Tek-Tips is the largest IT community on the Internet today!

Members share and learn making Tek-Tips Forums the best source of peer-reviewed technical information on the Internet!

  • Congratulations TouchToneTommy on being selected by the Tek-Tips community for having the most helpful posts in the forums last week. Way to Go!

LD 87 1

Status
Not open for further replies.

bfuller83

Programmer
May 15, 2007
102
US
When I do a ld 87 and prt the cdp type all I get a listing like this:

DSC 214
RLI 20
NPA
NXX
DSC 215
RLI 20
NPA
NXX

My question is what is the RLI pointing at? Is it the route number?

Bradley A. Fuller
Manager, Network Infrastructure
Kellogg Community College
 
You have to use LD86
Prt rlb
rli = whatever it was in your CDP print out. That will show all your entries for the list with the routs.
 
The easiest way is to print off the details in LD 86,87 and 90 etc in a capture file and then importing into the following tool.

If you don't use Procomm Plus, just read and use the commands for reference.


The excel tool is located at..


Instructions are given in the guide.



All the best

Firebird Scrambler
Meridian 1 / Succession and BCM / Norstar Programmer in the UK

If it's working, then leave it alone!.
 
Thanks to both! It looks as if I can get this info from using the conversion utility but I am going to ask anyway. When I prt my rdb I see that the ACOD is pointing to 39XX the last numbers depending on what pri they are going to Where is that 39XX at? This must be something defined in the NARS and/or BARS...I am in the process of prting everything form 86,87 and 90 so I can try and use the conversion utility. Thanks again!

Bradley A. Fuller
Manager, Network Infrastructure
Kellogg Community College
 
The ACOD is the access code to that route. You would access the ACOD for troubleshooting or to bypass BARS. Here is the flow of things.

1. You build the route in ld 16
2. you build the trunks for the route in ld 14
3. You build the RLI in LD 86
4. Then you build the Bars in LD 90 and point your NPA's, NXX's and SPN's to that particular RLI

The RLI contains all the entries for potentially making that particular call.
 
You do basically the same thing for CDP, Your RLI is not the route, The RLI contains all the routes for making that call.
 
Once the ACOD is defined in the route that is considered a used DN. You will not find that DN anywhere else in software except in the ACOD once it is defined.
 
So this is where I am stuck...I have the PRI's up and running all channels on both ends show idle...I can dial the acod and get secondary dial tone. when I dial the extension on the remote system I get fast busy... I created a rli entry (listed below) pointed at route 27.

RLI 27
ENTR 0
LTER NO
ROUT 27
TOD 0 ON 1 ON 2 ON 3 ON
4 ON 5 ON 6 ON 7 ON
VNS NO
CNV NO
EXP NO
FRL 0
DMI 0
FCI 0
SBOC NRR
IDBB DBD
IOHQ NO
OHQ NO
CBQ NO

ISET 0
NALT 5
MFRL 0
OVLL 0

I also created a cdp entry 440 pointed to rli 27 as listed below:

REQ prt
CUST 0
FEAT cdp
TYPE dsc
DSC 440
DSC 440
RLI 27
NPA
NXX

I am attempting to dial dn 4400 using route 27

I am sure I am missing something simple. Any suggestions? Thanks in advance!

Bradley A. Fuller
Manager, Network Infrastructure
Kellogg Community College
 
If your trying to call 4400 your DSC should be 4400 not 440.
 
440 covers 4400-4409 I believe? At any rate its fixed...I found that the rout sigo didn't match...changed it to esn5 and I am good to go!!! WAHOO =-) Thanks for all your help!

Bradley A. Fuller
Manager, Network Infrastructure
Kellogg Community College
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Part and Inventory Search

Sponsor

Back
Top