

                _____________________________________________________

              You can test the printing system by printing the IVP files
              from SYS$COMMON:[SYSTEST.DCPS]. The IVP files represent
              the different data types that DCPS supports. The IVP files
              are listed in Table 3-4.

              Table_3-4_IVP_Files_with_Different_Data_Types_____________

              File_Name_____________File_Type___________________________

              DCPS$IVP_ANSI.DAT     ASCII files

              DCPS$IVP_LIST.DAT     Simple ASCII

              DCPS$IVP_PCL.DAT      PCL Level 4 files

              DCPS$IVP_POST.DAT     PostScript files

              DCPS$IVP_PROPRINTER.DAProprinter files

              DCPS$IVP_REGIS.DAT    ReGIS files

              DCPS$IVP_TEK4014.DAT__Tektronix_4010/4014_files___________

              DCPS can automatically detect the file's data type. You do
              not have to specify the data type on the command line. For
              example, you can enter the following PRINT command:

                                Creating and Modifying Print Queues 3-21

 






           $ PRINT/QUEUE=queuename/NOTIFY DCPS$IVP_data-type.DAT

           If the print queue is linked to a specific data type, or
           you are testing the LIST data type, specify the data type
           of the file.

           For example, to print DCPS$IVP_POST.DAT, use the following
           PRINT command:

           $ PRINT /QUEUE=queuename -
             /PARAMETERS=DATA_TYPE=POSTSCRIPT /NOTIFY -
             SYS$COMMON:[SYSTEST.DCPS]DCPS$IVP_POST.DAT

































     3-22 Creating and Modifying Print Queues

 









                                                                       4
        ________________________________________________________________

                                 Providing Automatic Data Type Detection



              DECprint Supervisor software can determine the data type
              of the file to be printed. This chapter explains how you
              can customize your printing system to print the types of
              files that users need to print.

        4.1 How DCPS Automatically Detects Data Type

              If a user does not specify the data type and the print
              queue has no default data type, DCPS examines each file in
              the print job. DCPS attempts to determine the data type of
              the file from instructions in the file, or from the file
              name extension.

              If DECprint Supervisor software cannot determine the file
              data type by any of these methods, the file is printed as
              a text file. Text files are handled as ANSI files unless
              another default text file data type (PCL or Proprinter)
              has been defined by the system manager for the queue or
              for the system.

              When files are treated as text files in this way, the
              DECprint Supervisor software can detect PostScript data
              after the text, so a file that starts with text followed
              by PostScript is printed properly.

              The process of determining the file data type is repeated
              for each file in a print job, so a single print job can
              contain different types of files.







                             Providing Automatic Data Type Detection 4-1

 






     4.2 Specifying Automatic Data Type Detection

           You can control how the DECprint Supervisor software
           determines the data type of files as they are printed.
           You can:

           o  Link file extensions with data types. You can edit the
              default file extension data file to add or modify the
              standard list of file extensions and the data types to
              which they are associated. See Section 4.2.1.

           o  Specify the default data type to use when DCPS cannot
              determine the file's data type in any other way. You
              can specify a system wide default and a queue-specific
              default text data type. See Section 4.2.2.

           If necessary, you can create generic queues that have
           default data types, so that every file sent to the queue
           is assumed to be that data type. Only the user's PRINT
           parameters can override the queue default data type.

     4.2.1 Linking File Extensions with Data Types

           The DECprint Supervisor software uses a data file to
           link file extensions to data types. Use the following
           procedure to create a local data file of your system's
           file extensions and the associated data types.

           1. If your system does not have a customized data file,
              use the sample file supplied with your software. Copy
              the file, and change the file's extension, as shown in
              the following command:

              $ COPY
              _From: SYS$LIBRARY:DCPS$FILE_EXTENSION_DATA_TYPE.DAT_DEFAULT

              _To: SYS$COMMON:[SYSLIB]DCPS$FILE_EXTENSION_DATA_TYPE.DAT

              If the .DAT file is not in variable or stream format,
              DCPS cannot read it when the queues are started. OPCOM
              will report the error, and the symbiont process may
              be terminated. You should save the .DAT file in the
              appropriate format, and then restart the printing
              system using the DCPS$STARTUP.COM file.

     4-2 Providing Automatic Data Type Detection

 






              2. Edit the file. The file has the default file extension
                 and data types listed. For example:

                 POSTSCRIPT:
                         EPS
                         EPSF
                         POST
                         PS
                         ;

                 The example shows that files with extensions of .EPS,
                 .EPSF, .POST, and .PS are linked to the PostScript data
                 type.

                 Add extensions that are specific to your site, or
                 modify any that have a different local meaning.

                 You can specify any valid DATA_TYPE value, except
                 AUTOMATIC. Do not abbreviate the data type names. The
                 valid data type names are:

                    ANSI
                    ASCII
                    DDIF
                    LIST
                    PCL
                    POSTSCRIPT
                    PROPRINTER
                    REGIS
                    TEK4014

        4.2.2 Specifying Default Data Types for the System and Queues

              You can specify a system wide default text data type and
              queue-specific default text data types. If DCPS software
              cannot determine the data type, the file is processed as
              the default data type you specify.

              The factory default data type is ANSI. If users regularly
              print PCL or Proprinter text files instead of ANSI
              files, you should change the default from ANSI to PCL
              or Proprinter.

              Define one or both of the following logical names:

              o  DCPS$DEFAULT_TRANSLATOR specifies the system wide
                 default text data type.

                             Providing Automatic Data Type Detection 4-3

 






              To define a system wide default text data type, use the
              following command:

              $ DEFINE/SYSTEM/EXECUTIVE DCPS$DEFAULT_TRANSLATOR text_data_type

           o  DCPS$queuename_DEFAULT_TRANSLATOR specifies the queue-
              specific default data type.

              To define a queue-specific default text data type, use
              the following command:

              $ DEFINE/SYSTEM/EXECUTIVE DCPS$queuename_DEFAULT_TRANSLATOR text-data-type

           Valid values for the text-data-type are:

           o  ANSI (the default)

           o  PCL

           o  PROPRINTER

           Do not abbreviate the data type name.

           If the system wide data type differs from the queue-
           specific data type, the queue-specific data type takes
           precedence.

           The queue-specific logical name is useful when a queue
           is used by PATHWORKS clients. Text files printed from
           PCs may be PCL or Proprinter files. The following example
           specifies the PCL data type for the queue named PATHWORKS:

           $ DEFINE/SYSTEM/EXECUTIVE DCPS$PATHWORKS_DEFAULT_TRANSLATOR PCL

           The DECprint Supervisor software attempts to determine
           the file data type for each file sent to the PATHWORKS
           queue. If a file data type cannot be determined, the file
           is processed as a PCL file. If the file contains PCL text
           followed by PostScript, it is printed properly.

     4.2.3 How Users Control Data Type Detection

           Users control the way print jobs are processed for
           automatic data type detection by specifying:

           o  The data type with the /PARAMETERS=DATA_TYPE qualifier
              in the PRINT command.

     4-4 Providing Automatic Data Type Detection

 






                 This qualifier overrides the automatic data type
                 detection process; only the presence of DDIF file tags
                 can prevent the file from being processed using the
                 translator associated with the specified data type. If
                 the file contains DDIF tags and is explicitly specified
                 as another data type, the file is not printed. The
                 following error message is displayed, and the DECprint
                 Supervisor software continues with the next file in the
                 print job (if any):

                 INVDDIFDATA, Invalid DDIF data, flushing to end of file

              o  Automatic data type detection with the following PRINT
                 parameter:

                 /PARAMETERS=DATA_TYPE=AUTOMATIC[=text-data-type]

                 Users can specify the /PARAMETERS=DATA_TYPE=AUTOMATIC
                 qualifier to specify automatic data type detection (for
                 example, if the print queue has a default data type).

                 If the user includes the default text data type (text-
                 data-type) in the DATA_TYPE=AUTOMATIC parameter, the
                 DECprint Supervisor software assumes the specified
                 data type if the data type of a print file cannot be
                 determined.

                 The text-data-type value is optional; the default
                 is ANSI. Users should include this value to specify
                 another text data type, such as PCL or Proprinter.

                 The DECprint Supervisor software can print a file that
                 starts with the default text data type followed by
                 PostScript data. If a user needs to print a file that
                 begins with PCL text followed by PostScript data, the
                 user can explicitly set the default text data type to
                 be PCL using the following PRINT command:

                 $ PRINT/QUEUE=PS20$A10 PIC.MSG/PARAMETERS=(DATA_TYPE=AUTOMATIC=PCL)

                 This feature is useful for printing files generated
                 by electronic messaging systems. For example, you
                 can print a PostScript file that was sent to you from
                 someone using the messaging system, if the resulting
                 file contains a text message header followed by
                 PostScript data.

                             Providing Automatic Data Type Detection 4-5

 









                                                                       5
        ________________________________________________________________

                                Manipulating Print Jobs and Print Queues



              This chapter describes the commands for maintaining
              and controlling print jobs, print queues, and the queue
              manager.

              Some of the commands described in this chapter require
              privileges.

        5.1 Displaying Print Job Status

              You can use the SHOW ENTRY command to display the status
              of a print job. You do not need privileges to use this
              command to display your own print jobs, but privileges are
              required to display another user's print jobs.

              The SHOW ENTRY command lists all your print jobs. To
              display the status of another user's print job, you
              must supply the job number with the SHOW ENTRY command
              or specify the user using the /USER qualifier. You can
              display the job numbers for all print jobs in a designated
              queue using the SHOW QUEUE/ALL command, as follows:

              $ SHOW QUEUE/ALL PS40$A12

              Printer queue PS40$A12, busy, on LEVEL::PS40, mounted form DCPS$DEFAULT
              (stock=DEFAULT)

                Entry  Jobname         Username     Blocks  Status
                -----  -------         --------     ------  ------
                 304      MEMO         MSMITH            5  Printing

              You can use the SHOW ENTRY/FULL command to display
              information about a specific print job. For example:



                            Manipulating Print Jobs and Print Queues 5-1

 






           $ SHOW ENTRY 304/FULL

           Entry  Jobname         Username     Blocks  Status
           -----  -------         --------     ------  ------
             304  MEMO            MSMITH            5  Printing
                  On busy printer queue PS40$A12
                  Submitted 14-MAR-2002 10:41
                  /FORM=DCPS$DEFAULT (stock=DEFAULT) /NOTIFY
                  /PRIORITY=100
                  File: _$1$DUA10:[MSMITH]MEMO.TXT;1 (printing)

              ________________________Note ________________________

              Print job status may be shown as "Printing" when the
              file has not yet actually started printing on the
              printer.

              _____________________________________________________

     5.2 Deleting a Print Job

           You can delete a print job using the DELETE/ENTRY command.
           You can delete you own print job without privileges.
           However, you must have privileges to delete another user's
           print jobs.

           The DELETE/ENTRY command accepts the print job number as
           an argument. For example:

           $ DELETE/ENTRY=569

           This command deletes print job 569. The system sends
           messages indicating the successful print job deletion.

           The print job is terminated in a method that depends on
           the status of the print job when you issue the DELETE
           /ENTRY command.








     5-2 Manipulating Print Jobs and Print Queues

 





              __________________________________________________________
              If you issue DELETE
              /ENTRY_._._._____________DCPS_software_._._.______________

              when the print job is    may take several seconds to stop
              printing,                the print job. The printer prints
                                       data in its buffers, plus any
                                       required job trailer pages and
                                       job log pages. During this time,
                                       a SHOW QUEUE command displays the
                                       job's status as Aborting.

              before a connection      prints no pages.
              is established with a
              network printer,

              after the connection is  prints the job trailer page with
              established,             a message indicating the fact
                                       that you deleted the print job.

              before the job burst     may not print the job burst or
              or job flag pages are    job flag page. However, job
              printed,                 trailer and job log pages are
                                       printed if the queue is set up to
              _________________________print_them.______________________

        5.3 Releasing a Print Job in the Holding State

              When a print job is in the Holding state, you must release
              it for it to print. The user can put a job in the Holding
              state using the PRINT/AFTER or PRINT/HOLD command. The
              user or system operator can put a print job in the Holding
              state using the SET ENTRY/HOLD command.

              Use the SET ENTRY/RELEASE command to release the print job
              to be printed. You must specify the job number in the SET
              ENTRY command. This command does not require privileges
              if you are releasing a print job that you submitted.
              Privileges are required to release another user's print
              jobs.

              For example:

              $ SET ENTRY/RELEASE 569

              In this example, print job 569 was in the Holding state
              and was released for printing.

                            Manipulating Print Jobs and Print Queues 5-3

 






     5.4 Requeuing Print Jobs

           You can change the print queue for one or more print jobs,
           as described in the following sections.

     5.4.1 Requeuing Pending Print Jobs

           You can requeue a print job that has not started printing
           using the SET ENTRY/REQUEUE command. Without privileges,
           you can requeue your jobs. With privileges, you can
           requeue any print job that has not started printing.
           You must supply the job entry number with the SET ENTRY
           command. The /REQUEUE qualifier requires the name of the
           new print queue. For example:

           $ SET ENTRY/REQUEUE=POSTSCRIPT$DUPLEX 596

           This command changes the print queue for job 596. The
           print job is sent to the POSTSCRIPT$DUPLEX queue.

     5.4.2 Requeuing the Currently Printing Job to Another Queue

           When a printer problem prevents completion of the printing
           job, you can requeue the print job to another printer. Use
           the STOP/QUEUE/REQUEUE command to send the print job to
           another print queue. You supply both the old queue name
           and the new queue name for this command. For example:

           $ STOP/QUEUE/REQUEUE=POSTSCRIPT$DUPLEX POSTSCRIPT$SIMPLEX

           In this example, the print job that is currently printing
           on the queue
           POSTSCRIPT$SIMPLEX is stopped and requeued to POSTSCRIPT$DUPLEX.
           The POSTSCRIPT$SIMPLEX queue is not stopped and continues
           with printing the next job in the queue.

     5.4.3 Requeuing Current and Future Print Jobs in a Queue

           The ASSIGN/MERGE command allows you to specify that
           all print jobs in a certain queue, and those submitted
           later for that queue, are to be sent to another queue.
           The ASSIGN/MERGE command requires privileges. You must
           supply the old queue name and the new queue name. Use the
           following procedure:

           1. Use the STOP/QUEUE/NEXT command to stop the malfunc-
              tioning print queue after the current print job has
              finished.

     5-4 Manipulating Print Jobs and Print Queues

 






              2. Use the STOP/QUEUE/REQUEUE command to requeue the
                 currently printing job to the new queue.

              3. Use the ASSIGN/MERGE command to cause all pending and
                 future print jobs to be requeued. For example:

                 $ STOP/QUEUE/NEXT PRINTER$NOTABLE
                 $ STOP/QUEUE/REQUEUE=PRINTER$ABLE PRINTER$NOTABLE
                 $ ASSIGN/MERGE PRINTER$ABLE PRINTER$NOTABLE

        5.5 Modifying the Attributes of a Print Job

              The SET ENTRY command allows a user to modify the
              attributes of a pending print job. You cannot modify a
              print job that has begun printing. If you have privileges,
              you can modify the attributes of print jobs submitted
              by other users. The SET ENTRY command requires that you
              specify the job number and allows you to specify one
              or more PRINT command qualifiers, which are listed in
              Appendix A. For example:

              $ SET ENTRY 596/PARAMETERS=PAGE_ORIENTATION=LANDSCAPE

              This example changes a print job from portrait orientation
              to landscape orientation. If the original PRINT job
              contained any PRINT parameters, you must specify them
              all again when you modify any print parameters with the
              SET ENTRY/PARAMETERS command. If you do not respecify the
              PRINT parameters, the print job will be printed using the
              default parameter values for those not included in the SET
              ENTRY command.

        5.6 Displaying a Queue

              You can display a print queue, including its status, its
              attributes and the print jobs in the queue, using the SHOW
              QUEUE command. This command does not require privileges,
              unless you wish to view queue security information or view
              print jobs belonging to other users.

              To display a specific queue, supply the queue name. To
              display all of the queues, omit the queue name from the
              SHOW QUEUE command. Use the commands in Table 5-1 to
              display information about queues.

                            Manipulating Print Jobs and Print Queues 5-5

 






           Table_5-1_Commands_to_Display_Queues______________________

           To_list:___________________Enter:_________________________

           The name and description   SHOW QUEUE
           of every print and batch
           queue

           The names of all the       SHOW QUEUE/DEVICE=PRINTER
           print queues

           All the jobs in all the    SHOW QUEUE/ALL
           queues

           All the jobs in the        SHOW QUEUE/ALL queue-name
           specified queue

           The attributes of all the  SHOW QUEUE/FULL
           queues

           The attributes of a        SHOW QUEUE/FULL queue-name
           certain_queue_____________________________________________

     5.7 Pausing a Queue

           Use the STOP/QUEUE command to pause a queue. You must have
           privileges and supply the queue name to the STOP/QUEUE
           command.

           You can pause the queue after the current print job has
           completed by using the STOP/QUEUE/NEXT command. This
           allows the current job to complete before pausing the
           queue. For example:

           $ STOP/QUEUE/NEXT PS$A4

           This command pauses the queue PS$A4 after the current job
           has completed printing.

           If it is necessary to pause the queue without waiting
           for the current job to complete, use the STOP/QUEUE/RESET
           command. For example:

           $ STOP/QUEUE/RESET PS$A4

           This command pauses the queue PS$A4 and printing stops
           immediately.

     5-6 Manipulating Print Jobs and Print Queues

 








                ________________________Note  ________________________

                When communications problems arise with a serial
                or raw TCP/IP interconnect, the symbiont will keep
                listening for up to 4 minutes before disconnecting
                from the printer. Therefore, under some conditions,
                the device is not released immediately after a STOP
                /QUEUE/RESET command is issued.

                _____________________________________________________

              See Appendix A for more STOP/QUEUE qualifiers.

        5.8 Starting a Queue

              Use the START/QUEUE command to restart a print queue that
              has been paused with the STOP/QUEUE command. If you make
              changes to a print queue in DCPS$STARTUP.COM, restart the
              queue by executing the DCPS$STARTUP.COM file, as described
              in Section 3.6.

              For example, to restart print queue PS40$A15, use the
              following command:

              $ START/QUEUE PS40$A15

              If you interrupt a printing job when you stop the queue,
              the print job restarts when you restart the queue.

              The logical name, DCPS$queuename_PID, is defined by the
              symbiont when it starts executing. This allows the system
              manager to determine which symbiont is assigned to a given
              queue, and is especially useful when using multi-streamed
              symbionts. See Section 3.4.1.

                ________________________Note  ________________________

                When a DCPS queue is started, the symbiont does
                not immediately attempt to make a connection to
                the printer, to minimize the possibility that the
                queue will not start. This is particularly important
                while starting queues at system boot time, to avoid
                introducing delays or errors into the boot process.
                It is not until DCPS starts processing a job from a

                            Manipulating Print Jobs and Print Queues 5-7

 






              queue that DCPS determines the state of the printer
              and its associated interconnect.

              _____________________________________________________

     5.9 Modifying the Attributes of a Queue

           You can temporarily modify the attributes of a print
           queue with the SET QUEUE command. When the printing system
           is restarted, the queue attributes you set with the SET
           QUEUE command are lost. To permanently modify print queue
           attributes, edit the DCPS$STARTUP.COM file.

           The qualifiers to the SET QUEUE command are listed in
           Appendix A. Note that some print queue attributes cannot
           be set using the SET QUEUE command.

           The following command limits the print jobs for the
           PS$DRAFT queue to those of 1000 blocks or less.

           $ SET QUEUE PS$DRAFT/BLOCK_LIMIT=1000

           The SET QUEUE command requires privileges; you must supply
           the queue name and the appropriate qualifiers.

     5.10 Preventing Users from Printing to a Queue

           Use the SET QUEUE/CLOSE command to close a queue and
           prevent users from submitting print jobs to the queue.
           This command requires privileges and you must supply the
           queue name. For example:

           $ SET QUEUE/CLOSE PS$A4

           After you enter this command, the PS$A4 queue is closed
           and users cannot submit print jobs to the queue. The print
           jobs that are currently in the queue are completed. You
           can open the print queue using the following command:

           $ SET QUEUE/OPEN PS$A4





     5-8 Manipulating Print Jobs and Print Queues

 






        5.11 Deleting a Queue

              You can delete a print queue using the DELETE/QUEUE
              command. This command requires privileges. Follow these
              steps to delete a DECprint Supervisor queue:

              1. Make sure that there are no generic queues running that
                 are associated with the queue that you are deleting, by
                 displaying the queue using the SHOW QUEUE/FULL command.
                 If there are generic queues associated with the queue,
                 delete the generic queues first.

              2. Pause the queue using the STOP/QUEUE/NEXT command.
                 Wait for the printing to stop on the printer before you
                 delete the queue.

              3. Requeue all the print jobs in the queue and future
                 print jobs for the queue using the ASSIGN/MERGE command
                 (see Section 5.4.3).

              4. Delete the queue with the DELETE/QUEUE command. Enter
                 the queue name as an argument to this command. For
                 example, the following command deletes the queue PS$A4
                 and any print jobs that were pending in that queue.

                 $ DELETE/QUEUE PS$A4

              Remember to modify the DCPS$STARTUP.COM file to delete the
              queue permanently. Otherwise, when the printing system is
              restarted, the print queue you deleted will come back.

        5.12 Responding to a Stalled Queue

              Printers are reported as Stalled when the DECprint
              Supervisor does not receive information from the printer
              within a specified amount of time. When the stalled
              timeout value is exceeded, the following message is
              displayed:

              PRINTERSTALLED, Printer printer-name is stalled

              You can alter the stalled printer timeout value be
              defining a logical:

              $ DEFINE/SYSTEM/EXECUTIVE DCPS$queuename_STALL_TIME "0 hh:mm:ss.00"

              where hh:mm:ss.00 is an OpenVMS delta-time value
              specifying the desired time delay.

                            Manipulating Print Jobs and Print Queues 5-9

 






           The default stalled timeout value is four minutes. Compaq
           recommends that you do not change this timeout value.

           When you receive a message that the printer is stalled,
           you must determine if action is required. If the stalled
           message came from a networked printer (for example,
           a PrintServer printer), the stalled message probably
           indicates that a long time has passed between network
           communications and therefore you can safely ignore the
           stalled messages.

           But if the stalled message follows other printer-related
           messages, they may indicate another reason for the long
           delay. The printer might be out of paper, or it might have
           a paper jam. Therefore, when a print queue is stalled,
           you should check your OPCOM messages to see if a printer
           condition was previously reported. Refer to Chapter 11 for
           more information.

           DCPS may also temporarily define a system-wide logical
           giving some indication of why the queue is stalled. To
           examine this logical, execute the following command on the
           system where the execution queue is running. If the queue
           is on a VMScluster, be sure to use the appropriate cluster
           member.

           $ SHOW LOGICAL DCPS$queuename_STALLED

     5.13 Stopping and Starting the Queue Manager

           To stop and start all the queuing activity on the system,
           stop and start the queue manager. System shutdown and
           startup procedures perform these operations automatically.
           The commands to stop and start the queue manager require
           privileges.

           You can stop the queue manager using the following
           command:

           $ STOP/QUEUE/MANAGER/CLUSTER

           When you are ready to start the queue manager, enter the
           following command:

           $ START/QUEUE/MANAGER

     5-10 Manipulating Print Jobs and Print Queues

 









                                                                       6
        ________________________________________________________________

                             Specifying Separation, Log, and Error Pages



        6.1 What Are Separation Pages?

              Separation pages are sheets that show where a user's
              print job or each file in a print job begins and ends.
              Separation pages include:

              o  Burst pages - printed at the beginning of a print job
                 or file.

              o  Flag pages - printed at the beginning of a print job or
                 file.

              o  Trailer pages - printed at the end of a print job or
                 file.

              A job flag page looks like a job burst page without the
              border around the page. A job trailer page looks like a
              job flag page with the message "END OF JOB" printed at
              the top and with additional information listed for the job
              (for example, when it finished, which PRINT qualifiers and
              parameters were used, and how many pages were printed).
              File separation pages are differentiated from each other
              in an analagous fashion, and from job separation pages by
              the presence of file-specific information (for example,
              the file specification, file size, and modification time).

              You can enable separation pages for print jobs and each
              file in a print job. The following sections show you how.







                         Specifying Separation, Log, and Error Pages 6-1

 






     6.2 Enabling Job Separation Pages

           Job separation pages keep print jobs separate. Figure 6-1
           shows one type of job separation page; a job burst page.

           You enable and disable job separation pages by editing
           the DCPS$STARTUP.COM file; the user cannot override these
           settings.

           Enter the /SEPARATE qualifier to parameter 5 in the
           execution queue entry in DCPS$STARTUP.COM, as shown here:

           @sys$startup:dcps$execution_queue -
               DCPS_TTB4 -                    ! P1 - Execution queue name
               "SERIAL/TTB4" -                ! P2 - Device name
               DCPS_LIB -                     ! P3 - Logical name for /LIBRARY
               "" -                           ! P4 - Default queue parameters
               "/SEPARATE=(BURST,NOFLAG,TRAILER)"
                                              ! P5 - Default queue qualifiers

           Notes:

           o  Job burst pages do not imply job flag pages for DCPS,
              as is true for some other OpenVMS print symbionts.

           o  You can use the SET QUEUE command to temporarily
              specify job separation pages. For example:

              $ SET QUEUE /SEPARATE=(BURST,NOFLAG,TRAILER) queuename

           o  Job separation pages are not affected by parameters
              set with the PRINT/PARAMETERS command or by the
              PostScript file being printed. The pages use the
              default PostScript context of the printer, not the
              context of the user's job.

           o  Even if you disable separation pages, DCPS prints a job
              trailer page if an error occurs in the print job. The
              job trailer page contains messages about the errors in
              a print job.





     6-2 Specifying Separation, Log, and Error Pages

 






        6.2.1 Error Messages on the Trailer Page

              If the print job contains errors, the trailer page
              includes messages that can help the user determine what
              went wrong with the print job. Following are examples of
              these messages:

        28-MAR-2002 11:03  %DCPS-I-TRAYSUBST, Output will be delivered to the
        only tray on printer-name

        28-MAR-2002 11:03  %DCPS-W-INVACC, invalidaccess: Attempt to access
        restricted object or capability - offending command is get

              These types of messages are also displayed on the user's
              terminal if /NOTIFY was specified in the PRINT command for
              the print job.

              The following types of messages are not printed on the job
              trailer page:

              o  Start and end messages

              o  Hardware printer error messages, such as "out of paper"

              o  Messages related to communications

              o  Messages that the software uses to manage resources in
                 the printer

        6.2.2 Suppressing Job Trailer Pages

              DCPS normally prints a job trailer page if errors occur
              during the job, even if /SEPARATE=TRAILER is not specified
              for the queue, as mentioned in sections Section 6.2 and
              Section 6.2.1. This behavior may be undesireable when
              printing on expensive media, especially if the reported
              errors are unimportant.

              To prevent DCPS from printing job trailers, even when
              errors occur for the job, define the following system-wide
              logical:

              $ DEFINE /EXECUTIVE_MODE /SYSTEM DCPS$queuename_SUPPRESS_JOBTRAILER 1

                ________________________Note  ________________________

                Running DCPS this way makes it much more difficult
                to diagnose real problems when they arise. If
                you are getting nuisance error messages, Compaq

                         Specifying Separation, Log, and Error Pages 6-3

 






              recommends that you resolve the underlying problem
              rather than suppressing the messages.

              _____________________________________________________

     6.2.3 Specifying a Special Input Tray for Job Burst and Flag
           Pages

           When users print jobs on expensive or special media, it
           may be desirable to print job burst and flag pages from
           a special input tray. This technique is also useful for
           specifying a different color paper for separating print
           jobs.

           You may specify a special input tray for job flag pages
           and job burst pages. Define a logical name using the
           following command:

           $ DEFINE /EXECUTIVE_MODE /SYSTEM DCPS$queuename_SEPARATOR_TRAY n

           In this command, queuename is the name of the execution
           queue and n is the PostScript input tray number. The
           tray numbers are specific to your printer model and may
           be listed in your printer owner's manual. This feature
           may not work with all printers, especially those that
           do not select input trays with the PostScript Level 1
           setpapertray operator.

           The following are the values for Compaq and DIGITAL
           printers:

           Table_6-1_Tray_Number_Values______________________________

           Printer_______________________Tray________Tray_Number_____

           Compaq Laser Printer LN16     upper       0

                                         lower       1

                                         multipurpose3

           Compaq Laser Printer LN32     multipurpose0
           and LNM40

                                         tray 1      1

                                         tray 2      2

     6-4 Specifying Separation, Log, and Error Pages

 






              Table_6-1_(Cont.)_Tray_Number_Values______________________

              Printer_______________________Tray________Tray_Number_____

                                            tray 3      3

                                            tray 4      4

                                            tray 5      5

                                            envelope    6
                                            feeder

              Compaq and DIGITAL Laser      upper       1
              Printer LNC02

                                            lower       5

              DEClaser 1150 and 1152        multipurpose0

                                            cassette    1

              DEClaser 2150 and 2250        manual      0
                                            feed

                                            lower       1

                                            upper       2

                                            envelope    3
                                            feeder

              DEClaser 3250                 multipurpose0

                                            upper       1

                                            lower       2

                                            high        3
                                            capacity
                                            feeder

              DEClaser 3500                 upper       0

                                            lower       2

                                            multipurpose3

              DEClaser 5100                 multipurpose0

                                            upper       1

                                            lower       2

              DIGITAL Colorwriter 1000      upper       0

                                            lower       1

                         Specifying Separation, Log, and Error Pages 6-5

 






           Table_6-1_(Cont.)_Tray_Number_Values______________________

           Printer_______________________Tray________Tray_Number_____

           DIGITAL Colorwriter LSR 2000  upper       1
           and 2000[+]

                                         lower       2

           DIGITAL Laser Printer LN15    upper       0
           and LN15+

                                         lower       1

                                         multipurpose3

           DIGITAL LN17ps and Laser      main        0
           Printer LN17+ps

                                         multipurpose1

                                         lower 1     2

                                         lower 2     3

                                         envelope    4
                                         feeder

           DIGITAL Laser Printer LN20    multipurpose1

                                         upper       2

                                         lower       5

           DIGITAL Laser Printer LN40    upper       1

                                         middle      2

                                         lower       3

                                         LCIT        5

           DIGITAL PrintServer 17 and    upper       1
           17/600

                                         lower       2

           DIGITAL PrintServer 20, 32,   upper       1
           32plus and 40

                                         lower       2

           ______________________________LCIT________3_______________

     6-6 Specifying Separation, Log, and Error Pages

 






        6.3 Enabling File Separation Pages

              File separation pages separate the files in the print job.
              Figure 6-2 shows an example of a file flag page.

              To enable default file separation pages, do the following:

              o  For an execution queue, specify /DEFAULT=(file-separation-page)
                 in parameter p5.

              o  For a generic queue, specify the /DEFAULT=(file-separation-page)
                 in parameter p4.

              Users can override the default file flag, burst, and
              trailer attributes for a queue by specifying the
              /[NO]FLAG, /[NO]BURST, and /[NO]TRAILER qualifiers in
              the PRINT command.

              In the following example, each file in the job will
              be preceded by a file flag page and followed by a file
              trailer page:

              $ PRINT /FLAG=ALL /TRAILER=ALL FILE1.PS,FILE2.PS,FILE3.PS

                ________________________Note  ________________________

                If the PAGE_LIMIT parameter is used in the PRINT
                command, or if the print job is terminated, the file
                flag page and file trailer page may not be printed.

                _____________________________________________________

        6.4 Adding a System Message to Separator Pages

              You can add a system message to the top of job and file
              burst, flag, and trailer pages for all jobs printed on
              your system. The following example shows you how:

              $ DEFINE /EXECUTIVE_MODE /SYSTEM PSM$ANNOUNCE "Computer Services Group"

              The example shows that the logical name PSM$ANNOUNCE is
              now "Computer Services Group".

                ________________________Note  ________________________

                The PSM$ANNOUNCE logical is used by other print
                symbionts (for example, LATSYM) as well as by the

                         Specifying Separation, Log, and Error Pages 6-7

 






              DCPS symbiont. Your definition of PSM$ANNOUNCE will
              also affect these other symbionts.

              _____________________________________________________

     6.5 Extended File Specifications

           DCPS provides default support for systems with Extended
           File Specifications, including ODS-5 volumes and deep
           directories.

           Any file in any directory on an ODS-5 volume can be
           printed. Since files on ODS-5 volumes may have long
           directory and file names, the name may be truncated on
           file separator pages and in the heading when printing with
           the LIST translator. If the file name is truncated, it is
           so indicated with an ellipsis (...).

     6.6 Requesting Job Log Pages

           A job log page is an optional sheet with information about
           the print job and any messages that occurred during the
           print job. Use the MESSAGES=PRINT parameter in the PRINT
           command to print a job log page. When printed, the job
           log page precedes the job trailer page. If you are not
           printing job trailer pages, the job log page is the last
           page of a job.

     6.7 The File Error Page

           If the software cannot access the print file when the
           print job starts printing, a file error page is printed
           and the software continues with the next file in the print
           job (if any).

           The file error page contains the following information:

           o  File log page banner

           o  Client node name and user's name

           o  Job number

           o  File identification (file name, extension, and version
              only)

           o  File specification (full file specification)

     6-8 Specifying Separation, Log, and Error Pages

 






              o  The messages area












































                         Specifying Separation, Log, and Error Pages 6-9

 









                                                                       7
        ________________________________________________________________

                     Creating Setup Modules and Device Control Libraries



        7.1 What Is a Setup Module?

              A setup module is a file containing instructions that
              modify the appearance of a print job or redefine the
              instructions in the print job.

              You can include a setup module in a print job with the
              PRINT command's /SETUP qualifier. The following example
              uses a setup module that specifies 600 dots-per-inch (DPI)
              resolution:

              $ PRINT/QUEUE=LPS32$2SIDES/SETUP=RES_600X600 IMAGE.PS

              You can also implicitly include setup modules in a print
              job through the use of a form (see Chapter 8).

        7.2 Locating Setup Modules

              DECprint Supervisor ships with various setup modules,
              which are located in the following device control library:

              SYS$LIBRARY:DCPS$DEVCTL.TLB

              To list the setup modules, use the following command:

              $ LIBRARY/LIST SYS$LIBRARY:DCPS$DEVCTL.TLB

              The list of setup modules displays, similar to the
              following:






                 Creating Setup Modules and Device Control Libraries 7-1

 






           DCW1000_DISPLAY
           DCW1000_ENHANCED
           DCW1000_HIGHRES
           LPS$$APPLE360_INITPSDEVICE
           LPS$$APPLE360_SETINPUTTRAY
           RES_1200X1200
           RES_1200X600

              ________________________Note ________________________

              Do not modify any of the setup modules or the device
              control library.

              _____________________________________________________

           Some setup modules are created only for certain printers.
           Those setup modules have the printer name as part of their
           file name. For instance, the setup module DL3500_RET_DARK
           is intended for the DEClaser 3500 printer.

              ________________________Note ________________________

              Do not change the contents of the standard supplied
              device control library.

              _____________________________________________________

     7.2.1 Locating Custom Setup Modules

           Custom setup modules go in special device control
           libraries, which are required to be .TLB (text library)
           files located in SYS$LIBRARY. The following command lists
           all of the text libraries in SYS$LIBRARY. To determine
           what subset of these are special device control libraries
           used with DCPS, correlate the .TLB file names with the
           libraries and library search lists associated with the
           /LIBRARY qualifier for your system's DCPS print queues.

           $ DIRECTORY SYS$LIBRARY:*.TLB






     7-2 Creating Setup Modules and Device Control Libraries

 






        7.2.2 Displaying the Contents of a Setup Module

              To see the instructions that a setup module contains, do
              the following:

              1. Extract the setup module from the device control
                 library. The following example extracts the setup
                 module DI_ON from DCPS$DEVCTL.TLB and renames it
                 MYSETUP.TXT in the user's directory:

                 $ LIBRARY/EXTRACT=(DI_ON)/OUT=MYSETUP SYS$LIBRARY:DCPS$DEVCTL.TLB

              2. Type or edit the setup module to display its contents:

                 $ TYPE MYSETUP.TXT

                 The setup module DI_ON enables DECimage, and contains
                 the following instructions:

                 %!
                 % ~~~~~~~~~~ DI_on ~~~~~~~~~~
                 statusdict begin false setDECimage end
                 systemdict /languagelevel known {languagelevel} {1} ifelse
                 2 ge {currentpagedevice /Install get exec} if
                 statusdict begin true setDECimage end
                 % ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

                ________________________Note  ________________________

                Some setup modules contain escape sequences or
                graphics, which cannot be displayed when you type
                the file. For such modules, you may wish to use the
                DUMP/RECORD command on the extracted file.

                _____________________________________________________

        7.3 Creating Custom Setup Modules

              You can create setup modules that affect print jobs with
              different data types. Some setup modules manipulate ANSI
              print jobs, while others affect PostScript jobs. You can
              create setup modules for any data type you support.

              Notes:

              o  If your PCL or Proprinter setup module needs carriage-
                 control characters after each line, manually supply
                 them when you create the setup module file. (PCL and

                 Creating Setup Modules and Device Control Libraries 7-3

 






              Proprinter setup modules do not end line with carriage-
              control characters because the setup modules may
              contain binary data, like fonts and raster graphics.)

           o  ANSI setup modules cause a page eject in the printer
              before the data file, if the setup module causes
              anything to be printed.

     7.4 Creating Device Control Libraries

           To make the setup module accessible to users, you must
           create a device control library and put the module in the
           library. Create a different library for setup modules of
           each data type. Do not include setup modules of different
           data types in the same library. You can create a library
           for ANSI, PCL, Proprinter, or PostScript files.

              ________________________Note ________________________

              Do not put your custom setup modules in the standard
              DCPS$DEVCTL library. Custom setup modules in
              DCPS$DEVCTL will be deleted if you upgrade DECprint
              Supervisor software.

              _____________________________________________________

           To create a library for setup modules, use the following
           command format:

           $ LIBRARY/CREATE/TEXT SYS$COMMON:[SYSLIB]library-name.TLB

           You supply the library-name, the name you give to the
           library.

           The following command creates a new PostScript device
           control library, PS1, for your customized PostScript setup
           modules:

           $ LIBRARY/CREATE/TEXT SYS$COMMON:[SYSLIB]PS1.TLB

           For more information, refer to the OpenVMS Command
           Definition, Librarian and Message Utilities Manual.



     7-4 Creating Setup Modules and Device Control Libraries

 






        7.4.1 Putting Setup Modules in Libraries

              To insert a setup module into a device control library,
              use the following command format:

              $ LIBRARY/INSERT SYS$LIBRARY:library-name.TLB module-name

              In the command line, you supply the following information:

              library-name     The name of the library

              module-name      The name of the setup module

              The following command puts the PostScript setup module,
              CONFIDENTIAL.PS, into your PostScript device control
              library, PS1.TLB, and names the setup module CONFIDENTIAL:

              $ LIBRARY/INSERT SYS$LIBRARY:PS1.TLB CONFIDENTIAL.PS

              The following command puts the ANSI setup module,
              A4_PAGE.TXT, into your ANSI device control library,
              ANSI1.TLB, and names the setup module A4_PAGE:

              $ LIBRARY/INSERT SYS$LIBRARY:ANSI1.TLB A4_PAGE.TXT

        7.4.2 Specifying a Library Search List

              If you have several device control libraries, you
              need to set up a search list of the libraries in
              SYS$STARTUP:DCPS$STARTUP.COM. The search list specifies
              which device control libraries to search, and the priority
              of the libraries.

              Example 7-1 shows a search list of device control
              libraries.

              Example 7-1 Search List for Device Control Libraries

              $ DEFINE/SYSTEM/EXECUTIVE/NOLOG DCPS_LIB -
                       DCPS$DEVCTL,-
                       "PS1/DATA_TYPE=POSTSCRIPT",-
                       "ANSI1/DATA_TYPE=ANSI",-
                       PS2


                 Creating Setup Modules and Device Control Libraries 7-5

 






           In Example 7-1, the software does the following:

           1. Looks in the standard device control library DCPS$DEVCTL
              for required setup modules and for any setup modules
              that have been specified with /SETUP or /FORM.

           2. Looks in the PostScript library PS1 for any specified
              setup modules not found in the standard device control
              library. (PostScript setup modules can be used with any
              type of file, so the PostScript device control library
              is always included in the search for a setup module.)

           3. If the print job is ANSI, looks in the library called
              ANSI1.

           4. If the print job is a data type other than ANSI, skips
              the ANSI1 library and looks for it in the PostScript
              library PS2.

           To define your library logical name and search list,
           perform the following steps:

           1. Edit DCPS$STARTUP.COM and add the following command
              line:

     ________________________________________________________________
     Command_Line_______________Example______________________________

     $ DEFINE/SYSTEM/EXECUTIVE/N$LDEFINE/SYSTEM/EXECUTIVE/NOLOG DCPS_LIB -

         logical-name -             DCPS$DEVCTL,-
         search-list                "PS1/DATA_TYPE=POSTSCRIPT",-
                                    "ANSI1/DATA_TYPE=ANSI",-
     _______________________________PS2______________________________

              In the command line, you supply the following
              information:

              logical-name: Use a logical name that expands to a
              list of library names. Make sure the logical name also
              appears in the execution queue definition (parameter
              p3). search-list: Add the list of libraries to be



     7-6 Creating Setup Modules and Device Control Libraries

 






                 searched. Use the following guidelines as you add
                 libraries:

                 o  Place the standard device control library,
                    DCPS$DEVCTL, first in the list for most efficient
                    printing.

                    If you do not include DCPS$DEVCTL in the library
                    search list, the symbiont stops and returns the
                    following error message:

                    REQMODNOTFOUND, Required device control module module-name not found

                 o  Make sure all the library names are in SYS$LIBRARY.

                 o  Make sure all the library names have the file
                    extenstion .TLB.

                 o  For each library that includes the /DATA_TYPE
                    qualifier, enclose the library name and the
                    qualifier in quotation marks. If you do not use
                    the /DATA_TYPE qualifier, you do not need to enclose
                    the library name in quotation marks. The default
                    data type for a library is PostScript.

                 o  If an ANSI module and a PostScript module perform
                    the same function and have the same name, determine
                    which one you want as the default for ANSI jobs.

                    If you want ANSI jobs to default to PostScript,
                    place the PostScript device control library before
                    the ANSI library. If you want ANSI jobs to default
                    to ANSI, place the ANSI library in front of the
                    PostScript library.

              2. Stop and restart the execution queue to include your
                 new library. (If you add a setup module to an existing
                 library, you do not have to reinitialize the queue.)

        7.4.3 Device Control Libraries Must Exist for Queue to Start

              All device control libraries specified for a queue must
              exist for the queue to start. For example, if a queue
              is defined with the following logical, the libraries
              SYS$LIBRARY:DCPS$DEVCTL.TLB, SYS$LIBRARY:ANSI.TLB and
              SYS$LIBRARY:PS.TLB must all exist as text libraries:

                 Creating Setup Modules and Device Control Libraries 7-7

 






             $ DEFINE/SYSTEM/EXECUTIVE DCPS_LIB -
                 DCPS$DEVCTL, -
                 "ANSI/DATA_TYPE=ANSI", -
                 "PS/DATA_TYPE=POSTSCRIPT"

     7.4.4 Preserving Custom Setup Modules During Upgrades

           When you install DECprint Supervisor software, it creates
           a new version of the standard device control library
           (DCPS$DEVCTL.TLB). If you purged old files during the
           software installation, early copies of the device control
           library are deleted. (Refer to the DECprint Supervisor for
           OpenVMS Software Installation Guide for more information.)

           When you add custom setup modules, create a new library
           and refer to it in the library search list. This preserves
           your custom setup modules when you upgrade your software.

           Upgrading from DECprint Printing Services or PrintServer
           Client Software

           DECprint Printing Services software and PrintServer
           Client software have their own device control libraries
           (CPS$DEVCTL.TLB and LPS$DEVCTL.TLB). When you upgrade
           to DECprint Supervisor, the CPS$ and LPS$ device control
           libraries are no longer used. If you have custom setup
           modules in either of those libaries, insert the modules
           into a new library and specify the library in the device
           control library search list.

     7.5 Including Setup Modules in Print Job

           You can specify setup modules using the /SETUP qualifier
           in the PRINT command.

           To include an ANSI setup module in a print job using the
           /SETUP qualifier, use the following command format:

           $ PRINT/QUEUE=queue-name/SETUP=your-module-name print-file.TXT

           If you enter the command wrong, the error is not detected
           until the file prints. To enable the software to detect
           the error immediately, you can include the setup module in
           a form. See Chapter 8 for instructions.

     7-8 Creating Setup Modules and Device Control Libraries

 






              If users access a setup module frequently, you can
              associate the setup module with a queue, so that all print
              jobs submitted to that queue are printed with the setup
              module automatically. See Chapter 8 for instructions.

        7.6 Persistently Loading PostScript Resources



                ________________________Note  ________________________

                This feature applies only to desktop printers;
                PrintServer printers are loaded with persistent
                resources using the PrintServer software.

                _____________________________________________________

              Downloading PostScript code with every print job can
              adversely affect printing performance. To resolve this
              problem, you can load a module that permanently resides in
              the printer.

              The module LPS$PERSISTENT_RESOURCES loads persistently
              to desktop printers. To create a persistent PostScript
              module, follow these steps:

              1. Create a new device control library for site-specific
                 PostScript setup modules, using the following command:

                 $ LIBRARY/CREATE/TEXT SYS$COMMON:[SYSLIB]library-name.TLB

              2. Edit the SYS$STARTUP:DCPS$STARTUP.COM file to include
                 the new device control library in the search list. Use
                 the following command in the DCPS startup file:

                 $ DEFINE/SYSTEM/EXECUTIVE/NOLOG DCPS_LIB DCPS$DEVCTL, "library-name/DATA=POST"

              3. In the execution queue definition for each PostScript
                 printer to which you want to load the setup module,
                 ensure that the logical name DCPS_LIB is entered in
                 parameter 3 as the device control search list logical
                 name.

              4. Save the DCPS$STARTUP.COM file.

              5. Stop the queues for the printers affected by the
                 change, using the STOP/QUEUE/RESET command for each
                 queue.

                 Creating Setup Modules and Device Control Libraries 7-9

 






           6. Execute the new DCPS$STARTUP.COM file.

           7. Test each print queue by sending two print jobs to
              the printer. The setup module is loaded with the first
              print job sent to the printer. The setting should be
              effective for the second print job, as well.

              ______________________ CAUTION ______________________

              Problems can occur from the misuse of the persistent
              setup feature. Keep the following in mind when using
              this feature:

              o  Only PostScript setup modules can be persistently
                 loaded. Other data types cannot be persistently
                 loaded.

              o  A setup module can exceed the printer's virtual
                 memory. Different models of printers have
                 different capacities. For example, a setup module
                 can overwhelm a printer with too many fonts.

              o  A shared network printer can be used from several
                 nodes in the network. Make sure the same setup
                 module is loaded from all the nodes that access
                 the printer to ensure consistent print results.
                 If you required different setup modules load the
                 setup module with each print job, using either
                 the /SETUP or /FORM qualifier.

              o  Improper PostScript coding in a persistently
                 loaded setup module can cause unexpected results
                 that are difficult to analyze. Also, because the
                 code remains in the printer until the printer
                 is turned off, users from different systems may
                 have print jobs fail with unexpected results, but
                 would not be able to determine the cause of the
                 problem.

              _____________________________________________________





     7-10 Creating Setup Modules and Device Control Libraries

 






        7.7 Changing the Default Character Set for PCL and Proprinter
            Print Jobs


              The default character set for PCL files is Roman-8. The
              default character set for Proprinter files is code page
              437, character set 1. To change the default character set,
              use the following procedure:

              1. Create one device control library for PCL setup
                 modules, one for Proprinter modules, and another
                 library for PostScript modules. Use the following
                 commands:

                 $ LIBRARY/CREATE/TEXT SYS$COMMON:[SYSLIB]PCL_LIB
                 $ LIBRARY/CREATE/TEXT SYS$COMMON:[SYSLIB]PRO_LIB
                 $ LIBRARY/CREATE/TEXT SYS$COMMON:[SYSLIB]PS_LIB

              2. Edit DCPS$STARTUP.COM to include these libraries, as
                 follows:

                 DEFINE/SYSTEM/EXECUTIVE/NOLOG DCPS_LIB DCPS$DEVCTL,
                                                 "PCL_LIB/DATA=PCL",
                                                 "PRO_LIB/DATA=PRO",
                                                  PS_LIB)

                 The PostScript device control library (PS_LIB) must be
                 last in the search list.

              3. Create the following setup modules:

                 o  The DEF_CHAR_SET.PCL file selects the PC-8 Danish
                    /Norwegian character set:

                            <ESC>!`1P<ESC>(11U<ESC>!`0P

                    Replace <ESC> with the escape character (decimal
                    27).

                 o  The DEF_CHAR_SET.PRO file selects code page 850:

                            <ESC>`<ETX><NUL><CR>R<ETX>

                    -  Replace <ESC> with the escape character (decimal
                       27).

                    -  Replace <ETX> with the etx character (decimal 3).

                    -  Replace <NUL> with the null character (decimal
                       0).

                Creating Setup Modules and Device Control Libraries 7-11

 






                 -  Replace <CR> with the carriage return character
                    (decimal 13).

              o  The DEF_CHAR_SET.PS PostScript file is used for
                 printing files that are neither PCL nor Proprinter.

           4. Put these modules in the appropriate device control
              libraries, using the LIBRARY command as shown in the
              following example:

              $ LIBRARY/INSERT/TEXT
              SYS$COMMON:[SYSLIB]PCL_LIB DEF_CHAR_SET.PCL

              $ LIBRARY/INSERT/TEXT
              SYS$COMMON:[SYSLIB]PRO_LIB DEF_CHAR_SET.PRO

              $ LIBRARY/INSERT/TEXT
              SYS$COMMON:[SYSLIB]PS_LIB DEF_CHAR_SET.PS

           5. Create a form definition that includes DEF_CHAR_SET as
              the setup module. You can associate this form with your
              printer execution queue as follows:

              $ DEFINE/FORM DEF_CHAR_SET form_number -
                /SETUP=DEF_CHAR_SET/STOCK=DEFAULT

              To make this change to the queue permanent, specify
              this form in the execution queue definition in the
              DCPS$STARTUP.COM file.

     7.8 Specifying Printer Resolution with Setup Module

           These setup modules allow you to manipulate the resolution
           of PostScript Level 2 printers.











     7-12 Creating Setup Modules and Device Control Libraries

 






              Table_7-1_Printer_Resolution_Setup_Modules________________

              Setup_Module__________Description_________________________

              RES_300X300           300 dpi horizontal and vertical

              RES_600X300           600 dpi horizontal and 300 dpi
                                    vertical

              RES_600X600           600 dpi horizontal and vertical -
                                    default

              RES_1200X600          1200 dpi horizontal and 600 dpi
                                    vertical

              RES_1200X1200_________1200_dpi_horizontal_and_vertical____

                ________________________Note  ________________________

                Not all resolutions are supported by all printers.
                To have the printer notify you if it cannot print
                at a specified resolution, add the /NOTIFY switch
                to the PRINT command. If the printer cannot print
                at the requested resolution, it prints at a lower
                resolution.

                _____________________________________________________

        7.9 Modifying DECimage Parameters with Setup Modules

              There following setup modules invoke DECimage or modify
              the DECimage parameters. They are grouped into the
              following categories:

              Enabling and Disabling DECimage

              These setup modules leave all current parameters intact,
              and turn DECimage on or off. It is not necessary to use
              these modules if you use other DECimage setup modules. The
              DECimage setup modules automatically invoke DECimage for
              the current print job.

              Table_7-2_Enabling_and_Disabling_DECimage_________________

              Setup_Module__________Description_________________________

              DI_ON                 Turns DECimage ON

              DI_OFF________________Turns_DECimage_OFF__________________

                Creating Setup Modules and Device Control Libraries 7-13

 






           Combined Parameters

           These setup modules adjust two DECimage parameters
           simultaneously.

           Table_7-3_DECimage_Setup_Modules-Combined_Parameters______

           Setup_Module__________Description_________________________

           DI_HICONTRAST         Punch0 = 0.2, Punch1 = 0.8

           DI_LOCONTRAST         Punch0 = -.1, Punch1 = 1.1

           DI_BRIGHTER           Punch0 = -.2, Punch1 = 0.8

           DI_DARKER             Punch0 = 0.2, Punch1 = 1.2

           DI_NORMAL_____________Punch0_=_0,_Punch1_=_1______________

           Individual Parameters

           When you specify one of these setup modules, all other
           parameters remain at the default value or the value most
           recently modified by another setup module. The setup
           modules have no order dependency, so they may appear in
           any order on the print command line.



















     7-14 Creating Setup Modules and Device Control Libraries

 






              Table_7-4_DECimage_Setup_Modules-Individual_Parameters____

              Setup_Module__________Description_________________________

              DI_PUNCH0_0           Punch0 = 0

              DI_PUNCH0_0P1         Punch0 = 0.1

              DI_PUNCH0_0P2         Punch0 = 0.2

              DI_PUNCH0_M0P1        Punch0 = -.1

              DI_PUNCH0_M0P2        Punch0 = -.2

              DI_PUNCH1_1           Punch1 = 1

              DI_PUNCH1_0P8         Punch1 = 0.8

              DI_PUNCH1_0P9         Punch1 = 0.9

              DI_PUNCH1_1P1         Punch1 = 1.1

              DI_PUNCH1_1P2         Punch1 = 1.2

              DI_SHARP_0P5          Sharpness = 0.5

              DI_SHARP_1            Sharpness = 1.0

              DI_SHARP_1P5          Sharpness = 1.5

              DI_SHARP_2            Sharpness = 2.0

              DI_SHARP_2P5__________Sharpness_=_2.5_____________________

              DECimage Setup Module Example

              The following example adds sharpening and shifts the gray
              levels:

              $ PRINT/NOTIFY/QUEUE=queue/SETUP=(DI_SHARP_2,DI_DARKER) file

        7.10 Providing Access to Font Cartridge Emulation

              The DECprint Supervisor software can emulate physical font
              cartridges. Use the FONTS_USED parameter with the PRINT
              command to specify one or more soft font modules from the
              device control library SYS$LIBRARY:CPS$ANSI_FONTS.TLB.

              This feature, which is available for ANSI files only,
              supports documents that require font cartridges to print
              on DIGITAL ANSI printers. Just as with these printers,
              the document must contain escape sequences that select the
              desired fonts.

                Creating Setup Modules and Device Control Libraries 7-15

 






              ________________________Note ________________________

              DECprint Supervisor software does not include any
              soft font modules. You may obtain soft font kits
              from Compaq separately.

              _____________________________________________________

           You can associate one or more default soft font modules
           with a print queue, so that users do not have to specify
           this parameter on the PRINT command line. For example,
           to establish CGTRIUM24_ISO1 as the default soft font
           module for the queue, include the following line in
           DCPS$STARTUP.COM:

           FONTS_USED=CGTRIUM24_ISO1

           (Add the line to p4 in the execution queue definition or
           as p3 in the generic queue definition.)

           You can combine soft font modules for user convenience, at
           the expense of disk space and loading time. For example,
           if users need to load all three DEC Multinational CG Times
           soft font modules together, create a new module using the
           following sequence of commands:

           $ LIBRARY SYS$LIBRARY:CPS$ANSI_FONTS.TLB/EXTRACT=CGTIMES8-10-12_MCS

           $ LIBRARY SYS$LIBRARY:CPS$ANSI_FONTS.TLB/EXTRACT=CGTIMES14-18_MCS

           $ LIBRARY SYS$LIBRARY:CPS$ANSI_FONTS.TLB/EXTRACT=CGTIMES24_MCS

           $ COPY CGTIMES8-10-12_MCS.TXT,CGTIMES14-18_MCS.TXT,-
           CGTIMES24_MCS.TXT ALLCGTIMES_MCS.TXT

           $ LIBRARY/INSERT SYS$LIBRARY:CPS$ANSI_FONTS.TLB ALLCGTIMES_MCS.TXT

           Users can specify the new module with the print parameter
           FONTS_USED=ALLCGTIMES_MCS.

     7.11 Device Control Library Cache Feature

           DCPS includes a device control library caching feature
           that optimizes the retrieval of certain commonly-used
           PostScript device control modules.

     7-16 Creating Setup Modules and Device Control Libraries

 






              The caching feature causes modules with names beginning
              with LPS$$ to be read only the first time they are
              requested. Those modules reside in the symbiont's cache.
              Jobs that follow can quickly access those modules until
              you reset the queue or restart the system. This minimizes
              access to the primary device control library, saves CPU
              time, reduces disk activity.

              The device control library caching feature is disabled
              by default. To enable the device control library caching
              feature for a specific queue, enter the following command
              before you start a print queue:

              $ DEFINE/SYSTEM/EXECUTIVE DCPS$queuename_DEVCTL_CACHE 1

              Caching device control library modules can decrease the
              total CPU time consumed by the symbiont by as much as 17
              percent. I/O activity on the part of the symbiont is also
              reduced by as much as 50 percent.

              You can define the system logical DCPS$DEVCTL_CACHE (with
              no queue name specified) to specify that device control
              library caching is enabled for all DCPS print execution
              queues on that system.

        7.12 Printing on Unrecognized Printers

              The DCPS software automatically obtains a printer's
              product name before printing jobs. It uses the product
              name to select and download device control modules that
              are specific to the particular printer.

              If you use the DCPS software with a printer whose product
              name it does not recognize, the product name defaults
              to "UNRECOGNIZED" and the supervisor downloads device
              control modules associated with that name. Although this
              configuration is unsupported, the modules associated
              with the unrecognized printer may be sufficient to permit
              simple printing with that device.

              A system manager can also modify the corresponding device
              control modules as needed without affecting the character-
              istics of any of the supported printers. By following the
              comments contained within the LPS$$UNRECOGNIZED modules,
              along with some knowledge of PostScript and the specifics
              of the printer, and examination of device control modules

                Creating Setup Modules and Device Control Libraries 7-17

 






           for similarly programmed printers (if any), the system
           manager may be able to get tray and sheet size selection
           working for the printer.

              ________________________Note ________________________

              Your use of an unrecognized printer with DCPS, and
              any use or modification of the LPS$$UNRECOGNIZED
              device control modules, is without support or
              assistance from Compaq Computer Corporation.
              Further, Compaq makes no commitment to maintain the
              same contents of or interface to these modules for
              different versions of DCPS.

              _____________________________________________________

           Device control modules are located in the following device
           control library:

             SYS$COMMON:[SYSLIB]DCPS$DEVCTL.TLB

           The device control modules associated with an unrecognized
           printer are:

             LPS$$UNRECOGNIZED_INITPSDEVICE
             LPS$$UNRECOGNIZED_SETCONTEXT
             LPS$$UNRECOGNIZED_SETINPUTTRAY
             LPS$$UNRECOGNIZED_SETOUTPUTTRAY

           If you modify these modules for a certain printer, you
           should always place the modified modules in a site-
           specific device control library (see Section 7.4).













     7-18 Creating Setup Modules and Device Control Libraries

 









                                                                       8
        ________________________________________________________________

                               Creating and Maintaining Form Definitions



              You can create form definitions, which users can include
              in their PRINT command to modify the appearance of a
              file. A form definition can specify several attributes
              for a print job, including the type of paper stock on
              which it is to be printed; the width, length, and margins
              associated with the paper; whether long text lines are
              to be truncated or wrapped onto another line; and setup
              modules to be implicitly sent to the printer.

              When users specify an unknown form name in their PRINT
              command, DECprint Supervisor informs them immediately. In
              contrast, if they specify an unknown setup module in their
              PRINT command, DECprint Supervisor does not inform them of
              the problem until it starts printing the job and needs to
              access the setup module.

              The commands for creating, maintaining, and deleting forms
              require that you have operator privileges.

        8.1 Associating Setup Modules with Forms

              To associate a setup module with a form, use the DEFINE
              /FORM command with the /SETUP qualifier.

              Example 8-1 defines a form called CONFIDENTIAL that uses a
              setup module called PRIVATE.

              Example 8-1 Sample Form Definition, CONFIDENTIAL

              $  DEFINE/FORM CONFIDENTIAL 101-
                    /DESCRIPTION="prints the word CONFIDENTIAL on each page"-
                    /STOCK=DEFAULT-
                    /SETUP=PRIVATE


                           Creating and Maintaining Form Definitions 8-1

 






           When you define a form, you supply the following
           qualifiers and information:

           o  Form Name: You select the name for the form you are
              defining. The name can consist of up to 31 characters
              and must contain at least one alphabetic character.

           o  Form Number: You specify a number for the form you are
              defining.

           o  /DESCRIPTION:  You can optionally add a description to
              the form to help users understand what the different
              forms do.

           o  /STOCK: You supply the name of the media that needs
              to be in the printer when this form is invoked. The
              media you specify must match the media in the printer.
              If they do not match, the job is held in the queue
              until users load the specified media or modify the form
              definition. Use the DEFAULT parameter to use whatever
              media is in the printer.

           o  /SETUP: You must supply the name of the setup module(s)
              you want associated with the form.

              ________________________Note ________________________

              The existence of the setup module(s) is not checked
              until the form is used.

              _____________________________________________________

     8.2 Associating a Form with a Print Queue

           If users invoke a setup module frequently, you can
           associate the setup module with a form, then associate
           the form with a queue. This method ensures that print jobs
           submitted to the queue automatically use the setup module.
           Use the following procedure to associate a form with a
           queue:

           1. Associate the setup module with the form, as described
              in Section 8.1.


     8-2 Creating and Maintaining Form Definitions

 






              2. Associate the form with the execution queue, by editing
                 parameter 5 (p5) in DCPS$STARTUP.COM as follows:

                 o  With the /FORM_MOUNTED qualifier, specify the name
                    of the form you want tied to the queue.

                 o  Specify the /DEFAULT=FORM=form-name qualifier to
                    ensure that every job prints with the form, even if
                    the user does specify a form.

                 The following example associates the form called
                 CONFIDENTIAL with an execution queue called XLR8:

                 $ @SYS$STARTUP:EXECUTION_QUEUE.COM -
                   XLR8-                    !P1 - Execution queue name
                   "DECNET/XLR8" -          !P2 - Device name
                   DCPS_LIB -               !P3 - Logical name for /LIBRARY
                   "" -                     !P4 - Not used
                   "/FORM_MOUNTED=CONFIDENTIAL/DEFAULT=(FORM=CONFIDENTIAL,NOFEED)"
                                            !P5 - Queue default qualifiers

        8.3 Creating Form Definitions for ANSI Files

              When you define forms for ANSI files, you can use various
              qualifiers that affect the page layout. For example, the
              following command defines the form CENTER to have a top
              margin of 6 and a left margin of 10:

              $ DEFINE/FORM /MARGIN=(TOP=6,LEFT=10) CENTER 3

              You can use the qualifiers in Table 8-1 with form
              defintions for ANSI files only:













                           Creating and Maintaining Form Definitions 8-3

 






           Table_8-1_DEFINE/FORM_Qualifiers_for_ANSI_Files___________

           This_Qualifier_._._.__Does_the_Following_._._.____________

           /LENGTH=n             Sets the length of each page, in
                                 lines.

           /MARGIN=keyword=n     Sets the margins.

                                 You supply one or more of the
                                 following keywords:

                                 -  TOP=n

                                 -  BOTTOM=m

                                 -  RIGHT=y

                                 -  LEFT=z

                                 To supply more than one margin
                                 keyword, enclose the list in
                                 parentheses, as in:

                                 /MARGIN=(TOP=n,BOTTOM=m)

           /PAGE_SETUP=module    Applies a page setup module to each
                                 page in the job.

           /[NO]TRUNCATE         Truncates long lines that do not fit
                                 in the page width.

           /WIDTH=n              Sets the width of the page in
                                 columns or characters.

           /[NO]WRAP             Wraps lines wider than the page to
           ______________________the_next_line.______________________

           Notes:

           o  These form definitions are useful only with ANSI files,
              because other types of files have internal controls for
              these attributes.

           o  You can prevent the software from wrapping or
              truncating long lines by including both /NOWRAP and
              /NOTRUNCATE in the form definition.

     8-4 Creating and Maintaining Form Definitions

 






        8.4 Displaying Forms and Their Attributes

              You can display the forms that already exist on your
              system with the following command:

              $ SHOW QUEUE/FORM

              The form definitions display as follows:

              Form name                            Number   Description
              ---------                            ------   -----------
              A4_12 (stock=PLAIN_PAPER)              1129   A4 12-Pitch with margins
              A4_LPT_GRAY (stock=PLAIN_PAPER)        1118   A4 DP line printer with gray bars
              A4_LPT_PLAIN (stock=PLAIN_PAPER)
                                                     1119   A4 Plain DP line printer format
              BOOT_CHART (stock=DEFAULT)               37   BOOT_CHART
              BSS$LANDSCAPE (stock=DEFAULT)          3301   BSS Specific Landscape
              BSS$PORTRAIT (stock=DEFAULT)           3302   BSS Specific Portrait

              You can display the attributes of a form using the
              SHOW QUEUE/FORM/FULL command. For example, this command
              displays the attributes of DCPS$DEFAULT:

              $ SHOW QUEUE/FORM/FULL DCPS$DEFAULT

              Form name                            Number   Description
              ---------                            ------   -----------
              DCPS$DEFAULT (stock=DEFAULT)           1115   DCPS default
                  /LENGTH=66 /STOCK=DEFAULT /TRUNCATE /WIDTH=80

        8.5 Deleting a Form

              Use the DELETE/FORM command to delete a form definition
              from the system's form table. The format of this command
              is as follows:

              $ DELETE/FORM form-name

              In the command line, you supply form-name, which is the
              name assigned to the form you are using.

              Before you use the DELETE/FORM command, execute the SHOW
              QUEUE/FULL/ALL command. References to a form can exist as
              an attribute of an active print queue or as a qualifier
              to a print request. If you try to delete a form that has
              outstanding references, you are notified of the condition,
              and the form is not deleted. (Refer to Appendix A.)

                           Creating and Maintaining Form Definitions 8-5

 






     8.6 Using the Default ANSI Form Definition

           If users omit a form definition in their PRINT command,
           but supply one of the following qualifiers, DECprint
           Supervisor links the default form definition DCPS$DEFAULT
           with the ANSI file.

              /HEADER
              /SPACE
              /PARAMETERS=[NO]TAB



































     8-6 Creating and Maintaining Form Definitions

 









                                                                       9
        ________________________________________________________________

                                    Charging Users for Printer Resources



              This chapter describes the accounting information that is
              supplied to the OpenVMS accounting files by the DECprint
              Supervisor software.

              The OpenVMS Accounting Utility reads information about the
              use of system resources from the file SYS$MANAGER:ACCOUNTING.DAT.
              The DECprint Supervisor software records information in
              this file about printer usage. For information about
              the OpenVMS Accounting Utility, see the OpenVMS System
              Management Utilities Reference Manual.

        9.1 Accounting Information Supplied by the DECprint Supervisor
            Software

              The print symbiont supplies the following information in
              the accounting file for each print job:

              o  Pages printed

                 This is the actual number of sheets printed. When you
                 are using the NUMBER_UP parameter to print multiple
                 pages on a sheet, this field records the number of
                 sheets of paper printed, not the number of logical
                 pages printed. The number of sheets printed includes
                 the separation (flag, trailer, and burst) pages.
                 When the print job is deleted by the user or system
                 operator, this information reflects the number of pages
                 printed before the job was terminated.

                 The value shown in the accounting file and on the DCPS
                 trailer page will not be correct for all printers. See
                 Section 9.3 below for more information.

              o  Gets from source

                 This is the number of RMS "gets" from all files in the
                 print job (records read).

                                Charging Users for Printer Resources 9-1

 






           o  QIO puts

              This is the number of QIO "writes" to the printer per
              job.

           When a print job has been completed successfully, the
           print symbiont sends a request to the job controller to
           insert certain accounting data fields into the accounting
           log file. For successful jobs and jobs terminated by the
           DELETE/ENTRY command, the accounting file also includes
           the following message:

           %SYSTEM-S-NORMAL, normal successful completion

           If the print job terminates abnormally, the information
           the print symbiont supplies in the accounting log may be
           incomplete. To filter out such jobs, count only the jobs
           that receive the successful completion status message.
           Any of the following may cause the job to terminate
           abnormally:

           o  STOP/QUEUE/RESET command

           o  Symbiont crash

           o  Printer crash

           o  Network connection lost

     9.2 Accounting Information Supplied by the Job Controller

           The job controller supplies the following information in
           the accounting file for print jobs:

           o  Username

              User name of the user who submitted the print job.

           o  Account

              Account name of the user who submitted the print job.

           o  UIC (user identification code)

              UIC of the user who submitted the print job.

           o  Process ID

              Process ID of the user who submitted the print job.

           o  Start Time

     9-2 Charging Users for Printer Resources

 






                 The time the print job reached the top of the device
                 queue (not necessarily the time that the print job
                 actually began to print).

              o  Finish Time

                 The time the job finished printing.

              o  Elapsed Time

                 The wall-clock time it took for the job to print
                 (finish time minus start time).

              o  Priority

                 Queue priority of the print job.

              o  Final Status Code

                 Exit status of the print job. The status code for
                 success is 00040001.

              o  Queue Entry

                 Queue entry number. This is the print job number. In
                 this example, 222 is the job number:

                 $ PRINT/QUEUE=LN03R$SCRIPT4/NOTIFY TEST.MEM
                   Job TEST (queue LN03R$SCRIPT4, entry 222) started on queue SCRIPT4

              o  Queue Name

                 Name of the print device queue.

              o  Queue Job

                 Print job name, as printed on the job flag page.

              o  Final Status Text = F$MESSAGE

                 The text for the Final Status code. The text for
                 completion of a normal job is:

                 %JBC-S-NORMAL,  Normal successful completion

        9.2.1 Accounting Fields Left Blank by the Job Controller

              The job controller fills the following fields with blanks
              in the accounting file for print jobs:

              o  Owner ID

              o  Terminal Name

              o  Remote Node Name

                                Charging Users for Printer Resources 9-3

 






           o  Remote ID

     9.2.2 Accounting Fields Filled with Zeros by the Job Controller

           The job controller fills the following fields with zeros
           in the accounting file for print jobs:

           o  Privilege <31-00>

           o  Privilege <63-32>

     9.3 Accuracy of DCPS Page Counts

           The page count reported by DCPS in the accounting file and
           on the DCPS trailer page relies on information returned
           by the printer. Some printers do not report accurate
           information, due to different methods for:

           o  Counting pages vs. sides

              Some printers count physical sheets of paper, while
              others count images, or sides printed.

           o  When pages are counted

              Some printers count pages interpreted by the printer,
              while others count pages physically output.

           For the page count reported by DCPS to be correct,
           the printer must count physical sheets interpreted by
           the printer. All Compaq, DIGITAL and GENICOM printers
           supported by DCPS, except those noted below, adhere to
           this requirement and so send the proper information to
           DCPS.

           No other printer is guaranteed to supply correct
           accounting information. In addition, these Compaq
           and DIGITAL printers do not supply correct accounting
           information:

              Compaq Laser Printer LN20
              Compaq Laser Printer LN40
              Compaq Laser Printer LNC02
              DIGITAL Laser Printer LNC02

     9-4 Charging Users for Printer Resources

 






        9.4 Compatibility with Mechanical Page Counters

              The PrintServer printers have mechanical page counters.

              The mechanical page counter is different from the counter
              accessible through the PostScript pagecount operator.

              o  The mechanical page counter counts all the sheets
                 printed since the print engine was built.

              o  The PostScript page counter counts the number of sheets
                 printed by the controller.

              Under normal use, the totals of both counters increase at
              a similar rate, but there can be a significant difference
              between them. Print engine test pages, initiated with the
              test button on the printer, are recorded on the mechanical
              counter but not on the PostScript counter. Also, replacing
              components can affect the counters. For example, replacing
              the nonvolatile memory of the controller resets the
              PostScript counter, but it does not affect the mechanical
              counter.

              Because the counters record different events, they should
              be used for different purposes:

              o  Use the PostScript counter to determine the number of
                 sheets printed within a PostScript program.

              o  Use the mechanical counter to track print engine use.















                                Charging Users for Printer Resources 9-5

 









                                                                      10
        ________________________________________________________________

                                            Printer-Specific Information



              This chapter provides management information about using
              DCPS with specific printers. Printer-specific information
              that might be of interest to general users is in the
              DECprint Supervisor for OpenVMS User's Guide rather
              than in this manual. The DECprint Supervisor for OpenVMS
              Release Notes may also contain additional printer-specific
              information.

              Check the documentation for your printer, network
              interface card, print server, or terminal server to
              determine the correct TCP port number to use. The TCP
              port number may also be listed in Table 3-2.

        10.1 Apple LaserWriter Plus Printer

        10.1.1 LPS$PERSISTENT_RESOURCES Not Supported

              The DCPS feature to load the module LPS$PERSISTENT_
              RESOURCES outside the PostScript server loop for desktop
              printers is not supported for the LaserWriter Plus.

        10.2 Compaq Laser Printer LN16 and GENICOM microLaser 170

        10.2.1 Printer Configuration Setting

              DCPS requires the printer's PERSONALITY be set to
              POSTSCRIPT. If the PERSONALITY is set to AUTO or PCL,
              DCPS jobs will remain in a Starting state and never print.
              This setting is in the printer console's CONFIG menu.

              Setting the PERSONALITY to POSTSCRIPT will still allow PCL
              jobs coming from Windows PCs to print correctly.



                                       Printer-Specific Information 10-1

 






     10.2.2 LAT and AppleTalk Configuration

           To create a LAT device for use by a DCPS queue, you can
           use either of the following sets of values for LATCP
           qualifiers:

           o  /NODE=nodename /PORT=PORT_1

           o  /SERVICE=service

           where nodename is the printer's NIC nodename and service
           is the name of a valid service on the printer. These
           values can be obtained from the printer NIC's status
           page or by logging in to the NIC via Telnet or LAT. For
           example, this command shows the printer NIC's nodename to
           be PRQ_00001F:

               Local_4> show server
                  NET16 Version V1.0/1(990126)           Uptime:                 23:17:07
                  Hardware Addr: 00-50-27-00-00-1f       Name/Nodenum:      PRQ_00001F/ 0
                  Ident String: NET16

           To create a DCPS queue using AppleTalk, you must use a
           service name. You can use one of the default services,
           modify a default service or create your own. The following
           is an example of a service that can be used by both LAT
           and AppleTalk. In this example, DCPS_LN16 is the AppleTalk
           name.

               Local_4> list service dcps_ln16

               Service:  DCPS_LN16         Ident:  DCPS Compaq Laser Printer LN16
                 Rating: N/A               Ports:  1
                 Characteristics:          Queueing  Binary  Rtel  Connections  AppleTalk
                                           Lat
                 SOJ: <none>     EOJ: <none>
                 Enabled Groups: 0

           Create AppleTalk services with caution, as creating the
           same service name on more than one printer will result in
           multiple printers using the same AppleTalk name on your
           network.

           Refer to the printer's Ethernet Network Interface Card
           (NIC) Reference Manual for more information about setting
           characteristics of printer services.

     10-2 Printer-Specific Information

 






        10.3 Compaq Laser Printer LN32 and LNM40; GENICOM Intelliprint
             mL, LN and microLaser Series

                ________________________Note  ________________________

                This section does not apply to the GENICOM micro-
                Laser 170 printer.

                _____________________________________________________

        10.3.1 Printer Configuration Settings

        10.3.1.1 Language-Sensing Mode

              DCPS can print to these printers when the printer is
              in PostScript mode or automatic language-sensing mode.
              Make sure the INTERPRETER and FORMAT settings are set
              as described in Table 10-1. These values are set in the
              INTERFACE menu on the printer's console.

              Table_10-1_Valid_Language_Sensing_Configurations__________

                                    Printer_Settings____________________

              Printer_Mode__________Interpreter_Format__________________

              PostScript/PCL        Auto        Raw
              sensing               Switch

              PostScript____________PostScript__Normal__________________

        10.3.1.2 Printer Setting May Cause Stalled Queues

              The factory default value for the printer's Delayed
              Output Close setting may cause DCPS queues to stall.
              The default value is OFF and is intended to improve
              performance by controlling how quickly the printer ends
              one job and starts another. However, if you also print
              from environments other than DCPS, this value may cause
              DCPS queues to stall. Therefore, if you also print from
              multiple environments, set the value to ON. If you print
              only from DCPS, you may leave the value of Delayed Output
              Close at OFF.

              The setting for Delayed Output Close is found on the
              printer's console as DELAY OUT CLOSE in the NETWORK
              section of the INTERFACE menu. [*]

              ___________________
              [*]This setting does not appear on LN32 and LNM40

                                       Printer-Specific Information 10-3

 






     10.3.2 LAT and AppleTalk Configuration

           Please see Section 10.2.2 for information about configur-
           ing LAT and AppleTalk queues.
     10.3.3 Queue Aborts When Using TCPware

           When using TCPware with these printers, it is possible
           to receive numerous userdata messages on the screen and
           have the queue fail with an OPCOM message similar to the
           following:

             %%%%%%%%%%%  OPCOM  21-APR-1999 15:09:53.22  %%%%%%%%%%%
             Message from user SYSTEM on ZIPPY
             Queue LN32_RAW: %DCPS-F-EXQUOTA, process quota exceeded

           This problem occurs when running TCPware V5.3-3 and
           network firmware V1.0/4 (990323). To avoid this problem,
           the system manager should perform one of the following
           steps:

           o  Issue the following TCPware commands:

                 $ NETCU STOP /TCP
                 $ NETCU START /TCP /NOPATH_MTU_DISCOVERY

           o  Upgrade TCPware to a version later than V5.3-3

           o  Apply TCPware patch kit DRIVERS_V533P020

           o  Upgrade the printer's network firmware

     10.4 DIGITAL Colorwriter LSR 2000 Printer

     10.4.1 NIC Does Not Work with Raw TCP/IP

           DCPS cannot communicate with the Colorwriter LSR 2000 NIC
           via a raw
           TCP/IP connection because the NIC does not support raw
           TCP/IP communication.

           AppleTalk is the only network protocol that DCPS can use
           to communicate with the Colorwriter LSR 2000 printer.

           ___________________

               printers with firmware earlier than version 3.03.

     10-4 Printer-Specific Information

 






        10.5 DIGITAL DECcolorwriter 1000 Printer

        10.5.1 Printer-Specific Setup Files

              You can use the files listed in the table below to
              alter the persistent state of the printer, affecting all
              subsequent jobs that the printer receives from your system
              and from other systems in the network until the printer
              is turned off and back on. The files are located in the
              SYS$COMMON:[SYSHLP.EXAMPLES.DCPS] directory.

              __________________________________________________________
              Setup_File____________Description_________________________

              DCW1000_CONFIG.PS     Sets the printer timeouts

              DCW1000_DEVPARAM.PS   Changes configuration of the serial
                                    port

              DCW1000_STARTPG.PS    Enables the start page

              DCW1000_NOSTRTPG.PS   Disables the start page

              DCW1000_PRNTCNFG.PS   Enables a software-selected
                                    information page

              DCW1000_PSCRIPT.PS    Changes the port to PostScript and
              ______________________default_on_all_ports________________

              Notes:

              o  When you send the DCW1000_DEVPARAM.PS file to the
                 printer, the communications settings change and the
                 queue hangs. You must STOP/RESET the queue and change
                 the corresponding settings on the DECserver or other
                 LAT device to which the printer is connected. Also, be
                 sure that the printer is running in PostScript mode.

              o  By default, the DIP switches on the back of the printer
                 are in the down position, indicating that the serial
                 interface can be adjusted and that no color correction
                 is set. The factory default is 9600 baud, 8 bits, and
                 no parity. See the DECcolorwriter 1000 documentation
                 for further information on how setup files and DIP
                 switches interact.

              o  To check the current configuration of the printer,
                 toggle DIP switch 4 from down to up, then to down (with
                 the other three DIP switches in the down position). The

                                       Printer-Specific Information 10-5

 






              printer prints a configuration page. Make sure that the
              printer is running in PostScript mode.


     10.6 DIGITAL DEClaser 3500 Printer

     10.6.1 Job Remains in Starting State

           When using DCPS with the DEClaser 3500 printer with the
           optional serial port, the job may remain in a starting
           state. If this is the case, you must choose one of the
           following options:

           1. Lock the printer to PostScript mode. (On the front
              panel: Serial, Printer Type = STD PostScript). Do not
              use the DCPS$queuename_NO_SYNC logical name. In this
              mode, native PCL is not available because the printer
              does not respond to PJL sequences. You should use the
              workaround described in Section 10.7.1 to force use of
              the PCL 4 translator.

           2. Set the serial port language sensing mode to Automatic.
              (On the front panel: Serial, Printer Type = PS/PCL
              Sensing) and define the DCPS$queuename_NO_SYNC logical
              name as described in Section 3.4.3. In this mode,
              the printer responds to PJL sequences and switches
              to native PCL 5 or PostScript as indicated by the
              datastream.

     10.6.2 Interaction Between Communication Protocol and Native
            PCL Support

           The optional network card supports switching to native
           PCL; however, the protocol must be set to autosensing.

     10.6.3 NIC Does Not Work with Raw TCP/IP

           DCPS cannot communicate with the printer via a raw TCP/IP
           connection because the NIC does not support bidirectional
           TCP/IP communication.

           As an alternative, you can connect the printer to a print
           server (for example, the Rapidprint 500) or a terminal
           server, or use a LAT connection instead.

     10-6 Printer-Specific Information

 






        10.7 DIGITAL DEClaser 5100 Printer

        10.7.1 Native PCL Is Unavailable with EtherTalk Protocol on NIC

              Because of a problem with the Network Interface Card
              (NIC), DCPS cannot switch the printer into native PCL
              when using the EtherTalk protocol. Users will see the
              error:

              %DCPS-W-UNDEF, undefined: Name not known - offending command is <1B>
              %DCPS-E-FLUSHING, Rest of Job (to EOJ) will be ignored

              A partial workaround is possible by specifying a default
              print job parameter of PAGE_LIMIT=999999 for the queue
              when you create it in DCPS$STARTUP.COM. This parameter
              forces any PCL files to be printed through the PCL
              translator. Remember, though, that the PCL translator
              is PCL 4 rather than PCL 5.

        10.7.2 NIC Does Not Work with Raw TCP/IP

              DCPS cannot communicate with the printer via a raw TCP/IP
              connection because the NIC does not support bidirectional
              TCP/IP communication.

              As an alternative, you can connect the printer to a print
              server (for example, the Rapidprint 500) or a terminal
              server, or use a LAT connection instead.

        10.7.3 Downloading and Deleting Fonts

              You may download or delete fonts from the DEClaser
              5100 printer's optional hard drive using the FONT_
              DOWNLOADER.COM procedure described in Appendix C.

        10.7.4 Error Page Feature

              The DEClaser 5100 printer has a feature that ejects
              the current sheet and then prints a PostScript Error
              information sheet when a PostScript interpreter error
              occurs. While this feature provides a powerful means for
              analyzing PostScript problems, it is not recommended for
              everyday use with the DCPS software for the following
              reasons:

              o  PostScript error pages are printed when a user enters
                 DELETE/ENTRY to abort a print job.

                                       Printer-Specific Information 10-7

 






           o  PostScript error pages are printed after a not ready
              condition is cleared (paper supplied, jam corrected,
              etc.) if a job was submitted on the serial port while
              the printer was not ready to print.

           You should disable the feature called "Print Errors"
           through the DEClaser 5100 front panel before starting
           print queues with DCPS. Enable the feature only when you
           are interested in analyzing PostScript problems.

           If a job fails to print because of a "Limitcheck" error,
           also see if "page protection required" is part of the
           error message. Presence of this error means the job failed
           because of a banding failure.

     10.8 DIGITAL Laser Printer LN15+

           The DIGITAL Laser Printer LN15+ is an upgrade to the
           DIGITAL Laser Printer LN15. References in the DCPS
           documentation to the DIGITAL Laser Printer LN15 also apply
           to the DIGITAL Laser Printer LN15+.

     10.8.1 Printer Configuration Settings

           DCPS requires certain LN15 printer characteristics to be
           set. If these values, described in Table 10-2, are not
           set, DCPS jobs will remain in a Starting state and never
           print.

           Table_10-2_LN15_Configuration_Settings____________________

           Setting_________Value_____Where_Set_____Documentation_____

           PERSONALITY     PS        Printer       LN15 User Manual
                                     console
                                     CONFIG menu

           NPAP MODE       OFF       Printer       LN15 User Manual
                                     console
                                     PARALLEL
                                     menu

           PORT 1          ENABLED   Ethernet      RapidPrint 600
           BITRONICS                 card          Print Server
           __________________________management____Installation_Guide

     10-8 Printer-Specific Information

 






        10.9 DIGITAL Laser Printer LN17+ps

              The DIGITAL Laser Printer LN17+ps is an upgrade to
              the DIGITAL LN17ps printer. References in the DCPS
              documentation to the DIGITAL LN17ps printer also apply
              to the DIGITAL Laser Printer LN17+ps.

        10.9.1 Job Remains in Starting State

              If you use a raw TCP/IP or LAT-connected LN17ps printer
              with DCPS, the associated DCPS print job may remain in a
              Starting state.

              You must either set the Ethernet port to use the
              PostScript language and disable automatic language
              sensing, or define a DCPS$queuename_NO_SYNC logical name
              for the associated queue as described in Section 11.1.1.

              o  If all the print jobs that the printer receives from
                 its Ethernet port come from DCPS, including PCL jobs
                 that use the printer's native PCL 5e interpreter, do
                 the following:

                 Set the printer's Ethernet port System Language to
                 PostScript and turn off Language Sensing. You change
                 these settings from the interface menu on the printer
                 console, as described in the LN17ps User Guide.

              o  If any of the print jobs that the printer receives from
                 its Ethernet port do not contain PostScript data (for
                 example, they contain PCL or ASCII data) and DCPS is
                 not the source of such data, do the following:

                 Enable Language Sensing on the the printer's Ethernet
                 port. Define a DCPS$queuename_NO_SYNC logical name for
                 the associated queue as described in Section 11.1.1.

        10.9.2 Incorrect Sheet Count

              The sheet count reported on the job trailer page and in
              the OpenVMS accounting file may be several sheets too few
              due to a limitation with the LN17ps printer. There is no
              known workaround.


                                       Printer-Specific Information 10-9

 






     10.9.3 Downloading and Deleting Fonts

           You may download or delete fonts from the LN17ps printer's
           optional hard drive using the FONT_DOWNLOADER.COM
           procedure described in Appendix C.

     10.9.4 Colored Separator Pages and Tray Switching

           The LN17ps can switch between input trays when a specified
           tray becomes empty. By default, tray switching is
           disabled. If you currently specify colored separator pages
           by using the DCPS$queuename_SEPARATOR_PAGE logical, you
           may want to ensure that tray switching is disabled.

           You disable tray switching from the printer console, under
           the PostScript menu. See the LN17ps User Guide for more
           information.

           Use one of the following PostScript tray numbers as the
           value of the DCPS$queuename_SEPARATOR_PAGE logical:

                0       Main tray
                1       Front tray
                2       Lower 1 tray
                3       Lower 2 tray

     10.10 DIGITAL Laser Printer LN20

     10.10.1 Incorrect Sheet Count

           The sheet count reported on the job trailer page and
           in the OpenVMS accounting file is incorrect due to a
           limitation with the LN20 printer. There is no known
           workaround. The LN20 has, however, an accounting feature
           that can be used to track printer utilization.

     10.11 DIGITAL Laser Printer LN40

     10.11.1 Incorrect Sheet Count

           The sheet count reported on the job trailer page and
           in the OpenVMS accounting file is incorrect due to a
           limitation with the LN40 printers. There is no known
           workaround. The LN40 has, however, an accounting feature
           that can be used to track printer utilization.

     10-10 Printer-Specific Information

 






        10.12 Compaq and DIGITAL Laser Printer LNC02

        10.12.1 Minimum Firmware Version

              To use the LNC02 with the Raw TCP/IP protocol from DCPS,
              the printer must be running a minimum firmware version of
              System Release 1.1.1, Revision 3.11. This firmware version
              number is displayed on the printer's startup page.

        10.12.2 Incorrect Sheet Count

              The sheet count reported on the job trailer page and
              in the OpenVMS accounting file is incorrect due to a
              limitation with the LNC02 printer. There is no known
              workaround. The LNC02 has, however, an accounting feature
              that can be used to track printer utilization.

        10.13 DIGITAL PrintServer 17 Printer

        10.13.1 Colored Separator Pages and Tray Switching

              PrintServer Software, Version 5.0, adds input tray
              failover to the PrintServer 17 series printers. This
              feature allows the printer to automatically switch to
              another input tray containing the same size media when
              the current tray becomes empty. This feature is enabled by
              default.

              If you currently use colored flag pages, you may want
              to disable this feature. To disable input tray failover,
              perform the following steps:

              1. Edit LPS$SUPPORT:LPSDEFAULTS.<printer name>

              2. Search for the /TraySwitch parameter:

                   /TraySwitch true  % Controls input tray failover.
                                     % false = disable
                                     % true = enable

              3. Change the value of the TraySwitch parameter from
                 "true" to "false". PostScript is case sensitive; the
                 only valid values are "true" or "false".

                   /TraySwitch false % Controls input tray failover.
                                     % false = disable
                                     % true = enable

                                      Printer-Specific Information 10-11

 






           4. Enable the changes by issuing the reconfigure command
              from the remote console facility.

              $ MCR LPS$CONSOLE <printer name>
              LPS> PRIV
              Password: <password>
              LPS> RECONFIG
              LPS> EXIT

           Refer to the DEC PrintServer Supporting Host Software for
           OpenVMS Management Guide for additional information.

     10.14 HP LaserJet IIID Printer

     10.14.1 Job Remains in Starting State

           The DCPS$queuename_NO_SYNC logical name can be used to
           solve reported problems printing to HP LaserJet IIID
           printers with HP-supplied PostScript Level 2 cartridges.
           Those cartridges have a known problem where they corrupt
           status messages they send to a host. This can cause jobs
           to get stuck in the "starting" state when DCPS tries to
           use its synchronization sequence. See Section 3.4.3 for
           more information.

     10.14.2 Incorrect Sheet Count on Duplex Jobs

           The HP LaserJet IIID and several other HP LaserJet
           printers do not internally count physical sheets but
           instead count pages imaged. Therefore the "Sheets printed"
           data of the trailer page will reflect the number of
           images processed. For example, a six-page print job with
           burst and trailer pages enabled and /PARAMETERS=(SIDES=2)
           specified will show "Sheets printed" as eight when only
           five sheets are printed.

     10.15 HP LaserJet IIISi Printer

     10.15.1 Incorrect Sheet Count on Native PCL Jobs

           The HP LaserJet IIISi printer does not keep track of the
           sheet count while printing native PCL files. The sheet
           count reported at the end of the job, both on the trailer
           page and to the OpenVMS accounting system, includes only
           those sheets printed in PostScript mode, such as the job
           separation pages. There is no known workaround for this
           problem.

     10-12 Printer-Specific Information

 






        10.15.2 Incorrect Sheet Count on Duplex Jobs

              The HP LaserJet IIISi printer exhibits the same behavior
              with sheet count as mentioned in Section 10.14.2.

        10.16 HP LaserJet 4SiMX Printer

        10.16.1 Incorrect Sheet Count on Duplex Jobs

              The HP LaserJet 4SiMX printer exhibits the same behavior
              with sheet count as mentioned in Section 10.14.2.

        10.17 HP LaserJet 5M Printer

        10.17.1 Problems Selecting an Input Tray

              DCPS may ignore explicit INPUT_TRAY parameter values for
              the HP LaserJet 5M printer, instead utilizing paper from
              another input tray. DCPS may also report that TRAY_1 is
              not available, even though the tray is a standard tray,
              when tray 1 is empty.

              Both classes of problems are related to the printer
              attempting to select an alternate input tray if the
              desired tray is empty or otherwise not satisfactory. To
              avoid these problems, use the HP 5M console to specify
              that tray 1 is a "cassette" and to lock out all but one
              of the available input trays. Refer to the printer's user
              manual for more information.

        10.17.2 Incorrect Sheet Count on Duplex Jobs

              The HP LaserJet 5M printer exhibits the same behavior with
              sheet count as mentioned in Section 10.14.2.

        10.18 HP LaserJet 5SiMX Printer

        10.18.1 Job Trailer Pages Print in Next Bin

              If the network manager has placed the mailbox bins into
              "job separator mode" using the administration software
              supplied with the printer, the DCPS job log and trailer
              pages print in the next bin, separated from the rest of
              the job.

                                      Printer-Specific Information 10-13

 






     10.18.2 Tray Is Not Available Due to Lack of Memory for Loaded
             Paper

           If an input tray is loaded with a paper size that cannot
           be printed with the current memory configuration, DCPS
           reports the tray as not available. (Refer to the HP5SiMX
           users's guide for memory requirements.)

     10.18.3 Duplex Not Supported Due to Lack of Memory for Loaded
             Paper

           If an input tray is loaded with a paper size which
           cannot be printed in duplex mode with the current
           memory configuration, DCPS reports that duplex is not
           supported. (Refer to the HP5SiMX users's guide for memory
           requirements.)

     10.18.4 Incorrect Sheet Count on Duplex Jobs

           The HP LaserJet 5SiMX printer exhibits the same behavior
           with sheet count as mentioned in Section 10.14.2.

     10.19 HP LaserJet 4000, 4050 and 5000

     10.19.1 Minimum Firmware Version

           To use an HP LaserJet 4000 or 5000 printer from DCPS,
           the printer must be running a minimum firmware version
           of 19980714 MB3.68. To use an HP LaserJet 4050 printer,
           it is recommended that the printer be running a minimum
           firmware version of 19991030 MB6.30. Earlier versions of
           firmware may cause problems such as misprinted or missing
           characters when using the DCPS ANSI translator, especially
           when printing jobs with landscape orientation or NUMBER_
           UP. This firmware version number is displayed as Firmware
           Datecode on the printer's configuration page.

           If your printer is running an older version of firmware,
           contact HP and request the proper version. The new
           firmware will be sent on a SIMM to be installed in your
           printer.




     10-14 Printer-Specific Information

 






        10.20 HP LaserJet 8000, 8100 and 8150

        10.20.1 Optional Mailbox

              DCPS numbers the optional mailbox bins on the HP LaserJet
              8000 printer from 1-5, 1-7 or 1-8, depending on the
              particular option installed. This is consistent with
              the numbers molded into the plastic beside the bins. The
              printer's console, in contrast, refers to these same bins
              as numbers two through nine. Refer to the HP LaserJet User
              Guide for your printer model for more information about
              the numbering and purpose of trays with different options
              and configurations.

        10.20.2 Problems Starting Queues

              Some models in this series may not allow DCPS jobs
              to start. To resolve this, either set the printer
              to PostScript mode or suppress DCPS's PostScript
              synchronization. See Section 11.1.1 for more information.

        10.20.3 Minimum Firmware Version

              To use a HP LaserJet 8000 printer from DCPS, the
              printer must be running a minimum firmware version of
              19980610 MB4.28. This firmware version number is displayed
              as Firmware Datecode on the printer's configuration page.

              If your printer is running an older version of firmware,
              contact HP and request the proper version. The new
              firmware will be sent on a SIMM to be installed in your
              printer.

        10.21 HP LaserJet 9000

        10.21.1 Optional Stapler

              Output trays STACKER and STAPLER refer to the same
              physical tray, included with the HP LaserJet 9000's
              optional finisher.

              When printing to the STAPLER tray, the printer will staple
              output by default and place the staple in the default
              staple position.

                                      Printer-Specific Information 10-15

 






           The preferred way to specify stapling is with the DCPS
           parameter STAPLE, which offers four different staple
           positions and takes page orientation into account when
           determining staple position. Therefore, when specifying
           stapled output with the STAPLE parameter, use OUTPUT_
           TRAY=STACKER.

     10.22 HP XL300 Printer

     10.22.1 Communication Problem

           If a file printed to the XL300 printer contains multiple
           userdata messages that are returned in quick succession,
           some messages may be lost, and others returned incor-
           rectly. Also, occasionally, messages that the DECprint
           Supervisor wants returned to it will get garbled. This
           will result in spurious messages to the user's terminal
           (if /NOTIFY is set). Otherwise, the job prints correctly.

     10.23 Lexmark Optra Rt+ Printer

     10.23.1 Tray Linking and INPUT_TRAY

           If tray linking is enabled by the printer console, the
           linked trays cannot be selected individually using the
           INPUT_TRAY parameter. Specifying any linked tray in the
           INPUT_TRAY parameter causes the printer to select among
           the linked trays in accordance with its own algorithm.

     10.24 Lexmark Optra S, Optra T and T Series

     10.24.1 Problems Starting Queues

           Some models in the Lexmark Optra S, Optra T and T series
           may not allow DCPS jobs to start. To resolve this, either
           set the printer to PostScript mode or suppress DCPS's
           PostScript synchronization. See Section 11.1.1 for more
           information.

     10.25 Tektronix Phaser





     10-16 Printer-Specific Information

 






        10.25.1 Printer Configuration Settings

              You must change the following AppSocket settings when
              using Phaser printers with DCPS:

              Table_10-3_Tektronix_Phaser_Configuration_Settings________

              AppSocket_Setting_______Value_____________________________

              Interpreter or          PostScript
              Language

              Filtering_______________Interpreter-Based_________________
































                                      Printer-Specific Information 10-17

 









                                                                      11
        ________________________________________________________________

                                              Troubleshooting Procedures



              This chapter contains troubleshooting procedures for
              diagnosing error conditions on the printer system.

              When a printer problem occurs, information may be
              displayed on the user's terminal if the /NOTIFY qualifier
              is included on the PRINT command line. This information
              may indicate the cause of the failure.

              Check the job trailer page from the print job, which shows
              some of the messages that result from printing. Problems
              with the print files are indicated on a file error page
              (see Section 6.7).

              When a printing system problem occurs, examine the console
              output or the OPERATOR.LOG file for operator communication
              manager (OPCOM) messages. If your terminal is not running
              OPCOM, use REPLY/ENABLE to enable PRINTER and CENTRAL
              messages. Restart the symbiont, and reprint the job.
              Then you can read the relevant messages. This procedure
              requires OPER privileges. Printer messages are listed in
              the DECprint Supervisor for OpenVMS User's Guide.

        11.1 What to Do if a Raw TCP/IP Printer is Not Printing

        11.1.1 Job Remains in Starting State for Raw TCP/IP or LAT
               Queue

              Most printers respond to the PostScript synchronization
              command at the beginning of a DCPS job, but some do not.
              If all jobs to a queue remain in the Starting state, you
              may need to take one of the following steps:

              o  Change Printer Language Setting


                                         Troubleshooting Procedures 11-1

 






              Often, setting the printer's language-sensing mode to
              PostScript, instead of auto-sensing between PostScript
              and PCL, will solve the problem. Refer to your printer
              documentation for instructions on changing the language
              for the appropriate port. This is the preferred method
              for avoiding the problem.

           o  Define NO_SYNC Logical Name

              If the problem is not solved by changing the printer
              setting, you can tell DCPS to skip the PostScript
              synchronization command by defining the logical name
              DCPS$queuename_NO_SYNC and restarting the queue.
              This works with printers that use raw TCP/IP or
              LAT connections on built-in Network Interface Cards
              (NICs). It has no effect when using printers connected
              via other interconnects. See Section 3.4.3 for more
              information.

     11.1.2 Job Remains in Starting State for Raw TCP/IP Queue

           If you set up a DCPS queue that uses a raw TCP/IP
           connection and specify an incorrect TCP port number for
           the printer, any print jobs that you submit to the queue
           will remain in a starting state. DCPS cannot determine
           that you have provided an incorrect port number, because
           the network failure that it receives is no different than
           if the printer had been busy or offline.

           Note that a print job in a raw TCP/IP queue may remain in
           a starting state for other reasons as well.

           Check the documentation for your printer, network
           interface card, print server, or terminal server to
           determine the correct TCP port number to use. The TCP
           port number may also be listed in Table 3-2.

     11.1.3 Connection Terminations for Raw TCP/IP Queue

           You may get CONTERMINATED errors for long print jobs when
           using raw TCP/IP connections. For jobs that consist of a
           single file or only use the native PostScript capability
           of the printer (for example, they do not use native PCL),
           these errors are most likely to occur at the end of the
           job, with job trailer pages (if specified for the queue)
           and print job accounting (if enabled) being lost. For

     11-2 Troubleshooting Procedures

 






              other jobs, these errors may occur in the middle of the
              job, with subsequent documents as well as the trailer
              pages and accounting information being lost. DCPS requeues
              the terminated jobs, placing them in a Holding state so
              that you can reprint them once you resolve the termination
              problem.

              Some network devices, including the HP JetDirect cards,
              drop a TCP/IP connection if they do not receive any input
              from the host system within a specified amount of time.
              This is a feature, meant to prevent host software from
              monopolizing the device. DCPS, however, waits for the
              printer to acknowledge that previous documents are printed
              before switching from PostScript to some other native
              printer language and also before printing a trailer page
              and gathering accounting information. Even though the
              printer may be busy, the NIC may not receive any more
              input from DCPS before the timeout is reached.

              If your NIC allows you to alter the TCP/IP idle timeout
              value, you can work around this problem by disabling or
              increasing the timeout. Check your NIC documentation to
              determine if this is possible, and how to do it. Then
              release any requeued jobs for which desired output was
              lost, and delete the other requeued jobs.

              Note that it is the length of a job in time (versus size)
              that is important. For example, a very small PostScript
              program can take a very long time to print. Hence, it is
              difficult to predict how large a timeout is adequate.

        11.1.4 NOT_READY Warnings for Unavailable Raw TCP/IP Printer

              If a job is queued to a printer that uses a raw TCP/IP
              connection, and the printer is busy or offline, you will
              get NOT_READY warning messages for the printer.

              If you believe or determine that the printer is busy, you
              can ignore these messages. DCPS cannot, unfortunately,
              differentiate between the printer being busy, offline, or
              otherwise unavailable.




                                         Troubleshooting Procedures 11-3

 






     11.2 What to Do if a PrintServer Printer Is Not Printing

           The following troubleshooting procedures can help
           you diagnose error conditions that can occur during
           installation of DECprint Supervisor software for
           PrintServer printers.

           If the printer is not printing, check the OPCOM messages.
           If the cause of the failure is not immediately apparent,
           check the queue characteristics, as follows:

           1. Execute the following instruction, inserting the name
              of the PrintServer device queue:

              $ SHOW QUEUE queue-name/FULL

              For example, the queue characteristics for the
              PrintServer device queue LPS40$FANG on node VIPER are
              as follows:

              $ SHOW QUEUE LPS40$FANG/FULL

              Printer queue LPS40$FANG, on VIPER::FANG, mounted form DCPS$$FORM
              (stock=DEFAULT)
                  /BASE_PRIORITY=4 /FORM=DCPS$DEFAULT /LIBRARY=DCPS_LIB /OWNER=[SYSTEM]
                  /PROCESSOR=DCPS$SMB /PROTECTION=(S:E,O:D,G:R,W:W) /SCHEDULE=(NOSIZE)
                  /SEPARATE=(FLAG,TRAILER)
              $

           2. If the queue characteristics do not match those
              recorded in DCPS$STARTUP.COM, delete the device queue
              and all generic queues that point to it. Then execute
              the DCPS$STARTUP.COM file. DCPS$STARTUP is located in
              SYS$STARTUP:. For example:

              $ STOP/RESET/QUEUE generic-queue-1
              $ STOP/RESET/QUEUE other-generic-queues
              $ STOP/RESET/QUEUE pserver-name
              $ DELETE/QUEUE generic-queue-1
              $ DELETE/QUEUE other-generic-queues
              $ DELETE/QUEUE pserver-name
              $ @SYS$STARTUP:DCPS$STARTUP

              Recheck the queue characteristics. If they are correct
              and the job still does not print, refer to the DEC
              PrintServer Supporting Host Software for OpenVMS
              Management Guide for further information.

     11-4 Troubleshooting Procedures

 






        11.3 What to Do if a Serial Printer Is Not Printing

              When you examine the OPCOM messages, look for a message
              from the printer indicating NOTREADY. This message
              indicates that the printer is unable to acknowledge any
              queries from the system. Check for the following:

              o  Faulty communication line or cable

              o  Incorrect port baud rate setting

              o  Incorrect switch settings or front panel settings

              o  Excessive line noise resulting in lost response from
                 the printer

              o  No power to the printer

              o  Faulty connector or incorrect type of connector

              o  Incorrect bits/character, incorrect parity, or both

        11.3.1 What to Do if a Locally-Connected Serial Printer Will
               Not Start Printing

              The steps in this section apply to any serial printer on a
              local line.

              Step 1: Print a test page

              Manually print a test page on your printer, following
              instructions in your owner's manual.

              If able to print a test page, go on to step 2 to check
              the printer hardware and software configurations. If the
              printer does not produce a test page, check the printer
              hardware.

              o  Is the power on?

              o  Is the printer on line?

              o  What is the status of the print engine?


                                         Troubleshooting Procedures 11-5

 






           Step 2: Check the printer hardware and software
           configurations

           The configuration settings on the printer and in the
           software associated with the printer must be the same.
           To verify that the settings match, check a printed summary
           sheet or the printer console or switches to verify that
           the settings are consistent for the following settings:

           o  Paper size

           o  Communication: 9600 baud (or appropriate baud rate)

           o  Eight bits, no parity (required)

           o  Flow control

           Refer to the printer owner's manual for information on how
           to change these settings.

           Check the terminal device characteristics of a directly-
           connected serial printer by issuing the following command
           on the node of the device:

           $ SHOW TERMINAL device-name[:]

           The variable device-name is the device name in the printer
           startup file in parameter p2 of the execution queue
           definition.

           Check for the following characteristics:

           o  Eight bits

           o  Parity: None

           o  Input speed: 9600 baud

           o  Output speed: 9600 baud

           The summary sheet and the terminal settings should be the
           same.

           If your printer interface runs at a different speed, make
           sure you set the same configuration switch settings and
           device characteristics.

           If the printer is connected directly to the host, check
           the baud rate setting in the printer startup command file.
           If you did not enter a baud rate in parameter p6 of the
           execution queue definition, the startup procedure sets

     11-6 Troubleshooting Procedures

 






              the printer speed at 9600 baud. Refer to the SET TERMINAL
              command in the OpenVMS DCL Dictionary for information
              on changing the system's interpretation of the device
              characteristics.

              If your printer is connected by a LAT device to a local
              area Ethernet, see Section 11.3.3.

              If the settings agree and the job still does not print, go
              to step 3.

              Step 3: Check communications software

              Test the operation of the communications equipment by
              attempting to send data directly to the device. To
              perform this procedure, make sure the queue is paused
              (see Section 5.7).

              The device must not be spooled to accomplish this
              procedure. If the device is spooled, enter the following
              command:

              $ SET DEVICE LTAnnnn:/NOSPOOL

              To test the communications setup, issue the SET HOST/DTE
              command to the printer. Use the commands in the following
              examples:

              $ SET HOST/DTE LTA9092:
              Connection established, type ^\ to exit
              Ctrl/T
              %%[ status: idle ]%%

              After you press Ctrl/T, you should receive a message in
              the form of
              %%[Status: description]%%. If you receive this message,
              the connection to the printer is established and working.

              If no message of this type is displayed, enter the
              commands in the following example:

              ^\
              $ COPY TT: LTA9092:
              showpage
              Ctrl/Z
              $

                                         Troubleshooting Procedures 11-7

 






           The test is successful if a page of paper is ejected from
           the printer. If no paper is ejected, there is a faulty
           connection with the printer. In this case, check the
           communications cables. Then try the commands in the first
           example again.

           If the COPY command succeeds, but the SET HOST command
           fails, check the communications cables inbound from the
           printer to the host node for a faulty connection.

           Step 4: Check DCPS$STARTUP.COM

           Make sure that the DCPS$STARTUP.COM file reflects your
           print queue needs and that the changes are appropriate
           for your printer. To check the printer execution queue
           characteristics, enter the following command, inserting
           the name of the printer execution queue:

           $ SHOW QUEUE/FULL exec-queue-name

           For example, the characteristics for the printer execution
           queue TXA1_LN03R on host EDEN are as follows:

           $ SHOW QUEUE/FULL TXA1_LN03R

            Printer queue TXA1_LN03R, on EDEN::TXA1:
            /BASE_PRIORITY=4 /FORM=DCPS$DEFAULT /LIBRARY=DCPS_LIB /OWNER=[SYSTEM]
            /PROCESSOR=DCPS$SMB /PROTECTION=(S:E,O:D,G:R,W:W) /SCHEDULE=(NOSIZE)
            /SEPARATE=(BURST,TRAILER)
           $

           Specifically, check the following:

           o  Make sure that /PROCESSOR=DCPS$SMB.

           o  Check that /FORM=DCPS$DEFAULT, or matches the
              changes you made to DCPS$STARTUP.COM. Ensure that the
              printer is capable of printing according to the form
              definition.

           o  Make sure that the /LIBRARY qualifier value is the
              same as parameter p3 in DCPS$STARTUP.COM and if it is a
              logical name, that the logical name has been defined.

           If the queue characteristics do not match those defined in
           DCPS$STARTUP.COM, stop the printer execution queue.

     11-8 Troubleshooting Procedures

 






              Next, execute the DCPS$STARTUP.COM file, as follows:

              $ @SYS$STARTUP:DCPS$STARTUP

              Recheck the execution queue characteristics. If the
              characteristics are correct and the job still does not
              print, go to step 5.

              Step 5: Check queue logical defaulting

              Use the following command to check the values of queue
              default parameters in the DCPS$STARTUP.COM file, in p4 of
              the execution queue definition, and in parameter p3 of the
              generic queue definition.

              $ SHOW LOGICAL DCPS$queuename_PARAMETER

              Step 6: Check the queue configurations

              The values provided in DCPS$STARTUP.COM are not validated,
              but simply passed as parameters to the appropriate OpenVMS
              commands and utilities. Therefore, the OpenVMS commands
              and utilities detect and report any errors directly. Refer
              to the OpenVMS System Messages: Companion Guide for Help
              Message Users for an explanation of error messages issued
              by the following DCL commands:

              o  INITIALIZE/QUEUE

              o  SET TERMINAL

              o  SET DEVICE

                ________________________Note  ________________________

                To debug DCL command procedures and record the
                information in a file, you can use the following
                commands:

                $ SET HOST 0/LOG
                $ SET VERIFY

                Alternatively, you can set parameter p8 in the
                execution queue definition in DCPS$STARTUP.COM to
                1 for automatic recording.

                _____________________________________________________

                                         Troubleshooting Procedures 11-9

 






     11.3.2 What to Do if a Locally-Connected Serial Printer Has
            Stopped Printing

           When your printer stops printing, follow these steps:

           o  If your printer fails consistently, follow the steps in
              Section 11.3.1.

           o  If your printer fails occasionally, follow the steps in
              this section.

           After checking all messages, including the notification
           messages from the PRINT command, the console output, and
           the OPCOM log, go to step 1 if the cause of the problem is
           not apparent.

           Step 1: Print the IVP data sheets

           Print the following Installation Verification Procedure
           (IVP) files from SYS$COMMON:[SYSTEST.DCPS]:

              DCPS$IVP_ANSI.DAT
              DCPS$IVP_POST.DAT
              DCPS$IVP_REGIS.DAT
              DCPS$IVP_TEK4014.DAT
              DCPS$IVP_PCL.DAT
              DCPS$IVP_PROPRINTER.DAT

           Remember to use the appropriate DATA_TYPE parameter value,
           indicated in the file name following the underscore,
           for each of the files. For example, to print DCPS$IVP_
           REGIS.DAT, use the following PRINT command:

           $ PRINT/QUEUE=queue-name/PARAMETERS=(DATA_TYPE=REGIS)-
           /NOTIFY SYS$COMMON:[SYSTEST.DCPS]DCPS$IVP_REGIS.DAT

           If the files are not printed, go to step 2 to check the
           files for user error.

           If any of the IVP files are not printed, check to see if
           the translator execution files exist, using the following
           command:

           $ DIR SYS$SHARE:TRN$*.*

           Directory SYS$COMMON:[SYSLIB]

           TRN$ANSI_PS.EXE;     TRN$DDIF_PS.EXE;     TRN$REGIS_PS.EXE;
           TRN$TEK4014_PS.EXE;  TRN$PCL_PS.EXE;      TRN$PROPRINTER_PS.EXE;

     11-10 Troubleshooting Procedures

 






              Total of 6 files.

              If the correct files are present, go to step 2.

              If any files are missing, reinstall the DECprint
              Supervisor software.

              Step 2: Check files for user error

              If a particular file fails to print, examine the trailer
              page from the print job for messages that indicate the
              cause of the failure. For an explanation of, and recovery
              procedures for the error messages, see the DECprint
              Supervisor for OpenVMS User's Guide.

              If the file is a PostScript file, an error exists in
              either the PostScript file or in the application that
              generated the PostScript file. If the application is
              supplied by Compaq, submit a Software Performance Report
              (SPR).

              If the file is other than a PostScript file, an error
              exists in the translation process. If the translator is
              supplied by Compaq, submit a Software Performance Report.

              Sometimes, when the serial communication cable between
              the printer and the host is disconnected and later
              reconnected, the active print job displays the status
              Printing when nothing is happening at the printer. Power-
              cycle the printer, then resubmit the lost print job.

                ________________________Note  ________________________

                When reconnecting the printer to the host, turn off
                and then turn on the printer. Turning the printer
                off and on ensures proper synchronization between
                the print symbiont and the printer.

                _____________________________________________________

        11.3.3 What to Do if a LAT Printer Is Not Printing

              A network environment allows several separately managed
              systems to access the same printer. Therefore, when the
              printer is not printing, you must determine which node has
              control of the printer.

                                        Troubleshooting Procedures 11-11

 






           The remaining sections discuss the following steps in
           troubleshooting the printer in a network environment:

           1. Determining the node that controls the printer:

              o  Determine the printing node

              o  Determine the LAT node and port name

              o  Check the port and system server names

              o  Determine the host controlling the printer

           2. Troubleshooting the printer:

              o  Check port characteristics

              o  Follow procedures in Section 11.3.1

           3. Other troubleshooting hints:

              o  NOTREADY status

              o  Common error messages and their probable causes

     11.3.3.1 How to Determine Which Host Controls the Printer

           A network printer may fail to print if another node is
           accessing the printer, or if the printer has stopped
           printing. Perform the following steps to determine which
           host has control of the printer.

           Step 1: Determine your printing node

           To determine which node runs your printer, issue the
           following command, inserting the name of the print queue
           you use:

           $ SHOW QUEUE/FULL queue-name

           From the first line of the following sample display, you
           determine that FIERY is the node that runs your printer
           and LTA546 is the application port associated with the
           print queue:

           Printer queue LN03R3, on FIERY::LTA546, mounted form DCPS$DEFAULT
                                                                 (stock=DEFAULT)
               /BASE_PRIORITY=4 /FORM=DCPS$DEFAULT (stock=DEFAULT)
               /NOENABLE_GENERIC /LIBRARY=DCPS_LIB lowercase /OWNER=[SYSTEM]
               /PROCESSOR=DCPS$SMB /PROTECTION=(S:E,O:D,G:R,W:W) /SCHEDULE=(NOSIZE)
               /SEPARATE=(BURST,TRAILER)
           $

     11-12 Troubleshooting Procedures

 






              Perform steps 2 and 3 on the node (FIERY) that runs the
              printer.

              Step 2: Determine LAT node and port name to which the
              printer is connected

              Look in the LAT startup file SYS$STARTUP:LAT$SYSTARTUP.COM.
              The SET PORT command associates the application port
              (LTAd) with a specific port (/PORT=port_name) on the
              server (/SERVER=server_name).

              CREATE PORT LTA546: /NOLOG  /APPLICATION                 ! LN03R3
              SET PORT LTA546: /APPLICATION /QUEUE /NODE=TAS204 /PORT=PORT_7

                ________________________Note  ________________________

                The port must be set with queuing enabled (/QUEUE)
                and as an application port (/APPLICATION).

                Make sure that SYSTARTUP_VMS.COM invokes LAT$STARTUP.COM.

                _____________________________________________________

              Step 3: Check port and server system names

              Ensure that port and server system settings are the same
              as those in the SYS$STARTUP:LAT$SYSTARTUP.COM. Use the
              LATCP SHOW PORT command to look at the application port
              (LTAd) as follows:

              $ RUN SYS$SYSTEM:LATCP
              LCP>SHOW PORT lta546
              Local Port Name = LTA546:  application

                Specified Remote Node Name = TAS204
                Specified Remote Port Name = PORT_7
                Actual Remote Node Name = TAS204
                Actual Remote Port Name = PORT_7
                Link Name = LAT$LINK

              Step 4: Determine which host controls the printer

              You can determine which host controls the printer by
              logging in to a terminal that is connected directly to
              a DECserver or by connecting to a LAT device over the
              network. If you have direct access to the DECserver port,
              go directly to step 4B.

                                        Troubleshooting Procedures 11-13

 






           Step 4A: Connect to the LAT device

           Use either the Network Control Program (NCP) or Terminal
           Server Manager (TSM) to connect to the DECserver device
           over the network.

           To use NCP, issue the following commands:

           o  To determine the type of service circuit, for example
              UNA-0 or QNA-0, use the following commands:

              $ MCR NCP
              NCP> SHOW KNOWN CIRCUITS

           o  To determine the 48-bit Ethernet address (for example,
              08-00-2B-05-C7-05), use the following commands:

              $ MCR LATCP
              LCP> SHOW NODE server-name

              For example, to get the Ethernet address for TAS200PSSA,
              enter the following command:

              LCP> SHOW NODE TAS200PSSA

              Node Name:   TAS200PSSA                      LAT Protocol Version: 5.1
              Node State:  Reachable                       Address: 08-00-2B-05-C7-05
              Node Ident:  LN03R V2.0 DECServer 200

              Incoming Connections:   Enabled

              Circuit Timer (msec):        80
              Multicast Timer (msec):      30

              Service Groups:   15, 31-32  99

              Service Name     Status       Rating    Identification
              BURNET           Available      0

              In this example, the Ethernet address 08-00-2B-05-C7-05
              is displayed.

              You can use the service circuit name and the Ethernet
              address to make a connection to the LAT node using the
              following command:

              $ MCR NCP
              NCP> CONNECT VIA service-circuit PHYSICAL ADDRESS nn-nn-nn-nn-nn-nn

     11-14 Troubleshooting Procedures

 






              After entering the NCP CONNECT command, press Return until
              you get the pound sign (#) prompt. At this prompt type the
              password (ACCESS) to get the Local> prompt:

              #
              username: username
              Local>

              Step 4B: At the LAT console port

              After making your connection and logging in to the LAT
              console, enter the following commands:

              Local> SET PRIVILEGED
              Password>
              Local> SHOW SESSIONS PORT_7

              The default password is SYSTEM.

              The following example shows a SHOW SESSIONS PORT command
              on a DECserver 200 that tells you that a remote system
              HAILEY controls port 7.

              Local> SHOW SESSIONS PORT 7
              Port 7:  (Remote)      Connected       Current Session 1
              -Session 1: Hailey     Connected       Pasthru

              If your system runs the TSM software, issue the following
              commands:

              $ RUN SYS$SYSTEM:TSM$MAIN
              TSM> USE SERVER tas204
              TSM> SET PRIVILEGED
              Password>
              TSM> SHOW SESSIONS PORT_7

                ________________________Note  ________________________

                To run the TSM program, you need read access to the
                TSM management directory file and OPER privileges.
                For more information, refer to the Guide to Terminal
                Server Manager.

                _____________________________________________________

                                        Troubleshooting Procedures 11-15

 






     11.3.3.2 How to Troubleshoot Printer Communications Problems

           After determining which system controls the printer port,
           follow these steps.

           Step 1: Check port characteristics

           Compare the LAT port characteristics with those listed in
           the DECprint Supervisor for OpenVMS Software Installation
           Guide. To view the port characteristics, issue the SHOW
           PORT command at the Local> prompt or the TSM> prompt.

           Step 2: Use procedures in Section 11.3.1

           Follow the steps in the appropriate section:

           o  For a new printer, Section 11.3.1

           o  For a printer that has stopped printing, Section 11.3.2

           If you follow these procedures and the printer is not
           printing, go to step 3.

           Step 3: Regain control of the LAT port

           You may need to disconnect a symbiont process that
           controls the port connected to the printer. For example,
           an unsupported version of the symbiont software might not
           disconnect after it gains control of the port. Disconnect
           the symbiont process with the following command:

           Local> SET PRIVILEGED
           Password>
           Local> LOGOUT PORT port_number

           You need privileged status on the LAT node to execute this
           command.

     11.3.3.3 Common LAT Error Messages

           The following list contains common error messages received
           in a network environment. The error message prefix is
           DCPS$. The severity level is not indicated. The messages
           are arranged alphabetically by ident-string. (Refer to
           the DECprint Supervisor for OpenVMS User's Guide for an
           explanation of the error message format.)

     11-16 Troubleshooting Procedures

 






         DCPS$_CONAPPLICATION, Connection request is not to a LAT
            applications port

            Explanation: This message usually occurs when a LAT port is
            not reserved as an applications port, and another device is
            connected to the port that is requested by the printer. The
            LAT configuration file LAT$SYSTARTUP.COM should contain
            a line similar to the following with the /APPLICATION
            parameter.

            SET PORT LTAnnn:/NODE=server-name/PORT=port-name/QUEUE/APPLICATION

            To avoid this problem, specify a higher port number for the
            printer.

         DCPS$_CONTERMINATED, Connection abnormally terminated

            Explanation: This message occurs when communication to the
            LAT node is interrupted. This results in a stopped queue.
            Check the following:

            o  Power is supplied to the LAT device.

            o  Printer port is not logged off.

            o  All connections from LAT device to the Ethernet cable
               are working.

         DCPS$_CONTIMEOUT, Connection timed out, server not available,
            or incorrect server name specified

            Explanation: This message occurs when the server name is
            not recognized. This problem may indicate the collision of
            user terminal space and the printer port.

            Verify that the server name connected to the printer port
            is correct. Compare the server name specified in the LAT
            configuration file LAT$SYSTARTUP.COM with the server name
            on the LAT device. LAT$SYSTARTUP.COM should contain a line
            similar to the following:

            SET PORT LTAxxx:/NODE=server_name/PORT=port_name/QUEUE/APPLICATION

            Use the SHOW PORT command to find the server name associ-
            ated with the printer port:

            Local> SHOW PORT port-name

                                        Troubleshooting Procedures 11-17

 






       DCPS$_LRJACCESSDENIED, Access denied

         Explanation: This message usually occurs when the group
         code specified in LAT$SYSTARTUP.COM does not match one
         of the groups on the LAT device connected to the printer.
         Thus, the printer software does not have access to the LAT
         port. The LAT configuration file LAT$SYSTARTUP.COM should
         contain a line similar to the following:

         SET NODE/GROUP=group-list/ENABLE

         Compare groups, /GROUP=group-list, set in LAT$SYSTARTUP.COM
         with those set on the LAT device (SHOW PORT command).

       DCPS$_LRJDELETED, Queue entry deleted by server

         Explanation: This message occurs when someone manually
         terminates the connection to the LAT device.

       DCPS$_LRJILLEGAL, Illegal request parameter

         Explanation: This message indicates that an internal LAT
         error has occurred. Submit a Software Performance Report.

       DCPS$_LRJINUSE, Port or service in use

         Explanation: This message usually occurs on a LAT port when
         port-name is not set with the queuing parameter (/QUEUE)
         enabled or when the queue limit is too small. On the LAT
         device, enter the following command:

         SET PORT port-name QUEUE ENABLE

       DCPS$_LRJNAMEUNKNOWN, Port Name is unknown

         Explanation: This message occurs when the port name speci-
         fied in the LAT configuration file LAT$SYSTARTUP.COM is not
         known on the server. Compare the port name specified in the
         LAT configuration file LAT$SYSTARTUP.COM with the printer
         port name associated with the server. LAT$SYSTARTUP.COM
         should contain a line similar to the following:

         SET PORT LTAnnn:/NODE=server-name/PORT=port-name/QUEUE/APPLICATION

         Find the name of the printer port associated with the
         server, by issuing the following command:

         Local> SHOW PORT port-number

     11-18 Troubleshooting Procedures

 






         DCPS$_LRJNOTOFFERED, Service is not offered on the requested
            port

            Explanation: This message usually occurs when the access
            mode is not set to REMOTE on the LAT port. Use the SET and
            DEFINE commands as follows to set the access mode for the
            port:

            Local> SET PORT port-number ACCESS REMOTE
            Local> DEFINE PORT port-number ACCESS REMOTE

                ________________________Note  ________________________

                For more information, refer to the DECprint
                Supervisor for OpenVMS User's Guide or to the
                troubleshooting guide for your LAT device.

                _____________________________________________________

        11.3.4 How to Eliminate Excess Login Dialog on Serial Printers

              Serial printers transmit unsolicited data to the host
              system when power-up initialization occurs. The OpenVMS
              operating system normally interprets unsolicited data
              from a terminal device as a login request. The printer
              software startup file sets the SECURE_SERVER terminal
              characteristic for all printer terminal devices on the
              host system. SECURE_SERVER prevents the OpenVMS host and
              the printer from engaging in a potentially endless login
              dialog.

              To eliminate login dialog, set terminal characteristics
              for terminal devices by using the following procedures in
              this order:

              1. SYSGEN AUTOCONFIGURE

              2. SYSTARTUP_VMS

              3. DCPS$EXECUTION_QUEUE.COM

              AUTOCONFIGURE uses SYSGEN parameters to set default
              terminal characteristics for all terminal devices on the
              system. Your system will not encounter the login dialog
              problem if SECURE_SERVER is set with SYSGEN. The SYSGEN
              parameter that accomplishes this is TTY_DEFCHAR2. Refer to
              the OpenVMS System Management Utilities Reference Manual
              for information on setting SYSGEN parameters.

                                        Troubleshooting Procedures 11-19

 






           The system startup procedure may also set terminal
           characteristics. Since this command file executes prior
           to the printer startup file, your system will be less
           vulnerable to the login dialog problem if SECURE_SERVER is
           set for printer terminal devices within the SYSTARTUP_VMS
           file.

           DCPS$EXECUTION_QUEUE.COM (the printer execution queue
           command file) sets the SECURE_SERVER terminal characteris-
           tic for printer terminal devices by default. This file is
           provided in the software kit.

           If your printer is configured on a LAT device in a local
           area Ethernet, set the LAT port and the terminal server
           characteristics for the printer to minimize login dialog.
           Refer to the DECprint Supervisor for OpenVMS Software
           Installation Guide for LAT port characteristics.

     11.4 What to Do if Printing Is Slower than Expected

           Slower printing speeds can result from:

           o  Printing of complex ANSI jobs from applications

           o  Printing of complex PostScript jobs

           o  Occurrence of ANSI translator prologue mismatch

           o  Changing the printer password from the default (refer
              to the DECprint Supervisor for OpenVMS Software
              Installation Guide).

           Complex ANSI jobs include those that use many downloaded
           fonts on a page. These jobs always take longer to print.

           For serial printers, a 30-second delay before the printing
           of ANSI jobs indicates an ANSI prologue mismatch between
           the ANSI translator and the print job. On a serial
           printer, power cycle the printer (turn it off and then on)
           to load the appropriate prologue. The first ANSI print job
           is delayed by the loading of the prologue, but subsequent
           ANSI print jobs are printed more efficiently.

           If your printer is connected to multiple nodes running
           different versions of the printing system, power cycling
           the printer may not eliminate the 30-second delay. The
           node that connects to the printer first persistently loads
           its prologue. The other nodes must load the prologue with

     11-20 Troubleshooting Procedures

 






              every print job. To eliminate the delay in this case,
              every node should run the same version of the DECprint
              Supervisor software.

        11.5 What to Do if Layup Definition Files Are Not Found

              DECprint Supervisor software places the following sample
              layup definition files in the location specified by the
              logical name DCPS$LAYUP:

                 LPS$HOLES.LUP
                 LPS$SINGLEHOLES.LUP
                 LPS$DOUBLEHOLES.LUP
                 LPS$NUP.LUP
                 COLOR-PRINTER-FULL-PAGE.LUP
                 PROPRINTER-FULL-PAGE.LUP

              Make sure that the layup directory logical name,
              DCPS$LAYUP, points to SYS$SYSDEVICE:[SYSHLP.EXAMPLES.DCPS]
              or to the directory that contains the .LUP sample files on
              all nodes in the cluster.

        11.6 What to Do if Files Are Printed with Unexpected Results

              The DECprint Supervisor software attempts to print every
              file in every print job even if there are problems in
              the specification of print parameters and print job
              attributes. Print queues with erroneous default parameters
              can still print files, but all the print parameters are
              not effective and messages are generated indicating the
              problem, as described in Section 11.6.1.

              In cases where the file is printed using the wrong data
              type translator, the file data type has not been correctly
              determined by the DECprint Supervisor software. The
              methods for solving problems with automatic data type
              detection are described in Section 11.6.2.

        11.6.1 What to Do if Default Queue Parameters Are Not Effective

              If you enter a parameter in DCPS$STARTUP.COM incorrectly,
              print jobs sent to that print queue are printed, but the
              invalid parameter and the parameters following it are not
              applied to the print job.

                                        Troubleshooting Procedures 11-21

 






           If an invalid print parameter is included in the queue
           definition, the printing system generates an error message
           that is displayed on your screen and printed on the job
           trailer page for every print job sent to the associated
           queue. The parameters that are not processed take the
           default settings.

           In the following example, there is an extra L in the
           argument to the second parameter, PAGE_ORIENTATION.
           Therefore, the printing system ignores the second
           parameter, NUMBER_UP=2. Only the first parameter, SHEET_
           SIZE=B, is processed.

           @sys$startup:dcps$generic_queue -     ! Landscape queue
                DCPS$WIDE$PRINT -                ! P1 - Generic queue name
                TEK4014_TTB4 -                   ! P2 - /GENERIC = execution queues
                "SHEET_SIZE=B,PAGE_ORIENTATION=LLANDSCAPE,NUMBER_UP=2"
                                                 ! P3 - Default queue parameter
                                                 ! P3 - Default queue parameter

           For every print job for this queue, an error message
           similar to the following is displayed on the screen and
           printed on the job trailer page in the message section:

           10-MAR-2002 15:21 %DCPS-E-PARSYNERR, Syntax error in the /PARAMETERS
           qualifier at or near PAGE_ORIENTATION=LLANDSCAPE

     11.6.2 What to Do if a File Data Type Is Not Recognized

           If the DECprint Supervisor software fails to determine
           the data type of a print file correctly, the user can
           explicitly specify the DATA_TYPE parameter. If necessary,
           you can set up a generic queue for specific data types.
           All files printed to this queue will have the specified
           data type, unless the user explicitly specifies another
           data type using the DATA_TYPE parameter. Users can also
           specify the DATA_TYPE=AUTOMATIC parameter to explicitly
           specify automatic data type detection.

           The automatic data type feature examines the following to
           determine the data type of the file:

           1. The value of the DATA_TYPE parameter in the PRINT
              command

           2. The queue default data type specified in the DCPS$STARTUP.COM
              file

     11-22 Troubleshooting Procedures

 






              3. OpenVMS file tags (for example, DDIF stored_semantics
                 tags)

              4. The contents of the file

              5. The file extension

              If the DECprint Supervisor software cannot determine
              the file data type from these steps, the default text
              data type is used. If no default text data type has
              been defined by the user or the system manager (see
              Section 4.2.2), the file is processed as ANSI. When the
              default text data type is used, the text can precede
              PostScript; the file is printed properly. However, the
              file may not be printed properly if any more text follows
              the PostScript data. In this case, it may be necessary to
              edit the file and print the text and PostScript data as
              separate files.

              In general, though, users should not be encouraged to
              modify the contents of their files or the file extensions
              so that the data type can be determined. Instead, the
              application that generates the file may be examined and
              modified if necessary; or you can provide site-specific
              file extension files, default text data types, or generic
              queues with explicit default data types.



















                                        Troubleshooting Procedures 11-23

 









                                                                       A
        ________________________________________________________________

                                     Printing System Management Commands



              You use standard OpenVMS DCL commands to manage the
              DECprint Supervisor queues, jobs, and related system
              resources.

                ________________________Note  ________________________

                Remember that the management commands only affect
                the system on which they are issued. A network
                printer can serve other systems as well, with each
                system having its own set of queues, jobs, forms,
                etc.

                _____________________________________________________

        A.1 Overview of Management Commands

              Table A-1 lists the commands used to manage print queues,
              print jobs, and related system resouces. More information
              for these commands can be found in the OpenVMS DCL
              Dictionary.

              Table_A-1_Printing_System_Management_Commands_____________

              Command___________________Function________________________

              ASSIGN /MERGE             Removes jobs from one queue and
                                        puts them in another existing
                                        queue.

              ASSIGN /QUEUE             Assigns a logical queue to an
                                        execution queue.

              DEASSIGN /QUEUE           Deassigns a logical queue and
                                        stops the logical queue.

                                 Printing System Management Commands A-1

 






           Table_A-1_(Cont.)_Printing_System_Management_Commands_____

           Command___________________Function________________________

           DEFINE /CHARACTERISTIC    Defines a queue characteristic
                                     name and number.

           DEFINE /FORM              Defines a printer form name,
                                     number, and attributes.

           DELETE /CHARACTERISTIC    Deletes the definition of a
                                     queue characteristic.

           DELETE /ENTRY             Deletes one or more job entries
                                     from a queue.

           DELETE /FORM              Deletes the definition of a
                                     form.

           DELETE /QUEUE             Deletes a queue.

           INITIALIZE /QUEUE         Not recommended for use with the
                                     DECprint Supervisor software.

           SET ENTRY                 Changes or deletes attributes of
                                     a job that is in the queue but
                                     not currently executing.

           SET QUEUE                 Changes the status and
                                     attributes of a queue.

           SET QUEUE /ENTRY          This command has been superseded
                                     by the SET ENTRY command, which
                                     performs identical functions.
                                     Compaq recommends that you use
                                     the SET ENTRY command.

           SET QUEUE /RETAIN         Retains print jobs upon
                                     completion or termination due to
                                     an error.

           SHOW ENTRY                Display information about print
                                     jobs.

           SHOW QUEUE                Displays information about
                                     queues and jobs.

           SHOW QUEUE /CHARACTERISTICDisplays information about queue
                                     characteristic names and numbers
                                     available on a queue.

     A-2 Printing System Management Commands

 






              Table_A-1_(Cont.)_Printing_System_Management_Commands_____

              Command___________________Function________________________

              SHOW QUEUE /FORM          Displays the names and numbers
                                        of the forms defined for your
                                        system.

              START /QUEUE              Starts or restarts a queue.

              START /QUEUE /MANAGER     Starts the system job queue
                                        manager and opens the queue
                                        file.

              STOP /QUEUE               Pauses an execution queue.

              STOP /QUEUE /ABORT        Stops the executing print job,
                                        but does not stop the queue.

              STOP /QUEUE /MANAGER      Stops the system job queue
                                        manager and closes the job queue
                                        file.

              STOP /QUEUE /NEXT         Stops the queue after the
                                        current job has finished
                                        printing.

              STOP /QUEUE /REQUEUE      Stops the executing print job
                                        and requeues it to the specified
                                        queue, but does not stop the
                                        queue.

              STOP /QUEUE /RESET        Stops a queue immediately and
              __________________________returns_control_to_the_system.__

        A.2 Use of SET PRINTER with DCPS

              Because PostScript printers are controlled by the DECprint
              Supervisor software, the DCL SET PRINTER command has no
              meaning in a DECprint Supervisor environment. Print job
              characteristics for the DECprint Supervisor are set and
              displayed by other means.

              Print job characteristics for DECprint Supervisor are
              determined by:

              1. Parameters embedded in the job data

              2. Parameters passed in the /PARAMETERS qualifier of the
                 PRINT command

                                 Printing System Management Commands A-3

 






           3. DEFINE /FORM qualifiers

           4. For PrintServer printers, default parameters which are
              in the PrintServer configuration database

           5. The default queue parameters, which are defined in the
              DCPS$STARTUP.COM file

           Items 1, 2, and 3 in this list are controlled by the
           PostScript interpreter or the data syntax translator,
           depending on the type of job being processed. Item 4 is
           controlled by the PrintServer server management interface
           described in the DEC PrintServer Supporting Host Software
           for OpenVMS Management Guide.

           Table A-2 shows the SET PRINTER qualifiers and the
           equivalent control in a DECprint Supervisor printing
           system.



























     A-4 Printing System Management Commands

 






              Table A-2 SET PRINTER Qualifier Equivalents for DECprint
              __________Supervisor_Queues_______________________________

              SET PRINTER
              Qualifier_____Equivalent_Control__________________________

              /CR           Insertion of carriage return characters
                            is controlled by the current data type
                            translator.

              /FALLBACK     Translation of DIGITAL multinational
                            characters is controlled by the current
                            font. If the character does not exist in
                            the specified font, the font error character
                            prints.

              /FF           Mechanical form feeds are controlled by
                            the current data type translator or the
                            PostScript interpreter.

              /LOWERCASE    The DECprint Supervisor printer is
                            considered to be a lowercase printer. It
                            does not translate lowercase to uppercase.

              /PAGE         The number of lines printed on each page
                            is controlled by the ANSI translator
                            (ANSI files only). This characteristic is
                            available through DEFINE /FORM.

              /PASSALL      Whether the system interprets special
                            characters or forwards them as 8-bit binary
                            data is controlled by the current data type
                            translator.

              /PRINTALL     Whether the printer interprets special
                            characters or prints their 8-bit binary
                            equivalent is controlled by the current data
                            type translator.

              /TRUNCATE     Truncation of data that exceeds the
                            limitation imposed by the /WIDTH qualifier
                            is controlled by the form definition or the
                            current data type translator.

              /WIDTH        The number of characters allowed on each
                            line of the currently installed media
                            is controlled by the form definition, or
                            a combination of the current data type
                            translator and the current font.

              /WRAP         Generation of a carriage-return/line-feed
                            by the printer when it reaches the end of a
                            line PrintingoSystemyManagementdCommandsnA-5
              ______________the_current_data_type_translator.___________

 






              ________________________Note ________________________

              Not all data type translators implement the
              preceding functions in the same manner; refer to a
              translator's documentation for specific information
              about its behavior.

              _____________________________________________________





































     A-6 Printing System Management Commands

 









                                                                       B
        ________________________________________________________________

                                              Logical Names used by DCPS



              This appendix provides some information about OpenVMS
              logical names that are used by the DECprint Supervisor for
              OpenVMS software.

              Here are some guidelines for using these logical names:

              o  Any logical whose name begins with "DCPS" is only used
                 by the DECprint Supervisor for OpenVMS software. Other
                 logical names (for example, PSM$ANNOUNCE) may be used
                 by and impact other components of your OpenVMS system.

              o  You should place your desired definitions for these
                 logical names in DCPS$STARTUP.COM or in something that
                 it invokes. The startup procedure template has comments
                 about how to define some of these.

              o  Changes to some logical names have an immediate
                 effect, while changes to others take effect only
                 when a queue starts or when a DCPS symbiont process
                 is first created. The ramifications of this are
                 particularly significant if you are using multistreamed
                 DCPS symbiont processes (see Section 3.4.1.2). You
                 should assume that the symbiont reads all logical names
                 only when it is first created, thus requiring you to
                 first stop all queues and then retart them before your
                 changes can take effect.

              o  You should define the desired logical names in the
                 system table in executive mode (that is, using DEFINE
                 /SYSTEM/EXECUTIVE).

              o  In a VMScluster environment, you should define the
                 desired logical names on all nodes that utilize the
                 DCPS software. To examine logical names defined by
                 DCPS, you need to look on the node on which the DCPS
                 symbiont process is running.

                                          Logical Names used by DCPS B-1

 






           o  Additional logical names may be listed in the DECprint
              Supervisor for OpenVMS Release Notes.

           Below is a table of the logical names used by DCPS, their
           acceptable values, and a brief explanation of what they
           mean. There are also references to other sections of
           this document or other documents where you can find more
           information about the logical names.

              ________________________Note ________________________

              In the following table, qn is an abbreviation for
              the queue name.

              _____________________________________________________

     Table_B-1_DCPS_Logical_Names____________________________________

                           Acceptable
     Logical_Name__________Values_________Meanings_and_References____

     _________Logical_names_that_provide_information_to_DCPS_________

     DCPS_LIB[2]           search list    List of DCPS setup
                                          libraries and their data
                                          types; Section 7.4.2

     DCPS$DEFAULT_         <set of        System wide default text
     TRANSLATOR            transla-       data type; Section 4.2.2
                           tors>[1]

     DCPS$qn_DEFAULT_      <set of        Queue specific default text
     TRANSLATOR            transla-       data type; Section 4.2.2
                           tors>[1]

     DCPS$DEVCTL_CACHE     TRUE           Enable system wide
                                          device control caching;
                                          Section 7.11

     DCPS$qn_DEVCTL_CACHE  TRUE           Enable queue specific
                                          device control caching;
                                          Section 7.11

     [1]_<set_of_translators>_=_ANSI,_AUTOMATIC,_LIST,_PCL,__________

     POSTSCRIPT, REGIS, TEK4014, etc.
     [2] Defined with a default value in the DCPS$STARTUP.COM

     B-2 Logical Names used by DCPS

 






        Table_B-1_(Cont.)_DCPS_Logical_Names____________________________

                              Acceptable
        Logical_Name__________Values_________Meanings_and_References____

        _________Logical_names_that_provide_information_to_DCPS_________

        DCPS$qn_DEVICE_       string         Actual device name
        NAME[4]                              associated with the queue
                                             when name is too long
                                             for INITIALIZE/QUEUE
                                             /ON qualifier (and SHOW
                                             QUEUE/FULL lists "DCPS$"
                                             as the device instead);
                                             Section 3.3.2

        DCPS$_IGNORE_         TRUE           Disable unknown user
        UNKNOWN_USER                         error system wide when
                                             username not found in UAF;
                                             Section 3.4.5

        DCPS$qn_IGNORE_       TRUE           Disable unknown user
        UNKNOWN_USER                         error for a queue when
                                             username not found in UAF;
                                             Section 3.4.5

        DCPS$qn_INTERRUPT_    TRUE           Disable wait for serial
        WHEN_BUSY                            printers to be "not busy";
                                             Section 3.4.2

        DCPS$LAYUP[3]         search list    Directory where layup
                                             files are stored; DECprint
                                             Supervisor for OpenVMS
                                             Software Installation Guide

        DCPS$MAX_STREAMS      0..32          Number of queues per
                                             DCPS symbiont process;
                                             Section 3.4.1

        DCPS$qn_NO_SYNC       TRUE           Disable usual synchro-
                                             nization on printers other
                                             than PrintServer printers;
                                             Section 3.4.3

        [3]_Defined_by_DCPS$REQUIRED.COM_using_information_you_supplied_

        during the DCPS installation
        [4] Defined by DCPS$EXECUTION_QUEUE.COM

                                          Logical Names used by DCPS B-3

 






     Table_B-1_(Cont.)_DCPS_Logical_Names____________________________

                           Acceptable
     Logical_Name__________Values_________Meanings_and_References____

     _________Logical_names_that_provide_information_to_DCPS_________

     DCPS$qn_OLD_ANSI_     TRUE           Use old (pre-V1.1a)
     PAGE_SIZES                           vertical spacing for A4
                                          size in ANSI translator;
                                          Section 3.4.6

     DCPS$qn_PARAMETER[4]  string         Default queue parameters;
                                          Section 3.3.4

     DCPS$PURGE_TIME       delta time     Time to wait before purging
                                          working set; Section 3.4.4

     DCPS$qn_SEPARATOR_    number         Tray number to take job
     TRAY                                 burst and flag pages from;
                                          Section 6.2.3

     DCPS$qn_STALL_TIME    delta time     Timeout before declaring
                                          a printer stalled;
                                          Section 5.12

     DCPS$qn_SUPPRESS_     TRUE           Disable printing of job
     JOBTRAILER                           trailer; Section 6.2.2

     PSM$ANNOUNCE          string         String which prints
                                          on separator pages;
                                          Section 6.4

     ________________________________________________________________
     _________Logical_names_that_return_information_from_DCPS________

     DCPS$qn_PID                          Process ID of DCPS symbiont
                                          controlling the queue;
                                          Section 5.8

     DCPS$qn_STALLED                      Reason for queue being
                                          stalled; Section 5.12

     DCPS$VERSION                         DCPS software version
                                          running on the system;
                                          DCPS Version
     [4]_Defined_by_DCPS$EXECUTION_QUEUE.COM_________________________

     ________________________________________________________________

     B-4 Logical Names used by DCPS

 









                                                                       C
        ________________________________________________________________

                                          Downloading and Deleting Fonts



              You may be able to use the SYS$COMMON:[SYSHLP.EXAMPLES.DCPS]FONT_
              DOWNLOADER.COM command procedure to list, download, and
              delete fonts on the optional hard drive on a printer.
              The procedure is known to work with the DEClaser 5100 and
              LN17ps printers, and may work with other printers as well.

              To use the procedure, invoke it and follow the prompts
              that it gives you.



























                                      Downloading and Deleting Fonts C-1

 









                                                                       D
        ________________________________________________________________

               DECprint Supervisor (DCPS) and DECprint Printing Services
                                                          Software (CPS)



              This appendix explains the differences between the
              DECprint Supervisor software and the DECprint Printing
              Services software, and their ability to coexist. "DCPS"
              refers to the DECprint Supervisor for OpenVMS product;
              "CPS" refers to the DECprint Printing Services product.

        D.1 DCPS/CPS Coexistence

              DCPS software can coexist on the same system with CPS
              Version 4.0 or Version 4.1 software. The installation
              of DCPS software does not delete or modify components of
              CPS software. You may continue to run both products on
              the same system, or you may migrate the existing queue
              structure from the CPS product to the DCPS product.

        D.2 Printer Support

        D.3 Upgrading from CPS to DCPS

              If you are upgrading from CPS to DCPS, convert your
              CPS$STARTUP.COM file as follows:

              1. Enter the following command:

                 $ @SYS$STARTUP:CPS_TO_DCPS_STARTUP

              2. Answer the questions displayed on your screen. For
                 example:

                 Enter filename of CPS startup file to be converted;
                 Default filename is SYS$SYSROOT:[SYS$STARTUP]CPS$STARTUP.COM
                     [default]:

                 disk$manager:[cps_conversion]cps$startup.com

                 Enter filename of DCPS startup file to be created;
                 Default filename is SYS$SYSROOT:[SYS$STARTUP]DCPS$STARTUP.COM [default]:

 Supervisor     (DCPS) and DECprint Printing Services Software (CPS) D-1

 






              disk$manager:[cps_conversion]dcps$startup.com

              Please read or run DIFFERENCES on the output file,
                      DISK$MANAGER:[CPS_CONVERSION]DCPS$STARTUP.COM,
              to be sure the new file meets your needs.

           The procedure creates a startup file that DECprint
           Supervisor recognizes, but does not change your existing
           queue definitions. If you need to add new queues, see
           Section 3.3

           DCPS has an automatic data type detection feature.
           Therefore, you no longer need to specify the data type
           as a queue default or in the PRINT command.

           If you defined generic queues for default data types, edit
           DCPS$STARTUP.COM and remove them.

     D.4 DCPS$ Prefix

           All file names, logical names, and messages for the DCPS
           product start with the DCPS$ prefix. This ensures that you
           can continue to use CPS software to drive some queues, and
           add the DCPS software to drive others. The default OpenVMS
           form is DCPS$DEFAULT.

           Certain files, however, are considered system resources,
           and are shared between the DCPS and CPS products, and
           possibly other products. These shared resources are:

           o  CPS$ANSI_FONTS.TLB

              This is the library containing downloadable fonts that
              emulate LN03 or DEClaser font cartridges.

           o  Data type translators

              The DCPS product installs its translators using the
              same directory and file name structure that the CPS
              product used.

           Secondary messages (those generated by other facilities
           such as RMS, and passed along by the DCPS product) retain
           the code of the facility that originated the message.

     D-2 DECprint Supervisor (DCPS) and DECprint Printing Services Software (CPS)

 






        D.5 Startup File Converter

              The conversion tool, CPS_TO_DCPS_STARTUP.COM, converts
              the startup file for the CPS software so that it uses the
              names from the DCPS product. This tool is described in
              Section 3.2.

              The following table lists the CPS_Name and the correspond-
              ing DCPS_Name conversions.

              __________________________________________________________
              CPS_Name___________________DCPS_Name______________________

              CPS$STARTUP                DCPS$STARTUP

              CPS$EXECUTION_QUEUE        DCPS$EXECUTION_QUEUE

              CPS$REQUIRED               DCPS$REQUIRED

              CPS$GENERIC                DCPS$GENERIC

              CPS_LIB                    DCPS_LIB

              CPS$DEVCTL                 DCPS$DEVCTL

              LPS$queuename_PARAMETER    DCPS$queuename_PARAMETER

              CPS$queuename_STALL_TIME   DCPS$queuename_STALL_TIME

              LPS$LAYUP                  DCPS$LAYUP

              DECprint Printing          DECprint Supervisor
              Services__________________________________________________

              The conversion tool does not change queue names or the
              structure of the queues.

        D.6 Eliminating Generic Queues

              DCPS software has the ability to automatically detect data
              types, so you may be able to reduce the number of generic
              queues or eliminate them altogether. Refer to Chapter 4
              for more information on automatic data type detection.

        D.7 Page Scaling

              The DCPS product can scale the logical page image to
              fit the output sheet if the job provides the following
              parameters:

              PAGE_SIZE=p,SHEET_SIZE=s

              Note that p and s are different values.

 Supervisor     (DCPS) and DECprint Printing Services Software (CPS) D-3

 






           The job assumes the parameter NUMBER_UP=1. With CPS, it
           was necessary to explicitly provide a NUMBER_UP parameter
           in order to trigger page scaling.

     D.8 Layup for PS Level 2 Printers & Layup Fixes

           The DCPS software layup facility supports PostScript Level
           2 operators when connected to printers that implement
           PostScript Level 2. It also fixes or extends support for
           several Level 1 operators.

           Level 1 PostScript programs produced by Macintosh and
           PC applications generally print better with the DCPS
           product than they did with the CPS product. Problems with
           CorelDraw and Macintosh programs have been fixed.

     D.9 Layup Options on PRINT Command Line

           With DCPS software, you can provide layup options directly
           with the LAYUP_DEFINITIONS parameter, or you can record
           those options in a .LUP file and provide that file name
           with the parameter. Providing the layup options on the
           PRINT command makes it possible to pass them with jobs to
           be printed on another system via the Distributed Queuing
           Services product. CPS V4.1 software offers only the .LUP
           file option.

           See the DECprint Supervisor for OpenVMS User's Guide
           for information on expressing layup options in a layup
           definition file or as a PRINT parameter.

     D.10 Page Sizes

           In the CPS V4.1 product, the following page sizes did not
           exist or were not correctly interpreted. The DCPS product
           defines and interprets these correctly.

              A6
              C
              D
              7x9
              7_envelope
              10x14
              11x14
              PostCard

     D-4 DECprint Supervisor (DCPS) and DECprint Printing Services Software (CPS)

 






        D.11 Selecting Separator Pages from Alternate Tray

              To select job separator pages from an alternate tray using
              the DCPS software, define the following system logical:

              $ DEFINE /EXECUTIVE_MODE /SYSTEM DCPS$queuename_SEPARATOR_TRAY number

              Note that number is a valid tray number for the printer
              served by that queue, and is printer-specific. Refer to
              your printer documentation to obtain the correct value.

        D.12 Stopping Unreachable PrintServer

              If the operator issues STOP/QUEUE/RESET, and the queue
              is connected to a DIGITAL PrintServer printer that is
              unreachable, the queue stops properly. This was not always
              the case with the CPS V4.1 software.

        D.13 Overwriting First Line

              In the CPS V4.1 product, the top line was overwritten if
              the record started with a form feed. This works correctly
              in the DCPS software.

        D.14 Stall Timeouts

              The CPS V4.1 software did not start the stall timer for
              directly-connected serial printers. The DCPS software
              starts the timer.

              In the CPS V4.1 product, the default timeout for a stall
              message was one minute. This frequently resulted in "queue
              stalled" messages when the printer was processing a
              compute-intensive page (and was not really stalled at
              all). In the DCPS product, the stall timeout is four
              minutes.

        D.15 Requeuing a Job

              When a network error occurred while connecting to a
              printer, the CPS V4.1 software would requeue the job with
              the /HOLD attribute. The DCPS software requeues it without
              the /HOLD attribute.


 Supervisor     (DCPS) and DECprint Printing Services Software (CPS) D-5

 






     D.16 Reading Stream Files

           If a PostScript file has a record attribute of STREAM,
           STREAM_LF, or STREAM_CR, it is read in head1 mode. This
           allows the DCPS software to print very long stream records
           that the CPS software cannot print. Files of this type are
           sometimes written by PC communications programs.

     D.17 Copies Start on New Sheets

           When /COPIES=n is requested, and n is more than one,
           each copy starts on a new sheet, even when printing
           with NUMBER_UP or SIDES=2. This was not the case with
           PostScript jobs in the CPS V4.1 product.

     D.18 Generic Queues Restarted

           On shutdown, OpenVMS stops execution queues but not
           generic queues. As a result, when the system starts up
           again, the generic queues begin running even though they
           may have the wrong characteristics. When you start up
           generic queues in the CPS V4.1 product, you get warning
           messages saying that the queues are already running (as of
           OpenVMS V5.5). When the DCPS software starts up generic
           queues, it stops and then restarts those that are already
           running.

     D.19 Proprinter Translator

           The DCPS software contains a new Proprinter-to-PostScript
           translator not available in the CPS product. For general
           information on using the PROPRINTER data type, see the
           DECprint Supervisor for OpenVMS User's Guide.

     D.20 DCPS and PATHWORKS Libraries

           PATHWORKS for OpenVMS (Macintosh) creates its own device
           control library, MSAP$DEVCTL.TLB, and also puts its
           modules into the CPS library if there is one. It does
           not put them in the DCPS library. To rectify this, define
           DCPS_LIB as a search list that points to both the DCPS and
           PATHWORKS libraries. An example in DCPS$STARTUP.TEMPLATE
           shows how to do this.


     D-6 DECprint Supervisor (DCPS) and DECprint Printing Services Software (CPS)

 






        D.21 Printing with Macintosh and PC Files

              The DCPS software contains a new PostScript example file
              to improve printing of Macintosh and PC files on DIGITAL
              PrintServer printers.

        D.22 Improved Color Function for Colormate PS

              The color transfer function of the Colormate PS has
              been changed to avoid the problems of gray scale images
              that are muddy or brown, and natural images with poor
              flesh tones. The Colormate PS now runs prints with a new
              default color transfer function to provide better gray
              scale images and natural flesh tones. Consequently, you
              may notice the following changes when you print on the
              Colormate PS:

              o  Graphic images may not seem as brilliant.

              o  Grays will be accurately rendered as gray and not
                 brown.

              o  Some pictures may appear to have less yellow and/or
                 more blue in them.

        D.23 Printing Security Messages

              The DCPS product provides a new example file:

              SYS$COMMON:[SYSHLP.EXAMPLES.DCPS]CONFIDENTIAL.PS

              This file shows how to redefine the showpage operator to
              write "Confidential" at the top and bottom of each page as
              an overlay (that is, after the contents of the page have
              been imaged).










 Supervisor     (DCPS) and DECprint Printing Services Software (CPS) D-7

 









                                                                       E
        ________________________________________________________________

                                       Ordering Additional Documentation



              This appendix lists Compaq software documents and
              documentation kits associated with PostScript printers,
              and their respective order numbers.

        E.1 DECprint Supervisor (DCPS) for OpenVMS

              o  Hardcopy documentation (order number: QA-09NAA-GZ)

                    Software Installation Guide
                    System Manager's Guide
                    User's Guide

              o  CD-ROM documentation and software (order number: QA-
                 09NAB-H8)

                 -  Software

                       DECprint Supervisor (DCPS) for OpenVMS Alpha V2.1
                       DECprint Supervisor (DCPS) for OpenVMS VAX V2.1

                 -  Documentation

                       Release Notes
                       Software Installation Guide
                       Software Product Description (SPD)
                       System Manager's Guide
                       User's Guide

                    Documentation is provided in the following formats:

                       Bookreader
                       HTML (Hypertext Markup Language)
                       PDF (Acrobat Portable Document Format)
                       PS (PostScript)
                       Text

                                   Ordering Additional Documentation E-1

 






     E.2 PostScript Programming

           o  PostScript Language Reference Manual, Second Edition
              [*]
              (order number: AA-HL87A-TE)

           o  PostScript Language Tutorial and Cookbook
              (order number: AA-HL87A-TE)

           o  PrintServer Printers PostScript Level 2 Programmer's
              Supplement
              (order number: EK-PRTPL-PS)

           o  PostScript Printers Programmer's Supplement
              (order number: AA-HL84G-TE)

     E.3 DIGITAL ANSI-Compliant Level 3 Printing Protocol

           Documentation (order number: EK-PPLV3-DK)

           o  DIGITAL ANSI-Compliant Printing Protocol Level 3
              Programming Reference Manual
              (order number: EK-PPLV3-PM)

           o  DIGITAL ANSI-Compliant Printing Protocol Level 3
              Programming Supplement
              (order number: EK-PPLV3-PS)

     E.4 PrintServer Software












           ___________________

           [*]Third  Edition available from Adobe Systems Incorporated

     E-2 Ordering Additional Documentation

 





              __________________________________________________________
              Software
              Document_________Part_Number______________________________

              DIGITAL UNIX     QA-0V9AJ-GZ

              HP-UX            QA-0V9AD-GZ

              IBM-AIX          QA-0V9AE-GZ

              IRIX             QA-0V9AQ-GZ

              OpenVMS          QA-0V9AA-GZ

              Solaris          QA-0V9AK-GZ

              SunOS            QA-0V9AC-GZ

              ULTRIX           QA-0V9AB-GZ

              Windows__________QA-0V9AH-GZ______________________________

























                                   Ordering Additional Documentation E-3

 













     ________________________________________________________________

                                                                Index



     A__________________________          C__________________________

     Accounting fields                    Changing the character set
       filled with zeros by job             for PCL and Proprinter
         controller,  9-4                   files,  7-11
       left blank by job                  Character sets, changing
         controller,  9-3                   for PCL and Proprinter
       supplied by DECprint                 files,  7-11
         Supervisor,  9-1                 Commands
       supplied by job                     See Print queue commands
         controller,  9-2                  DELETE/ENTRY,  5-2
     Accounting utility,  9-1              SET ENTRY,  5-5
     Automatic data type                   SHOW ENTRY,  5-1
        detection                          SHOW QUEUE,  5-1, 5-5
       overview, 1-3                       START/QUEUE,  5-7
       solving problems with,              START/QUEUE/MANAGER,  5-10
         11-22                             STOP/QUEUE/MANAGER,  5-10
       specifying a default text          Conventions, xiv
         data type for,  4-3              Converting queues from

                                            DECprint Printing
     B__________________________            Services,  3-1

     Baud rate limitations,               CPAP

        2-10                               Also see TCP/IP
     Bi-directional                        definition of,  3-6
        communication                      specifying network
       requirement for, 2-2                   address,  3-8
     Burst page,  6-1                     CPS software
                                           See DECprint Printing
                                              Services,  D-1
                                          Custom setup modules, 7-8

                                                              Index-1

 






                                          Documentation
     D__________________________           Compaq/DIGITAL PostScript

     Data type detection,  1-3                printers,  E-1

     DCPS$DEFAULT form,  8-6
     DCPS$STARTUP.COM                     E__________________________
       creating, 3-1                      Error messages
       specifying the device               for LAT connected
         name in,  3-7                        printers,  11-16
     DEClaser font emulation,             Error page, 6-8
        7-15                              Ethernet use, serial
     DECnet                                 printers,  2-2
       specifying PrintServer             Execution queues, 3-1
         network address,  3-8             specifying printer device
     DECprint Printing Services,              name in,  3-7
        D-1                               Extended File
     DECprint Printing Services,            Specifications,  6-8
        converting from, 3-1
     DECprint Supervisor                  F__________________________
       features, 1-1                      File burst page
       software overview, 1-3              specifying,  6-7
     Default form,  8-6                   File error page, 6-8
     Default queue                        File flag page
       parameters, 3-10                    specifying,  6-7
          syntax errors handling          File separation pages
            ,  11-21                       specifying,  6-7
          syntax for, 3-9                 File trailer page
       qualifiers, 3-11                    specifying,  6-7
     Default text data type,              Flag page, 6-1
        4-3                               Font cartridge emulation,
     Defining                               7-15
       print queue qualifiers,            Fonts
         3-11                              downloading and deleting,
     DELETE/ENTRY command,  5-2               C-1
     DELETE/FORM command,  8-5            /FORM qualifier
     Deleting                              with DELETE,  8-5
       forms, 8-5                          with SET/QUEUE,  8-2
       print jobs, 5-2                     with START/QUEUE,  8-2
     Device control library,              Forms
        1-5, 7-1                           associating with queues,
     Device name, specifying in               8-2
        DCPS$STARTUP.COM, 3-7              default,  8-6
     Displaying                            deleting,  8-5
       print job status, 5-1
       queues, 5-5

     Index-2

 






                                            Log page,  6-1
        G__________________________         LPD, not supported,  3-6
        Generic queues, 3-18                LPS$$UNRECOGNIZED,  7-17

         defining,  3-18
                                            M__________________________

        H__________________________         Messages
        Hardware requirements                 network error,  11-16
         other printers,  2-2               Modifying
                                              DCPS symbiont behavior,
        I__________________________              3-13
        IP_CPAP                               execution queue behavior,
                                                 3-13
         See CPAP                             print job attributes,  5-5

        IP_RAWTCP                             queues,  3-20
         See Raw TCP/IP                     Multistreamed symbiont
                                               process
        J__________________________           changing DCPS environment
        Job burst page                           with, 3-14
         specifying,  6-2                     running DCPS as,  3-13

        Job flag page                       N
         specifying,  6-2                   ___________________________
        Job log page                        Network printers
         description of,  6-8                 troubleshooting,  11-11
         specifying,  6-8
        Job not printing, 11-4              O__________________________
        Job trailer page                    ODS-5 Volumes
         specifying,  6-2                     printing files on,  6-8

        L                                   OPCOM messages,  11-1
        ___________________________         Other printers
        LAT                                   hardware requirements,
         port characteristics                    2-2
            required for printing,
            2-5                             P__________________________
         terminal server,  2-4              Page counters, mechanical,
        LAT protocol file, editing             9-5
          the,  2-7                         PCL files
        LAT startup file, 2-4                 changing character set
        Library search list for                  for, 7-11
          setup modules,  7-5               Persistent resources,
        Login dialog, reducing for             loading, 7-9
          serial printers,  11-19

                                                                 Index-3

 






     Port characteristics,  2-5           Print queues (cont'd)
     Postinstallation                      interrupting busy
        requirements                          printers when job
       for PrintServer printers,              starts,  3-16
         2-14                              parameters
     PRINT command,  1-4                      default,  3-10
       /BURST qualifier, 6-7                  syntax,  3-9
       /FLAG qualifier, 6-7                   syntax errors,  11-21
       MESSAGES parameter, 6-8             qualifiers,  3-11
       /TRAILER qualifier, 6-7             running DCPS as a
     Printer documentation,  E-1              multistreamed process,
     Printer name, setting,                   3-13
        2-13                               running multistreamed,
     Printers                                 3-14
       troubleshooting newly               stalled,  5-9
         installed,  11-5                  starting,  5-7
     Printers, serial use on               suppressing PostScript
        Ethernet, 2-2                         synchronization when a
     Printer-specific                         job starts,  3-16
        information, 10-1                  suppressing the OPCOM
     Printer startup file                     message USERNOTFOUND,
       defining execution queues              3-17
         in,  3-1                          testing the printing
       defining generic queues                system,  3-21
         in,  3-18                         types of,  3-1
     Printing system management           PrintServer printers
        commands, A-1                      postinstallation
     Print job attributes,                    requirements,  2-14
        changing, 5-5                      specifying DECnet network
     Print jobs                               address,  3-8
       characteristics, A-3                specifying TCP/IP network
       deleting, 5-2                          address,  3-8
       holding, 5-3                        troubleshooting
       printer state is unknown,              procedures for,  11-4
         5-7                              Print symbiont
       releasing, 5-3                      device control library
     Print queues                             for,  1-5
       commands, A-1                      Proprinter files
       customizing execution               changing character set
         queue behavior,  3-13                for,  7-11
       displaying, 5-5                    PSM$ANNOUNCE, 6-7
       execution, 3-1
       generic, 3-18


     Index-4

 







        Q__________________________         S__________________________

        Qualifiers, print queue,            Search list for device
          3-11                                 control libraries, 7-5
        Queue                               Separation pages
         See Print queue                      adding system message to,
        Queue logical names, 11-9                6-7
        Queue manager                         definition of,  6-1
         starting,  5-10                      enabling for file,  6-7
         stopping,  5-10                      enabling for job,  6-2
        Queue parameters                    Serial printers
         default,  3-9                        eliminating login dialog
         defaulting order of,  3-10              on, 11-19
         redefining,  3-9                   Serial printers, on
         syntax for,  3-9                      Ethernet, 2-2
        Queue structure                     SET ENTRY command,  5-5
         of execution queues,               SET ENTRY/HOLD command,
            defining,  3-1                     5-3
         of generic queues,                 SET ENTRY/RELEASE command,
            defining,  3-18                    5-3
                                            SET PRINTER,  A-3
        R__________________________         Setup modules,  7-8
        Raw TCP/IP                            customized,  7-8
                                            SHOW ENTRY command,  5-1
         Also see TCP/IP                    SHOW QUEUE command,  5-1,
         definition of,  3-6                   5-5
         specifying network                 Stalled print queue,  5-9
            address,  3-6                   Starting
         specifying TCP port                  print queues,  5-7
            number,  3-6                      queue manager,  5-10
        Raw TCP/IP printers                 START/QUEUE command,  5-7
         troubleshooting                    START/QUEUE/MANAGER command
            procedures for,  11-1              , 5-10
        Requirements                        Startup file, creating,
         for PrintServer printers              3-1
            on TCP/IP,  2-14                Stopping
        Resources                             queue manager,  5-10
         persistently loading,  7-9         STOP/QUEUE/MANAGER command,

                                               5-10
                                            Supported printers
                                              using,  2-11
                                            Symbiont,  1-4

                                                                 Index-5

 






     System startup file,                  for jobs not printing,
        editing the, 3-20                     11-1
                                           for newly installed
     T__________________________              printers,  11-5
     TCP/IP                                for PrintServer printers,
       Also see CPAP                          11-4
       Also see Raw TCP/IP                 for queue default
       requirements, 2-14                     parameters,  11-21
     Telnet, not supported,  3-6           for Raw TCP/IP printers,
     Text data type default,                  11-1
        4-3                                for slow printing,  11-20
     Third-party printers                  for stopped printers,
       unsupported, 7-17                      11-10
     Trailer page,  6-1                    when jobs are not
     Translators,  1-5                        printing,  11-4
     Troubleshooting procedures            when layup definition
       for a printer in a                     files are not found,
         network environment,                 11-21

         11-11                            U
       for incorrectly                    ___________________________
         translated files,                Unrecognized printers,
         11-22                              7-17
                                          Unsupported printers, 7-17





















     Index-6
