22-9 Fiery on a NetWare networkTips for experts—IPX networksSetting up the Fiery is similar to setting up any other PostScript printer onthe network.The Fiery with IPX connections has the following characteristics:• A minimum connection to the Fiery consists of a NetWare file server, a NetWare printserver, and a NetWare queue.• A single directory tree and up to eight bindery servers can be configuredsimultaneously.• The Fiery looks for print jobs on one NetWare print server per bindery server.• Each print server can store jobs for any print connection on the Fiery.Overview of IPX printing to the FieryNetWare file servers support the creation of print queues, which are storage areas forprint jobs. When a client on a remote computer decides to print, the job is directed toa print queue on the NetWare file server and spooled to the NetWare server disk,freeing up the client workstation.You must give the NetWare queue names a specific extension corresponding to theFiery print connection, as follows:_print_hold_directN OTE : These extension names must be in English and in all lowercase letters.You do not need to rerun Setup when you add or remove a NetWare queue; however,you should restart the Fiery after you create or remove a queue.When the Fiery is configured to connect to a NetWare server, it polls the NetWareserver for jobs in each of its queues. If jobs are found, they are automatically transferredover the network to the matching connection on the Fiery. For example, jobs from the