But it didn't fix the undocumented fault that I've been waiting for. Since R7 release, you can't configure a T1 without a "The number of configured channels on universal PRI exceeds the number of licensed channels" error. We configure all but one channel as "out of service" and get the same error. Remember, you're supposed to get 8 channels "free" with purchase of the module. ONLY changing trunks to PRI makes the error go away. I can replicate this error on any R7 system in fifteen seconds. The Avaya tier 3 guy said that he couldn't replicate it, but he didn't have access to R7 manager - they weren't given access to "the new stuff". Amazing to me...
Mike
@amriddle01 - I'm not sure what field you are describing. In earlier versions, it was purely the number of channels in service. I did config on R6 (Manager r8) and didn't have the same error. In R7, if either trunk is set for T1 (vs PRI), I get the "exceeded licensed channels" error - even if I have all channels out of service.
Mike
As a test I uploaded a ton of bin files to both a v1 with CF card and a v2 with SD card and the v1 took around 5 mins the v2 40 .... basically the read/write to the cards is way too slow
I need to find an old SD card use my card reader to copy the memory card folder to it using windows and then the same with manager and see if there is a difference.
It is seriously far too slow.
Upgrades used to be easy and quick. Not any more!
Jamie Green
Football is not a matter of life and death-It is far more important!!!!
I don't see it ever changing, all the files used to sit on the file server/Manager PC, now you have to upload all those files to the card and as there are so many individual files it just takes ages. On your PC Try moving the docs CD from one folder to another (while it's still zipped/compressed), takes a couple of mins, extract it and try again...takes hours
Avaya should fix the file updating on the SD Cards.
Is it that hard to upload a compressed file and have the system decompress it? Or if they are worried about CPU load, why not concatenate all the files as one big file and split it again? Like copy /b used to do in MS-DOS.
I don't ever recall seeing transfer rates of 800K a second on the previous systems I installed. It seemed it always maxed out around 250K. I'm back to the land of "Unknown" and "Infinity" transfer rates now. Oh well. Its something to stare at on a Friday while web surfing.
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