On Saturday 19 Jul 2014 11:00:10 Bill Kenworthy wrote:
> On 19/07/14 06:19, Mick wrote:
> > On Friday 18 Jul 2014 22:18:58 Bill Kenworthy wrote:
> >> On 19/07/14 02:19, James wrote:
> >>> Bill Kenworthy <billk <at> iinet.net.au> writes:
> ...
> 
> >> Thanks, now working.  The socket interface works whereas my old printer
> >> used usb - wireless seems SO much nicer, and I don't need to run raw
> >> queues for windows and fragile bonjour services via cups anymore -
> >> win-win :)
> >> 
> >> The web server is also a great idea - but the (lack of) documentation is
> >> a problem when they don't tell you it exists!
> > 
> > It may also have a telnet daemon running, or snmp.  Worth investigating.
> 
> PORT     STATE SERVICE      VERSION
> 80/tcp   open  http?
> 
> |_http-methods: No Allow or Public header in OPTIONS response (status
> 
> code 405)
> 
> |_http-title: Site doesn't have a title (text/html).
> 
> 139/tcp  open  netbios-ssn?
> 445/tcp  open  netbios-ssn
> 515/tcp  open  printer
> 631/tcp  open  ipp?
> 
> |_http-methods: No Allow or Public header in OPTIONS response (status
> 
> code 405)
> 
> |_http-title: Site doesn't have a title (text/html).
> 
> 9100/tcp open  jetdirect?
> 
> No telnet but it does seem to do ipp - is there a way of finding the
> queue name?

You don't need a queue for ipp, unlike say for lpd:

http://www.cups.org/documentation.php/network.html


From the results above it does not seem like ipp is supported (you got a 405) 
but I am not sure.  You can try this to see if it reports an ipp or other 
server version running on that port:

 nmap -A -T4 -P0 -vvv <printer's IP address> -p 631

-- 
Regards,
Mick

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