Tek-Tips is the largest IT community on the Internet today!

Members share and learn making Tek-Tips Forums the best source of peer-reviewed technical information on the Internet!

  • Congratulations TouchToneTommy on being selected by the Tek-Tips community for having the most helpful posts in the forums last week. Way to Go!

LCR question

Status
Not open for further replies.

mmilla0502

Technical User
Sep 13, 2011
27
US
Hello, we have a neax2000 ips system and my question is how do I check to see which extensions are used for the LCR trunk routes. For example we dial LCR acces code 1 and then 900 to access our voicemail server which is offsite. How can I determine what "900" is actually being pointed to? Thanks in advance.
 
Thanks for the tutorial but here's what I have. One line in the tut says "If you get a value in the range 100 to 163 you are simply accessing the lines direct and this walkthrough will be of no use to you." I am receiving 200>1>a129. So does that mean the tutorial will not help me?
 
Im not sure I am understanding where the tutorial is taking me. Ultimately I do not want to change any data I just want to see where the 900 is pointed to. I would think it is pointed to an outside number but I am having a hard time figuring out what that is.
 
A129 means LCR group 3,

So try command 8AA000 > 3 >

You should see a number between 4005 and 4007

Use the number you found above in the command below

8A(the 4 digit number from above) > 19 >

You may have to experiment with the 19 above it may be 1, 19, 190, 1900. When you find the correct number you should see a 4 digit number come up as the last data.

Post back with that command and we can help you continue.

 
Okay here's what I have.
COMMAND=8A4007
8A4007>1
8A4007>1:0020-
 
single digit 1 is being sent over CCIS to another system. What you dial from there lives on the other system.
EX: 1 dials over CCIS then 1900 is an extension on the other system.
Look at CMD 857 for digit 1. This tells the system how many digits to send over CCIS. It is probably set for 4 digits.
The 8A4007 table repeats the digits dialed. so even though 1 is sent over CCIS it is repeated as part of an extension number on the other side. You can test this by dialing 1900 on the other system.
 
Hold up there are some assumptions being made here! Let's follow the LCD to make sure they don't later just delete the 1 and digit add something.Belvedere may well be right but I prefer to check all possibilities!

Check cmd 8A002 de 1 de and post back what you get!
 
Providing the extension number plan of the other system will help.
 
Hey guys thanks alot for your help. Turns out the problem was with the service providers circuits on our point to point connection to where our voicemail server is located and they fixed the problem. I learned some good info from you guys though for the future. Thanks.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Part and Inventory Search

Sponsor

Back
Top