MORE INFORMATION
Windows NT 4.0 implements EMF spooling by recording the graphic device
interface (GDI) function calls that produce the application's graphic
object on the specified printer. This record is an EMF-format file, called
a print spool file. Windows NT builds the spool file quickly, and then
returns control to the application. In the background, the spool file is
spooled to the server, and the server converts the EMF data into a format
suitable for the output device.
The bulk of the EMF print model is an array of variable-sized records that
encode the GDI function calls necessary to reproduce the picture when the
EMF spool file is played back. EMF spool files encode graphics information
in such a way as to maintain device independence.
NOTE: By default, Windows NT 4.0 enables EMF spooling for PCL and HPGL/2.
EMF can also be configured for PostScript printing; however, the benefits
are minimal for client performance.
Other Spool File Formats
RAW: The raw data type indicates that the print job has already been fully
rendered by the GDI and device driver interface (DDI), and it does not
need any more processing. Raw data streams can either be printed
directly, or they can be put into spool files. Most Windows NT printing
clients send raw jobs. Raw spool files are device-dependent. That is,
the spooled data is destined and formatted for a particular device and
does not need to be printable on any other device. An example of a raw
spool file is an encapsulated PostScript file, which is formatted to be
understood by the PostScript printer for which it is destined.
For more information, please see the following article in the Microsoft
Knowledge Base:
ARTICLE-ID: 104902
TITLE : Print Processors and Data Types
TEXT: When the data type of a print job is text, the print processor sends the
incoming job to the graphics engine. The graphics engine then returns a
print job, which prints the original text using the print device's
default paper source, default font, orientation, margins, and duplexing.
This achieves the same result as saving the incoming job to a file,
opening that file with Notepad, and then printing the job.
JOURNAL: The Windows NT JNL 1.000 data type (usually called "Journal") indicates
that the job is being sent from a Windows-based application (either 16-
bit or 32-bit) running on the Windows NT print server. It also indicates
that the target printer was established in Print Manager using the
Create Printer option. In this case, the application uses GDI commands
to describe the output. The Windows NT GDI32 component and the printer
driver partially render the print job using DDI commands, and then
return control to the application. As a result, the application finishes
its print operation faster than normal. In the background, GDI32 then
submits the DDI journal file to the spooler, with the data type set
to "NT JNL 1.000." The spooler then calls GDI32 to finish rendering the
job into printer language commands.
Note that the Journal type does not exist in Windows NT 4.0, only Windows NT 3.51.
The table below illustrates when EMF is used by Windows NT 4.0 Server.
Print Client EMF RAW
-----------------------------------------
Windows NT 4.0(1) 1 0
Windows NT 4.0(2) 0 1
Windows NT 3.x(1) 0 1
Windows NT 3.x(2) 0 1
Windows 95(3) 0 1
Windows for Workgroups 0 1
Non Microsoft Client 0 1
Notes:
(1) Indicates the server in the "Connected to" box. In Windows NT 4.0,
this occurs when you select Network Printer in the Add Printer
Wizard.
(2) Indicates that the driver is installed locally and is redirected to
the server share point.
(3) Windows 95 supports EMF, but always plays the EMF file locally and
spools to the server as RAW.
As indicated in the chart above, the only client that takes advantage of
the EMF spooling is a Windows NT 4.0 client using one of the following
drivers:
For each of those drivers, EMF spooling is enabled by default. If
necessary, users can turn off EMF spooling functionality on a per printer
basis. To do this, perform the following steps:
- In the Printers folder, click the printer whose properties you want to
change.
- On the File menu, click Properties.
- Click PrintProcessor.
- Click the Always Spool RAW Datatype option.