H
Hugh
Printer sharing within the home network:
There are printer-server routers in the market such as Netgear FR114P.
Such a router has a parallel-port interface for a parallel printer.
The router itself is the printer server in this configuration.
Because the printer is connected to the server through the
old-style parallel interface, I do not expect that the speed is
really up to the level of the USB connection.
Now, if the printer has the ethernet interface, I wish
I could use this interface hooked directly to one
of the available RJ45 ports in the router.
Then, as far as I understand, the printer should
be assigned an IP number through bootp or DHCP.
I hope that one of the router itself can do the
job of a DHCP server or a bootp server.
That way, the setup will become straight-forward.
Is my scenario all correct?
Does anyone know a howto document for this
circumstance?
Thanks
Hugh
There are printer-server routers in the market such as Netgear FR114P.
Such a router has a parallel-port interface for a parallel printer.
The router itself is the printer server in this configuration.
Because the printer is connected to the server through the
old-style parallel interface, I do not expect that the speed is
really up to the level of the USB connection.
Now, if the printer has the ethernet interface, I wish
I could use this interface hooked directly to one
of the available RJ45 ports in the router.
Then, as far as I understand, the printer should
be assigned an IP number through bootp or DHCP.
I hope that one of the router itself can do the
job of a DHCP server or a bootp server.
That way, the setup will become straight-forward.
Is my scenario all correct?
Does anyone know a howto document for this
circumstance?
Thanks
Hugh