07-03-2013
I made the printer print another network settings page and discovered it had magically acquired a legitimate IP address. Possibly it reports an address of 0.0.0.0 when the network cable is not connected. It was then possible to set the address to what was needed with a browser and the printer is working on the network now.
The Lexmark IP utility is for Bill Gates' cancerous, virus-infested scourge of the Earth excuse for an OS which I don't use. Lexmark tech support suggested resetting the printer to factory defaults but I don't need to try this now.
Thanks for the help!
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PAP(8) System Manager's Manual PAP(8)
NAME
pap - download files to or communicate interactively with an AppleTalk network connected printer
SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/pap [ -d ] [ -p printer ] [ -s statusfile ] [ files ]
DESCRIPTION
pap is used to connect and send files to an AppleTalk connected printer using the Apple Printer Access Protocol (PAP). pap can also be
used to conduct an interactive session with a PostScript printer. When pap starts execution, it first tries obtain the status of the
printer. It then tries to open a session with the printer using PAP, and then downloads the files to the printer.
If no files are given on the command line, pap begins reading from standard input.
If no printer is specified on the command line, pap looks for a file called .paprc in the current directory and reads it to obtain the name
of a printer. The .paprc file should contain a single line of the form object:type@zone where each of object, :type, and @zone are
optional. type and zone must be proceeded by `:' and `@' respectively. Lines the begin with a `#' are ignored. type and zone default to
LaserWriter and the zone of the local host, respectively.
Note that pap is designed to be useful as a communication filter for sending lpd(8) spooled print jobs to AppleTalk connected printers.
See psf(8) for hints on how to use it this way.
OPTIONS
-p printer
Connect to the printer named printer (do not consult the .paprc file to find a printer name). The syntax for printer is the same as
discussed above for the .paprc file.
-s statusfile
Update the file called statusfile to contain the most recent status message from the printer. pap gets the status from the printer
when it is waiting for the printer to process input. The statusfile will contain a single line terminated with a newline. This is
useful when pap is invoked by lpd(8) within lpd's spool directory.
-c
Take cuts. The PAP protocol specified a simple queuing procedure, such that the clients tell the printer how long they've been
waiting to print. This option causes pap to lie about how long it's been waiting.
-e
Send stdout to stderr. This causes information that the printer returns to be recorded as error output for lpd.
-E
Don't wait for EOF from the printer. This option is useful for printers which don't implement PAP correctly. In a correct imple-
mentation, the client side should wait for the printer to return EOF before closing the connection. Some clients don't wait, and
hence some printers have related bugs in their implementation.
-w
Wait for the printer's status to contain the word "waiting" before sending the job. This is to defeat printer-side spool available
on HP IV and V printers.
FILES
.paprc file that contains printer name
~/.paprc secondary file to look in for printer name
SEE ALSO
nbp(1), pap(4), lpd(8), papstatus(8), psf(8).
BUGS
pap will send a quit command to exit interactive mode when it gets an end-of-file on a tty. If the user has already typed quit themselves,
the quit that pap sends is spurious and will cause a PostScript error. The fix would be for pap to watch what the user types and look for
quit, but this is impractical.
netatalk 1.2 13 Dec 1991 PAP(8)