2003 network sp3, 2GB ram, 140GB HDD, dedicated IBM printserver running a range of xp, vista and w7 machines printing to 5 canon ir 5030i advance machines. When printing word or eexcel docs one of the xp machines seems to freeze the spooler, no error messge just a backlog of jobs in the queue.Then today another machine a w7, froze the spooler. I had to log in to the printserver delete the queue, and restart the spooler. This has happened 3 times now, any help would be really really appreciated. This is a new installation and the customer is livid!
2003 spooler freezing
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At first glance, I would say there is a problem with the OS on the IBM, simple corruption with the software itself regarding the spooler. Would not be the first time Windows failed on this level.
Is the IBM primarily meant only to act as a print server, or does it play a role on the network as a domain control role, and you merely have the drivers for the printers installed and shared? In other words, do you need the IBM to allow the work stations on the network to print to the Cannons?
If it is a print server, then try reinstalling the OS to "fix"."Many years ago I chased a woman for almost two years, only to discover that her tastes were exactly like mine: we both were crazy about girls."
---Groucho Marx
Please do not PM me for questions related to Konica Minolta hardware.
I will not answer requests or questions there.
Please ask in the KM forum for the benefit of others to see the question and give their input.
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I'll second that recommendation of Stirton's, reinstall the OS is a good place to start.
Did they have zero issues before, and this just started? Try switching drivers, PCL or UFRII. If they were willing you could try isolating it more. Setup the problem workstations as local printers. You can try deleting all the print drivers, use the Canon uninstall utility or Kyrocera Mita's Undelete utility to wipe all the drivers and their associated files off, then install the drivers again, but even after all that you could still wind up reinstalling the OS.
In my experience if it is your print driver or specific files conflicting with the driver it will seem obvious and consistent. Changing from PCL to UFRII or UFRII to PCL will usually make a difference. Otherwise if it is too random to tell or can't be isolated, the workstations/server could be locking up from other issues such as viruses/Spyware/Malware/corrupt software and printing just happens to be a trigger.Comment
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At first glance, I would say there is a problem with the OS on the IBM, simple corruption with the software itself regarding the spooler. Would not be the first time Windows failed on this level.
Is the IBM primarily meant only to act as a print server, or does it play a role on the network as a domain control role, and you merely have the drivers for the printers installed and shared? In other words, do you need the IBM to allow the work stations on the network to print to the Cannons?
If it is a print server, then try reinstalling the OS to "fix".Grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change.Comment
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I'll second that recommendation of Stirton's, reinstall the OS is a good place to start.
Did they have zero issues before, and this just started? Try switching drivers, PCL or UFRII. If they were willing you could try isolating it more. Setup the problem workstations as local printers. You can try deleting all the print drivers, use the Canon uninstall utility or Kyrocera Mita's Undelete utility to wipe all the drivers and their associated files off, then install the drivers again, but even after all that you could still wind up reinstalling the OS.
In my experience if it is your print driver or specific files conflicting with the driver it will seem obvious and consistent. Changing from PCL to UFRII or UFRII to PCL will usually make a difference. Otherwise if it is too random to tell or can't be isolated, the workstations/server could be locking up from other issues such as viruses/Spyware/Malware/corrupt software and printing just happens to be a trigger.Grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change.Comment
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The only time I have seen this is with large jobs and a "compatible" driver, i.e. using an hp 32 bit driver on a 64 bit system to a Toshiba copier. The only other time was with a compatibility issue between 2 print drivers (i.e. hp and xerox). One of the dll files for each had the same code and caused issues.And Star Trek was just a tv show...yeah right!Comment
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