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R2 Signaling Examples

R2 Signaling Examples

This chapter provides examples of R2 signaling performed with the following:

Two examples discuss R2 digit collections on incoming trunks (calls coming into the VCO system); a third example describes R2 digit outpulsing on outgoing trunks (calls originating at the VCO system). Each example begins with a brief explanation of the scenario, followed by a graphic representation of the call flow. These diagrams illustrate system processing and information flow between the VCO and host, and between the VCO and connected equipment (network registers). Direction of the information flow is indicated by arrows under the message data.

Example #1 — Incoming Call Using Inpulse Rules

Example #1 illustrates a simple R2 digit collection scenario after an incoming seize on the VCO E1 circuit at port address $00 61. A default inpulse rule is executed to perform R2 digit collection on this circuit.

The inpulse rule performs the following general tasks:

At the end of this example, the VCO establishes speech conditions with the connected equipment (network register) and generates an Inpulse Rule Complete ($DD) report to the host. The processing flow for this example is shown in Figure 4-1. In this example, it is assumed that the default inpulse rule for the incoming circuit has been defined as inpulse rule #1 (shown below).

RULE #1

Refer to the Cisco VCO/4K System Administrator's Guide for more information about specific MFCR2 inpulse rule tokens.

Once the $DD report is generated, the inpulse rule collects the remaining called party number digits and stores them in Field 3. A-1 (send next digit) signals prompt the network register for each new digit. When an I-15 digit is received, an A-3 (send category) digit is sent.


Figure 4-1: Processing Flow for Example #1



Figure 4-2: Processing Flow for Example #1



Figure 4-3: Processing Flow for Example #1


Example #2 — Incoming Call Using $68 Host Command

Example #2 also illustrates a simple R2 digit collection scenario on an incoming E1 circuit (port address $00 61). However, all R2 digit collections in this scenario are initiated by host command; no inpulse rule processing is used. Three MF Collection Control ($68) commands perform the following actions:

An MF Digit ($D0) report reports each digit collection to the host.

At the end of this example, the VCO establishes speech conditions with the connected equipment (network register). The processing flow for this example is shown in Figure 4-4.

Refer to the Cisco VCO/4K Standard Programming Reference and the Cisco VCO/4K Extended Programming Reference for more information about the $68 command and the $D0 report.


Figure 4-4: Processing Flow for Example #2



Figure 4-5: Processing Flow for Example #2



Figure 4-6: Processing Flow for Example #2



Figure 4-7: Processing Flow for Example #2


Example #3 — Outgoing Call

Example #3 describes R2 digit outpulsing on an E1 circuit at port address $00 40. This scenario involves both host command and outpulse rule processing. The host initiates the outpulsing using an Outgoing Port Control ($69) command that populates the digit fields and specifies the outpulse rule to execute (refer to the Cisco VCO/4K Programming Reference and Cisco VCO/4K Extended Programming Reference for a command description).

The outpulse rule performs the following actions:

This rule is shown below.

RULE #1

At the end of this example, the VCO establishes speech conditions with the connected equipment (network register) and generates an Outgoing Port Change of State ($DA) report to the host indicating the final backward digit. The processing flow for this example is shown in Figure 4-8.

Refer to the Cisco VCO/4K System Administrator's Guide for more information about OP MFCR2, OP ANI, OP FIELD [xx], and OP CAT [xx] outpulse rule tokens.


Figure 4-8: Processing Flow for Example #3



Figure 4-9: Processing Flow for Example #3



Figure 4-10: Processing Flow for Example #3



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Posted: Sat Sep 28 22:09:14 PDT 2002
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