Any suggestion?? all i did is on ld90 added NPA 1900, so know everybody can dial 1900 numbers. But what i need is to allow just 5 employees dial 1900 numbers and block them for everybody else.
I would assign 1900 its own RLI with a high FRL/NCOS level (7); and bump up the NCOS levels on only those phones. If you are using 7 for something else, you may need to move some things around or create another NCOS level and be sure to MAP it correctly in the NCTL table.
the npa points to a rlb, that rlb sets the frl, after you build the new rlb (ld 86) point 1900 to that rlb.. that is how you require a higher ncos for a unique (or group of) unique numbers.. if you need the code or your using nocs 7 let us know
Do i just have to specify the RLI "5" and FRL "7" and leave everything else by default when creating the new RLB? Please give me more detail since this is the first time i create NPA and RLB.
richi23, first you need to know how the NCOS is set up in your PBX, and what NCOS is currently assigned to all your phones.
Think of FRL as money for rides at the fair -- say, a ride takes $3 -- 3 FRL. If you only have 2 FRL, you can't ride. It is standard to assign the same level FRL as the NCOS, when one is building that datablock -- NCOS 1 to FRL 1, and so on, 0 - 7. I've seen some PBXs that didn't do that, so that needs to be checked.
Then you assign an NCOS to each phone. Then, you build RLIs and assign an FRL to each route entry. When someone makes a call, they need to have an NCOS with at least that FRL to be able to call out.
Now, if your phones are currently assigned an NCOS/FRL of less than 7, you can do as other posters have suggested. But do not assume anything. When I build a PBX, I assign NCOS of 5 as the highest level of permission for phones, leaving 7 for telecom techs and the like for local termination, and perhaps a "superuser" class with 6 as you envision. Other switches I have seen give a 7 to everybody. In that case, you are facing a great deal of reprogramming.
As you are not conversant in BARS/NARS programming, I suggest you have your service provider do this, or someone who is skilled in this. Otherwise, you may open yourself up for some very unpleasant phone bills.
I have to agree with sandyml on this one; I would not feel comfortable walking you through something in "detail" as I don't know how your PBX is configured and it really isn't safe to assume anything.
everyone agree's, maybe pay someone to check this one and set it up, and watch, ask questions and make notes... it's like a lot of things, the second one is a lot less painfull
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