DS1FD configuration used on the Avaya.
We have a customer who will be replacing equipment from a now bankrupt vendor with ours.
They would like to use the same configuration on their PBX as they now use to the current equipment.
I understand that they have deployed a T1 optioned as a robbed bit trunk with extension numbers optioned as DS1FD.
I have some general familiarity with how Avaya programs and configures their PBXs, and I have been doing some investigation around this DS1FD configuration.
It appears that this configuration allows an extension/station number to be associated directly to the channel on a DS1 circuit, without having to define Trunk Groups etc. In most DS1FD examples the connection is to an IVR platform.
All the example configurations I have seen to this point in use a robbed bit configuration on the T1, although I haven’t seen any documentation that indicates that PRIs are NOT used. The typical Avaya PRI configuration requires you define the D-channel in the Signaling group form and the ISDN protocol type in the trunk group. If the DS1FD configuration is simplified and you don’t define trunk groups I can see why the more basic T1 robbed bit configuration is used.
That being said trunk group forms are used in Avaya configurations to define the signaling on the T1 robbed bit circuit as well… wink start of various types, loop start etc.
Question 1: is the DS1FD configuration only supported on Robbed bit circuits?
Question 2: What type of signaling is used on the DS1FD, or am I off base here, that in fact some kind of auto answer feature is assumed on these DS1FD connections such that when the station number that maps to a T1 channel is dialed the AB [for D4] or ABCD [for ESF] bits on the circuit are simply seized.
I have a concern that if the logics in the PBX are such that
DS1FD station number X - maps - DS1-channel 1
In a hard coded arrangement that the dialed number won’t be passed across the channel. The PBX assumes it will be connecting to a device that understands this “hard” mapping so the station number won’t be passed. That being the case I wouldn’t expect the calling number [ANI] to be passed either.
Question 3:
So… does DNIS or ANI get passed across those DS1FD channels?
We have a customer who will be replacing equipment from a now bankrupt vendor with ours.
They would like to use the same configuration on their PBX as they now use to the current equipment.
I understand that they have deployed a T1 optioned as a robbed bit trunk with extension numbers optioned as DS1FD.
I have some general familiarity with how Avaya programs and configures their PBXs, and I have been doing some investigation around this DS1FD configuration.
It appears that this configuration allows an extension/station number to be associated directly to the channel on a DS1 circuit, without having to define Trunk Groups etc. In most DS1FD examples the connection is to an IVR platform.
All the example configurations I have seen to this point in use a robbed bit configuration on the T1, although I haven’t seen any documentation that indicates that PRIs are NOT used. The typical Avaya PRI configuration requires you define the D-channel in the Signaling group form and the ISDN protocol type in the trunk group. If the DS1FD configuration is simplified and you don’t define trunk groups I can see why the more basic T1 robbed bit configuration is used.
That being said trunk group forms are used in Avaya configurations to define the signaling on the T1 robbed bit circuit as well… wink start of various types, loop start etc.
Question 1: is the DS1FD configuration only supported on Robbed bit circuits?
Question 2: What type of signaling is used on the DS1FD, or am I off base here, that in fact some kind of auto answer feature is assumed on these DS1FD connections such that when the station number that maps to a T1 channel is dialed the AB [for D4] or ABCD [for ESF] bits on the circuit are simply seized.
I have a concern that if the logics in the PBX are such that
DS1FD station number X - maps - DS1-channel 1
In a hard coded arrangement that the dialed number won’t be passed across the channel. The PBX assumes it will be connecting to a device that understands this “hard” mapping so the station number won’t be passed. That being the case I wouldn’t expect the calling number [ANI] to be passed either.
Question 3:
So… does DNIS or ANI get passed across those DS1FD channels?