As pointed out we should give information as well as ask for information / help. Due to the lack of caller id on t1 line to the system. I changed it over to pri. Bellow is the Cisco config.
Note: One of things that is confusing is on the ISR 4000 series you cannot set the clock to internal. As you can see I set it to network.
This is for PRI only and not T1. Also, from my understanding in certain configurations you need a DSP modules to. Plus proper Cisco licensing.
PRI CONFIGURATION one Cisco:
controller T1 0/1/0
framing esf
clock source network (I have read this might cause slip errors)
linecode b8zs
cablelength short 110
pri-group timeslots 1-8,24 (Only using 1-8 due to Avaya licenses.)
interface Serial0/1/0:23
no ip address
encapsulation hdlc
no cdp enable
isdn switch-type primary-ni
isdn protocol-emulate network
isdn incoming-voice voice
isdn supp-service name calling
isdn outgoing display-ie (I don't know if this is needed. I was messing around for caller-id)
dial-peer voice 23 pots
destination-pattern 5555004
clid network-number 5555004 (Not sure if this is needed or not.)
port 0/1/0:23
forward-digits all (When I removed this. Caller id did not work when calling over phones.)
prefix 555
Avaya settings: (This was easy since it had less settings than the T1 configuration.)
I pretty much left all the settings the same (I think from default.) But, I did have it switches to T1 first. Then changed over back to PRI.
Under PRI 24 Line:
Prefix: 555 ----- filled out with the prefix I'm using.
Test number 55555001 --- optional. Just a number to put in to remind you to test the circuit.
Incoming Routing digits is 3 ------ (This was left over from my pri settings. Default is 4. I used 3 on the Cisco.)
Under Channels:
I left all of this at default except disabled 9-23 due to licensing.
Farther thoughts but more on the Cisco side. Figure out the FX0 card in the router and Caller ID name / number. Currently it just does number.
I hope you find this helpful.
Thanks,
Josh
Note: One of things that is confusing is on the ISR 4000 series you cannot set the clock to internal. As you can see I set it to network.
This is for PRI only and not T1. Also, from my understanding in certain configurations you need a DSP modules to. Plus proper Cisco licensing.
PRI CONFIGURATION one Cisco:
controller T1 0/1/0
framing esf
clock source network (I have read this might cause slip errors)
linecode b8zs
cablelength short 110
pri-group timeslots 1-8,24 (Only using 1-8 due to Avaya licenses.)
interface Serial0/1/0:23
no ip address
encapsulation hdlc
no cdp enable
isdn switch-type primary-ni
isdn protocol-emulate network
isdn incoming-voice voice
isdn supp-service name calling
isdn outgoing display-ie (I don't know if this is needed. I was messing around for caller-id)
dial-peer voice 23 pots
destination-pattern 5555004
clid network-number 5555004 (Not sure if this is needed or not.)
port 0/1/0:23
forward-digits all (When I removed this. Caller id did not work when calling over phones.)
prefix 555
Avaya settings: (This was easy since it had less settings than the T1 configuration.)
I pretty much left all the settings the same (I think from default.) But, I did have it switches to T1 first. Then changed over back to PRI.
Under PRI 24 Line:
Prefix: 555 ----- filled out with the prefix I'm using.
Test number 55555001 --- optional. Just a number to put in to remind you to test the circuit.
Incoming Routing digits is 3 ------ (This was left over from my pri settings. Default is 4. I used 3 on the Cisco.)
Under Channels:
I left all of this at default except disabled 9-23 due to licensing.
Farther thoughts but more on the Cisco side. Figure out the FX0 card in the router and Caller ID name / number. Currently it just does number.
I hope you find this helpful.
Thanks,
Josh