Novell iPrint lets Linux, Macintosh, and Windows users
Quickly locate network printers using their Web browser.
Easily install and configure a located printer using their native printer installation method.
Print to installed printers from any location (including the Web) using an IP connection.
The information in this section provides a high-level overview of Novell iPrint print services. It is designed to acquaint you with basic iPrint functionality so you will understand
The configuration steps you need to perform to provide iPrint print services.
How iPrint functions from the user’s perspective.
If you already know that you want to provide OES print services for your users and you understand how iPrint works, skip the overviews and continue with Section 36.2, Planning for Print Services.
If you want to learn more about iPrint, continue with this overview section.
A Novell iPrint installation consists of various components, most of which are represented by objects in your eDirectory™ tree:
Print Driver Store (Linux): This is a repository that stores the drivers on an OES Linux server for your network printers. It is the first component you configure and is represented by an eDirectory object that you create.
Print Broker (NetWare): This is a repository that stores the drivers on an OES NetWare® server for your network printers. It is the first component you configure and is represented by an eDirectory object that you create.
Printer Drivers: These are the platform-specific printer drivers and PostScript* Printer Description (PPD) files that are stored in the Driver Store or Broker and are installed on workstations when users select a target printer. Printer drivers and PPD files exist as file structures within the Driver Store and Broker and are not represented by objects in eDirectory.
Printer Objects: These are eDirectory objects you create that store information about the printers available through iPrint. The information stored in an object is used each time its associated printer is added to a workstation’s list of available printers.
Print Manager: This is a daemon that runs on OES Linux or an NLM™ that runs on the OES NetWare server. It receives print jobs from users and forwards them to the target printer when it is ready. It is represented by and controlled through an eDirectory object that you can configure.
iPrint Client: This is a set of browser plug-ins. On Macintosh and Windows workstations it is automatically installed the first time it interacts with iPrint. On Linux workstations, it must be installed manually. The client is required on each platform to navigate through the iPrint Web pages, select a target printer, and install the print driver.
For more information on iPrint, see
Print Services
in the OES online documentation.
Figure 36-1 describes how iPrint functions from a user workstation perspective.
Figure 36-1 How iPrint Works
The following table explains the information illustrated in Figure 36-1.