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NCOS AND TGAR 2

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rondphig

IS-IT--Management
Feb 28, 2008
33
US
Hello,
I have Option 11s.
Is there a way i can print out NCOS and TGAR to see what the restrictions are?

I changed NCOS at one site to 6 which opened up the phone to be able to dial internationally.

I did the same on a different switch and that ended up restricting everything on that phone, couldnt dial anything at all, no ext dialing, no local, or long distance calls.

I always thought NCOS 6 was the highest NCOS, ie least restrictions.

please help. thanks
 
You can print the NCOS/FRL correlations in LD 87.

LD 87
REQ: PRT
CUST: 0
FEAT: NCTL
RNGE: 0 7

If the NCOS and FRL match, then the higher the NCOS, the less the set is restricted.

If they are opposites, i.e. FRL 0 = NCOS 7, then the lower the NCOS, the less the set is restricted.

War Eagle!
Lions Baseball '09!
 
You will have to print out all of you Route Data Blocks in LD 21 to get the TARGs assigned.

If a phone's TGAR matches a route's TARG, and TGAR = YES in the ESN data block in LD 86, the call will be blocked from that route.
 
ok. i got that part now. thanks

1 site has matching NCOS and FRL for everything. 0-0, 1-1, 2-2, 3-3, 4-4, 5-5, 6-6, 7-7.
So NCOS 7 should have the least restrictions.


I read through the manual for what EQA,RWTA,NSC,OHQ,CBQ etc do, but that doesnt really help me with my next question.

How do i know what each NCOS does and what the difference is between them. I guess what i'd really want to know is how do i know which NCOS will allow local dialing access, which one allows local and north american LD, which one allows International dialing etc etc etc.

Can i see that somewhere?
 
Correct.

In your site NCOS 7 has the highest level of access.
 
How do i know what each NCOS does and what the difference is between them. I guess what i'd really want to know is how do i know which NCOS will allow local dialing access, which one allows local and north american LD, which one allows International dialing etc etc etc.

Can i see that somewhere?

To answer this you would have to go to LD 90 and print your NXX, NPA, SPN data and determine what RLI they go to. Then go to LD 86 and print your RLB data and determine what FRL the RLI is set to.

For example: If local NXX 202 goes out RLI 0 and RLI 0 uses FRL 2, then an NCOS of 2 or higher can dial 9-202-xxxx. Any NCOS lower than 2 will get a fast busy.
If Long Distance NPA 1404 goes out RLI 1 and that RLI has an FRL of 5, then an NCOS of 5 or higher can dial that area code. Any NCOS lower than 5 will get a fast busy. Make sense?

War Eagle!
Lions Baseball '09!
 
When you think of NCOS as $$ Cash and FRL "How much it cost to Ride" little easier to grasp

Mato' Was'aka
 
wow. that actually makes sense to me. thanks guys
 
My friend go in to LD 49 ,
LD 49
type FCR
cust 0
crno enter

you will get the list of each NCOS which was initially set by the NORTEL professional ,
that is crno0 =NCOS0
crno1 =NCOS1
crno2 =NCOS2
crno3 =NCOS3
.
.
.
crno6 =NCOS6
crno7 =NCOS7
now u will see that there are some scripts as
init means initially allow ( what to allow to dial out)
deny means what is denied to dial out.

see and reply me then further i can guide you how to do that.
 
this is what i get...


CRNO 0
INIT ALOW

CRNO 1
INIT ALOW
DENY 011
 
Do not confuse FCR (what you configure in LD 49) with BARS/NARS (what you configure in Lds 86,87,90).

BARS/NARS is more commonly used now because it allows or denies access to many different routes with a single access code.

FCR is the "old" way of restricting calls when the trunk route access code is dialed. Might be okay on a small system with only a single outgoing route.

NCOS is used for both methods but in completely different ways.

You can tell which applies in your case by printing a DNB for the access code you are using. If TYPE is RDB then FCR may apply, otherwise you are probably using NARS.
 
exactly. ignore the cnro post please. Good post Stanley *

Mato' Was'aka
 
crno and nfrl/tgar works IF your acod is 9.. so i dial 9, hit a trunk.. if 9 is ac1, dialing 9 takes me to ld 90. past crno.. as the op found out, ncos 6 may allow international in one box, but may not allow even local in another.. nctl as well as frl applied to the rlb's combine to allow or deny digits post 9..

quick tour.. ac1 is 9, that takes me to 90.. next digits 1213.. match an npa in 90 sends me to ld 86 via the rlb.. prt the rli in 86, entry 0 requires frl 4, ld 87 nctl tells me ncos 4 is equal to frl 4.. easy fix, ncos 4 allows the call..

will ncos 6 allow the call? depends on nctl, if ncos 6 is frl 4 or higher, yes.. if it is default (ncos 6 equales frl_0 ) then no..

john poole
bellsouth business
columbia,sc
 
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