
DOCUSP 3.6.xx
XEROX DOCUMENT SERVICES PLATFORM SERIES 1-3
GETTING STARTED
the stock from a specific tray regardless of the paper
stock attributes of the stock in the tray.
vEnforce Unique Names forces the customer to
create new names for a new stock. Some printing
environments, especially the color printers, prefer to
be able to use duplicate stock names for stock
grouping and characterization.
vAllow Duplicate Names allows the user to create
multiple stocks with the same or similar name. In
the creation of the duplicate name, the customer
can select to automatically generate the name
extension, thus adding a !1, !2 to the duplicate stock
name, or manually generate the name extension
allowing the customer to determine the extension.
vUnspecified stock behavior has been more clearly
defined for each printer type.
vQueue Manager:
vThe Queue Manager provides a new option to allow the
customer to feed stock from a specific tray as an
alternative to specifying the paper stock by stock
parameters. This option performs an override to the job
properties for paper stock for all job pages and
administration pages.
vThe outQ size limit has been extended to scale with the size
of the internal hard drive of the DocuSP controller. This
allows for a very large outQ, which will allow processing of
very large jobs.
vThe size of the banner page message field has been
expanded.
vThe pages to print range has been expanded to 999,999.
vThe maximum total number of exception pages, covers, and
inserts has been set at 1000 per job.
vSNMP enhancements:
vMore complete SNMP support is now available,
including many of the printer engine level features can
now be communicated to the SNMP managers. The
exact list of available features is dependent upon the
match between the SNMP manager and the DocuSP
functions.
vThe SNMP gateway now requires a license to be
enabled on the DocuSP controller.
vThe SNMP gateway can be switched on or off by the
System Administrator or Trusted User in the Gateways,
SNMP setup tab. This switch allows the gateway to be
disabled as necessary for security reasons.