Sunil,
This is what I found in the manual about the adjunct route:
The adjunct routing command provides a means for an adjunct ASAI processor to specify
the destination of a call. The switch provides information in an ASAI route request
message that the ASAI adjunct can use to first access a database and then determine a
route for the call. In a typical application, the ASAI adjunct might use the dialed number,
the Calling Party Number (CPN/BN), or the digits collected via Call Prompting to access
caller information and thereby determine the call route.
An adjunct specified in an adjunct routing command can route a call to an internal
number, an external number, a split, a VDN, an announcement extension, or a particular
agent. An adjunct can also provide priority ringing and priority queuing.
an example of a simple vector that uses adjunct routing:
1. adjunct routing link 1111
2. wait-time 60 seconds hearing ringback
3. route-to number 0 with cov n if unconditionally
4. disconnect after announcement 2000
In this vector, 1111 is the extension number of an ASAI link. Each ASAI link has a unique
extension number, even in a configuration where there might be multiple ASAI links to
the same adjunct.
When a call encounters an adjunct routing command, and if the call is not queued to a
split, the switch sends an ASAI message requesting a call route over the specified adjunct
link. The following list identifies the contents of the message, along with a comment or a
brief explanation for each item:
Calling number information.
Calling party number or billing number
(CPN/BN) provided by ISDN-PRI or R2MFC signaling facilities. If the call originates from a local switch extension, this extension is the calling number.
Originating line information (II-digits).
Two-digit code provided by ISDN-PRI facilities indicating the type of originating line being used.
Called number.
Originally called extension (if a call is forwarded to a VDN), or the first VDN through which the call was routed (if the call was not forwarded to the VDN).
Routing VDN.
Last VDN that routed the call to the vector that contains the adjunct routing command.
Call identifier.
ASAI identifier that permits the ASAI adjunct to track multiple calls via either Event Notification or Third Party Call Control. (See the DEFINITY Enterprise Communications Server Release 8 CallVisor ASAI Technical Reference for more information on ASAI.)
Look-Ahead Interflow information (if any).
Includes the original VDN display information, the priority level of the call at the originating switch, and the time that the call entered vector processing. (See Chapter 11.)
Digits collected via Call Prompting or Caller Information Forwarding (CINFO)
(if any; maximum of 16 digits). Digits are collected by the most recent collect digits command. (See Chapter 10 and Chapter 7.)
User-to-User Information (if any).
User-provided data associated with the call. If provided by ASAI, this data was provided in a 3rd-Party-Make-Call, Auto-Dial, or Route-Select message. If provided over ISDN, the data was in the SETUP message that delivered the call to this switch.
If the call is queued, the adjunct routing step is ignored, and vector processing continues at
the next vector step. :-Q
all this comes out the Call Vectoring/Expert Agent Selection (EAS) Guide manual try to get your hands on that !!
kind regards,
Europe