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ATT DEFINITY Communications System Generic 3 Instructions Manual
ATT DEFINITY Communications System Generic 3 Instructions Manual
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Ad ministered Connections Issue 3 March 1996 3-27 For an Ad ministered Connection that uses a trunk which has CDR enabled, the origination extension of the Administered Connection will be used as the originator of the call. CDR is not available for access endpoints. nSystem Measurements Access endpoints are not measured. All other trunks in an Administered Connection are measured as usual. nTerminal Dialing It is recommended that the terminal d ialing capability be turned off for data modules involve d in an Ad ministered Connection. NOTE: This will stop call processing relate d messages (INCOMING CALL,...) from being displayed on the terminal. nTrunk Groups In order for auto restoration to be invoked, an Administered Connection must be routed over SDDN trunks. Since a successful restoration depends on there being an SDDN path over which to route the restoration attemp t, some SDDN trunks should be kept idle to be used in the event of failure for restoration. SDDN trunk group usage should be restricted to Alternating Current (AC) related traffic. Administration Each Administered Connection is administered by the System Manager. The following items require administration. nEndpoints If an Ad ministered Connection involves local endpoints, the en d points must be administered before the Administered Connection using those endpoints can be administered. An endpoint cannot be removed if it is involved in a locally administered Administered Connection, or if it is currently involved in an active Ad ministered Connection. If the user desires to change any of the translation data associated with an endpoint (except for the “Name” field which may be changed at any time) that is involved in an active Administered Connection, the Administered Connection must first be d isabled or removed. nAdministered Connection An Administered Connection must be administered on the same switch as the originating en d point. The System Manager may change the attributes of an Administered Connection at any time, b ut not all c hanges take effect immediately. These attributes are as follows (included in each description is a statement as to whether or not changes take effect immediately):
Feature Descriptions 3-28Issue 3 March 1996 —Originating Address — The address of the originating end p oint is its local extension on the originating switch. When this attribute is changed for an active Administered Connection, the connection will be dropped and reestablished using the new originating address. —Destination Address — The destination address is used to route the Administered Connection to the desired destination. When this attribute is changed for an active Administered Connection, the connection will be dropped and reestablished using the new destination a ddress. —Enable — The “ Enable” field allows the System Manager to specify whether the system should attemp t to establish the connection when it is due to be active. Answering yes to the enable option indicates that the system should be established when the Administered Connection is due to be active. Answering no indicates that the System Manager does not want the Administered Connection to be considered for activation at this time (that is, held for future use). A disabled Administer Connection is displayed along with the other Administered Connections administered locally in response to the list administered-connection command. A disabled Administered Connection may be enabled at any time. Since Ad ministered Connection administration is done on the originating switch, disabling an Administered Connection can only be done on the originating switch. If an Ad ministered Connection is currently active, answering no c auses the Administered Connection to be dropped immediately. If an Administered Connection is disabled, answering yes will cause the originating switch to attempt to establish the connection immediately if the Administered Connection is d ue to b e active. The disabling and enabling of an Administered Connection after an attribute of the Ad ministered Connection has been changed guarantees that the change will take effect immediately. —Name — A one through 15 c haracter long, optional “ Name” field is provided to allow for a d ditional i dentification information. Changing this field has no effect on the Ad ministered Connection connection. —Authorized Time of Day — An Ad ministered Connection may be continuous (permanent) or scheduled. Scheduled Administered Connections are described by indicating the days of the week, start time, and the duration for which the Administered Connection is to be active. The mo dification of any of the attributes asso ciated with the authorize d time of d ay will not affect the current status of an Administered Connection unless the change results in activating or deactivating an Ad ministered Connection. —Priority — The System Manager can specify the priority of a given Administered Connection. This priority is used to determine the order in which Administered Connections are esta blished if two or more Administered Connections are due to be active at the same time. The “ Priority” field allows the user to specify a number
Ad ministered Connections Issue 3 March 1996 3-29 between one and eight (with one being the highest and eight being the lowest). Changes to the priority attribute have no effect on an active Ad ministered Connection. —Auto Restoration — The System Manager may specify whether an attempt should be made to restore an Administered Connection, via the ‘Auto Restoration’ feature, if the connection is dropped due to failure and the connection was routed over SDDN trunk(s). Reestablishment (retry) of dropped connections is attemp ted regardless of the value specified in this field. This field has no effect on Administered Connections route d over non-SDDN trunks. The System Manager must d isable and enable an active Administered Connection to have changes to this attribute take effect. —Retry Interval — The System Manager must specify a retry interval of 1 to 60 minutes. The d efault is two minutes. This interval is the number of minutes waited before a retry is attempte d. When this field is changed, the new interval will be used for the next retry. An Administered Connection, which is in retry mode when this field is changed, will retry after the old interval has elapsed and then use the new interval for the next retry time. Twenty-three of the Administered Connections will be restored within the required time. The remaining Ad ministered Connections will be restored, but after the time limit. —Alarm Type — An alarm type of none, warning, minor or major must be chosen. The default will be warning. None indicates that no alarms will b e generated on establishment or restoration failure. A choice of warning will cause alarms to be g enerated and logged in the alarm and error log. A minor or major indication will also cause alarms to be generated and logged in the alarm and error log and forwarded to an Operations Support System such as INADS if OSS is administered. Changing this field to none will cause an existing alarm to be cleared. Changing the field to one of the other values will c ause the upgrading or the downgrading of an existing alarm. —Alarm Threshold — The “ Alarm Threshold” field indicates the number of consecutive failures (1 to 10) that must occur before an Administered Connection alarm is g enerated. Entering 1 in this field will cause alarms to b e generated immediately upon failure to establish or reestablish an Administered Connection. Changes to this field take effect immediately. A comparison of the new value and the current retry count will be ma de to determine if an alarm should be g enerated or possibly cleared due to the change. nAccess Endpoint The access endpoint has the following attributes which must b e administered:
Feature Descriptions 3-30Issue 3 March 1996 —Extension — This is a unique one- to five-digit identifier, c onsistent with the current dial p lan, by which this access endpoint is addressed. —Port — This is the port a d dress of the DS1 or analog tie trunk port. A DS1 trunk can be used regardless of the signaling mode of the DS1 circuit pack. —Name — This can be any alphanumeric string (up to 10 characters) representing a name that is useful to the customer. —Communication Type — A communication typ e of 64K data, 56K data, or voice-band data must be assigned. An access endpoint on an analog tie trunk port is restricted to a communication type of voice-band data. In addition, a communication type of 64K is not allowed for access endpoints on DS1 c ircuit p acks administered for robbed-bit signaling. —COR — A Class of Restriction may be a dministered for each access endpoint. —COS — A Class of Service may be administered for each access endpoint. Class of Service administration should be used to block call forwarding activation of an endpoint. Hardware and Software Requirements Hardware requirements vary depending on the type of Administered Connection desired. The following hardware may be required for Administered Connections: nAccess Endpoint Circuit Packs — TN767 DS1 Interface circuit pack (TN464B/C/D support A-law), TN760B Analog Tie Trunk (TN760D supports A-law). nData En d point Circuit Packs — TN726 Data Line or TN754 Digital Line (TN413, TN754B support A-law). nData Mo dules — 700A/700D PDM or MPDM, 700B/700C/700E TDM or MTDM, 7400D series voice terminal with DTDM, PC/PBX, 510D, 515BCT. nTrunk Circuit Packs — TN767 DS1 Interface circuit pack (TN464B/C/D support A-law), TN760 Analog Tie Trunk (TN760D supports A-law). nTN758 Pooled Modem circuit pack. No a d ditional software is required.
Administrable Language Displays Issue 3 March 1996 3-31 Administrable Language Displays Feature Availability This feature is available with Generic G3i-Global and all Generic V2 and later releases. The user-defined display language option is only available with the Generic V2 and later releases. Description There is a set of messages that appear on a DCP/ISDN-BRI Station/Attendant users set that provide call related information. The Ad ministrable Language Displays feature allows 40-character display station users or an attendant user to select a display language for these messages. This disp lay language selection is made via administration; with the options being English (default), French, Italian, or Spanish. Note that the messages themselves do not change, only the wording that is used to present the message is changed. The Generic V2 and later releases allow the addition of one user customized language display message set to the system. This a d ditional display message set is entered into the system via administration by either a customer or an AT&T in-country partner and is accessed by a user as their disp lay language preference by selecting the user defined d isplay language option. Feature Displays This section shows the English, French, Italian, and Spanish language display message sets su bd ivid e d by feature. Since none of the feature functions are modified, no explanation of the feature is ma de. The user-defined language display message set is the user customized language display message set that was a d ded to the system via administration. If user-defined is selected as the d isplay language preference and the user-defined language display message set has not been entered into the system, all d isplay messages appear as a string of asterisks. When the time is displayed, only the English display set uses the AM/PM notation, all others use the 24 hour clock. Automatic Wakeup The following displays are associate d with the Automatic Wakeup feature.
Feature Descriptions 3-32Issue 3 March 1996 n‘‘AUTO WAKEUP - Ext: xxxxx Time: --:-- xM’’ (En glish) — French - ‘‘REVEIL AUTO. - POSTE: xxxxx HEURE: --:--’’ — Italian - ‘‘SERVIZIO SVEGLIA - Tel: xxxxx Ora: --:--’’ — Spanish - ‘‘DESPERT AUTOMA - EXT: xxxxx HORA: --:--’’ n‘‘I NVA LI D E XT ENSI ON - TRY A G AI N’’ (English) — French - ‘‘NUMERO DE POSTE EST ERRONE - REESSAYER’’ — Italian - ‘‘NUMERO ERRATO - RIPETERE’’ — Spanish - ‘‘ EX TENS IO N N O V ALIDO - INTENTE DE N U EVO ’’ n‘‘WAKEUP ENTRY DENIED - INTERVAL FULL’’ (English) — French - ‘‘DEM. REVEIL REFUSEE - INTERVALLE PLEIN’’ — Italian - ‘‘SVEGLIA NON ATTIVATA - ORARIO OCCUP’’ — Spanish - ‘‘ ENTR A D A DE NEG A DA - I NTE RV A L O C O M PL ETO ’’ n‘‘WAKEUP ENTRY DENIED - NO PERMISSION’’ (English) — French - ‘‘DEM. REVEIL REFUSEE - SANS AUTOR ISA TIO N’’ — Italian - ‘‘SVEGLIA NON ATTIVATA - NON PERMESSO’’ — Spanish - ‘‘ ENTR A D A DE NEG A DA - S IN PE RMI SO ’’ n‘‘WAKEUP ENTRY DENIED - SYSTEM FULL’’ (English) — French - ‘‘DEM. REVEIL REFUSEE - ENCOMBREMENT’’ — Italian - ‘‘SVEGLIA NON ATTIVATA - CONGESTIONE’’ — Spanish - ‘‘ ENTR A D A DE NEG A D A - S IS TEM A C O M PLE TO’ ’ n‘‘WAKEUP ENTRY DENIED - TOO SOON’’ (English) — French - ‘‘DEM. REVEIL REFUSEE - TROP TOT’’ — Italian - ‘‘S VE G L I A N O N A TTI VA TA - TR OP PO P REST O ’ ’ — Spanish - ‘‘ ENTR A D A DE NEG A DA - M UY P RONTO’’ n‘‘W AKEUP R EQUES T CAN CELE D’’ (English) — French - ‘‘DEMANDE DE REVEIL EST ANNULEE’’ — Italian - ‘‘RICHIESTA SVEGLIA CANENTR YA TA ’’ — Spanish - ‘‘SOLICITUD DE DESPERTADOR CANCELADA’’ n‘‘W AKEUP R EQUES T CONFIRMED’’ (English) — French - ‘‘DEMANDE DE REVEIL EST CONFIR M EE ’’ — Italian - ‘‘RICHIESTA SVEGLIA CONFERMATA’’ — Spanish - ‘‘SOLICITUD DE DESPERTADOR CONFIR M A DA ’’ n‘‘Wakeup Call’’ (English)
Administrable Language Displays Issue 3 March 1996 3-33 — French - ‘‘APPEL DE REVEIL’’ — Italian - ‘‘Serv. Sveglia’’ — Spanish - ‘‘Despierte’’ ASAI The following display is associated with the CallVisor Adjunct/Switch Applications Interface (ASAI) feature. n‘‘You have adjunct messages’’ (English) — French - ‘‘MESSAGES SUPPLEMENTAIRES’’ — Italian - ‘‘MESSAGGI AGGIUNTIVI’’ — Spanish - ‘‘TIENE MENSAJES ADICIONALES’’ Busy Verification of Stations and Trunks Table 3-2 lists the disp lays associated with the Busy Verification of Terminals and Trunks feature. Call Appearance Designation For each of the display language options, the display to indicate call appearance designation a p pears as: n‘‘a = ’’ (English) Call a ppearance buttons are designated on the display by a lower case letter (a through z for the first 26 call a p pearances then A through Z) in position 1, followed by an ‘‘=.’’ Table 3-2. Busy Verification of Stations and Trunks Displays. English Display French Display Italian Display Spanish Display ‘‘ALL MADE BUSY ’’ ‘‘ TOUS OCC.’’ ‘‘TUTTI OCCUPATI’’ ‘‘TODAS OCUPADAS’’ ‘‘ BRIDGE D’’ ‘‘ EN DERIV ATION’’ ‘‘OCCUPATO’’ ‘‘PUE NTEADA’’ ‘‘ DENIE D’’ ‘‘ INT ERDI T’ ’ ‘‘NON PERMESSO’’ ‘‘DENEGADO’’ ‘‘INVALID’’ ‘‘ERRONE’’ ‘‘NON VALIDO’’ ‘‘NO VALIDO’’ ‘‘ N O M EM BER’ ’ ‘‘AUCUN MEMBRE’’ ‘‘NESSUN E LE ME NTO’ ’ ‘‘NINGUN MIEMBRO’’ ‘‘ OUT OF SE RVI CE’’ ‘‘ HORS SERVICE ’’ ‘‘ FUOR I SE RVIZIO’’ ‘‘FUE RA SERVICIO’’ ‘ ‘ REST R I CTED’ ’ ‘‘ RES TR EINT ’’ ‘‘ RIS TRE TT O’’ ‘‘RES TRINGIDO’’ ‘‘ TER MI NATE D’’ ‘‘ TE RMINE’ ’ ‘‘ TE RM INAT O’’ ‘‘TE RMINADO’’ ‘‘ TRUNK SE IZE D’’ ‘‘CIRCUIT SAIS I’’ ‘‘GIUNZIONE IMP.’’ ‘‘ENL ACE OCUPADO’’ ‘‘ VERI FIED’’ ‘‘ VE RIF IE’ ’ ‘‘ VE RIF ICAT O’’ ‘‘VE RIFICADO’’
Feature Descriptions 3-34Issue 3 March 1996 Call Detail Record The following display is associated with the Call Detail Record ing (CDR) feature. n‘‘CDR OVERLOAD’’ (English) — French - ‘‘S UR CHA RG E EDA ’’ — Italian - ‘‘S VR ACCA RI CO DA C’’ — Spanish - ‘‘ SO BR ECAR G A DA T’’ Call Progress Feedback Table 3-3 lists the call progress displays. Table 3-3. Call Progress Feedback Displays ‘‘English Display’’ (stands for)‘‘French Display’’ (stands for)‘‘Italian Display’’ (stands for)‘‘Spanish Display’’ (stands for) ‘‘busy’’ (Extension Busy, Intrusion Not Allowed, Call Waitin g Not Allowed) ‘‘OCCUPE’’ (Occupe)‘‘occ’’ (O c cupato) ‘‘OCUPADA’’ (Ocupada) ‘‘busy(I)’’ (Extension Busy, Intrusion Allowed, Call Waitin g Not Allowed) ‘‘OCC.(E)’’ (Entree ligne occupe) ‘‘occ(I)’’ (O c cupato- Intrusione) ‘‘OCUP(I)’’ (Ocupada- intrusion) ‘‘ringing’’ (Extension Ringing) ‘‘SONNE’’ (Libre) ‘‘libero’’ (Libero) ‘‘LIBRE’’ (Lib ero) ‘‘wait’’ (Extension Busy, Intrusion Not Allowed, Call Waitin g Allowed) ‘‘ATTENTE’ ’ (Attente) ‘‘auat’’ (Autoattesa) ‘‘ ESPERA’ ’ (Espera) ‘‘(I) wait’’ (Extension Busy, Intrusion Allowed, Call Waitin g Allowed) ‘‘(E) ATTENTE’’ (Entree ligne attente) ‘‘(I) auat’’ (Intrusione- Autoattesa) ‘‘ (I ) ESPERA’’ (Intrusion, en espera)
Administrable Language Displays Issue 3 March 1996 3-35 Class of Restriction Table 3-4 lists displays associated with the Class of Restriction (COR) feature. Date/Time Mode and Formats The following displays are associate d with the ‘Date & Time’ feature. If the time is not available: nEnglish - ‘ ‘SO RR Y, TIM E UNA VAI LA BLE NOW ’ ’ nFrench - ‘‘HEURE ET DATE INDISPONIBLES’’ nItalian - ‘‘ORA E DATA TEMP. NON DISPONIBILI’’ nSpanish - ‘‘HORA Y FECHA NO DISPONIBLES AHORA’’ If the time is available, Screen 3-1 lists the English date/time mode and formats attributes; Screen 3-2 lists the French, Italian, Spanish, or user-defined date/time mode and formats attributes; — English - Screen 3-1. Date/Time Mode and Formats — English — French, Italian, & Spanish, user-defined - Table 3-4. Class of Restriction Displays Restriction ‘‘English Display’’ ‘‘French Display’’ ‘‘Italian Display’’ ‘‘Spanish Display’’ Tol l ‘‘TOLL’’ ‘‘INT.’’ ‘‘TASS’ ’ ‘‘ TARF’ ’ Ful l‘‘FULL’’ ‘‘COM.’’ ‘‘DISB’’ ‘‘LLEN’’ No Restrictions‘‘NONE’’ ‘‘AUC.’’ ‘‘ABIL’’ ‘‘NING’’ Origination‘‘ORIG’’ ‘‘DEP.’’ ‘‘ORIG’’ ‘‘ORIG’’ Outward‘‘OTWD’’ ‘‘SOR.’’ ‘‘USCN’’ ‘‘SALI’’ : 1-12 (hour of day, no leading zeroes) 00-59 (minute of hour) ‘‘am’’ or ‘‘pm’’ , Day of week, upper case, unabbreviated Month of year, upper case, unabbreviated 1-31 (day of month, no leading zeroes) Year in 4 digits Blank
Feature Descriptions 3-36Issue 3 March 1996 Screen 3-2. Date/Time Mode and Formats — French, Italian, Spanish, or User-Defined Table 3-5 lists the d ays of the week format. Table 3-5. Days of the Week Format ‘‘English Display’’ ‘‘French Display’’ ‘‘Italian Display’’ ‘‘Spanish Display’’ ‘‘SUNDAY’’ ‘‘DIMANCHE’’ ‘‘DOMENICA’’ ‘‘DOMINGO’’ ‘‘MONDAY’’ ‘‘LUNDI’’ ‘‘LUNEDI’’ ‘‘LUNES’’ ‘‘TUESDAY’’‘‘MARDI’’ ‘‘MARTEDI’’ ‘‘MARTES’ ’ ‘‘WEDNESDAY’’ ‘‘MERCREDI’’ ‘‘MERCOLEDI’’ ‘‘MIERCOLES’’ ‘‘THURSDAY’’ ‘‘JEUDI’’ ‘‘GIOVEDI’’ ‘‘JUEVES’’ ‘‘FRIDAY’’ ‘‘VENDREDI’’ ‘‘VEN ERDI’’ ‘‘VIERNES’’ ‘‘SATURDAY’’ ‘‘SAMEDI’’ ‘‘SABATO’’ ‘‘SABADO’’ : 0-23 (hour of day, no leading zeroes) 00-59 (minute of hour) , Day of week, upper case, unabbreviated 1-31 (day of month, no leading zeroes) Month of year, upper case, unabbreviated Year in 4 digits Blank