Sorry, I've never used the WRAPUP table. And you're right, there is nothing in the interface to fill it with values.
But digging deep in memory, I begin to remember...
The keyword in the description of the table is "custom reports". Long time ago we were running rel.6 and used TCS for Workforce-Management. That times, Aspect offered a "Custom-Reports" package. The reports where defined by aspect-techs and stored in the ACD. There was a function in the old interface to start these predefined reports, nothing else.
Output of the reports was printed to serial ports, TCS captured the data and imported it into their own DB...
I think the WRAPUP table just has not been kicked to dumb like some other tables. Like the TAPELOG table: using rel.6 every backup to tape was logged in that table, very nice! But today using rel.8 it contains just nothing...
Perhaps you can convince Aspect to grant you apropriate rights to the table to be able to fill it using the oracle-client... Sorry, I've never used the WRAPUP table. And you're right, there is nothing in the interface to fill it with values.
But digging deep in memory, I begin to remember...
The keyword in the description of the table is "custom reports". Long time ago we were running rel.6 and used TCS for Workforce-Management. That times, Aspect offered a "Custom-Reports" package. The reports where defined by aspect-techs and stored in the ACD. There was a function in the old interface to start these predefined reports, nothing else.
Output of the reports was printed to serial ports, TCS captured the data and imported it into their own DB...
I think the WRAPUP table just has not been kicked to dumb like some other tables. Like the TAPELOG table: using rel.6 every backup to tape was logged in that table, very nice! But today using rel.8 it contains just nothing...
Perhaps you can convince Aspect with $$$ to grant you apropriate rights to the table to be able to fill it using the oracle-client. But that's very unlikely.
Let me know what they say.
Good luck,
Chris