Starting over
First lets build your IP trunking.
- In your digital trunks they will be assigned to a Trunk Service Number. They might each be a different number but are typically the same
- In your Trunk service Assignment there will be a COS (class of Service) assigned, all digital trunks should be the same COS
- Hopefully the comments field is used when the Trunk Service is used, find a blank one and name it IP trunks
- Assign the same COS as the digital trunks and set the absorb digits to 0 and set the insert digits to (Star)* (Make note of Service Assignment Number)
- In the Network Assignment Form your system will have an IP address assigned (the one you use to access ESM, Embedded System Manager)
- We Need to create a Cluster. Goto Cluster element form
- Add Cluster and give it a name, do not program anything in the PNI field
- Add member and choose your system, assign PBX number 1 to it, CEID digits of ????? (unique number on system)
- In release 9, the form names are different but they are organised better so I will give you the navigation to the forms
- Configuration
- Trunks
- IP/Xnet?
ICP/PBX Networking?
- Add PBX 1 and designate it as the local system
- in the lower window, enter the IP Address
XNET/ ICP PBX Networking
- Add PBX 1 and designate 200 IP trunks
IP/XNET Trunk Profiles
- Assign the Trunk Service Number that you created earlier then 1 for interconnect and a 1 for remote profile
IP/XNET Trunk Groups
- Trunk group 1, PBX 1, Local profile 1, hops 26, IP, IP, Trunks 200
ARS
We will need a separate route for each Region Code (80)
It might be simplest to start with Route 100
Routes
Each Route will need its own Modified digit table
Example:
Route 101, IP/XNET trunk group 1, COR 64, MOD Digit table 101
Route 102, IP/XNET trunk group 1, COR 64, MOD Digit table 102
Route 103, IP/XNET trunk group 1, COR 64, MOD Digit table 103
...
Route 180, IP/XNET trunk group 1, COR 64, MOD Digit table 180
ARS Digits
- Enter ARS Digit Entries for each DDI with * as the first digit (* was added above)
- Each DDI with a common Region code will be assigned to a different route
Modified Digits:
We want to retain the last 4 digits of the DDI (absorb 9 or 10 digits)
Then we insert 2 or digits that allow a unique entry for each Region
The combination is a 6 digit unique number
When the call loops back it will have a * inserted again to become *AB3456
Speed Calls:
Create Speedcalls for each 7 digit unique entry and termimate them to the appropriate destinations.
Summary:
System receives 11 digits - ABCDE123456
Trunk service form prepends *
ARS Entry *ABCDE123456 chooses Route XXX with Modified Digits Table XXX
MOD Digits remove 9 digits and insert 2 resulting in AB3456
AB3456 is dialed out on IP trunks and received as AB3456
Trunk service Assignment Prepends * again
*AB3456 matches Speedcall
Speedcall designates trmination point
Good Luck
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What's most important is that you realise ... There is no spoon.